Monday, August 29, 2022

CFOW Newsletter - Some thoughts on Rep. Jamaal Bowman and the Democratic primary

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
August 29, 2022
 
Hello All – Tuesday's Democratic primary election for Congress resulted in an impressive victory for incumbent Rep. Jamaal Bowman in the 16th Congressional District.  According to the "unofficial tally" posted by the county Board of Elections, Bowman received 19,012 votes, or 52% of the total votes cast.  Bowman's rival Vedat Gashi received 26% of the vote and Catherine Parker got 20%. We await with interest the publication of voting results broken down by towns/municipalities, but incomplete reports show Bowman capturing a majority of votes in Westchester, as well as 90% of the 2,000 votes cast in the Bronx.
 
One of the features of this election was the reluctance of most local Democratic parties (with the exception of Hastings) to support the incumbent, Bowman.  If Democratic leaders thought this was the politically astute thing to do, Bowman's sweeping victory should encourage a course correction in their thinking. If their reluctance to support Bowman was based on disagreement with his program, the election showed that – faced with clear choices – the electorate did not vote for "moderation," but for a clear, progressive program.  If the reluctance of local Democratic leadership to support Bowman was based on their belief that the electorate would prefer a "white" congressional representative to Bowman, here again the election proved them wrong.  In any case, the August 23rd congressional primary should be a wake-up call to many Democratic Party activists that Rep. Bowman's activist record and strong progressive program commands the support of a majority of Democrats in the 16th District.
 
And now for Rep. Bowman.  Having stated our support for him, his candidacy, and his program, let's look at the email he sent to his supporters last Friday, asking for input and support for campaign program going forward to the November 8 general election.  His draft program includes many things we support: "full student debt cancellation, passing the Green New Deal for Public Schools, abolishing the filibuster, codifying Roe, fighting for voting rights, expanding the Supreme Court, and so much more." Excellent!  But presumably folded into "so much more" is the US role in the world, our trillion-dollar "national defense" budget, our participation in a half-dozen wars around the world, and our growing involvement in the dangerous war in Ukraine. Certainly "so much more"!
 
In the judgment of even the most radical Democrat, the reality of our political system is that the elephant in the room – the US economic and military Empire – is simply Off the Agenda.  Not worth discussing.  A "third rail."  Sadlyl, this response to a looming danger that could end us all is, among other things, a devastating criticism of decades of peace-movement activism.  We haven't been able to get war & peace on the list of issues normally discussed in politics. Going forward, we have to change this, perhaps starting by putting more pressure on Rep. Bowman, letting him know that his supporters are looking for leadership in preventing and ending war. Give him a call!
 
News Notes
The Democratic Socialists of America supported quite a few candidates for state government in the recent Democratic primary elections, and several of them were successful.  For a round-up of what the socialists did and didn't do, read "New York's Socialists Were Largely Victorious in Last Night's Elections," by Nick French, Jacobin Magazine [August 2022] [Link].
 
News bias refers not just to words, but to pictures as well.  The way that Facebook decides which pictures are "appropriate" and which are not makes an interesting mainstream media tutorial.  In this useful article from The Intercept, Facebook's instructions to its content censors reveal different standards for pictures about the war in Ukraine and Israel's attacks on Gaza.  Instructive … but standard stuff for readers of the Herman and Chomsky primer on media bias, Manufacturing Consent. Check it out!
 
Part of the negotiations that led to the Inflation Reduction Act was a side agreement with Sen. Manchin and the fossil fuel industry that would "expedite" permits for pipelines and other environmental dangers by eliminating steps that allow public participation or environmental studies.  To learn more about this, go here; to take some action, call Sen. Schumer at 855-980-2321 and tell him this side deal stinks.
 
CFOW Nuts & Bolts
Please consider getting involved with Concerned Families of Westchester.  Weather permitting, we meet for a protest/rally each Saturday in Hastings, at 12 noon at the VFW Plaza (Warburton and Spring St.)  A "Black Lives Matter/Say Their Names" vigil is held each Monday from 5:30 to 6:00 pm in Yonkers at the intersection of Warburton Ave. and Odell. To learn about our new project, "Beauty as Fuel for Change," go here; and to make a financial contribution to the project, go here. If you would like to join one of our Zoom meetings, each Tuesday and Thursday at noon, please send a return email for the link. Our newsletter is archived at https://cfow.blogspot.com/; and news of interest and coming events is posted on our CFOW Facebook pageAnother Facebook page focuses on the climate crisis. 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!
Once again, the Newsletter's "Rewards" for stalwart readers come from our favorite New Orleans ensemble, Tuba Skinny. Here is a concert recorded last month, and new to me.  Enjoy!
The Newsletter staff will be on vacation next week. See you next on September 11th.
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
CFOW Weekly Reader
 
Featured Essays
Has the Fight Against Antisemitism Lost Its Way?
By Peter Beinart, New York Times [August 26, 2022]
---- Over the past 18 months, America's most prominent Jewish organizations have done something extraordinary. They have accused the world's leading human rights organizations of promoting hatred of Jews… In a terrible irony, the campaign against "antisemitism," as waged by influential Jewish groups and the U.S. government, has become a threat to freedom. It is wielded as a weapon against the world's most respected human rights organizations and a shield for some of the world's most repressive regimes. We need a different struggle against antisemitism. It should pursue Jewish equality, not Jewish supremacy, and embed the cause of Jewish rights in a movement for the human rights of all. In its effort to defend the indefensible in Israel, the American Jewish establishment has abandoned these principles. It's time to affirm them again. [Read More]
 
Chomsky: Maintaining Class Inequality at Any Cost Is GOP's Guiding Mission
An interview with C.J. Polychroniou, Truthout [August 27, 2022]
---- It was observed long ago that the U.S. is basically a one-party state: the business party, with two factions, Democrats and Republicans. Now there is one faction: the Democrats. The Republicans hardly qualify as an authentic parliamentary party. That's fairly explicit under McConnell's rule. When Obama took office, McConnell made it clear that his primary goal was to ensure that Obama could achieve virtually nothing, so that Republicans could return to power. When Biden was elected, McConnell reiterated that position even more strongly. And he's lived up to it. On virtually every issue, the GOP is 100 percent opposed, even when they know that the legislation is popular and would be very valuable for the population. With a handful of right-wing Democrats joining the uniform GOP opposition, Biden's platform has been cut down very sharply. Perhaps he could have done more, but he's being unfairly blamed, I think, for the failure of what would have been constructive programs, badly needed. … The political situation is ugly, and very likely to get much worse in November if the GOP manages to take over. It is likely to get so much worse that it will literally threaten survival, "as no thoughtful person can question," to quote the estimable Justice Powell. [Read More]
 
War & Peace
Six months after Russian invasion, a bloody stalemate, a struggle for peace
By Anatol Lieven, Responsible Statecraft [August 25, 2022]
---- Six months after Russia invaded Ukraine, the war has apparently settled into a stalemate. The front line has hardly moved in two months. Casualties on both sides have been immense. In a fashion almost reminiscent of the First World War, recent advances in military technology have greatly strengthened the power of the defensive, while weakening the massed armored forces backed by airpower that in the generations after 1939 were responsible for "Blitzkrieg" style offensive victories. …Nor does it seem likely that this picture is likely to change much in the foreseeable future. The factors that have worked against Russia will do the same to Ukrainian forces if they launch mass offensives. … What we therefore need to recognize is that Ukraine — with massive military help from the West — has already won a great victory, though not a complete one. As a result, Ukraine has achieved its most vital goal, that of securing its independence and its chance to move towards membership of the West. This success has been achieved on the battlefield, but perhaps even more importantly through the demonstration of the strength and unity of Ukrainian nationalism. This is therefore arguably no longer an "existential" struggle for Ukraine. It is a battle for limited amounts of territory in the east. By the same token, Russia has suffered a massive historic defeat. Moscow's hope of turning the whole of Ukraine into a client state has been destroyed for all foreseeable time. [Read More] Lieven also discussed these issues last week on Democracy Now!
 
The West's Dangerously Simple-Minded Narrative About Russia and China
By Jeffrey D. Sachs, Common Dreams [August 23, 2022]
---- The world is on the edge of nuclear catastrophe in no small part because of the failure of Western political leaders to be forthright about the causes of the escalating global conflicts. The relentless Western narrative that the West is noble while Russia and China are evil is simple-minded and extraordinarily dangerous.  It is an attempt to manipulate public opinion, not to deal with very real and pressing diplomacy. Europe should reflect on the fact that the non-enlargement of NATO and the implementation of the Minsk II agreements would have averted this awful war in Ukraine. The essential narrative of the West is built into US national security strategy. The core US idea is that China and Russia are implacable foes that are "attempting to erode American security and prosperity." … There is only one country whose self-declared fantasy is to be the world's dominant power: the US. It's past time that the US recognized the true sources of security: internal social cohesion and responsible cooperation with the rest of the world, rather than the illusion of hegemony. With such a revised foreign policy, the US and its allies would avoid war with China and Russia, and enable the world to face its myriad environment, energy, food and social crises. Above all, at this time of extreme danger, European leaders should pursue the true source of European security: not US hegemony, but European security arrangements that respect the legitimate security interests of all European nations, certainly including Ukraine, but also including Russia, which continues to resist NATO enlargements into the Black Sea. Europe should reflect on the fact that the non-enlargement of NATO and the implementation of the Minsk II agreements would have averted this awful war in Ukraine. At this stage, diplomacy, not military escalation, is the true path to European and global security. [Read More]
 
Last Chance For America and Iran
By Trita Parsi, Responsible Statecraft [August 26, 2022]
[FB – Trita Parsi has written several books on the US-Iran standoff, including Losing an Enemy, about the Obama diplomacy that led up to the Iran Nuclear Agreement in 2015.]
---- As war rages on in Ukraine, diplomacy is on the cusp of prevailing in Vienna. Against the odds, negotiators are poised to revive the Iran nuclear agreement and block Iran's pathways to a nuclear weapon—a crucial U.S. interest. According to officials who are familiar with the draft of the agreement circulated in Europe and Tehran in the latter half of August, Iran will once more give up its stockpile of enriched uranium, apart from 300 kilograms enriched at lower levels. It will also cease all enrichment above 3.67 percent and remove thousands of advanced centrifuges from operation. Iran will also have no pathway to a plutonium-based nuclear weapon. Perhaps most importantly, its nuclear program will once more be fully open to intrusive International Atomic Energy Agency inspections. … Yet the main reasons why the new JCPOA is more fragile are not internal to the deal but external. There is now deepened mistrust, both in Tehran and in other capitals around the world, about Washington's ability to uphold international agreements. The current U.S. and Iranian political leaderships also have few domestic incentives to move beyond their shared enmity. As a result, the new Iran deal may come into existence in a strategic context that reduces rather than bolsters its longevity. [Read More].  For additional insights into this precarious situation, read "Why the Right Wingers in Israel and the US Really Oppose Iran Nuclear Deal: They Want Regime Change Instead," b[Link].
 
Also of interest re: war & peace – "Two Decades Into Forever Wars, the Pentagon Finally Unveils Plan to Reduce Civilian Casualties," by Nick Turse, The Intercept [August 25, 2022] [Link]; and "The legacy of Shinzo Abe: a Japan divided about nuclear weapons," by Sayuri Romei, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists [August 24, 2022] [Link].
 
The Climate Crisis
Pakistan: Climate Emergency-Driven, biblical Floods affect 33 million People Leave Millions Homeless
---- Heavy flooding in southern Pakistan has destroyed or damaged 670,000 homes, according to Reliefweb. During an ordinary monsoon season in Pakistan beginning in June and ending in September, there would be four waves of precipitation. There have been eight such waves since June. Balochistan has been drenched by five times its average rainfall (averaged over 30 years) and Sindh has been inundated by 5.7 times its 30-year average. Extra heat in the Bay of Bengal and the Arabian Sea are largely responsible for this massive flooding. Some 2 million acres of crops and orchards have been destroyed or damaged, leaving millions bereft of a livelihood. Nearly 800,000 livestock animals have been killed, on whom many rural families depend for earning their living. The collapse of some infrastructure has interfered with the escape of populations from the rising waters. Nearly 2,000 miles of roads have been washed out and 145 bridges have been pulled down. These are the worst floods since a similar extreme whether event in 2010, and perhaps they are the most destructive in recorded history. [Read More] The Pakistan disaster is being covered closely on Al Jazeera.  And from Bill McKibben, the founder of 350.org, read "Pakistan's Floods Beggar the Imagination" [Link].
 
The State of the Union
Mar-a-Lago Affidavit Shows Trump Kept Some of America's Top Secrets, Is in Huge Trouble
By Fred Kaplan, Slate [August 27, 2022]
---- Even with about half of its 38 pages blacked out for security reasons, the Justice Department's affidavit to get a warrant to search Donald Trump's residency at Mal-a-Largo is more damning than many of the former president's critics expected. The affidavit, written on Aug. 5 and released by a judge on Friday, reported that 15 boxes of documents, which had already been retrieved from the Florida estate early in 2022, contained 184 documents, including 25 marked Top Secret—and that some of those were marked HCS, SI, FISA, ORCON, NOFORN. In these acronyms lies a scandalous, perhaps literally incriminating story. HCS means HUMINT Control System, and HUMINT means Human Intelligence—in other words, intelligence gathered from spies. Documents marked HUMINT may contain the identities of spies, as well as information obtained from them. … In other words, at least some of the documents in Mar-a-Lago were among the most sensitive in any president's files. The FBI special agent who filed the affidavit wrote that he had "probable cause" to believe there were more boxes, containing more highly classified documents, still hidden away at Mar-a-Lago, many of them in unsecured locations. The judge who approved the request agreed. [Read More] Also useful, from today's Democracy Now!, is (Video) "Ex-Agent: FBI Has Long History of Abuse, But Trump Probe Shows Better, 'more Effective" Path for Agency'" [Link].
 
Keep Pushing: The Real Heroes Behind Biden's Student Debt Announcement
By Astra Taylor, The New Republic [August 26, 2022]
--- Though not nearly enough, the president's move is a good one—and is the result of a decade-plus of activism by thousands of brave Americans. On Wednesday, President Biden announced that he would use his executive power to wipe out up to $10,000 in student loans for 43 million Americans, and up to $20,000 for those who received Pell Grants to attend college.       Make no mistake about it, this represents a landmark victory for student debtors. Through years of tireless and often thankless organizing, borrowers and their allies pushed a reluctant administration to deliver broad-based student debt cancellation—to bail out regular people, not big banks or businesses. Approximately 20 million people will have their balances completely wiped out, and many have been sharing emotional messages of shock and jubilation online. … we need to ensure that this announcement is a stepping stone, not a destination—a milestone on the path to full student debt abolition and an overhaul of our higher education system, including making public college free for all who want to attend. I believe that this is possible because I've seen what it took to get to this point. [Read More]  Astra Taylor talked about the Biden plan and the need for full student debt relief on Thursday's Democracy Now! On Saturday, AOC said that Biden could abolish all student debt by reversing Trump's 2017 tax cuts for the rich and large corporations.
 
Israel/Palestine
Deliberate misrepresentation: Western media bias makes Israeli war on Palestinians possible
By Ramzy Baroud,Middle East Monitor ]August 23, 2022]
---- While US and western mainstream and corporate media remain biased in favour of Israel, they often behave as if they are a third, neutral party. This is simply not the case.
Take the New York Times coverage of the latest Israeli war on Gaza as an example. Its article on 6 August, "Israel-Gaza Fighting Flares for a Second Day" is the typical mainstream western reporting on Israel and Palestine, but with a distinct NYT flavour. For the uninformed reader, the article succeeds in finding a balanced language between two equal sides. This misleading moral equivalence is one of the biggest intellectual blind spots for western journalists. If they do not outwardly champion Israel's discourse on 'security' and 'right to defend itself', they create false parallels between Palestinians and Israelis, as if a military occupier and an occupied nation have comparable rights and responsibilities. Obviously, this logic does not apply to the Russia-Ukraine war. For NYT and all mainstream western media, there is no question regarding who the good guys and the bad guys are in that bloody fight. [Read More]
 
Our History
Howard Zinn at 100: Remembering "The People's Historian"
By Robert Cohen and Sonia Murrow, The Nation [August 24, 2022]
---- Today marks the centennial of historian Howard Zinn's birth. More than a decade after Zinn's death in 2010, his best-selling A People's History of the United States (1980) remains the most popular—and radical—introduction to American history, having recently surpassed 4 million copies sold. Zinn did more than any other historian to popularize the historiographical revolution of the Long 1960s, bringing from the campuses to the public its spotlight on the oppression of groups formerly marginalized in US history textbooks: African Americans, workers, Native Americans, women—and on their liberation movements. In place of traditional textbook triumphalism, Zinn's People's History offered a scathing account of American capitalism's role in promoting economic, racial, and sexual inequality. … Also enduring is Zinn's concern that too many high schools lack the academic freedom to debate dissident historical interpretations, which led him in 2008 to cofound the Zinn Education Project (ZEP). Today, with its impressive online presence, ZEP reaches more than 100,000 teachers, and not only promotes people's history and progressive pedagogy but has also spearheaded resistance to the recent bans imposed by Republican legislatures and governors on critical race theory and on candid teaching about race and gender in history classrooms. [Read More] Last Wednesday, on Zinn's 100th birthday, Democracy Now! devoted its whole program to Zinn: (Video) "War Poisons Everybody": Remembering Legendary Historian Howard Zinn on His 100th Birthday [Link].

Sunday, August 21, 2022

CFOW Newsletter - We urge you to vote for Jamaal Bowman for Congress

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
August 21, 2022
 
Hello All – On Tuesday, August 23rd, we hope that you will join us in voting for Jamaal Bowman in the Democratic primary election.  Though a "primary," the winner of this election will almost certainly win the general election in November, and go on to represent our district in Congress, as the Republicans are unlikely to have much of a campaign. Concerned Families of Westchester has endorsed Bowman. Here's why:
 
In 2020, Concerned Families of Westchester joined the movement to elect Jamaal Bowman to represent our district in Congress.  As a peace & justice group, we were especially anxious to unseat the incumbent, Eliot Engel, who had represented our district for decades, and who had never seen a war or a military budget that he did not like.  In meeting several times with Jamaal Bowman to learn he stood on the issues, and what kind of person he was, we learned that he was not only an educator who had started a middle school in the Bronx, but that he shared most of our values regarding peace and justice. We felt that Bowman would give our district the kind of representation we needed and deserved in Washington, and that he would help to advance the agendas of antiwar forces towards a more peaceful world.
 
After nearly two years in office, we know now that we were right to support Jamaal Bowman in 2000.  His issues are our issues; and many of our issues are issues for him also.  Where we are not always on the same page, we know that we can ask for a meeting, make a suggestion, and/or ask that an issue be considered.  The articles in this Newsletter are illustrative: this week we write about Afghanistan, Ukraine, Yemen, Julian Assange, Iran's nuclear program, Palestinian rights, compassion for elderly prisoners, military veterans, and unwarranted police power. In Congress, Rep. Bowman has spoken out about these issues, initiating or supporting legislation, and has supported the work of grassroots movements fighting the good fight.
 
There are many good reasons to re-elect Jamaal Bowman to Congress.  Perhaps his work on education, job development, or the Green New Deal ranks near the top of your priorities.  Perhaps his constituent services, his deepening connection with our communities, and his outspoken commitment to multi-racial democracy are what most concern you. In Rep. Bowman, Westchester has a congressional representative of national stature, who has addressed issues of the greatest importance.  On Tuesday, please cast your vote to re-elect Jamaal Bowman to Congress. Thank you.
 
News Notes
"One hundred days after Israeli forces killed Palestinian American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh, the Biden administration has made no concrete effort to secure accountability for her killing," writes Alice Speri in The Intercept. Speri reminds us that a similar US gov. moral failure has happened before, recalling the US refusal to take any action in the case of the Israel murder of US human rights worker Rachel Corrie in Gaza in 2003. To learn some of the tortured reasoning behind US inaction, read Speri's excellent report.
 
In New York and elsewhere, there has been publicity and agitation for compassionate release of elderly prisoners as they approach their death.  Putting a human face on these campaigns, see the Democracy Now! program broadcast this week about political prisoner Mutulu Shakur, "Calls Grow for Compassionate Release for Dying Black Liberation Activist" [Link].
 
In the fall of 1973, Apache activist and actress Sacheen Littlefeather was asked by Marlon Brandon to speak for him at the Academy Awards ceremony, in case he was awarded "best actor" for his role in "The Godfather" (which he was).  Speaking through Littlefeather, Brando rejected the Academy award, stating that he could not accept the award because of "the treatment of American Indians today by the film industry," and because of recent events at Wounded Knee, South Dakota. Littlefeather was booed and cheered when she made her statement on behalf of Brando; and this month the Academy Awards issued an apology to her. Missing from the reporting of this feel-good step was any mention of the 1973 occupation and standoff at Wounded Knee. You can see a good short documentary about these dramatic events here, of great importance in our history.
 
CFOW Nuts & Bolts
Please consider getting involved with Concerned Families of Westchester.  Weather permitting, we meet for a protest/rally each Saturday in Hastings, at 12 noon at the VFW Plaza (Warburton and Spring St.)  A "Black Lives Matter/Say Their Names" vigil is held each Monday from 5:30 to 6:00 pm in Yonkers at the intersection of Warburton Ave. and Odell. To learn about our new project, "Beauty as Fuel for Change," go here; and to make a financial contribution to the project, go here. If you would like to join one of our Zoom meetings, each Tuesday and Thursday at noon, please send a return email for the link. Our newsletter is archived at https://cfow.blogspot.com/; and news of interest and coming events is posted on our CFOW Facebook page.  If you would like to 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
 
CFOW Weekly Reader
 
(Video) As Afghan People Boil Grass to Eat, U.S. Refuses to Release $7 Billion of Frozen Afghan Assets
From Democracy Now! [August 17, 2022]
---- The Biden administration has ruled out releasing roughly $7 billion of frozen U.S.-held Afghan assets, a year after the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan and occupation, even as the United Nations warns a staggering 95% of Afghans are not getting enough to eat. "This money belongs to the Afghan people. And the U.S., for 365 days, has been holding their money in a New York vault while Afghan people are boiling grass to eat, are selling their kidneys, are watching their children starve," says Unfreeze Afghanistan co-founder Medea Benjamin. [See the Program] For more detail on this crime against the Afghanistan people, read "Joe Biden's Senseless Economic Strangulation of Afghanistan," by Ryan Cooper, American Prospect [August 16, 2022] [Read More] The Biden people justify the withholding half the sum owed Afghanistan by saying it is reserved for the US victims of 9/11; our friends at September 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows reject this evil nonsense.  Read "'Morally wrong': 9/11 families urge Biden to return $3.5B to Afghans," by Alexander Ward, Politico [August 16, 2022] [Link].
 
What Do We Owe Afghanistan?
By Nathan J. Robinson and Noam Chomsky, Current Affairs [August 3, 2022]
---- The 20-year war in Afghanistan is often spoken of as a well-intentioned failure. In fact, it was a major crime originating in bloodlust and an indifference to Afghan lives. The U.S. bears a major responsibility for the present suffering of Afghans and has an obligation to undo the damage it has inflicted. … The 9/11 attacks could have been dealt with as a crime. This would have been sane and consistent with precedent. When lawbreaking occurs, we seek the perpetrators, rather than starting wars with unrelated parties. When the IRA set off bombs in London, nobody called for air strikes on West Belfast (or on Boston, where a great deal of IRA funding came from). When the Oklahoma City bombing was found to have been perpetrated by a white supremacist associated with ultra-right militias, there was no call to obliterate Idaho or Montana. Instead, the attacker was searched for, found, apprehended, brought to court, found guilty, and sentenced. This was not the approach taken by the Bush administration. Rather than seek out and punish the guilty—and only the guilty—it swiftly launched a "global war on terror" that led to the deaths of millions. [Read More]
 
Featured Essays
Salman Rushdie Joins Indian Writers on 75 Years of Independence
By Pranay Somayajula, The Nation [August 18, 2022]
---- As India celebrated the 75th anniversary of its independence from British colonial rule this Monday, August 15, PEN America launched India at 75, an anthology of reflections on Independence and Indian democracy from some of the country's most prominent literary voices. … This year's Independence Day celebrations came at a time when India, often referred to as "the world's largest democracy," is experiencing a pronounced deterioration in the strength and stability of its democratic institutions. Since 2014, when the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party came to power under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, the country has experienced a sharp rise in intercommunal tensions between its Hindu majority and Muslim minority. [Read More] A pleasant surprise in reading about this anthology was to learn about "the Polis Project," which keeps its eye on India's deteriorating democracy/rise of fascism. Honoring Indian novelist Salman Rushdie, historian Juan Cole reposts his essay/speech from 2003, "Midnight's Other Children: Reading Rushdie in the Middle East"; interesting, imo [Link].
 
Is Moral Clarity even Possible anymore in Donald Trump's America?
By Kelly Denton-Borhaug, Tom Dispatch [August 8, 2022]
---- How many who were initially enthusiastic about the Afghan and Iraq wars would now, like their former president, admit we were wrong? How many people who supported those conflicts have taken what happened to heart and are thinking more deeply about an American propensity for war and the war culture that goes with it? Like George W. Bush, too few, I'm afraid. This past July 24th, the New York Times featured "I was wrong" op-ed pieces by a number of its columnists. The editors defined "being wrong" as "incorrect predictions and bad advice," as well as "being off the mark." Of course, one of the definitions of the Greek word for "sin" (amartia) in the New Testament is "missing the mark." Often, the problem isn't simply that people lack the best, most up-to-date information or data. Only by digging into ethics and social psychology will we better understand why people deceive not just others but even themselves with lies, slippery rationalizations, or comedic attempts at distraction to cover up deeper dynamics that have to do with privilege and power, or what religious traditions sometimes call "worshipping false idols." [Read More]
 
Meet the veterans who chose 'paths of dissent'
By Dan McKnight, Responsible Statecraft [August 10, 2022]
---- One of my heroes, Major General Smedley Butler, said "We Americans who will protect our flag should have a voice in where it is flown." The two-time Medal of Honor recipient and author of War is a Racket exemplifies the model of a dissident soldier.   Voices of today's soldiers, all veterans of the Global War on Terror, have been collected in a new anthology, Paths of Dissent: Soldiers Speak Out Against America's Misguided Wars, edited by (Ret.) Maj. Danny Sjursen and (Ret.) Col. Andrew Bacevich, President of the Quincy Institute. The book shares fifteen individual stories of how soldiers — in some ways big, in some ways small — dissented from what their high command, their government, and in many ways society expected of them as they advocated to bring our troops home. … For several years, polls have demonstrated that veterans support military withdrawals from the Middle East at higher percentages than the civilian population. We witnessed firsthand the failures of nation-building, the ineffectiveness of raw military power to solve political problems, and the lack of coherent strategy or victory conditions. [Read More]
 
War & Peace
Playing With Fire in Ukraine: The Underappreciated Risks of Catastrophic Escalation
By John J. Mearsheimer, Foreign Affairs [August 17, 2022]
---- In essence, Kyiv, Washington, and Moscow are all deeply committed to winning at the expense of their adversary, which leaves little room for compromise. Neither Ukraine nor the United States, for example, is likely to accept a neutral Ukraine; in fact, Ukraine is becoming more closely tied with the West by the day. Nor is Russia likely to return all or even most of the territory it has taken from Ukraine, especially since the animosities that have fueled the conflict in the Donbas between pro-Russian separatists and the Ukrainian government for the past eight years are more intense than ever. These conflicting interests explain why so many observers believe that a negotiated settlement will not happen any time soon and thus foresee a bloody stalemate. They are right about that. But observers are underestimating the potential for catastrophic escalation that is built into a protracted war in Ukraine. [Read More]  For some dissent, read "John Mearsheimer's latest article on Ukraine in Foreign Affairs – a critique," by Gilbert Doctorow [August 20, 2022] [Link]. For those keeping score at home, read "Pentagon Announces New $775 Million Weapons Package for Ukraine" [the 18th US military aid package], by Kyle Anzlone, Antiwar.com [August 19, 2022] [Link].
 
How Long Will The Fragile Truce in Yemen Last?
By Shireen Al-Adeimi, Responsible Statecraft [August 16, 2022]
---- This month, Yemen's warring parties agreed to another two-month renewal of the truce that was first reached in April and later extended to August, thus marking the longest ceasefire in Yemen's 7-year-long war.  With Saudi Arabia exhausted by years of stalemate and faced with increasing threats to its internal security, and the Houthis failing to capture the oil-rich province of Marib from the coalition, parties agreed to a truce that finally brought about a perceptible shift in conditions on the ground. Despite the truce, the blockade has yet to be lifted completely, thereby further deteriorating the humanitarian condition and putting into question both the viability of the truce and Yemen's long-term political and economic stability. … The War Powers Resolution — previously passed in a historic bipartisan vote then vetoed by then-President Trump in 2019 — has once again been gaining momentum in Congress, this time to end President Biden's involvement in the war in Yemen. … For Yemeni civilians who have suffered the brunt of this protracted conflict, the road to recovery and stability will be long. To ensure a permanent truce and long lasting peace, however, a complete end to foreign involvement, both politically and militarily, is essential. This can begin with the passing of the War Powers Resolution, which will not only deprive Saudi Arabia of the U.S. military capabilities it has come to rely upon, but will also pave the way for further dialogue and concessions among parties in Yemen. [Read More]
 
Iran Nuclear Deal 'Imminent' with Crippling Sanctions Removed
From Al Jazeera [August 19, 2022]
---- A European proposal to revive the nuclear agreement between Western countries and Iran is imminent and includes the release of billions of dollars in frozen Iranian funds and oil exports in return for the scaling back of its nuclear programme. The new deal will be carried out in four phases over two 60-day periods, sources with knowledge of the proposed agreement told Al Jazeera Arabic. Iran recently voiced optimism about an agreement on a renewed version of the 2015 nuclear deal with the United States and other foreign powers, formally called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). Iran's negotiating team adviser Mohammad Marandi said earlier this week "we're closer than we've been before" to securing a deal and the "remaining issues are not very difficult to resolve". The European Union's "final text" proposal for the accord, submitted last week, was approved by the US, which says it is ready to quickly seal the agreement if Iran accepts it. [Read More]  But will Israel allow this? Read "With Iran deal closer than ever, Israel presses for war," by Mitchell Plitnick, Mondoweiss [August 21, 2022]
 
The Climate Crisis
What the U.S. climate law means for the world
---- The Inflation Reduction Act is a very big deal for the United States. It's the biggest climate law in the country's history. It's a lot of money, nearly $370 billion, for all kinds of tax incentives for American consumers and businesses. We've explained that from several different angles and we'll continue to explore the package in the coming weeks. But what does it mean for the rest of the world? That's what I want to talk about today. Here's what the law does, and one thing it doesn't:  It puts the United States on course to sharply reduce its own pollution, which is good for every living creature on Earth. … It's likely to make renewable energy cheaper worldwide. … It keeps the United States in the game in the run-up to international climate talks [and many more pluses and minuses.] [Read More]
 
Julian Assange Update
The Biden-Trump Persecution of Julian Assange
---- For a good while one could blame Trump for the prosecutorial monstrosity perpetrated on journalist Julian Assange. But now it's time for Trump to move over. The single worst assault on the first amendment and a free press in recent centuries is no longer solely his. Biden owns it. Biden could end this state persecution of a journalist today, if he felt like it. A persecution that a U.N. expert has called torture. A persecution that could easily lead to Assange's death. But maybe that's the point. Indeed, if killing Assange isn't the point, Biden should prove it, by pardoning him now. Biden doesn't feel like it. Unlike Jamal Khashoggi, whose murder he deplored before he didn't, Biden never censured the years of abuse heaped on Assange by the U.S. government. He enabled it. Unlike Trump, who may very well have been threatened with impeachment by senators like Mitch "Democracy's Gravedigger" McConnell, if Trump dared dream of pardoning Assange, Biden was never vulnerable to such a hypothetical menace. In fact, he's in McConnell's corner. By his inaction, it's clear that Biden approves of the criminal state attack on Assange. [Read More]
 
The State of the Union
(Video) "There Are Good Reasons to Defund the FBI. They Have Nothing to Do with Trump": Professor Alex Vitale
From Democracy Now! [August 16, 2022]
---- "Defund the FBI" is the growing call by Republicans after the FBI searched former President Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate. We get response from Alex Vitale, author of "The End of Policing," who lays out reasons to defund the FBI that have nothing to do with Trump. Vitale reviews the history of the FBI, which he says has "always been a tool of repression of left-wing movements," and calls the FBI investigation into Trump a "shortsighted" attempt to shut down some of the most extreme parts of the right wing. He uplifts efforts to "reduce the power and scope of the FBI in ways that limit their ability to demonize and criminalize those on the left." [Read More] Also of interest is Alex Vitale's article in Truthout, "There Are Good Reasons to Defund the FBI. They Have Nothing to Do With Trump."
 
Israel/Palestine
(Video) Palestinian NGOs Speak Out After Israeli Forces Raid Offices & Declare Them to Be "Terrorist" Groups
From Democracy Now! [August 19, 2022]
---- Israeli forces raided and closed the offices of seven Palestinian civil society rights groups in the occupied West Bank on Thursday, six of which Israeli authorities had designated as terrorist groups last year. The raid came as the United Nations condemned Israel for killing 19 Palestinian children in recent weeks, and 100 days after Israeli forces shot dead Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh while covering an Israeli military raid in the Jenin refugee camp. We speak to Sahar Francis and Brad Parker, with two of the human rights groups Israel raided. Parker, senior adviser for policy and advocacy at Defense for Children International – Palestine, describes how 100 Israeli soldiers gathered outside his organization's building before dozens broke into the offices to confiscate items and files, sealed the building and left behind notices declaring the organization unlawful. He calls the raid "part of a years-long campaign to delegitimize and essentially criminalize the work that we do to expose grave violations against Palestinians at the hands of Israeli authorities." In Ramallah, Sahar Francis of Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association says the attack "aims to silence us." [See the Program].  Also of interest is "UN, Britain Denounce Israeli Jackboot Assaults on Offices of Palestinian Human Rights Organizations," b[Link].
 

Sunday, August 14, 2022

CFOW Newsletter - Focus on the Climate Crisis

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
August 14, 2022
 
Hello All – Much of the world is on fire.  Some corners of our world are wracked by drought, others by torrential rainfall and flooding.  There can no longer be any question about when the world will be hit by the Climate Crisis – it has arrived. And so we welcome the passage of the "Inflation Reduction Act" – At last! – a re-branded version of watered-down Green New Deal legislation.  Will this be enough to save us from climate disaster?  What more do we need?  And how can we get it?
 
The new legislation will invest $369 billion in energy projects that will promote renewable energy and cut costs to consumers.  It will also make significant investments in affordable health care.  To pay for all this, the legislation will add some new taxes on the wealthy. The legislation's supporters say that reductions in greenhouse gases envisioned in the bill's projects will go a long way toward meeting goals that will keep global temperature increases short of disaster. Perhaps.
 
Despite the large federal investments now passing into law, it is clear that in terms of what needs to be done, and what must be done to ensure "climate justice" to historically neglected communities, the legislation falls far short of what is needed.  Yet the money to do what needs to be done is there. Congress is now passing a military budget for next year that will exceed $800 billion, and which includes tens of billions more dollars that even the Biden administration is requesting. This illustrates the basic fallacies of our national obsession with "military security" at the expense of "human security."  The reasons for this failure are many, not least the lobbying by giant military contractors.  To achieve real progress in avoiding the looming dangers of our Climate Crisis, our national religion of war and militarism must be ended. There is no other way.
 
News Notes
The Democratic primary election is on August 23, and early voting has begun.  In the race to represent congressional district 16, CFOW is supporting the incumbent, Rep. Jamaal Bowman.  While there is no polling (available to us, anyway), his main challenger appears to be Vedat Gashi, a county legislator from the Yorktown area who was recently endorsed by former congressional representatives Eliot Engel (whom Bowman defeated two years ago) and Nita Lowey. This week controversy arose over a mailing from Gashi that depicted Bowman as a much blacker man that in real life.  This traditional campaigning trick, and the campaign itself, are discussed in this useful article from The Intercept.
 
Another article from The Intercept focuses on the campaign of State Sen. Allexandra Biaggi to defeat Democratic congressional leader Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney in the Democratic primary for CD 17, currently held by Rep. Mondaire Jones but radically redistricted.  Read "Cops Spend $400,000 to Save House Democrats' Campaign Chair," by Akela Lacy here.
 
National voter surveys are reflecting the looming crisis in rental housing, as thousands of tenants are facing eviction and thousands simply cannot afford the rent of what's on the market.  Read this useful summary, "Voters Demand Biden Take Action to Address 'National Crisis' of Rising Housing Costs," by Julia Conley, here.
 
CFOW Nuts & Bolts
Please consider getting involved with Concerned Families of Westchester.  Weather permitting, we meet for a protest/rally each Saturday in Hastings, at 12 noon at the VFW Plaza (Warburton and Spring St.)  A "Black Lives Matter/Say Their Names" vigil is held each Monday from 5:30 to 6:00 pm in Yonkers at the intersection of Warburton Ave. and Odell. To learn about our new project, "Beauty as Fuel for Change," go here; and to make a financial contribution to the project, go here. If you would like to join one of our Zoom meetings, each Tuesday and Thursday at noon, please send a return email for the link. Our newsletter is archived at https://cfow.blogspot.com/; and news of interest and coming events is posted on our CFOW Facebook page.  If you would like to 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 readers blend some smooth jazz with our cooler, end-of-summer weather.  The music is taken from the archive of "Café Society," New York City's first racially integrated night spot.  Not surprisingly, Café Society became a home to political radicalism as well as good music.  Check out this hour-long presentation about Cafe Society, including some music from Café stalwarts such as Teddy Wilson, Billie Holiday, Lena Horne, and more.  And perhaps you will also like this short video with Café regulars Lena Horne, Pete Johnson, Albert Ammons, and Teddy Wilson, "Boogie Woogie Dream." Enjoy!
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
CFOW Weekly Reader
 
Featured Essays
The Book Burning
By Salman Rushdie, New York Review of Books [March 2, 1989]
[FB - Salman Rushdie wrote the following in January 1989 after a public burning of copies of The Satanic Verses took place in Bradford, UK. Many demonstrations against the book took place in other locations. – News reports today say that Rushdie is no longer on a ventilator and is recovering from his injuries.]
----Muhammad ibn Abdallah, one of the great geniuses of world history, a successful businessman, victorious general, and sophisticated statesman as well as prophet, insisted throughout his life on his simple humanity. There are no contemporary portraits of him because he feared that, if any were made, people would worship the portraits. He was only the messenger; it was the message that should be revered. As to the revelation itself, it caused Muhammad considerable anguish. Sometimes he heard voices; sometimes he saw visions; sometimes, he said, the words were found in his inmost heart, and at such times their production caused him acute physical pain. When the revelations began he feared for his sanity and only after reassurances from his wife and friends did he accept that he was the recipient of the divine gift of the Word. The religion which Muhammad established differs from Christianity in several important respects: the Prophet is not granted divine status, but the text is. It's worth pointing out, too, that Islam requires neither a collective act of worship nor an intercessionary caste of priests. The faithful communicate directly with their God. [Read More]
 
The Stench of Neoliberalism
By Noam Chomsky, Resilience [August 11, 2022]
---- Noam Chomsky, the well-known linguist, author, and social critic, joins Asher Miller to discuss the failures and dominance of neoliberalism — which Chomsky describes as "class war" — since delivery of the Powell Memo 50 years ago. Chomsky responds to a critique of the political center and left for not developing viable alternatives to neoliberalism. Disagreeing, Chomsky discusses proposals developed by places like the Political Economy Research Institute (PERI) that he believes would meet the needs of the poor and working classes while tackling the climate crisis. [Read More]
 
Chomsky refers to "the Powell Memo," perhaps the flagship statement of neo-liberalism, written for business interests by Lewis Powell, who was subsequently appointed to the Supreme Court by President Nixon.  The "Memo" proposes a strategy by which pro-business interests should and could gain a more secure control of the state, defeating what conservatives at that time saw as the growth of a dangerous radicalism (Ralph Nader, civil rights, the "new left," etc.)  Read the Memo here; and you can also read about the context that produced Powell's Memo in this essay by former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich.
 
Europe's Energy Crisis May Get a Lot Worse
By David Wallace-Wells, New York Times [August 10, 2022].
[FBSanctions on Russia – the ultimate weapon in the Ukraine war – have begun to backfire on Europe and, to some extent, on the USA.  If US pressure to continue sanctions through the winter is rejected by some/many NATO countries, or if sanctions are recognized as a failed strategy, what will happen to US/NATO support for Ukraine?  Inquiring minds want to know. This article is a good outline of the possibilities.]
---- I don't think many Americans appreciate just how tense and tenuous, how very touch and go the energy situation in Europe is right now. For months, as news of the Ukraine war receded a bit, it was possible to follow the energy story unfolding across the Atlantic and still assume an uncomfortable but familiar-enough winter in Europe, characterized primarily by high prices. In recent weeks, the prospects have begun to look darker. ... I think there's been a gradual and growing recognition that we are headed into the worst global energy crisis at least since the 1970s and perhaps longer than that. It's increasingly clear that Vladimir Putin is using gas as a weapon and trying to supply just enough gas to Europe to keep Europe in a perpetual state of panic about its ability to weather the coming winter. Europe has been finding all the supplies that it can, but governments are realizing that's not going to be sufficient. There are going to have to be efforts taken to curb demand as well and to prepare for the possibility of really severe energy rationing this winter. I think now you're seeing — in terms of the efforts toward efficiency and rationing — some countries are more willing than others. If things become really severe this winter, I fear that you could see European countries start to look out for themselves rather than one another. [Read More]
 
War & Peace
Pelosi's Taiwan Visit Launched a New Era of Military Competition With China
By Michael T. Klare, The Nation [August 10, 2022]
---- Long before House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's plane touched down in Taiwan on August 2, relations between China and the United States had been on a downward spiral. The Biden administration had been working to encircle China with a network of hostile military alliances, while China had been increasing its aggressive military maneuvers in the East and South China Seas. Still, bilateral relations had not deteriorated to the point where it had become impossible for US and Chinese leaders to discuss cooperation on climate change and other vital matters, as Presidents Biden and Xi Jinping did in their teleconference of July 28. But Pelosi's visit produced a new chasm in the US-China relationship: From now on, all prospects for cooperation have been swept away, and all that remains is intensified military competition and increased risk of war. [Read More]
 
To Move Back From the Brink, Restart Nuclear Talks
By Daryl G. Kimball, Arms Control Association [August 11, 2022]email sharing button
---- Over the long course of the nuclear age, millions of people—from Hiroshima and Nagasaki to the United States, Russia, and around the globe—have stood up to demand meaningful action to halt arms racing, end nuclear weapons testing, reduce the number and role of nuclear weapons, and move toward the elimination of nuclear weapons. But without renewed public pressure and focused international demands for renewed disarmament diplomacy between Washington and Moscow, a dangerous, unconstrained global nuclear arms race is on the horizon. Already unsteady and dangerous relations between Moscow and Washington would become far worse.
Through the Cold War years, Soviet and American leaders from time to time responded to public calls for action to eliminate the nuclear threat and recognized the value arms control in creating more stable and predictable international relations. In the wake of the 1962 Cuban missile crisis, they began to work together to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons through the 1968 nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and to slow the arms race through a series of bilateral arms control and arms reduction agreements. These agreements constrained nuclear competition, reduced nuclear stockpiles, and reduced the threat of nuclear war. But there is no room for complacency. The nuclear weapons threat has not gone away. Nuclear competition is accelerating, and the danger of a conflict between nuclear-armed adversaries is growing. [Read More]
 
The State of the Union
(Video) Biden to End Trump-Era "Remain in Mexico" Border Policy; Immigrants Face Ongoing Trauma, Separation
From Democracy Now! [August 10, 2022]
---- The Biden administration says it is officially ending the controversial Trump-era "Remain in Mexico" policy that forces asylum seekers to wait in Mexico as their cases wind through court, often in grueling conditions for months or years. We speak to attorney and activist Efrén Olivares with the Southern Poverty Law Center's Immigrant Justice Project about the impact of this policy, as well as ongoing efforts to reunite families separated at the U.S.-Mexico border under the Trump administration's "zero tolerance" policy in 2018. Olivares represented some of the children and their parents, and wrote about them in his new book, "My Boy Will Die of Sorrow: A Memoir of Immigration from the Front Lines." [See the Program]. For Part 2 of this interview, (Video) "My Boy Will Die of Sorrow": Efrén Olivares on His Memoir of Family Separation Under Trump & Beyond," go here. Also very interesting is "The Secret History of the US Government's Family-Separation Policy," by Caitlin Dickerson, The Atlantic [August 7, 2022] [Link]
 
The Photographs of the Border
By Aviva Chomsky August 11, 2022
["We died in your hills, we died in your deserts, / We died in your valleys and died on your plains. / We died 'neath your trees and we died in your bushes, / Both sides of the river, we died just the same," Woody Guthrie sang in his 1948 classic "Deportee"]
---- While Guthrie's song referred to the bracero guest workers imported for California's harvests between World War II and the 1960s, the bracero program was just one incarnation of the uses of the US-Mexico border. In More Than a Wall / Más que un Muro, labor journalist and documentary photographer David Bacon offers a lavishly illustrated and politically rich bilingual compilation of photographs and oral histories (as well as Bacon's own historical and interpretive text) that serves as a fitting update to Guthrie's song. Many people are still dying in all those places, on both sides of the river/border, and not by chance. Their deaths are the result of the arbitrary and exploitative nature of US-Mexico relations, which pulses through the volume's narratives and photographs. [Read More].
 
(Video) The Chris Hedges Report: We Don't Need The CIA
---- The CIA, from its inception, carried out assassinations, coups, torture, and illegal spying and abuse, including of US citizens, many of which were exposed in 1975 by the Church Committee in the Senate and the Pike Committee in the House. Congress attempted to enact laws to curb the widespread criminal activity by the CIA. Senate and House intelligence oversight committees were created, and after the Iran-Contra scandal a statutory Inspector General at the CIA was appointed. But this oversight has largely collapsed following the attacks of 9/11 and the so-called war on terror. The activities of the CIA have once again reverted to the shadows. The CIA, at the same time, has transformed itself into a paramilitary organization, with its own armed units and drone program. The US allocates a secret black budget of about $50 billion a year to hide multiple types of clandestine projects carried out by the National Security Agency, the CIA, and other intelligence agencies, usually beyond the scrutiny of Congress. Chris Hedges and John Kiriakou discuss the CIA, how it has evolved, how it sees its mission, what it does, how it works, and the effects of its clandestine operations around the globe. [See the Program]
 
Israel/Palestine
Israel's Pyrrhic Victory in Gaza
ByAugust 14, 2022]
---- While U.S. support for the most recent Israeli assault on the Gaza Strip was more muted than usual, there was still no mistaking American backing for the bombing which left dozens of Palestinians dead and hundreds wounded. This attack stands out among many on Gaza as being particularly orchestrated and the timing, on the heels of Joe Biden's recent visit to the region, as well as the White House's statement that "the United States has worked with officials from Israel, the Palestinian Authority, Egypt, Qatar, Jordan, and others throughout the region to encourage a swift resolution to the conflict" raise the question of how deeply the Biden administration was involved in that coordination. … Much speculation has centered around the upcoming Israeli elections as the prime motivating factor for Lapid's insistence on attacking Gaza now. No doubt, this was a major part of Lapid's and Defense Minister Benny Gantz's thinking, as both men are vying to become Israel's next prime minister in November. But it may also be a case of "be careful what you wish for." While killing Palestinians in Gaza does tend to help in Israeli elections, it may be a pyrrhic victory for Lapid and Gantz [Read More].  Also of interest – "Israel's friends struggle to justify unprovoked attack that killed 17 children," byAugust 12, 2022] [Link].
 
AIPAC vs. Democracy
By Ruth Messinger and Mik Moore, The Nation [August 12, 2022]
---- The benefits of democracy in the United States have never been shared equally, despite ongoing rhetoric claiming otherwise. African Americans, women, some immigrant groups, the formerly incarcerated and other marginalized populations have, at different times, been denied equal citizenship. But for most Jews, liberal democracy in the US, designed both to protect vulnerable minorities and to provide avenues for the average citizen to shape their government, has been consistently great for us. We thrive under democracy and do badly under authoritarian regimes. American Jews don't agree on everything, but on this question we are largely aligned. US democracy is a system of government that we should want to protect and expand. So it has been outrageous to see some of the most politically engaged American Jews, including AIPAC and its allies, taking steps that effectively weaken our democracy by engaging in unlimited spending to overwhelm unaligned candidates, supporting candidates who are opposed to democratic laws and norms, and seeking to limit free speech if it is critical of Israel.  Let's start with the matter of unlimited spending. [Read More]  Also of interest – "How AIPAC went from Lobbying for Israel to quashing Progressives and backing Jan. 6 Insurgents," b[Link].