Friday, December 30, 2022

Beauty as Fuel for Change Exhibit Announcement

Concerned Families of Westchester declares this New Year Will Be Off To A Great Start And You're Invited!

The Beauty As Fuel For Change project is excited to announce its First Art Exhibition, Opening Sunday January 15, 2023, 2-5PM, and continuing Mondays-Fridays 8:30AM-4PM, January 16-February 17.  The exhibition will be at The Wenberg Family Art Gallery, Fonseca Center, Masters School, 49 Clinton Ave, Dobbs Ferry, NY.
 
Participants, inspired by the theme to create a better world through pathways into beauty, are joined by Masters School Art Students!
 
Masks are required at the Opening
Exhibitors: Deborah Ryan, Madge Scott, Isabella Bannerman, Monique Avakian, Nick Mottern, Janet Gerson, Susan Rutman, Barbara King, Ann Van Buren, Andrew Courtney, Carol Herd-Rodriguez, Paul Greco, Victoria Bugbee, Nadine Johnson, Clare Francis, Beth Fonfrias, Seth Tobocman, Sabrina Jones, Carlo Quispe, Paula Hewitt Amram, Peter Kuper, and Masters Art Students.

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Sunday, December 18, 2022

CFOW Newsletter - Free Whistle-Blowers for Peace, Daniel Hale and Julian Assange

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
December 18, 2022
 
Hello All – Two men who are behind bars this Christmas should go free. Both men – Daniel Hale and Julian Assange – are in prison for revealing secrets about our government's wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.  Both men are charged under the Espionage Act of 1917, a piece of law designed to crush dissent under the guise of guarding against spies.
 
Daniel Hale is a veteran of the US Air Force.  During his military service from 2009 to 2013, he worked in the US drone program, based in both Afghanistan and the USA. After leaving the Air Force, Hale became an outspoken opponent of the US targeted killings program, and of US wars. Hale bases his criticisms on his own participation in the drone program, which included helping to select targets based on faulty criteria and attacks on unarmed innocent civilians. To learn more about his case, his conditions in prison, and the efforts to free him, go to his website, https://standwithdanielhale.org.
 
Julian Assange is better known. He is a co-founder of WikiLeaks, and in 2010 he published hundreds of thousands of government documents leaked by US intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning. This is Julian Assange, now in prison in London, fighting extradition to the USA.  A co-founder of the internet platform Wikileaks, in 2010 Assange The publication of these documents cast light on war crimes committed by US military personnel in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as unsavory activities revealed by State Department diplomatic cables.  The documents were then picked up and published by news media around the world. If extradited to the USA and convicted of the charges against him, Assange faces 175 years in prison. In the UK, a vigorous campaign attempts to prevent Assange's extradition to the USA.  In the US, we are demanding that the Biden administration drop the charges against Assange.  More information about Hale and Assange can be found in the good articles linked below.
 
 Some reading about our captured whistle-blowers
 
Where the Heart Is [Afghanistan and Thinking of Daniel Hale]
By Kathy Kelly, Waging Nonviolence [December 16, 2022]
---- Whenever I visited Kabul, a U.S. surveillance blimp was always visible, hovering over the city and recording film footage of the streets below. Less visible but at times terrifyingly audible, weaponized drones constantly patrolled the skies, gathering surveillance to target people deemed a threat to the United States. Pilots and analysts working inside dimly lit trailers at bases in the United States would, when given the order, launch Hellfire missiles from Reaper drones, striking homes, villages, farms and   roadways. Drone attacks killed and maimed thousands of Afghan civilians and the surveillance was repeatedly so flawed that, according to a U.S. government document, over one five month period, 90% of Afghans killed by drones had been innocents, mistakenly identified as terrorists. Daniel Hale, a drone whistleblower who disclosed this information, is now serving a 45-month prison sentence at the Marion, Illinois federal penitentiary. Accused of stealing documents, he told the judge: "I am here because I stole something that was never mine to take — precious human life. I couldn't keep living in a world in which people pretend that things weren't happening that were. Please, your honor, forgive me for taking papers instead of human lives." [Read More]
 
Nearly Every War Has Been The Result Of Media Lies': Julian Assange, State-Corporate Media And Ukraine
By David Cromwell, Media Lens [UK] [December 14, 2022]
---- Julian Assange once observed that, 'Nearly every war has been the result of media lies.'For daring to publish evidence of US war crimes, Assange now sits in the high-security Belmarsh prison in London, at risk of being extradited to the US within the next few weeks. The prospects for a fair trial range from miniscule to zero. In a recent interview, WikiLeaks Editor-in-Chief Kristinn Hrafnsson told US journalist Glenn Greenwald that legal avenues in London to challenge Assange's unlawful extradition were being exhausted. What is needed now is, not recourse to a legal system that is subservient to power, but a political fight. … The Guardian recently joined with the New York Times, Le Monde, El PaĆ­s and Der Spiegel in publishing an open letter calling on US President Joe Biden to end Assange's prosecution. [Read More]
 
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 (winter schedule) on the first Monday of each month; the next vigil will be January 2nd, 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. (And for Susan Rutman's video of October 2022 in Vermont, 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!
The Rewards this week for Stalwart Readers raise up the world-class athleticism of "Double Dutch," a sport invented by girls on the streets of New York a half-century ago. As an introduction to the sport and its cultural world, here is a short video of an early famous group, "The Fantastic Four." The Fantastic Four are also featured in one of the first documentary films about Double Dutch, "Pick Up Your Feet" (1981); and their story was recently charted on an NPR Program. Double Dutch has grown and is now a sport with an audience and participants worldwide.  Here is a nice short doc about a contemporary group in Hartford, "Black Magic."  Enjoy!
 
The CFOW Newsletter will be taking a vacation.
The next issue will be sent out on January 8, 2023.
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
CFOW Weekly Reader
 
Featured Essays
How Neighbors in the Borderlands Fought Back Against Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey's Illegal Wall — and Won
By Ryan Devereaux, The Intercept [December 14, 2022]
[FB – This is an in-depth article about how a border community rallied to take on the Governor's idiotic plan to construct his own border wall by using shipping containers.  For a short video overview, go here.]
---- In late October, Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey began unloading thousands of shipping containers on the border in the Coronado National Forest to thwart a supposed "invasion." Topped with concertina wire and welded together, the nearly 9,000-pound boxes would be stacked two high on land where the retirees chop wood every winter, where they took their sons hiking and camping as kids, and where they still hike and camp to this day. In the early 2000s, they saw evidence of heavy migration through the area — discarded desert clothes, empty water jugs, trash — but it hadn't been like that in more than a decade. On October 26, two days after Ducey's project began, the Browns got in their truck and set off to see the shipping containers for themselves.  … No one knew if the contractors would try another night installation, but they were ready if they did. Instead, strangers and neighbors shared soup under the stars. At one point, Scott described how a wave of energy had rushed over her at dusk. Maybe it was just the hawk she had seen hovering over the now quiet work site, but it felt like it was something more. "I don't know," she said, "I just think that we won." The next morning, we awoke to frost on our tents. The desert was still. The governor's men did not return for work. They have not put down a container since. [Read More]
 
(Video) "Eve of Destruction"
---- Three years ago the South African Daily Maverick launched a project called Our Burning Planet, which focused on climate change and government incompetence.  A recent effort is the powerful music video "Eve of Destruction," a climate-focused updating of Barry McGuire's antiwar anthem from 1965. Added here for good measure is the latest from "Tom Tomorrow" - "Getting Warm in Here." The truth is out there.
 
Remembering Grace Paley
---- Last Sunday, December 11th, was the 100th birthday of the late Grace Paley, an icon of American literature and a stalwart in the US/World peace and justice movement. The Allen Ginsberg website has put together a comprehensive memorial to Grace, with links to writings and memoirs and some video. I was fortunate to work with Grace while on the staff of Resist in the 1970s; all the wonderful things said about her are true.  Here is a clip of her reading one of her stories, which I think captures her well. [h/t DM]
 
War & Peace
Military Spending Surges, Creating New Boom for Arms Makers
By Eric Lipton, et al., New York Times [December 18, 2022]
---- The prospect of growing military threats from both China and Russia is driving bipartisan support for a surge in Pentagon spending, setting up another potential boom for weapons makers that is likely to extend beyond the war in Ukraine. Congress is on track in the coming week to give final approval to a national military budget for the current fiscal year that is expected to reach approximately $858 billion — or $45 billion above what President Biden had requested. … Spending on procurement would rise sharply next year, including a 55 percent jump in Army funding to buy new missiles and a 47 percent jump for the Navy's weapons purchases. … The combination of the Ukraine war and the growing consensus about the emergence of a new era of superpower confrontation is prompting efforts to ensure the military industrial base can respond to surges in demand. The issue has become urgent in some cases as the U.S. and its NATO allies seek to keep weapons flowing to Ukraine without diminishing their own stocks to worrisome levels.  [Read More]  And more good news for the "merchants of death" – "US Weapons Makers Set to Profit as Japan Readies $320 Billion Military Buildup," by Kenny Stancil, Common Dreams [December 16, 2022][Link].
 
The Night Raids [Afghanistan]
[FB – This is an amazing in-depth article.  Not for the squeamish.  Check it out.]
---- On a December night in 2018, Mahzala was jolted awake by a shuddering wave of noise that rattled her family's small mud house. A trio of helicopters, so unfamiliar that she had no word for them, rapidly descended, kicking up clouds of dust that shimmered in their blinding lights. Men wearing desert camouflage and black masks flooded into the house, corralling her two sons and forcing them out the door. Mahzala watched as the gunmen questioned Safiullah, 28, and 20-year-old Sabir, before roughly pinning them against a courtyard wall. Then, ignoring their frantic protests of innocence, the masked men put guns to the back of her sons' heads. One shot. Two. Then a third. Her youngest, "the quiet, gentle one," was still alive after the first bullet, Mahzala told me, so they shot him again. Her story finished, Mahzala stared at me intently as if I could somehow explain the loss of her only family. [Read More]

The War in Ukraine
[FB – The focus for this week – the two articles below – addresses some of the difficult questions that arise in pushing for "negotiations" to end the Ukraine War.  Further down, I've linked several articles indicating a significant push from the US/NATO to escalate the war, as Ukraine carries out attacks in Russia itself.]
 
The Ukrainian Left View on the Prospects of Peace Negotiations
Lately, in the West, the sentiment on the prospects of a peaceful end to the war imposed on the Ukrainian people is heard more and more often. But are such negotiations possible, and who will benefit from them? And does Putin actually want peace? … People in the USA, European countries, and the rest of the world who want the beginning of peace negotiations should at least achieve an immediate end to the destruction of Ukrainian critical infrastructure by Russian missiles and the restoration of regular electricity and heat supply to the population. This requires introducing stricter sanctions against Russia, which will reduce its ability to produce such missiles, as well as providing Ukraine with more effective air and missile defense systems, reducing the effectiveness of Russian attacks. It would be worthwhile to convince the governments of the world to stop buying Russian oil and gas, to provide anti-missile defense systems and at least a couple of thousand industrial-grade electricity transformers to restore regular electricity, water, and heat supply (preferably with the repair crews for their installation) instead of wasting time talking about how the world needs to convince Zelenskyy of something. Only if this is done can we at least hypothetically expect that the interest of Ukrainians in peace negotiations will increase. [Read More]
 
America's Roving Goals for Ukraine
By Ted Snider, The American Conservative [December 13, 2022]
---- U.S. goals have shown signs of shifting. There have been three shifts, gradually growing, with the most significant almost imperceptibly whispered on December 7, when Secretary of State Blinken suggested for the first time that the "territorial integrity" part of Biden's vow may be flexibly open to interpretation. … That was the first shift. The Biden administration went from ruling out nudging Ukraine to negotiate to pushing Ukraine to negotiate. The second shift came only days later. … U.S. officials began to say that "they believe that Zelensky would probably endorse negotiations and eventually accept concessions, as he suggested he would early in the war." And that was the second shift. Western officials began suggesting that Zelensky compromise. … If that is so, it suggests the possibility that the U.S. and its NATO allies are shifting to a position of openness to the possibility of a ceasefire, one where Russia remains in Crimea and the area of the Donbas that it controlled prior to the war, with the final status of those territories negotiated at some later date. [Read More]
 
[FB]The US Supports an Expanding War
---- Last week the US announced programs to significantly increase the number of Ukrainian troops to be trained each month in Western Europe.  The US also announced that it would send "Patriot" anti-missile missiles to Ukraine, though it would take considerable time before they are operable.  Also announced is the establishment in Germany of a headquarters devoted to managing/supporting the Ukraine war, an indication that a long war is expected. -- Useful sources on the US buildup –unfortunately behind a New York Times pay wall – are "US Plans to More Than Double the Number of Ukrainian Troops It Trains in Germany" December 15, 2022] [Link]; and "Russia warns that it would 'undoubtedly' target U.S. Patriot air defense systems in Ukraine," [December 15, 2022] [Link].  Not behind a pay wall are two articles from Antiwar.com: "US Gives Tacit Support for Ukrainian Drone Attacks Deep Inside Russia," [December 11, 2022][Link]; and "NATO Chief Says Full-Blown War With Russia Is a 'Real Possibility' [December 11, 2022] [Link].
 
The Climate Crisis
The Keystone Pipeline Ruptures
By Heather Cox Richardson, Letters from an American [December 11, 2022]
---- The Keystone Pipeline ruptured Wednesday night near a creek in northern Kansas, spilling what its operator, TC Energy, says is about 14,000 barrels of oil. This is equivalent to about 588,000 gallons (an Olympic swimming pool holds about 666,000 gallons). TC Energy says the leak is now contained. This is the largest land-based crude pipeline spill in the U.S. in nine years. Although the Keystone Pipeline has leaked 22 times before this, this week's spill is bigger than all the others put together. … The leak recalls arguments over the extension of the Keystone Pipeline, known as the XL Pipeline, that right-wing Republicans made a symbol of what they considered an antigrowth attack on U.S. energy production by Democrats.  The second extension is the one that caused such a fuss. It was supposed to carry crude oil from Alberta to Kansas, traveling through Montana and North Dakota, where it would pick up U.S. crude oil to deliver it to the Gulf Coast of Texas. This leg crossed an international border, and thus the Canadian company building it needed approval from the State Department. [Read More]
 
Israel/Palestine
Israelis Have Put Benjamin Netanyahu Back in Power. Palestinians Will Surely Pay the Price.
[FB - Ms. Buttu is a lawyer and former adviser to the negotiating team of the Palestine Liberation Organization. Last year PBS did a very interesting program with Ms. Buttu about her experiences in Palestine.]
---- As the prime minister-designate, Benjamin Netanyahu, finalizes the formation of Israel's most extreme right-wing government to date, I, along with other Palestinians in Israel and in the occupied territories, am filled with dread about what the next few years will bring. Every day since the elections, Palestinians wake up with a "What now?" apprehension, and more often than not, there's yet another bit of news that adds to our anxiety. The atmosphere of racism is so acute that I hesitate to speak or read Arabic on public transportation. Palestinian rights have been pushed to the back burner. We Palestinians live knowing that a vast majority of Israeli politicians don't support an end to Israel's military rule over the West Bank and Gaza Strip or equality for all of its citizens. We are made to feel we are interlopers whose presence is temporary and simply being tolerated until such time as it is feasible to get rid of us. [Read More]
 
The Nakba Day Triumph: How the UN Is Correcting a Historical Wrong
---- The next Nakba Day will be officially commemorated by the United Nations General Assembly on May 15, 2023. The decision by the world's largest democratic institution is significant, if not a game changer. For nearly 75 years, the Palestinian Nakba, the 'Catastrophe' wrought by the ethnic cleansing of Palestine by Zionist militias in 1947-48, has served as the epicenter of the Palestinian tragedy as well as the collective Palestinian struggle for freedom. … May 15, 2023, UN Nakba Day represents the triumph of the Palestinian narrative over that of Israeli negationists. This means that the blood spilled during Gaza's March of Return was not in vain, as the Nakba and the Right of Return are now back at the center of the Palestinian story. [Read More]
 
Our History
How the Left Was Lost in the 1990s—but Found Its Way Again
By Naomi Klein, The Nation [December 12, 2022]
---- I came of age in the '90s, and my first steady job in journalism was as editor of a small left-wing magazine that subsisted on atrophying subscriptions and crashing arts grants and was, in those years, perpetually on the verge of publishing its last issue. … I often pictured us—the relatively small and marginal group that still identified as leftists in those days—as jamming our foot in the heavy door of history so that the full weight of neoliberal power would not succeed in slamming it shut completely. We bruised some toes in our efforts, but we did hold it open a crack. Just enough for a new generation to come along and kick it wide open.  [Read More]
 
(Video) "Lowndes County and the Road to Black Power": New Film on Radical Voting Activism in 1960s Alabama
From Democracy Now! [December 14, 2022]
---- We look at "Lowndes County and the Road to Black Power," a remarkable new documentary that shows how a small rural community in Alabama organized during the civil rights movement to challenge white supremacy and systematic disenfranchisement of Black residents, and would become, in some ways, the first iteration of the Black Panther Party. Lowndes County went from having no registered Black voters in 1960 — despite being 80% Black — to being the birthplace in 1965 of the Lowndes County Freedom Organization, a radical political party that brought together grassroots activists and members of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. [See the Program]

Sunday, December 11, 2022

CFOW Newsletter - Focus on a "Christmas Truce" for the Ukraine war

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
December 11, 2022
 
Hello All – Concerned Families of Westchester holds a peace vigil/rally each week in the center of Hastings.  Yesterday's vigil called for a Christmas Truce – a ceasefire – in the war in Ukraine.  The focus on a Christmas Truce was/is in support of a campaign by national peace organizations such as Code Pink and Peace Action, recalling the Christmas Truce of 1914, which interrupted fighting in the First World War. The agitation for a Christmas Truce is part of the broader worldwide effort to move towards negotiations, a ceasefire, and an end to the fighting in Ukraine.
 
Needless to say, the Christmas Truce of 1914 was a spontaneous move by the soldiers on both sides of the front line.  There was nothing "official" or 'authorized" about it; in fact, it terrified the high commands of all the armies. On Christmas Eve, English, German, and French soldiers left their trenches and met in "no-man's land."  For several days, enemy soldiers put down their guns and mingled to become friends.  They played football (soccer), ate meals together, and sang Christmas carols.  This symbol of hope and courage sadly came to an end, and the soldiers returned to their trenches to resume almost four more years of trying to kill each other.
 
Yet the Christmas Truce of 1914 remains in our historical memory as an inspiration for peace action in the midst of war. As is evident from the mainstream news and the articles linked below, "negotiations" is now an idea to be discussed, even if it is rejected by the Politicians and Generals who lead us into battle.  But the way out of the war in Ukraine will not be through military power.  Neither side is capable of achieving its goals on the battlefield.  And the war itself is creating chaos through much of the world. It has to stop; and stopping begins with negotiations and a ceasefire. 
 
Some perspectives on ending/not ending the Ukraine war
 
Next To Starting a War The Worst Thing Is To Keep It Going
By David Mandel, The Socialist Project [Canada] [December 6, 2022]
---- Once the war began, the humanist position is to demand a rapid, negotiated end to it in order to minimize the loss of life and socio-economic infrastructure. For after starting a war, the most reprehensible act is to keep it going when there is no hope that continued fighting can change the outcome. [Read More]
 
(Video) "Russia Is Losing the War":
From Democracy Now! [December 8, 2022]
---- We go to Moscow and speak with Russian dissident Boris Kagarlitsky, who says war fatigue is sweeping Russian society. "It will end badly for us in Russia," says Kagarlitsky, who adds that Russian elites are increasingly uncomfortable. "Russia is losing the war, and Russia is going to lose the war inevitably." [See the Program]
 
News Notes
The homecoming of basketball star Brittney Griner is great thing; it also offers one of those slilces-of-life that opens up some of the deeper currents of life in the USA. "A Vindication for Agitation: Brittney Griner Is Coming Home" by The Nation's sportswriter Dave Zirin has some interesting insights race and gender and sports in the Homeland.
 
You might not see it on US mainstream media, but on Aljazeera and (I suspect) much of the rest of the world the Palestinian flag is omnipresent at the World Cup games in Qatar. What is this about?  In "On 'Hate' and Love at the World Cup: Palestine is More Than An Arab Cause," Ramzy Baroud drills down on this interesting question. [Link].
 
We are familiar with Juan GonzĆ”lez for his decades as the co-host on Democracy Now!  But Juan's day job has been/is being a premier NYC journalist, writing for the New York Post. Now, at the age of 75, Juan is leaving NYC for Chicago, where his wife holds a teaching position.  Of great interest, therefore is his valedictory talk given last week at the Columbia School of Journalism, (Video) "Reflections on 40 Years of Fighting for Racial and Social Justice in Journalism."
 
Last week we lost anti-Vietnam War stalwart Don Luce, dying at the age of 88. Unlike most of us, Don opposed the Vietnam War from within Vietnam itself.  According to his obituary in The New York Times,  "His relentless campaign against the war and his exposure of South Vietnam's "tiger cages" [tiny prison/torture cells] were instrumental in turning the American public and Congress against the war." He was expelled from Vietnam in 1971; in reporting his expulsion, Time magazine said, "Don Luce is to the South Vietnamese government what Ralph Nader is to General Motors." Don Luce, presente!
 
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 (winter schedule) on the first Monday of each month; the next vigil will be January 2nd, 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. (And for Susan Rutman's video of October 2022 in Vermont, 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!
This week's Rewards for stalwart readers focus on that great USA contribution to world culture – Underground Comix – as we remember Aline Kominsky-Crumb, who died two weeks ago.  Part of her fame stems from her marriage to that titan of comic-art, R. Crumb; and their relationship can be glimpsed (in part) in the wonderful, full-length film "Crumb."  "Trailblazing Funny Woman" is the title of an interesting write-up in The New Yorker, while the memorial in The Gutter Review ("Lived a Bunch, Loved a Bunch: Remembering Aline Kominsky-Crumb") has many pictures; and there are lots of her pictures and comix on-line; enjoy!
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
CFOW Weekly Reader
 
Featured Essays
Noam Chomsky: "We're on the Road to a Form of Neofascism"
An interview with C. J. Polychroniou, ZNet [December 9, 2022]
Q. "What's the actual connection between neoliberalism and neofascism?"
Chomsky: The connection is drawn clearly in the first two sentences of the question. One consequence of the neoliberal social-economic policies is collapse of the social order, yielding a breeding ground for extremism, violence hatred, search for scapegoats — and fertile terrain for authoritarian figures who can posture as the savior. And we're on the road to a form of neo-fascism. … One component of the policies was a form of globalization that combines extreme protectionism for the masters with search for the cheapest labor and worst working conditions so as to maximize profit, leaving decaying rust belts at home. These are policy choices, not economic necessity. … The ground is well prepared for the rise of neofascism to fill the void left by unremitting class war and capitulation of the mainstream political institutions that might have combated the plague. … As the class war intensifies, the basic logic of capitalism manifests itself with brutal clarity: We have to maximize profit and power even though we know we are racing to suicide by destroying the environment that sustains life, not sparing ourselves and our families. [Read More]
 
(Video) A Life in Struggle: Exclusive with Leila Khaled, Icon of Palestinian Resistance [50 minutes]
From BreakThrough News [December 6, 2022]
---- BT's Rania Khalek sat down with Palestinian icon and revolutionary Leila Khaled in Beirut, Lebanon to discuss her life and participation in the Palestinian struggle for liberation. [See the Program] With her family, Leila Khaled fled Palestine for Lebanon in 1948 at the age of 4.  In 1969, at the age of 25, she hijacked a plane.  She did it again a year later.  Leila Khaled – get to know this stalwart of the Palestinian resistance.
 
Nancy Fraser's Lessons From the Long History of Capitalism
By Rhoda Feng, The Nation [November 29, 2022]
----- Theories of capitalism have always also been theories of crisis. John Maynard Keynes linked the instability of capitalism to the instability of aggregate demand, and Marxist thinkers like Rosa Luxemburg pointed out that capitalism depends on noncapitalist markets to survive but disavows and destroys them. In her new book, Cannibal Capitalism: How our System is Devouring Democracy, Care, and the Planet and What We Can Do About It, Nancy Fraser—one of the best-known feminist political theorists working today—advances a similar argument but adds that capitalism should be viewed as an "institutionalized societal order" on par with feudalism. She calls for a broader understanding of capitalism that isn't exclusively focused on private property, the means of production, wage labor, and accumulation. Just as we need an expanded view of capitalism, so too, she argues, do we need a broader conception of socialism. [Read More]
 
There Is No "Migrant Crisis": It's the bordered logic of global apartheid itself.
By Harsha Walia, Boston Review [November 16, 2022]
[FB – Harsha Walia is the author of the imo very interesting book, Border and Rule: Global Migration, Capitalism, and the Rise of Racist Nationalism.]
 ---- To be a modern nation-state in a state-centric world presupposes the necessity of a secured border. Borders maintain hoarded concentrations of wealth accrued from colonial domination while ensuring mobility for some and containment for most—a system of global apartheid determining who can live where and under what conditions. … We are witnesses to the horrific impacts of this categorization and control of people. Suffocation in the back of cargo trucks in Texas and Arizona, dehydration in blistering heat in the Horn of Africa's eastern corridor, unmarked graves in the Sonoran and Sahara deserts, deadly pushbacks of migrant caravans in Melilla and Croatia, and wet cemeteries throughout the Mediterranean are the deathscapes of borders' victims. [Read More]
 
War & Peace
'War Is Over, If You Want It': US Can End Its Complicity in Horrendous Yemen War Today
By Kevin Martin, Common Dreams [December 9, 2022]
---- Over 400,000 Yemenis have perished since the war broke out in 2014, making it the world's worst humanitarian catastrophe, according to the United Nations. Partisan loyalty cannot be allowed to override the suffering of the people of Yemen. Biden has had plenty of time to shut this war down, and has failed to do so. Congress must act, and is on solid ground in terms of its Constitutional authority. … Today, we can get Congress to pass a War Powers Resolution to end US complicity in Yemen's catastrophe. Congress already did so in 2019. President Trump then vetoed it, and the vote to override the veto failed. Since then, thousands more Yemenis have suffered and died. President Biden's pledge to end "offensive" weapons transfers to the Saudi-led coalition soon after taking office was insufficient to end the war. A mostly successful truce earlier this year recently expired, and violence has escalated. The time for more definitive action is now. [Read More]
 
Dismantling Racism and Militarism In US Foreign Policy
---- The major challenges facing Americans today—pandemic disease, climate change, economic inequality, racial and gender injustice—cannot be solved without international solidarity and human compassion. The prevailing, militaristic conception of "national security" is steeped in racism and perpetuates white supremacy. The Racism-Militarism Paradigm is a way of looking at the world, widely shared among the U.S. policymaking community and much of the public, which arises from a largely unacknowledged doctrine of white supremacy and the necessity of using violence to uphold it. This paradigm establishes a rigid hierarchy, based on race, that values white lives more than any other—at home and abroad. It embraces militarism as the most effective mechanism to guarantee this ordering of society and the world. [Read More]
 
The Climate Crisis
The US is a rogue state leading the world towards ecological collapse
By George Monbiot, The Guardian [UK] [December 9, 2022[
---- There are two extraordinary facts about the convention on biological diversity, whose members are meeting in Montreal now to discuss the global ecological crisis. The first is that, of the world's 198 states, 196 are party to it. The second is the identity of those that aren't. One is the Holy See (the Vatican). The other is the United States of America. This is one of several major international treaties the US has refused to ratify. … While others play by the rules, the most powerful nation refuses. If this country were a person, we'd call it a psychopath. As it is not a person, we should call it what it is: a rogue state. … Thanks to such failures of care over many years, we now approach multiple drastic decision points, at which governments must either implement changes in months that should have happened over decades, or watch crucial components of civic life collapse, including the most important component of all: a habitable planet. In either case, it's a cliff edge. [Read More]
 
Radical tactics are likely to help the climate movement, not hurt it
By James Ozden, Waging Nonviolence [December 8, 2022]
---- Radical actions across the climate movement are gaining popularity. From Just Stop Oil in the U.K. to Save Old Growth in Canada to Letzte Generation in Germany, there is a wave of activists employing increasingly disruptive tactics to demand climate action. These tactics include throwing soup at a Van Gogh painting, going on a hunger strike and blocking motorways during rush hour. Why are people resorting to these tactics? … Despite the noble goals, the public doesn't tend to like these protests. Activists often hear the words "I support your cause, but not how you're going about this." That is quite understandable — most people don't enjoy having their lives disrupted. However, even with a high level of public disapproval, activists are convinced that these radical tactics are necessary and effective. To understand why they think this, we'll have to look at some previous cases of successful social change, as well as some relevant academic evidence.  [Read More] Also of interest is this segment from Aljazeera's program "Generation Change"(Video) "What is legitimate protest?" [December 11, 2022] [Link].
 
Civil Liberties/"The War on Terror"
GuantƔnamo's First 7,627 Days - Will America's Forever Prison Finally Close on Biden's Watch?
By Karen J. Greenberg, Tom Dispatch [December 8, 2022]
---- As of December 8, 2022, GuantĆ”namo Bay detention facility — a prison offshore of American justice and built for those detained in this country's never-ending Global War on Terror — has been open for nearly 21 years (or, to be precise, 7,627 days). Thirteen years ago, I published a book, The Least Worst Place: Guantanamo's First 100 Days. It told the story of the military officers and staff who received the prison's initial detainees at that U.S. naval base on the island of Cuba early in 2002. Like the hundreds of prisoners that followed, they would largely be held without charges or trial for years on end. Ever since then, time and again, I've envisioned writing the story of its ultimate closure, its last days. … There is no way to fathom the harm caused by the torture, cruel treatment, legal limbo, injustice, and dehumanization that has become the definition of GuantĆ”namo. But for the first time in all these years, its actual closure might realistically be on the horizon. One can always hope, right? [Read More]
 
The State of the Union
"Fascism never disappears because people come to their senses" – Robin D. G. Kelley on the midterm elections
An interview with Deborah Chasman, Boston Review [November 21, 2022]
---- Every racial regime in the United States is an expression of class power. Trumpism has always been fragile because its ideological foundations are based on the deceptions Cedric [Robinson] identified in Forgeries of Memory and Meaning (2007): the myths of white patrimony, patriotism, nationalism, non-white inferiority, shored up by exploited and oppressed white people who believe they will one day get a larger share of the pie. … I understand why many are happy that the Democrats did surprisingly well in the midterms; it is important that the Democrats held the Senate and the basic protection of reproductive rights sailed to victory in many states. But that was not the result of a sudden, rapid diminishing support for emergent fascism or some wholesale abandonment of Trumpist ideas (which, by the way, are not really Trump's but have circulated for decades). It was the result of all the hard work and mobilizing to get out Democratic votes, to resist voter suppression at every turn, to raise money, to outmaneuver the right. And still, most of these races were exceedingly close, and Democrats did not always prevail. [Read More]
 
(Video) Supreme Court Weighs Voting Rights Case Based on Fringe Theory That Could Upend Democracy
From Democracy Now! [December 8, 2022]
---- The Supreme Court is considering a North Carolina redistricting case that could have far-reaching implications for voting rights in the 2024 election and beyond. At stake in Moore v. Harper is whether North Carolina Republican lawmakers had the authority to overturn a state Supreme Court ruling that redrew the state's congressional map due to partisan gerrymandering. The plaintiffs want the Supreme Court to embrace the notion of "independent state legislature theory," a radical conservative reading of the Constitution that claims state lawmakers have sweeping authority to override courts, governors and state constitutions. [See the Program]
 
Israel/Palestine
'Deliberate Ambiguity': Israel's Nuclear Weapons Are Greatest Threat to Middle East
---- As western countries are floating the theory that Russia could escalate its conflict with Ukraine to a nuclear war, many western governments continue to turn a blind eye to Israel's own nuclear weapons capabilities. Luckily, many countries around the world do not subscribe to this endemic western hypocrisy. 'The Conference on the Establishment of a Middle East Zone Free of Nuclear Weapons and Other Weapons of Mass Destruction' was held between November 14-18, with the sole purpose of creating new standards of accountability to be applied equally to all Middle Eastern countries. [Read More]  Also of interest – "Israel's Nuclear Weapons 'Deliberate Ambiguity'," by Judith Deutsch, Counterpunch [] [Link]
 
Our History
The revolutionary pacifism of A.J. Muste: On the backgrounds of the Pacific War
By Noam Chomsky, Liberation Magazine [1971]
FB – Wednesday, December 7th, was the anniversary (1941) of the Japanese attack on the US naval base at Pearl Harbor, triggering the US declaration of war. (It was also Chomsky's 94th birthday.)  Reading this article for a writing project in the late 1980s, it challenged and changed what I thought I knew about WWII in the Pacific.
---- Introductory Comment by Chomsky: "The title and subtitle of this essay may seem unrelated; hence a word of explanation may be useful. The essay was written for a memorial number of Liberation which, as the editor expressed it, "gathered together a series of articles that deal with some of the problems with which A.J. struggled." I think that Muste's revolutionary pacifism was, and is, a profoundly important doctrine, both in the political analysis and moral conviction that it expresses. The circumstances of the anti-facist war subjected it to the most severe of tests. Does it survive this test? When I began working on this article, I was not at all sure. I still feel quite ambivalent about the matter. [Read More]