Sunday, March 26, 2023

CFOW Newsletter - Focus on some truths about the climate crisis

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
March 26, 2023
 
Hello All – While California is buried in snow and millions of "climate refugees" scramble to find food and shelter, the United Nation's watchdog on the climate crisis has issued its "Sixth Assessment Report."  Thousands of climate scientists, networked in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, have created a climate assessment that had to be acclaimed by a consensus of the world's nation states – i.e., Saudi Arabia and other oil-dependent states had to go along. Thus, this is a conservative document.
 
The Report strives to find rays of optimism in an increasingly dark and stormy picture of our future world.  The bottom line is that the agreed-upon red line for global warming – an increase in the world's temperature of 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial temperatures – must be maintained. Surpassing this red line would mean a volatile, unstable climate.  Yet, as has been known for at least a decade, the likelihood of achieving this goal has been slim; and it now appears that the barrier will be broken soon. After that, rising temperatures may be irreversible and unstoppable.
 
The article by climate scientist Kevin Anderson linked below illuminates one part of the tragedy that has been unjustly ignored.  Much of the controversy at recent climate conferences has been the consequence of the great inequalities of wealth and levels of development among the world's nations.  In essence, the poorer nations of the world can only develop a reasonable standard of living, while the world remains limited to warming no more than 1.5 degrees, if the industrialized parts of the world are willing to reduce our own standards of consumption.  This of course is inconceivable, given our current political horizons. Moreover, as Anderson maintains, continued world inequality has been built into the work of the UN climate scientists, who are overwhelmingly themselves from the wealthier countries.  Our salvation, therefore, lies not only with advances in technology and social arrangements far in advance of what now seems possible, but in a worldwide revolution of values that also seems unimaginable.  Yet abandoning the struggle to maintain what we value in our civilization is also unimaginable.  We can't give up.
 
  Some useful reading on the depths of the climate crisis
 
Facing Up to the Climate Reckoning Ahead
By Samuel Miller McDonald, The Nation [March 24, 2023]
---- The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change recently released the "summary for policymakers" section of the group's forthcoming Synthesis Report, the final portion of its massive Sixth Assessment Report. Two messages in particular have stood out in both media coverage and the report itself. The 1.5 degrees C warming threshold scientists say is the line between relative stability and extreme volatility—which may be irreversible—is more likely than not to occur within around five years, even under scenarios positing very low carbon emissions. This has accompanied the urgent message that there's still time to avert calamity. … Are world leaders likely to reverse their historical behavior in the next few years? Given this grim pattern of noncompliance, it does not seem prudent to rely on them. It may even be reasonable to assume that the COPs have prevented meaningful action by providing world leaders the appearance of acting while avoiding doing anything of substance. [Read More]
 
IPCC's conservative nature masks true scale of action needed to avert catastrophic climate change
By Kevin Anderson, The Conversation [March 24, 2023]
---- For over two decades, the IPCC's work on cutting emissions (what experts call "mitigation") has been dominated by a particular group of modellers who use huge computer models to simulate what may happen to emissions under different assumptions, primarily related to price and technology. I've raised concerns before about how this select cadre, almost entirely based in wealthy, high-emitting nations, has undermined the necessary scale of emission reductions. In 2023, I can no longer tiptoe around the sensibilities of those overseeing this bias. In my view, they have been as damaging to the agenda of cutting emissions as Exxon was in misleading the public about climate science. [Read More]  Also useful on this topic is "How Scientists From the "Global South" Are Sidelined at the IPCC," by Christopher Ketcham, The Intercept [November 17 2022] [Link].
 
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 April 3rd from 5:30 to 6:00 pm in Yonkers at the intersection of Warburton Ave. and Odell. (Thereafter, the vigil will be held weekly.) 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 join one of our Zoom meetings, each Tuesday and Thursday at noon, please send a return email for the link. 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 come from two of my favorites.  First up is Teddy Wilson and his orchestra, with Billie Holiday.  I believe this is the first (1935) of their many wonderful collaborations.  Also this week, I found a new (to me) set from Tuba Skinny, playing at the French Quarter Fest (New Orleans) in 2018.  Enjoy!
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
CFOW Weekly Reader
 
Featured Essays
Prophesies, Then and Now: My Life at World's End
By Tom Engelhardt, Tom Dispatch [March 2023]
---- But more than 60 years later, it strikes me that we kids who had learned to "duck and cover" at school — to dive under our desks, hands over our heads (with CONELRAD warnings blaring from the radio on our teacher's desk) — in preparation for a Russian nuclear attack, already had a deep sense not of future promise but of doom to come. In those days, it wasn't that hard to imagine ourselves in a future devastated world returned to the Stone Age or worse. And at the time, I suspect that was hardly out of the ordinary. After all, there were, in a sense, mushroom clouds everywhere on the horizon of our lives to come. By 1962, America's victory weapon that, in two blinding flashes in August 1945, took out the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki to end World War II, had become a weapon (in other hands) of potential defeat. Everywhere in our lives there lurked the possibility that "we," not "they," might be the next victims of nuclear extermination. Consider it an irony indeed that our country's nukes would chase Americans through the decades to come, infiltrating so many parts of our world and our lives. [Read More]
 
I Am Haunted by What I Have Seen at Great Salt Lake
[FB – I have family in Salt Lake City, and have been hearing this story for years. Not emphasized in this powerful article is the fact that most of the water being diverted from Great Salt Lake is used for agriculture, mostly for hay and alfalfa (for cattle-meat), and that much of this is exported to China to feed their cattle. IMO this is a prime example of the way in which the private/corporate control of water is endangering us all. The author, Ms. Williams, is a writer who lives in Utah and grew up near Great Salt Lake.]
---- For 13,000 years, the lake has existed with no outlet to the sea, her large deposits of salt left behind through evaporation. Lately, evaporation from heat and drought accelerated by climate change, combined with overuse of the rivers that feed it, have shrunk the lake's area by two-thirds. A report out of Brigham Young University and other institutions earlier this year warned that if we do not take emergency measures immediately, Great Salt Lake will disappear in five years. … Great Salt Lake's death and the death of the lives she sustains could become our death, too. The dry lake bed now exposed to the wind is laden with toxic elements, accumulated in the lake over decades. On any given day, dust devils are whipping up a storm in these "hot spots," blowing mercury and arsenic-laced winds through the Wasatch Front where 2.6 million people dwell, with Salt Lake City at its center.  … Yet I do not believe Utahns have fully grasped the magnitude of what we are facing. We could be forced to leave. [Read More]
 
(Video) Worlds of Ursula K. Le Guin – [2019]
[FB – For many of us, the writings of Ursula Le Guin – especially The Left Hand of Darkness and The Dispossessed – opened new ways of thinking about how the world was and how it could be different.  You can see this excellent documentary film on the platform of "Kanopy," if you have a library card, for free.  Just follow the link.]
---- Best-known for groundbreaking science fiction and fantasy works such as A Wizard of Earthsea, The Left Hand of Darkness, and The Dispossessed, Ursula K. Le Guin defiantly held her ground on the margin of "respectable" literature until the sheer excellence of her work, at long last, forced the mainstream to embrace fantastic literature. Her fascinating story has never before been captured on film. [See the Film].
 
War & Peace
'Extremely Dangerous Escalation': Putin to Station Russian Nukes in Belarus
By Jessica Corbett, Common Dreams [March 25, 2023]
---- Russian President Vladimir Putin announced on state television Saturday plans to station tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus—an escalation anti-war campaigners had been warning about and that alarmed disarmament advocates and experts. The International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) "condemns this extremely dangerous escalation which makes the use of nuclear weapons more likely," the group declared in a series of tweets.  The deployment decision comes 13 months into Russia's invasion of Ukraine and after the United Kingdom this week revealed plans to provide the invaded nation with armor-piercing rounds containing depleted uranium (DU). [Read More]
 
The U.S. Is Not an Indispensable Peacemaker
---- Over the years, as America's foreign policy became more militarized and as sustaining the so-called rules-based order increasingly meant that the United States put itself above all rules, America appears to have given up on the virtues of honest peacemaking. We deliberately chose a different path. America increasingly prides itself on not being an impartial mediator. We abhor neutrality. We strive to take sides in order to be "on the right side of history" since we view statecraft as a cosmic battle between good and evil rather than the pragmatic management of conflict where peace inevitably comes at the expense of some justice. This has perhaps been most evident in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict but is now increasingly defining America's general posture.
 
War with China?
Useful this week are "Pentagon Leaders Say New Budget Will Help Prepare for War With China," by Dave DeCamp, Antiwar.com [March 23, 2023] [Link]; and "AUKUS Nuclear Submarines: Accelerating the Sleepwalking to War With China," by Joseph Gerson, Common Dreams [March 26, 2023] [Link].
 
War with Russia?
New this week, in addition to Putin's threat/plan to move nuclear weapons to Belarus, is an update on the Seymour Hersh story alleging US responsibility for the sabotage of the Russian "Nord Stream" gas pipeline to Germany: "Russia Calls for U.N. Investigation of Nord Stream Attack, as Hersh Accuses White House of False Flag," by Jeremy Scahill, The Intercept [March 25, 2023] [Link].  Those just tuning into this swamp might want to read "Conflicting Reports Thicken Nord Stream Bombing Plot," also by Jeremy Scahill, The Intercept [March 10, 2023] [Link].
 
The Climate Crisis
Biden Betrays Youth With Willow Project—and Breaks His Own Promise
From In These Times [March 2023]
---- Despite our generation saving Democrats year after year at the ballot box, despite the more than 650 million views on TikTok of mostly young people screaming to #StopWillow, the White House made a decision to throw a middle finger to our generation. Many are now throwing their hands up, proclaiming that government does not work, that Biden's choice to move forward with Willow is proof of the inadequacies of our government system. Biden's choice isn't a reason to give up on our government — it is only proof that the fossil industry is winning and that we must get serious about building the type of leverage and power that can compete with them. [Read More]
 
The Intertwined Food and Climate Emergencies: Culpability
[former president of Science for the People] [March 24, 2023]
---- Contrasting images come to mind when it comes to hunger and climate: the haunting silhouetted dance of death in Bergman's movie The Seventh Seal, the Last Supper scene with a blind Jesus, set to Handel's Hallelujah Chorus in surrealist director Luis Bunuel's Viridiana. Unfortunately, this image isn't fiction — "Scenic Eclipse Ultra-Luxury Ocean Cruising" to melting Antarctica offering "private degustation – 2500 recipes". Nigerian novelist Wole Soyinka speaks of the haywire loss of morality, a world in which UN Right to Food expert Jean Ziegler reported that a child under age ten dies of hunger every five seconds and the oligarchs of agri-food and finance decide every day who on this planet will die and who will live. This article is about loss of both morality and of thinking. [Read More]
 
Civil Liberties
US Progressives Stand Against 'Xenophobic' TikTok Ban
By Brett Wilkins, Common Dreams [March 23, 2023]
---- Civil and digital rights groups this week joined a trio of progressive U.S. lawmakers in opposing bipartisan proposals to ban the social media platform TikTok, arguing that such efforts are rooted in "anti-China" motives and do not adequately address the privacy concerns purportedly behind the legislation. The ACLU argues that, if passed, legislation recently introduced in both the U.S. House and Senate "sets the stage for the government to ban TikTok," which is owned by Beijing-based ByteDance and is used by more than 1 in 3 Americans. The Senate bill would grant the U.S. Department of Commerce power to prohibit people in the United States from using apps and products made by companies "subject to the jurisdiction of China" and other "foreign adversaries." [Read More] Also of interest is "Social Media Surveillance by the U.S. Government," by Rachel Levinson-Waldman, et al., The Brennan Center [January 7, 2022] [Link].
 
The State of the Union
Fear-Mongering Threatens a Plan to Build More Suburban Housing
By Mara Gay, New York Times [March 22, 2023]
---- In an insult to New Yorkers suffering from spiraling rents and home prices, both houses of New York's Democratic-controlled Legislature rejected an ambitious set of proposals from Gov. Kathy Hochul last week that would begin to address the crisis in available housing. The legislators appear to be capitulating to the panic of their suburban members, as well as a smaller but persistent group of NIMBYs who oppose development in New York City. Lately, those voices have proven stubborn. Some of the backlash to the effort to build more housing in the suburbs has evoked euphemistic language that might have brought a smile to a Southern segregationist in the era of "states' rights." [Read More] For some background, a report from the Furman Center, Ending Exclusionary Zoning in New York City's Suburbs looks useful. A report from the University of California-Berkeley found that 80 percent of US metro areas were more segregated in 2019 than in 1990 [Link].
 
(Video) Cop City: Judge Denies Bond to People Rounded Up in Mass Arrest for Opposing Police Training Facility
From Democracy Now! [March 24, 2023]
---- In Atlanta, a judge has denied bond for most of the people indiscriminately arrested at a music festival against the proposed "Cop City" police training facility in the Weelaunee Forest. Jailed since March 5, they are charged with domestic terrorism based on scant evidence like muddy clothes or simply being in the area at the time of the festival. We're joined by Micah Herskind, an Atlanta community organizer, who calls the charges "political prosecutions" and a blatant "attempt to repress this social movement that is trying to stop Cop City." [See the Program] To learn more, a useful website is https://defendtheatlantaforest.org/.
 
Israel/Palestine
Israeli protest movement must dismantle the foundations of society to be successful
By Rachel Beit Arie, Mondoweiss [March 26, 2023]
---- The Israeli protest movement against planned judicial reforms is entering its 12th week, with little sign of slowing down. The Netanyahu government has passed its initial plans, and the protest movement is redoubling its efforts with growing support from Jewish communities in the United States. In many ways, this is an extraordinary moment for Israel and Jewish communities' connection to it around the world. Still, in the midst of the struggle against the current government, we must remember that the root of the problem lies with the colonialist regime as a whole rather than bemoan a democracy that has never existed here. [Read More]
 
(Video) The Candidate and the Spy: James Bamford on Israel's Secret Collusion with Trump to Win 2016 Race
From Democracy Now! [March 24, 2023]
---- In his new book, Spyfail: Foreign Spies, Moles, Saboteurs, and the Collapse of America's Counterintelligence, investigative journalist James Bamford reveals that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu dispatched a secret Israeli agent to the United States in the spring of 2016 to help Donald Trump win the presidential election. The agent met with advisers to Trump and offered to share secret intelligence with the campaign against Hillary Clinton. Bamford's investigation finds that while American media fixated on Russia's role in swaying the 2016 election, Israeli interference was completely ignored. [See the Program].  Also of interest is Bamford's article in The Nation, "The Trump Campaign's Collusion With Israel" [Link].
 
Our History [The Invasion of Iraq]
(Video) War Made Easy: Norman Solomon on How Mainstream Media Helped Pave Way for U.S. Invasion of Iraq
From Democracy Now! [March 21, 2023]
----As we continue to mark the 20th anniversary of the U.S. invasion of Iraq, we look at how the corporate U.S. media helped pave the way for war by uncritically amplifying lies and misrepresentations from the Bush administration while silencing voices of dissent. Longtime media critic Norman Solomon says many of the same media personalities and news outlets that pushed aggressively for the invasion then are now helping to solidify an elite consensus around the Ukraine war. "In the mass media, being pro-war is portrayed as objective. Being antiwar is portrayed as being biased," he says. Solomon is author of War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death and the forthcoming War Made Invisible: How America Hides the Human Toll of Its Military Machine. [See the Program]
 
Also of interest re: the US invasion of Iraq – "20 Years of Iraq Denialism: The New York Times Continues to Get it Wrong on U.S. Empire," b [Link]; "Iraqis Deserve Justice in the Form of Reparations," by Noha Aboueldahab, Democracy in Exile [March 17, 2023] [Link]; and "The Architects of the Iraq War: Where Are They Now?," by Jon Schwarz, The Intercept [March 15 2023] [Link].
 

Sunday, March 19, 2023

CFOW Newsletter - The Iraq War 20 years later - What have we learned?

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
March 19, 2023
 
Hello All – Monday, March 20th, marks the 20th anniversary of the US war against Iraq.  Many Rivertowns resident will recall the petitioning and protests in the months before the war, culminating in the great million-person antiwar rally at the UN on February 15, 2003.  However, despite the worldwide protest of many millions that day, our government launched its illegal war a few weeks later. The war was illegal and immoral, a disaster, and we live with the consequences still.
 
In retrospect we see clearly that the antiwar protesters in 2003 were right and those who assured us that the war against Iraq was just and necessary were wrong.  History has revealed that the arguments for going to war were mainly based on lies about Iraq's "weapons of mass destruction." We will never forget this.
 
Nor was the war the easy victory predicted by the Bush administration; indeed, it lasted for many years with almost 5,000 US soldiers killed, tens of thousands wounded, and tens of thousands of veteran suicides.  The US war and war machine caused hundreds of thousands of "excess deaths" of Iraqi civilians. And the war cost at least $3 trillion.  (What else might that have provided us?)
 
On this, the 20th anniversary of the war against Iraq, let us pledge to redouble our efforts to stop the many wars now on-going, and to prevent future wars from taking place. Peace is possible.
 
  Some useful reading about the Iraq War
 
Who's in Control of How We Remember the Iraq War?
By Jeremy Earp, ZNet [March 17, 2023]
---- As mainstream U.S. media outlets pause to remember the U.S. invasion of Iraq, it's clear that there's a lot they hope we'll forget – first and foremost, the media's own active complicity in whipping up public support for the war. But the more you dig into mainstream news coverage from that period, as our documentary team did last week when we put together this five-minute montage from our 2007 film War Made Easy, the harder it is to forget how flagrantly news networks across the broadcast and cable landscape uncritically spread the Bush administration's propaganda and actively excluded dissenting voices. … The result was a barely debated, deceit-driven, headlong rush into a war of choice that would go on to destabilize the region, accelerate global terrorism, bleed trillions of dollars from the U.S. treasury, and kill thousands of U.S. servicemembers and hundreds of thousands of Iraqis, most of them innocent civilians. Yet two decades later, as we hurtle ever closer to potentially catastrophic new wars, there's been virtually no accountability or sustained reporting in mainstream news media to remind us of their own decisive role in selling the Iraq war. [Read More]
 
We Iraqis had survived Saddam Hussein. It was the US invasion that destroyed our lives
By Balsam Mustafa, The Guardian [UK] [March 17, 2023]
---- Twenty years ago, around this time, the US-led military operation to invade Iraq and topple Saddam Hussein's regime finally seemed inevitable for Iraqis. With it, the idea of leaving started to sink in. By leaving, I do not mean fleeing the country. That was not even an option. After the 1990s Gulf war, and the international sanctions that followed it, Iraqis were isolated from the rest of the world. For many, there was no exit. Leaving meant departing schools, universities or workplaces, saying goodbye to friends and colleagues, and moving to relatively safer places within the country, away from the areas targeted by strikes and bombings. But my parents decided to stay at home in Baghdad. … We did not anticipate the trajectory that Iraq would follow after the invasion. We shared some cautious optimism about a better future despite our mixed emotions towards the war. [Read More]
 
Iraqis Tortured by the U.S. in Abu Ghraib Never Got Justice
By Elise Swain, The Intercept [March 17, 2023]
---- Before the "shock and awe" invasion of Iraq launched and the contrived toppling of Saddam Hussein's statue, U.S. special forces, private contractors, and intelligence agents had begun sweeping up suspects in the new "war on terror." The brutalization of so-called enemy combatants was a well-established practice by the time American boots hit the ground in Iraq 20 years ago next week, and it would be carried onto Iraqi soil. Tens of thousands of Iraqis in the early years of the war would pass through interrogation and detention sites where CIA agents, military intelligence, military police, private contractors, special operation, and ordinary soldiers inflicted abuse that no longer gets cloaked by euphemisms: It was torture.  … As is the American playbook, those in the highest seats of power, who played dumb while making torture a matter of policy, evaded any accountability. No criminal court indictments, no personal or professional repercussions, no travel restrictions, and no sanctions would flow up the chain of command. [Read More]
 
The Not-So-Winding Road from Iraq to Ukraine
By Medea Benjamin and Nicolas J.S. Davies, Code Pink [March 15, 2023]
---- March 19th marks the 20th anniversary of the U.S. and British invasion of Iraq. This seminal event in the short history of the 21st century not only continues to plague Iraqi society to this day, but it also looms large over the current crisis in Ukraine, making it impossible for most of the Global South to see the war in Ukraine through the same prism as U.S. and Western politicians. …Today, nations in the Global South have overwhelmingly refused U.S. entreaties to send weapons to Ukraine and are reluctant to comply with Western sanctions on Russia. Instead, they are urgently calling for diplomacy to end the war before it escalates into a full-scale conflict between Russia and the United States, with the existential danger of a world-ending nuclear war. [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 April 3rd from 5:30 to 6:00 pm in Yonkers at the intersection of Warburton Ave. and Odell. 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 join one of our Zoom meetings, each Tuesday and Thursday at noon, please send a return email for the link. 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!
Stalwart readers are rewarded this week with a package of recordings by the amazing pianist Yuja Wang.  Within the world of classical music, she has emerged as a "rock star"; check out her renditions of George Gershwin's "Rhapsody in Blue," Dimitri Shostakovich's "Concerto No.1 for Piano and Trumpet," and Vladimir Horowitz's variations on gypsy dances from George Bizet's  "Carmen."  Enjoy!
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
The CFOW Weekly Reader
 
Featured Essays
Witness, Resilience, Accountability
An interview with Rabab Abdulhadi, Against the Current [March-April 2023]
[FB – Rabab Abdulhadi lives in Westchester and is a professor at San Francisco State University, where she developed the Arab and Muslim Ethnicities and Diasporas Studies (AMED) program.  She is also a member of JVP-Westchester.]
---- Last September, I co-organized with emergent scholars two international conferences and a delegation to Lebanon and Tunisia as part of our multi-year project, Teaching Palestine: Pedagogical Praxis and the Indivisibility of Justice. We focused in 2022 on the commemoration of the 40th anniversary of the September, 1982 Sabra and Shatila refugee camp massacres that took place after the Israeli invasion of Lebanon and the siege of Beirut. We also commemorated the 20th anniversary of both the Israeli invasion of Palestinian areas under Palestinian Authority (PA) control (at the height of the Aqsa Intifada), the 2002 Jenin massacre and the start of the Apartheid wall. … Teaching Palestine entails centering the voices and lived experiences of the marginalized who bear witness to radical changes taking place. This captures the sense that resilience is a major contributing factor to victories. These reciprocal solidarity trips highlight more than ever the need to seriously commit to justice-centered knowledge production. [Read More]
 
Hope Amid Climate Chaos: A Conversation with Rebecca Solnit
By Stella Levantesi, DeSmogBlog [February 21, 2023]
---- In Hope in the Dark you wrote that hope requires imagination and clarity, and in your latest essay published by the Guardian you said that every crisis is a storytelling crisis. … How do we reconcile these three dimensions: the climate crisis, imagination, and hope? And if we succeed in reconciling them what can that lead to?
Rebecca Solnit: I always feel it's very important to clear up the distinction between hope and optimism. For me, optimism is a form of certainty: everything will be fine, therefore, nothing is required of us, which is really the same as cynicism and pessimism and despair. Hope, for me, is just recognizing that the future is being decided to some extent in the present, and what we do matters because of that reality. I think the fundamental role of imagination and hope is just the ability to imagine a world that's different from what it is now. … I find that so many people around me are very good at imagining everything falling apart, everything getting worse; they're good at dystopia, they're bad at utopia. There are a lot of reasons why people find dystopia very credible and utopia or improvements hard to comprehend. I think some of that comes from amnesia. If you don't know how much the world has been changed, to some extent for the better, how much the climate movement has achieved, then you don't really have a picture of how change works either. [Read More]
 
War & Peace
Are We Manufacturing a Taiwan Crisis Over Nothing?
By Michael T. Klare, The Nation [March 17, 2023]
---- Is China really on the verge of invading the island of Taiwan, as so many top American officials seem to believe? If the answer is "yes" and the United States intervenes on Taiwan's side—as President Biden has sworn it would—we could find ourselves in a major-power conflict, possibly even a nuclear one, in the not-too-distant future. But what if the answer is "no," which seems at least as likely? Wouldn't that pave the way for the US to work with its friends and allies, no less than with China itself, to reduce tensions in the region and possibly open a space for the launching of peaceful negotiations between Taiwan and the mainland? How that question is answered has enormous implications for us all. Yet, among policy-makers in Washington, it isn't even up for discussion. Instead, they seem to be competing with each another to identify the year in which the purported Chinese invasion will occur and war will break out between our countries. [Read More]
 
(Video) China's Middle East Deal: Iran & Saudi Arabia Reestablish Relations as U.S. Watches from Sidelines
From Democracy Now! [March 13, 2023]
---- Iran and Saudi Arabia have agreed to reestablish diplomatic relations after seven years and reopen their respective embassies within months, in a deal brokered Friday by China and signed in Beijing. The rapprochement between the two rivals is the latest sign of China's growing presence in world affairs and waning U.S. influence in the Middle East amid a shift in focus to Ukraine and the Pacific region. "If we have a more stable Middle East, even if it's mediated by the Chinese, that ultimately is good for the United States, as well," says author and analyst Trita Parsi, executive vice president of the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft. He adds that the U.S. focus in the Middle East is mainly on helping Israel normalize relations with Arab states while "all of the pressure is taken off of Israel to end its occupation" of Palestinian territory. [See the Program]
 
Also of interest re: war & peace – "View from the Ukrainian Left," by Denys Bondar and Zakhar Popovych, Against the Current [March-April 2023] [Link]; "Biden Administration Splits on Prosecuting Russia for War Crimes in Ukraine," by Alice Speri, The Intercept [March 15, 2023] [Link]; "The Arctic is the next frontier in the new cold war," by Renate Bridenthal, Geopolitical Economy Report [February 28, 2023] [Link]; and "There's No Settlement of the War in Ukraine Without China," by Gilbert Achcar, The Nation [March 16, 2023] [Link].
 
The Climate Crisis
Biden just betrayed the planet – and his own campaign vows
By Rebecca Solnit, The Guardian [UK] [March 14, 2023]
---- The Willow project is an act of terrorism against the climate, and the Biden administration has just approved it. This massive oil-drilling project in the wilderness of northern Alaska goes against science and the administration's many assurances that it cares about climate and agrees that we must make a swift transition away from fossil fuel. … I call it an act of terrorism, because this drilling project in Alaska produces petroleum, which will be burned, which will send carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, where it will contribute to climate chaos that will affect people in the South Pacific, the tropics, the circumpolar Arctic, will affect the melting of the Greenland ice shield …. [Read More].  Also of interest is this program from Democracy Now!, "Climate & Indigenous Activists Decry Biden's Approval of Willow Oil Drilling Project in Arctic" [March 13, 2023] [Link].
 
Civil Liberties
(Video) Julian Assange's Father & Brother Speak Out on His Jailing, Press Freedom & New Documentary "Ithaka"
From Democracy Now! [March 17, 2023]
---- We continue our coverage of the 20th anniversary of the U.S. invasion of Iraq by looking at the imprisonment of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who has been jailed for exposing U.S. war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan. One video released by WikiLeaks showed a U.S. helicopter gunship in Baghdad slaughtering a dozen civilians, including a Reuters journalist. Assange has been held in London's Belmarsh prison since 2019 as he fights the U.S. campaign to extradite him to face espionage charges. If convicted, the publisher faces as much as 175 years behind bars. His legal fight is documented in the new film Ithaka that centers on Assange's father John Shipton, who has been crisscrossing the globe to raise awareness of the case and the danger it poses to press freedoms. We speak with Shipton, as well as filmmaker Gabriel Shipton, Julian Assange's brother and a producer of the documentary. [See the Program].   And for more information about the film, go here.
 
The State of the Union
Biden Has Now Embraced Republican Restrictionism on Immigration
By Gaby Del Valle, The Nation [March 16, 2023]
---- The Biden administration will soon implement a policy that will "encourage migrants to avail themselves of lawful, safe, and orderly pathways into the United States, or otherwise to seek asylum or other protection in countries through which they travel, thereby reducing reliance on human smuggling networks that exploit migrants for financial gain." One could be forgiven for thinking that this regulation, slated to go into effect in mid-May, expands access to the asylum process. In fact, it does the opposite. The new policy "encourages" lawful pathways by further criminalizing the most common existing pathways. Once the rule goes into effect, anyone who passes through another country on their way to the United States and crosses the border between official entry points will be deemed ineligible for asylum unless they applied for asylum in that other country first. There are a few exceptions, but the new policy will affect virtually all non-Mexican nationals who arrive at the border. [Read More]
 
It's a New Day in the United Auto Workers
By Luis Feliz Leon and Jane Slaughter, Labor Notes [March 17, 2023]
---- Nearly 80 years of top-down one-party rule in the United Auto Workers are coming to an end. Reformer Shawn Fain is set to be the winner in the runoff for UAW presidency. There are around 600 unresolved challenged ballots. (This story will be updated with the final vote tally when we have it.) "… Once Fain's victory is conclusive— after remaining challenged ballots are counted—he will join Secretary-Treasurer Margaret Mock, who ran on the Members United slate and won outright in the first round, and a majority of the International Executive Board, giving reformers control of the direction of the union. The UAW Members United slate won every race it challenged—a clear rebuke to the old guard. [Read More]  Also of interest is this interview with Shawn Fain, "Challenger Shawn Fain Set to Win UAW Presidency," In These Times [March 17, 2023] [Link].
 
Israel/Palestine
Do Palestinian citizens want a place in Israel's anti-gov't protests?
By Samah Salaime, +972 Magazine [Israel/Palestine] [March 13, 2023]
---- The Palestinian Arab public in Israel has had very mixed and complex feelings about the mass protests against the far-right government's plans to overhaul the judiciary. On the one hand, the hundreds of thousands of Israeli Jews filling city squares and streets every week have been surprisingly persistent, inspiring appreciation, reflection, and even a modicum of jealousy. On the other hand, it isn't easy for Palestinians to watch what appears like a nationalist Flag March washing over the country. … Seeing all this, three main camps of thought have emerged among Palestinian citizens on how to respond to the anti-government protests. [Read More]
 
Twenty years later, Rachel Corrie lives
By
---- Twenty years ago, on March 16, 2003, an Israeli military bulldozer crushed American solidarity activist Rachel Corrie to death a few kilometers away from my home in Rafah in the Gaza Strip. She was one of several International Solidarity Movement (ISM) activists trying to stop the demolition of Palestinian homes there. Israel's Prime Minister, Ariel Sharon, had launched a campaign to destroy thousands of Palestinian homes to establish a buffer zone on the Palestinian-Egyptian border. ISM activists arrived in the area to express humanitarian solidarity with civilians facing Israel's occupation machine. … The intentional killing of Rachel Corrie was a message of intimidation to solidarity activists, telling them to stop hindering Israeli soldiers during their daily ritual of house demolition and killing civilians. [Read More]  Of course the home demolitions continue: read "Number of demolitions by Israel of Palestinian property doubles," from Middle East Monitor [March 18, 2023] [Link].
 
Our History [Remembering Kenzaburo Oe]
(Video) Japanese Nobel Laureate Kenzaburo Oe on 70th Anniv. of US Atomic Bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
From Democracy Now! [August 6, 2015]
[FB – Kenzaburo Oe, a Nobel-prize winner for literature many years ago, and one of Japan's leading campaigners for peace, died this week [[Link]. Eight years ago Democracy Now! interviewed him in connection with the anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima.]
---- Seventy years ago today, at 8:15 in the morning, the U.S. dropped the world's first atomic bomb on the Japanese city of Hiroshima. Destruction from the bomb was massive. Shock waves, radiation and heat rays took the lives of some 140,000 people. Three days later, the U.S. dropped a second atomic bomb on the Japanese city of Nagasaki, killing another 74,000. President Harry Truman announced the attack on Hiroshima in a nationally televised address on August 6, 1945. Today, as the sun came up in Hiroshima, tens of thousands began to gather in Hiroshima's Peace Memorial Park to commemorate the world's first nuclear attack. We are joined by the acclaimed Japanese novelist and winner of the 1994 Nobel Prize for Literature, Kenzaburo Oe, whose books address political and social issues, including nuclear weapons and nuclear power. [See the Program] Also of interest is this interview from 2010, "Nobel Prize novelist Kenzaburo Oe talks about 'Hiroshiima'," [Link].

Sunday, March 12, 2023

CFOW Newsletter - Nuclear Power problems and dangers - Fukushima and Indian Point

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
March 12, 2023
 
Hello All – This weekend marks 12 years since the disaster at the Fukushima nuclear plant in Japan.  Along with the earlier disaster at Chernobyl in Ukraine, the destruction of the Fukushima plant and the resulting radiation leaks should have marked a turning point towards ending the use of nuclear power asap.  But they did not. More than 90 nuclear plants still operate in the USA, all but a few now nearing (or exceeding) their age limit, with the prospect of "decommissioning" (or closing down) the plants fast approaching.
 
As we are learning from the decommissioning of our own Indian Point plant, this is an expensive and difficult process, whose costs and dangers must be entered into the ledgers against the benefits of "cheap electricity."  In the case of Indian Point, the corporation charged with decommissioning plans to dump more than a million gallons of radioactive (tritium) water into the Hudson River.  A campaign to stop this has sprung up along the river: resolutions against the dumping have been passed by Westchester and Rockland Counties, and a similar resolution will be on the agenda at the next board of trustees meeting in Hastings.  Much still has to be done, however, to generate the groundswell of public opposition that will persuade a court to rule that the plan to dump irradiated water into the Hudson River is illegal.
 
Though the disaster at Fukushima dwarfs the decommissioning problems at Indian Point, they share the common danger of disposing of radioactive water.  The Japanese government intends to dump more than a million tons of radioactive water – now stored on-site at the nuclear plant – into the Pacific Ocean.  Needless to say, there is massive opposition to this in Japan.  Yet, as in the case of Indian Point, the cost of "safety-first" is deemed to be too high by those with the power to make decisions. In NYC on April 8th there will be a march and rally denouncing both of these dangerous plans. To learn more, go here.
 
  Some Useful Reading on Fukushima and Indian Point
 
Fukushima: Japan insists release of 1.3m tonnes of 'treated' water is safe
By Justin McCurry, The Guardian [UK] [February 14, 2023]
---- Almost 12 years have passed since the strongest earthquake in Japan's recorded history resulted in a tsunami that killed more than 18,000 people along its north-east coast. As the country prepares to mark the 11 March anniversary, one of the disaster's most troubling legacies is about to come into full view with the release of more than 1m tonnes of "treated" water from the destroyed Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. [Read More]
 
A Dozen Years after Fukushima, Nuclear Power is Still a Death Wish
---- A dozen years after four atomic reactors exploded at Fukushima, the plant STILL daily irradiates 150 tons of water which must be treated and stored forever. Thousands of tons more of such lethal liquid are still held in rotting tanks. The Japanese government wants to dump them in the Pacific, but local resistance is fierce. The build-up will continue for countless years to come, with gargantuan quantities of deadly liquid ever-readier to destroy our oceans. [Read More]
 
Experts explain how tritium in water impacts health and safety [Indian Point]
By Regina Clarkin, The Peekskill Herald [February 20, 2023]
---- With Holtec's announcement earlier this month that it plans to dump a million gallons of contaminated wastewater from the Indian Point nuclear power plant into the Hudson River sometime this summer, the latest Critical Public Health & Safety expert panel, organized by a coalition of environmental advocacy groups, took on new urgency amid calls for action on the part of citizens. A Thursday, February 16th seminar on Zoom featured three experts in the fields of medicine and science who walked the 265 viewers through the ramifications of radioactive hydrogen or tritium entering the water that is a drinking source for seven communities. … Visit here to learn more and listen to a recording of the session. [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 April 3rd from 5:30 to 6:00 pm in Yonkers at the intersection of Warburton Ave. and Odell. 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 join one of our Zoom meetings, each Tuesday and Thursday at noon, please send a return email for the link. 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 reward for Newsletter readers this week is a new album from Iris DeMent called Workin' on a World." The title song expresses what many peace & justice stalwarts feel in their hearts about what we do and how we feel about it.  Enjoy!
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
CFOW Weekly Reader
 
Celebrating International Women's Day [March 8th]
(Video) International Women's Day: Roots in Radical History, Labor & Reproductive Rights
From Democracy Now! [March 8, 2023]
[FB – This is the first part of a four-part DemNow program celebrating International Women's Day.]
---- March 8 marks International Women's Day around the world, seeking to end gender discrimination, violence and abuse. We start the show by looking at the day's roots in socialism, and what it means for the movement for reproductive justice in the United States. Our guest is Nancy Krieger, renowned professor of social epidemiology at Harvard University's School of Public Health and director of the Interdisciplinary Concentration on Women, Gender, and Health. She's also co-founder and chair of the Spirit of 1848 Caucus in the American Public Health Association, which links social justice and public health. [See the Program]
 
Also of interest – "Happy International Women's Day: a look back at over a century of the global fight for justice and equality," by Sarah Johnson, The Guardian [UK] [March 8, 2023] [Link]; and Temma Kaplan, "On the socialist origins of International Women's Day," Feminist Studies [1985) [Link].
 
Featured Essays
Why Poverty Persists in America
March 9, 2023]
---- For the past half-century, we've approached the poverty question by pointing to poor people themselves — posing questions about their work ethic, say, or their welfare benefits — when we should have been focusing on the fire. The question that should serve as a looping incantation, the one we should ask every time we drive past a tent encampment, those tarped American slums smelling of asphalt and bodies, or every time we see someone asleep on the bus, slumped over in work clothes, is simply: Who benefits? Not: Why don't you find a better job? Or: Why don't you move? Or: Why don't you stop taking out payday loans? But: Who is feeding off this? Those who have amassed the most power and capital bear the most responsibility for America's vast poverty: political elites who have utterly failed low-income Americans over the past half-century; corporate bosses who have spent and schemed to prioritize profits over families; lobbyists blocking the will of the American people with their self-serving interests; property owners who have exiled the poor from entire cities and fueled the affordable-housing crisis. [Read More]
 
The American War from Hell, 20 Years Later: How Washington Lost Its Moral Compass in Iraq
By Juan Cole, Tom Dispatch [March 9, 2023]
---- Who remembers anymore that, in 2003, we were Vladimir Putin? Today, our cable and social-media news feeds are blanketed with denunciations of the president of the Russian Federation for his lawless and brutal invasion of Ukraine. … Yes, it's true, on the 20th anniversary of the invasion of Iraq, that war is long forgotten here. No one in the Biden administration today cares that it ruined what credibility America had as a pillar of international order in the global south and gave Putin cover for his own atrocity. So, sit back for a moment and let me take you on a little trip into a long-lost all-American world. … In retrospect, on the 20th anniversary of the nightmarish decision to invade Iraq, we've lost more than our credibility in the Global South or a true commitment to international law. As a country, we lost our moral compass and now, amid Russian crimes in Ukraine, it seems that we have also lost all memory of the path we paved and the example we set in Iraq, as well as the crimes that went with it. [Read More]
 
Also of interest – "The False Promise of ChatGPT," by Noam Chomsky, et al., New York Times [March 9, 2023] [Link]; "The Hard Head and Wild Heart of Barbara Ehrenreich," by Sarah Jaffe, In These Times [March 7, 2023] [Link]; and (Video) "Life inside an MST landless workers' settlement in Brazil," bMichael Fox, ZNet [March 9, 2023] [Link].
 
War & Peace
Biden's new whopping $886B defense budget request
By William Hartung, Responsible Statecraft [March 9, 2023]
---- The Pentagon released its budget request for Fiscal Year 2024 today. The figure for the Pentagon alone is a hefty $842 billion. That's $69 billion more than the $773 billion the department requested for Fiscal Year 2023.  Total spending on national defense — including work on nuclear weapons at the Department of Energy — comes in at $886 billion. Adding in likely emergency military aid packages for Ukraine later this year plus the potential tens of billions of dollars in Congressional add-ons could push total spending for national defense to as much as $950 billion or more for FY 2024. The result could be the highest military budget since World War II, far higher than at the peaks of the Korean or Vietnam Wars or the height of the Cold War.  The proposed budget is far more than is needed to provide an effective defense of the United States and its allies. [Read More]
 
The Earthquake Has Left Syrian Kurds Even More Under Siege
By Kurtis Dengler and Debbie Bookchin, The Nation [March 8, 2023]
---- The February 6 earthquake that killed more than 50,000 people and injured more than 120,000 across southeastern Turkey and northwestern Syria has had a particularly devastating aftermath in the Kurdish communities in northern Syrian. Here, instead of trying to alleviate the suffering of their citizens, the governments of Turkey and Syria weaponized the crisis for their own political ends, particularly against the Kurdish people. This became painfully clear during our tour of three largely Kurdish areas.  … While people were cold and hungry, for two weeks the Assad regime refused to let a single truck of emergency aid into Sheikh Maqsoud. When we arrived on February 20, we passed a convoy from Heyva Sor, the Kurdish Red Crescent, including ambulances, medical workers, trucks full of food, tents, blankets, medicine, and heating fuel—all sitting on the side of the road. They had been there for a week, waiting for permission to cross. [Read More]
 
The War in Ukraine
What a Victory for Ukraine Should Look Like
By Anatol Lieven, Responsible Statecraft [February 22, 2022]
---- Differences are growing within the Biden Administration over what kind of victory for Ukraine the United States should support. On the outcome of these discussions could depend not only the outcome of the war in Ukraine, but even conceivably the future of humanity. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken has described a Ukrainian attempt to retake not just the Ukrainian territories seized by Russia over the past year, but Crimea (annexed by Russia in 2014) as a "red line" for Russia, that could lead Moscow to widen the war. … To judge by his latest speeches in Kyiv and Warsaw, President Biden himself appears not yet to have decided what the territorial goal of U.S. support to Ukraine should be. He has said that this must be a matter for the Ukrainians to decide, but has stopped short of endorsing their aim to recover Crimea. The issue at stake here for Americans is whether this war should end in a peace that would leave Russia in de facto (if not de jure) possession of Crimea and the eastern Donbas (territory it seized in 2014) while returning (if Ukraine can recapture them) the land seized since the invasion began a year ago; or if America should give massive help to Ukraine indefinitely with a view to recapturing all the lost Ukrainian lands. [Read More]
 
Conflicting Reports Thicken Nord Stream Bombing Plot
By Jeremy Scahill, The Intercept [March 10, 2023]
---- In the month since veteran journalist Seymour Hersh published his bombshell report alleging that President Joe Biden personally authorized a covert action to bomb the Nord Stream pipelines, we've seen a frenzy of speculation, detailed dissection of Hersh's specific assertions, and the emergence of competing narratives both supporting and denouncing the report. The question of whether Hersh's story is accurate — either in whole or in part — is of monumental significance, and there are some issues related to this story that have not received as much attention as they deserve. [Read More] Also informative is "In Nord Stream attack, US officials use proxy media to blame proxy Ukraine," by Aaron Maté, Substack [March 8, 2023] [Link]
 
Also of interest – "Silent in Ukraine: Weapons Perpetuate, Do Not End Wars," by Ramzy Baroud, ZNet [March 12, 2023] [Link]; "The Far Right in Ukraine," from New Politics: Steve Shalom interviews Taras Bilous, [February 8, 2023] [Link]; and "The Conversation About Ukraine Is Cracking Apart," by Stephen M. Walt, professor of international relations at Harvard University [February 28, 2023] [Link].
 
The Climate Crisis
(Video) "Hopeful": Historic U.N. High Seas Treaty Will Protect 30% of World's Oceans from Biodiversity Loss
From Democracy Now! [March 6, 2023]
---- The first-ever international treaty to protect the oceans was agreed to by negotiators from more than 190 countries at a United Nations conference this weekend, capping nearly two decades of efforts by conservation groups. The legally binding pact could help reverse marine biodiversity loss by establishing marine protected areas covering nearly a third of the world's seas by 2030. We hear more from one of the treaty's scientist-negotiators, Minna Epps, a marine biologist and director of the Ocean Team at the International Union for the Conservation of Nature. [See the Program]
 
Civil Liberties/ "The War on Terror"
(Video) Opposition Grows to Atlanta "Cop City" as More Forest Defenders Charged with Domestic Terrorism
From Democracy Now! [March 9, 2023]
---- Prosecutors in Atlanta have charged 23 forest defenders with "domestic terrorism" after their arrests late Sunday at a festival near the site of Cop City, a massive police training facility being built in the Weelaunee Forest. The arrests followed clashes between police and protesters on Sunday afternoon and came less than two months after Atlanta police shot and killed Manuel "Tortuguita" Terán, a 26-year-old environmental defender. For an update on the growing movement to fight Cop City in Atlanta, we're joined by Micah Herskind, a local community organizer, and Kamau Franklin, founder of Community Movement Builders. [See the Program].  Also of interest is "Atlanta Cop City Protesters Charged With Domestic Terror for Having Mud on Their Shoes," by Natasha Lennard, The Intercept [March 8, 2023] [Link].
 
Israel/Palestine
Israel's new far-right government: Unprecedented challenges and opportunities
By Palestinian BDS National Committee [March 5, 2023]
---- Supporting the recent pogrom by fascist Jewish-Israeli militias against Palestinians in Huwara near Nablus in the occupied Palestinian territory and overtly inciting state terrorism, senior Israeli government minister, Bezalel Smotrich, a self-declared "fascist," said, "I think Huwara needs to be erased. The state should be the one to do that." Still, Israel's new far-right government is the most racist, fundamentalist, sexist, corrupt, authoritarian and homophobic ever—without masks. It constitutes simultaneously an escalation in Israel's ongoing settler-colonial and apartheid policies against Indigenous Palestinians and a potentially radical departure in its far-reaching plans for judicial, social and cultural "reforms" affecting Jewish Israeli society, and most likely Israeli economy. This provides advocates of Palestinian rights worldwide, particularly in the BDS movement, an even more urgent responsibility and an opportunity that is unprecedented in 74 years. … But opportunities alone do not lead to change but only provide the fertile ground for it. The anti-racist BDS movement for Palestinian freedom, justice and equality, led by the largest Palestinian coalition ever, has a special responsibility to push the limits even further in exposing Israel's regime of oppression and holding it accountable while, at the same time, carefully, accurately and effectively analyzing the current realities to help guide our human rights campaigning. If ever there was a time to get out of our comfort zones and further grow our intersectional movement and mainstream BDS pressure, it is now! [Read More]
 
Also of interest re: Israel/Palestine – "The Palestinian Authority is a fig leaf for Israeli apartheid. Disband it." By [Link]; (Video) "The reality for Palestinians: 'There is nobody here to protect us,'" MSNBC interview with Diana Buttu, former legal adviser to the Palestinian Authority [Link]; and (Video) "On The Brink: Jenin's Rising Resistance," from Mondoweiss [March 5, 2023] – 20 minutes - [Link].
 
Our History
Wounded Knee 50 Years Later: the Fight for Self-Determination Continues
---- The 1973 Siege at Wounded Knee is the longest "civil unrest" in the history of the US Marshal Service. For 71 days, the American Indian Movement (AIM) and members of the Oglala Lakota (Sioux) nation were under siege in a violent standoff with the FBI and US Marshals equipped with high powered rifles and armored personnel carriers.  Two people were killed, over two dozen wounded.  At stake, sovereignty and self-determination guaranteed through treaty rights. Fifty years have passed but for American Indians the struggle for recognition of the nation-to-nation treaties continues to be seen as survival.  [Read More]  This article does not mention the plight of still-incarcerated Leonard Peltier, still in prison (and nearing death) for a murder he did not commit during the FBI siege of Wounded Knee.  You can learn a lot from the website of the International Leonard Peltier Defense Committee.   Also very interesting is the documentary film "Incident at Ogala: The Leonard Peltier Story." Produced by Robert Redford (1992) and for rent on You Tube for $3.99 [Link]
 
'Working 9 to 5': A Firsthand Account of the Women's Movement, Labor Union and Iconic Movie
By Eleanor J. Bader, MS Magazine [March 6, 2023]
---- Shortly after Ellen Cassedy graduated from college in 1971, she joined her friend Karen Nussbaum as an office worker at Harvard University. The pair—close friends who first met as undergraduates—quickly began speaking with other female typists and administrative assistants about the need for better pay, better working conditions, and better and more respectful treatment from their often-condescending male bosses. Within a year, the initial group of 10 Boston-based women went from grousing about their jobs to forming 9 to 5, a bold labor rights organization that eventually became a model for innovative workplace activism throughout the country [Read More]