Sunday, April 30, 2023

CFOW Newsletter - Focus on the War in Ukraine and the REAL crisis of global heating

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
April 30, 2023
 
Hello All – After months of anticipation and speculation, Ukraine is about to launch its "counteroffensive" against Russian occupation forces. Recent disclosures have underscored the extent to which the USA/NATO will be co-belligerents in this offensive, training thousands of Ukrainian troops, supplying many kinds of advanced weaponry, and infiltrating an unknown number of military personnel into Ukraine itself. The success or failure of this offensive is expected to strongly influence whether one or all the parties to this conflict might consider diplomacy and negotiations, or whether the war will continue for many more months/years.
 
The recent leak of Pentagon documents by a low-level intelligence officer has allowed us to see some forbidden zones of the US understanding of the war. Most importantly, there is concern that Ukraine's military forces are inadequate to the task, and that the coming offensive might only reinforce the prospects of gridlock in the war.  Additionally, there are small signs of dissent in Congress and the mainstream media: How long will this war go on?  And is it worth it?
 
The dilemma for the US is illustrated by recent article in Foreign Affairs, the flagship of Establishment thinking about US foreign policy. Co-authored by Richard Haas, president of the Council on Foreign Relations (the publisher of Foreign Affairs), the writers argue that the war in Ukraine has diverted US attention and resources from issues of greater strategic importance for "national security."  "This policy," they write, "regardless of whether it made sense at the outset of the war, has now run its course. It is unwise, because Ukraine's goals are coming into conflict with other Western interests. And it is unsustainable, because the war's costs are mounting, and Western publics and their governments are growing weary of providing ongoing support."  One of the "other Western interests," of course, is US policy in the Pacific and the possibility of war with China.
 
The statement by the Council on Foreign Relations does not count the climate crisis among "other Western interests," but it is clearly the Number One existential crisis facing humans.  Beyond the diversion of money and other resources from addressing this crisis to fighting the war in Ukraine, the war has suspended the international cooperation needed to prevent us from zooming past key indicators (such as a limit of 1.5⁰ Celsius increase in global heating) or breaking barriers on "feedback loops" that will doom us to forever over-heating.  A report from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration warns that an El Niño-driven period of temperature rise is in the works, likely increasing the rise in the Earth's temperature by 2 to 4 degrees Fahrenheit over the next few years. – In a nutshell, humans simply don't have the option to dawdle and "see what happens" in Ukraine.  We have a far more serious problem at our doorstep, which needs all our attention NOW.
 
 War or Peace in Ukraine?
 
"The West Needs a New Strategy in Ukraine," by Richard Haass and Charles Kupchan, Foreign Affairs [April 13, 2023].
 
"Biden's team fears the aftermath of a failed Ukrainian counteroffensive," by Jonathan Lemire and Alexander Ward, Politico  [April 24, 2023].
 
"Pentagon leak reinforces what we already know: US-NATO in it to win," by Anatol Lieven, Responsible Statecraft  [April 10, 2023].
 
"Can China broker peace in Ukraine? Don't rule it out," by Rajan Menon and Daniel R DePetris, The Guardian [UK] [April 28, 2023]
 
All Out for May Day!
Monday is May Day, the workers' holiday.  In today-speak, it is a day for the 99 percent to reflect on our achievements and on how far we have to go. One thing on my mind is the struggle for control of Time – to control the pace of work on the job and the amount of our lives that are "our own," as opposed to being at the command of others.  The titanic strikes in France against raising the age of retirement are emblematic of this struggle.  More generally, as Selma James writes, "capital takes who we could be and limits us to who we are.  It takes our time, which happens to be our life." Our country's founding Manifesto laid down as a self-evident truth the unalienable right of people to "the pursuit of happiness." The great Haymarket rally of May 1, 1886 – the origins of May Day -- was about the 8-hour day: 8 hours for work, 8 hours for rest, and 8 hours "for what we will."  The struggle continues.
 
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 in Yonkers on Monday from 5:30 to 6:00 pm 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!
This week's Rewards for stalwart readers are songs for May Day, the workers' holiday that originated in the USA in Chicago in 1886 and spread throughout the world.  First up is Pete Seeger and "Solidarity Forever," as important now as it ever was.  Next, old friends Marcia Diehl and the New Harmony Sisterhood update "Union Maid." And finally, I think you will like Sweet Honey in the Rock's song, "More Than a Pay Check."  Enjoy!
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
CFOW Weekly Reader
 
Featured Essays
(Video) "Sing Your Song": Remembering Harry Belafonte, Who Used His Stardom to Help MLK & Civil Rights Movement
From Democracy Now! [April 26, 2023]
---- We remember the remarkable life of Harry Belafonte, the pioneering actor, singer and civil rights activist, who died at his home on Tuesday in New York at the age of 96. The son of Jamaican immigrants, Belafonte rose to stardom in the 1950s and became the first artist to sell a million records with his album Calypso. He was also the first African American actor to win an Emmy. Along with his growing fame, Belafonte became deeply involved in the civil rights movement. One of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s closest confidants, he helped to organize the March on Washington in 1963 and frequently raised money to bail activists out of jail and fund their activities throughout the South. Belafonte was also a longtime critic of U.S. foreign policy, calling for an end to the embargo against Cuba, supporting the anti-apartheid movement and opposing policies of war and global oppression. He spoke out against the U.S. invasion of Iraq and once called George W. Bush the "greatest terrorist in the world." [See the Program]
 
Extinction Coalition [Climate action in the UK]
By Jon Allsop, New York Review of Books [April 27, 2023]
---- On New Year's Eve, the British arm of Extinction Rebellion posted a statement to its website: "WE QUIT." The headline was a provocation more than a promise, but it did herald a change in emphasis from the tactics that made the movement for direct climate action famous. "This year," the statement read, "we prioritise attendance over arrest and relationships over roadblocks." The new strategy would culminate in April with "The Big One," an open-ended mass demonstration in the streets around Britain's Parliament that its organizers placed in the tradition of the protests that precipitated Ukraine's Orange Revolution and the fall of the Berlin Wall. … Extinction Rebellion first rocketed to widespread public attention in 2019 when it shut down central London—activists parked a pink boat emblazoned with the slogan TELL THE TRUTH in the middle of one of the city's busiest intersections—and more than a thousand protesters were arrested. It made three principal demands of the government: to tell the truth about the climate crisis; achieve net-zero emissions and an end to biodiversity loss by 2025; and convene a citizens' assembly in which a representative "mini public" would be called to make non–legally binding policy recommendations to fight the climate crisis. [To open, paste this link into your browser -  https://archive.ph/l8hR9]
 
What the World Should Know About Sudan
By Nanjala Nyabola, The Nation [April 25, 2023]
---- Sudan, with all its complexity and changeability, is easy to fall in love with. This only makes recent events more devastating. The marriage of convenience between the military and the Rapid Support Forces, a paramilitary outfit built from the embers of the infamous Janjaweed militia, has collapsed into the worst fighting that the capital, Khartoum, has seen in a generation. Sudanese people have been protesting the military regime since the 2019 military coup, warning the world that this could happen. Both the current de facto president and the leader of the RSF were henchmen of the deposed former President Omar al-Bashir, who oversaw mass killings across Sudan. Sudanese people immediately saw through their new rulers' false promises of change and demanded a democratically elected government. As the date for a promised return to a civilian administration drew close, the contest between the two arms of military power has devolved into fighting, which has killed at least 300 people. [Read More]
 
Also of interest re: Sudan – "Sudan's Conflict Ignites Fears of Civil War in Darfur," New York Times [April 29, 2023] [Link]; "A resources grab is likely in post-conflict Sudan. But democracy isn't," by Paul Rogers, Open Democracy [April 28, 2023] [Link]; and "Sudan conflict: Hemedti – the warlord who built a paramilitary force more powerful than the state," by Alex De Waal, The Conversation [April 17, 2023] [Link].
 
War & Peace
(Video) The Monroe Doctrine, Revisited: How 200 Years of U.S. Policy Have Helped to Destabilize the Americas
From Democracy Now! [April 27, 2023]
---- This weekend, Democracy Now! co-host Juan González gives the opening plenary at American University's one-day conference, "Burying 200 Years of the U.S. Monroe Doctrine," marking 200 years since the Monroe Doctrine, the foreign policy directive from President James Monroe that effectively declared all of Latin America a U.S. sphere of influence. For the past two centuries, the Monroe Doctrine has been repeatedly used to justify scores of invasions, interventions and CIA regime changes in the Americas. On today's show, we speak to two other conference guests, CodePink's Medea Benjamin and The Red Nation's Nick Estes, about the Monroe Doctrine's long and brutal legacy within U.S. imperialism. [See the Program]
 
Also of interest/importance  (Video) "This is Not a War Story," from the Chris Hedges Report [April 29, 2023] [Link]; "A US-China War Over Taiwan?" by Michael T. Klare, The Nation [April 28, 2023] [Link]; (Video) "'Provocative & Dangerous': Biden to Send Nuclear-Armed Subs to South Korea as Activists Demand Peace." from Democracy Now! [April 28, 2023] [Link]; and "The Toxic Legacy of U.S. Foreign Policy in Vieques, Puerto Rico," by Monisha Rios, Foreign Policy in Focus [April 23, 2023] [Link].
 
The War in Ukraine
(Video) Medea Benjamin: Pentagon Leaks Show Ukraine War Is a Stalemate. Why Isn't the U.S. Pushing for Peace?
From Democracy Now! [April 27, 2023]
---- Chinese President Xi Jinping spoke by phone with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky this week for the first time since Russia's invasion last year. The call comes two months after China put forward a 12-point peace plan to end the war, and Xi reportedly said negotiations are "the only viable way out" of the conflict. The Chinese president also offered to send a special envoy to Ukraine to help resolve the crisis. To talk more about the war in Ukraine and growing calls for negotiations, we are joined by Medea Benjamin, co-founder of CodePink and co-author of the new book War in Ukraine: Making Sense of a Senseless Conflict. "The world is calling for negotiations, and the U.S. keeps saying no," says Benjamin. "We are the ones who are holding up a peace process." [See the Program]  Also of interest is "Pentagon Leaks Punch a Hole in the U.S. Propaganda War," by Medea Benjamin and Nicolas J S Davies, The Progressive [April 26, 2023] [Link].[
 
How to End the War in Ukraine: On stopping the fighting and building the peace.
By Rajan Menon, Boston Review [April 26, 2023]
[FB – This issue of the Boston Review includes a half-dozen responses to this essay by Rajan Menon, very useful for thinking about where the war is going and how it might end.]
---- Over the last year Russia's invasion of Ukraine has produced a flood tide of commentary, with largely unconstructive volleys back and forth. Roughly speaking there are two main camps. Realists and progressives blame Russia's invasion principally, sometimes solely, on NATO expansion—a needless, provocative policy that, as they see it, posed an "existential threat" to Russia. Neoconservatives and many liberal internationalists, despite their political differences on other fronts, deny that NATO expansion had this effect, and even claim that it was wholly irrelevant to Putin's decision to attack Ukraine. Instead, they see Putin's ingrained imperial instincts and fear of a democratic Ukraine as the root cause of the war. The trouble with this impasse is that each camp makes blame for the war an all or nothing affair. After a year of enormous violence and destruction, we need a far more nuanced understanding of the war—its causes, how it might be ended, and the challenges that will remain once it is over. [Read More]
 
Also of interest – "The Most Dangerous Game: How Shadow War Over Ukraine Nearly Triggered Nuclear Holocaust," by James Bamford, The Nation [April 27, 2023] [Link]; and "US corporations cash in on Ukraine's oil and gas," by Ben Norton, Geopolitical Economy [April 28, 2023] [Link].
 
The Climate Crisis
(Video) 'The system is not moving fast enough'
Chris Hedges interviews Extinction Rebellion's Roger Hallem [April 21, 2023]
---- Earlier this year, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), an international body of UN scientists, delivered a "final warning" to drastically cut global emissions in order to prevent the heating of the planet past 1.5 degrees Celsius. As the exponentially accelerating effects of the climate crisis have become more apparent in recent years, so too has activism to demand urgent action from governments. In the UK, a movement known as Extinction Rebellion (XR) first emerged in 2018, and then proliferated around the globe. XR has helped popularize the spread of civil disobedience tactics in the contemporary environmental movement. But what is the movement's theory of change? How does XR seek to proceed from direct action tactics to systems change on a timescale that matches the rapidly degrading state of our the earth's ecological systems? Roger Hallam, co-founder of XR and leader of the activist organization Just Stop Oil, joins The Chris Hedges Report for a conversation on tactics and strategy to save the planet, which ultimately requires transforming the system. [See the Program].  Also of interest is "How China can prevent climate catastrophe? Moving humanity toward global ecological civilization," by David Schwartzman, Monthly Review [April 11, 2023] [Link].
 
The State of the Union
(Video) Oklahoma Parole Board Denies Clemency for Richard Glossip, Rejecting Plea from State Attorney General
From Democracy Now! [April 27, 2023]
---- We speak with investigative reporter Liliana Segura about the remarkable case of Oklahoma death row inmate Richard Glossip, whose execution is set for May 18. Oklahoma's Pardon and Parole Board on Wednesday denied Glossip clemency even though Oklahoma's own Republican attorney general has sought to vacate Glossip's conviction. Glossip has always maintained his innocence. The case dates back to 1997, when Glossip was working as a motel manager in Oklahoma City and his boss, Barry Van Treese, was murdered. A maintenance worker, Justin Sneed, admitted to beating Van Treese to death with a baseball bat, but claimed Glossip offered him money for the killing. The case rested almost entirely on Sneed's claims, and no physical evidence tied Glossip to the crime. Sneed, in exchange for his testimony, did not get the death penalty. "From the beginning, the evidence in this case was weak," says Segura, a senior reporter for The Intercept who has been following the case since 2015. [See the Program]
 
Israel/Palestine
Israel Is Throwing a 75th Birthday Party. Palestinians Have Little to Celebrate.
By Rashid Khalidi, The Nation [April 26, 2023]
---- The coming month witnesses two very different, albeit intimately linked, 75th anniversaries. This May, Palestinians will solemnly commemorate the Nakba, the catastrophe that befell their society and precipitated the establishment of a Jewish state in a country with a two-thirds Arab majority. Meanwhile, this week, Israeli Jews are celebrating the simultaneous creation of their state, one that by 1949 controlled 78 percent of the former Mandatory Palestine, and that since 1967 has controlled all of it, plus an occupied chunk of Syrian territory. Palestinian citizens of Israel are expected to cheer Israel's independence, which left them as second-class citizens of a state with at least 65 laws that discriminate against them, and that expelled 750,000 of their fellow Palestinians in 1948. For the millions of Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip who have lived under the draconian control of the Israeli military for nearly three generations, and for the equal numbers of Palestinians living in exile whom Israel bars from returning to their homeland, there is also little to celebrate. [Read More]
 
Could Israel Carry Out Another Nakba?
By Peter Beinart, Jewish Currents [April 19, 2023]
---- When Palestinians explain the current government's agenda, however, many describe the policies advanced by Gottlieb and Ben-Gvir as part of a larger strategy: mass expulsion. In early March, Palestinian anti-occupation activist Fadi Quran told me he felt "like we are at the cusp of another Nakba"—the term that denotes the expulsion of roughly 750,000 Palestinians at Israel's birth. Last December, when the pollster Khalil Shikaki asked Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip to characterize Israel's "long run aspiration," 65% chose "extending the borders of the state of Israel to cover all the area between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea and expelling its Arab citizens" (emphasis mine). … Another Nakba is possible. By pretending it isn't, American officials conveniently avoid an uncomfortable but vital question: What would they do to try and stop it? [Read More]
 
Our History
May Day and Abolition
---- "Murther, murther, murther, murther …" shouted Free-born John Lilburne from prison. "M'aidez, m'aidez," says the international distress signal. Murder is the crime, and help is the need. That is the dynamic of the day, May Day. It's methodology therefore requires answers to two questions: Who? Whom? We remember los martiros, that is the martyrs who were hanged for their support of the Eight Hour Day and the police riot at Haymarket, Chicago. That struggle commenced on May 1st 1886. Who? Whom? The bosses hanged the workers. Their names were August Spies, Albert Parsons, Adolph Fischer, George Engel. Their hanging was judicial murder or state sponsored terror. "The day will come when our silence will be more powerful than the voices you are throttling today." Their last words, our prologue. The Haymarket hangings were preparation for mass murder at Wounded Knee (1890). Who? Whom? The army massacres the Lakotas. [Read More]
 

Sunday, April 23, 2023

CFOW Newsletter - Earth Day, War, and the Climate Crisis

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
April 23, 2023
 
The first Earth Day was celebrated and acted upon by some 20 million Americans on April 22, 1970.  The day is now seen as a milestone in the birth of the modern environmental movement, leading by the end of the year to the establishment of the Environmental Protection Agency and the passage of pro-environment legislation.  The New York Times reported the event with enthusiasm and a large front-page picture of huge crowds on Fifth Ave. But on the right-hand side of the front page was the paper's lead article, "Cambodian Crisis Grows as Troops Seem to Falter."  Earth Day had the picture, but The Times knew that the looming military disaster in Cambodia was the main story.
 
And so Earth Day was born in the midst of war. A week after Earth Day Nixon went on TV to announce an invasion of Cambodia, which he and Secretary of State Kissinger had been "secretly" bombing for more than a year. An outpouring of campus protest, culminating in the massacre at Kent State on May 4th, brought much of the nation to a standstill and overshadowed the promising beginnings of Earth Day.  While Exxon, Shell, and Big Oil knew how the burning of fossil fuels endangered our planet, the 70s and 80s sped by with little popular or political engagement with the looming climate crisis. Thus then as now, efforts to address what we now see as a climate crisis were/are offset by political and media attention to war, and the siphoning of trillions of dollars to the US War Machine that was/is desperately needed to stop the real existential crisis of climate catastrophe.  
 
Indian Point Update
Last week's Newsletter relayed the news that Holtec International, the mega-company paid (a lot) to "decommission" the Indian Point nuclear plant, had put on "pause" it's plan to dump a million gallons of radioactive water into the Hudson River until "this summer" (whenever).  All sources ascribe the "pause" to agitation by citizens (500,000 petition-signers) and action by local officials: two dozen towns and three counties have passed Resolution condemning Holtec's dumping plan.  Also important was a strong letter to the (federal) Nuclear Regulatory Commission from Senators Schumer and Gillibrand; and I am told that Sen. Gillibrand announced on the Brian Lehrer show that she would take strong action in the Senate to prevent dumping.
 
Well done people!  And yet clearly we have to keep up the pressure, as we have won only a "pause."  Our most important task for the coming week is to flood Governor Hochul's phones with short messages saying NO to the water-dump.  Give her a call at 518-474-8390.  Tell the human or answering machine that you want the Guv to take action to "stop the dump!"  Also this week, we can support the campaign to Stop Holtec by attending a rally and press conference at Cortlandt Town Hall on Thursday, April 27th, at 4:30 pm, ahead of the 6 pm meeting of the Decommissioning Oversight Board, which we can also attend. (To learn more, go here.)
 
Finally, I found an in-depth article from two years back, published in the Very Establishment "Fortune" magazine, which raised serious questions about the competence of the "decommissioning" contractor Holtec.  Read "Nuclear drawdown: How two little-known private companies are taking over the biggest environmental cleanup in U.S. history" here (follow 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 in Yonkers on Monday from 5:30 to 6:00 pm 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!
This week's Rewards for stalwart readers riff on the theme of "the pursuit of happiness."  First up is Bob Marley's "One Love," from the international group Playing for Change.  Next we have Gustavo Dudamel and the Simon Bolivar Symphony Orchestra with Leonard Bernstein's "Mambo," from "West Side Story" [h/t BT]. And finally, enjoy Yuja Wang, who brings such enthusiasm to classical music, with Mendelssohn's "Piano Concerto No.1."
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
CFOW Weekly Reader
 
Featured Essays
(Video) A Conversation with Professor Noam Chomsky
A talk to/with the New York Bar Association [April 20, 2023]
[FB – In one of his most interesting recent talks, Chomsky discusses a variety of topics, including but not limited to geopolitics and the role of China; US elections; the climate catastrophe; the threat of nuclear weapons; and the future of our economy; followed by a Q&A segment.] [See the Program]
 
The Man Who Leaked the Pentagon Papers Has a Final Warning for America
From The New York Times [April 19, 2023]
---- Daniel Ellsberg fully expected to spend the rest of his life in prison after he leaked the Pentagon Papers to The New York Times and The Washington Post in 1971. The documents revealed decades of government lies and mistakes in about the war in Vietnam, and eventually, they helped end it. The charges against Ellsberg were ultimately dismissed but, he had a secret: The Pentagon Papers were only supposed to be the beginning. Alongside the documents about Vietnam, he'd copied thousands of pages of other documents about America's nuclear war planning that he believed would shock the public conscience. But a series of mishaps kept those documents from ever coming to light. Now, after revealing a terminal cancer diagnosis in March, Ellsberg is reflecting on his life, the secrets he wasn't able to reveal and threats to the world he's leaving behind. [Read More, hear the interview]
 
Religion Has Friends Among Judges in High Places
By Linda Greenhouse, New York Times [April 22, 2023]
[FB – Linda Greenhouse, the recipient of a 1998 Pulitzer Prize, reported on the Supreme Court for The Times from 1978 to 2008 and was a contributing Opinion writer from 2009 to 2021.]
---- Here's a thought experiment: Suppose that some doctors, who may or may not ever encounter a patient with a Tylenol-induced liver problem, say that the care these patients require is exceedingly stressful and would take them away from attending to the needs of other patients. So the doctors sue the F.D.A., demanding that the agency withdraw its approval of acetaminophen, and a Federal District Court judge agrees. … As readers may have deduced by now, my thought experiment substitutes Tylenol for the abortion drug mifepristone.. The plaintiffs, who would have been laughed out of any court that hadn't been taken over by appointees of former President Donald Trump, are four anti-abortion medical organizations and four individual anti-abortion doctors. And here's my question: What is the difference between my hypothetical Tylenol case and the actual case against mifepristone? In one word, religion. [Read More]
 
War & Peace
Leaks Reveal Reality Behind US Propaganda in Ukraine
By Medea Benjamin and Nicolas J. S. Davies, Code Pink [April 20, 2023]
---- The US corporate media's first response to the leaking of secret documents about the war in Ukraine was to throw some mud in the water, declare "nothing to see here," and cover it as a depoliticized crime story about a 21-year-old Air National Guardsman who published secret documents to impress his friends. President Biden dismissed the leaks as revealing nothing of "great consequence." What these documents reveal, however, is that the war is going worse for Ukraine than our political leaders have admitted to us, while going badly for Russia too, so that neither side is likely to break the stalemate this year, and this will lead to "a protracted war beyond 2023," as one of the documents says. The publication of these assessments should lead to renewed calls for our government to level with the public about what it realistically hopes to achieve by prolonging the bloodshed, and why it continues to reject the resumption of the promising peace negotiations it blocked in April 2022.  [Read More]
 
Will the West Turn Ukraine into a Nuclear Battlefield? Why Depleted Uranium Should Have No Place There
By Joshua Frank, Tom Dispatch [April 19, 2023]
----The United Kingdom, which has committed well over $2 billion in assistance to Ukraine, has so far refused to ship fighter jets there but has promised to supply more weaponry, including tank shells made with depleted uranium (DU), also known as "radioactive bullets." A by-product of uranium enrichment, DU is a very dense and radioactive metal that, when housed in small torpedo-like munitions, can pierce thickly armored tanks and other vehicles. … While the UK's decision to send depleted-uranium shells to Ukraine is unlikely to prove a turning point in the war's outcome, it will have a lasting, potentially devastating, impact on soldiers, civilians, and the environment. … If the grisly legacy of the American use of depleted uranium tells us anything, it's that those DU shells the British are supplying to Ukraine (and the ones the Russians may also be using there) will have a radioactive impact that will linger in that country for years to come, with debilitating, potentially fatal, consequences. It will, in a sense, be part of a global atomic war that shows no sign of ending. [Read More]
 
Also of interest – "Just how many US troops and spies do we have in Ukraine?" by Kelley Beaucar Vlahos, Responsible Statecraft [April 18, 2023] [Link]; and "Peace in Ukraine Is Too Important to Leave in the Hands of Arms Dealers," by [Link].
 
The Climate Crisis
(Video) "Not Too Late": Author Rebecca Solnit & Filipino Activist Red Constantino on Avoiding Climate Despair
From Democracy Now! [April 17, 2023]
---- We discuss climate solutions and the need for broad involvement in the fight to avert climate catastrophe with writer and activist Rebecca Solnit and longtime Filipino climate activist Renato "Red" Constantino. Solnit is the co-editor of Not Too Late: Changing the Climate Story from Despair to Possibility, which features an essay by Constantino about his role in the Paris Climate Agreement titled "How the Ants Moved the Elephants in Paris." "This is the decade of decision, and we need as many people as possible engaged as fully as possible," says Solnit. [See the Program]
 
We Know the Damage, but Who Will Foot the Bill?
By David Williams, Rosa Luxemburg Foundation [March 22, 2023]
---- Once again, the findings are dire. Projections indicate the 1.5°C warming limit will be reached within ten years, failing binding commitments made in the Paris Agreement in 2015. To prevent further warming and with it the deterioration of living conditions for future generations, it is imperative to drastically reduce the burning of fossil fuels…. Media outlets are hailing the synthesis report as yet another final warning, as a desperate call to act now before it's too late. It is fundamental to recognize, however, that this will only be achieved if those causing the climate crisis are held to account. The report identifies growing inequality as a driver of vulnerability, but inequality in terms of carbon emissions has also risen over the past decades. Recent figures show that the top 10 percent of income and wealth holders are responsible for 48 percent of global emissions, while the bottom 50 percent are responsible for a mere 12 percent. In terms of regional distribution, there is a stark divide between industrialized and low-income countries' emissions. [Read More]
 
'We Need a Green New Deal': AOC, Markey Re-Up Visionary Climate Resolution
By Jessica Corbett, Common Dreams [April 20, 2023]
---- Backed by climate, health, and labor groups, U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Sen. Ed Markey on Thursday reintroduced the Green New Deal Resolution, which the progressive leaders have been fighting for since they first unveiled it in February 2019. "In the four years since we first introduced the Green New Deal, the tides of our movement have risen and lifted climate action to the top of the national agenda," Markey (D-Mass.) said of the resolution, which envisions a 10-year mobilization that employs millions in well-paying union jobs to help the country respond to the climate emergency. … Along with reintroducing the resolution—a largely symbolic move given the current makeup of Congress—the pair released a guide for cities, states, tribes, nonprofits, and individuals about how those two laws "help bring the Green New Deal to life." [Read More]
 
The State of the Union
The Supreme Court Has Preserved Access to the Abortion Pill—Over Alito's Salty Objection
By Elie Mystal, The Nation [April 21, 2023]
---- This is a victory for reproductive rights, insofar as keeping what rights people still have in the wake of last year's Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health decision overturning Roe v. Wade counts as "victory." The case now goes back to the Fifth Circuit, which will hold a hearing and, almost certainly, issue another shambolic ruling against the abortion pill. That ruling will eventually be appealed to the Supreme Court, so we don't know when access to medical abortion will be put at risk again. … This is as good as things get on the legal front of the reproductive rights struggle these days: a clearly wrong ruling from a Texas judge has been temporarily blocked over the objection of a mean old man who wanted to fight about something else. And pregnant people who want to terminate unwanted pregnancies can still have access to a 23-year old drug that is safe, effective, and available all over the world in countries not run by fascist theocrats.  This is a win, mainly because it's not another devastating loss. For now. [Read More]
 
Also of interest - (Video) "'A New Jane Crow;: Abortion Advocates Brace for Supreme Court Ruling That Could Ban Mifepristone," from Democracy Now! [April 20, 2023] [Link]; and "The Abortion Pill Case Could Throw Our Health Care System Into Chaos," by Jack Resneck, Jr., New York Times [April 20, 2023] [FB - Dr. Resneck is the president of the American Medical Association] [Link - paste into browser]
 
(Video) "Poverty, by America": Author Matthew Desmond on How U.S. Punishes the Poor & Subsidizes the Wealthy
From Democracy Now! [April 18, 2023]
---- A new study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association finds that poverty is the fourth-greatest cause of death in the United States. Roughly 500 people die from poverty in the U.S. every day. Our guest, sociologist Matthew Desmond, is the author of the new book, Poverty, by America, the follow-up to his Pulitzer Prize-winning book Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City. "There's so much poverty in America, not in spite of our wealth, but because of it," says Desmond in an in-depth interview. [See the Program]
 
Israel/Palestine
Fantasies of Israel
By Ilan Pappé, New Left Review [April 19, 2023]
---- The protesters are motivated by what one might call the fantasy of Israel: that of a secular democratic state with enough moral capital to justify its occupation of Palestine at home and abroad. They are happy to be seen as exceptional nation – which must subjugate the Arabs to preserve the dream of a Jewish homeland – but they are also desperate to conform to the 'civilized' standards of the Global North. Their liberal Zionism is founded on a series of oxymorons: Israel as an enlightened occupier, a benevolent ethnic cleanser, a progressive apartheid state. Thanks to Netanyahu's government, this image is now under threat; its contradictions are no longer containable. The state's reputation is being damaged not only domestically, but also among the 'international community' that typically hails Israel as the only democracy in the Middle East and Tel Aviv as the LGBT capital of the world, while ignoring the besieged Gaza ghetto a few miles south. … For all their differences, the two Israeli camps are united in their support for the settler-colonial project on which the nation was built. Settler colonialism invariably entails the dehumanization of colonized peoples, viewed as the principal obstacle to political harmony. In Israel, every Palestinian must be perceived as a savage or potential terrorist, every Palestinian territory as a theatre of war. [Read More]  Also of interest – "Israeli Apartheid at Last Described in the Pages of the Venerable 'Foreign Affairs' Journal," by Nasim Ahmed, Middle East Monitor [April 18, 2023] [Link]
 
Meet 'proud racist' May Golan, set to become Israel's Consul General in New York
By
---- "I'm proud to be a racist!" shouted Israeli lawmaker May Golan in 2012, when she was an activist in one of the nationalist rallies inciting against African refugees in Tel Aviv. Now she is on her way to New York City. Benjamin Netanyahu has tapped her to become Consul General in NYC, a position that is considered influential because it covers not just New York state but also New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Delaware. This means that it covers the largest Jewish population in the world outside of Israel — nearly 3 million people.  …Responses to the reported nomination were nonetheless vociferous among Zionists. The more liberal-leaning were horrified, and several former diplomats called Golan a "divisive and racist" figure and "the opposite of what Israel needs in such an important region." T'ruah, a progressive rabbinical human rights group, said, "Golan and her far-right cronies are not welcome here." [Read More]
 
Our History
(Video) Author Carol Anderson on How Anti-Blackness Drives U.S. Gun Culture & Right-Wing Assault on Democracy
From Democracy Now! [April 13, 2023
---- We discuss the debate over gun control, as well as Republican attacks on democracy, with author and academic Carol Anderson, who says U.S. gun culture has always been connected to "the inherent, fundamental fear of Black people." She notes the expulsion of two Black Democratic state lawmakers in Tennessee for leading a gun control protest at the Capitol highlights how gerrymandered state governments uphold white supremacy in the face of "youth that are pushing forward for a different vision of America." Anderson is professor of African American studies at Emory University and author of The Second: Race and Guns in a Fatally Unequal America. She also comments on the right-wing assault on abortion rights and education. [See the Program] Also of interest is "Why Did Madison Write the Second Amendment?" by Carl T. Boggs, History News Network [April 17, 2023] [Link].
 
How Social Turmoil Has Increased Witch Hunts throughout History
By Silvia Federici and Alice Markham-Cantor, Scientific American [May 2023]
---- It's an old story: A woman is accused of witchcraft by someone close to her—a neighbor, a relative, a rival. Often the original accuser resents or envies the woman or has a property dispute with her. At first the complaints are just whispers. But then something happens—a child gets sick, or an accident occurs. The woman's name is said again, loudly this time, and more people echo it. Then she is dragged from her house and killed. This is what happened to Iquo Edet Eyo, a 69-year-old woman from Cross River State in Nigeria. Along with four others, she was murdered in October 2022, allegedly by a group of young men who charged that her witchcraft had caused a recent motorcycle crash. … The narrative could be set in Germany in 1581, India in 2003, Uganda in 2018 or Papua New Guinea in 2021. Every year more than 1,000 people around the world, including men and children, are tortured, expelled from their homes or killed after being charged with witchcraft—using magic, usually to cause harm. Far from declining with modernization, as some 20th-century scholars predicted, witch hunts are holding steady in some places and may be happening more often in others. [Read More]

Monday, April 17, 2023

CFOW Newsletter - Focus on taxes (& military spending) and Indian Point dangers

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
April 17, 2023
 
Hello All – Once again, the Tax Man Cometh.  Each year on Tax Day, CFOW encourages supporters and others to give some thought to how the federal government raises its revenue, and how it spends it.  In a nutshell, in recent decades the well-to-do have ceased to pay their fair share, and about half of what Congress calls "discretionary spending" – i.e. not social security or Medicare or interest payments on the national debt – goes to the Pentagon for past, present, and future wars.
 
Last month the Biden administration sent its draft 2024 budget to Congress.  It included a request for $842 billion in military spending.  (As Congress usually appropriates some tens of billions more than the Executive asks for, we could be looking at a final budget with military spending at $900 billion.)  This year's military spending is augmented by payments for the War in Ukraine.  As of early March, the USA had allocated aid to Ukraine on 33 separate occasions, amounting to more than $113 billion worth of humanitarian, military, and financial assistance. As the Pentagon/Biden are assuming that the Ukraine War will continue into 2024, presumably this rate of additional military spending will continue.  Additionally, as Michael Klare points out in a recent article, the Pentagon is planning now for the weapons needed for anticipated conflicts with Russia and/or China a decade or more into the future. Congress has discussed little or none of this, and the news media provide little useful information.
 
As for where the money funding the government comes from, the politics of the last decade have highlighted the extreme income and wealth inequality in the USA, and the shrinking portion of the income and wealth of the Very Rich that is subject to taxation.  As Warren Buffet famously observed, it is Not Right when his tax rate is lower than that of his secretary.  People are generally aware of this injustice, but what can be done?  Leaving the "in-the-weeds" wonkiness of tax reform to others, I refer you to a useful article by Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman, who conclude that "Taxing the superrich involves three essential and complementary ingredients: a progressive income tax, a corporate tax, and a progressive wealth tax. The corporate tax ensures that all profits are taxed, whether distributed or not: it acts as a de facto minimum tax on the affluent. The progressive income tax ensures high earners pay more. And a progressive wealth tax gets the ultrarich to contribute to the public coffers even when they, including Buffett, manage to realize little taxable income."
 
Indian Point Update
Last week's CFOW newsletter included the shocking news that the corporation managing the "decommissioning" of the Indian Point nuclear plant intended to begin dumping one million gallons of radioactive water into the Hudson River as soon as May 4th.  This plan has now been postponed until "the summer."  In addition to widespread opposition from local officials, county executives, and almost 500,000 citizens signing petitions, the postponement was undoubtedly motivated by a strong letter by our Senators Charles Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand to the (federal) Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) on April 6th. The letter asked the NRC to respond to more than a dozen concerns raised by the dumping plan, mostly regarding the safety of dumping water containing radioactive tritium into a river used for drinking water, food supply (fish), and recreation.  According to the Decommissioning Oversight Board, "the decision to pause the May 2023 releases from the Indian Point spent fuel pools will allow the State to independently analyze the spent fuel pool water before it is released. Holtec's pause will also allow time for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, which has jurisdiction over these discharges, to answer the important questions Senators Schumer and Gillibrand recently raised and to directly address concerned members of the public and local elected officials at an upcoming meeting of the Decommissioning Oversight Board."  This is good news for opponents of the dumping plan, but as the dumping is only "paused," we must remain alert and continue our educational efforts to inform our communities about this danger. Useful further reading includes "Plan for Dumping Nuclear Wastewater Into Hudson River Is Paused," from The New York Times; and this link takes you to the letter sent to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission by Senators Schumer and Gillibrand.
 
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 in Yonkers on Monday from 5:30 to 6:00 pm 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 jazz pianist Ahmed Jamal died on Sunday at the age of 92.  His career in music, starting as a child, is quite amazing.  He usually played/performed as part of a trio; one of his most popular recordings is "Poinciana."  To listen to some more of his music, here is his album, ""Ahmad's Blues," recorded in 1958.  Enjoy!
 
Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW
 
CFOW Weekly Reader
 
Featured Essays
AOC: The Biden Administration's Rightward Turn Is "a Profound Miscalculation"
An interview with Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Jacobin Magazine [April 2023]
---- I think it is extremely risky and very perilous should the Biden administration forget who it was that put him over the top. When you look at the places — not just abstract levels of turnout, not just where numbers came from, but these swing places that gave Joe Biden the edge on an [Electoral College] victory — it was young people that that won him this election, communities of color, high turnout areas. This lurch to the right at a time when the Right is scrambling and lost in the desert on how to even win an election after these stunning losses — I think it's a profound miscalculation. And it is quite dangerous. … So what we really need right now is having that continued, outside vocal organizing that allows us, when we are approaching the administration, to say, "This is why this is happening," so we can pull and point to grassroots movements that are telling that story as our evidence. [Read More] Also of interest is this short (video) from a recent AOC appearance on Late Night wth Seth Meyers.
 
A Conservative Christian Judge Rules Against Medication Abortion. How Hard Will Democrats Fight Back?
By Amy Littlefield, The Nation [April 11, 2023]
---- Now a debate has erupted over how the Biden administration, blue states, and the abortion-rights movement should respond to this unprecedented decision. Senator Ron Wyden and Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez have called on the Biden administration to ignore Kacsmaryk's ideological ruling.  … The most encouraging change since the Dobbs decision is the growth of the grassroots abortion rights movement shown in the rising number of young people voting and in the momentum around campaigns like the abortion referendum in Kansas. "The only way to win durable and full and free access to abortion is through a mass movement for abortion justice," McGuire said.  That's true no matter what the courts do next. [Read More] Also of interest is author Amy Littlefield's appearance on Democracy Now! - (Video) "DeSantis Signs Six-Week Abortion Ban in Florida; Legal Fight Intensifies over Abortion Pill" [April 14, 2023] [Link]; also important is "The GOP's Fanatical Judges Are Putting Our Lives in Danger," by Gregg Gonsalves, The Nation [April 15, 2023] [Link].
 
Why We Are Called Hammer & Hope
By Robin D. G. Kelley, Hammer & Hope [April 2023]
[FB – Robin Kelley is an historian whom I admire very much.  He and some colleagues have launched a new magazine, which looks interesting and useful.  Here is what he has to say about this new project.]
---- Our Hammer & Hope aims to expose the system of racial capitalism tearing up neighborhoods, filling the state's cages, and extracting value from working people while leaving them in a state of insecurity and precarity. Our hammer will smash myths and illusions. It will tear down the master's house, as Audre Lorde would say. And our hope? It is not the false optimism of liberals or the fatalism of armchair revolutionaries or the pessimism of pundits waiting for the end of the world. James Baldwin understood hope as determination in the face of catastrophe: "I can't be a pessimist because I'm alive. To be a pessimist means that you have agreed that human life is an academic matter, so I'm forced to be an optimist. I'm forced to believe that we can survive whatever we must survive." [Read More]
 
Can You Fight for Climate Justice Without Being Antiwar?
By Teddy Ogborn, ZNet [April 15, 2023]
---- Can organizations sincerely say they are leading the climate justice fight without also being unapologetically antiwar? Short answer – no. Here's why. We cannot end climate change without ending war. The United States military is the planet's largest single emitter of greenhouse gasses and consumer of oil. The US military and its weapons, consistently deployed to secure economic dominance for the few while ensuring suffering for the many, has no place on a just and livable planet. The corporate interests and fascist, militarist tendencies that lead humanity into conflict are the very same that view our Earth, its atmosphere, and its abundant life as a resource to be exploited for profit. Ending war means ending the war economy – the colonial system of extraction and exploitation that got us into this mess in the first place. That a more peaceful world could be a result of the broad system change climate activists are calling for is no coincidence. But the theoretical intersection alone isn't enough! Environmentalists and climate change activists must make a commitment to peace explicitly. Our planet depends on it. [Read More]
 
War & Peace
Will it Never Stop? From Forever War to Eternal War
---- "It is time," President Biden announced in April 2021, "to end the forever war" that started with the invasion of Afghanistan soon after the tragic terror attacks on this country on September 11, 2001. Indeed, that August, amid chaos and disaster, the president did finally pull the last remaining U.S. forces out of that country. A year and a half later, it's worth reflecting on where the United States stands when it comes to both that forever war against terrorism and war generally. As it happens, the war on terror is anything but ended, even if it's been overshadowed by the war in Ukraine and simmering conflicts around the globe, all too often involving the United States. In fact, it now seems as if this country is moving at breakneck speed out of the era of Forever War and into what might be thought of as the era of Eternal War. Granted, it's hard even to keep track of the potential powder kegs that seem all too ready to explode across the globe and are likely to involve the U.S. military in some fashion. Still, at this moment, perhaps it's worth running through the most likely spots for future conflict. [Read More]
 
Crimea Has Become a Frankenstein's Monster
By Anatol Lieven, Responsible Statecraft [April 11, 2023]
---- Clear differences are emerging within the Ukrainian government as to whether Ukraine should make the reconquest of Crimea a nonnegotiable goal of its war effort or be prepared to trade at least provisional Russian control of the peninsula for Russian concessions elsewhere. This issue also has the potential to create a deep split between Kyiv and Western governments, which fear that Crimea and control of the strategically vital military base of Sevastopol might be the point on which Moscow would be willing to escalate toward nuclear war. The question is becoming more urgent as Ukraine prepares for an offensive that could potentially allow it to cut the land route between Russia and Crimea. My own research in Ukraine last month suggests that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky would have very great domestic difficulty in supporting a cease-fire leaving Crimea in Russian hands. Not only would this face strong opposition from hard-line nationalists and the Ukrainian military, but the Ukrainian government has helped foster a general public mood that Crimea must be recovered at all costs. [Read More]
 
More useful reading about the Ukraine War – "Why the Media Don't Want to Know the Truth About the Nord Stream Blasts," by Jonathan Cook, Mint Press News [April 11, 2023] [Link]; "Miscommunication Nearly Led to Russian Jet Shooting Down British Spy Plane, U.S. Officials Say" New York Times [April 12, 2023] [Link]; and "Joe Biden Can't Seek Peace in Ukraine Without a Robust Antiwar Movement," by Branko Marcetic, Jacobin Magazine [April 2023] [Link].
 
Losing Wars and Losing Recruits
By Nan Levinson, Tom Dispatch [April 13, 2023]
---- After more than 20 years of losing wars, recruiting for the U.S. Army is now officially a mess. Last year, that service fell short of its goal by 15,000 recruits, or a quarter of its target. … Despite ever-decreasing reportage on military and veterans' issues, young civilians seem all too aware of the downsides of enlisting. Gen Zers, who until recently never lived in a country not openly at war, have gobs of information at their fingertips: videos, memoirs, movies, novels, along with alarming statistics on sexual assault and racism in the military and the ongoing health problems of soldiers, including exposure to toxic waste, rising cancer rates, and post-traumatic stress disorder. And that's not even to mention the disproportionate rates of suicide and homelessness among veterans, not to speak of the direct contact many young people have had with those who returned home ready to attest to the grim consequences of more than 20 years of remarkably pointless warfare in Afghanistan, Iraq, and across all too much of the rest of the planet. [Read More].  Also of interest re: veterans' treatment by the VA is "PACT Act Problems,"
by Suzanne Gordon and Steve Early," The Progressive [April 6 2023] [Link].
 
The Climate Crisis
Getting real: what would serious climate action look like?
By Prof. Kevin Anderson, Responsible Science Journal [March 19, 2023]
---- In signing the Paris Climate Agreement, governments have committed to hold the global temperature rise to no more than 1.5 to 2°C. However, as we understand more about the scale of impacts of rising temperatures, the emphasis has increasingly shifted towards 1.5°C as our primary commitment; and even 1.5°C is far from a safe threshold for many communities around the globe. People are already suffering and dying from the impacts associated with a rise of just 1.1°C, a situation we need to keep in the forefront of our thinking when deciding on what is and isn't feasible. … We've left it so late that technology will never deliver in isolation. It is a prerequisite condition, but not enough. We also need profound changes in the socio-economic structure of modern society. That is to say a rapid shift in the labour and resources that disproportionately furnish the luxuries of the relative few - not just the billionaires, but also people like me. Such resources and labour are urgently needed to rapidly decarbonise our physical infrastructure, from housing to transport and industry to energy supply. So it's not the old adage of 'take from the rich to give to the poor', it's mobilising society's productive capacity, its labour and resources, to deliver a public good for all - a stable climate with minimum detrimental impacts. This is a huge challenge! [Read More]
 
AOC, Bowman Call for Biden Administration to Reverse Willow Oil Project Approval
By April 13, 2023]
---- A group of 33 House Democrats is urging Biden administration officials to heed calls from numerous climate and Indigenous groups to suspend a permit that would allow fossil fuel giant ConocoPhillips to construct a massive drilling operation on pristine Alaskan land. The lawmakers, led by Representatives Jamaal Bowman (D-New York), Jared Huffman (D-California) and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-New York), said that the administration should suspend the permit while the $8 billion project is in litigation, and reject future permits that the company may file to pursue the project.… Democrats, along with hundreds of climate and Indigenous groups, have been urging Biden to stop the Willow project for months, pointing out that moving forward goes against Biden's campaign promise for "no more drilling on federal lands, period, period, period." [Read More]
 
Civil Liberties
The Julian Assange Test Facing Every Member of the House
By John Nichols, The Nation [April 14, 2023]
---- There is a growing consensus in journalistic circles that the efforts by the US Department of Justice to prosecute WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange under the Espionage Act for obtaining and revealing information regarding alleged atrocities committed during the US occupation of Iraq pose a serious threat to the freedom of the press. … With the executive branch refusing to budge, it falls to Congress to defend the First Amendment. And this week, a number of progressive House members did just that. In an open letter organized by US Representative Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.), a group of lawmakers—Tlaib and US Representatives Cori Bush (D-Miss.), Greg Casar (D-Tex.), Jamaal Bowman (D-N.Y.), Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), and Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.)—are urging Attorney General Merrick Garland to stop going after Assange. The letter calls on Garland to "uphold the First Amendment's protections for the freedom of the press by dropping the criminal charges against Australian publisher Julian Assange and withdrawing the American extradition request currently pending with the British government." [Read More] Also of interest is "Dozens of Australian politicians urge US to abandon Julian Assange extradition," by Daniel Hurst The Guardian [UK] [April 10. 2-23] [Read More]
 
The State of the Union
The Threats to Our Democracy Have Gone Local
By Camille Squires, New York Times [April 15, 2023]
---- American democracy didn't crumble in one fell swoop under the administration of a president with disregard for rule of law or under the weight of a mob storming the Capitol or under a wave of candidates who claimed the 2020 election was rigged. Though some election deniers did win critical midterm races, the most prominent — Republicans like Kari Lake and Mark Finchem in Arizona and Doug Mastriano in Pennsylvania — lost their 2022 campaigns. As a result, some voters might have concluded that the movement died beyond Donald Trump's continued claims. That would be a serious mistake, because though it has receded from the headlines, election denialism has not died. It has just gone down ballot. In some state and local offices across the country, election denialism is still recasting how elections are conducted, in ways big and small. [Read More]
 
Israel/Palestine
(Video) Barely Anyone in Washington Supports the Two State Solution
By Peter Beinart [April 17, 2023]
[FB – In this short video, Beinart talks about the political shift going on in USA discussions about one-state and two-state "solutions" to the Israel-Palestine conflict.  Very useful, imo.] [See the Program]
 
Bowman, Sanders and 12 reps demand Biden 'shift policy' over Israel's 'systemic violence against Palestinians'
By
---- Yesterday 14 Congresspeople, led by Bernie Sanders and Jamaal Bowman, sent a historic letter to President Biden and his secretary of state calling on them to "undertake a shift in U.S. policy" in recognition of the "systemic violence against Palestinians" and begin to condition aid to Israel: to assure that all future foreign assistance "is not used in support of gross violations of human rights." You say, Only 14. But the letter signed by the 14 (first circulated last month) establishes a firm address for Palestinian human rights inside the Congress. It includes the Squad and more traditional progressives, but also new reps, Summer Lee of Pittsburgh and Delia Ramirez of Chicago. The 14 are part of the "sea change" in U.S. attitudes towards Israel its own advocates acknowledge. [Read More]