Sunday, August 27, 2023

CFOW Newsletter - 60 Years Ago, Martin Luther King, Jr. Had A Dream

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
August 27, 2023

Hello All – 60 years ago, on August 28th, 1963, Martin Luther King, Jr. spoke to 250,000 people gathered at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, DC to demand "jobs and freedom."  On Saturday, thousands again gathered in Washington to commemorate that historic occasion and to assess how much of King's dream remains unfulfilled. (And a much smaller rally was held in Hastings.)

The demands of the 1963 March included what became the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act.  But as noted in the article by historian Robin Kelley linked below, the March for Jobs and Freedom quickly lost its focus on jobs, as the forces (including the Kennedys) that would advance a modest civil rights agenda would not open the door to significant economic reforms that might lift millions of people out of poverty, especially in the (Democratic) Jim-Crow South. As one commentator wrote recently: "The march's radicalism hinged on its call for 'a national minimum wage of not less than $2.00 per hour.' Accounting for inflation, that modest-sounding figure translates to more than $19 in today's market. That's $4 more than the Fight for $15 movement demands, $2 more than the $17 recently proposed by Senator Bernie Sanders, Independent of Vermont, and $11.75 above the $7.25 federal minimum wage, which hasn't budged since 2009."  An economy, especially in the South, that rested so heavily on the super-exploitation of people of color could not concede a living wage to its workers.

What the March did do was to give the "southern" civil rights movement a national platform, and – through the oratory of Martin Luther King, Jr. and the resolute non-violence of the demonstration itself – accelerated movement-building in the Black communities of cities and towns large and small.  As Brandon Terry has noted in several books and the article linked below, the "sanitized" memory we have today of King belies his life-long efforts to forge a black and white, union-based coalition of labor on behalf of a progressive economic program.  The white racism that King and his movement encountered when attempting to establish a base in Chicago and the North after Selma blunted this objective, and the consequences of this failure remain a cancer on our body politic.

Finally, on the eve of this 60th anniversary of the March for Jobs and Freedom, two of our major newspapers published fascinating oral histories of the march's organizers and some stories behind the March.  Highly recommended are "The 1963 March on Washington Changed America. Its Roots Were in Harlem" [New York Times] and "An oral history of the March on Washington, 60 years after MLK's dream" [Washington Post].

Some useful reading on "Jobs and Freedom," 1963

MLK Now
By Brandon Terry, Boston Review [September 10, 2018]
---- The King now enshrined in popular sensibilities is not the King who spoke so powerfully and admiringly at Carnegie Hall about Du Bois. Instead, he is a mythic figure of consensus and conciliation, who sacrificed his life to defeat Jim Crow and place the United States on a path toward a "more perfect union." In this familiar view, King and the civil rights movement are rendered "backward looking and even conservative." King deployed his rhetorical genius in the service of our country's deepest ideals—the ostensible consensus at the heart of our civic culture—and dramatized how Jim Crow racism violated these commitments. Heroically, through both word and deed, he called us to be true to who we already are: "to live out the true meaning" of our founding creed. No surprise, then, that King is often draped in Christian symbolism redolent of these themes. He is a revered prophet of U.S. progress and redemption, Moses leading the Israelites to the Promised Land, or a Christ who sacrificed his life to redeem our nation from its original sin. Such poetic renderings lead our political and moral judgment astray. [Read More]

Big, Glitzy Marches Are Not Movements
By Robin D. G. Kelley, Boston Review [
---- Anyone paying attention to the events leading up to the fiftieth anniversary of the March on Washington should know by now that this historic gathering rallied under the banner of "jobs and freedom." It has become common knowledge that economic justice was at the heart of the march's agenda, and the main forces behind the event had roots in socialist movements—Bayard Rustin and veteran black labor leader A. Philip Randolph, who threatened a similar march two decades earlier after a black woman activist proposed the idea at a Civil Rights conference in 1940. The truth is that the broad economic agenda didn't just drop out of historical accounts; it dropped out of the mainstream movement.  First, the big groups—the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, Congress on Racial Equality, the NAACP and the Urban League—threw their energies almost entirely behind passing the watered-down Civil Rights bill and supporting a Voting Rights bill under President Johnson.  … And finally, Randolph and the circle of leaders controlling the march deliberately excluded black women's organizations from playing any significant role in the movement. [Read More]

News Notes
On Sunday, September 17th, there will be climate-crisis protests around the world, including on in NYC, demanding an end to using fossil fuels.  In the Rivertowns, I know of contingents going from CD16, WESPAC, and CFOW.  There will also be focused contingents such as a Peace Action group underscoring the role of military activity in promoting climate chaos.  For basic information about the march and rally, go here.

In the House of Representatives, "the Squad" – including now our own representative Jamaal Bowman -- faces an uphill fight for passing good legislation and preventing horrible stuff. Jacobin Magazine just published a useful balance-sheet of the Squad's accomplishments.

While the "plan" to dump a million-plus gallons of radioactive water from Indian Point into the Hudson River may be thwarted, Japan has begun to a million-plus tons of radioactive water from its failed Fukushima nuclear plant into the Pacific Ocean. Needless to say, a zillion people are unhappy about this.  Read more here.

Boris Kagarlitsky, one of Russia's leading dissidents and an opponent of Russia's war against Ukraine, has been arrested and jailed. This article describes the background to Kagarlitsky's arrest and the difficult situation of dissidents generally, and links ways for us to protest.

Finally, some good news, a judge in Montana has ruled in favor of a group of young people claiming that they have a constitutional right to a healthy environment, and that state regulators, etc. must be allowed to consider the climate impact of their regulatory decisions.  A wonderful story!

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 newsletter readers focus on The Freedom Singers, who were on stage at the 1963 March for Jobs and Freedom to perform "We Shall Not be Moved."  Several of the original Freedom Singers were students at Albany State College (GA), who when arrested in 1962 used the "jail in" to become a singing group. Much of their music transformed the lyrics of gospel songs into freedom songs.  Connected with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), the group became ambassadors of the Freedom Movement to the North, raising funds for the Movement and explaining (esp. to Northern students) what the struggle was all about. In 1973 one of the founding Freedom Singers, Bernice Johnson Reagon, initiated Sweet Honey in the Rock, which carried on and popularized freedom music – such as "Ella's Song" – for new generations. Enjoy!

Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW

CFOW Weekly Reader

Featured Essays
We Are Witnessing the First Stages of Civilization's Collapse
By Michael T. Klare, The Nation [August 22, 2023]
---- In his 2005 bestseller Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed, geographer Jared Diamond focused on past civilizations that confronted severe climate shocks, either adapting and surviving or failing to adapt and disintegrating. Among those were the Puebloan culture of Chaco Canyon, N.M., the ancient Mayan civilization of Mesoamerica, and the Viking settlers of Greenland. Such societies, having achieved great success, imploded when their governing elites failed to adopt new survival mechanisms to face radically changing climate conditions. … The question today is: Will our own elites perform any better than the rulers of Chaco Canyon, the Mayan heartland, and Viking Greenland? [Read More] And relevant here – "Global Subsidies for Fossil Fuels Skyrocket to $7 trillion per Year, as 2023 Promises to be Hottest on Record," by Juan Cole, Informed Comment [August 26, 2023] [Link].

Art – Awakening – Abolition
By Peter Linebaugh, Counterpunch [August 25, 2023]
---- The cover of Janie Paul's Making Art in Prison: Survival and Resistance shows a painting of a man in prison who stares at us.  We see him on the other side of wire.  In the background behind him are ten other prisoners in the yard.  The artist is Rafael DeJesus.   The man stares implacably.  Neither vacant nor accusatory the expression is sad though not quite accepting.  It is alert, as if to say to us, "your move." Our move must be abolition. [Read More]

The Deluge Facing Africa's Leaders Is Going to Get Worse
By Alex de Waal, New York Times [August 14, 2023]
---- An uninterrupted swath of African countries from the Atlantic Ocean to the Red Sea is now under military rule. Mali, Guinea, Chad, Sudan, Burkina Faso and, most recently, Niger. Some of the putschists deposed elected leaders, like Niger's president, Mohamed Bazoum. Others forestalled elections or even overthrew the leaders they had installed. This is more than a series of distant and regrettable events. It's a sign that a large part of the continent — mostly in an area south of the Sahara known as the Sahel — has fallen off the path of building functioning states. It raises an unsettling question that affects the whole world: How can poor and insecure countries forge political order and give their citizens the confidence that democratic government can deliver what they need? [Read More]

And on the coup in Niger – "When Is a Coup Not a Coup? When the U.S. Says So," by Nick Turse, The Intercept [August 19, 2023] [Link]; and "What's Happening in Niger Is Far From a Typical Coup," by Vijay Prashad, ZNet [August 16, 2023] [Link].

War & Peace
(Video) Noam Chomsky – Opening Remarks for the International Peace Summit for Ukraine [June 12, 2023] – 7 minutes
---- Prior to the June 10 & 11 International Peace Summit in Vienna, Joseph Gerson recorded Noam's brief and cogent remarks, which opened and framed this conference with participants drawn from 32 countries. Noam was clear that for peace and to prevent escalation, it is essential to win a ceasefire and begin diplomatic negotiations for a just and peaceful end to the war. [See the Program]

War Without Humans [2011]
By Barbara Ehrenreich, Tom Dispatch
---- For a book about the all-too-human "passions of war," my 1997 work Blood Rites ended on a strangely inhuman note: I suggested that, whatever distinctly human qualities war calls upon — honor, courage, solidarity, cruelty, and so forth — it might be useful to stop thinking of war in exclusively human terms.  After all, certain species of ants wage war and computers can simulate "wars" that play themselves out on-screen without any human involvement. … A decade and a half later, these musings do not seem quite so airy and abstract anymore. The trend, at the close of the twentieth century, still seemed to be one of ever more massive human involvement in war — from armies containing tens of thousands in the sixteenth century, to hundreds of thousands in the nineteenth, and eventually millions in the twentieth-century world wars. [Read More]

'Oppenheimer': an artistic visual tapestry of the bomb's science and power intricacies
By Lovely Umayam, The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists [August 17, 2023]
---- Paradoxically, the audience must feel Oppenheimer's love for his work to feel his horror and remorse after the Trinity test. Once the "gadget" successfully exploded on New Mexico, Oppenheimer had effectively weaponized the very thing he found so wondrous at Göttingen. Oppenheimer's curiosity, ego, and moral blindness that came with the exigencies of war transformed him from a theoretical physicist eagerly exploring the underpinnings of the universe to a bomb-maker entangled in political machinations largely out of his control. … By the final hour of the film, the audience endures not only the humiliation of Oppenheimer, but also the oppressive air of bureaucracy, with scene after scene of bureaucrats flicking through their binders, speaking on podiums, or huddled together, devising their next political move. I found a subtle message in this visual shift: the terrifying realization that the most destructive weapons in the world are ultimately left in the hands of fallible men—the jealous, the petty, and the power hungry. [Read More]

The War in Ukraine
What was touted as Ukraine's spring – and then summer – counter-offensive continues to gain little ground.  With the creation of a war-capable air force (F-16s, etc.) put off until next year, Ukraine leadership and US elite-media commentators are conceding that they have little hope for a military breakthrough this year.  Three recent articles in The Washington Post, hardly a dissenter from the patriotic war effort, elaborate this point: US Intelligence Says Ukraine Will Fail to Meet Key Goal"; "Ukraine's Hopes for Maximal Victory Look Remote"; and  "Ukraine Running Out of Options to Retake Significant Territory."

Possibly significant also has been a flurry of articles quoting Pentagon and other spokespeople to the effect that Ukraine's military strategy is flawed (focusing on the east rather than exclusively on the south), and that Ukraine's "counteroffensive" is not working because of an unwillingness to "accept casualties."  (The New York Times recently estimated Ukraine's casualties in the war as 70,000 killed and up to 120,000 wounded.) Why the Pentagon et al. is giving publicity to this line of criticism is a mystery to me: is it the beginning of the USA abandoning its blank-check commitment to Ukraine? Australian journalist Caitlin Johnstone examines some of these statements in "Big Brave Western Proxy Warriors Keep Whining That Ukrainian Troops Are Cowards" [Link].

Two useful articles to read in their entirety this week are "U.S.-Backed Roll of the Dice Leaves Ukraine in Worse Crisis," by Code Pink's Medea Benjamin and Nicolas J.S. Davies [Link]; and "Washington Needs an Endgame in Ukraine," by Samuel Charap, Foreign Affairs.  The latter article is important esp. because Foreign Affairs is the flagship publication for the US foreign policy elite.

The Climate Crisis
(Video) Plantation Disaster Capitalism: Native Hawaiians Organize to Stop Land & Water Grabs After Maui Fire
From Democracy Now! [August 18, 2023]
---- With the death toll from the Maui wildfires at 111 and as many as 1,000 still missing, we speak with Hawaiian law professor Kapuaʻala Sproat about the conditions that made the fires more destructive and what's yet to come for residents looking to rebuild their lives. Decades of neocolonialism in Hawaii have redirected precious water resources toward golf courses, resorts and other corporate ventures, turning many areas into tinderboxes and leaving little water to fight back against the flames. Now many Hawaiians say there is a power grab underway as real estate interests and other wealthy outsiders look to buy up land and water rights on the cheap as people are still reeling from the loss of their family members, livelihoods and communities. [See the Program] Also of interest – "Maui Fire Coverage Ignored Fossil Fuel Responsibility," by Robin Andersen, FAIR [August 25, 2023] [Link].

As the Red Rock Desert Broils Us in Beauty, Will We Have to Leave?
By
---- Aridity is baked into the people and places of the American Southwest. We possess a dry demeanor influenced by a landscape that is often cracked and weathered by wind, water and time. You see it in our faces and you feel it on the ground, but we hardly have a vocabulary for the extreme version of heat and drought we are now living through.… The red rock landscape I love and have lived in for a quarter of a century is a blistering terrain. The heat bears down on our shoulders with the weight of a burning world. We can hide from the heat in the desert in our air-conditioned homes, ours cooled by a heat pump powered by solar panels. But there is no place on Earth where we can escape the climate emergency for the duration. This is not being a doomer. This is dwelling with the facts that mirror our own lived experience. [Read More]

The State of the Union
The Constitution Prohibits Trump From Ever Being President Again
By J. Michael Luttig and Laurence H. Tribe, The Atlantic [August 20, 2023]
---- As students of the United States Constitution for many decades we long ago came to the conclusion that the Fourteenth Amendment, the amendment ratified in 1868 that represents our nation's second founding and a new birth of freedom, contains within it a protection against the dissolution of the republic by a treasonous president. This protection, embodied in the amendment's often-overlooked Section 3, automatically excludes from future office and position of power in the United States government—and also from any equivalent office and position of power in the sovereign states and their subdivisions—any person who has taken an oath to support and defend our Constitution and thereafter rebels against that sacred charter, either through overt insurrection or by giving aid or comfort to the Constitution's enemies. The historically unprecedented federal and state indictments of former President Donald Trump have prompted many to ask whether his conviction pursuant to any or all of these indictments would be either necessary or sufficient to deny him the office of the presidency in 2024. [Read More]

Israel/Palestine
Why we created the Institute for the Critical Study of Zionism
By Rabab Ibrahim Abdulhadi and Heike Schotten, Mondoweiss [August 24, 2023]
[FB – Prof. Rabab Abdulhadi teaches at San Francisco State in California, but she lives in Westchester and is an active member of JVP-Westchester] ---- At this point, it could not be clearer that Zionism is a political ideology tightly enmeshed with racism, fascism, and colonial dispossession. But the conditions for studying and resisting Zionism are incredibly difficult because Zionism has been framed by its proponents as "Jewish liberation," while opposition to Zionism has been historically framed as antisemitic (or even, as the ADL habitually characterizes left-wing groups, framed in the rhetoric of totalitarianism). … Despite the false antisemitic labels used to smear research and teaching on Zionism and Palestinian liberation, scholars and activists continue to produce crucial new knowledge in these areas. Extending well beyond the academy, this research is being undertaken by activists and organizers as well, in the United States, Palestine, and around the world who are directly confronting these systems of surveillance and repression. [Read More]

Six Tropes to Look Out for That Distort Israel/Palestine Coverage
By Lara-Nour Walton, FAIR [Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting] [August 22, 2023]
---- To say that U.S. news skews pro-Israel raises many an eyebrow, since the public has been conditioned to believe otherwise. … Yet such claims have been litigated, and the verdict is plain: U.S. corporate media lean in favor of Israel. As Abeer Al-Najjar (New Arab,7/28/22) noted: "The framing, sourcing, selection of facts, and language choices used to report on Palestine…often reveal systematic biases which distort the Palestinian struggle." Some trends are more ubiquitous than others, which is why it is vital that news readers become acquainted with the tropes that dominate coverage of the Israeli occupation. [Read More]

Sunday, August 13, 2023

CFOW Newsletter - Poverty and self-destruction in America

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
August 13, 2023

No newsletter next week – Vacation!

Hello All – In America, our lives are shorter than those of people living in other rich countries.  We die sooner, and young people die more often.  Why is this happening?  What can we do to fix this?

Beginning in the 1980s, life expectancy in the USA began dropping behind other wealthy countries.  Today we are below Albania and Algeria, and just ahead of Panama and Turkey.  We are now 47th in the world; on average we live 5-6 fewer years than people in Japan, Hong Kong, or Switzerland.

A recent study found the 25% of more of deaths in the USA were "excess" compared to other wealthy countries; and that during the Covid pandemic this share jumped to one-third.  "Excess" deaths are due to gun violence, drug overdoses, infant and child-birth mortality, traffic accidents, and workplace accidents. Hundreds of thousands more died unvaccinated from Covid.  Native Americans and Black Americans die at a higher rate.

Each of these kinds of deaths has their own story, but taken together they demand a deeper answer. Is our national health system, so unprepared for the Covid pandemic, related to our very high rate of expenditure on the military and war? Is our lack of a social "safety net" related to the legacies of slavery and racism?  Some commentators describe the tsunami of deaths from drug overdoses as a "crisis of despair" – is this a more general crisis, where our institutions and social systems are collapsing all around us?  If living in America causes the average person to lose 5 years of their life, isn't it time to do something about this?

Further Reading on Deadly America

Why Is America Such a Deadly Place?
By David Wallace-Wells, New York Times [August 9, 2023]
---- You've probably heard about the mortality crisis in terms of its effect on average life spans — several years ago, after decades of steady improvements, life expectancy in the United States took an unprecedented turn for the worse, placing it not among its wealthy peers, but below Kosovo, Albania, Sri Lanka and Algeria (and just ahead of Panama, Turkey and Lebanon). But the loss is jaw-dropping by another measure — the sheer number of needless deaths. Before the pandemic, roughly a half million more people in America died each year than would have died, on average, in wealthy peer countries. In each of the first two years of the pandemic, the number surpassed one million. Those are conclusions of a paper, "Missing Americans: Early Death in the United States — 1933-2021," by a team of mortality researchers published in May that tabulated the number of "missing" Americans by comparing U.S. death rates to the average of 21 closely comparable countries, mostly pretty-rich nations across Europe. [Read More]
News Notes
On Monday the White Plains Common Council approved a $5 million settlement to "resolve" a decade-long lawsuit by the family of Kenneth Chamberlain Sr., who was killed by a White Plains police officer in 2011 in the midst of a mental health crisis. Family and friends of Kenneth Chamberlain have sustained a fierce fight to get justice in this case of police murder.  For some background, go here; for the settlement, go here.

The "Not On Our Dime" campaign seeks NY legislation to curb a handful of foundations that are channeling supposedly tax-deductible funds ($60 million annually) to support illegal settlements in the Occupied Territories of Palestine.  The bill is sponsored by Zohran Mamdani and is supported by a coalition of civil rights organizations.  Palestinian poet and activist Mohammed El-Kurd has a good article about this in The Nation.

For those keeping score at home, America's 5 biggest weapons contractors - Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon, Boeing, and General Dynamics – made $196 billion in 2022.  To learn more, go here.

CFOW Nuts & Bolts

Please consider getting involved with Concerned Families of Westchester.  Weather permitting, we meet for a protest/rally each Saturday in Hastings, at 12 noon at the VFW Plaza (Warburton and Spring St.)  A "Black Lives Matter/Say Their Names" vigil is held 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 the CFOW Newsletter time machine transports stalwart readers back 40 years to the time of the "Talking Heads."  In these two numbers - "Once in a Lifetime" and "Life During Wartime" – the choreography complements the deep-thinking of the lyrics.  Enjoy!

Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW

CFOW Weekly Reader

Featured Essays
(Video) "We're Living the Climate Emergency": Native Hawaiian Kaniela Ing on Fires, Colonialism & Banyan Tree
From Democracy Now! [August 11, 2023]
---- We speak with Kaniela Ing, national director of the Green New Deal Network and seventh-generation Kanaka Maoli, Native Hawaiian, about the impact of this week's devastating wildfires and their relationship to climate change. The catastrophic fires have destroyed nearly all buildings in the historic section of Lahaina, which once served as the capital of the Hawaiian Kingdom. What is now being described as the worst natural disaster in Hawaii's history was created by conditions such as dry vegetation, hurricane-level winds and developers redirecting water and building over wetlands, which are directly related to the climate crisis. "Anyone in power who denies climate change, to me, are the arsonists here," says Ing. "We're living the climate emergency." [See the Program]

(Video) Horace Campbell on Opposing Military Intervention in Niger & Disastrous U.S./French Role in Africa
From Democracy Now! [August 10, 2023]
[FB – IMO, this is an excellent introduction to the complexities surrounding the military coup in Niger and the on-going African fight against neo-colonialism.]
---- West African leaders from ECOWAS, backed by the United States and France, met today to consider military action to restore the ousted Niger President Mohamed Bazoum following last month's military coup. Neighboring Mali and Burkina Faso have threatened that any intervention in Niger would amount to a declaration of war on them, as well. This comes as leaders of the coup in Niger have appointed a 21-member cabinet as they forge ahead with building a new government. The coup "is a consequence of the militarization of Nigerien society" by the United States and France, which both have strong military presence in the region, explains Horace Campbell, chair of the Global Pan African Movement, North American delegation. He notes anti-French sentiment is a powerful force in Niger and across Africa as people reject the former colonizer's influence: "The French are inordinately dependent on the exploitation and plunder of Africa." [See the Program]

The War in Ukraine
It's almost 18 months since Russia invaded Ukraine, and peace seems no closer
By Rajan Menon, The Guardian [UK] [August 8, 2023]
[FB – Rajan Menon is an emeritus professor at the City College of NY and the co-author of Conflict in Ukraine: The Unwinding of the Post-Cold War Order.
---- Both countries still believe they can prevail, and that belief is more powerful than any evidence suggesting that neither side can truly win. … ---- Initiatives aimed at ending the war that Russia started by invading Ukraine have been underway for months. On 24 February – a year to the day Russia started its attack – China unveiled a proposal containing 12 principles. In June, a group of African leaders met separately with Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy and Russian president Vladimir Putin to present a 10-point peace plan. Most recently, this month, Saudi Arabia convened more than 40 countries, including Ukraine but not Russia, to find a way forward. With the war approaching the 18-month mark, efforts like these are understandable. Parts of Ukraine have become rubble. Reconstruction costs are estimated at hundreds of billions of dollars. Some 11 million Ukrainians are either refugees or "internally displaced people" – about a quarter of the country's population. More than 26,000 civilians have been killed or injured – some estimates run much higher – and military casualties may be four times greater. Anyone who has visited wartime Ukraine will attest that the enormity of devastation verges on the incomprehensible. [Read More]

War & Peace
(Video) Is Biden Risking War with Iran as U.S. Deploys Marines to Guard Commercial Ships in the Persian Gulf?
From Democracy Now! [August 8, 2023]
---- In an escalation of tensions, the Biden administration has deployed thousands of U.S. Marines and sailors to the Middle East in order to deter Iran from seizing oil tankers and other commercial ships near the Strait of Hormuz. The move comes after the Navy said Iran tried to seize two commercial oil tankers in the Gulf of Oman last month, after seizing dozens more since 2019. Iran responded by equipping its Navy with drones and missiles. "It's really baffling to see why we're taking such immense risks that could bring the U.S. into war for achieving things that are of little value when it comes to peace and stability in the region or U.S. interests in the region," says Trita Parsi, executive vice president of the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, who says the Biden administration is risking a new war for stronger relations with Saudi Arabia. He argues the Biden administration has made critical mistakes in its relations with Iran by continuing Trump administration-era maximum-pressure sanctions. [See the Program]

The Nuclear Plan to Decapitate Russia and China (and the Planet)
By Dan Steinbock Antiwar.com [August 10, 2023]
---- On June 16, the 92-year-old Daniel Ellsberg passed away. At RAND, he contributed to a top-secret 47-volume study of classified documents on the Vietnam War. Even though the war had been acknowledged to be "unwinnable" since the 1950s, successive presidents from Eisenhower to Nixon had lied about the conflict. As Ellsberg released copies of the classified documents, the 7,000 pages became known as the "Pentagon Papers." However, from 1958 to 1971, his primary job had been as a nuclear war planner for Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon administrations. In his view, nearly every US president from Truman to Trump has "considered or directed serious preparations for possible imminent US initiation of tactical or strategic nuclear warfare." Until recently, it was not known that Ellsberg also secretly copied files on Pentagon's nuclear plans to "decapitate" Russia, China and our planet. [Read More]

Some last thoughts on Hiroshima & Nagasaki
The US Nuked Nagasaki 78 Years Ago Today. "Oppenheimer" Barely Mentions It.
By Greg Mitchell, Mother Jones [August 9, 2023]
---- Seventy-eight years ago today, on August 9, 1945, the US military detonated a powerful atomic bomb over the Japanese city of Nagasaki, ultimately killing as many as 90,000 people, nearly all civilians. Yet Nagasaki today might as well be called the "forgotten A-bomb city." … In short, US military officials felt there was much to gain by getting the war over before the Russians advanced. In that sense, the Nagasaki bomb was not the last shot of World War II but the first blow of the Cold War. [Read More]

(Video) The Strangest Dream [Atomic scientist Joseph Rotblat]
By Eric Bednarski, National Film Board of Canada [2008]
---- This is the story of Joseph Rotblat, the only nuclear scientist to leave the Manhattan Project, the U.S. government's secret program to build the first atomic bomb. His was a decision based on moral grounds. The film retraces the history of nuclear weapons, from the first test in New Mexico, to Hiroshima, where we see survivors of the first atomic attack. Branded a traitor and spy, Rotblat went from designing atomic bombs to researching the medical uses of radiation. Together with Bertrand Russell he helped create the modern peace movement, and eventually won the Nobel Peace Prize. [Link] To see the film, go here.

The Climate Crisis
Behind All the Talk, This Is What Big Oil Is Actually Doing
By Jason Bordoff, New York Times [August 7, 2023]
---- If you've been listening to the world's major energy companies over the past few years, you probably think the clean energy transition is well on its way. But with fossil fuel use and emissions still rising, it is not moving nearly fast enough to address the climate crisis. In June, Shell became the latest of the big oil companies to curb plans to cut oil output, announcing that it will no longer reduce annual oil and gas production through the end of the decade. The company also raised its dividend, diverting money that could be used to develop clean energy. BP's share prices surged this year when the company walked back its plan to reduce oil and gas output. … The industry has spent less than 5 percent of its production and exploration investments on low-emission energy sources in recent years, according to the I.E.A. Indeed, the fact that many companies (with some notable exceptions) seem to be prioritizing dividends, share buybacks and continued fossil fuel production over increasing their clean energy investments suggests they are unable or unwilling to power the transition forward. Contrary to their rhetoric, the behavior of these companies suggests that they believe a low-carbon transition will not occur or they won't be as profitable if it does. [Read More]  Also of interest is "Climate change is a threat to the planet: We must address it," by Senator Bernie Sanders [August 8, 2023] [Link] 

The State of the Union
"Nurses Fight Godzilla" [New Jersey nurses on strike]
By Chris Hedges, The Chris Hedges Report  [August 8, 2023]
---- Nurses, battered by the almost inhuman demands put on them during the pandemic, have been especially hard hit. Almost one-third of New Jersey's nurses have left the profession in the last three years. … Judy Danella, president of United Steel Workers Local 4-200 — the union that represents Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital's more than 1,700 nurses — stands in a church basement before a room full of her union members. Her voice quavers slightly as she delivers grim news. The hospital management, whose top administrators earn salaries in the millions of dollars, has refused to concede to any of the nurse's core demands. Friday at 7:00 a.m. they will be locked out of the hospital and on strike. But it is not only the strike that concerns Danella, who is wearing a blue T-shirt that reads: "Safe Staffing Saves Lives." "It is 100 percent my belief that the goal is to break the union," says Danella, who has worked at the hospital for 28 years. "This is about the future of nursing." [Read More]

Israel/Palestine
How Israel occupied Itself: The Way the Crisis on the West Bank Came Home
By Juan Cole, Tom Dispatch [August 11, 2023]
---- On July 24th, the Israeli Knesset passed a measure forbidding the country's High Court of Justice from in any way checking the power of the government, whether in making cabinet decisions or appointments, based on what's known as the "reasonability" standard. In the Israeli context, this was an extreme act, since right-wing parliamentarians were defying massive crowds that had, for months on end, demonstrated with remarkable determination against such radical legislation. And that measure was only one part of a wide-ranging redesign of the court system unveiled by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in January, which deeply alarmed his critics. … The central motivation for that legislation, however, lay not in domestic politics but in the desire of extremists in the cabinet to ensure that the courts won't be able to interfere with their plans to vastly increase the number of Israeli squatter-settlements on Palestinian land on the West Bank and perhaps someday soon simply annex that occupied territory. Under such circumstances, members of the far-right Religious Zionist Party were recently excoriated by Tamir Pardo, a former head of Israeli intelligence, as Israel's "Ku Klux Klan." [Read More]

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. - The Israel Lobby's Useful Idiot
By Chris Hedges [August 12, 2023]
---- The Palestinians are poor, forgotten and alone. And this is why the defiance of Israel's treatment of the Palestinians is the central issue facing any politician who claims to speak on behalf of the vulnerable and the marginalized. To stand up to Israel has a political cost few, including Robert F. Kennedy Jr., are willing to pay. But if you do stand up, it singles you out as someone who puts principles before expediency, who is willing to fight for the wretched of the earth and, if necessary, sacrifice your political future to retain your integrity. Kennedy fails this crucial test of political and moral courage. Kennedy, instead, regurgitates every lie, every racist trope, every distortion of history and every demeaning comment about the backwardness of the Palestinian people peddled by the most retrograde and far-right elements of Israeli society. [Read More]

Our History
The Audacity of Occupy Wall Street
By Richard Kim, The Nation [November 2, 2011]
---- But then in these grim times, something unexpected happened: at first scores met in parks around New York City this summer to plan an occupation of Wall Street, then hundreds responded to their call, then thousands from persuasions familiar and astonishing, and now more than 100 cities around the country are Occupied. In the face of unchecked capitalism and a broken, captured state, the citizens of Occupy America have done something desperate and audacious—they put their faith and hope in the last seemingly credible force left in the world: each other. …Since September 17, the first day of the Occupation, thousands of people have flocked to Liberty to follow this impulse to live life anew. To stay for even a few days there is to be caught up in an incredible delirium of talking, making, doing and more talking—a beehive in which the drones have overthrown the queen but are still buzzing about furiously without any immediately apparent purpose. Someone might shout over the human microphone, "Mic check! (Mic check!) We need! (We need!) Some volunteers! (Some volunteers!) To go to Home Depot! (To go to Home Depot!) And get cleaning supplies! (And get cleaning supplies!)" A handful of people might perk up and answer the call—or not, in which case it is made again and again.  [Read More]

Black Study, Black Struggle
By Robin D. G. Kelley, Boston Review [
---- In the fall of 2015, college campuses were engulfed by fires ignited in the streets of Ferguson, Missouri. This is not to say that college students had until then been quiet in the face of police violence against black Americans. Throughout the previous year, it had often been college students who hit the streets, blocked traffic, occupied the halls of justice and malls of America, disrupted political campaign rallies, and risked arrest to protest the torture and suffocation of Eric Garner, the abuse and death of Sandra Bland, the executions of Tamir Rice, Ezell Ford, Tanisha Anderson, Walter Scott, Tony Robinson, Freddie Gray, ad infinitum. That the fire this time spread from the town to the campus is consistent with historical patterns. The campus revolts of the 1960s, for example, followed the Harlem and Watts rebellions, the freedom movement in the South, and the rise of militant organizations in the cities. But the size, speed, intensity, and character of recent student uprisings caught much of the country off guard. … What I offer here are a few observations and speculations about the movement, its self-conception, and its demands, many of which focus on making the university more hospitable for black students. [Read More]

Sunday, August 6, 2023

CFOW Newsletter - Today is the anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima - and the beginning of the "Atomic Age"

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
August 6, 2023

Hello All – Sunday, August 6th, is the anniversary of the use of an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan.  Three days later, another bomb was dropped on Nagasaki. Why did the USA use an atomic bomb against Japan?  Was it really "necessary"? Did it end World War 2? These questions are still with us today. 

After the bombing, President Truman said the Bomb was the only alternative to an invasion of Japan.  He said that a million US soldiers would have been killed if an invasion was necessary.  But was there an alternative?  We now understand that there was, and that the President lied about many things.  Historians now know that the US knew that Japan was seeking to end the war, several months before August 6th.  Japan had lost the war. All leading US military people, including General Eisenhower, opposed using the Bomb.  They said it was cruel and unnecessary. But Japan was willing to surrender only if the Emperor/system was allowed to continue, and the US and its allies were insisting on "unconditional surrender." Many top US leaders urged that this policy be changed.  But President Truman refused.

The evidence is strong that Truman wanted to use the Bomb before the war ended.  Using the Bomb was intended to scare the Russians, not just in the Pacific war, but in the postwar settlements in Europe and elsewhere. Also, he wanted to end the war before Russians troops joined the war, which was scheduled for mid-August.  The demand for "unconditional surrender" prolonged the war until the Bomb was ready, but the Soviets declared war and invaded Manchuria before Japan surrendered.  Historians now understand that Japan decided to surrender not only because the Bomb, but because of the Russian invasion, two days after Hiroshima. In the end, ironically, the Peace Treaty allowed the Japanese to keep their Emperor, suggesting that the demand for an "unconditional surrender" had only been a ploy by Truman to keep the war going until the Bomb was ready and could be used.  And so began "the Atomic Age." 

Some reading on the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki

U.S. leaders knew we didn't have to drop atomic bombs on Japan to win the war. We did it anyway
By Gar Alperovitz and Martin J. Sherwin, Los Angeles Times [August 5, 2020]
---- The accepted wisdom in the United States for the last 75 years has been that dropping the bombs on Hiroshima on Aug. 6, 1945, and on Nagasaki three days later was the only way to end the World War II without an invasion that would have cost hundreds of thousands of American and perhaps millions of Japanese lives. Not only did the bombs end the war, the logic goes, they did so in the most humane way possible. However, the overwhelming historical evidence from American and Japanese archives indicates that Japan would have surrendered that August, even if atomic bombs had not been used — and documents prove that President Truman and his closest advisors knew it. [Read More]

Counting the dead at Hiroshima and Nagasaki
By Alex Wellerstein, The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists [August 4, 2020]
---- How many people died as a result of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki? There is one thing that everyone who has tackled this question has agreed upon: The answer is probably fundamentally unknowable. The indiscriminate damage inflicted upon the cities, coupled with the existing disruptions of the wartime Japanese home front, means that any precise reckoning is never going to be achieved.But beginning in 1945, people have tried to estimate the number of the dead and injured. … The estimated casualties also play a nuanced role in the various narratives and arguments about the end of World War II. [Read More]

News Notes
Friday, August 4th, was the anniversary of the 1964 "Tonkin Gulf Incident," which President Johnson turned into the "Tonkin Gulf Resolution," a congressional blank check to wage war against North Vietnam and the Vietnamese revolution.  What actually happened that day in August is illuminated in this short clip featuring Daniel Ellsberg, an excerpt from the PBS film "The Most Dangerous Man in America. The only Senators to vote against this Resolution were Oregon's Wayne Morse and Alaska's Ernest Gruening, and each year we remember them and honor them.  Wayne Morse was outspoken in his opposition to the war and the presidential proclamation of the war, as shown in this clip from the film, "War Made Easy."

We recall that July was the hottest month in human history.  In September, UN is hosting a Climate Ambition Summit to compel world leaders to stop the fossil fuel expansion driving the climate emergency.  On Sunday, September 17th, ahead of the Summit, a zillion people will march to demand that President Biden take bold action to End Fossil Fuels.  The march will be from 1 to 4 pm; the march route is TBD.  To learn more and keep up, go to https://www.endfossilfuels.us/.

At the conclusion of Secretary of State Blinken's recent visit to Australia, the Australian Foreign Secretary spoke at a press conference and called on the USA to release Julian Assange, who is an Australian citizen.  Blinken rejected this request, saying that Assange had done many mean things to the USA.  To learn more, go here.

Gymnast Simone Biles is back, and back in form, winning the U.S. Classic meet with a combo of amazing vaults, including an Yurchenko double pike.  (Don't try this at home.)

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!
I started college in 1960, just 15 years after Hiroshima.  Like most youngsters, I had "ducked and covered" at school, but knew little about the A-Bomb except that it ended World War II, and Uncle Charlie came home from the Pacific.  In one of my early college classes, I heard a political and ethical defense of using the atomic weapon, and became puzzled and curious and – finally – outraged as I investigated further.  It was a slippery slope, with no exit; a journey I shared with many, as more info about the Bomb became available.  Not surprisingly, Bob Dylan's early music spoke to many of us.  His "Hard Rain"  and "Masters of War" denounced not just war, but our rulers and their world.  Sixty years later, they still do.  Enjoy!

Best wishes,
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW

CFOW Weekly Reader

Featured Essays
Putin's Forever War
By
---- I spent a month in Russia, a country almost as large as the United States and Canada combined, searching for clues that might explain its nationalist lurch into an unprovoked war and its mood more than 17 months into a conflict conceived as a lightning strike, only to become a lingering nightmare. The war, which has transformed the world as radically as 9/11 did, has now taken 200,000 lives since Feb. 24, 2022, roughly split between the two sides, American diplomats in Moscow estimate. As I traveled from Siberia to Belgorod on Russia's western border with Ukraine, across the vertigo-inducing vastness that informs Russian assertiveness, I found a country uncertain of its direction or meaning, torn between the glorious myths that Mr. Putin has cultivated and everyday struggle. Along the way, I encountered fear and fervid bellicosity, as well as stubborn patience to see out a long war. [Read More]

Rebecca Solnit on Hope in Dark Times
By Maria Popova, The Marginalian [March 16, 2016]
---- The stories we tell ourselves about our public past shape how we interpret and respond to and show up for the present. The stories we tell ourselves about our private pasts shape how we come to see our personhood and who we ultimately become. The thin line between agency and victimhood is drawn in how we tell those stories. The language in which we tell ourselves these stories matters tremendously, too, and no writer has weighed the complexities of sustaining hope in our times of readily available despair more thoughtfully and beautifully, nor with greater nuance, than Rebecca Solnit does in Hope in the Dark: Untold Histories, Wild Possibilities. [Read More]

What Happened To Democracy in Turkey?
By Umut Özkırımlı, Waging Nonviolence [August 3, 2023]
---- The failure of the Turkish model cannot be explained solely in terms of unrealistic expectations. The rapid deterioration of Turkey into full-blown authoritarianism is also a manifestation of a broader, global trend of what political scientists call "democratic backsliding." As documented by Freedom House, 2021 marked the 15th consecutive year of decline in global freedom. With a global freedom score of 32 out of 100, Turkey is categorized as "not free." … But how did Turkey get here? What accounts for the meteoric fall from grace of what was once considered a success story? To what extent is the deterioration of democracy in Turkey related to the global rise of authoritarianism? And how do domestic factors, notably nationalism and religion, factor in? [Read More]  Also of interest is (Video) "Turkey: Rise of Erdogan's Empire," from the BBC [July 18, 2023] [Link].

War & Peace
Niger is Fourth Country in Sahel to Experience Anti-Western Coup
By Vijay Prashad adn Kambale Musavuli, Globetrotter [August 2, 2023]
---- The coup in Niger follows similar coups in Mali (August 2020 and May 2021) and Burkina Faso (January 2022 and September 2022), and Guinea (September 2021).At 3 a.m. on July 26, 2023, the presidential guard detained President Mohamed Bazoum in Niamey, the capital of Niger. Troops, led by Brigadier General Abdourahmane Tchiani closed the country's borders and declared a curfew. … This region of Africa—the Sahel—has faced a cascade of crises: the desiccation of the land due to the climate catastrophe, the rise of Islamic militancy due to the 2011 NATO war in Libya, the increase in smuggling networks to traffic weapons, humans, and drugs across the desert, the appropriation of natural resources—including uranium and gold—by Western companies that have simply not paid adequately for these riches, and the entrenchment of Western military forces through the construction of bases and the operation of these armies with impunity. [Read More]

US Leaders Split on China Policy
By Richard D. Wolff, Counterpunch [August 4, 2023]
---- On the one hand, U.S. policy aims to constrain China's economic, political, and military development because it has now become the United States' chief economic competitor and thus enemy. On the other hand, U.S. policy seeks to secure the many benefits to the United States of its companies' trade with and investments in China. U.S. debates over "decoupling" the two countries' economies versus the milder version of the same thing—"de-risking"—exemplify, on both sides, U.S. policy's split approach to China. The difficult reality for the United States is economic dependence on the world's number two economy that deepens with China's relentless march toward becoming the world's number one. [Read More]

The Iraq War – 20 Years Later
Manufacturing Consensus: An interview with Noam Chomsky
With Bhaskar Sunkara, Jacobin Magazine [July 28, 2023]
---- The Iraq War has been easily absorbed into the powerful doctrinal system, illustrating George Orwell's observation eighty years ago that, in free societies, inconvenient facts can be suppressed without the use of force. After twenty years, one would be hard put to find a single sentence anywhere near the mainstream affirming the obvious: the US-UK invasion of Iraq was the worst crime of this century, the kind of crime for which Nazis were hanged at Nuremberg — or even a sentence affirming that it was a crime. It has been refashioned as a benign effort to rescue the Iraqi people from a terrible dictator and to bring them the gift of democracy, an effort that unfortunately failed. Omitted are a few of those easily suppressed inconvenient facts…. [Read More]

The War in Ukraine
(Video) John Mearsheimer: Ukraine war is a long-term danger
[FB – Mearsheimer is a "realist" scholar who has been skeptical of the US/Ukraine project since 2014. He laid out his views in a short article last June.  In this one-hour video, "Ukraine War is a Long-Term Danger," he is interviewed by Aaron Maté, who recently published "US admits to pushing Ukraine into a fight it can't win" [Link].]

When facts cut through the fog of war
By Katrina vanden Heuvel and James Carden, Responsible Statecraft [July 28, 2023]
---- The fog of war over much of the last 18 months has skewed press coverage and our understanding of what is happening in Ukraine. Yet media opacity can no longer mask the facts on the ground. In only the past week, reports have emerged in the Wall Street Journal, CNN, the Financial Times and the New York Times indicating, among other things, that Ukraine's much awaited spring offensive has ground to a virtual stalemate and munitions from its NATO-allied partners are drying up. [Read More]

The Climate Crisis
"Is It Going to Get Us?" Climate Dystopia, Borders, and the Future
By Todd Miller, The Border Chronicle [August 3, 2023]
---- On the evening of July 23, my phone buzzed with an emergency alert. I was on the island of Corfu, Greece. There was a fire. Sure enough, I looked up and saw a plume of smoke coming over a ridge. It didn't look far. Was it just a cloud? No— as night fell, my frivolous hope was debunked when the ridgeline began to glow like an ember. Then we could see the licking flames. "Is it going to get us?" asked my seven-year-old William. For all of our two-week stay in Greece, there had been a heat wave, which would turn out to be the longest in Greek history (and one of the worst ever for Europe, and the world, for that matter).  … Still, I do not want to diminish the real fear that I saw in my child's eyes. And the pain in my heart to know that this is the world we are leaving to new generations. [Read More]

The Far Right Has a 'Battle Plan' to Undo Climate Progress Should Trump Win in 2024
B Kristoffer Tigue, Inside Climate News [August 1, 2023]
---- Far-right conservative groups are promoting a sprawling "battle plan" to obstruct and undo the federal government's efforts to tackle the climate crisis, with hopes of quickly enacting a series of sweeping changes if Donald Trump, or any other Republican, gets elected as president next year. The 920-page proposal, if implemented, would not only undo any progress the Biden administration has made to reduce emissions and fund clean energy development and other climate-related efforts, but it would make it far more difficult for a future administration to pursue any policy that seeks to address global warming at all. [Read More]

Civil Liberties
Ten Years After The US Military Verdict Against Chelsea Manning
By Kevin Gosztola, The Dissenter [July 31, 2023]
---- It was ten years ago that a United States military judge found Pfc. Chelsea Manning guilty of violating the Espionage Act, along with several other related offenses. She was fortunately acquitted of the most alarming charge levied against her: "aiding the enemy."Manning provided over 700,000 documents to WikiLeaks, many of which contained evidence of torture, war crimes, human rights abuses, and corruption within the State Department. … I noted in my coverage of the verdict that Manning was convicted on National Whistleblower Appreciation Day, and that her conviction crystallized a sharp contradiction. While U.S. officials professed their support for whistleblowers, U.S. military prosecutors simultaneously secured a guilty verdict in one of the most harsh and vindictive cases ever brought against a U.S. soldier. [Read More]

Israel/Palestine
Israel didn't Place Palestinians in "Refugee," but in Internment Camps
By Thomas Suarez, Middle East Monitor [August 3, 2023]
---- During much of 1948, Palestinians driven from their homes by the violence of that terrible year took safety in what could reasonably be called refugee camps; camps for people who have fled ongoing violence or natural disaster and are unable or fearful to return. They ceased to be refugee camps by January, 1949. … Like so much of the mainstream language used to explain what is happening with Israel and the Palestinians, the framing of these places as "refugee camps" distorts reality for Israel's benefit, and yet this is so ubiquitous that we repeat it without a thought. The narrative needs to change. The term tells a public already conditioned to see Israel-Palestine as a "conflict" with "two sides", that the camps are the result of complicated historical circumstances, a tragedy without a specific perpetrator. This obscures the simple reality that Israel has for seventy-five years blocked the people in the camps from going home simply because they are not Jewish. That, for the Zionists, has always been the Palestinians' "crime". [Read More]

Jewish supremacy won't end from within. BDS is still the only hope.
By Jonathan Ofir, Mondoweiss [August 5, 2023]
---- Israelis will never dismantle a system of domination that works for them. That's why the end of Jewish supremacy in Palestine will only come from external pressure — and BDS represents that hope. … The point is to make Jewish supremacy costly. If you really really hope for an end to Israeli apartheid, you have to advocate for pressure on Israeli society from the outside — that means BDS. Israel's internal fissures, as symbolized by the protest movement, are an isolated intra-Jewish fight that excludes Palestinians because they are not part of the "Jewish and democratic" vision. None of that offers hope to me. My hope, quite simply, is in the liberation of Palestinians. [Read More]

Also of interest – "Judea vs Fantasy Israel: the Collapse of Israeli Pillars, and the Opportunities for Palestine," by Ilan Pappé, Palestine Chronicle [July 31, 2023] [Link]; (Video) "Weaponising Water in Palestine," from Aljazeera [July 27, 2023] [Link]; and "Abolishing Israel's Reasonableness Standard: An Explainer," by Elisheva Goldberg, Jewish Currents [August 1, 2023] [Link].

Our History
The test ban treaty at 60: How citizen action made the world safer
By Robert Alvarez and Joseph Mangano, The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists [August 4, 2023]
---- Sixty years ago, almost to the day, in a Cold War world haunted by the specter of nuclear war, negotiators brought large-scale atmospheric nuclear weapons tests to an end. The United States, Soviet Union, and United Kingdom—which had conducted over 500 above-ground tests, with the combined power of 30,000 Hiroshima bombs—agreed to end testing in the atmosphere, under water, and in outer space. France and China, which had detonated a much smaller number of tests, did not sign, but ended all atmospheric tests in 1980. The Limited Test Ban Treaty became the first international environmental treaty curtailing the poisoning of Earth. [Read More]