Sunday, June 23, 2024

CFOW Newsletter - Gaza, Ukraine, Sudan - Work for Peace

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
June 23, 2024

Hello All – We live in very difficult times. There is little point in enumerating the threats to freedom and, indeed, human life that fill our world, except to recall that our survival depends on doing things that seem beyond our capacities. War, the climate crisis, civil liberties, and justice pre-occupy the pages of this newsletter and the work of Concerned Families of Westchester. Somehow we must find the strength to continue and the wisdom to find effective courses of action.

This edition of the newsletter considers the wars in Gaza, Ukraine, and Sudan.  In the first two of these wars, our country is directly involved, supplying weapons and money and diplomatic support, working night and day to prevent peace from breaking out.  In both cases, perhaps a majority of Americans see these wars as wrong and dangerous; yet our leaders – President, Pentagon, Congress, mainstream media, etc. – refuse to consider alternatives that might bring the wars to an end.

In these wars, War will be the winner, and the only winner. Israel, Hamas, Ukraine, and Russia have already suffered deadly losses, for which it may take decades to recover.  The United States has nearly destroyed whatever international reputation it retained after Iraq and Afghanistan.  The United Nations and international law have been overwhelmed by the refusal – not for the first time – of the "Great Powers" to support the principals of the UN Charter.  "Concerned Families" everywhere hardly know where to turn.  We are becoming refugees, trying not to be buried in the rubble of war.

This week's news from the Gaza war is that Israel is preparing to widen the war by attacking Hezbollah in Lebanon.  Such a war would be even more deadly than the war now being waged on the people of Gaza, as the UN Secretary General warned on Friday.  The Israeli war minister is now in Washington, presumably to get permission and perhaps to arrange for collaboration for this war. Such a war would offer the danger (or is it the opportunity?) of engaging the US and Iran, a long-held aspiration of Israel.  In a short video ("Apocalyptic Thinking and Israel's Looming War in Lebanon"), Peter Beinart explains why this is very dangerous/insane.

Work for peace.  And don't forget to vote. 

Illuminating the Week That Was

(Video) Inside Al-Aqsa hospital: Doctor shares experience in Gaza medical facility 
From Aljazeera English [8 minutes] [June 20, 2024] – 8 minutes 
---- Al Jazeera has been given special access inside Gaza's largest, remaining, functioning hospital, where medical workers are struggling to provide care to an ever-growing number of patients. Our correspondent Hani Mahmoud was taken through Al-Aqsa hospital in Deir el-Balah by Doctor Bushra Othman who's a general surgeon working with an overseas medical mission. [See the Program] 

UN Commission Finds Israel Guilty of Crimes Against Humanity 
By Bashir Abu-Manneh, Jacobin Magazine [June 2024] 
---- A new report by a UN commission finds that Israel intended to murder civilians en masse, inflict wide-scale civilian destruction, and collectively punish Palestinians in Gaza — holding them hostage to its political aims. The UN Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory issued its "first in-depth investigation into the events that took place on and since 7 October 2023." The report holds the Israeli occupation responsible for the ongoing catastrophic situation in Gaza. But it also alludes to the possibility that October 7 is a watershed moment for even harsher Israeli occupation unless international law is urgently implemented. [Read More] 

(Video) UN chief warns against escalation in Lebanon 
From Al Jazeera English [June 21, 2024] ---- Fighting between Israel and Hezbollah must not turn Lebanon into "another Gaza", UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres warns. "The risk for the conflict in the Middle East to widen is real and must be avoided when a rash move, when miscalculation, could trigger a catastrophe that goes far beyond the border and, frankly, beyond imagination," he told reporters at UN headquarters. [See the Program]

The Bowman Campaign
 Rep. Jamaal Bowman's campaign to win the Democratic Party nomination for Congress is now in its final days.  Early voting has gone on for a week, and the official Election Day is Tuesday, June 25.  There has been little reliable polling, though talking heads say that his opponent is in the lead, thanks to an unprecedented spending campaign by the pro-Israel lobby AIPAC and its affiliates.  But canvassers from CFOW have found that, at least in Hastings, where Bowman is supported by Mayor Nikki, Bowman may have an edge.  In any case, there is across-the-board agreement that the election depends on turnout, which depends in part of Bowman's ninth-inning volunteers.  To help out and get involved – with door-knocking or phone-banking or whatever - go here to see what's happening and to sign up. 

This election has been dominated by the determination of the Israel Lobby to defeat one of the handful of members of Congress supportive of Palestinian rights and opposed to Israel's horrible war on Gaza.  Behind the scenes, the immense spending on ads and mailers and whatever by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) and its affiliates has turned the election into one that raises questions about election interference by Big Money in service to a foreign country (Israel).  Here are two short videos that highlight this issue:

(Video) This NY race is history's most expensive House primary. Here's why. 
With Chris Hayes, MSNBC [June 19, 2024] ---- "Why all that spending? And where is it coming from? Well, this race isn't really about the candidates, at least the spending part of it," says Chris Hayes on Democratic primary for New York's 16th congressional district. [See the Program]

(Video) Some Jewish voters don't like what he's saying about the war in Gaza. Why that might cost him his seat 
From CNN [June 22, 2024] – And filmed in Hastings! 
---- Congressman Jamaal Bowman represents one of the largest Jewish populations in the country. Here is how some Jewish voters in his district have reacted to his comments on Israel and Gaza — and what that may mean for his upcoming primary on June 25th. [See the Program] 

And also 
AIPAC vs. Jamaal Bowman: New York Democratic Race Turns Into Referendum on pro-Israel group 
By Ben Samuels, Haaretz [Israel] [June 21, 2024] 
---- AIPAC has spent over $14 million in its bid to unseat the far-left Democrat in his race against challenger George Latimer next Tuesday. In response, Jamaal Bowman has called the pro-Israel group 'the Zionist regime' and questioned its targeting of Black lawmakers. [Read More]  Also of interest is "NY Dem challenging Bowman shares dozens of donors with Republican who sought Santos' seat," by Michelle Bocanegra and Jaclyn Jeffrey-Wilensky, The Gothamist [June 13, 2024] [Link]

News Notes 
Arundhati Roy is in trouble again.  This time it is for a speech she made in 2010 about the disputed territory of Kashmir, claimed by both India and Pakistan.  As Nitasha Kaul writes in "Arundhati Roy 'anti-terror' charge part of a push to silence Modi's critics," the newly reelected Hindu nationalist government in India is poised to punish Roy as a means to silence all dissenters.

What we call "The Movement" is made up of thousands and thousands of people working hard for peace and justice.  Frank Emspak, from Tuckahoe, was one of them.  In "The Passing of a Troublemaker," labor historian Paul Buhle writes about the life and times of Emspak, and about what a stalwart's stalwart did in one lifetime. The labor movement, civil right, the peace movement – he did it all.  Thank you, Frank.

Our team lost two other members this week.  In their own ways they helped to weave a more just world, while giving us great pleasure as they plied their trades.  Here is a nice video remembering Willie Mays, while another video remembers Donald Sutherland and the great antiwar cabaret group "FTA."

Rewards! 
This week's Rewards for stalwart newsletter readers come from Democracy Now's Juneteenth broadcast last week. It begins with an interview with musical artist Rhiannon Giddens, who won a Pulitzer Prize for her opera Omar, about Omar ibn Said, a Muslim scholar in Africa who was sold into slavery in the 1800s. [See the Program]  And here is a link to the song mentioned in the program, "When the Moon Meets the Sun."  Enjoy! 

Best Wishes, 
Frank Brodhead 
For CFOW

CFOW Weekly Reader 

Featured Essays 
(Video) 'The Night Won't End': Biden's War on Gaza 
---- From air strikes to field executions, Fault Lines investigates the killings of civilians by the Israeli military in Gaza and the role of the United States in the war. As Israel's bombing campaign continues in Gaza and the humanitarian crisis deepens to catastrophic levels, the Biden administration has not wavered in its support for Israel. United States weapons transfers – from 2,000-pound bombs to artillery shells and tanks – have been a crucial part of the Israeli military campaign. Fault Lines worked with journalists in Gaza to profile three families as they try to survive the war. Together with Airwars, Fault Lines also investigated an air strike on December 11 in north Gaza in which more than 100 people from the same family were killed. Numerous attacks on civilians – including that on Hind Rajab and her relatives in late January – have raised international concern and questions over continuing US support. [See the Program] 

The United States Is the Main Obstacle to Peace in Palestine 
By Medea Benjamin and Nicolas J. S. Davies, Code Pink [June 17, 2024] 
---- The United States seems determined to share Israel's self-inflicted isolation from voices calling for peace from all over the world, including large majorities of countries in the UN General Assembly and Security Council.  But perhaps this is appropriate, as the United States bears a great deal of responsibility for that isolation. By its decades of unconditional support for Israel, and by using its UN Security Council veto dozens of times to shield Israel from international accountability, the United States has enabled successive Israeli governments to pursue flagrantly criminal policies and to thumb their noses at the growing outrage of people and countries across the world. This pattern of U.S. support for Israel goes all the way back to its founding, when Zionist leaders in Palestine unleashed a well-planned operation to seize much more territory than the UN allocated to their new state in its partition plan, which the Palestinians and neighboring countries already firmly opposed. [Read More] 

The Art of the Submarine 
By Frida Berrigan, Counterpunch [June 21, 2024] 
---- On a train with all her belongings, Beatrice Cuming looked out the window — so the story goes — as it pulled into New London and impulsively got off, drawn by what she later described as the "obviously beautiful, powerful, dramatic, [and] exciting" subject matter in our town. And she stayed, painting city scenes and diving into the local arts community. To support herself, she got a job as a security guard at the General Dynamics Electric Boat company. I try to imagine her, maybe wearing a green jumpsuit, a flashlight, and a ring of keys at her waist, patrolling Electric Boat's massive yard and docks in nearby Groton. During World War II, that company must have been a 24/7 operation as it churned out 74 submarines and 398 PT boats from those very docks. … Eventually, realizing the prodigious talent of its security guard, the company commissioned Cuming to begin documenting its contributions to the war effort. As Electric Boat's artist-in-residence (so to speak), she produced a number of breathtaking works. All too literally. I sat across from her painting Welders at Electric Boat Company  unable to breathe. [Read More]

Sudan Starves 
By Joshua Craza, et al, New York Review of Books [June 23, 2024] 
---- Ninety-five percent of Sudan's total grain production occurs in November and December. It should be a time of plenty. In the southeastern state of Blue Nile, farmers fashion conical gourds into wazza, horn instruments with a bright clear sound, which they play to celebrate the harvest season. Last year they were silent. In April 2023 a war broke out between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), the major factions of Sudan's ruling military junta. The conflict has created a humanitarian catastrophe. In January the UN published a report claiming that during the first eight months of the war, between 10,000 and 15,000 people were killed just in El Geneina, the capital of West Darfur state; no one knows how many have died overall. Over a million people have fled abroad. Ten million are internally displaced, more than in any other country. … It is easy to forget that hunger in Sudan has a long political history. Droughts might have provoked food insecurity, but governments cause famines. For six painful decades the country's postcolonial rulers have weaponized hunger, choosing a select few to live and leaving the rest to die. [Read More]

The War on Gaza 
'Netanyahu Knows He's Out if Hostages Return' 
By Bar Peleg, et al, Haaretz [Israel] [June 22, 2024] 
---- Tens of thousands of people protested against the Netanyahu coalition and for a deal that would release the hostages in Tel Aviv and in several other locations across Israel, including Jerusalem, Caesarea, Haifa, and Be'er Sheva. As every week, the main protest calling for early elections was held on Kaplan Street in Tel Aviv, while a rally of the Hostages and Missing Families Forum was held at the same time at the so-called Hostage Square outside the Tel Aviv Museum of Art. A protest by the anti-government hostages' families is held in front of the Israeli defense ministry complex. After the protests largely ended, demonstrators began marching toward Tel Aviv's city center. Some marched from the defense ministry complex to Hostage Square, in a route approved by police, but some deviated from it and headed to the Likud headquarters, where hundreds of them lit fires in front of the entrance. [Read More]

Also of interest - (Video) 'All of the rats in the Knesset': Mass antiwar protest in Israel, from Aljazeera [Link]; and "Hostage Families demand Deal, Netanyahu Resignation, in Largest Demonstrations since Oct. 7," by Juan Cole, Informed Comment [June 23, 2024] [Link].

(Video) The World Food Program on Gaza: "Famine Means Failure" 
---- The World Food Programme's Palestine director on urgent aid in Gaza, where trapped civilians struggle amid a collapsed infrastructure. The human cost of Israel's ongoing war on Gaza is becoming increasingly evident. For those on the ground, the reality is stark and harrowing. With ongoing bombardments and almost destroyed infrastructure, how are people coping as the food, water and other basic essentials they need, become increasingly scarce? And is there any way the humanitarian crisis in Gaza can be alleviated? Matthew Hollingworth, the country director for the World Food Programme in Palestine, talks to Al Jazeera. [See the Program] 

Ten Holocaust survivors condemn Israel's Gaza genocide 
An Open Letter [June 22, 2024] 
[FB – One of the signers of the Open Letter is Lillian Rosengarten.  A member of JVP-Westchester, Lillian escaped from Germany in 1936.] 
---- The co-founder of Human Rights Watch, Aryeh Neier, has recently said that Israel is engaged in genocide in Gaza. He's also said that using accusations of antisemitism to attack Israel's critics "debases the whole concept of antisemitism." As Holocaust survivors, we are writing to agree wholeheartedly with Professor Neier — who himself only survived the Holocaust by escaping Nazi Germany as a child in 1939. At a recent Holocaust memorial, Netanyahu declared: "We'll defeat our genocidal enemies. Never again is now!" Meanwhile, at another memorial, Biden warned of a "ferocious surge of antisemitism" on college campuses. In our opinion, to use the memory of the Holocaust like this to justify either genocide in Gaza or repression on college campuses is a complete insult to the memory of the Holocaust. [Read More] 

The War in Ukraine 
(Video) The Ukraine "Peace Summit" 
With Anatole Lieven, Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft [June 18, 2024] 
---- The Ukraine "Peace Summit" in Switzerland on June 15th and 16th is taking place in the absence of Russia (not invited), as well as China and other key countries. The ten-point "peace plan" put forward by the Ukrainian government is generally regarded by experts as standing no chance of success. Nonetheless, Western governments hope that the summit will help to rally international support and sympathy for Ukraine. To assess the outcomes of the meeting, the Quincy Institute held a conversation with John Mearsheimer…. [See the Program]

Reality Has Changed: the Ukraine War Slams Europe Rightward 
By Eve Ottenberg, Counterpunch [June 21, 2024] 
---- So has fascism come back to Europe or are Europeans simply sick of the Empire's endless wars? The smart money's on the latter, because what mostly unites the diverse right-wingers recently elected to the European Parliament is objection to the Ukraine War. But even that unity shows many cracks, as this motley collection of rightists share little regarding policies. That's not to say that a far-right European parliament can't have nasty effects – it can and very well may. But for now, what voters for these reactionaries generally want is peace – and it's hard to fault them for that. What the elected officials in fact provide is another story. [Read More 

Also of interest - "Ukraine-Russia Peace Is as Elusive as Ever. But in 2022 They Were Talking," b Anton Troianovski, et al., New York Times [June 15, 2024] [Link].  On his Substack site, Aaron Maté has a useful essay about The Times' revelations/article, "New evidence US blocked Ukraine-Russia peace deal, and a new Ukrainian excuse for walking away" [June 23, 2024] [Link].

The Climate Crisis 
Unprecedentedly Hot: Why we Need a National Climate Action Plan 
By John J. Berger, Tom Dispatch [June 19, 2024] 
---- Nobel Prize-winning former Energy Secretary Steven Chu now claims it's no longer possible to keep the global temperature from rising more than 1.5°C above the historical average, as the 195-nation signatories to the 2015 Paris climate agreement had hoped. In fact, he projects that the target of 2°C will also be broken and that, by 2050 the global temperature will have risen above 3°C. Nor is his pessimism unique. Hundreds of other scientists have recently forecast a strong possibility of hitting 2.5°C, which should hardly be surprising since, for well over 30 years now, global leaders have failed to heed the warnings of climate scientists by moving decisively to phase out fossil fuels and their heat-trapping gases.  It could hardly be clearer that the world is already in the throes of a climate catastrophe. That means it's high time for the U.S. to declare a national climate emergency to help focus us all on the disaster at hand.  [Read More] 

Biden's border restrictions are stranding climate migrants in extreme heat 
By Ayurella Horn-Muller, Grist [June 12, 2024] 
---- With much of the southwest baking under record temperatures, immigrants' rights advocates worry President Joe Biden's decision to effectively close the border to asylum seekers for the foreseeable future will endanger lives and further marginalize climate-displaced people seeking refuge in the U.S. Their concerns come as a heat dome lingering over Mexico and the southwestern United States has obliterated temperature records from Phoenix to Sacramento, California. The promise of a hotter-than-average summer has raised fears that Biden's directive, which allows the government to suspend border crossings when they surpass 2,500 daily, will lead to a surge in heat-related illnesses and possibly deaths. [Read More] 

The State of the Unions 
What Is the State of Organized Labor? 
By Arthur MacEwan, Dollars and Sense [May-June 2024] 
---- In the short run, there are clear conflicts between efforts by unions to extend their organizing efforts and other union responsibilities—in particular, bargaining and protecting their members from employers' mistreatment and abuses of union members (i.e., employers' contract violations). These relatively immediate union responsibilities can include strikes, which, in turn, mean using union resources to maintain a strike fund. There would seem to be, and often are, conflicts between using union resources to support organizing and meeting immediate responsibilities. Given the difficulties in organizing noted above, it is easy to forego organizing in favor of immediate responsibilities. This approach is "Fortress Unionism," advocating that unions use their limited resources to protect their existing strengths and forego costly and lengthy organizing drives until the environment (economic structure, political context, employer aggressiveness) changes. But there are two major problems with the "Fortress Unionism" argument: first, the environment is unlikely to change appreciatively without a stronger labor movement—which means a larger labor movement; and, second, it turns out that unions' resources are not so limited! [Read More]  Also of interest is "Unions Must Seize the Moment to Organize the South," by Ben Carroll, Portside [June 15, 2024] [Link]. 

Our History 
Exploring the History of Freedom Schools 
By Deborah Menkart and Jenice L. View, Zinn Education Project [June 2024] 
---- The Freedom Schools of the 1960s were part of a long line of efforts to liberate people from oppression using the tool of popular education, including secret schools in the 18th and 19th centuries for enslaved Africans; labor schools during the early 20th century; and the Citizenship Schools formed by Septima Clark and others in the 1950s.  The Freedom Schools of the 1960s were first developed by the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) during the 1964 Freedom Summer in Mississippi. They were intended to counter what Charles Cobb refers to as the "sharecropper education" received by so many African Americans and poor whites. Through reading, writing, arithmetic, history, and civics, participants received a progressive curriculum during a six-week summer program that was designed to prepare disenfranchised African Americans to become active politi­cal actors on their own behalf (as voters, elected officials, organizers, etc.). Nearly 40 Freedom Schools were established serving close to 2,500 students, including parents and grandparents. [Read More] 

The Rev. James M. Lawson Jr., 1928–2024 
By Peter Dreier, The Nation [June 13, 2024] 
---- In the spring of his senior year, Lawson received a draft notice. He had decided to pursue the ministry and could have received a deferment, but he thought it was unconscionable for clergy to be deferred while others had to serve in the Korean War. He ended up serving 13 months in prison. After his release, Lawson moved to Nagpur, India, where he worked for three years as a Methodist missionary and studied satyagraha—Mohandas Gandhi's principles of nonviolent resistance. One day in 1955, while in India, Lawson was reading a newspaper and saw photographs of masses of African Americans launching a bus boycott in Montgomery, Alabama. He began whooping, clapping, and dancing in joy. This shocked a colleague in the next hut, who only knew Lawson as a serious and cerebral man. But for Lawson, the photographs offered evidence that a nonviolent mass movement was taking hold back home. [Read More]






Sunday, June 16, 2024

CFOW Newsletter - Biden's false "search for peace" in Gaza

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
June 16, 2024

Hello All – For the second time, it now appears that a promising peace proposal to end the war in Gaza has collapsed. The most recent proposal, falsely described by President Biden as an "Israeli proposal," was endorsed by the UN Security Council and this week by the meeting of the G7 countries.  As two articles linked below explain in some detail, the proposal was initially described in the mainstream media as similar to the Hamas proposal of May 6th – suggesting that since Hamas and Israel had endorsed the main terms of the proposal, peace was at hand.

Alas.  Biden's "Israel" proposal does not lead directly to a permanent ceasefire in Gaza, a Hamas demand and originally thought to be included in Biden's proposal. Thus Biden proposes only a temporary ceasefire, with the possibility that it could become permanent if Israel wanted this.  Israel, of course, has not said an official word about Biden's "Israel" proposal, but major actors in the Israeli government have made it clear that there will be no ceasefire before all Israel's war aims have been accomplished, including the destruction of Hamas, etc.

It is reasonable to conclude that President Biden's "Israeli" proposal was never expected to bring peace to Gaza.  Rather, it was hoped that it would bring peace to the Democratic Party and the outrage around the world that the USA is supporting a genocidal war in Gaza.  As has happened so often in the past (see Vietnam War), antiwar efforts are met by flawed, insincere peace declarations and proposals, attempting to turn the onus of continued war and slaughter onto the party that is being bombed (Vietnamese, Palestinians), rather than on those doing the bombing.

In modern wars of colonial conquest or domination, control of the media narrative is essential for victory.  In the war on Gaza, the mainstream media supports the war by omitting the scenes of horror and slaughter readily available on Aljazeera or much of European news, and by repeating stenographically President Biden's claims to be seeking a end to the war in Gaza.  Working to end this war includes working to counter the mainstream media's messaging that our government is on the side of peace.

Some essays illuminating the week that was

Blinken's lies about Hamas rejecting a ceasefire reveal the Biden administration's true intentions 
By Mitchell Plitnick, Mondoweiss [June 15, 2024] [h/t JW] 
---- Biden's proposal is very similar to the one Hamas accepted on May 6. Notably, the United States at the time explicitly said that Hamas had not accepted the proposal. Blinken's blatant contradiction of his own agency's words is typical of the prevarication that the United States and Israel have maintained throughout recent weeks, during which the Biden administration has gone to great lengths to create the illusion of pressing for a ceasefire. However, there is a key difference between the May 6 proposal and the current one, and it lies in Phase Two of the plan.  Biden's plan calls for a negotiation during Phase One that would lead to a permanent ceasefire. He even noted, as did the Security Council, that if negotiations need longer to succeed, Phase One, including its temporary ceasefire, will be extended for as long as it takes.  But crucially, the plan also says that if Israel decides Hamas is not negotiating "in good faith," it can resume its murderous rampage through Gaza. And if that happened, it would be doing so with the full public blessing of the U.S. — a blessing even more explicit than it has given until now. [Read More]  Also of interest is "Unpacking Blinken's lies on the Gaza ceasefire negotiations," by Mohamad Elmasry, Aljazeera [June 14, 2024] [Link].

As Israel Rejects UN Ceasefire, 3,000 Palestinian Children in S. Gaza in Danger of Starving before their Parents' Eyes 
By Juan Cole, Informed Comment [June 12, 2024] 
---- The children of Gaza do not care. They do not care about US Secretary of State Tony Blinken's posturing on the UN Security Council demand for an immediate ceasefire. They do not care that Hamas says it accepts the resolution. They do not care that Israel's far right extremist government rejects it. Their severe lack of interest in geopolitics is only matched by their hunger for actual concrete food aid. And if they do not get it, they will take revenge on the adults by dying. Some 3,000 likely candidates for starvation have been identified by UNESCO. The only thing that can stop them from dropping dead, their little bodies emaciated, is a ceasefire. The leader of Israel's fascist government, the war criminal Benjamin Netanyahu, rejects such a ceasefire. [Read More]  Also of interest is "UN: Israel-caused Famine to encompass all Gaza by July, killing as many as 19,800 a Month," by Juan Cole, Informed Comment [June 9, 2024] [Link].

The Bowman Campaign 
Why So Much Depends Upon Jamaal Bowman Beating AIPAC 
By Hadas Their, The Nation [June 13, 2024] 
---- Representative Jamaal Bowman is a hugger, a high-fiver, and a beloved member of the Squad on Capitol Hill. He's also engaged in a fight for his political life, as the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) has vowed to make an example of him, spending millions of dollars, sometimes in a single day, to drown him out with unrelenting attack ads. Bowman is seeking his third term representing New York's 16th Congressional District, which encompasses a mix of working-class cities and wealthy suburbs in Westchester County and the northern end of the Bronx. Facing a primary opponent funded by a seemingly bottomless well of dollars from AIPAC, he told me, "I'm just kind of overwhelmed with love and support and strength." I met with Bowman at a Jews for Jamaal canvassing of Hastings-on-Hudson on the first weekend of June. About a hundred supporters gathered at MacEachron Park for bagels and cream cheese, listened to constituents and organizers speak about the importance of the campaign, and collectively recited the Jewish Shehecheyanu blessing, which expresses gratitude and celebrates life. We then heard from the congressman himself before pounding the streets with campaign material. [Read More]

Also of interest – "Hillary Clinton Just Made the Wrong Choice in One of 2024's Most Crucial Races," by John Nichols, The Nation [June 14, 2024].[Link]; and "George Latimer's History of Slow-Walking Desegregation," by Branko Marcetic, Jacobin Magazine [June 2024] [Link].

AIPAC Watch 
'Their message is, The Empire Strikes Back': Breaking down AIPAC's role in the 2024 election 
By Michael Arria, Mondoweiss [June 12, 2024] 
---- Political consultant Peter Feld unpacks AIPAC's strategy in the Democratic primaries, Jamaal Bowman's bad poll numbers, and whether Gaza will impact Biden's reelection. [Read More] Also of interest is "Bipartisanship or Republican meddling? AIPAC is biggest source of GOP donations in Dem primaries," Politico [June 9, 2024] [Link]. 

News Note – Noam Chomsky 
News of Chomsky's Ill Health Prompts Outpouring of Gratitude for 'Lion of the Left' 
By Brett Wilkins, Common Dreams [June 12, 2024] 
---- News that renowned American linguist, dissident, and author Noam Chomsky is hospitalized in Brazil following a massive stroke he suffered last year was met with an avalanche of accolades and well wishes from members of the international left on Wednesday. Valeria Chomsky told The Associated Press that her 95-year-old husband—a laureate professor at the University of Arizona and professor emeritus at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)—is currently in a São Paulo hospital. She took him there on an ambulance jet with two nurses after he was able to travel from the United States following his June 2023 stroke. Chomsky told Folha de São Paulo that although her husband has difficulty speaking and the right side of his body is numb from the stroke, he follows the news and "when he sees images of the war in Gaza, he raises his left arm in a gesture of lament and anger." She said his condition has improved significantly, and he is seeing a neurologist, speech therapist, and pulmonologist daily. [Read More]

CFOW Nuts & Bolts 
Please consider getting involved with Concerned Families of Westchester.  Weather permitting we meet for a protest/rally each Saturday in Hastings, at 12 noon at the VFW Plaza (Warburton and Spring St.)  A "Black Lives Matter/Say Their Names" vigil is held in Yonkers on Mondays 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!

Please join us! – Tomorrow's (Monday) "Say Their Names" vigil in Yonkers (see above) will mark the 4th anniversary of the murder of George Floyd.  Members of several other organizations will be joining us, and the media has been invited.  Please stand with us against the tidal wave of police killing of Black Americans. – 5:30 at Warburton and Odell Aves.

Rewards! This week's Rewards for stalwart newsletter readers come, once again, from Hudson Valley Sally, an ensemble of local musicians who sang in Hastings for the Riverarts program.  I think you will like "The FM Band"; "Annie"; and "Bound for Glory" (Woody Guthrie).  There are many more great tunes on-line.  Enjoy!

Best wishes, 
Frank Brodhead
For CFOW 

The CFOW Weekly Reader

Featured Essays 
Acts of Language 
[FB - Why have so many writers treated pro-Palestine speech as a threat?] 
By Isabella Hammad, New York Review of Books [June 13, 2024] 
---- Since the protests began on campuses throughout the United States, I have been struck by the verbal contortions many writers have gone through to avoid engaging with the gravity of Israel's assault on Gaza—one of the most brutal, punitive military campaigns in modern history—and with the clarity of the students' moral outrage. If you are in this country, and you have successfully ignored the images of children, dead and living, being pulled out from rubble in Gaza, … you might get the impression from much of what you read that a woke mob has been flinging words like "colonialist" around indiscriminately, aggressing American Jewish students, and intimidating all those who oppose their views into silence. It has been startling to me to read so many writers lamenting the speech of pro-Palestine protesters in the US compared with this actual violence—tantamount, according to numerous experts, to the crime of genocide. Such essays frequently describe speech as being either threatening (from the Palestinian side) or under threat (on the anti-Palestinian side). [Read More] 

The Lasting Legacy of Truth-Teller Daniel Ellsberg 
By Norman Solomon, Tom Dispatch [June 12, 2024] 
---- After working inside this country's doomsday machinery, even drafting nuclear war plans for the Pentagon during President John F. Kennedy's administration, Dan Ellsberg had gained intricate perspectives on what greased the bureaucratic wheels, personal ambitions, and political messaging of the warfare state. Deceptions about arranging for the ultimate violence of thermonuclear omnicide were of a piece with routine falsehoods about American war-making. It was easy enough to get away with lying, he told me: "How difficult is it to deceive the public? I would say, as a former insider, one becomes aware: it's not difficult to deceive them. First of all, you're often telling them what they would like to believe — that we're better than other people, we're superior in our morality and our perceptions of the world." [Read More] Also of interest is "Suddenly, the 'nuclear age' is today," by James Carden, Responsible Statecraft [June 6, 2024] [Link].

Answering the call to fight injustice: An interview with Barbara Smith 
By Ashley Smith, Tempest Magazine [June 11, 2024] 
[FB - Barbara Smith is one of the leading intellectuals and activists who developed the traditions of Black feminism. A part of a group of Black lesbian socialists, she co-authored the groundbreaking "Combahee River Collective Statement." Tempest's Ashley Smith interviews her here about her history as a participant and leader in struggles from the civil rights movement to Palestinian solidarity today.
---- Barbara Smith: I became politically active in the heart of the 1960s during the long Civil Rights Movement. As a teenager in Cleveland, Ohio, I joined the struggle that was centrally focused on school desegregation… The city officials, in a typically cynical manner, built new schools in segregated areas so that the color line was upheld and reproduced. This was true of all northern school systems. They would never put a school in an integrated neighborhood. … Already active in the struggle, I went to Mount Holyoke College in the fall of 1965. There were virtually no Black students on my campus. There was a group called the Civil Action Group, which I joined. Most of the Black students already at the school were active in it. We didn't have a Black student group or an Afro-American society yet. The focus of the Civil Action Group was civil rights organizing. Already, the movement was turning toward Black nationalism and Black power and also beginning to take up the struggle against the Vietnam War.[Read More] 

The War on Gaza 
Israel Has Had a 'Conscience-ectomy.' Can a Society Survive Without a Conscience? 
By Gideon Levy, Haaretz [Israel] [June 12, 2024] ---- Can a society exist without a conscience? Can a state continue to function after its removal? Is the conscience a vital organ, like the heart or the brain, or is it like the spleen or the gall bladder, which you can live without? Perhaps it's like the thyroid: You can live without it, as long as you take a replacement for the hormone? These questions should be asked by every Israeli now, after the country underwent a total 'consciencectomy' on October 7, 2023. Israel has been without a conscience ever since. For now, it appears to be alive. The process that Israel has undergone in the past several months can only be described as a separation from its conscience. It had been sick for years; now it is dead. There are a myriad explanations and justifications, but the question remains, in all its force: How can a society continue to endure over time without a conscience. [Read More] 

(Video) Doctor Just Back from Gaza: The Health System Has Totally Collapsed Due to Israel's Genocidal War 
From Democracy Now! [June 11, 2024] 
---- More than eight months into Israel's devastating assault on Gaza, the territory's healthcare system is barely functioning, with the World Health Organization reporting this week that there have been 464 Israeli attacks on Gaza's healthcare system since October 7, affecting 101 health facilities. Gaza's Health Ministry warns that the few remaining hospitals still partially functioning could completely shut down due to Israel's near-total blockade of the territory, which is keeping out parts needed to maintain hospital diesel generators, as well as crucial medical supplies. Over 37,000 Palestinians have been killed in Israel's war on Gaza, and nearly 85,000 Palestinians have been wounded. "The situation in Gaza … remains catastrophic," says Dr. James Smith, an emergency medical doctor just back from Gaza, where he treated patients for nearly two months. "There are no fully functional hospitals any longer in Gaza and no health facilities that are able to absorb the sheer scale of need now." [See the Program]

The War at Home 
Palestine Is on the Ballot 
By Liza Featherstone, Jacobin Magazine [June 2024] 
---- In numerous races across the country this year, Palestine is a key issue for voters. Popular opinion is on the side of a Gaza cease-fire, but pro-Israel billionaires are spending big to overcome that antiwar will. … For the first time ever in American politics, Palestine is on the ballot all over the country, mobilizing billionaires and special-interest groups against the Left … Yet the issue is also inspiring voters and candidates who oppose the war. In recent years, left and progressive candidates have mostly avoided foreign policy, especially Israel, seeing the terrain as simply too risky, especially with no grassroots antiwar movement demanding or supporting such a criticism of the status quo. This time, with protests in the streets and encampments on more campuses than anyone can track, is different. Not only has AIPAC put Israel on the ballot, but the Left, too, has a positive case to make. [Read More]. Also of interest is "The "Uncommitted" Vote Campaign Pressured Democrats on Gaza. What's Next?" by Tyler Walicek, Truthout [June 12, 2024] [Link].

Active-Duty US Service Members Issue Appeal to Congress to Stop Funding Genocide 
By Marjorie Cohn, Truthout [June 13, 2024] 
 ---- On June 4, a coalition of active-duty service members, veterans and G.I. rights groups launched a campaign called Appeal for Redress V2 to encourage military personnel to tell Congress to stop funding genocide in Gaza. Israel's genocidal operation, now in its ninth month, has killed more than 37,000 Palestinians and wounded nearly 85,000. The campaign is sponsored by Veterans For Peace (VFP), the Military Law Task Force of the National Lawyers Guild, About Face: Veterans Against the War and the Center on Conscience & War. It is modeled after the 2006 Appeal for Redress issued during the occupation of Iraq. During that campaign, almost 3,000 active-duty, Reserve and Guard personnel sent protected communications to their members of Congress urging an end to the wars and occupations in Iraq and Afghanistan. [Read More]

The Mainstream Media & the War 
When Israel Burned Refugees Alive, Establishment Media Called It a 'Tragic Accident' 
By Robin Andersen, FAIR [Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting] [June 10, 2024] ---- Over the Memorial Day weekend, Israel bombed starving Gazan refugees crowded in tents in Rafah, where Israel had told them to go. Nevertheless, without warning, Israel hit the camp with at least eight missiles spreading fire though the encampment of plastic tents. Some refugees burned to death, mostly women and children, leaving them dismembered and charred. … US news media reported the tent massacre, some more truthfully than others. But most establishment media repeated Israel's false claims that it was an accident, weaving disinformation messaging into toned-down descriptions of the scene. With confused syntax, they omitted words like "genocide," "massacre" and "starvation." Most left out the language of international law that is best able to explain the unprecedented crimes against humanity that Israel is committing. Corporate reporting left the tent massacre devoid of context and empathy, ignored actions that need to be taken, and ultimately facilitated the ongoing Israeli genocide of Palestinians. [Read More] 

The War in Ukraine 
Why Does American Folly March on in Ukraine 
By James Carden, American Conservative ---- As the tide of the war has turned, perhaps permanently, in Russia's favor (itself an entirely foreseeable development despite the wishful thinking that has characterized too much of what passes for informed analysis here in Washington), Ukraine's Western sponsors find themselves scrambling to find a way to halt Russia's momentum. For their part, Biden, Blinken and Sullivan have decided to reverse course—despite public assurances to the contrary—by secretly sending long range ATACMS to Kiev and lifting the (wise) prohibition against the use of American weapons to strike inside Russian territory—a prohibition Germany has likewise lifted. … Amidst this flurry of activity, no one can explain in clear, unambiguous language why the matter of who governs Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, Luhansk, Donetsk (or even Odessa and Kharkiv) is worth a direct, possibly even catastrophic confrontation with Russia. How and when did it become a paramount national security objective of the United States and NATO to help Galician ethno-nationalists regain control over a people they neither desired nor valued? [Read More]

Also of interest – "Biden, Zelensky Sign 10-Year Bilateral Military Deal," by Dave DeCamp, Antiwar.com [June 13, 2024] [Link]; "Putin Makes Public Peace Offer to Ukraine," by Kyle Anzalone, Antiwar.com [June 14, 2024] [Link]; and "G7 Leaders Agree To Provide Ukraine With $50 Billion Using Frozen Russian Assets," by Dave DeCamp, Antiwar.com [June 13, 2024] [Link]. 

The Climate Crisis 
What grief for a dying planet looks like: Climate scientists on the edge 
By Anna Pivovarchuk, Aljazeera [June 16, 2024] 
---- [Climate scientists] Kalmus and Abramoff are among the rapidly growing number of those exasperated with the lack of urgency around the climate emergency. According to the American Psychological Association, which defined eco-anxiety in 2017 as "a chronic fear of environmental doom", more than half of US adults see climate change as the biggest threat facing humanity. … Kalmus remains disappointed with people, he says. He thought we'd have more courage, more fortitude, more compassion and love for each other and life on Earth. "It's like a nightmare," he explains, that judges, world leaders, corporate leaders and people on the street "don't understand that we're in an emergency, … that everyone's still acting like things are normal". [Read More] 

If Not in New York, Then Where? ["Congestion Pricing"] 
By 
---- Here is what the indefinite pause on New York City's congestion pricing program, if it sticks, will cost: 120,000 more cars daily clogging Lower Manhattan's bumper-to-bumper streets, according to a New York State analysis, and perhaps $20 billion annually in additional lost productivity and fuel and operating costs, as well as health and environmental burdens and a practically unbridgeable budget shortfall for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority that will straitjacket an already handicapped agency and imperil dozens of planned necessary capital improvement projects for the city's aging subway system. Here is what it gains Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Democrat, who announced her unilateral decision about the suspension last week: perhaps slightly better chances for New York Democrats in a couple of fall congressional races. [Read More

Civil Liberties 
The Liberal Police State: How Democrats Are Playing Into GOP Hands 
By Sandy Tolan, The Nation [June 2024] 
---- In a campaign where Democrats seek to contrast their values with those of Trump and his neofascist supporters, supposedly liberal Democrats are alienating a significant proportion of the electorate—not only young students of conscience and of color but also Black churches and elderly white Midwesterners horrified by the images coming out of Gaza. As the stakes rise, the distinctions are blurring, and the liberals have only themselves to blame. This centrist Democratic strategy fits into a larger, longer-term, bipartisan alliance that views protesters as the enemy, and their tactics as a threat to the fundamental interests of our militarized, fossil-fuel-dependent society. [Read More] 

The State of the Union 
(Video) Supreme Court Protects Access to Mifepristone, But War on Abortion Rights Continues to Escalate
From Democracy Now! [June 14, 2024] 
---- The Supreme Court has unanimously rejected a challenge from anti-abortion groups to the nationwide availability of the abortion medication mifepristone, which is available by mail and can be taken at home in many states. Mifepristone is used in roughly two-thirds of all U.S. abortions, including in some states that have severely limited or banned abortions. "This is just one of the strikes — not the first strike, not the second or third, but one of the strikes — in an artillery that is aimed at reproductive freedom," says our guest, legal scholar Michele Goodwin. We discuss the ruling and the anti-abortion movement's "playbook" of attacks on reproductive healthcare with Goodwin. [See the Program] 

Our History 
(Video) Understanding The True Origins Of Juneteenth 
An interview with historian Robin D. G. Kelly, The Minority Report – 40 mins. 
---- Many know Juneteenth as the official declaration of emancipation in Texas in 1865, two months after the end of the Civil War and the dismantling of slavery in the rest of the South. While Juneteenth has recently been recognized as a national holiday, African Americans have been observing and celebrating this day for 150 years, extending beyond Texas, the United States, and even the era of slavery itself. Originally known as "Jubilee Day," its roots can be traced back to biblical references in Leviticus chapter 25, which symbolized the liberation of slaves, debt cancellation, and the restoration of land to its divine authority. This significant occasion also provides an opportunity to connect the struggles of Black and Indigenous communities and highlight the shared experiences of oppression and dispossession. [See the Program]