Sunday, August 25, 2024

CFOW Newsletter - The Democratic Convention and the War on Gaza

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter 
August 25, 2024

Hello All – This week's Democratic National Convention clarified the Kamala Harris presidential campaign's position on the Gaza war.  In the weeks since Harris replaced Joe Biden as the Democrats' presidential candidate, people in the USA demanding an end to Israel's war on Gaza have debated whether Harris would continue the Biden policy of unconditional support for Israel, or whether she would be more sympathetic and even-handed towards Palestinians. Harris acceptance speech on Thursday night, and the Party's management of the Convention, made it clear that Harris will follow Biden and other Democratic presidents in supporting Israel and giving no more than lip service to Palestinian rights.

The demands of the antiwar movement have now focused on the slogan of "Not Another Bomb."  That is, it is now longer sufficient for US political leaders to simply call for a ceasefire.  This has become only lip-service.  The demand now is for a commitment – and an implementation of that commitment – to stop providing bombs and weapons to Israel to continue its killing.  Many experts believe that this would quickly force Israel to bring the war to an end.  We don't know if this is true, but it would be an important first step to end the fighting.

The DNC this week made it clear that Biden/Harris is not likely to take such a step.  Thus, for Americans opposed to US support for Israel's war on Gaza, our dilemma is clear: how can we agitate against the war while many Democrats sympathetic to our demands prioritize ignoring the war and defeating Trump?  Our argument must be that opposing genocide is a prime directive for being human, AND that action (not just words) to stop the war will increase the likelihood of a Democratic win in November.

And a cease fire? 
The negotiations now underway in Cairo may be the last chance for an early end to the fighting in Gaza.  President Biden's team has been saying for several weeks that a ceasefire is "very close."  Yet statements from both Hamas and Israel show that there are wide gaps of disagreement. How close are we really to a ceasefire?

At the end of May, President Biden proposed a 3-step plan to end the war that included a 6-week temporary ceasefire, then a 6-week period in which a permanent ceasefire would be established, and then a prolonged period of rebuilding Gaza.  President Biden presented this as something that was co-authored by Israel.  The proposal was approved by the UN Security Council, and Hamas accepted this framework at the beginning of July.

Talks became stalled in July, with disagreements emerging over important "details," especially Netanyahu's assertions that he would continue or resume the war whenever he wanted. Israel's assassination of Hamas' chief negotiator did not help. But the fear that Iran would retaliate against Israel for this killing prompted the USA and other negotiators to restart the talks in mid-August.

However, new sticking points have emerged: Hamas claims that Israel has inserted new demands into the peace proposal that would leave Israeli troops in occupation of three important sites in Gaza.  (The importance of one of these sites – the "Philadelphi Corridor" – is described in a useful article linked below.)  Thus it is possible that the gaps between Israel and Hamas will not be bridged.  Today fighting seems to be escalating to the north of Israel, against Hezbollah in Lebanon. Unless and until the USA is willing to use its considerable leverage with Israel, the end of the Gaza war may be a long time coming.

The DNC and the War on Gaza

(Video) Thousands March on DNC in Chicago to Demand End to War on Gaza 
From Democracy Now! [August 20, 2024] 
---- On the opening day of the Democratic National Convention, Democracy Now! was on the streets of Chicago during the March on the DNC as thousands of protesters held a rally and march to call on Joe Biden, Kamala Harris and the Democratic Party to end U.S. support for Israel amid its ongoing assault on Gaza. We bring you the voices of some of the protesters. [See the Program]

Biden's Gaza policy is a liability for Kamala Harris. She must break with Biden now
By Mehdi Hasan The Guardian [August 19, 2024] 
---- What does she have to lose? As the Financial Times pointed out last month, the polling suggests there is "less downside" on Gaza than one might expect: "a Democrat who is soft on Israel (as Biden is seen as having been) loses support on the left, but a candidate who takes a more critical line wins those voters back without losing votes among moderates." A poll last week from YouGov and the IMEU Policy Project showed that over a third of voters in three swing states say they are more likely to vote for the Democratic nominee if they pledge to withhold weapons to Israel, while only 5 to 7% said they would be less likely to do so. [Read More]

The DNC Stays Committed to Silence on Gaza 
By Emilio Leanza, The Progressive [August 22, 2024] ---- Abbas Alawieh waited for a phone call for three days. In press conference after press conference, each held near a heavily barricaded United Center Arena in Chicago, he explained to a crowd of reporters that, so far, top Democratic Party officials and members of the Harris campaign have refused to allow a Palestinian American to speak at the Democratic National Convention. Stuck in limbo, Alawieh kept his phone hooked to a portable charger tucked in a blazer pocket, so that he wouldn't miss the call if it ever arrived. But before the end of Wednesday night, it was confirmed: The DNC, despite making space earlier in the evening for the parents of an Israeli-American hostage held by Hamas, would not feature a Palestinian speaker. [Read More] 

(Video) Uncommitted Delegates Launch Sit-In After DNC Rejects Request for a Palestinian Speaker at Convention 
From Democracy Now! [August 22, 2024] 
---- Delegates from the Uncommitted National Movement and their allies launched a sit-in protest Wednesday night outside the convention hall in Chicago after the DNC refused to honor their request to let a Palestinian American speak onstage, despite allowing family members of an Israeli American hostage to address the convention. We hear voices from the sit-in with uncommitted delegates and their allies. "Today I watched my party say, 'Our tent can fit anti-choice Republicans,' but it can't fit an elected official like me?" said Georgia state Representative Ruwa Romman, referring to convention addresses given by anti-Trump Republicans. Romman was among the list of speakers offered by the uncommitted movement that the DNC refused to allow on onstage. "We can't take no for an answer here," Minneapolis City Councilmember Jeremiah Ellison, an uncommitted delegate from Minnesota, tells Democracy Now!. [See the Program].

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 make out your check to "Frank Brodhead," write "CFOW" on the memo line, and send your check to CFOW, PO Box 364, Hastings-on-Hudson, NY 10706. Thanks!

Rewards! 
Most of the weekly Rewards! for stalwart newsletter reader feature musical selections that I enjoy or find interesting.  But not always.  This week I hope you will like learning about (or learning more about) comic book genius Joe Sacco. Several of his books are about Gaza, including the acclaimed Footnotes on Gaza (2009). In January 2024 The Comics Journal began running a new series by Sacco, "The War on Gaza."  Some amazing drawing and thinking.  Check it out.

Best wishes, 
Frank Brodhead 
For CFOW

CFOW Weekly Reader

Featured Articles 
How to Be Truly Free: Lessons From a Philosopher President [Pepe Mujica of Uruguay] 
By Jack Nicas, New York Times [August 23, 2024]
---- A decade ago, the world had a brief fascination with José Mujica. He was the folksy president of Uruguay who had shunned his nation's presidential palace to live in a tiny tin-roof home with his wife and three-legged dog. In speeches to world leaders, interviews with foreign journalists and documentaries on Netflix, Pepe Mujica, as he is universally known, shared countless tales from a life story fit for film. He had robbed banks as a leftist urban guerrilla; survived 15 years as a prisoner, including by befriending a frog while kept in a hole in the ground; and helped lead the transformation of his small South American nation into one of the world's healthiest and most socially liberal democracies. [Read More] And about Pepe's comrade Lucia Topolansky, "Two Armed Rebels Who Led a Nation: A Love Story" [Read More]

The DNC Fiddles While the World Burns 
By Medea Benjamin and Nicolas J. S. Davies, Code Pink [August 22, 2l024] 
---- An Orwellian disconnect haunts the 2024 Democratic National Convention. In the isolation of the convention hall, shielded from the outside world behind thousands of armed police, few of the delegates seem to realize that their country is on the brink of direct involvement in major wars with Russia and Iran, either of which could escalate into World War III. Inside the hall, the mass slaughter in the Middle East and Ukraine are treated only as troublesome "issues," which "the greatest military in the history of the world" can surely deal with. In the real world, the most explosive flashpoint right now is the Middle East, where U.S. weapons and Israeli troops are slaughtering tens of thousands of Palestinians, mostly children and families, at the bidding of Israel's Benjamin Netanyahu. [Read more]

(Video) Remembering TV Icon Phil Donahue: He Brought Antiwar Voices to the Airwaves Until MSNBC Fired Him 
From Democracy Now! [August 20, 2024] 
---- The acclaimed television host Phil Donahue died Sunday at the age of 88. Donahue's commitment to bringing major social and political issues to the American public spanned decades, a mission that was perhaps best encapsulated by his platforming of antiwar perspectives during the lead up to the Iraq War. He was fired in 2003 from his eponymous MSNBC talk show for doing so. In 2013, Democracy Now! spoke to Donahue about his firing. We play an excerpt from that interview and speak to journalist Jeff Cohen, who served as a senior producer on MSNBC's Donahue before its cancellation. "Phil was a progressive. He was for peace and justice. He exuded it. It's what made him tick," recalls Cohen. [Read More] Also of interest is "Fired by MSNBC for Giving Voice to Iraq War Opposition, Phil Donahue (1935-2024) Was Courage Personified," by Jeff Cohen, Common Dreams [Link].

The War on Gaza 
(Video) What I Saw Was "Unfathomable": Doctor Who Worked in Gaza Speaks Out Against U.S. Arming of Israel 
From Democracy Now! [August 21, 2024] 
---- A group of American doctors who treated patients in Gaza held a press conference in Chicago on Tuesday to describe the suffering they saw among Palestinians injured and killed in Israel's war on the territory. The press conference, taking place during the Democratic National Convention, was organized by the Uncommitted National Movement, which is pressuring Democrats for an end to blanket U.S. support for Israel. Among those who spoke was Dr. Ahmed Yousaf, who returned from Gaza just weeks earlier. "When we got to the hospital, everything I saw on TikTok and Instagram and all the television, all the stuff that we had in alternative media … it was 100 times worse than I could have ever imagined," he said. [See the Program]

The Politics of Water Under Occupation 
By M. Reza Behnam, ZNet [August 22, 2024] 
---- Israel's objective has always been to decrease the supply of water to Palestinians so that they will inevitably have to leave.  … The catastrophic water crisis in Gaza today predates the October 2023 war.  Israel's 16-year blockade contributed to severe water shortages.  And potable water was hard to find after decades of Israeli invasions. With no surface sources of water, the coastal aquifer, on the brink of collapse, provided 81 percent of the enclave's supply.  Three desalination plants and three Mekorot pipes provided the remainder.  Families had to buy often questionable drinking water from street vendors at high prices.  On 9 October 2023, Israel cut off the piped water it had been sending Gaza.  Since Israel withdrew in 2005, it has conducted five major wars on the small densely-populated Strip, destroying much of its infrastructure.  And for years, Gazans have lived with depleted, contaminated and salinated water because Israel has restricted the entry of construction and other materials like cement and iron needed to repair, maintain or develop the enclave's water infrastructure.  [Read More]

Explained: Philadelphi and Netzarim, the Two 'Corridors' Blocking a Gaza-Israel Cease-fire 
By Allison Kaplan Sommer, Haaretz [Israel] [August 21, 2024] 
---- A deal between Israel and Hamas that could see hostages released and a cease-fire sealed – and possibly a regional war averted – has been paralyzed for months. Two small strips of land - the Philadelphi corridor along the Gaza-Egypt border and the Netzarim corridor that bisects the Gaza Strip - are now seen as the main obstacles to an agreement. This week, with negotiations at a critical phase, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu maintained his hard line, declaring, "Israel will not under any circumstances leave the Philadelphi corridor or the Netzarim corridor, despite the enormous pressure both at home and abroad." So where are these corridors and why are they so important to Israel? [Read More]

Also of Interest – "It's Ideology That Drives Netanyahu, Not Just Power," by Gideon Levy Haaretz [Israel] [August 25, 2024] [Link]; "Israel Will Collapse Within a Year if the War of Attrition Against Hamas and Hezbollah Continues," by Yitzhak Brik, Haaretz [Israel] [August 22, 2024] [Link]; and "Understanding Netanyahu's endgame in the war on Gaza," by Qassam Muaddi and Faris Giacaman, Mondoweiss [August 23, 2024]  [Link].

The West Bank 
Prolonging Genocide as a Smokescreen: On Israel's Other War in the West Bank 
By Ramzy Baroud [August 22, 2024]
---- Promises of "absolute victory" in Gaza are nothing but "gibberish", according to Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant. Gallant's comments were not meant to be public, but somehow were leaked and published by Israeli media on August 12.  The explanation of why Netanyahu is pursuing a losing war in Gaza has been largely confined to the prime minister's personal interests: avoiding the outcome of his corruption trials, preserving his extremist government coalition and avoiding early elections.  Still, none of these rationales explain the absurdity of continuing with a war, which, in the words of former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak is "the worst failure in Israel's history". What else could explain Netanyahu's motive behind the war? And why are his most crucial government allies, National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich determined to prolong it?  The answer may not lie in Gaza, but in the West Bank.  While Israel is extending its failed military campaign in the Strip with no clear strategic objectives, its war on the West Bank is driven by clear strategic motives: the annexation of the West Bank and the ethnic cleansing of large sectors of the Palestinian population.  [Read More] Also of interest is this editorial from Israel's leading liberal newspaper Haaretz, "Jewish Terror Has Exploded, and Nothing Is Standing in Its Way. It May Bring Israel Down" [August 25, 2024 [Link].

The Climate Crisis 
What Would a Real Renewable Energy Transition Look Like? 
By Richard Heinberg, Resilience.org [August 22, 2024] 
---- The transition of society from fossil fuel dependency to reliance on low-carbon energy sources will be impossible to achieve without also reducing overall energy usage substantially and maintaining this lower rate of energy usage indefinitely. This transition isn't just about building lots of solar panels, wind turbines, and batteries. It is about organizing society differently so that is uses much less energy and gets whatever energy it uses from sources that can be sustained over the long run. … Even with a new social movement advocating for a real energy transition, there is no guarantee that civilization will emerge from this century of unraveling in a recognizable form. But we all need to understand: this is a fight for survival in which cooperation and sacrifice are required, just as in total war. Until we feel that level of shared urgency, there will be no real energy transition, and little prospect for a desirable human future. [Read More] Also of interest is the latest Global Newsletter from Extinction Rebellion, "The Biggest Death Project in Human History," [August 23, 2024] [Link].

The State of the Union 
Healthcare for All Isn't on the Ballot This November, But It Should Be 
By Sonali Kolhatkar Other Words [August 24, 2024] 
---- All it took for Olympian Ariana Ramsey to call herself a "universal free healthcare advocate" was—unsurprisingly—a taste of free health care. The bronze-medalist rugby player, who represented the U.S. at the 2024 Paris games, posted Tik Tok videos of herself getting care at the Olympic Village. "The fact that I'm actually so excited to be getting free dental…!" she said incredulously, unable to finish her sentence. "This is going to be my new fight for action—free healthcare in America—period." While in Paris, Ramsey got a pap smear, eye exam, and eyeglasses all free of charge—and said she was "truly amazed" that such a thing was possible.  Ramsey went viral for her endearing enthusiasm over a right that a majority of people in wealthy nations take for granted. … A majority of Americans report feeling dissatisfied with their access to healthcare. Millions turn to crowdfunding campaigns to ask family, friends, and random strangers to help them pay for unexpected care. But ahead of the 2024 presidential race, neither of the two major party nominees has offered a pathway for a universal, publicly funded healthcare system. [Link].

Our History 
The Real Scandal of Campus Protest 
By Erik Baker, Boston Review [April 25, 2024] 
----One of the courses I teach is called "Science, Activism, and Political Conflict," and one of my ambitions with that course is to show students that both of these things—activism and political conflict—are normal in science, and in academic life more generally. That's a theme that we like to emphasize when speaking in "defense" of student protest. It's part of a storied tradition, it's respectable, it's normal. But in order to explain why I think what you all are doing is so important, I want to start today by saying that actually, student protest is nowhere near normal enough in the history of higher education in this country. The real scandal is not that there has been student protest. It is that there has not been much, much more of it. … The fundamental historical reality is that mass student protest—especially at elite schools like this one—is a relatively recent phenomenon and a product of the belated and incomplete diversification of American universities that began after World War II. All of a sudden there were students on campus who didn't have any reason to accept their institutions' historic commitment to oppressive hierarchies. In some cases, they even came from the very communities who were victimized by the violence that universities profited from materially and supported ideologically. And they revolted. [Read More]

Sunday, August 18, 2024

CFOW Newsletter - Gaza & the USA on the brink

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
August 18, 2024

Hello All – The intersection of foreign and domestic politics is a constant in the US management of its many wars. This is especially true this week, as the Democrats attempt to finesse a national convention without disruption from broad opposition to its support for Israel's war on Gaza.  On Thursday, when Kamala Harris will be officially nominated as the Democratic presidential candidate, negotiations to end the war on Gaza, or at least to establish a ceasefire, will resume.  The failure to reach an agreement will very likely plunge the Middle East into a regional conflict, with Israel and the USA at war with Iran, Hezbollah in Lebanon, and Yemen.  If/when this happens, all bets are off, both in the Middle East and in the US presidential election.

What should our peace movement do?  We have moved from calling for a ceasefire, a slogan parroted by insincere politicians, to a demand that our government send "not another bomb' to Israel – an arms embargo.  The Harris campaign had stated that this is totally unacceptable, that Israel has the right to defend itself against Iran (!) and its "proxies." The Democratic National Committee, through its actions and proclamations, has made it clear that pro-Palestinian actions at the Convention will be stifled – even though an arms embargo as a step toward ending the war is supported by a majority of Democratic voters.

If, as many experts on Israel/Gaza are now discussing, next week's talks fail to reach a useful agreement, the USA and Israel will do what it can to spin this disaster as being the fault of Hamas.  If this is not true, if Netanyahu's insistence that Israel can continue or renew its war against Gaza whenever it wants to is the cause of the negotiating impasse, the antiwar/peace movement in the USA will have its work cut out for it, fighting a patriotic tide of media bias blaming Hamas, etc.

These are very difficult times, and peace activists have been hard at work for ten months attempting to educate our neighbors and persuade our politicians that the war on Gaza is unjust, viciously cruel, and terribly dangerous.  We can't rest now. Work for peace.

Illuminating The Week That Was

(Video) What are the prospects for talks to Israel's war on Gaza? 
From Aljazeera ["Inside Story"] [August 17, 2024] 
---- Discussions brokered by the US, Qatar and Egypt to resume in Cairo. Israel and Hamas are studying proposals from mediators. But what are the chances of a ceasefire this time? [See the program]Also of interest is "Marwan Bishara on the chances (and remaining obstacles) to a ceasefire agreement in Gaza," from Aljazeera [August 16, 2924] [Link].

(Video) Former Israeli Peace Negotiator Daniel Levy: U.S. Is Part of "Axis of Zionist Extremism" 
From Democracy Now! [August 13, 2024] ---- The United States, Qatar and Egypt are urging Israel and Hamas to hold a new round of negotiations to finalize a ceasefire deal in Gaza. However, Hamas is urging mediators to enforce the ceasefire terms proposed by President Biden in May that Hamas already agreed to and that Israel rejected. Daniel Levy, president of the U.S./Middle East Project and a former Israeli peace negotiator under Prime Ministers Ehud Barak and Yitzhak Rabin, says U.S.-led efforts for a ceasefire are likely to fail as long as the Biden administration remains unwilling to pressure Israel. [See the Program]  

The Ghost of Hubert Humphrey Is Stalking Kamala Harris 
By Norman Solomon, ZNet [August 15, 2024] 
---- After the Democrat in the White House decided not to run for reelection, the vice president got the party's presidential nod — and continued to back the administration's policies for an unpopular war. As the election neared, the candidate had to decide whether to keep supporting the war or speak out for a change. Hubert Humphrey faced that choice in 1968. Kamala Harris faces it now. Despite the differences in eras and circumstances, key dynamics are eerily similar. The history of how Vice President Humphrey navigated the political terrain of the war in Vietnam has ominous parallels with how Vice President Harris has been dealing with the war in Gaza.  [Rad More]  Also of interest is "Kamala's Path to Victory Requires a Message That Speaks to the Concerns of America's Multi-Racial Working Class," by Nicholas Powers, The Indypendent [NY] [August 15, 2024] [Link].

News Notes 
On Saturday, CFOW hosted a "Not Another Bomb" rally, one of hundreds still taking place across the USA.  We had a good turnout and a spirited protest, with people joining us from across Westchester.  To see a good picture of the stalwarts in action, go here.

The "Not Another Bomb" protest movement is an attempt from pro-Palestinian, antiwar forces to move the Democratic Party (and its Convention) beyond nice words about "ceasefire now" and towards an arms embargo if Israel refuses to end its war.  This site by Jewish Voice for Peace explains more, and helps us to contact our congressional representatives to demand action.

The defeats of congressional representatives Jamaal Bowman and Cori Bush in primary elections in which the pro-Israel lobbies had invested millions of dollars against them calls for some serious thinking about campaign financing. A good place to start is 'Progressive anger with AIPAC rises over Bush loss," by Hanna Trudo, The Hill [August 11, 2024] [Link].

CFOW Nuts & Bolts 
Please consider getting involved with Concerned Families of Westchester.  Weather permitting we meet for a protest/rally each Saturday in Hastings, at 12 noon at the VFW Plaza (Warburton and Spring St.)  A "Black Lives Matter/Say Their Names" vigil is held in Yonkers on 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 make out your check to "Frank Brodhead," write "CFOW" on the memo line, and send your check to CFOW, PO Box 364, Hastings-on-Hudson, NY 10706. Thanks!

Rewards! 
Helping me through this weekend's writing was a new compilation of great tunes from the New Orleans band Tuba Skinny.  So this 52-song music video is the reward for this week's stalwart newsletter readers, starting out with "Jackson Stomp." Enjoy!

Best wishes, 
Frank Brodhead 
For CFOW  

CFOW Weekly Reader

Featured Essays 
The Day of the World's Indigenous Peoples 
By Aviva Chomsky, Tom Dispatch [August 9, 2024] 
---- Indigenous peoples have been under siege by colonizers for hundreds of years, even if their struggles for land and sovereignty only gained true international recognition in the late twentieth century, a time when, ironically enough, they were experiencing new assaults on their lands globally. Since World War II, the unprecedented growth of both the world's population and global consumption levels have pushed resource use far beyond any limits once imagined. And that scramble for resources only accelerated starting in the 1990s, which meant further encroachment on Indigenous territories — and, of course, an onrushing climate catastrophe. Since then, however, the growing visibility and power of Indigenous movements have created enormous potential for fundamentally changing our world in a positive fashion. … A deeper dive into colonialism and Indigenous peoples can help clarify the nature of such movements today and, curiously enough, some of the debates around the Israeli-Palestinian question as well. [Read More]

The Geneva Conventions at 75: Do the laws of war still have a fighting chance in today's bloody world? 
By Marnie Lloydd and Te Herenga Waka, The Conversation [August 12, 2024] 
---- It has been 75 years since the adoption of the Geneva Conventions on August 12 1949. In theory, these rules of war are universally agreed by every nation. In practice, they are routinely violated everywhere. With an estimated 120 armed conflicts worldwide, more than 450 armed groups and 195 million people living in areas under their control, the protection of the vulnerable is as vitally important as ever. As the news headlines remind us daily, however, international humanitarian law can seem like too little, too late when faced with military might and political indifference. [Read More] Also of interest is "They Would Not Know Us," by Matthew Hoh, Counterpunch [August 15, 2024] [Link].

The War on Gaza 
(Video) "Incomprehensible": U.S. Approves $20 Billion in New Arms for Israel as Gaza Death Toll Tops 40,000 
From Democracy Now! [August 15, 2024] 
---- Health officials in Gaza said Thursday that the official death toll from Israel's 10-month war has topped 40,000, though that is believed to be a vast undercount of the true figure. The grim milestone was reached just days after the Biden administration greenlit $20 billion in additional weapons sales to Israel, including 50 F-15 fighter jets, tank ammunition, mortar rounds, tactical vehicles and advanced air-to-air missiles. The U.S. approved the sales despite growing calls for an arms embargo on Israel. [See the Program] Also of interest is "In Gaza, Israel's Military Has Reached the End of the Line, U.S. Officials Say," by Helene Cooper, et al., The New York Times [August 14, 2024] [Link].

A Wider War? 
Threatened by a moderate Iranian president, Israel is pulling him into a fight
By Lior Sternfeld, 972 Magazine [Israel/Palestine] [August 13, 2024] 
---- [Today's conflict with Iran] continues a long and seemingly counterintuitive tradition of Israel preferring conservative, fervently anti-Israel presidents in Iran over reformists, whom it sees as detrimental to its strategic interests. After all, part of Israel's support among American, and European governments derives from the idea that it is a Western democratic outpost in a "dangerous neighborhood," which can defeat bad actors in the Middle East before they reach Europe and the West.  According to this logic, Iran is the chief enemy: an anti-Western, anti-Semitic, theocratic dictatorship that poses a clear and immediate danger to the world. When Iran elects moderate leaders, it undermines this monolithic caricature — and Israel, which refuses to change its outlook toward its regional neighbors, sees a diplomatic threat. [Read More]

The War at Home 
The Quiet Success of the Israel Divestment Movement 
By Marianne Dhenin, Yes! Magazine  [August 6, 2024] 
---- As demands for Palestinian liberation grow louder than ever before in defiance of Israel's continuing assaults on the occupied nation and its people, organizers with JVP and other groups critical of U.S. funding for Israel have ramped up efforts targeting this support in their own backyards. These efforts include the Not on Our Dime! campaign in New York state, which aims to end subsidies for New York–registered charitable organizations that fundraise to support the Israeli military and violent settler groups, and the Break the Bonds campaign, a JVP-led initiative that seeds and supports local efforts to demand divestment from Israel Bonds nationwide. [Read More]

Columbia University…Where the Only Ivy is Poison 
By Stanley L. Cohen, Counterpunch [August 16, 2024] 
---- As the very public face of genocide has raged throughout Palestine these past ten months, Columbia University has opened a domestic front in its own war against dissent. In the name of "public safety," Columbia has sought to silence protest and speech be it by suspension, expulsion or arrest.  Utilizing an academic star chamber stoked by outside investigators and inside sham, by pretext and intimidation, it has invented an academic crisis and then marched to punish students and faculty who wish nothing more than to express ideas. [Read More]

The Climate Crisis 
How Close Are the Planet's Climate Tipping Points? 
By Raymond Zhong and Mira Rojanasakul, New York Times [August 11, 2024] 
----For the past two decades, scientists have been raising alarms about great systems in the natural world that warming, caused by carbon emissions, might be pushing toward collapse. These systems are so vast that they can stay somewhat in balance even as temperatures rise. But only to a point. Once we warm the planet beyond certain levels, this balance might be lost, scientists say. The effects would be sweeping and hard to reverse. Not like the turning of a dial, but the flipping of a switch. One that wouldn't be easily flipped back. [Read More]

Europe's Crackdown on Environmental Dissent Is Silencing Voices the World Needs to Hear 
By Christopher Ketcham, New York Times [August 18, 2024] 
---- Michel Forst, the United Nations special rapporteur on environmental defenders, sees this crackdown as "a major threat to democracy and human rights," as he put it in a report in February. The effort to crush environmental dissent has come as some Europeans appear to have soured on the clean energy transition. … Truth is what the world needs, even if it must be delivered by protesters on the streets and reiterated again and again from the ramparts. The European countries suppressing dissent are smothering the sense of urgency that might otherwise compel those nations to do their part to stop this looming calamity. [Read More]

Civil Liberties 
A Brief History of the Right-Wing Takeover of the US Judiciary 
By Alex Aronson et al., Convergence [August 16, 2024] 
---- The history of the Right's campaign to seize the courts reveals how closely the electoral and judicial arenas are linked, and how politics shapes the interpretation of the law. The structural changes that the Right has put into place are going to take decades to address, not only through Congressional action but also through informed action on the part of people. … Movement Law Lab recently hosted a webinar entitled "How Did We Get Here? The History of the Conservative Legal Movement" to help us understand the roots of our present rotten and captured judiciary, influenced by maneuvering and dark money. [Read More]

The State of the Union 
(Video) Leaked Project 2025 Training Videos Show Former Trump Officials Detailing Plans to Dismember Government 
From Democracy Now! [August 12, 2024] 
---- As Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump tries to downplay his connection to the far-right policy agenda known as Project 2025, ProPublica and Documented have just published dozens of training videos by the group that show how the conservative movement is gearing up for the next Republican administration. It's an effort led by the conservative Heritage Foundation think tank and other groups to remake the federal government, including by replacing civil servants with thousands of partisan political appointees who would help carry out the extreme policies envisioned by Project 2025. Many of the people who crafted the policy blueprint are former top Trump officials. The training videos include discussions about undoing climate policy, combatting diversity efforts, denying freedom of information requests and more. "The first time that Trump … got elected, his operation was very unprepared. They did not have a bench of people ready. There was chaos, there was confusion, and that set back that administration for perhaps months, maybe even a year or two," says ProPublica reporter Andy Kroll. "If he is elected again, that will not be the case." [See the Program] 

Our History 
To Build Working-Class Power, We Need a Workers' Education Movement 
By Daniel JudtIn, The Nation [August 13, 2024] 
---- In December of 1936, a day into their historic sit-down strike at a General Motors plant in Flint, Michigan, autoworkers set up a school. Surrounded by idle machines, freed from the foreman's gaze, they took classes in public speaking and labor journalism, in political economy, in the history of the labor movement. This was not a spontaneous idea. Some of the key players in the strikes—the education director and several rank-and-file organizers in the nascent United Auto Workers (UAW), as well as its future president, Walter Reuther, and his brother, Roy—had spent time at Brookwood Labor College, a small independent school for workers who wanted to radicalize the labor movement. Many of the classes at the factory in Flint were based on those at Brookwood. In a way, so was the strike itself. It was at Brookwood that the Reuther brothers first studied the sit-down—a tactic that would be deployed in the coming year by nearly 400,000 workers in one of the most radical upsurges in American labor history. The start of the modern labor movement in America owed a lot, as one historian puts it, to "Brookwood's Detroit vanguard." [Read More]



 


Sunday, August 11, 2024

CFOW Newsletter - Can peace be forced on Israel?

Concerned Families of Westchester Newsletter
August 11, 2024

Hello All – As we gathered yesterday in Hastings for our weekly peace vigil, the sun was starting to set in Gaza.  It was a "normal" day in Israel's war.  A UN-operated school was bombed, killing more than 100 people who were taking shelter there, mostly children.  This was the 8th such school Israel has bombed in recent weeks.  Those taking shelter there did so because their homes have been destroyed by Israeli bombs and rockets. At least one of the bombs that hit the school was "made in the USA."

Americans were told about the bombing and deaths, or course, but were shielded (on their television news) from the gruesome details readily available to the millions of people watching Arabic or (in many cases) European broadcasting, or on the English-language channel of Aljazeera.  Most Americans (and most Israelis) simply don't know what's going on, shielded from the blood and grief and horrors by their patriotic media.  It is therefore hard for those so shielded to understand the intensity of the world's hatred from Israeli and American war crimes in Gaza, and/or for the disbelief with which people in much of the world watch the passive acquiescence with which Americans complacently accept what our government does in our name.

The official death toll in Gaza is now 40,000; but researchers say that the true number is much higher, with thousands buried under rubble or dying from preventable disease and starvation.  Almost all of Gaza's hospitals have been destroyed, as have all of its universities and hundreds of schools. Hundreds of UN staff, aid workers, and hospital staff have also been killed.  At this moment, the Israeli media is reporting credible accounts of torture of Palestinians held prisoner. Polls show that this torture is widely supported in Israel.

The world weeps; but what can be done?  Next Thursday Israel and Hamas are asked to attend a "final" negotiating session, to agree on a ceasefire proposal deemed "fair to both sides" by the Biden administration.  What will happen if Netanyahu refuses to make an agreement? The simple answer is: the USA can tell Israel to accept the ceasefire terms that have been developed by the US and other countries, or face an end to US financial and diplomatic support, and an embargo on weapons.  Will or can Biden and Harris take this step?  As reported below, this seems doubtful; but we must keep agitating for peace.  Strong action by the USA is the only way that this bloodbath will come to an end.

Illuminating the Week that Was

(Video) What are the chances for renewed talks to end the Gaza war? 
---- From Aljazeera ["Inside Story"] with guests Mustafa Bargouti [Palestine National Initiative]; Gideon Levy [columnist for Israeli liberal newspaper Ha'aretz]; and Rami Khoury [American Univ. of Beirut]. [See the Program]

(Video) Jeremy Scahill on New Head of Hamas, Questions About Haniyeh Assassination & Iran Retaliation From Democracy Now! [August 7, 2024] 
---- Hamas has named Yahya Sinwar as successor to former senior political leader Ismail Haniyeh, who was assassinated in Tehran last week, shortly after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's warmly received visit to the United States. As the region braces for a retaliatory attack on Israel from Iran, we speak to Jeremy Scahill, whose latest piece for Drop Site News details Hamas's account of the assassination, and look at how Haniyeh's death and Sinwar's ascension may affect Hamas's next moves and the course of the nearly yearlong conflict in Gaza. [See  the Program]

Kamalapalooza 
By Joseph O'Neill, The New York Review of Books [August 3, 2024] 
---- The liberal grassroots coalition has transformed Kamala Harris's fortunes. How can she harness its power? [Read More]

What Tim Walz Could Mean for Kamala Harris's Stance on Gaza and Israel 
By Jonah Valdez, The Intercept [August 6, 2024] 
---- Walz allows for Harris to "turn a corner" in her policy on the war in Gaza, said James Zogby, president of Arab American Institute. [Read More]

News Note – Happenings in Carmel, NY 
[FB – Carmel is an affluent, 82% white town of 33,000 people in Putnam County just over the border from Westchester. Carmel schoolboard member Jim Wise is the object of a campaign to oust him because he advocates a ceasefire in the Gaza war.  (He posted his story on Facebook.) Mr. Wise is being supported by JVP-Westchester, and I'm posting here a letter that JVP leader Harry Soloway sent to the Carmel schoolboard.  My hope is not only to encourage others to lend support for Mr. Wise, but also as an excellent example for fighting back against the kind of racist stupidity that afflicts too many towns.]

Dear Carmel Board of Education Members, 
I write in defense of the first amendment rights of Carmel Schools Board of Education member Jim Wise. The current campaign to oust Mr. Wise from the Board based on his call for a ceasefire in Gaza and for equal rights for all people living in Palestine is based on supremacist, discriminatory and undemocratic beliefs. Mr. Wise's compassion for the people of Gaza experiencing genocide at the hands of a lawless Israeli government should be honored and praised. The entire world, including the International Court of Justice, has condemned the Israeli government's policy of occupation, displacement, starvation, and apartheid, and has called for an end to the current slaughter of innocent Palestinian men, women and children.

As a Jewish American, I object in the strongest terms to the conflation of criticism of the Israeli government with antisemitism. In fact, the weaponization of antisemitism against anyone supporting the human rights of Palestinians is both dangerous and un-American.

Furthermore, the phrase "From the River to the Sea" when used by supporters of freedom and dignity for Palestinians is not a call for the destruction of Jews, but rather a plea for equality and human rights for all people living in historic Palestine. However, when used by Netanyahu and his fellow zionists, as it has been for over 75 years, it is a call for the displacement and destruction of all Indigenous Palestinians, be they Muslim, Christian or Jewish, if they don't accede to a supremacist Jewish ethnostate that does not recognize their humanity in their own land. Which use of the term is hateful?

I can only imagine the harm done to Palestinian, Arab and Muslim members of the Carmel community when faced with the hateful rhetoric of those seeking to oust Mr. Wise from his democratically elected position. They can only feel marginalized and silenced in their own community when any expression of their concern and despair for their family members and friends is called hate speech. Similarly, Jewish people and other people of conscience in the Carmel community calling for a ceasefire, especially students, are being made to feel like outcasts by the vile and unfounded accusations of "antisemitism".

I urge you to not cede your moral imperative by threatening free speech rights in Carmel. Please support Jim Wise and his right to speak his truth. His courage is exemplary.

Sincerely, 
Harry Soloway 
Cortlandt Manor, NY

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 make out your check to "Frank Brodhead," write "CFOW" on the memo line, and send your check to CFOW, PO Box 364, Hastings-on-Hudson, NY 10706. Thanks! 

Rewards! 
The rewards for stalwart newsletter readings this week focus on the 1970 song "Leve Palestina," which has become an antiwar anthem for Palestinian freedom.  For the back story for this song, go here; for the song and its action video, (with English subtitles), go here. 

Best wishes, 
Frank Brodhead 
For CFOW

CFOW Weekly Reader

Featured Essays 
We Must Oppose Israel's Dangerous Gamble Before It's Too Late
By Kathy Kelly, The Progressive [August 7, 2024]
---- We must try to absorb what it means to live as a refugee in an open-air concentration camp—already one of the most densely populated areas on Earth, even before 70 percent of its housing was destroyed. More than 341 mosques and three churches have been destroyed. 2,000-pound bombs have been dropped on tents in places deemed safe areas. Innocent civilians are being killed by snipers. Thirty-one out of thirty-six hospitals have been damaged or destroyed. Escape routes are cut off. Persistent restrictions on the flow of humanitarian aid into and around Gaza are driving a desperate shortage of food, fuel, and medicine. As access to humanitarian relief is deliberately choked off, children are being collectively punished while Israeli leaders denounce them as animals. The world watches in horror as surgeons are forced to amputate the limbs of wounded children with no available anesthetics. … Israel has resorted to assassinations of the very negotiators with which it purports to be seeking peace, and in a manner clearly intended to expand the conflict into a global war involving nuclear-armed nations. [Read More]

Zionism on the brink: The Gaza war beyond Netanyahu 
By Dr. Ramzy Baroud, The Middle East Monitor [August 6, 2024]
---- The idea that Israel's war on Gaza is essentially waged and sustained by and for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has dominated political analyses on the subject for some time. The notion is often kept alive by public opinion inside Israel. Most polls produced since the start of the Israeli genocide of the Palestinians in Gaza suggest that an overwhelming majority of Israelis believe that Netanyahu's decisions are motivated by personal, political and familial interests. This conclusion, however, is too convenient and not entirely accurate. It assumes, wrongly, that the Israeli people oppose Netanyahu's war in Gaza whereas, in reality, they have been quite approving of all tactics used by the Israeli army so far. … For years prior to the current war, Israel has been moving slowly to the political right and far right, the political extremism of which has surpassed that of any generation of Zionist leaders who have governed the occupation state since the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians in 1948.  [Read More]

Israel's Assassination Program and Its Ties to US Intelligence
By James Bamford, The Nation [August 9, 2024] 
---- Considering the over-the-top number of weapons and other support provided to Israel by the Biden administration, it seems highly likely that it would also be given whatever it asked for in terms of intelligence—including targeting and geolocation details as well as human source reporting, all of which could greatly assist in carrying out assassinations. Such actions, however, have serious consequences, including potentially involving the United States in another deadly and prolonged Middle East war. And the longer the genocide continues, the greater the chances of a large-scale regional war, with the US at the center. [Read More]  

The War on Gaza 
For Israel, Dead Children Are Worth Mourning, Unless They're Palestinian 
By Gideon Levy, Haaretz [Israel] [August 11, 2024] 
---- The possibility that the most unnecessary and most criminal war that Israel has ever fought is liable to end spurs the government, and especially the military – the military is culpable for such crimes – to make one last effort to kill as many as possible, without discrimination and without restraint. Eight schools in 10 days is an urgent matter for The Hague. The jurist who can refute the accusation has not been born. [Read More]  Also of interest is "Gaza's Children Face an Unseen Crisis," from New Lines Magazine [Link].

(Video) Israel Accused of Running "Torture Camps" as Video Emerges of Soldiers Raping Palestinian Prisoner 
From Democracy Now! [August 8, 2024] 
---- The Israeli human rights group B'Tselem has published a major new report documenting how the Israeli prison system has become "a network of torture camps," where physical, psychological and sexual abuse of Palestinian prisoners is normalized and routine. The report, titled "Welcome to Hell," collects the testimony of 55 Palestinians who were detained by Israeli authorities since October 7 and later released, almost all without charges. This comes as a group of U.N. experts condemned the widespread torture of Palestinians and as Israel's Channel 12 News aired shocking footage of Israeli soldiers sexually abusing a prisoner at the Sde Teiman army base, where thousands of detainees from Gaza are held. Sarit Michaeli, the international advocacy lead for B'Tselem, says the abuse in Israeli prisons is "systemic, ongoing and state-sanctioned," reflecting the cruelty and thirst for revenge among a growing number of Israelis. [See the Program]

The War at Home 
AIPAC Hijacks Rep. Cori Bush's Race–and Our Elections 
By Medea Benjamin, Code Pink [August 7, 2024] 
---- Representative Cori Bush, a progressive black woman from St. Louis, MO who is a member of the "Squad" and has been a powerful voice in Congress for poor people, women's rights, healthcare, housing–and Palestine, just lost her primary because pro-Israel lobby groups flooded the race with outside funding. Her loss is a tremendous blow to progressives and to the U.S. electoral process itself.  This is the pro-Israel lobby's second "win" of the season. The first was the June defeat of progressive, black congressman from Westchester County, N.Y., Jamaal Bowman, who was a forceful critic of Israel's attacks on Gaza. AIPAC and its mis-named super PAC, the United Democracy Project, barged into Westchester County to anoint an opponent—white, pro-Israel Westchester County Executive George Latimer—and then shower him with cash. … By throwing $17 million into the race, pro-Israel groups turned Bowman's primary into the most expensive one in U.S. history. When Bowman was defeated, AIPAC declared the outcome showed that the pro-Israel position is "both good policy and good politics." On the contrary. It showed that pro-Israel groups can buy elections and it sent a frightening message to all elected officials that if they criticize Israel, even during a genocide, they may well pay with their careers. [Read More]

Civil Liberties 
The Outrageous Case of a Journalist Charged With a Hate Crime for Recording a Gaza Protest Action 
By Natasha Lennard, The Intercept [August 8 2024] 
---- There is no law that requires journalists — or any members of the public — to act as police informers should they observe a crime.  On the contrary, there is a particular public interest in ensuring that members of the press can respond to tips and cover stories without fear that they will in turn face prosecution for their continued presence. Indeed, the right to observe and record unlawful conduct without being considered complicit should not only be reserved for journalists. … If Seligson's arrest and perversely overreaching charges are an effort to compel a journalist to share information, the police and prosecutors have already set a pernicious, coercive precedent, whether or not the charges stick. [Read More]

Our History 
Changing gear 
By Sheila Rowbotham, ZNet [March 18, 2009] 
[FB – Sheila Rowbotham is/was one of the leading activist-intellectuals in the UK women's movement, starting in the late 1960s.  She has written several interesting memoirs about those times.] 
---- Action brought a whirl of ideas in 1968 that seemed to challenge the scope of politics. Long after the music died, they left a mark on subsequent radical social movements. In 1968 learning and doing, theorising and experiencing appeared to come together. As boundaries went down, we contested the divide between personal life and politics. We imagined democracy permeating all aspects of living. This was the energy which would later stream into the first women's liberation conference in Oxford in 1970 and into the early Gay Liberation Front meetings. Sex, pregnancy, mothering, fathering, housework and cultural identity were regarded as political as wages and welfare. … Four decades on, we can see that the rebellions of 1968 coincided with capitalism changing gear. An opening and a recoupment emerged together. Over time, snags became evident in the dreams of liberation, transformation and participation. The hair of the 68ers grew white and they became less certain. Yet the memory had lodged: things were not immutable, even though change might not come in ways you expected. During the 1990s, when capitalism seemed triumphant and all-pervasive, new movements of resistance appeared. Environmentalists and global networkers took up demands for qualitative transformation and a grassroots internationalism. Now another generation of activists worldwide are searching for an alternative to domination, greed and competition. Despite the differing contexts, they have rediscovered the capacity to hope which marked the rebellions of 1968. [Read More] 

When W. E. B. Du Bois Was "Un-American" 
By Andrew Lanham, Boston Review [January 13, 2017]
[FB – WEB Du Bois was a leading US intellectual for most of a century.  He was an intellectual leader of the movement for Black civil rights, a founder of the NAACP, and much more.  Get to know him!] 
---- February 1951 was a busy month for W. E. B. Du Bois, who turned eighty-three and threw himself a huge birthday party to raise funds for African decolonization. He also married his second wife, the leftist writer Shirley Graham, in what the Baltimore Afro-American newspaper called the wedding of the year. And he was indicted, arrested, and arraigned in federal court as an agent of the Soviet Union because he had circulated a petition protesting nuclear weapons. The Justice Department saw Du Bois's petition as a threat to national security. They thought it was communist propaganda meant to encourage American pacifism in the face of Soviet aggression. They put Du Bois on trial in order to brand him as "un-American," to use the language of Joe McCarthy's House Un-American Activities Committee. Du Bois was not in fact a Soviet agent. He was an American citizen using his First Amendment rights to protest nuclear weapons on his own behalf. A federal judge acquitted him because prosecutors failed to present any evidence. The mental picture of an eighty-three-year-old Du Bois in handcuffs reminds us that these ideas have consequences. Du Bois himself, though, fought furiously against persecution. He crisscrossed the country giving speeches, wrote passionately about his trial, and built a small but vigorous coalition that helped preserve social justice causes during a decade that tried desperately to strangle them. In our own moment of threatened repression, Du Bois's story and his civil rights and antiwar tactics offer important political lessons. Du Bois may be our keenest critic of Trumpism today. [Read More]