Thursday, July 31, 2008

World In My Eyes

mp3 * Let me take you on a trip Around the world and back And you won't have to move You just sit still Now let your mind do the walking And let my body do the talking Let me show you the world in my eyes I'll take you to the highest mountain To the depths of the deepest sea And we won't need a map, believe me Now let my body do the moving And let my hands do the soothing Let me show you the world in my eyes That's all there is Nothing more than you can feel now That's all there is Let me put you on a ship On a long, long trip Your lips close to my lips All the islands in the ocean All the heavens in the motion Let me show you the world in my eyes That's all there is Nothing more than you can touch now That's all there is Let me show you the world in my eyes *

"Love and Gratitude to Water" ceremony


Alone With Everybody, Charles Bukowski

the flesh covers the bone and they put a mind in there and sometimes a soul, and the women break vases against the walls and the men drink too much and nobody finds the one but keep looking crawling in and out of beds. flesh covers the bone and the flesh searches for more than flesh. there's no chance at all: we are all trapped by a singular fate. nobody ever finds the one. the city dumps fill the junkyards fill the madhouses fill the hospitals fill the graveyards fill nothing else fills.

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Anarchists propose $50 million deal on convention

A group of anarchists says it will drop its plans to disrupt the Democratic National Convention if Denver invests a $50 million federal grant in the community rather than spend it on security. The group Unconventional Denver wants the city to spend the $50 million intended for security for the convention on health care and other needs. If the city agrees, the anarchists say they’ll call off their protests. Otherwise, Tim Simons says members of the group plan to “physically stand in the way of what’s going to happen.” He says the group is protesting what it sees as the Democratic Party’s support of big business rather than meeting people’s basic needs. ...

A movement begins: Vote 'no' on Election Day

WASHINGTON – Both major-party presidential candidates should be rejected at the polls this November, writes Joseph Farah, founder and editor of the largest independent news source on the Internet in an unusual new book hitting bookstores nationwide in three weeks and available now exclusively through WND's online store. "None of the Above" is the first book of its kind in modern U.S. history – calling for Americans to send a message to the Democratic and Republican parties that they will not vote for candidates who do not honor and uphold the principles of the Constitution. Farah believes 2008 could be transformed into a history-making year in American politics if his book inspires millions to take up his challenge. ...


Anarchist's Wife Trailer

video The Anarchist's wife in IMDB.

Atari Teenage Riot - Revolution Action (Banned Version)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hkb3r9filcM

A Girl Among the Anarchists

[Thanks to *TLL* for this post]

by Isabel Meredith


Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Fidel Castro Stresses Hugo Chavez Virtues

Havana, Jul 29 (Prensa Latina) Cuban Revolution leader Fidel Castro stressed the figure of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, whose investment program is impressive. In his Tuesday Cubadebate website article entitled "Chavez" Message," Fidel Castro stated, "Never before, quite possibly, has more attention been paid to the most deeply felt wishes and pressing needs of people. We’re already seeing some results." "He returned from his trip to Europe on Friday. He was away for only four days. Flying west, he arrived at Caracas at 11 at night, at sunrise in Madrid, the point of departure. The call from Venezuela came in early on Saturday. I was told he wanted to speak to me over the phone that day. I replied that I could speak to him at 1:45 in the afternoon," he noted. "Chavez," he stressed, "was calm, pensive and satisfied with his tour. We shared views on the prices of foodstuffs, oil and raw materials, needed investments, the dollar’s devaluation, inflation, recession, imperialist swindles and plundering, mistakes made by our adversaries, the risk of nuclear war, the system’s insurmountable problems and other issues which require no secrecy. Nevertheless, I use this means of communication only exceptionally." "We exchanged comments and news. He didn’t say one word about the wonderful message he wrote on the occasion of the 26th of July celebrations, in which he analyzed my denunciation entitled “Machiavelli’s Strategy”. I received it that same Saturday at night. Chavez is the embodiment of Bolivar’s ideas. Our one-hour conversation, back in the days of the Liberator, would have spanned months and his 4-day European tour at least 2 years," Fidel Castro said. Prensa Latina is posting below the full text of Fidel Castro"s reflection. REFLECTIONS BY COMRADE FIDEL CHAVEZ’ MESSAGE (Source: CubaDebate) He returned from his trip to Europe on Friday. He was away for only four days. Flying west, he arrived at Caracas at 11 at night, at sunrise in Madrid, the point of departure. The call from Venezuela came in early on Saturday. I was told he wanted to speak to me over the phone that day. I replied that I could speak to him at 1:45 in the afternoon. I had enough time to jot down 25 points, of the sort one can speak of over an international phone line, knowing the enemy is listening in, some of which had been tackled by the Venezuelan president himself before the press. Chavez was calm, pensive and satisfied with his tour. We shared views on the prices of foodstuffs, oil and raw materials, needed investments, the dollar’s devaluation, inflation, recession, imperialist swindles and plundering, mistakes made by our adversaries, the risk of nuclear war, the system’s insurmountable problems and other issues which require no secrecy. Nevertheless, I use this means of communication only exceptionally. We exchanged comments and news. He didn’t say one word about the wonderful message he wrote on the occasion of the 26th of July celebrations, in which he analyzed my denunciation entitled “Machiavelli’s Strategy”. I received it that same Saturday at night. Chaves is the embodiment of Bolivar’s ideas. Our one-hour conversation, back in the days of the Liberator, would have spanned months and his 4-day European tour at least 2 years. Yesterday, I listened to his remarks on the Alo Presidente program. His investment program is impressive. Never before, quite possibly, has more attention been paid to the most deeply felt wishes and pressing needs of people. We’re already seeing some results. When I turned on the television at night, Chavez was in the midst of a crowd that was cheering on the female softball team playing the final game of the cup against Cuba. The Venezuelan team won, one to zero. And, to top it all, this was a ‘no hit, no run’ match. The eyes of the young and handsome Venezuelan pitcher almost popped out of her head when the magnitude of her feat dawned on her following the last out. In the middle of the exuberant team that was leaping with joy on the infield next to the box, Chavez was hugging and kissing the players. Were we not internationalist in spirit, this would have been reason to be depressed. But, after thinking about it a few seconds, I was happy for him and Venezuela. What a man! How can he keep at it like that after so much effort? Today is his birthday. Raul and I sent him a painting which shows Che emerging from the earth, as envisaged by a painter from Cuba’s westernmost province. It is a striking piece. I shall have this reflection reach him early tomorrow. Fidel Castro Ruz July 28, 2008 11:30 a.m

WarIsForSuckers.com

http://warisforsuckers.com/videos.php UPDATED DAILY AT 2:11am EST-- OVER 2000 VIDEOS -- WAR IS FOR SUCKERS -- recklessly speculative comedy

Monday, July 28, 2008

Johnny Depp enters Alice In Wonderland as Mad Hatter

After playing a pirate in Pirates of the Caribbean series, versatile Hollywood actor Johnny Depp is set to play the Mad Hatter in the film version of Alice in Wonderland.

Thesun.co.uk reports the movie will be shot in 3D and Depp teams up with his friend and collaborator, director Tim Burton. The two have worked together on six movies.

A source said: "Burton has had designs on Alice In Wonderland since before he was famous. He has a knack for turning what seem like stories for just kids into gripping, spooky fables loved just as much by adults. He's held out on doing Alice till he got a big enough budget. Now this film is financed by Disney so money won't be a problem."

Unknown actress Mia Wasikowska will play Alice. Production will start next year and the release is planned for the summer of 2010.


Media Marginalization of “Third” Parties

Interview with Mickey Z.

There has been a plethora of articles and commentary in progressivist media focused on the Democratic Party — considered left of the Republican Party (but clearly, for a non-American observer, a right-wing party and not a left-wing party). Yet some progressives in the media — forgetful of the Bill Clinton era — continue to push for the effete strategy of lesser evilism that no matter how terrible the Democratic presidential candidate of the corporate political duopoly is s/he would not be as bad as the Republican presidential candidate. Other progressives point out that the Democratic candidate, Barack Obama, is clearly aligned with corporatism and imperialism.

Despite all this, the progressivist media has excluded or severely marginalized progressivist “third” party candidates.

If there is any credence to the aphorism “any publicity is good publicity,” then Obama has reaped the benefits while progressivist candidates have been disadvantaged by independent/progressivist media.

To get a thoughtful analysis on lesser evilism and American “democracy,” I turned to Astoria, New York-based author Mickey Z., whose most recent offering is CPR for Dummies (Think: Henry Miller meets Bukowski and Vonnegut at Sunday Mass).

Kim Petersen: What is it about the political milieu in the United States that fosters lesser evilism?

Mickey Z.: I guess it’s one of the oldest tricks in the book (insert Eliot Spitzer joke here). You know: good cop, bad cop. Settle for less pain instead of demanding more pleasure. To delve a little deeper and risk armchair psychology, I’d say that when the “far left” engages in its despicable Anybody-But-Bush style delusion, it perhaps reveals their fear and unwillingness, re: radical change.

KP: Are the political duopoly and corporate media still so persuasive?

MZ: Well, ask yourself this: Why does every major newspaper and TV news show have a business section, but not a labor section? They cover automobiles, not bicycles. If the Dow Jones Industrial Average drops, it’s “Stop the presses.” But if the infant mortality rate rises, it questionable if it’ll even make the papers. If you created a blueprint for an apparatus that erased critical thought, there’s none more efficient than our (sic) corporate media.

KP: Obama exposes his regressivism with statements such as the recent: “But the greatest danger of all is to allow new walls to divide us from one another.” This he said in Berlin on the heels of departing the greatest wall-building project since dynastic China.

MZ: Well, there’s “our” walls (“our” being the US, UK, and Israel) and then you have “their” walls, Kim. We only build walls when left with absolutely no choice. We really don’t want to. Really… we don’t. I mean it. We’re the good guys. I can prove it: It says so in our history books.

KP: Why do you think it is that even the independent media excludes or marginalizes “third” party candidates and focuses so preponderantly on Barack Obama?

MZ: It’s just so distracting to focus on more than two things at once. The media are us. The press is made up humans shaped by the same hypocritical and destructive culture as the rest of us. All of us lunatics trying to navigate the Space Age with Stone Age brains. If believing that Obama is living proof that American democracy works keeps things simple, then it’s just so much easier to believe that. More subtly, the unspoken reality is that those who look beyond the accepted parameters of discussion are excluded from all the (alleged) fun.

KP: Sometimes the focus is support for Obama since he is supposedly less evil than John McCain, or it can even be about revealing Obama’s lack of progressivism. But the focus is on Obama and not the progressivist candidates out there. Given that Obama presents himself as a thoroughly unattractive presidential candidate for many progressives, why does one seldom encounter articles on more attractive presidential candidates in the independent media?

MZ: Ah, now we get to the dirty little secret of the so-called Left. A big chunk of them just wanna fit in. They wanna win… even if it means incredible compromise. Then there’s some of them that are happiest when bitching and moaning and complaining. Give them a cartoon character to hate like Cheney or Guiliani and they’re pacified. So once again in 2008, the independent (sic) press will buy the line of bullshit being sold by a corporate Democrat (sorry, I’m being redundant) and, by proxy, support the status quo and the subsequent global nightmare.

KP: Even if Obama were an appealing candidate for progressives, he would still be entrenched in the corporate political duopoly. Is a “third” party the answer to steering the United States away from the policies of the corporate duopoly? Is party politics even the way to go?

MZ: Corporate America could buy the Green Party as easily as it owns the Democrats and Republicans… but this isn’t a preordained theology or force of nature. The planet is fucked primarily due to decisions made by humans. If different choices had been made in the past, it’s very likely we’d have had different outcomes. If we start making different decisions now, there just might be enough time to create new outcomes. It’s not about party politics or religion or the system or terrorism or any other fairy tale… it’s about human beings changing their god damned minds and rejecting what has nearly destroyed us — and every other living — so far.

KP: What is the most effective strategy for ditching lesser evilism?

MZ: I don’t know… but I’m guessing it begins with us in the privileged West waking the fuck up and taking drastic action as soon as possible.

KP: Lastly, is going for a “third” party a viable strategy? Or is participating in a rigged electoral system anathema?

MZ: In 2004, there were 202,746,417 eligible voters, but only 122,293,332 hit the polling booths. More than 80 million more Americans could have voted while George W. Bush won with 62,040,610 votes. Imagine if even 20% of those 80 million voted for Nader or McKinney in 2008 — if for no other reason than to demonstrate that what they (we) want isn’t on the menu. Sixteen million protest votes? In America? Hey, it’s at least a tiny step in the right direction… unless of course, they figure out a way to disappear all those votes. Oh well… never mind.

  • If you are in Astoria on August 7, hear more from Mickey Z. on the 2008 election, the state of activism in America, cell phones, gorillas, Gwen Stefani, and much more at the Waltz-Astoria Café.

  • Sunday, July 27, 2008

    Out of the Mouths of a Thousand Birds, by Hafiz

    Listen - Listen more carefully to what is around you Right now. In my world There are the bells from the clanks Of the morning milk drums, And a wagon wheel outside my window Just hit a bump Which turned into an ecstatic chorus Of the Beloved's Name. There is the Prayer Call Rising up like the sun Out of the mouths of a thousand birds. There is an astonishing vastness Of movement and Life Emanating sound and light From my folded hands And my even quieter simple being and heart. My dear, Is it true that your mind Is sometimes like a battering Ram Running all through the city, Shouting so madly inside and out About the ten thousand things That do not matter? Hafiz, too, For many years beat his head in youth And thought himself at a great distance, Far from an armistice With God. But that is why this scarred old pilgrim Has now become such a sweet rare vintage Who weeps and sings for you. O listen - Listen more carefully To what is inside of you right now. In my world All that remains is the wondrous call to Dance and prayer Rising up like a thousand suns Out of the mouth of a Single bird. ~ Hafiz ~ (The Subject Tonight is Love -- versions of Hafiz by Daniel Ladinsky)

    Moore-Alexander Seeks PFP Presidential, V.P. Nomination

    Stewart A. Alexander Vice Presidential Nominee Socialist Party USA Candidate for V.P. Nomination Peace and Freedom Party July 27, 2008 It was October 19, 2007 that Brian P. Moore and Stewart A. Alexander met for the first time at the National Convention of Socialist Party USA; in St Louis, Missouri. Less than three days later, the two men were joined together as presidential running mates representing the Socialist Party USA, and joint partners to lead in the socialist movement nationwide. During the convention, Brian Moore was nominated for President and Stewart Alexander was nominated for Vice President. With less than a week before the State Convention of the Peace and Freedom Party, both Brian Moore and Stewart Alexander are hoping to capture the nomination for president and vice president of the California socialist party; to expand the party’s mission and socialist agenda nationwide. There are three other presidential candidates besides Brian Moore that will be attending the convention in Sacramento, California; they are Ralph Nader, Gloria La Riva, and Cynthia McKinney. The hope of all four candidates will be to secure the party’s nomination for president. The Peace and Freedom Party of California, founded in 1967, is committed to socialism, democracy, ecology, feminism and racial equality. As stated in the party’s platform, the party is organized toward a world mission where cooperation replaces competition, where all people are well fed, clothed and housed; where all women and men have equal status; where all individuals may freely endeavor to fulfill their own talents and desires; a world of freedom and peace where every community retains its cultural integrity and lives with all others in harmony. Brian Moore and Stewart Alexander believe the mission of the Peace and Freedom Party and Socialist Party USA are closely related and both socialist parties have worked for decades to protect the rights of working people; for better conditions in employment and better wages, affordable health care for all, affordable housing, and better benefits for seniors. Within the past three years, millions of working people have seen a steady decline in living standards; the Peace and Freedom Party is offering short term and long term solutions in a capitalist system that continues to fail working people. Short term, Peace and Freedom Party wants the minimum wage double and index to the cost of living, the party is calling for the guaranteed right of all workers to organize and strike, and equal pay for equal work and for work of comparable worth. The PFP is also calling for a guaranteed dignified income for those who cannot work, and a Universal Basic Income that will alleviate poverty and homelessness. Brian Moore and Stewart Alexander fully support the position of Peace and Freedom Party to tax the income and assets of the rich to meet human needs. Alexander says, “Under capitalism, the income of the workers is taxed to meet the needs of the capitalist ruling class; as we now see with the bail out of big banks, financial institutions, private investors and big corporations.” Both socialist parties are calling for all financial and insurance institutions to be socially owned and operated by a democratically-controlled national banking authority, which should include credit unions, mutual insurance cooperatives, and cooperative state banks. The Moore/Alexander campaign fully supports the position of the Peace and Freedom Party and Socialist Party USA regarding international trade agreements. The PFP Platform states, “International trade agreements must guarantee the protection of workers and the environment in all participating countries; abolish NAFTA, GATT and the World Trade Organization (WTO).” Similar to the platform of the Peace and Freedom Party, the platform of Socialist Party USA “demands the immediate withdrawal of the United States from the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA), and oppose the creation of a widened Free Trade Area of the Americas.” Alexander says, “The trade agreements that are now in existence in the U.S. are assuring that this nation will continue to lose jobs abroad and will leave working people without work, here in the U.S. and in their own countries. These agreements will force the emigration of millions across the U.S. boarders for food, clothing and housing while robbing millions of working people from having the ability to maintain a decent standard of living in their own countries.” Most of the national opinion polls are indicating that the economy is the number one concern with most voters, and the economy is a top campaign issue for Moore and Alexander; however, the number one concern of the Moore /Alexander campaign is ending the occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan and ending U.S. imperialism. Moore and Alexander have been strong opponent to the illegal war and invasion and both candidates are strongly opposed to the ongoing U.S. threats against the Iran government. Brian Moore and Stewart Alexander believe their campaign is offering the socialist parties a national voice to speak on the many issues that are presently affecting working people. During a time when the Democrats and Republicans, Barack Obama and John McCain, have failed to address the needs of working people, Moore and Alexander firmly believe it is time for working people to take control and responsibility of their lives and their communities. The 2008 General Election will become a turning point in American politics and will reshape the political landscape for third party candidates. The up-coming election is another turning point for the socialist parties and socialists candidates such as Brian Moore and Stewart Alexander; it has been more than 100 years since Eugene Debs first entered the race for president as a socialist candidate at the beginning of the 20th Century. The State Convention for Peace and Freedom Party will convene on Saturday, August 2 and 3 at the Hawthorn Suites, 321 Bercut Drive, Sacramento California. At the convention Brian Moore, Gloria La Riva, Ralph Nader, and Cynthia McKinney will be seeking the Peace and Freedom Party’s presidential nomination. A debate among the four presidential candidates will be at the same location on Friday, August 1 at 7 p.m. For more information search the Web of: Stewart A. Alexander; Independent Voters Rejecting Democrats and Republicans. http://peaceandfreedom.org/home/ http://labs.daylife.com/journalist/stewart_a._alexander http://StewartAlexanderCares.com http://www.vote-socialist.org/ http://peaceandfreedom.org/home/ http://www.sp-usa.org/ http://www.dcpoliticalreport.com/pres08.htm http://www.politics1.com/p2008.htm

    Saturday, July 26, 2008

    S'malice

    The music video for my song 'Alice', an electronic piece of which 90% is composed using sounds recorded from the Disney film 'Alice In Wonderland'. Download the full song in 128kbps MP3 format here: http://www.last.fm/music/Pogo/_/Alice Alice, mp3 Alice Turns 150 CAROLL’S PHILOSPHY: LANGAUGE & CONTINGENCY IN ALICE IN WONDERLAND

    Colombia party leader arrested

    The leader of one of Colombia's major political parties has been arrested on suspicion of having ties to right-wing paramilitaries. Carlos Garcia, a senator and head of the National Unity party, which holds the most seats in the senate, was arrested in the city of Santa Marta, the chief prosecutor's office said on Friday. Garcia is the 31st politician to be arrested over links between paramilitaries and politicians. Thirty other members of congress, most of them from parties that support Alvaro Uribe, Colombia's president, are under investigation over links to right-wing armed groups formed in the 1980s. The paramilitaries have been condemned by human rights groups for the killings of trade unionists and political activists and their involvement in the drug trade. In May, Uribe extradited 14 senior paramilitary leaders to stand trial in the United States on drug trafficking charges. "The accusation against the senator is that he used paramilitaries to help win elections and consolidate power in his home province of Tolima," a spokesman for Colombia's attorney general's office told the Reuters news agency. Uribe re-election Garcia is the second senior member of a party closely tied to Uribe to be arrested in the so-called parapolitics scandal. In April, authorities arrested Mario Uribe, a former senator, second cousin and confidante of the president, over his alleged links to paramilitary groups. Garcia had been promoting efforts to allow Uribe to run for a third term in 2010. Uribe, the United States' closest ally in Latin America, is leaving open the option of running again in 2010, and polls suggest he will win with ease. But Colombia's scandal-hit congress will first need to approve a referendum vote on whether to amend the constitution to allow him to seek an unprecedented third term. The law has already been changed once to allow his 2006 re-election.

    U.S.–Mexico NAFTA Transportation Agreement Imperiled

    The governing idea behind NAFTA is to remove trade restrictions so as to encourage the free-flow of goods and services across the North American continent. Along the U.S. – Mexican border, however, the reality is that the ground transportation of such goods remains highly congested and drawn out. Long-haul trucks from Mexico are restricted from operating in the U.S. except within designated commercial zones located in border-cities such as San Diego, El Paso and Brownsville. At these sites, the contents of a truck must be unloaded and transferred onto a domestic carrier in order to continue to their final destination. Authorities estimate that this obvious kink in the supply chain costs U.S. consumers $400 million a year.

    Children's Rhymes, by Langston Hughes

    By what sends the white kids I ain't sent: I know I can't be President. What don't bug them white kids sure bugs me: We know everybody ain't free. Lies written down for white folks ain't for us a-tall: Liberty And Justice-- Huh!--For All?

    Angry Cindy Sheehan exits Judiciary hearing

    At several points in Friday’s Judiciary Committee sort-of-almost-not-really impeachment hearing, members of the audience erupted in applause after one of the dozen-plus witnesses delivered a particularly incendiary indictment of President Bush. The committee’s Republicans were none too amused by these displays, and they whined several times that such outbursts were inappropriate. Rep. Lamar Smith (R-TX), the committee’s ranking member, at one point asked Chairman John Conyers to clear the hearing room after one particularly rousing ovation from Code Pink activists. They were responding as author Vincent Bugliosi outlined his case that the Justice Department should bring first degree murder charges against the president for illegally invading Iraq. Conyers decided not to boot the boisterous activists from the room, but he did remind the entire audience to refrain from any demonstrations of approval or disapproval of the proceedings. Less than an hour later, Bugliosi, a former Los Angeles County prosecutor who recently wrote The Prosecution of George W. Bush for Murder, fired up the crowd again. “By taking this nation into war on a lie, all of the killings of American soldiers in Iraq became unlawful killings, and therefore murders,” Bugliosi said. Anti-war activist Cindy Sheehan had been sitting in the crowd, and she shouted, “Thank you Vince.” Conyers seemed flustered, reminding Sheehan and others that some “members are urging me to take more action than merely reminding our audience,” before trying to move on to the next witness. “I urge you to take action,” said Sheehan, who is among the most visible activists pushing for impeachment. After losing her son in the Iraq war, Sheehan became famous for her roadside vigil outside Bush’s Crawford ranch in the summer of 2005, and she has mounted a long-shot bid to unseat House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in this year’s election. “OK then, Sheehan, you’re out,” Conyers said, but the northern California native was already on her way out the door. “I’m going,” she said. “Good-bye.” This video is from C-SPAN, broadcast July 25, 2008. * Seven years after the attacks of 9/11, a global awakening has taken place, the likes of which the world has never seen. As the corporate-controlled media dwindles into extinction, a new breed of journalists and activists has emerged. Click here to watch 9/11 Chronicles Part One: Truth Rising online in high quality now! *

    Main Core: New Evidence Reveals Top Secret Government Database Used in Bush Spy Program

    Salon.com has published new details about a top secret government database that might be at the heart of the Bush administration’s domestic spying operations. The database is known as “Main Core.” It reportedly collects and stores vast amounts of personal and financial data about millions of Americans. Some former US officials believe that “Main Core” may have been used by the National Security Agency to determine who to spy on in the immediate aftermath of 9/11. We speak with author and investigative journalist, Tim Shorrock. [includes transcript] Listen

    Peace and Freedom Party state meeting and nominating convention

    by Norma Harrison The regular state meeting of the Party, including now, the nominating convention will be held 1-3Aug2008 at 321 Bercut Dr. , Sacramento, Ca. All supportive and interested people are invited to join us. http://peaceandfreedom.org/home/

    Friday, July 25, 2008

    What is behind the struggle in Colombia?

    Friday, July 25, 2008 By: Gloria La Riva Revolutionary movements battle U.S.-backed repression Colombian trade unionists and peasant leaders continue to be gunned down in record numbers by a death-squad government that is armed and financed by the Bush administration. More trade unionists are assassinated every year in Colombia than anywhere else in the world. The FARC is waging a struggle against Colombia's ruling class and their U.S. backers.

    These facts are never reported in the U.S. corporate owned media. Such bastions of "free speech" could not care less about the epidemic of killings against progressive workers and small farmers. Instead, all concern and sympathy is being drummed up for the individuals who were taken prisoner by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia-People’s Army (FARC-EP, or simply FARC). In the 1980s, when the FARC laid down its weapons and entered the political process to "peacefully" compete with the U.S.-backed political parties representing the ultra-rich landowners and capitalists, government-backed death squads murdered more than 5,000 of their members. Since 2000, the U.S. government has spent more than $5 billion on Plan Colombia to exterminate the revolutionary movement. Bombings, assassinations and every other conceivable tactic have been used against those resisting imperialism and capitalism. Now the imperialists’ operatives in the CIA and their Colombian puppets are organizing a worldwide campaign against "violence" and "hostage taking." The hypocrisy is so great that few parallels come to mind. Hitler organized a war crimes trial in 1942 that found French socialists guilty and, consequently, blamed them for "starting" World War II. Their punishment was their immediate dispatch to German concentration camps. ‘Rescuing hostages’: the hidden story The timing of "Operation Jaque"—the July 2 "rescue" of French-Colombian politician Ingrid Betancourt and 14 other prisoners held by the FARC—was designed to bolster Colombian president Álvaro Uribe's war against the country's progressive forces and to possibly win him a third (unconstitutional) term for that war. It was soon exposed as a set-up. Instead of a "brilliant Colombian military operation" that supposedly proved the end of the FARC, it was unmasked as a staged event to disrupt and destroy the active negotiations that were underway between FARC negotiators and Swiss and French emissaries to free Betancourt and others. The groundwork for negotiations was being established because the FARC has also sought the liberation of its members in an exchange of prisoners. Many FARC members are enduring extremely long sentences in U.S. and Colombian prisons after kangaroo trials on bogus charges of terrorism and narcotrafficking. In the thousands of media stories extolling Betancourt's release, scarcely a word has been uttered about the existence of imprisoned FARC guerrillas. On July 15, Alfonso Cano, the FARC's new leader, issued his first statement since taking over after the death of legendary founder Manuel Marulanda. Cano said in part, "We will insist for as many times as necessary our willingness to achieve a humanitarian accord that fixes clear and obligatory rules for both parties with respect to the civilian population, and above all, to prioritize the freedom of our extradited comrades Sonia, Simon, Ivan Vargas and of all the prisoners of war of both sides." Cano mentions Simon Trinidad, the nom de guerre of FARC member Ricardo Palmera Pinera. On Jan. 28, Trinidad was sentenced in Washington D.C.'s federal court to 60 years imprisonment in the United States. He is in prison as the result of a false conspiracy conviction linking him to the kidnapping of the three U.S. mercenaries who were just freed with Betancourt. The mercenary contractors were shot down in 2002 while flying military reconnaissance planes over FARC-controlled territory. Conspiracy is a charge that needs no real evidence for conviction. Interestingly, the maximum prison sentence in Colombia used to be 40 years, but it was extended after its penal code was modified under the direction and funding of the United States Agency for International Development. Class struggle in Colombia The most fundamental issue in Colombia's struggle is hidden by the media and denied by the U.S. and Colombian governments: There are two sides in Colombia's struggle representing irreconcilable classes—that of owners and that of dispossessed, of oppressors and of oppressed. Colombian President Álvaro Uribe is leading a U.S.-backed campaign to exterminate left-wing forces.

    This is the real reason the U.S. and Colombian governments have done everything possible to thwart such a prisoner exchange from taking place in Colombia. Despite numerous FARC proposals for a peace settlement and prisoner releases, Uribe and Washington have deliberately sabotaged them. For U.S. imperialism, agreeing to a prisoner exchange would be a de facto recognition of the FARC and the National Liberation Army (ELN) as legitimate military armies. The United States is not interested in negotiations. Its objective is the wiping out of the opposition, armed and unarmed, at all cost. All the crocodile tears cried by U.S. government officials and Uribe over the fate of prisoners held by the FARC belie the fact that the real danger to the prisoners has come from U.S.-Colombian military operations, including the mass bombing of FARC encampments and other lightning attacks. One such military raid was carried out in June 2007 on a FARC camp with a goal similar to "Operation Jaque." It was meant to boost Uribe's presidency and make crystal clear that the U.S. and Colombian perspective of "no concessions, no negotiations under any circumstances" with the FARC, except for purposes of deceit. Twelve members of Colombia's congress had been taken prisoner by the FARC. While negotiations were ongoing for their release, on June 18, 2007, a SWAT team of CIA, British and Israeli mercenaries and the Colombian army stormed the FARC jungle camp. Eleven of the congress members were killed. FARC spokesperson Rodrigo Granda explained Uribe's intention in the raid in an October 2007 interview: "What has to be said about the deaths of the 11 congressmen is that it was undoubtedly a meticulously prepared plan, both politically and militarily, and also in terms of propaganda. "Uribe's government began its plan by talking about the possibility of releasing a number of FARC-EP prisoners for whom no one had made any request, because we had sought a bilateral humanitarian exchange of prisoners between the FARC-EP and the government. ... This, in my view, had to do with the preparations for action on a large scale in the Colombian mountains [the June raid]. "The intended blow was that, if this special force appeared to have successfully freed the 12 congressional representatives, Uribe would have kept in prison those he was supposedly attempting to free and embarked on a political campaign at home and abroad claiming that direct interventions would henceforth be the most appropriate way to secure the release of those being held by the FARC-EP, thereby ruling out the feasibility of humanitarian exchange or any possibility of dialogue." In November 2007, renewed negotiations for a prisoner exchange were at first agreed to by Uribe, who approved of Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez's role as a mediator along with liberal Colombian senator Piedad Cordobas. Prominent individuals held by the FARC were set for release. At the last minute, however, Uribe abruptly called off the talks and accused Chávez of violating the ground rules by engaging in a telephone conversation with a Colombian general. This was a spurious accusation, yet the official relations between both countries almost came to a breaking point. Chávez has accused the U.S. government of having intervened to put a sudden stop to the talks. Despite Uribe's sabotage of the talks, the FARC unilaterally released two prisoners on Jan. 10: Clara Rojas, Betancourt's campaign manager in her 2002 presidential bid; and Consuelo González. On Jan. 31, four more civilians were released by the FARC to Venezuela’s president Hugo Chávez in yet another unilateral gesture. Days later, Uribe's answer was, "We will exterminate the FARC." On March 1, the Colombian military conducted an attack at dawn on a FARC encampment a few miles inside Ecuador's territory along Colombia's southern border. The aerial bombing, which violated Ecuadorian airspace, lasted several hours. The assault killed almost all 20 encampment occupants, including four Mexican university students who had just arrived hours before to express their solidarity with the FARC. Raúl Reyes, the FARC's number two leader and actual ground commander, was executed in the mop-up operation after the bombing ended. The military intelligence and logistics were provided by the United States. Days later, another top FARC commander, Iván Rios, who had a million-dollar bounty placed on his head, was betrayed and executed by a member of his battalion. High-priced bounties have been issued against key FARC leaders. If it were still not clear to all those who follow developments in Colombia that the intent of the United States and the Colombian bourgeoisies is the brutal elimination of the FARC and ELN, Uribe stated it explicitly on July 9. Still flush with his "rescue" victory, Uribe announced a renewed military offensive against the ELN. According to the July 10 edition of Mexico’s La Jornada, "[T]he Colombian president Alvaro Uribe ordered the military forces to launch an offensive against the Army of National Liberation (ELN), the second most important guerrilla in the country, in particular to locate and capture their maximum leaders …" Organized resistance The FARC's methods as a revolutionary guerrilla force in wartime are not the cause of the violence in Colombia. It is the necessary outcome of a class war that was intensified in the late 1940s by U.S. imperialism and the Colombian oligarchy and that has never let up. With state power in their hands, U.S. imperialism and Colombia's comprador bourgeoisie have employed the most ruthless means to vanquish all opposition movements, armed or unarmed, including the trade unions. The fascist paramilitary forces, armed and supplied by the United States, have ferociously tortured and murdered workers and peasants trying to resist the aggressive free-trade and neoliberal policies of Bogota and Washington. The FARC and the ELN were born as a means of defense and survival for the peasants and working class against the state terror that was unleashed on the population in the 1940s. A turning point was in 1948, when the popular presidential candidate Jorge Eliécer Gaitán, from the left wing of the Liberal Party, was assassinated. The violence that broke out between the Conservative Party and Liberal Party supporters, known as the "Bogotazo," soon became the ruling class's justification for an unending war against Colombia's peasants. Colombian peasants had first begun to organize cooperatives and small units of self-defense to protect themselves against large landowners from the 1930s to the 1950s. These peasant organizations grew in size and influence by the 1960s. Throughout Latin America, movements of workers and peasants were gaining in organization and strength, many inspired by the Cuban Revolution of 1959. In response, the U.S. government pumped millions of dollars of military assistance to repress numerous popular movements. The 1960s and 1970s brought a wave of state terror and dictatorship throughout Latin America, with military coups directed and financed by U.S. imperialism, from Chile to Argentina, Bolivia to Brazil, and Haiti to Venezuela. A Marxist understanding of violence Literally hundreds of thousands of people across the continent were murdered in the U.S.-backed reign of terror. It is against this state violence that the rise of the revolutionary armed forces in Colombia must be understood. Funeral for Javier Suarez, a Colombian labor leader killed by right-wing paramilitaries, May 2000 Marxism, as a scientific method of assessing and giving direction to the class struggle, has a very particular view of violence. Marxism rejects the vile hypocrisy of the capitalist bosses and landowners who have always maintained their systems of slavery and exploitation by resort to the most extreme methods of violence. The rule over society by a tiny handful of the population would be impossible without the employment of repression. "Democratic" methods are fine, but only as long as the masses of the exploited remain meek. As soon as the oppressed take up arms to defend their organizations and their communities from the organized violence of the capitalist state, which is frequently supplemented by extra-judicial death squads, the corporate media condemns them as "terrorists." Unlike pacifism, Marxism is distinguished by its understanding that the armies of the capitalist state inevitably employ methods of violence, including outright war, assassination, prisoner and hostage taking, spying, covert operations, and other instruments of terrorism. The goal of these methods is not to kill all of their opponents. Only a relatively small number of opponents are killed in any war, be it a class war or one directed against targeted governments. The goal is to break the will of those who are still alive by inflicting sufficient casualties and widespread terror so that resistance appears futile. Pacifists denounce the violence of the oppressor state and those who resist it through armed struggle with equal fervor. Marxists, like all progressive people, do not "like violence." They would much prefer a non-violent end to the miseries of capitalist exploitation. But wringing one's hands about violence "from both sides" does not contribute in the slightest to arresting the violence of the oppressor state once the ruling class feels its interests are threatened. It is not possible for bourgeois pacifism to cite one example in history where a small exploiter class gave up its control over the economy and the political order without unleashing the fiercest, most violent war against the class forces that sought a new society. Colombia: a pivot in imperialist strategy For more than six decades, Colombia has been the anchor for U.S. imperialism in Latin America. Washington is intent on maintaining the oligarchy in power for its own means on the continent. By waging ruthless violence against the oppressed who have organized for economic and social betterment, Colombia's ruling class has been able to expand its wealth tremendously. It has also created the repressive environment necessary for greater U.S. exploitation. Today, the economic situation in Colombia is staggering. The country suffers the highest unemployment rate in Latin America, exceeding 15 percent in seven major cities. Over half of those who do work are based in the informal economy of street vending or living from scavenging in dumps; 54 percent of the population lives on only $1 to $2 a day. The richest 5 percent of Colombia’s population owns 90 percent of all property and almost 60 percent of peasants struggle to survive on less than 3 percent of the country’s land. Homelessness is estimated at almost 10 million out of a population of 44 million—the highest in the continent. To keep such an impoverished population down, Colombia's police, military and, by extension, paramilitary forces have received billions of dollars in U.S. military aid through the Plan Colombia and Plan Patriota programs of the United States. From 2000 to 2006, $5 billion were given to Colombia, 80 percent of it in the form of military aid. FARC leaders who were directly involved in negotiations over prisoner exchanges are being targeted for assassination or arrested and railroaded into U.S. prisons. All opposition activists, even those who do not employ armed resistance to the state terror, have been heavily targeted. That thousands of trade unionists have been slaughtered in recent years for peaceful, unarmed labor actions and for defending workers' rights strongly negates the argument that peace can be achieved by the FARC first surrendering their arms. The paramilitary death squads have particularly targeted trade unionists with the complicity of the government. Between 1986 and 2002, according to an AFL-CIO 2006 study, more than 3,000 labor leaders were assassinated in Colombia. Only five cases ended in a successful prosecution. The state terror against aboveground and legally recognized organizations and their members is not a thing of the past. Located in the northeast of the South American continent, Colombia shares extensive borders with Venezuela and Ecuador, whose governments are engaged in a radical societal transformation. Some leaders, including Venezuela's president Hugo Chávez, have called for the FARC to lay down its arms in order to initiate a peace process. History and on-the-ground reality in Colombia shows the reason for the revolutionary forces to maintain its arms and organization. Again, it is not a fetish for armed struggle; it is an estimate of reality that leads to basic calculations about strategy and tactics. In 1984, it was the FARC that agreed to a peace settlement with Colombian president Belisario Betancur. The FARC was instrumental in establishing the Patriotic Union (UP), an aboveground and legal political party created for electoral purposes. Despite the FARC’s efforts at peaceful forms of struggle, a bloodbath ensued in which paramilitary death squads murdered over 5,000 militants of the UP. Colombian struggle in international context With 60 years of state terror and violence, Colombia has seemed impenetrable by the phenomenon of the Latin American masses in motion, demanding dramatic change after the "lost decades" in the 1980s and 1990s. Those times were characterized by economic surrender to the U.S. imperialism. More than 200,000 Colombians take to the streets to protest paramilitary violence, March 6. But in fact, there has been a growing consciousness and mobilization among many sectors in Colombia in recent months. They do not receive much notice in the international press. Recently, more than 200,000 people marched in Bogotá demanding an end to death squad violence. And a major scandal involving Uribe's links to the paramilitary and narcotraffickers resulted in his lowest public ratings since he became president. There is also an ongoing investigation of the more than 70 members of Colombia's Congress—with direct links to the death squads—who used their offices to help re-elect Uribe for his second four-year term in 2006. The euphoria created among large sectors of Colombia by Operation Jaque, calling for a possible third presidential run for Uribe—despite the unconstitutionality of a third term—is bound to be short-lived. The country’s inescapable economic and social crisis will not be. Proclaiming victory over the guerrilla forces after a series of recent setbacks for the FARC will not resolve Colombia’s crisis for the vast majority of the people. Nor will it end the inextinguishable need to organize, mobilize and fight back with the means necessary for the people’s victory. The FARC, like any workers’ or peasants’ organization that is involved in a protracted conflict, may seek to fight at the same time as it engages in negotiations and diplomacy. Only the revolutionary organization can determine the usefulness of negotiations with a state that seeks to exterminate them. Ultimately, an estimate of the relationship of forces is required, which is dictated not only by the internal domestic situation but by an approximation of complex international factors as well. Any movement for change in Latin America has arrayed against it not only the forces of domestic counterrevolution, but also the vast interventionist instrument of U.S. imperialism. The Pentagon, CIA and the complex of transnational media corporations are working day and night to discredit and destroy the revolutionary forces. For people outside of Colombia, and especially for those of us living in the United States, our work must intensify to expose the macabre role of our own ruling class. Exposing Plan Colombia and extending real solidarity with the workers and farmers who are being viciously attacked because they dare to stand up for a better world are the top priorities. Castigating and lecturing those who are being hunted down by imperialism and by its legal and extra-legal death squads is no solution at all to the enduring crisis in Colombia.


    Thursday, July 24, 2008

    ...4 My Friend Fernando...


    Ulises Ruiz in Oaxaca - MURDERER

    Shown clandestinamente Tombs of the murderer During the 2006-2007 by by APPO Thursday, Jul 24 2008, 11:27 a.m. Is beginning to appear clandestine graves the murderers by the regime of Ulises Ruiz Ortiz (URO) IN 2006 - 2007, during the uprising of the People of Oaxaca claiming the dismissal of this criminal. To the People of Oaxaca To the people of Mexico The peoples of the world They begin to appear clandestine graves of those killed by the regime of Ulises Ruiz Ortiz (URO) in 2006 - 2007, during the uprising of the people of Oaxaca claimed the dismissal of this criminal. 8 The exhumation of bodies in one of these clandestine graves in the pantheon Garden, 2 children and 6 adults, evidence so forceful policy of state terrorism and the criminal paramiltarismo Ulises Ruiz developed to try to contain the dissatisfaction of Oaxacans , For all crimes, human rights violations and other atrocities that this murderer has been committed against the people, authorities and organizations since its imposition as governor of Oaxaca. The exhumations were reported by authorities in the municipality of the state capital, noting as an operator of this dirty work clandestine burial, the cousin of Ulises Ruiz called himself Romeo Ruiz Garcia, and show just the tip of the iceberg of the number killed since in the complaint also states that this same cousin is looking to accommodate 200 more bodies. This information strengthens and confirms many of the investigations carried out by agencies of great seriousness and professionalism as an observer The International Commission For Human Rights CIODH, who have already submitted, in both Mexico and the European Parliament, two reports on violations committed by Governments against the resistance of the people of Oaxaca during 2006-2007. The clandestine graves are a blunt test to start a day of national and international denunciation on all crimes committed, and demand punishment for the criminal Ulises Ruiz Ortiz, the presentation of the missing and the immediate and unconditional release of those still in prison . The mass graves are under fascist dictatorships, and that is what is put into evidence the state and federal governments. Taking all these evidences suggest: 1. Convene an assembly of the APPO to be genuinely representative, where they form a broad commission, after analysing and discussing whether it is appropriate or not go to a negotiating table without being mobilized or be exerting pressure to ensure a genuine demands policies the people of Oaxaca. 2. While reaching the date of this assembly, develop a national campaign is international denouncing the existence of clandestine graves. 3. Convene human rights organizations nationally and internationally, to take up this case and forming groups that come to investigate, specifically, the issue of missing persons and clandestine graves. 4. That the unique demands of the APPO remain: • Departure immediate Ulises Ruiz Ortiz, to ensure a thorough investigation and impartial investigations into the missing and clandestine graves. • Freedom and immediately and unconditionally all political prisoners of Oaxaca, because the mere fact that they have been charged under the government of a criminal and violator of human rights, is evidence of manipulation that made laws to indict. • Presentation of all missing. • Cancellation of all orders for apprehension politically motivated, released during the criminal regime of Ulises Ruiz Ortiz. • Punishment to all government officials involved in crimes against humanity, repression and violation of human rights. Particularly those involved in mass graves and torture.

    Wednesday, July 23, 2008

    Death of Free Internet is Imminent: Canada Will Become Test Case

    Contributed by blackandred on Wed, 2008-07-23 02:11. By Kevin Parkinson; July 20, 2008 - Global Research

    http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=9627

    In the last 15 years or so, as a society we have had access to more information than ever before in modern history because of the Internet. There are approximately 1 billion Internet users in the world...and any one of these users can theoretically communicate in real time with any other on the planet. The Internet has been the greatest technological achievement of the 20th century by far, and has been recognized as such by the global community. The free transfer of information, uncensored, unlimited and untainted, still seems to be a dream when you think about it. Whatever field that is mentioned- education, commerce, government, news, entertainment, politics and countless other areas- have been radically affected by the introduction of the Internet. And mostly, it's good news, except when poor judgements are made and people are taken advantage of. Scrutiny and oversight are needed, especially where children are involved. However, when there are potential profits open to a corporation, the needs of society don't count. Take the recent case in Canada with the behemoths, Telus and Rogers rolling out a charge for text messaging without any warning to the public. It was an arrogant and risky move for the telecommunications giants because it backfired. People actually used Internet technology to deliver a loud and clear message to these companies and that was to scrap the extra charge. The people used the power of the Internet against the big boys and the little guys won. However, the issue of text messaging is just a tiny blip on the radar screens of Telus and another company, Bell Canada, the two largest Internet Service Providers (ISP'S) in Canada. Our country is being used as a test case to drastically change the delivery of Internet service forever. The change will be so radical that it has the potential to send us back to the horse and buggy days of information sharing and access. In the upcoming weeks watch for a report in Time Magazine that will attempt to smooth over the rough edges of a diabolical plot by Bell Canada and Telus, to begin charging per site fees on most Internet sites. The plan is to convert the Internet into a cable-like system, where customers sign up for specific web sites, and then pay to visit sites beyond a cutoff point. From my browsing (on the currently free Internet) I have discovered that the 'demise' of the free Internet is slated for 2010 in Canada, and two years later around the world. Canada is seen [as] a good choice to implement such shameful and sinister changes, since Canadians are viewed as being laissez fair, politically uninformed and an easy target. The corporate marauders will iron out the wrinkles in Canada and then spring the new, castrated version of the Internet on the rest of the world, probably with little fanfare, except for some dire warnings about the 'evil' of the Internet (free) and the CEO's spouting about 'safety and security'. These buzzwords usually work pretty well. What will the Internet look like in Canada in 2010? I suspect that the ISP's will provide a "package" program as companies like Cogeco currently do. Customers will pay for a series of websites as they do now for their television stations. Television stations will be available on-line as part of these packages, which will make the networks happy since they have lost much of the younger market which are surfing and chatting on their computers in the evening. However, as is the case with cable television now, if you choose something that is not part of the package, you know what happens. You pay extra. And this is where the Internet (free) as we know it will suffer almost immediate, economic strangulation. Thousands and thousands of Internet sites will not be part of the package so users will have to pay extra to visit those sites! In just an hour or two it is possible to easily visit 20-30 sites or more while looking for information. Just imagine how high these costs will be. At present, the world condemns China because that country restricts certain websites. "They are undemocratic; they are removing people's freedom; they don't respect individual rights; they are censoring information,” are some of the comments we hear. But what Bell Canada and Telus have planned for Canadians is much worse than that. They are planning the death of the Internet (free) as we know it, and I expect they'll be hardly a whimper from Canadians. It's all part of the corporate plan for a New World Order and virtually a masterstroke that will lead to the creation of billions and billions of dollars of corporate profit at the expense of the working and middle classes. There are so many other implications as a result of these changes, far too many to elaborate on here. Be aware that we will all lose our privacy because all websites will be tracked as part of the billing procedure, and we will be literally cut off from 90% of the information that we can access today. The little guys on the Net will fall like flies; Bloggers and small website operators will die a quick death because people will not pay to go to their sites and read their pages. Ironically, the only medium that can save us is the one we are trying to save- the Internet (free). This article will be posted on my Blog: www.realitycheck.typepad.com and I encourage people and groups to learn more about this issue. Canadians can keep the Internet free just as they kept text messaging free. Don't wait for the federal politicians. They will do nothing to help us. I would welcome a letter to the editor of the Standard Freeholder from a spokesperson from Bell Canada or Telus telling me that I am absolutely wrong in what I have written, and that no such changes to the Internet are being planned, and that access to Internet sites will remain FREE in the years to come. In the meantime, I encourage all of you to write to the media, ask questions, phone the radio station, phone a friend, or think of something else to prevent what appears to me to be inevitable. Maintaining Internet (free) access is the only way we have a chance at combatting the global corporate takeover, the North American Union, and a long list of other deadly deeds that the elite in society have planned for us. Yesterday was too late in trying to protect our rights and freedoms. We must now redouble our efforts in order to give our children and grandchildren a fighting chance in the future. Author's website: http://realitycheck.typepad.com/

    Death of the Internet

    Contributed by blackandred on Wed, 2008-07-23 02:11. By Kevin Parkinson - July 20, 2008 Canada Will Become Test Case By Kevin Parkinson; July 20, 2008 - Global Research

    http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=9627

    In the last 15 years or so, as a society we have had access to more information than ever before in modern history because of the Internet. There are approximately 1 billion Internet users in the world...and any one of these users can theoretically communicate in real time with any other on the planet. The Internet has been the greatest technological achievement of the 20th century by far, and has been recognized as such by the global community. The free transfer of information, uncensored, unlimited and untainted, still seems to be a dream when you think about it. Whatever field that is mentioned- education, commerce, government, news, entertainment, politics and countless other areas- have been radically affected by the introduction of the Internet. And mostly, it's good news, except when poor judgements are made and people are taken advantage of. Scrutiny and oversight are needed, especially where children are involved. However, when there are potential profits open to a corporation, the needs of society don't count. Take the recent case in Canada with the behemoths, Telus and Rogers rolling out a charge for text messaging without any warning to the public. It was an arrogant and risky move for the telecommunications giants because it backfired. People actually used Internet technology to deliver a loud and clear message to these companies and that was to scrap the extra charge. The people used the power of the Internet against the big boys and the little guys won. However, the issue of text messaging is just a tiny blip on the radar screens of Telus and another company, Bell Canada, the two largest Internet Service Providers (ISP'S) in Canada. Our country is being used as a test case to drastically change the delivery of Internet service forever. The change will be so radical that it has the potential to send us back to the horse and buggy days of information sharing and access. In the upcoming weeks watch for a report in Time Magazine that will attempt to smooth over the rough edges of a diabolical plot by Bell Canada and Telus, to begin charging per site fees on most Internet sites. The plan is to convert the Internet into a cable-like system, where customers sign up for specific web sites, and then pay to visit sites beyond a cutoff point. From my browsing (on the currently free Internet) I have discovered that the 'demise' of the free Internet is slated for 2010 in Canada, and two years later around the world. Canada is seen [as] a good choice to implement such shameful and sinister changes, since Canadians are viewed as being laissez fair, politically uninformed and an easy target. The corporate marauders will iron out the wrinkles in Canada and then spring the new, castrated version of the Internet on the rest of the world, probably with little fanfare, except for some dire warnings about the 'evil' of the Internet (free) and the CEO's spouting about 'safety and security'. These buzzwords usually work pretty well. What will the Internet look like in Canada in 2010? I suspect that the ISP's will provide a "package" program as companies like Cogeco currently do. Customers will pay for a series of websites as they do now for their television stations. Television stations will be available on-line as part of these packages, which will make the networks happy since they have lost much of the younger market which are surfing and chatting on their computers in the evening. However, as is the case with cable television now, if you choose something that is not part of the package, you know what happens. You pay extra. And this is where the Internet (free) as we know it will suffer almost immediate, economic strangulation. Thousands and thousands of Internet sites will not be part of the package so users will have to pay extra to visit those sites! In just an hour or two it is possible to easily visit 20-30 sites or more while looking for information. Just imagine how high these costs will be. At present, the world condemns China because that country restricts certain websites. "They are undemocratic; they are removing people's freedom; they don't respect individual rights; they are censoring information,” are some of the comments we hear. But what Bell Canada and Telus have planned for Canadians is much worse than that. They are planning the death of the Internet (free) as we know it, and I expect they'll be hardly a whimper from Canadians. It's all part of the corporate plan for a New World Order and virtually a masterstroke that will lead to the creation of billions and billions of dollars of corporate profit at the expense of the working and middle classes. There are so many other implications as a result of these changes, far too many to elaborate on here. Be aware that we will all lose our privacy because all websites will be tracked as part of the billing procedure, and we will be literally cut off from 90% of the information that we can access today. The little guys on the Net will fall like flies; Bloggers and small website operators will die a quick death because people will not pay to go to their sites and read their pages. Ironically, the only medium that can save us is the one we are trying to save- the Internet (free). This article will be posted on my Blog: www.realitycheck.typepad.com and I encourage people and groups to learn more about this issue. Canadians can keep the Internet free just as they kept text messaging free. Don't wait for the federal politicians. They will do nothing to help us. I would welcome a letter to the editor of the Standard Freeholder from a spokesperson from Bell Canada or Telus telling me that I am absolutely wrong in what I have written, and that no such changes to the Internet are being planned, and that access to Internet sites will remain FREE in the years to come. In the meantime, I encourage all of you to write to the media, ask questions, phone the radio station, phone a friend, or think of something else to prevent what appears to me to be inevitable. Maintaining Internet (free) access is the only way we have a chance at combatting the global corporate takeover, the North American Union, and a long list of other deadly deeds that the elite in society have planned for us. Yesterday was too late in trying to protect our rights and freedoms. We must now redouble our efforts in order to give our children and grandchildren a fighting chance in the future. Author's website: http://realitycheck.typepad.com/

    Reality Check: The Democrats are the Real Problem

    [Thanks to Thespian Lipstick Lesbian for this link] by Mike Whitney / July 23rd, 2008 Obama’s candidacy is over; kaput. He’s already stated that he has no intention of stopping the war, so he has disqualified himself. That’s his prerogative; no one put a gun to his head. His op-ed in Monday’s New York Times just removes any lingering doubt about the matter. What Obama proposes is moving the central theater of operation from Iraq to Afghanistan. Big deal. Why is it more acceptable to kill a man who is fighting for his country in Afghanistan than in Iraq? It’s not; which is why Obama must be defeated and the equivocating Democratic Party must be jettisoned altogether. The Democrats are a party of blood just like the Republicans, they’re just more discreet about it. That’s why people who are serious about ending the war have to support candidates outside the two-party charade. The Democrat/Republican duopoly will not deliver the goods; it’s as simple as that. The point is to stop the killing, not to provide blind support for smooth-talking politicos who try to mask their real intentions. Obama made his choice, now he can suffer the consequences. Nancy Pelosi is a perfect example of what the Democrats are all about. Just look at the way she brushed aside the people who got her elected. They mean nothing to her. In a matter of months, the “San Francisco liberal” has achieved what former-Speaker of the House Hastert could only dream of; she’s driven the Congress’ public approval ratings into single digits for the first time in history making her the worst speaker of all time. She rubber-stamped the FISA bill, concealed what she knew about the CIA’s global torture programs, and vowed to stop any public effort to hold the administration accountable for its war crimes. (No impeachment) She has betrayed her most ardent supporters and single-handedly transformed an already-emasculated congress into a purely ceremonial body incapable of doing the people’s work. At least Bush never betrayed any of his supporters. Never. Pelosi is worse than Bush, much worse. And yet, liberals still insist that we should vote the Democratic ticket. In your dreams! What leftist or progressive is not totally fed-up with the Democrats cagey “bait-and-switch” hypocrisy? Voting the Democratic ticket is not a sign of “hope”, it’s a sign of being a schmuck. The Democrats have done nothing to stop the war and will do nothing to stop the war. The Obama candidacy is merely a way to replace one group of genocidal maniacs with another. Who needs a charismatic, flannel-mouth glamour boy to lead us into battle when a senile fogy with “anger management” issues will do just fine. Voters of conscience should reject that choice altogether. Just as they should reject the “lesser of two evils” theory which does not apply when ordinance is being dumped daily on innocent civilians. It has to stop. Obama is not an antiwar candidate that is merely a fiction maintained by his public relations team. In fact, he wants to beef up the military with 65,000 additional ground forces and 27,000 more marines. He’s also stated that he will add “two additional combat brigades to Afghanistan” and encourage NATO to make “greater contributions — with fewer restrictions.” In his op-ed he boasted, “As president, I will make the fight against Al Qaeda and the Taliban the top priority that it should be. This is a war that we have to win.” He also added this ominous warning: “The greatest threat to that security lies in the tribal regions of Pakistan, where terrorists train and insurgents strike into Afghanistan. We cannot tolerate a terrorist sanctuary, and as president, I won’t. We need a stronger and sustained partnership between Afghanistan, Pakistan and NATO to secure the border, to take out terrorist camps and to crack down on cross-border insurgents. We need more troops, more helicopters, more satellites, more Predator drones in the Afghan border region. And we must make it clear that if Pakistan cannot or will not act, we will take out high-level terrorist targets like bin Laden if we have them in our sights.” Obama supporters should take their candidate at his word. What he is proposing is a dramatic escalation and expansion of the war into another sovereign country. How is this consistent with the demands of his base or the millions of Americans who believe that Obama represents real change. It’s time for a reality check; the Democrats are the real problem not the Republicans. If the path to peace requires crushing the Democratic Party and its blood-thirsty candidates; so be it. The main thing is to stop the killing. If Obama won’t do it; we’ll find someone who will.

    Tuesday, July 22, 2008

    Oh..nothing...

    To escape, Daedalus built wings for himself and Icarus, fashioned with feathers held together with wax. Daedalus warned his son not to fly too close to the sun, as it would melt his wings, and not too close to the sea, as it would dampen them and make it hard to fly. *

    Daedalus and Icarus mosaic

    Daedalus and Icarus When King Minos of Crete decided to keep alive a magnificent bull that Poseidon had given him for sacrifice, the sea god punished him by having Minos's wife Pasiphae (seated at left in the mosaic) fall in love with the bull. To satisfy her desire, the architect Daedalus and his son Icarus (second from right and far right, respectively) built her a hollow cow in which she could hide and mate with the bull. Their coupling produced the half-man, half-bull Minotaur, which was shut away in the maze-like Labyrinth (upper right). Later, when Minos had Daedalus and Icarus shut up in the Labyrinth, they escaped using wings fixed to their bodies with wax. Daedalus safely reached Sicily, but Icarus, exulting in his new-found abilities, flew too close to the sun; the wax melted and he fell to his death in the sea.


    Gandhi - The Anarchist

    GANDHI ON GOVERNMENT Government control gives rise to fraud, suppression of Truth, intensification of the black market and artificial scarcity. Above all, it unmans the people and deprives them of initiative, it undoes the teaching of self-help...I look upon an increase in the power of the State with the greatest fear because, although while apparently doing good by minimizing exploitation, it does the greatest harm to mankind by destroying individuality which lies at the heart of all progress...Among the many misdeeds of the British rule in India, history will look upon the Act depriving a whole nation of arms as the blackest....We find the general work of mankind is being carried on from day to day be the mass of people acting as if by instinct....If they were instinctively violent the world would end in no time...It is when the mass mind is unnaturally influenced by wicked men that the mass of mankind commit violence. But they forget it as they commit it because they return to their peaceful nature immediately the evil influence of the directing mind has been removed....A government that is evil has no room for good men and women except in its prisons. http://www.whatwouldgandhido.net/ * Was Gandhi an Anarchist? Visionary promoted decentralized, direct democracy as key to peace; power resides in the individual and in self-rule By Josh Fattal (View Original) Anarchy is about abolishing hierarchy. According to the original, Greek meaning of the word, Anarchy stands to create a world where there is no separation between the rulers and the ruled--a place where everyone rules themselves. (An-archy in Greek means without rulers.) An anarchic vision of society is nonviolent, self-managed and non-hierarchical, and Anarchist thinkers hold dear to the ideal of democracy--rule by the people. They suggest political confederations of local organizations; a "commune of communes" was how the 19th century Parisians Anarchists articulated it. Anarchists seek to dissolve power instead of seize it. Therefore, they seek a social revolution instead of a political one. The social revolution throws into question all aspects of social life including family organization, schooling, religion, crime and punishment, technology, political organization, patriarchy, environmental concerns as well as others. Anarchists are identified "as enemies of the State," because they do oppose the existence of a hierarchical, top-down State.

    Mohandas Gandhi opposed the State. The State is the military, police, prisons, courts, tax collectors, and bureaucrats. He saw the State as concentrated violence. "The State represents violence in a concentrated and organized form. The individual has a soul, but as the State is a soulless machine, it can never be weaned from violence to which it owes its very existence." Gandhi recognized that the State claims to serve the nation, but he realized that this was a fallacy. "While apparently doing good by minimizing exploitation, [the State] does the greatest harm to mankind."1

    According to Dr. Dhawan, Gandhi was a philosophical Anarchist because he believed that the "[the greatest good of all] can be realized only in the classless, stateless democracy."2 While Gandhi advocated democracy, he differentiated between direct democracy and western democracy. Commenting on the parliamentary system, Gandhi says, "If India copies England, it is my firm conviction that she will be ruined. Parliaments are merely emblems of slavery."3 He had no more appetite for majority democracy of America, "It is a superstition and an ungodly thing to believe that an act of a majority binds a minority."4 By centralizing power, western democracies feed into violence. Thus, he thought decentralization was the key to world peace.

    *

    Towards a non-violent society: a position paper on anarchism, social change and Food Not Bombs by Chris Crass Gandhi writes of Tolstoy in his autobiography, "It was forty years ago, when I was passing through a severe crisis of skepticism and doubt that I came across Tolstoy's book, The Kingdom of God is Within You, and was deeply impressed by it. I was at that time a believer in violence. Its reading cured me of my skepticism and made me a firm believer in ahimsa(non-violence)... He was the greatest apostle of non-violence that the present age has produced".

    Anarchist ideas also influenced Gandhi's ideas about the future society. In the book Gandhi Today, Mark Shepard explains, "India could become strong and healthy, Gandhi insisted, only by revitalizing its villages, where over four-fifths of its people lived - a figure that still applies today. He envisioned a society of strong villages, each one politically autonomous and economically self-reliant. In fact, Gandhi may be this century's greatest proponent of decentralism - basing economic and political power at the local level."

    After Gandhi was assassinated, the person who was known as "Gandhi's spiritual heir", Vinoba Bhave led several major campaigns to reclaim land for the poor. In 1951 Bhave and the many workers from Sarva Seva Sangh (Society for the Service of All), started the Bhoodon (land gift) movement. Many felt that Bhave was a saint in the Hindu tradition, and so when he began walking across the country asking for acres of land from landowners, he received land gifts, which were then given to the poor. One and one third million acres, according to Shepard, were actual reclaimed by the poor (far more than had been managed by the land reform programs of India's government). Bhave was involved with other projects and campaigns to bring about the "non-violent revolution". Bhave was an anarchist.


    Monday, July 21, 2008

    Great Episode of History Detectives

    Atocha Spanish Silver; Lucy Parsons Book; Ernie Pyle's Typewriter Decoding a strange mark on a bar of silver retrieved from the Atocha; a book that may have belonged to anarchist Lucy Parsons; a typewriter of World War II journalist Ernie Pyle.

    First All-Women-of-Color Presidential Ticket in US History:

    Green Party Nominee Cynthia McKinney and Running Mate Rosa Clemente on War, Democracy and Hip Hop The Green Party made history last week when it nominated the first all-women-of-color presidential ticket in US history. Former Democratic Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney, who was the first African American woman elected to Congress in Georgia, won the Green Party's nomination last Monday. She named longtime community organizer, journalist and former director of the Hip Hop Caucus, Rosa Clemente, as her running mate earlier this month. They both join us for a wide-ranging discussion on the 2008 race, the media, the impact of the hip hop generation and more. Listen/Watch/Read http://www.democracynow.org/2008/7/21/first_all_women_of_color_presidential

    Betancourt in plea to Farc rebels

    Thousands of protesters take to the streets in Bogota
    The recently freed French-Colombian politician, Ingrid Betancourt, has urged her former captors, the Marxist Farc rebels, to release all hostages. Ms Betancourt was leading a rally in the French capital, Paris - one in a series of global demonstrations calling for an end to kidnapping and for peace. Hundreds of thousands took to the streets in Colombia, some holding photographs of missing loved ones. The Farc has waged a 44-year civil war there and still holds 700 captives. Up to 2,000 more people are believed to be held by the ELN (National Liberation Army), another left-wing rebel group, in remote jungle and mountain camps. Freedom call In Paris, thousands gathered near the Eiffel Tower to hear Ms Betancourt, who was freed in a daring military rescue earlier this month after six years in captivity. She read out a list of names of those still held by the Farc (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia) and called for their release. "We want freedom for everyone," Ms Betancourt said in Spanish, amid applause and chants from the crowd of "Libertad", or Freedom. Her speech was also broadcast in Colombia, where independence day celebrations became a mass national appeal for an end to hostage-taking and for peace moves between the government and the Farc. Colombian pop star Shakira opened events in the Amazonian town of Leticia by singing the national anthem, flanked by President Alvaro Uribe and visiting dignitaries. Mr Uribe pledged to work for the release of all hostages. He offered "a commitment to those who have lost their freedom so that they may regain it, a message of commitment to the new generations so that the homeland will allow them to live happily". Marches took place in most of the country's more than 1,000 municipalities, with the biggest turnout in the capital, Bogota. The BBC's Jeremy McDermott, who is in the Colombian capital, described huge crowds of people dressed in white t-shirts - the colour of peace - shouting "Libertad! Libertad!". But he says the question is whether the rebels of the Farc group are going to listen. 'Impervious' A previous demonstration in February this year saw almost a million people take to the streets in Bogota alone. After the successful rescue of 15 hostages earlier this month from the Farc, the best-known of whom was Ms Betancourt, the turnout was expected to be even greater, although there are no official figures. Our correspondent says the Farc appear to be impervious to cries for an end to kidnapping, let alone an end to the 44-year civil conflict. Earlier this week, they kidnapped 10 people travelling down the Atrato River in the western province of Choco. While being badly hit by government offensives and a series of recent setbacks, there has been no softening of their position. Yet even the Farc will have to pay attention to not just Colombia but cries from more than 40 countries to end the kidnapping and violence, our correspondent says.

    Sunday, July 20, 2008

    The Cleaver: Transcend The Control System

    I really enjoyed this post at The Cleaver: Transcend The Control System: You Are Not A Number "If you are not shaping your own reality, then someone else is doing it for you. The Control System serves up the default reality configuration for those who do not determine their own. There is no neutrality. Each individual has a prescribed belief system downloaded into their head via repeated containment encoding* that emanates from parenting, schooling, sociological trends, organized religion and the mainstream media. The ultra-saturation of this mass hypnosis is so pervasive and well established that most people no longer wish to think for themselves, preferring instead to slip into the anaesthetizing pre-packaged reality they have grown to venerate. From: http://dedroidify.blogspot.com

    Nudity: Shameful or Innocent?

    Let me get this straight, right off the bat–I’m not a nudist. In fact, I’m a little too shy of my body and other’s. But I support the right of people to do it if they want to, just like I’m personally against sex before marriage and abortions but support the rights of others to do so.

    I can’t help but wonder why in our society it is considered immoral to let children see nakedness? Is there truly anything immoral about showing our bodies–when each of us has one and already knows what is under the clothes? What exactly is so shameful and evil about our bodies?

    I’ve yet to hear any argument against nudity and the like that doesn’t simply label nudists and nudity as “evil”, “immoral”, “corrupt”, or “weird”. Why do we have such mental blocks against nudity–some might claim this is the reason nudity is immoral, because our minds are so opposed to the idea. But how many of us ran around naked as children, completely unabashed? How many of us took baths with our parents, nude? Maybe not all (if your parents really were prude), but many. Children, get this, are not shocked or afraid of nudity. They find it natural. And I’m talking very young children, ones who have not been indoctrinated with the idea that their bodies are sinful.

    So, the argument that nudity and showing bits of the human body is corrupting children is completely false. If anything, society is corrupting children by telling them their bodies are shameful and have to be covered up. Even the Bible, surprisingly, ’supports’ the idea that there is nothing immoral about nudity–Adam and Eve were written to be naked and shameless before being kicked out, after which they wore clothes in their “shameful” lives. Are Christians and society really implying that their little Adam and Eve were evil and sinful and corrupt when naked?

    There’s also the argument that while nudity itself may be okay, no one wants to see an ugly or an old person naked. I can understand why that may seem to be a problem–but are we going to ban someone from appearing in public because they’re so ugly we don’t want to see it? I’m not saying everyone has to be nude under OMG NEW WORLD ORDER OF NUDITY! I’m saying, let’s not arrest people who are walking around nude. We seriously have worse things to worry about. Like, I dunno, poverty, healthcare, economy, etc? Infringing on personal freedom is the last thing we need to worry about.

    Anyways, there’s some food for thought.

    EDIT: I forgot to add this in. Regardless of personal opinion towards nudity, the right to personal liberty outweighs the “right” to not be offended. For example, years ago the majority of our society would have been shocked and horrified at an interracial kiss in the park. Does that mean those two should have done it in the privacy of their homes just because most people are offended by it? No. Sorry, but it is not your right to not be offended.


    Norman Finkelstein on The Israeli Wall - Video

    http://www.zmag.org/zvideo/2758 Part One http://www.zmag.org/zvideo/2761 Part Two

    Saturday, July 19, 2008

    From Jane Roberts’ "Seth" book, "The Way Toward Health"

    "The ideas you have, then, play a large role in the way the body handles its nutrients, and utilizes health and vitality…it is possible for your ideas to cause chemical reactions that impede your body’s ability to accept nourishment. If you believe that the body is evil, the purest health food diet may do you little good at all, while if you have a healthy desire and respect for your physical body, a diet of TV dinners and even fast foods may well keep you healthy and nourished. If we are talking about health, it is to your beliefs that we must look. It is up to you to form a body of beliefs that is worthy of your physical image – for you are nourished by your beliefs, and those beliefs can cause your daily bread to add to your vitality, or add to your cares and stress."

    Indigenous grandmas nearly kicked out of Vatican

    [Thanks to smcgee43 for this link]
    ROME - They went to pray. They went to see Pope Benedict XVI on his home turf. They went to ask that he rescind historic church doctrine that played a role in the genocidal onslaught of millions of indigenous people worldwide. For 13 indigenous grandmothers, accomplishing only one of their three goals wouldn't have been so bad - had they also not been harassed by several Vatican policemen who claimed the women were conducting ''anti-Catholic'' demonstrations. The elders, formally known as the International Council of Thirteen Indigenous Grandmothers, convened in the morning hours of July 9 at St. Peter's Square. After setting up an altar cloth, candles and sacred objects, including feathers and incense, they began holding a prayer and ceremony circle. Nine-year-old Davian Joell Stand-Gilpin, a direct descendant of Chief Dull Knife of the Lakota Nation, was brought along by one of the grandmothers to participate in traditional regalia. Soon, however, four Vatican police officials asked the women to stop the prayer ceremony, claiming their prayers were in contradiction to the church's teachings - despite the two crosses on the alter cloth and some of the members being practitioners of the Catholic faith. The officials told Carole Hart, an Emmy and Peabody award-winning producer and filmmaker traveling with the grandmas, that the group was in violation of Vatican policy. They said a permit Hart had obtained in order to document the prayer gathering was only relevant in terms of filming, but did not allow the women to pray, sing or burn incense. The police said the actions of the grandmothers were ''idolatrous.'' Through the course of obtaining the permit, Hart had written to Vatican officials explaining that the grandmothers would be conducting a prayer ceremony at the site. ''We stuck to the fact that we were legitimately there with this permit,'' Hart said. ''The grandmas did not back down.'' Still, the police urged the grandmothers to move on; but Hart and the group appealed the decision to a higher authority. Finally, the police brought back a law official who assessed the situation. Upon seeing 13 indigenous elder women and hearing one of their songs, the official concluded there was no problem with the ceremony. The official also ultimately invited the grandmothers to enter St. Peter's Basilica to rest and pray. Despite their short-term success, the ultimate goal of the grandmothers - to hand-deliver a statement to Pope Benedict XVI, asking him to rescind several controversial papal bulls that played a part in the colonization of indigenous lands - was thwarted. Documents from the 15th century, such as the papal bulls, show the papacy played a role in the genocidal onslaught that affected millions of indigenous people on the North American continent. In 1455, for instance, Pope Nicolas authorized Portugal ''to invade, search out, capture, vanquish and subdue all Saracens and pagans'' who had previously made their homes in North America. Just a short time before the grandmothers left for their long-planned journey to Rome, Pope Benedict XVI announced that he would be leaving the Vatican to rest at his summer home, called Castel Gandolfo, in preparation for a trip to Australia. The pope had originally been scheduled to be in residence July 9. Laura Jackson, the grandmothers' publicist, described the pope's decision to leave the Vatican as a ''sudden cancellation'' and noted that the grandmas held tickets to a scheduled public audience he was to have held that day. While Castel Gandolfo is less than 20 miles away from the Vatican, the grandmothers ultimately decided not to make the journey to the pope's summer getaway despite some in their inner circle encouraging them to pay an unexpected visit. Hart believes the grandmothers chose to focus on St. Peter's Square because it's part of the Vatican and is a strong symbol of the pope. ''As women of prayer, I think they felt that bringing their prayer there, on the very ground on which the church as an institution stands, as close as they could get to the heart of the church, would have a great effect on what will happen next,'' Hart said. Additionally, the women had no guarantee that they would even be able to enter the grounds of the pope's summer residence. Instead, the elders left a package with one of the pope's personal guards at the Vatican. The package contained a written statement the women had sent to the Vatican in 2005 decrying the papal bulls, to which the Vatican never responded. It also contained a new 632-word statement to the pope asking him to repeal three Christian-based doctrines of ''discovery'' and ''conquest'' that set a foundation for claiming lands occupied by indigenous people around the world. ''We carry this message for Pope Benedict XVI, traveling with the spirits of our ancestors,'' the women said in their new message. ''While praying at the Vatican for peace, we are praying for all peoples. We are here at the Vatican, humbly, not as representatives of indigenous nations, but as women of prayer.'' The package was given to the pope's guard via a traditional Lakota manner, by extending it to him three times with him then accepting it on the fourth attempt. The entire process was captured on film, and is expected to be made into a documentary by Hart in the coming year. It is unknown whether the pope has yet personally received the package, but legal scholars and Native activists in the U.S. have nonetheless been paying close attention to the grandmothers' journey. ''I think the trip is very significant,'' said Steven Newcomb, co-director of the Indigenous Law Institute and author of the book, ''Pagans in the Promised Land: Decoding the Doctrine of Christian Discovery,'' and an Indian Country Today columnist. ''These are women who are very much grounded in their own languages and traditions. They're able to raise visibility of the issue in ways that others are perhaps less effective.'' The grandmothers from the U.S. who sit on the women's council are Margaret Behan, of the Arapaho/Cheyenne of Montana; Agnes Baker Pilgrim, of the Takelma Siletz; and Beatrice Long Visitor Holy Dance and Rita Long Visitor Holy Dance, both Oglala Lakota of Black Hills, S.D. All of the grandmothers are currently in private council in Assisi, Italy, and are expected to be returning home by early August.

    Friday, July 18, 2008

    Mohandas Gandhi

    An error does not become truth by reason of multiplied propagation, nor does truth become error because nobody sees it.

    ‘Centrists’ Running the Asylum

    From: http://lefti.blogspot.com A very perceptive analysis by David Sirota:
    In the asylum that is American politics, beware a candidate like Barack Obama when he is lauded for moving to “the center”—because usually that means he is drifting away from it. ... Day after day, smiling anchormen, blow-dried correspondents and silver-tongued congressmen follow the Big Lie theory of indoctrination, taking to our televisions, radios and newspapers insisting that crazy is normal, the majority is the minority and—most important—the fringe is the “center.” This is no accident. These voices of the status quo do not want the status quo challenged. They deliberately broadcast messages crafted to get us—the mainstream—to question our mainstream-ness, while convincing politicians that the Establishment’s extremism represents a responsible middle ground.
    The corollary, which Sirota doesn't discuss, is when slightly liberal Democrats like Daily Kos or MoveOn.org are referred to by the media as the "far left." This serves a double purpose. One is to discredit and marginalize such actual moderates, and the second is to put real people on the far left (say, Cynthia McKinney or Gloria La Riva) as so far beyond "far left" that they aren't even to be discussed in "polite company."

    Colombian government cancels referendum

    The Colombian government canceled the referendum about a possible rerun of the 2006 presidential elections, now the crisis between the country’s Supreme Court and the Government seems to be solved. Bogotá and Colombia’s highest court clashed after the Supreme Court wanted the legality of the elections investigated. According to the court, the elections may have been illegal, because it took the bribery of at least one congressman to make it possible for Colombian President Álvaro Uribe to run for office again. Uribe furiously denied the bribery and immediately called for the popular vote to legalize the elections, causing a constitutional crisis between the two powers of State. After the refusal of the Constitutional Court to investigate the elections and the interference of the church, the court and government started re-establishing ties and promised to solve whatever issues through dialogue. Colombia’s Interior Minister Fabio Valencia Cossio told reporters the referendum has become unnecessary because of the Institutional Court’s refusal to investigate.

    N.H. will accept free oil from Chavez after all

    [Thanks to ghettodefender for this link] Two years ago, New Hampshire refused to accept heating oil from Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, the pro-Castro U.S. critic who once called President Bush ``the devil.'' But with fuel prices rising, well, free oil is free oil. With the state's blessing, New Hampshire residents will be receiving some of the fuel this winter. New Hampshire becomes the last state in the Northeast to embrace the offer. ``A lot of people have said, `We need help and we value any help we can get,''' said Amy Ignatius, director of New Hampshire's office of energy and planning. The oil giveaway will be managed by Citizens Energy, a nonprofit organization set up by former Massachusetts Rep. Joseph Kennedy to help the poor stay warm. But the state energy office plans to help Citizens publicize the aid and sign up fuel-oil dealers. It is just the latest example of how rising oil prices have brought about an attitude adjustment in the U.S. Over the past few weeks, for instance, pressure has been growing in Washington and around the country to lift the federal ban on offshore drilling. Back in 2006, when Chavez began offering free oil to Americans from Venezuela's government-controlled Citgo, New Hampshire's energy office contacted the Venezuelan Embassy about working out a deal. But the idea galled some New Hampshire Republicans, including Sen. John Sununu, who called it a ``disgrace'' and an attempt at grandstanding by Chavez, and Democratic Gov. John Lynch squelched the effort. This year, though, ``the state's role is to make sure people are aware of the program,'' Lynch spokesman Colin Manning said. Chavez's supporters defend the heating oil program as another example of a generous deed by a president leading a socialist revolution for the poor. Some Chavez critics have charged that he is trying to embarrass the Bush administration and curry favor with the American public. But a lot has changed over the past two years. Back then, heating oil sold for about $2.50 per gallon in the Northeast. Last month, the average price was $4.61, with predictions of $5 per gallon oil by winter. ``The average tank is 250 to 275 gallons,'' Citizens spokeswoman Ashley Durmer said. ``Filling it once is over $1,500. That is unfathomable that anyone can pay that price. If you have to fill the tank four times, it's going to be a devastating winter for a lot of people.'' On Thursday, Sununu again criticized Chavez but said he has no problem with people or businesses accepting help from an independent nonprofit such as Citizens. Sununu and other lawmakers around the Northeast are pressing for big increases in federal home heating aid. More than 6 million New England households rely on oil heat. Bob Garside, president of the Oil Heat Council of New Hampshire, a trade group, predicted many of the state's 200 dealers will refuse to participate in the heating-oil giveaway. ``In the past, it's been nothing but a ploy for Chavez,'' Garside said. Bill Fuller, general manager of Fred Fuller Oil Co., disagreed. He began delivering fuel for Citizens last winter, when hundreds of New Hampshire residents who applied on their own, without state involvement, got 100 gallons free. Fuller said he plans to do it again. ``It's actually a pretty good program,'' he said. ``We get a voucher. We fax it in and get money right away.'' ^--- On the Net: Citgo: http://www.citgo.com/CommunityInvolvement/HeatingOil.jsp Citizens Energy: http://www.citizensenergy.com/main/Home.html

    Cuba allows private farmers to have more land

    Communist officials decreed Friday that private farmers and cooperatives can use up to 100 acres (40 hectares) of idle government land, as President Raul Castro works to revive Cuba's floundering agricultural sector. The law published in the Communist Party newspaper Granma did not say how much state land will be turned over to private hands and gave no indication of how many Cubans might apply. But it described the measure as a way to help Cuba solve the problem of underused land while cutting food imports that are expected to cost the government US$2 billion this year. Landless Cubans can be given a bit more than 33 acres (13 hectares) while those who already have fully producing plots can add enough state lands to bring their total holdings to 100 acres (40 hectares). Existing state farms, cooperatives and state factories also can apply for underused land. Ownership will stay with the state. Private farmers can get concessions of up to 10 years, renewable for another 10. Cooperatives and companies can have renewable 25-year terms. And all will have to pay taxes for the lands, though the decree gave no details. While the individual parcels are small, the widespread transfer of farmland from public to private hands could change the face of farming in a country where the government controls well over 90 percent of the economy. The decree noted that Cuba now suffers from ``a considerable percentage of idle state lands,'' making it necessary to grant concessions ``with the objective of elevating food production and reducing importation.'' Government statistics released last month show that the percentage of fallow or underused Cuban farm land increased to 55 percent in 2007, up from 46 percent in 2002. Just 29 percent of land on state farms is actively used. After Fidel Castro took power in 1959, the government expropriated many large farms and agricultural holdings, while allowing thousands of small farmers to keep their plots and sell their produce to the state. The new measure doesn't say where farmers will sell their output, but nearly all private farmers now are required to sell most of their produce - beyond what they eat themselves - to the state. Friday's decree spells out details of a plan announced in March, when officials told state television they had begun lending more small plots to private producers of tobacco, coffee and other key cash crops. Raul Castro, 77, has made increasing food production and reducing dependance on foreign imports a top priority since succeeding his brother Fidel in February. The government earlier gave more autonomy to regional farm authorities and it is paying private farmers more for milk and meat. State-owned farms now hold just over one-third of Cuba's agricultural land - down from about 70 percent two decades ago. The rest is worked by small farmers and cooperatives, many of them state-organized.

    Don’t Drink the Nuclear Kool-Aid

    by Amy Goodman July 17, 2008 TruthDig.com While the presidential candidates trade barbs and accuse each other of flip-flopping, they agree with President Bush on their enthusiastic support for nuclear power. Sen. John McCain has called for 100 new nuclear power plants. Sen. Barack Obama, in a July 2007 Democratic candidate debate, answered a pro-nuclear power audience member, “I actually think that we should explore nuclear power as part of the energy mix.” Among Obama’s top contributors are executives of Exelon Corp., a leading nuclear power operator in the nation. Just this week, Exelon released a new plan, called “Exelon 2020: A Low-Carbon Roadmap.” The nuclear power industry sees global warming as a golden opportunity to sell its insanely expensive and dangerous power plants. But nuclear power is not a solution to climate change — rather, it causes problems. Amory Lovins is the co-founder and chief scientist of Rocky Mountain Institute in Colorado. He makes simple, powerful points against nuclear: “The nuclear revival that we often hear about is not actually happening. It is a very carefully fabricated illusion … there are no buyers. Wall Street is not putting a penny of private capital into the industry, despite 100-plus percent subsidies.” He adds: “Basically, we can have as many nuclear plants as Congress can force the taxpayers to pay for. But you won’t get any in a market economy.” Even if nuclear power were economically viable, Lovins continues, “the first issue to come up for me would be the spread of nuclear weapons, which it greatly facilitates. If you look at places like Iran and North Korea … how do you think they’re doing it? Iran claims to be making electricity vital to its development. … The technology, materials, equipment, skills are applicable to both. … The president is absolutely right in identifying the spread of nuclear weapons as the gravest threat to our security, so it’s really puzzling to me that he’s trying to accelerate that spread every way he can think of. … It’s just an awful idea unless you’re really interested in making bombs. He’s really triggered a new Mideast arms race by trying to push nuclear power within the region.” Along with proliferation, there are terrorist threats to existing nuclear reactors, like Entergy’s controversial Indian Point nuclear plant just 24 miles north of New York City. Lovins calls these “about as fat a terrorist target as you can imagine. It is not necessary to fly a plane into a nuclear plant or storm a plant and take over a control room in order to cause that material to be largely released. You can often do it from outside the site boundary with things the terrorists would have readily available.” Then there is the waste: “It stays dangerous for a very long time. So you have to put it someplace that stays away from people and life and water for a very long time … millions of years, most likely. … So far, all the places we’ve looked turned out to be geologically unsuitable, including Yucca Mountain.” Testifying at a congressional hearing this week, Energy Department official Edward Sproat said the price of a nuclear dump in Nevada’s Yucca Mountain has climbed to $90 billion. Slated to go online a decade ago, its opening is now projected for the year 2020. And even that’s optimistic. Rep. Jim Matheson, D-Utah, wants to block nuclear waste from passing through Utah entirely, and most Nevadans oppose the Yucca waste plan. The presidential candidates are wrong on nuclear power. Wind, solar and microgeneration (generating electricity and heat at the same time, in smaller plants), on the other hand, are taking off globally, gaining billions of dollars in private investments. Lovins summarizes: “One of the big reasons we have an oil problem and a climate problem today is we spent our money on the wrong stuff. If we had spent it on efficiency and renewables, those problems would’ve gone away, and we would’ve made trillions of dollars’ profit on the deal because it’s so much cheaper to save energy than to supply it.” The answer is blowing in the wind. Amy Goodman is the host of “Democracy Now!,” a daily international TV/radio news hour airing on more than 700 stations in North America.

    Thursday, July 17, 2008

    To Speak and Be Heard: Making Rights a Reality in the 2006 Oaxaca Social Movement

    Lynn Stephen | July 17, 2008

    How people imagine themselves as citizens has increasingly been influenced by global rights discourses. This chapter explores acts of testimony and their links to global discourses of human, women's, and indigenous rights in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca. Testimonials here are urgent oral accounts of bearing witness to wrongs committed against the speakers. Broadcast on the radio, television, at public demonstrations, and in the street, testimonial rights claiming repositions previously excluded speakers as active citizens instead of as folkloric parts of the landscape. This chapter centers on a recent and ongoing social movement in Oaxaca, Mexico and the emergence in June, 2006 of the Popular Assembly of the Peoples of Oaxaca (APPO), a coalition of over 200 organizations that effectively ran the city for six months until the Mexican federal police force intervened.

    The APPO continues to be active. Testimony and rights claiming occupy central roles in this complex context, permitting silenced groups to speak, be heard, and to enact alternative visions for political and cultural participation. Because Oaxaca is a state with 16 different indigenous languages and a population that largely receives news and culture through non-print media, the orality of testimonials is a particularly important and compelling aspect of the shaping of new models of citizenship.

    During the summer and fall of 2006, what began as a large group of teachers exercising their right to bargain for higher salaries through the occupation of Oaxaca City's historical colonial square erupted into a widespread social movement after state police violently attempted to evict the teachers. Mega-marches of thousands, the creation of a popular assembly known as the APPO composed of more than 200 groups, occupation of state and federal buildings and offices, the take-over of the state's television and radio stations, the construction of barricades in many neighborhoods, and regional movements throughout the state questioned the legitimacy of the state government and resulted in a massive assertion of rights by many.

    Here I use two examples to illustrate the importance of speaking and hearing through the use of testimony as a way of claiming rights in the Oaxaca Rebellion. The first is the story of the urban women who took over and re-programmed the state television and radio stations broadcasting what became known as Radio Cacerola, or Casserole Radio. The second details the illegal detention, torture, and imprisonment of a biologist and two teachers and their appeals for justice and defense of their human rights. My own involvement comes from long-standing friendships, family relationships, and links to the city of Oaxaca since the 1980s which propelled me into a position of interpreter, documenter, and reporter about the social movement and the rights claims it generated.

    Emerging Rights Discourses in Mexico: 1990 to the Present

    The Oaxaca social movement of 2006 can be understood as part of prior historical processes of violence and reconciliation in Latin America as well as intimately linked to the globalization of human rights discourses during the past 20 years. This globalization has been accompanied by the institutionalization of human rights and other rights discourse in many of the different countries discussed in this book: Chile, Argentina, Guatemala, Peru, and Uruguay. In Mexico and elsewhere, many indigenous, urban, women's, and other types of social movements, social movement organizations, and NGOs began to institute their own human rights committees to defend their organizers and participants in the 1980s before the widespread growth of organizations dedicated purely to human rights in Latin America.

    In Mexico, three waves of rights (cultural, agrarian, and human) have come to be recognized in different areas of government legislation. In addition, a wide range of non-governmental and civil society organizations and spaces have emerged since the 1990s in relation to these rights discourses. First, Cultural rights are recognized to some degree in the Mexican Constitution through the rewriting of Article IV in 1990 which states:

    The Mexican nation has a multicultural composition originally found in its indigenous peoples. The law protects and promotes the development of their languages, uses, customs, resources, and specific forms of social organization, and guarantees their members effective access to the full range of the state's legal authority (jurisdiction). In the agrarian judgments and legal proceedings they are part of, their own legal practices and customs shall be taken into account in establishing the law.

    The Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN) signed the San Andrés Accords with Mexican president Ernesto Zedillo in 1996. If they had been legislated, these accords would have recognized traditional indigenous systems of governance and justice, provided indigenous peoples with the opportunity to design their own economic development plans, as well as providing opportunities for indigenous organizations and communities to federate in order to build larger political blocks. Instead of implementing these accords, the successor government of Vincente Fox facilitated much weaker legislation passed in April of 2001 that grants individual states the right to limit indigenous rights proposals, limits "the degree of indigenous autonomy to communities within single municipalities, denied constitutional recognition of indigenous peoples as subjects with the right to decide upon their own forms of governance and development, and maintained a paternalistic relation in which the federal government would provide social services to indigenous communities" (Harvey 2001:1048).

    Secondly, much more limited agrarian rights were articulated under the rewritten Article 27 of the Mexican Constitution which facilitated, but did not require, the privatization of land held communally in social tenancy. Evoking the discourse of Emiliano Zapata during the Mexican Revolution of "the land belongs to those who work it," the neoliberal governments of Carlos Salinas and Ernesto Zedillo harnessed "land and liberty" to a modernist discourse of individual rights. Slogans such as "defend your rights to your individual parcel," and "guarantee your individual freedom" were associated with the government's mapping and measuring program which accompanied the counter-agrarian reform found in the rewritten Article 27 (Stephen 2002: 62-62). While the rights granted were centered on the individual, reactions to the government effort to encourage privatization of communally held land re-centered discourses of collective and indigenous rights in Oaxaca and elsewhere, as hundreds of thousands of indigenous peasants debated the land question along with other forms of indigenous rights.

    A third significant arena where rights discourses were institutionalized at the national level in Mexico was through the establishment in 1990 of the National Commission for Human Rights (CNDH). The CNDH functions as an alternative legal system in Mexico with about 200 lawyers working full time taking on cases (Dezlaya and Garth 2002:231). In addition to handling thousands of complaints every year, the CNDH also has a core of individuals who take care of contact with other human rights entities abroad as well as the ever-growing number of human rights organizations established within Mexico. A few years after the National Commission for Human Rights was established, state-level counterparts were set up as well. In the state of Oaxaca, this emerged in tandem with the establishment of grassroots human rights organizations.

    As elsewhere in Mexico, the 1990s saw a major growth in the number of organizations in Oaxaca carrying out work they called human rights monitoring and defense. The defense of the human rights of indigenous peoples in Oaxaca is rooted in the experience of organizations such as the COCEI (Isthmus Coalition of Workers, Peasants, and Students), UCIZONI (Union of Indigenous Communities of the Northern Zone of the Isthmus), and SER (Services of the Mixe People) formed in the 1980s and dedicated to gaining power at the municipal level, defending indigenous land rights, promoting community-based grassroots development, and later linking to national networks and movements for indigenous rights and self-determination (see Stephen 2002: 235-237, Rubin 1997).

    Initially, organizing focused on human rights at the grassroots level did not emerge out of organizations with the label of human rights, but out of organizations defending indigenous and peasant rights. Because members of these organizations suffered from harassment, death threats, illegal detention, and imprisonment, their work increasingly came to focus on defense and protection of their members. In the 1990s, with the militarization of several regions of Oaxaca including the Loxicha region, specific human rights organizations were founded, as was a Regional Center for Human Rights. Many of the organizations that now participate in the Regional Center for Human Rights Bartolomé Carraso (BARCO) are supported by the Catholic Church. Other state groups include the Center for Human Rights Flor y Canto, the Center for Human Rights Siete Principes, and The Oaxaca Network for Human Rights. These groups have undertaken campaigns to defend the rights of communities and individuals in the face of military and paramilitary occupation and harassment as well as individual cases of detention, torture, and illegal incarceration (see Stephen 2000).

    The State Commission of Human Rights in Oaxaca was formed in 1993 in response to a new state law calling for the formation of the commission and outlining how it should work. The website for the commission, which is now called the Commission for the Defense of Human Rights of Oaxaca (CDDRO), states: "With the creation of this commission the necessity of the people of Oaxaca to have their rights and liberties guaranteed, as well as the prompt and impartial procurement of justice, is satisfied." The specific human rights that the CDHRO states that it protects include: "the right to life, to physical integrity, equality, liberty, dignity, and judicial security of all persons, property, as well as the best possible efficiency in the provision of public services" (CDDRO 2008).

    In addition to the areas of indigenous rights and human rights, women's rights have also received much institutionalization both in communities, NGOS, and instances of the government. All of this history is an important backdrop to the current movements in Oaxaca and the kinds of rights claims they are making. The historic feminist organization, Grupo de Estudios Sobre la Mujer, Rosario Castellanos A.C., began in 1977. In the 1980s, they sponsored weekly radio shows, workshops on health, and worked to bring women's rights to state and city political arenas. In 1991 they opened up La Casa de la Mujer Rosario Castellanos and in 1995 began a scholarship program for young indigenous women that provides them with mentoring and support to continue in high school and university.

    In the 1980s and 90s, a wide range of indigenous, peasant, urban, student, and other organizations had "women's" committees within them, functioning as internal human rights committees had in the 1980s. In 2003, women's groups from around the state of Oaxaca including both independent groups such as the Grupo de Estudios Sobre la Mujer, Rosario Castallanos, A.C. as well as women's committees and caucuses within other groups formed the Huaxyacac Collective. The purpose of the alliance-building network was to pressure candidates in the 2004 elections (in which Ulises Ruiz was "elected" as governor of Oaxaca) to sign the Agenda Oaxaca for Gender Equity, which would have obligated Oaxaca to adhere to the Convention for the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women ratified by the Mexican Senate in 2001 (Dalton forthcoming, Magana 2008).

    The Colectivo Huaxyacac also pressured the administration of Ulises Ruiz shortly after his election to take action on the alarming number of femicides in the state. According to the collective, crimes against girls and women between 1999 and 2003 include 351 homicides of girls and women which occurred in the state of Oaxaca, according to data from INEGI. The local press reported 267 homicides between 1999-2005 and the Procurator-General of Justices Office reported 52 assassinations between January 2004 and June 2005. This information was repeated in a formal denunciation of governor Ruiz sent to the Mexican Congress in July of 2006 (Davies 2006). In 2006 and beyond, the Huaxyacac Collective was an active member of the APPO.

    Claiming Space

    While the Mexican Constitution provides for freedom of speech, rights for women, and racial equality with specific mention of indigenous peoples, these ideological rights expressed in Mexican law are juxtaposed with a contradictory reality in Oaxaca, Mexico (see Martínez Vásquez 2007, Hernández 2007, Stephen 2007). There, a long-standing political elite has maintained control of politics and economics through a regional political culture that is built on a contradiction between claims to equal citizenship rights for women, indigenous people, and the poor, and the lived reality of people who lack the resources, public spaces, and legitimacy to exercise such rights. Awareness of rights for these silenced sectors is at an all-time high due to ongoing contact with discourses of rights coming from both the Mexican National Human Rights Commission, the Oaxacan Human Rights Commission, social movements, and a wide range of NGOs as discussed above.

    As suggested by Mark Goodale for Bolivia, in Oaxaca human rights consciousness came to "serve as a kind of normative standard against which social and economic relations can be measured (and resisted if needed)" (2007:157). In Oaxaca, human rights and even more specifically indigenous rights, women's rights, and the rights of the poor are expressed as an idea, "as a kind of floating signifier that represents a new form of human dignity and moral worth." Thus human rights "can reinforce—and embolden—existing normatives, even if their provisions or rules or 'laws' do not, strictly speaking, conform to specific human rights instruments" (2007:160).

    Rights discourses have become an important strategic resource for social movements in Oaxaca since the late 1980s and came to the fore in 2006 and 2007. A repressive state political system made expression of fundamental rights guaranteed by the Mexican Constitution and international accords Mexico has signed protecting the right to life, due process and freedom of thought, assembly, and expression increasingly dangerous to act on (see Organization of American States 1969, Office of the High Commission for Human Rights 1966, Constitución Política de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos 1967, chapter 1, LASA 2007: 4-5).

    Elected amid widespread charges of electoral fraud in 2004, Governor Ruiz Ortíz (also known as URO) took office with a pledge that there would be no more social protests in the streets and public spaces of Oaxaca. He moved the seats of the state senate and the governor's palace to the sleepy, pottery-producing town of San Bartolo Coyotepec in an attempt to dissuade the continual occupations of these public governance spaces by relocating them outside of the capital city of Oaxaca. His removal and re-inscribing of state governance spaces as well as his brutal treatment of social protesters and anyone who criticized his government set the stage for a prolonged period of conflict, polarization, and violence that intensified during the summer and fall of 2007 (see LASA 2007, Martínez Vásquez 2007).

    After state and local police attempted unsuccessfully to violently evict thousands of teachers from the Oaxaca Zocalo on June 14, 2006, efforts by the teachers in Sección 22 of the CNTE, members of the APPO, and others to force the resignation of the state governor intensified, as did protests of official state cultural events and the occupation of state and federal buildings.

    By the time I arrived in Oaxaca in July, 20061 the teachers and those affiliated with APPO controlled the center of the city. Soon after arriving, I went out to observe and film a protest. The protest was a gathering of APPO members in a local park who were trying to prevent a Oaxaca-state sponsored official Guelaguetza celebration from being performed, albeit on a small scale. Guelaguetza refers to the institution of reciprocal exchange in Zapotec, but in the hands of the state came to refer to a commercialized festival of folkloric dances and gift-showering with a high admission price. Many locals never attended the event because of its prohibitive price tag. A description of the of the 2007 official Guelaguetza states:

    Since 1932 (Oaxaca's 400th anniversary) groups from the seven regions of the valley of Oaxaca have presented carefully chosen dances with local characteristics and regional dress at this annual festival. During the dances, to symbolize the commitment to sharing, local gifts are tossed to the crowd. Ticket prices to this spectacular event are US$50.00 per person (plus tax) for each Monday's performance (Oaxacainfo 2007).

    Protesters had taken control of the official Guelaguetza stadium in 2006 and the governor had cancelled the event. The teachers of Sección 22, however, had self-financed and organized a counter "popular Guelaguetza" at one of the local universities that had no entry free and was attended by up to 30,000 people (see Poole 2007).

    Unable to launch the official Guelaguetza in the stadium, the governor's cultural staff tried repeatedly to mount a small-scale version in the Llano Park. While watching and filming one such attempt with a local friend, I documented an amazing shift in the control of public space in the park which mirrored the displacement of the official Guelaguetza with the popular Guelaguetza. What began as about 10 contingents of official state dance troops and bands in the center of the park ended with their withdrawal and a complete occupation by hundreds of APPO supporters carrying wooden sticks and metal rods shouting "Ya cayó, ya cayó, Ulises ya cayó" ("He has fallen, he has fallen, Ulises has already fallen").

    An APPO supporter climbed to the top of a statue of Oaxacan native son Benito Juárez, a Zapotec lawyer from Guelatao, Oaxaca who became president of Mexico. Once there he waved and shouted, "Ya cayó, ya cayó," as well. He was almost ripped from the statue by the official Guelaguetza defenders, but escaped surrounded by a circle of APPO supporters. The park divided into two contingencies shouting slogans at each other. Eventually the official dancers withdrew and the APPO supporters spread out over the entire park, controlling the space.

    Through my friend I came to know several women there who were committed APPO activists and who encouraged me to keep filming and to meet them the next day. They were most interested not only in the presence of someone with a camera filming but also in anyone who would write about their activities and disseminate information outside of Oaxaca. They felt, they said, "invisible, unheard, and unseen." With this event, my role as one of many people who were asked to accompany the movement and to document its events began. The same women would sight me, call me, and direct me to film and photograph.

    A few days later in the same park, I was filming another APPO rally when shots were fired in the air at the edge of the park. APPO supporters chased down the shooters, detained them, and then took them to the UABJO Law School two blocks from the Zocalo where they were tried in a people's court. After many hours they were finally turned over to federal police with signs around their necks labeling them "traitors."

    The conflict deepened. Not only were APPO members and the teachers controlling large sections of the city and public buildings, they had also formed their own police force called the Honorable Cuerpo de Topiles de la Asamblea Popular del Pueblo de Oaxaca (The Honorable Police Force of the Popular Assembly of the Peoples of Oaxaca) and la Policía Magisterial de Oaxaca (The Teachers' Police of Oaxaca, POMO). These police forces had begun to detain people who acted against the APPO and the teachers and to try them in people's courts. The Oaxaca Municipal police refused to leave their barracks and attack their fellow citizens. Most spent July and August of 2006 playing basketball and hanging out in their barracks.

    On Speaking and Being Heard: Women Take Over the State Media

    How does the active claiming of rights affect who is deemed as having the right to speak—both literally and figuratively—and whether or not speakers can be heard (see Poole 2007)? Being heard involves having access to public space and channels of communication that cut across different social sectors, cultural worlds, and venues. Oaxacan women's takeover of state television and radio stations provides a good example of this.

    The women changed the traditional programming of these media spaces to project a new vision of who the legitimate citizens of Oaxaca are. Their programming included testimonials from a wide range of social groups—from indigenous women, to working class motorcycle taxi drivers, to urban indigenous venders, to middle school students. These broadcasts, often done in the form of oral testimonials, allowed new voices to be heard, new faces to be seen, and permitted silenced models of governance and democratic participation to move into the cultural and political mainstream.3

    While most work on Latin American testimonials has focused on them as a literary genre that reflects political and linguistic complexity (Anzaldua 1999, Arias 2001, Beverly 2004, Maier and Dulfano 2004, Sommer 1996), the Oaxacan movement presented testimonials in action, focusing on how testimonials are operationalized. Because these testimonials are oral and visual acts rather than solely texts, we can see how they are heard and interpreted by social movement participants and sympathizers, and how once codified they become integrated into local political cultures in social movement sites such as the city of Oaxaca. For 21 days, a group of women remade what had been state-controlled and narrowly programmed "public media" into "citizen's media."

    While media analysts might be tempted to call what happened with Radio Cacerola and the subsequent take-over of other stations "alternative media," what happens when the "alternatives" become the main mode of communication for major parts of a city's population and produce a new kind of listener in the process? Clemencia Rodriguez suggests that we substitute the term "citizen's media" for alternative media:

    "... referring to 'citizens' media' implies first that a collectivity is enacting its citizenship by actively intervening and transforming the established mediascape; second, that these media are contesting social codes, legitimized identities, and institutionalized social relations; and third, that these communication practices are empowering the community involved, to the point where these transformations and changes are possible" (2001: 20).

    On Aug. 1, 2006, I was driving on the Pan-American Highway from Teotitlán del Valle to Oaxaca and turned on the radio to FM 96.9, one of the radio stations that belonged to the Oaxacan Corporation of Radio and Television (Corporación Oaxaqueña de Radio y Televisión or COR-TV). The TV and radio stations were known locally as Canal 9/Channel 9. Usually during that time of day the station had a program of mixed music including jazz and reggae. But that day, a young woman was announcing that she and a larger group of women had just taken over the TV and radio stations. "We have taken over Channel 9. Right now we are seeing if the technicians are going to stay and if they can make an agreement to help us with our television transmissions ... we are waiting to see if they will answer the call of the people to stay and help us with our transmissions. If not, we will be calling for other technicians to come and help us with our TV transmissions ... All of the workers who are here have been treated well."

    Like many in Oaxaca I was surprised to hear the kinds of voices and programming that began to flow out of the state radio station and, a day or two later, on the television station as well. Within a few days I went to the occupied Channel 9 and spoke with a number of women there. I returned several times during August before the transmission towers were shot out by paramilitaries on Aug. 21, 2006.

    These hundreds of women took over the radio and TV stations on Aug. 1 after a group of women representing an APPO and teachers' march of almost 10,000 were denied a space on the air. "When we were denied just one hour of air time, we decided to take over the whole station," explained one woman who participated in the occupation. "After all, it is a public television station. Shouldn't the people be able to use it?" From early in the morning until late at night, Radio Cacerola, as it became called (Casserole Radio for the pots and pans women carried with them on the march when they took over the station) became the chief means for people to voice their opinions, receive news, and have debates for most of the month of August 2006.

    Everyone from the motor-taxi association of six neighborhoods denouncing a corrupt licensing official to Zapotec vegetable farmers fed up with a corrupt local mayor used the station to air their opinions. Regular radio shows cropped up on topics including the murder of women in Ciudad Juarez and Oaxaca, celebrating local musical groups, and hosting discussions of indigenous rights in more than half a dozen of Oaxaca's 16 indigenous languages.

    When local municipal police refused to leave their barracks and the Oaxacan Head of Security and Transportation Aristeo López Martínez put together an improvised police force of undercover "municipal" police rumored to include paramilitaries from outside the state, Radio Cacerola announced where they had been seen and encouraged people to not lose faith. When leaders of the APPO were detained without a warrant, Radio Cacerola revealed the kind of vehicle the police used and encouraged people in the neighborhood where the leaders were last seen to search for the car. When APPO needed to gather supporters to reinforce groups of people holding more than 20 state government buildings, the call went out over Radio Caserola. When 50-year old Jose Jíménez Colmenares was shot dead in the middle of a peaceful protest march on the way to the TV station, Radio Cacerola broadcast the news and urged people not to be afraid and to continue to protect the station and other buildings that had been taken over by APPO.

    Throughout some of the tensest days and nights in August, the voice of a young woman told listeners, "Don't be afraid. We are not afraid. Do not abandon your posts. Do not be afraid to come down to help us to fight this intimidation. We are a pacific movement; we have so many people they cannot force us out." The women behind the radio station did not appear to be militant fighters, but rather long-time Oaxaca residents who had finally gotten fed up with their invisibility and bad treatment by successive state governments which had been promising to improve their lives for decades.

    Radio Cacerola and COR TV became a testimonial forum in which all of the disaffected of Oaxaca could share their stories. Day and night people flooded the station with calls and shared their past grievances as well as calling in warnings about ongoing repression, conflict, and suspicious activities. In many ways the radio and TV stations served as an x-ray of the range of perspectives and rights claims associated with the Oaxaca rebellion. The kinds of rights claims expressed through the testimonials transmitted reflected both a connotative sense of human rights in which a reference is made to a moral universe in which the fact of human rights grants dignity and respect to each person, as well as to a denotative sense of rights in which gestures are made toward specific perceived human rights provisions (Goodale 2007: 149-150). As Goodale and others have noted, when specific individuals narrate their rights claims as part of a larger testimonial, they do not distinguish between connotative and denotative senses of "human rights."

    Nor do they necessarily distinguish between specifically legal or extra-legal ways of claiming rights. As discussed by Speed, (2007), in relation to the Zapatistas exercise of their right to self-determination, conceptualizations of rights can emerge "in their exercise, not as designations from God/nature of the state/law" (2007: 184). The takeover of the radio and television stations was not planned by women on the march, but was seen as justified, as a right, due to the fact that the television and radio stations are public media spaces that are paid for with tax money. The case reveals both connotative and denotative senses of "rights," and the legitimating of rights through their exercise, particularly through their interpretation in the context of the social conflict in Oaxaca. Catalina Ruiz4 shared her experience on the women's march and take-over of the state TV and radio stations on Aug. 1, 2006:

    There was a call that went out over Radio Universidad that said, "All of the women, let's go and march with our frying pans, our pots, our casserole dishes." The big surprise was when we arrived to where the march started and there were hundreds, and hundreds, and hundreds of women. From women with long braids and aprons on with a pot in their hands and a daughter at their side, to old women, to women from the middle class, the poor, and intellectuals. We all marched together ... So when the march was ending we started saying, "Before we go to eat why don't we go up to Channel 9? Come on. Let's go." Everyone started to say that this TV station and radio needed to tell the truth about what was happening. So we got on some buses and went up to the station.

    Everyone was saying that we had to get on the TV and radio to communicate our demands that the governor leave his office. Well, unfortunately they didn't give us permission to do this. They didn't even give us permission to talk for even an hour. So the companeras decided that we were going to stay. We said, "This media is ours. It is paid for by money from our taxes. We pay for it every time we buy something. It is supposed to be public, to be ours. So now since it is ours, we are going to keep it and run it."

    The men, the male teachers and others, they were shocked when we took over the station because it wasn't something they had thought up. A lot of times in our meetings they were always saying, "How do we get the official state station to carry our information? They never could figure out how to do this ... After we did it they supported us. We got a ton of calls on the radio from men who stated, "Bravo. These valiant women, these combative women, did what we couldn't do. We hope that this is a lesson for the larger movement, for women, and for the media. We also hope that it is a lesson for the next governor so that it is clear the governor has to obey the citizens and this includes women. Article 39 of our constitution says—and when you hear this being read in the voice of a working class housewife it is clear—the article says we have the right to decide who will govern us. And if the person who is governing us doesn't work out, then we have the right to change that person."

    In her narrative, Catalina justifies the takeover of the state media based on the fact that the radio and TV stations are public property, paid for by Oaxacan citizens every time they pay taxes when they buy something. Because the station is public, it should include all perspectives, including that of the teachers' movement and the APPO. In addition to claiming the right to freedom of expression through the takeover of state media, Catalina also invokes Article 39 of the Mexican Constitution as a reference to giving the citizens the right to change those who govern them if they abuse power. Here she makes a specific legal claim to the right of Oaxaca's people to remove the governor from power. The taking of the radio and TV stations became an extension of that right through providing the means of communicating this demand to the people of the city.

    The primary way in which rights were claimed on the radio, the TV, and in public rallies was through the use of personal testimonials. As a speech form, testimonials are hybrid, interstitial, and flexible discursive spaces that reflect political and linguistic complexity (Anzaldua 1999, Arias 2001, Beverly 2004, Maier and Dulfano 2004, Sommer 1996). Of particular interest here are the ways that testimonials often subvert official histories and call into question power relations and authority stemming from official state sources and media. When testimonials are deployed to claim rights in a specific political and cultural context they are a part of real political practices which can literally let "the subaltern speak" (see Spivak 1994, Schaffer and Smith 2004). For the 21 days that women controlled the state TV and radio stations and subsequently other radio stations, the subaltern was literally speaking in ways that had never been heard or seen before.

    The ability of testimonials to synthesize personal lived histories within the structural frames of economic, racial, and gendered hierarchies has made them a particularly valuable tool for theorizing through lived experiences and processes (Latina Feminist Group 2001). In addition, they have a strong convocation force in terms of the credibility they have with a listening audience.

    The following testimonial is from Fidelia Vasqúez, who was a constant presence in the radio station and went on to also be a participant in the women's organization known as the COMO (Coordinadora de Mujeres de Oaxaca, Primero de Agosto). COMO was formed after the radio station takeover when a group of women who occupied the station went to Mexico City to press for their cause. When paramilitaries shot out the transmission tower of Radio Cacerola on Aug. 21, 2006, COMO women participated in the takeover of other radio stations that broadcast in September and October of 2006.

    Fidelia is also a teacher, a member of Sección 22 of the SNTE, and a self-declared supporter of the APPO. The portion of her testimonial which follows is typical of a pattern that emerged whereby people first situated themselves personally as a part of the city, put forward a set of rights claims, and then stated their determination to see justice realized. What is most striking about this testimonial is Fidelia's claim that women who are "brown, short, and fat" are the face of Oaxaca, represent the people, and have a right to a voice through their occupation of the TV and radio stations. This was recorded on Aug. 5, 2006.

    I am a woman born in Oaxaca of Zapotec and Mixtec blood. We Oaxacan women ask that a woman be treated with the same rights as a man. Our mission as women is to create, educate, communicate, and participate. That is why we are here occupying the state radio and TV stations ... We are like a lot of the humble, sincere, working people of my state. From the countryside to the city, we Oaxacan women are tired of bearing this burden alone of the repression we are experiencing from the long line of people who have governed us and from our current governor, Ulíses Ruiz ... Although the people who may read this are far away, we are living this crude reality of repressions and an impossible situation.

    ... We went out into the streets on the first of August to tell Ulises Ruiz that he had to leave Oaxaca. We are women who don't usually have a voice because we are brown, we are short, we are fat, and they think that we don't represent the people, but we do. WE are the face of Oaxaca. ... It is too bad that the government doesn't recognize the greatness, the heart, and the valor of the women who are here. We are here because we want a free Mexico, a democratic Mexico, and we have had enough. ... They will have to take us out of here dead, but we are going to defend the TV station and radio.

    The women's take-over of the state TV and Radio stations provided an invaluable forum for testimony after testimony of people who were tired of being ignored, tired of being poor, tired of being asked to vote only to be discounted by those in power, tired of being silenced, and tired of being told they had rights and then watching those rights get trampled. The radio and TV stations became platforms for many to speak who had never been heard from before as well as for a broad-spectrum audience where many different kinds of people were "heard." The words of men, women, children, indigenous, mestizo, working class, middle class, and the most impoverished were strikingly similar and had a common target: the governor of Oaxaca. In his persona and through the larger metaphorical and physical space he and his government came to represent as the government of corruption, ignorance, greed, repression, and anti-democratic practices, URO became the unifying container for decades of legitimate discontents.

    The redefinition of the state radio and TV stations and then subsequent other stations as media spaces of the social movement had a profound impact on those who were not a part of the APPO, Sección 22, or any of the marches. Radio Cacerola, Radio la Ley taken on Aug. 21, and later Radio Universidad which began transmitting again in September, became the primary conduits of information about the movement. Leaders used the media they controlled to plan actions, move people around the city, and to protect neighborhoods.

    The movement-controlled media also produced new kinds of messages and created an entirely different audience than that which had tuned in to the state's prior programming. While previous programming had been profoundly apolitical, focusing primarily on cultural and scientific topics, the material broadcast over the radio and TV by women who occupied the state media stations was profoundly political. For three weeks, Channel 9 regularly broadcast films on revolutionary figures such as Che Guevarra, Subcomandante Marcos, Lucio Cabañas Barrientos (founder of the Partido de Los Pobres in Atoyac de Álvarez, Guerrero in 1967), and Emiliano Zapata. The new Channel 9 also beamed out a wide range of popular media including DVDs of the popular Guelaguetza which had supplanted the official one in July of 2006, and films documenting the violence used to attempt to dislodge the teachers' sit-in on June 14, 2006 that included detailed interviews with severely beaten teachers who were hospitalized. Other broadcasts featured documentaries on the violence in Atenco, Mexico and in Chiapas. Talk shows featured women who were occupying the station interviewing indigenous women who insisted on speaking in their own languages, marking spontaneous broadcasts in Zapotec, Mixtec, Trique, Mixe, and the other languages of Oaxaca.

    The radio stations played popular ballads such as the "Corrida del 14 de Junio" which told of the repression suffered on June 14, 2006, "What a Bad Governor," "APPO Reguetón," and "the Son of the Barricade." Radio stations sponsored speakers who spoke about the problems with the neoliberal model of development, and criticized NAFTA and the Plan Puebla Panama, a regional development plan linking Mexico and Central America. Popular media productions which previously had been distributed only in person through DVDs and CDs sold by movement sympathizers were broadcast to thousands through the radio stations and television station.

    The tens of thousands who listened to these radio broadcasts and watched the alternative TV broadcasts for three weeks were affected by this new media. Josefina Reyes, a 40-year-old working mother whose husband has been in the United States for more than five years lives in one of the many neighborhoods ringing the city that began with poor people squatting on land. From her one-room, tin-roofed home, she listened to the radio and watched as thousands responded to a call to come and protect the TV station once the transmission towers were shot out on Aug, 21, 2006. She describes this, as well as the importance of receiving new kinds of information from the radio. For her, the movement came alive through the radio. On Aug. 7, 2007, Josefina stated:

    The movement really came together when they took over the radio station and Channel 9, the state TV station. We would have the radio on all night long to learn about what was going on. You would hear, for example, that they were calling people to come down from the mountains to help. When they called for people to come down and help when they shot at the TV station a lot of people came down, not just a few. We all had the radio turned up all day and all night to find out what was happening. The radio had a lot of information. They would talk about where the shooting was going on. Sometimes we could even hear shots from where they were transmitting ...

    ... The other thing that happened with the women taking over the state radio station and TV and then on the other radio stations is that lots of people began to arrive and to go on the air. They would talk about what was going on in Oaxaca. And it wasn't just people from the city. People started to arrive from the towns and the ranchos from all over the state to say that they too were unhappy with things. They would go to the station or call in to say that they were in agreement with the movement, that they supported it ...

    ... There would be young people who talked about neoliberalism and the people started to know more things. Before we never heard about these things and we were not interested. But people started to know more and more, like about the Plan Puebla Panama and other things that our government was involved in with other nations. People started to hear more and more from lots of people and to know more. They got more and more fed up with our government. After this we started to realize more and more things ...

    The radio was so important. It was the key way that we were informed about the movement. We would hear about it and know what was going on. Commissions from the APPO and the teachers would go on the air to talk about decisions they had made, to announce another march, to announce a new barricade that was being put up to keep the convoys of death (reference to paramilitaries) out of the neighborhoods. These convoys would arrive and start shooting at people. They were police dressed as civilians who would go around looking for people who were opposed to them or who were manning the barricades. They would shoot at the people supporting the barricades. People would put buses across the road at night, light fires, and burn tires to keep these people out of the neighborhoods."

    The stakes for those who were occupying the state TV and radio stations were very high and they took security very seriously. There were more than 12 different security points which had groups of people posted at them for 24-hour shifts. The groups often incorporated teachers and their supporters and were organized by regions of the state of Oaxaca. For example, teachers and other women from the coastal region were in charge of the street in front of the station, while women from the Mixtec region had to maintain watch over the transmission towers that were located on a hillside more a mile away from the TV and radio station installations.

    Ruth Guzmán (not a pseudonym), a biologist and community development organizer, spent quite a bit of time working at Radio Carcerola, including on the security detail. She described the excitement, tension, and fear that permeated the night as women kept watch. Later, after her husband was disappeared, tortured, and imprisoned on false charges, she became a regular speaker on the radio stations controlled by the social movement.

    The times I went to Channel 9 at night, I didn't sleep ... I was awake the whole time. We all had our sticks. What ideas we had, no? We thought we could defend ourselves with sticks. The men had metal rods, but most people had sticks and even umbrellas. We were always worried that people were going to come and threaten us from those delinquent groups ...

    We had a lot of contacts and people would call us up. They would say, for example, that some blue trucks were nearby coming toward the station. We always had these kinds of alerts. Even the people who lived around the station didn't sleep. They were always keeping watch. When we would get these calls we would never know for sure if the threat was for real, but mostly it was people who were sympathetic who called. We had lots of information and people would call in from all over the city ... You know, we were really happy to be participating in this movement because we knew we were making history. I never, ever thought that there would be people killed and disappeared. Then things changed.

    Human Rights Violations in Conditions of Open Repression

    On Aug. 10, 2006 after filming the radio show of a friend, Conchita Nuñez (not a pseudonym), on Radio Cacerola, I started to walk toward a large march that was approaching the state TV and Radio stations. Conchita had just announced the disappearance of Ramiro Aragón (not a pseudonym), a biologist, and two teachers, Eleonai Santiago and Juan Gabriel Ríos (not pseudonyms) who had disappeared with him. Their families had been looking for them all night and through the day. Their names as well as the names of others who had disappeared and/or were imprisoned were featured prominently in the march.

    I walked with Domingo, a teacher, and had just finished a 24-hour security shift at Channel 9. The march filed by for about eight minutes. Then, as I watched through the camera lens, about two or three blocks away people turned around, started running backward, and confusion reigned. It was clear that something terrible had happened.

    Domingo commented, "Some kind of provocation." For about 10-15 minutes, the march stalled. A large space opened in the middle. Some people didn't move. Then part of the march began to come forward. Domingo and I walked around the edge and began to double back to the middle where we had seen people running. As we were walking, I smelled smoke and suddenly we saw a huge crowd and an ambulance with a bloodied person inside. Everyone was clearly upset and in shock. We asked a woman, "What happened?" With tears in her eyes she responded, "There has been a death. Someone has already died. The bullet went into his heart. They didn't want to take him in an ambulance. They took him to a clinic nearby where he died. There were various shots and there are others wounded."

    Later we found that the person we had seen die from a distance was José Jímenez Colmenares, a mechanic who had been marching with his wife, a teacher, and his children. Four suspected shooters were surrounded and detained by the APPO and Sección 22 police. One remained in a building attached to a medical clinic. When he did not emerge, other enraged people from the march set fire to the building. The four who were detained were put in a local bus that had been commandeered by APPO and driven to the state television and radio stations where I had just come from. Domingo and I had watched the bus go by as we walked toward the site of the shooting.

    Aug. 10, 2006 became a turning point for me and many others in Oaxaca. At that time, there was very little press attention outside of Oaxaca concerning what was going on. A situation that came to resemble what many saw beamed around the world as the monks in Myanmar protested in the streets and were detained and shot at was not visible, even in the Mexican press.5 The Oaxaca conflict was not broadly written about in the press until Bradley Will, a U.S. journalist who worked for Indymedia, was shot and killed on Oct. 27, 2006 in Santa Lucía del Camino, just outside of Oaxaca City. That same day, four other Oaxacans were killed as well: Emilio Alonso Fabián, Esteba Ruiz, Esteban López Zurita, and Eudacia Olivera Díaz.

    After Aug. 10, 2006 the conflict became further polarized, everyone became much more fearful, and the stakes for participating in any kind of public political action rose precipitously. If you could be shot at while walking in a peaceful protest march, then anything was possible.

    While the state governor appeared on TV in Mexico City assuring the nation that everything was under control in Oaxaca, he and his staff could not set foot in the city of Oaxaca and increasingly in other parts of the state as well.

    APPO supporters who were holding the state senate, the offices of the governor, the state TV station, and other installations redoubled their security measures and prepared for further repression. The Oaxaca city police refused to leave their barracks and attack their fellow citizens. Increasingly unofficial "police" without uniforms who traveled in convoys of pick-up trucks began to patrol neighborhoods and intimidate anyone who appeared to be associated with anti-governor activities, or simply anyone who "looked" suspicious. Not only were people shot at during protest activities, but they were also detained unofficially at night, tortured, and then later they might appear in jail. Such was the fate of Ramiro Aragón, his brother-in-law, and a friend. My personal and professional links to the Oaxaca rebellion became further intensified with the detention of Ramiro Aragón.

    Ramiro Aragón Pérez is a biologist with a specialization in ornithology. He has worked in Mexico and in the United States with a range of NGOs, birdwatching, and conservation organizations. In Oaxaca, Mexico he worked for Grupo Mesófilo, an NGO dedicated to the sustainable management of natural resources and improvement of the quality of life in the villages, communities, and indigenous ejidos (communally owned and managed lands) of the State of Oaxaca, Mexico. Ramiro Aragón Pérez was not a political activist, nor a member of the APPO or Sección 22 of the SNTE.

    At approximately 1 a.m. in the morning on Aug. 1, 2006, Ramiro was forcibly detained with his brother-in-law Elionai Santiago Sánchez, and Juan Gabriel Ríos, both of whom are school teachers and members of Sección 22 of the SNTE. They were detained in San Felipe del Agua while searching for two childhood friends of Ramiro's who had disappeared the day before with Germán Mendoza Nube, a teacher and long-time activist in Oaxaca. After a car followed them, they turned around to go home, but were blocked by another vehicle, a truck. Five men got out of both vehicles and proceeded to ask them for their identification and quiz them about what they were doing. After finding an identification card on Elionai Sánchez that identified him as a teacher and a flyer from a leftist organization in Oaxaca, they bound their hands and began to beat them up. They were transferred to another vehicle and continually beaten for more than 30 minutes. Ramiro was burned with a cigarette on his face, was continuously beaten and kicked, had his hair pulled out, and was threatened with death and rape. Threats were also made against his wife Ruth Guzmán and his two small children. Ramiro stated in an interview in July of 2007:

    They threw us in the truck and we started to drive and they started beating us again. They threatened to kill us, told us that they were going to rape us, and that after they raped us that they were going to go to my house and do the same thing to my family. They took all of my documents and had my address ... Then they began to pull me by the hair. One of them asked one of the others for a knife to cut my hair. But they didn't give it to him because he would have done something crazy.

    In that moment they were really enjoying themselves in their fiesta of violence. It was a party for them. They were beating us and kicking us. Wham. They would hit us and then say, "Hey, look. This fucking guy is squirting blood all over me. He got my new shirt all bloody." They were really enjoying it and we were bleeding all over the place. Then one of them took a cigarette and burned me with it on my face ... They cut my neck and pulled out a lot of my hair. They were playing with us, and having an orgy of violence and laughing. They were putting into practice what they had learned in their courses ... Then they asked for the glass that they cut Elionai with and the other guy wanted to cut my throat but he didn't have time.

    They stopped then and we got down. Then they pushed us into the back of a police truck. There we saw a policeman. They kept on driving. We were really beat up and wounded. My face was really swollen and they were braking suddenly, and jumping over these speed bumps while we were still tied up ... We had no idea where we were. Finally, they stopped and they put is in a jail. We asked the jailer, "Where are we?" He said, "You are in Ejutla." They threw us into that jail at about 3:30 in the morning."

    All three were taken first to a jail in Ejutla de Crespo, then transferred to a jail in Zimatlán de Alvarez, south of Oaxaca City. When Ramiro was processed through the Federal Attorney General's office (La Procuraduría General de la República, PGR) on Aug. 12, 2006 in San Bartolo Coyotopec, he was told he was charged with possession of a mosqueton, a musket from 1924, which was for exclusive use of the Mexican Armed Forces. He was also charged with possession of bullets which were not compatible with the gun. The two teachers who were detained with Ramiro were charged with illegal possession of firearms as well. All three men vehemently deny these charges.

    On July 2, 2006 Mexico held national presidential elections that were highly contested. For more than a month afterward, the results were not known. During this time a part of the vote was recounted. The national focus was on the contested elections, not on the severe conflict, polarization, and violence in Oaxaca. PRD (Party of the Democratic Revolution) presidential candidate Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who was ultimately declared the loser to Felipe Calderón by less than 1% of the vote, organized a massive campaign of resistance, taking over much of the center of Mexico City. In Oaxaca the state government had begun to escalate its repression efforts through the use of paramilitaries.

    During the three months that Ramiro Aragón was in jail, he listened daily to the radio. He and others kept up with the movement by listening to Radio Cacerola and later to the other radio stations. After he was beaten and in his jail cell, Ramiro heard the PRD candidate, López Obrador talking on the radio. He noted, "He (López Obrador) was talking on the radio and he was saying, 'Vote by vote, ballot box by ballot box we will go' ... It sounded absurd to me knowing that we were part of a terrible violation of human rights going on, really revolting, and in the meantime here they are worried about voting saying ballot box by ballot box. This was what the political parties were saying and I was asking, 'Why did I go to vote? What did it matter?'"

    For Ramiro, this moment captured the contradiction of legal rights versus actual rights that he and many others were living. While one had the "right" to vote and supposedly participate in a democracy, freedom of assembly was disregarded as marchers were shot, and civilians looking for friends in the night could be arbitrarily detained, beaten, and tortured, and then imprisoned on false charges. For him, Juan Gabriel Rios, Eleonai Santiago, and others, the legal rights guaranteed under Mexican law and the legal processes they were supposed to have guaranteed became meaningless.

    Legal protections had no meaning in Oaxaca during 2006 and 2007. Many claims of human rights violations have been filed by organizations including the Mexican National Human Rights Commission (CNDH), which in its preliminary report concluded that 20 people had been killed, 370 inured, and 349 imprisoned between June 2, 2006 and December of 2006 (CNDH 2006:5). While the Supreme Court agreed to name a special commission to investigate the violation of human rights in Oaxaca in April of 2007, so far no action has been forthcoming. In the meantime, those who have been falsely imprisoned have witnessed a justice system in crisis.

    The policeman who accused Ramiro Aragón of illegal weapons possession stated in a preliminary hearing that Ramiro had been found running through the street with a gun and had been in a street fight. The swelling and contusions left from the severe beating Ramiro received were reported as the result of a street fight. When the firearm Ramiro was charged with possessing was tested for fingerprints in an independent analysis, Ramiro's prints were not found. Later a judge ruled that the test was inconclusive and Ramiro was returned to prison on the basis of the testimony of one policeman and no physical evidence. During his three months in custody, Ramiro Aragón was never able to see or speak to the judge.

    After spending three months in jail, Ramiro Aragón was freed at the end of October of 2006 as part of a political negotiation worked out between Carlos Abascal, secretary of the interior under the Vincente Fox administration, and Enrique Rueda Pacheco, who was the secretary general of Sección 22 of the SNTE. Early in the morning of Oct. 30, 2006, Ramiro was flown by small plane close to Mexico City and released, in a press conference that took place at the negotiating table between the Federal Ministry of the Interior and the APPO and Sección 22. He received no documentation and all of the false charges were left on his record. He has not been exonerated of the invented charges and has fled Mexico for his safety and for fear of being returned to prison. No action has been taken to investigate the illegal detention, torture, and imprisonment of Ramiro and the two teachers he was detained with. He fears that he may be attacked or arrested at any time if he returns to Oaxaca.

    A federal injunction (amparo) against the committal for trial (auto de formal prisión) required a review of Aragón's case, but there is no evidence of any action to comply with this ruling. Aragón reported his case to the Oaxaca State Human Rights Commission (Comisión Estatal de Derechos Humanos de Oaxaca, CEDHO) and the National Human Rights Commission (Comisión Nacional de Derechos Humanos, CNDH). However, neither the CNDH nor the CEDHO have yet carried out a full enquiry, and the torture he and his friends suffered has not been investigated by state or federal authorities.

    Juan Gabriel Ríos, who was detained, tortured, and arrested with Aragón, has been an active member in Sección 22 of the SNTE. He finished studying to be a teacher three years ago and has been teaching in a small town in the district of Sola de Vega. It takes him about 11 hours to arrive there from his home near Oaxaca City. Juan Gabriel was tear-gassed in the attempt to dislodge the teachers on June 14, 2006, and had been actively participating in the sit-in and occupation of the Zocalo that followed. In his testimonial, he emphasizes that when his tormentors found flyers advertising an APPO march and a small biography of Joseph Stalin on his fellow teacher and friend Elionai, that is when they decided to savagely beat them. The right to free speech was clearly violated in his description of their detention.

    I have been an active sympathizer and participant in our (teachers') struggle. But I have never been a leader or part of another organization. I am part of Sección 22, this is clear, but I don't belong to any other organization. Something important that happened is that when they found a socialist piece of literature on my friend Elionai (also a teacher), that was the requirement for them to really beat us up. Why were they so violent toward us? The torture lasted a long time.

    Then one of them said, "Who wants to put out my cigarette? Stick your tongues out. I want to put out my cigarette." I stuck out my tongue and so did Ramiro but they decided not to burn my tongue. Instead they began to burn Ramiro in the chest with the cigarette. They grabbed him by the hair and began to pull his hair and beat him up around the face. They beat him really, really badly around the face, his face was terribly hurt.

    They began to beat me too from behind, beating me on the ears with their hands open. This resulted in the rupture of my eardrum. It made a terrible sound and then I had a terrible pain. It was really, really ugly. Then they grabbed me by the neck and also began to beat me on the face. I don't know what they were hitting me with, something really hard like a bottle. I still have a scar where they broke open my eyebrow and a lot of blood poured out.

    At that point the pain was so terrible that I just became resigned to it and gave up ... I was tied up and they continued to beat me. I couldn't do anything being tied and they were verbally assaulting us too ... I have never felt so much fear in my entire life."

    While Juan Gabriel was being severely beaten, his friend and co-teacher Elionai Santiago was being strangled and cut with a glass bottle. Eleonai is a 25-year-old teacher who is a member of Sección 22. He teaches elementary school in the southern part of the state. Like Juan Gabriel, he was an active participant in the teachers' union and had supported the teachers' occupation of the Zocalo. He also got caught in the state police attempts to evict the teachers from the center of the city and went on to support other actions the teachers and APPO undertook. Eleonai helped to guard the transmission towers of Channel 9 after it was taken over by the women who became COMO, attended conferences, marches, and other activities. While not a leader in the teachers' movement and the APPO, he felt confident of his ability to participate freely. He said of the months of June and July of 2006:

    After the attempt to remove the teachers from the Zocalo a lot of activities started. But our spirits were very, very high because we (the teachers) had tremendous support from the people. People would arrive in the Zocalo with blankets, with food, with money to support us. This kind of experience really made a difference and motivated us. We realized that our struggle was supported by the people of Oaxaca. There were marches that came down from the different colonias in the city and people came to tell us that we were not alone. Little by little there were more and more activities like conferences, talks, other things. I was really into it because my family was participating too. My mother, my sister. We had grown up in this atmosphere because my mother is a teacher too and she had suffered a lot in the past as well. We were also really angry about what had happened with the desalojo and how people were treated."

    Confident that he could freely exercise his rights to free speech, free assembly, and interact with all of the people who were participating in a flood of activities organized by the teachers and the APPO, Elionai spoke with the many different people who had congregated daily in the Zocalo. Many groups from a wide range of leftist and progressive perspectives had set up booths in the Zocalo. Thousands of teachers were sleeping and living in and around the Zocalo which became a tent city. Hundreds of meetings, exchanges, cultural events, and activities were going on. Many of the groups who established a presence there also set out books, brochures, DVDs, CDs, and other materials for sale or for small donations. Eleonai bought a book and was distributing flyers for an APPO march. When the men who detained Eleonai, Juan Gabriel, and Ramiro found a biography of Stalin and an APPO flyer on Eleonai, the three of them were immediately tagged as "suspicious," and treated as if they had no civil or human rights. Eleonai stated in his testimonial in July of 2007:

    They had Ramiro on one side and Juan Gabriel on the other and they pushed me up against the side of a truck with hands up in the air. They patted me down, like a routine check, and then they stop and say, "What's this?" They found my teacher's I.D. and a book, a biography of Joseph Stalin that I had bought from a stall in the Zocalo. I saw a red book that said Life and Works of Joseph Stalin and I bought it. I had this with me and I was also passing out the last accords of the APPO which said that they were going to have a march for children.

    ... So I had these documents and when they found them, their attitude changed. One of them said to me, "What are you doing with Stalin? Now you are going to really get fucked up, teacher. What are you doing here? What are you looking for?" I told them, "I am just moving about here freely. We were looking for a place to eat."

    "Looking for a place to eat at this hour?" They kept asking us what we were really doing. After that they stopped asking me anything. They took my cellphone, all of my documents, my credit card, only leaving me my teacher's I.D. Then they tied us up with really heavy rope ...

    ... They were beating me really hard in the front of my body and another person was beating me on the neck. The blows were really hard and I asked for help, but who was going to help me? ... Then they started to pull on a rope. The one who was behind me began to strangle me. I tried to grab it with my hands ... for a while I was able to use my hands on the rope to keep them from strangling me ... "Talk, talk, talk," they kept saying. They were telling me that I was guilty of something. I don't know what their intentions were. ... Then they grabbed me by the hands and then I heard them break a bottle. They said, "Now we are really going to fuck over the three of you ... Then I heard Ramiro and Juan Gabriel screaming and I felt really bad. I started to get really very, very nervous, hysterical, and I started to scream. Their screams were really terrible ... After they broke the bottle that is when I thought, now they are going to kill me. And they said to us, "Now you are going to die ..."

    ... I thought they were going to cut my throat or something. But, no. I started to feel an intense pain in my ear and I felt lots of blood flowing. I said, oh, no, they are going to cut my ear. I started to scream because the pain was unbearable. That's all I remember because after that I received a blow that rendered me unconscious. Then I only remember vaguely that they loaded me into a new truck, a Nissan that the State Preventative Police (Policia Preventitativa del Estado) used. Then I remember that Ramiro was beside me. I touched his hand and he moved. The three of us were there. I remember thinking, "Well, at least all three of us are alive."

    Elionai Santiago and Juan Gabriel Ríos were captured with Ramiro Aragón. They were jailed with him and served with false charges of possession of weapons that are for exclusive use by the army. These are federal charges which put them in the custody of the Federal Attorney General's office. Finally Elionai and Juan Gabriel were released on 12,000 pesos bail each (about $1,200 U.S. dollars). Once they were out of jail, they had to report to a federal courthouse in the center of Oaxaca and sign in every two weeks.

    The two of them are still waiting for any significant movement on their case in the courts after many postponements. Eleonai is doubtful that they will dismiss the false weapons charges. The most difficult effect of this terrible experience has been the psychological damage it has caused him and the fear it has instilled in his daily life activities. He continues to be afraid to go out alone and has been left with a significant health problem. He reported:

    Sometimes in the mornings I don't want to wake up because I still know what happened to me ... I stopped doing a lot of things that I used to do before: visit places, go to the movies, read books. I stopped doing these things because it seemed like they didn't have any meaning. Sometimes I even have a moment when I feel peaceful and then I feel guilty because I am having a peaceful moment because so many people are suffering.

    For him, Juan Gabriel, and Ramiro, the rights they are guaranteed in the Mexican Constitution and through international rights agreements Mexico has signed ring hollow. Their feelings might be summarized by Speed's quote about how the Zapatista movement came to distrust the state and its role as the custodian of rights: "Rights-based claims can be seduced into a system where legal process is an empty signifier for the resolution of immediate conflict, while the heavier architecture of power that created those conflicts remains unquestioned" (Speed 2007:180).

    For Eleonai, Juan Gabriel, and Ramiro, the power of the human rights discourses they interacted with is double-edged. A sincere belief in the connotative, moral authority of human rights gave them and many others the confidence to support a powerful social movement which swept through the city of Oaxaca like a wildfire in the summer and fall of 2006. Their disbelief at what had happened to them, of the false charges, of their torture and the apparent impunity for those who acted against them, and of the total stagnation of the Mexican justice system has left them in a state of suspension. While Juan Gabriel and Eleonai are out on bail and Ramiro has fled the country, they are still imprisoned by fear, doubt, and anger. Juan Gabriel relates:

    In spite of the fact that we have demonstrated that our fingerprints were not on those arms, that we demonstrated that we were tortured—because we have submitted torture charges—that I was beaten so badly my ear drum broke, that one of us had cigarette burns on his chest, that we were terribly beaten, that we were treated so horribly in order to make us completely afraid—in spite of all of this, nothing has happened with our cases. We continue to be accused.

    ... This has also affected our families, like the wife of Ramiro, Ruth, and our families. We had to come forward and make public denouncements about what happened, to do interviews with the press, to go to the official human rights offices of the government, to go to the League of Human Rights, with Amnesty International, with international human rights organizations. We had to do this because we had to declare what had happened. We had to declare again and again what happened. We have pictures, an infinity of photos showing what they did to us and know in spite of all this, the government says, you are accused of a crime and that's the end of it.

    The experiences of Juan Gabriel, Eleonai, and Ramiro can be multiplied by hundreds to include all of those who were treated similarly by state police and security forces in 2006 and 2007. The families of all of those imprisoned as well as of the 23 or more people assassinated will never forget their treatment by the state government. The discourses of human rights which helped them to take to the streets and to take over large parts of the city are also connected to a very present moral outrage which is going to fuel future actions in the city of Oaxaca.

    When the disconnect between consciousness of rights and the inability to act on them becomes very large and continues for long periods of time, deep-seated movements for social justice are likely to emerge and to continue burning long into the future. These words of Eleonai in July of 2007 signal the fertile ground for an ongoing rebellion and social movement.

    All of this that happened to us and many others has resulted in a lot of disillusionment and sadness for everything that happened ... After the death of José Jiménez Colmenares we understood what was going on. There were more than 20 other deaths after that.

    This has put us in a situation of despair with the Mexican system of justice, the federal as well as the state one. Our justice system is controlled by a government that is super corrupt. We are profoundly disillusioned with the system we live under. We have seen so many injustices committed in the light of day and now this situation has become normalized. It is still happening. Just yesterday there were more detentions, more tortures. We have seen how this works right here in Santa Lucia. We saw the same police running with arms (a reference to the death of Bradley Will and others on Oct. 28 in Santa Lucia where Eleonai lives).

    We want to get rid of this whole system, this system of assassins. The only way we can really relax and calm down is if this government leaves. Until there is justice for all of us, the tortured, the unjustly imprisoned, for the families of those who were assassinated, until all are punished, all of these who carried out these acts against the people, until that happens, we cannot rest.

    Conclusion: Possibilities and Ironies of Rights Discourses

    In May and June of 2007, Ramiro Aragón and his family came directly into the orbit of my daily life. Through prior family connections Ramiro and a member of my family knew one another. Through this tie, I began to talk with Ramiro, his wife Ruth, and with their extended families in Oaxaca. They are all engaged in an ongoing process of trying to draw continued attention to the cases of Ramiro, Elionai, Juan Gabriel, and others and to receive recognition, restitution, and justice from within the Mexican legal system. So far, these efforts have not born fruit. In the meantime, Ramiro and his family have filed a petition for political asylum in the United States. Their hopes are that if they receive political asylum, that this will give them a broader platform for working to secure justice from the Mexican legal system for the torture, illegal detention, and imprisonment of Ramiro on false charges—a tactic that was used on hundreds of people who participated in the Oaxaca social movement of 2006.

    While the political situation in Oaxaca has not changed as of this writing—Governor Ruiz remains in power due to a political deal struck between the PAN (National Action Party) presidential administration of Felipe Calderón and the PRI (Institutional Revolution Party)—the Oaxaca social movement of 2006 lives on. In June, July, and August of 2007 and again in 2008, the APPO, the COMO, Sección 22, and others remobilized to sit-in the Zocalo, held the Guelaguetza popular and tried to stop the official Guelaguetza, took to the streets in marches, and organized forums to discuss the wide range of rights people in Oaxaca are struggling for.

    The tenacity of the movement and its dogged determination to continue despite ongoing militarization in Oaxaca (see LASA 2007) suggests the staying power of the rights discourses people took over the city to defend and the historical depth and complexity of the movement organizing that came before the emergence of the APPO in 2006 (see Magaña 2008). An additional factor that can be pointed to in the persistence of the movement is the effectiveness of the form in which rights were defended—through oral testimonials on the radio, on television, and on the streets of Oaxaca. What this suggests is the importance of mobilizing rights discourses through the specific means of oral testimonies.

    While transformation of the Oaxacan state political system does not seem possible at the moment, the political and cultural space that opened for six months in Oaxaca in 2006 created a deep synergy between rights discourses that had been circulating for almost two decades among a limited public and a long-held culture of testimonial orality held by the majority. The Oaxaca social movement is a case study in how a variety of lived experiences (urban, immigrant, indigenous, women's, youth, teachers, union members) and of varied cultural, social, and geo-political positions achieved dialogue across these significant differences.

    The verdict is still out on the long-term outcome of the Oaxaca social movement of 2006, but what we can already clearly see is the resonant power of rights discourses when harnessed with a cultural form that actively empowers those to speak who have been silenced, and makes what they have to say understandable to others who are hearing their voices for the first time.

    End Notes

    1. During the summer of 2006, I was in Oaxaca in July and August with the intention of filming a wide range of activities from weddings, mayordomías, and local dances to processes of communal labor known as tequio, and medical plant use for a course I was to co-teach with four Mixtec community outreach workers on "Indigenous Immigrants in Oregon." We had mapped out the curriculum and planned to show short video clips in relation to particular units. I was also visiting with a group of colleagues from the University of Oregon who were seeking to forge stronger links between the Center for the Study of Women in Society and several institutions in Oaxaca.
    2. The state-sponsored Guelaguetza which has its origins in the "Homenaje Racial," was described as "a great festival of the races to the Sultaness of the South." It was to "consist of 'Racial Ambassadoresses' and their indigenous entourages, supposedly representing a discrete cultural territory within the state." One of the main features was that entourages were to be made up of "men and women who still conserved the autochthonous garments of their race" (Poole 2004:-76-77). This event, as noted by Deborah Poole, was a way for the post-revolutionary state to consolidate a state "culture," but also to define Oaxaca as consisting of "different regional races" (2004:78). See Poole 2007 for a description of the contemporary Guelaguetza and the alternative Guelaguetza popular.
    3. Numerous scholars have analyzed how the historical and cultural contexts within which rights discourses operate can deeply influence their reception, outcome, and role in the creation of local political cultures (Postero 2007, Rappaport 2005, Speed 2007, Warren and Jackson 2002, Yudice 2003).
    4. This and all other names are pseudonyms unless specifically noted in order to protect the identity of the speakers.
    5. The repression in Oaxaca was not broadly covered in the press until Bradley Will, an independent American journalist who worked for Indymedia was shot and killed on October 27, 2006 in Santa Lucía del Camino, just outside of Oaxaca City. That same day, four other Oaxacans were killed as well, Emilio Alonso Fabián, Esteba Ruiz, Esteban López Zurita, and Eudacia Olivera Díaz.

    Lynn Stephen is professor and chair of the Department of Anthropology at the University of Oregon. She is the author of four books including Zapotec Women.


    Archann


    Wednesday, July 16, 2008

    Wonder Woman:Spirit of Truth

    DC published an oversized graphic novel Wonder Woman:Spirit of Truth in which the amazon princess questions her roll as a superhero. She goes to an unnamed middle eastern country in order to help the populace, but they merely stone her as a foreign, half-nude temptress of Satan. She has similar reactions in other countries (though not as extreme) and decides to visit her buddy Clark Kent and ask how he deals with the issue of being "other". His answer: blend in. Take a secret identity. She tries it, likes it, and returns to this unnamed middle eastern country, this time covered from head to foot in order to blend in. This can't last, though, and in a very dramatic scene she drops her abbaya and steps forth as the shining godess she is.

    Exxon puts squeeze on Venuzuela

    [Thanks to Nora for this post]

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7462712.stm

    Venezuelans' assets frozen by US

    The two men are accused of raising funds for Hezbollah

    The US Treasury Department has frozen the US assets of two Venezuelan nationals for alleged links with the radical Islamist group, Hezbollah.

    The men include one of the country's official representatives in Lebanon.

    Ghazi Nasr Din, director of political interests of the Venezuelan embassy in Lebanon, is accused of raising funds for the Islamist group.

    The other man, Fawzi Kan'an, rejected the accusations as baseless in a BBC interview.

    Mr Kan'an operates two travel agencies in Caracas that have also been blacklisted by the US.

    The latest move also prohibits Americans from doing business with the two men.

    The move is likely to add to the existing rift between the Bush Administration and the government of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, correspondents say....

    [end]

    =========================================

    http://uk.reuters.com/article/rbssEnergyNews/idUKN1338614020080713

    Venezuela's Chavez says oil could reach $300 Mon Jul 14, 2008 MARACAIBO

    Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said on Sunday oil prices could hit $300 per barrel if U.S. oil company Exxon Mobil again freezes Venezuelan assets in a dispute over a nationalized oil project.

    Exxon won court orders freezing $12 billion in assets held by Venezuelan state oil company PDVSA after the OPEC nation took over a multi-billion dollar oil project, heightening tensions with the United States and helping to raise oil prices.

    A London court later overturned Exxon's temporary asset freeze, but Chavez said the company could seek further action against Venezuela.

    "If they freeze us there will be no more oil for the United States, and the price will go to $300," Chavez said during a televised meeting with Caribbean and Central American leaders as part of an energy cooperation scheme called Petrocaribe.

    Chavez also said oil prices were being influenced by a "speculative bubble", the collapse of which could send prices as low as $70 per barrel....


    Petrocaribe Building ‘Anti-Crisis, Anti-Hunger Shield’

    By Humberto Márquez Seventeen countries in Central America and the Caribbean are to make down payments of only 40 percent on Venezuelan oil, while cooperating to expand their food supply, and calling on the North to take measures to curb speculation on futures markets, which is resulting in surging crude prices. "Petrocaribe must become an anti-crisis shield to protect us from hunger," said Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez who hosted the Fifth Summit of this South-South alliance. The Dominican Republic’s President Leonel Fernández proposed creating a bloc of the 57 poorest nations in the South who are net oil importers to lobby for a global cooperation agreement with oil producers, and to demand changes in the rules for futures markets. Prime Minister Ralph Gonsalves of St. Vincent and the Grenadines, for his part, successfully argued that Petrocaribe address the issue of fertilisers, which have tripled in price in the last three years, threatening food production on Caribbean islands. Not only Energy ministers will attend Petrocaribe meetings in future. At the summit, held in the city of Maracaibo, 600 kilometres west of Caracas, a council of Agriculture ministers was created, which is to meet for the first time on Jul. 30 in Tegucigalpa. Petrocaribe was created in 2005 as a Venezuelan initiative to supply fuels, as well as extend payment facilities and logistical and technical help, to neighbouring countries that are net oil importers. The beneficiaries are Antigua and Barbuda, Bahamas, Belize, Cuba, Dominica, Dominican Republic, Grenada, Guatemala, Guyana, Haiti, Honduras, Jamaica, Nicaragua, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, and Suriname. Costa Rica was present as an observer at this summit. Under the Petrocaribe agreement, Venezuela has been sending 92,000 barrels per day (bpd) to Cuba and has made available up to 135,000 bpd for the other countries, although the effective demand has been 86,000 bpd, according to Venezuelan Energy Minister Rafael Ramírez. In three years, Venezuela has supplied 59 million barrels of crude to its Petrocaribe partners, for which they paid 50 percent of its value within 90 days and the rest on credit over 25 years, with a two-year grace period and an interest rate of one percent a year, saving them 921 million dollars. Venezuela is also developing joint venture companies to provide infrastructure for storage and distribution costing 550 million dollars, and has invested another 100 million dollars for social purposes in these countries. BEANS AND FERTILISERS But from now on, and as long as the benchmark price for North Sea Brent crude remains above 100 dollars a barrel, beneficiaries will be paying only 40 percent of their oil bill within 90 days, with the rest on the same terms as before. Chávez announced that if the price of oil reaches 200 dollars a barrel, only 30 percent would have to be paid in 90 days. "If things carry on like this, after a certain point we will have to think about freezing prices," said Chávez, without elaborating on what he had in mind. Furthermore, Chávez encouraged the Central American and Caribbean countries to make their down payments for oil "with cattle, beans or tourism services." Gonsalves scored a point with his message about fertilisers, which "cost an average of 268 dollars a tonne in 2005, 405 dollars in 2007, 875 in 2008, and is being quoted at 998 dollars a tonne for 2009," he said. At those prices, "our farmers cannot produce, and if they do the prices will be higher than for imported food, increasing our dependency," he said. Venezuela, which produces two million tonnes of urea a year, offered to sell 100,000 tonnes a year to its Petrocaribe partners at a 40 percent discount, half to be paid on receipt of the product and half when the crop is harvested. President Álvaro Colom of Guatemala -- which became a full member of Petrocaribe at this summit -- announced that his country would produce food for export to Venezuela, which imports more than 60 percent of its food. Petrocaribe has "a new vision, based on complementing our economies on the basis of solidarity and fair trade," said Colom. In the first quarter of 2008, Guatemala paid 749 million dollars for fuel, 63 percent more than it spent in the same quarter of 2007. Costa Rican President Oscar Arias, who had a brief verbal spat with Chávez 15 months ago, came to Petrocaribe after his country spent 838 million dollars on oil imports between January and April this year, an amount 88 percent higher than for the same period in 2007. "BLOC OF 57" PROPOSED Dominican President Fernández elaborated on "casino capitalism", or speculating on futures markets, which he said "has become a destabilising force in the global economy." He pointed out that a barrel of crude cost 10 dollars in 1998, and last week reached 147 dollars, an increase of over 1,300 percent. But this year the price has risen by 10 percent a month, fuelled mainly by speculators. Some days up to 850,000 contracts (for 1,000 barrels apiece) are traded -- 850 million barrels are bought and sold -- on paper, because the actual daily consumption of crude worldwide is ten times lower. Furthermore, Fernández stressed, a contract buyer pays only five percent of the face value before he or she has possession of it and can sell it again, for a similar outlay. "The 57 poor countries of the South that are net importers of oil should form a bloc and insist at the United Nations that the minimum payment for those paper purchases should be at least 50 percent," said Fernández. The Dominican president also said: "we thank Venezuela for its solidarity, but we must not leave it to make all the running alone." He said the 57 low-income oil-importing countries have seen their fuel bills increase by 40 billion dollars over the last year as a result of the doubling of crude prices. That is barely three percent of the 1.3 trillion dollars by which the incomes of oil-producing countries have risen over the same period. Therefore, the proposed 57-nation bloc and its allies should work to persuade the oil- producing countries to restore the amount lost by the poorest countries, through soft loans or investment in development, he said. The outcome document of the Fifth Petrocaribe Summit urges the regulatory authorities of the futures markets in the New York and London stock markets to take the necessary measures to eliminate speculation as a factor in the international prices of oil and other commodities. Venezuela, for its part, made a commitment, to set aside 50 cents of each dollar for every barrel of oil exported outside Petrocaribe at a price over 100 dollars, in order to create a subregional fund for food security initiatives. Such a fund would accumulate around one million dollars a day. Finally, Chávez proposed handing over a crude oil exploration and exploitation block in the Orinoco Heavy Oil Belt -- in the southeast of the country -- to an association of the state oil companies of the Petrocaribe partners, for their consumption needs. He said Venezuela in turn could build fertiliser plants or refineries in several of these countries.

    US plans to station diplomats in Iran for first time since 1979

    The Guardian has learned that an announcement will be made in the next month to establish a US interests section - a halfway house to setting up a full embassy. The move will see US diplomats stationed in the country

    Lumpin Prollie Blog...A Groovy Blog...with Really Groovy People...

    http://lumpinprollie.blogspot.com/ Are you "Uniquely American"? Do you have 2.5 jobs to keep your home that you never see? Have you worked your ass off to get your BA at night school only to find out that today's BA is yesterday's HS Diploma? I want to hear from you - I want to know how you get by! What do you do to pay the leeches - I mean bills? This is a forum of ideas. You can stay anonymous if you wish, I want to hear what you have to do just to keep afloat in today's sinking economy.

    Alexander Dismisses Economic Plans of Obama and McCain

    Stewart A. Alexander Nominee for Vice President Socialist Party USA Candidate for Vice President Peace and Freedom Party July 16, 2008 Today, Vice Presidential Candidate Stewart A. Alexander attacked the economic programs of Democratic Presidential Candidate Barack Obama and Republican Presidential Candidate John McCain; Alexander dismissed the economic proposals of both candidates as “campaign baiting to win votes.” Alexander says the U.S. economy needs much more than what either candidate has presented, “the U.S. economy needs a total makeover, and a little makeup will not work.” Recently, the U.S. economy has become the number one concern with a majority of Americans; and as President Bush attempts to hold together the U.S. economy during his final six months in office, it is likely it will become the responsibility of the next president to offer a national plan that will move the nation forward and to restore the confidence of the American people. Today, working people are concerned with a broad range of issues that are presently threatening their financial well-being; those issues include job security, smaller paychecks, affordable housing, soaring gasoline and food prices, health care cost, the value of the U.S. dollar, inflation and the expanding U.S. recession. Most working families are earning less than what they earned when President Bush became president in 2000; and with all the promises that were made by the Democrats in the House and Senate in 2006, conditions have gone from bad to worse for working people over the past 18 months. The price of gasoline has increased by more than $2.00 per gallon and the Democrats have chosen to invest in war while millions of Americans are finding it difficult to keep up with the rising cost of food. The campaign rhetoric of Obama and McCain is failing to connect with a majority of working people; both candidates represent political parties that have failed to ease the massive loss of jobs nationwide. Recent employment data indicates that more than 320,000 jobs have been lost in the past six months and more than 79,000 for the months of May and June of this year. Both McCain and Obama are promising to invest in clean and energy efficient technologies to create jobs and to revamp foreign policies to protect U.S. jobs; however, both candidates represent political parties that are whole selling jobs to foreign markets and have only invested in new technologies that are in the interest of special interest groups and technologies that are military related. Both McCain and Obama have failed to offer any viable plans for the battered U.S. economy. Obama recently proposed his own version of a national stimulus package that would amount to another $50 billion. The $168 billion stimulus package that was presented by the Bush administration has failed to stimulate the sagging U.S. economy; and it is likely Obama’s stimulus proposal would only create an additional tax burden on working people and add to the national debt. Obama is also calling for government subsidies for health care, college and for those retired; however, his plan would require him to tax the nation’s top earners and the special interest groups that have helped his campaign the most. With less than four months before the 2008 Election, both McCain and Obama have failed to offer an economic road map that will alter the course of the U.S. economy; a course that has many signs indicating more trouble ahead. Stewart Alexander says, “The U.S. economy needs a fundamental transformation, focusing on production for need not profit;” as stated in the National Platform of Socialist Party USA. Alexander says the campaign of his U.S. Presidential running mate, Brian Moore, is not about reforming the process, “our campaign is about changing the process.” Unlike McCain and Obama, Presidential Candidate Brian Moore is demanding the immediate withdrawal of the United States from the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the Central America Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA), and Moore opposes the creation of a widened Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA). As the presidential nominee for Socialist Party USA and a presidential candidate seeking the nomination of the Peace and Freedom Party, Brian Moore supports the platforms of both the socialist parties. Both socialist parties are calling for worker and community ownership and control of corporations within the framework of a decentralized and democratically determined economic plan. To the contrary, Obama and McCain support an economy that is based upon corporate profits, dominated by the capitalist ruling class and a few massive corporations. Brian Moore is also calling for a minimum wage of $15 per hour, indexed to the cost of living. The presidential candidate has also presented a plan that will provide full employment and he supports the provisions of a livable guaranteed annual income. Moore and Alexander believes it is possible to provide health care for all; Alexander says all financial and insurance institutions must be socially owned and operated by a democratically-controlled national banking authority, which should include credit unions, mutual insurance cooperatives, and cooperative state banks. Alexander says the makeover that is needed for the U.S. economy will be much broader than the New Deal that was introduced during the Roosevelt administration; the New Deal helped to pull the nation out of the Great Depression. Socialists believe only a global transformation from capitalism to democratic socialism will provide the conditions for international peace, justice, and economic cooperation based on the large-scale transfer of resources and technology from the developed to the developing countries. Two things are for certain, there is no easy fix for the ailing U.S. economy, and Barack Obama and John McCain are not prepared to make the necessary changes that will protect the interests of working people. Comparing the economic plans of the two candidates, it does not matter whether McCain or Obama is elected in the 2008 Election; the economic programs that have been outlined by both candidates will only produce minor differences to the present Bush White House. For more information search the Web for: Stewart A. Alexander; Independent Voters Rejecting Democrats and Republicans; The Economy Needs a Total Makeover by Monica Hill. http://www.socialism.com/fsarticles/vol29no2/economy29201.html http://labs.daylife.com/journalist/stewart_a._alexander http://StewartAlexanderCares.com http://www.vote-socialist.org/ http://peaceandfreedom.org/home/ http://www.sp-usa.org/ http://www.dcpoliticalreport.com/pres08.htm http://www.politics1.com/p2008.htm

    PSL completes Iowa petitioning effort

    The Party for Socialism and Liberation has completed its petitiong in Iowa, collecting over 1,900 signatures in a state that requires 1,500. According to the latest release on the matter, petitioners recieved generally positive response during their drive:

    Members of the Chicago branch of the PSL made weekend trips to Iowa City, Des Moines, Waterloo and Davenport to collect signatures.

    The message put forward by PSL volunteers—that an alternative is needed to the program of war, racism and exploitation shared by the two dominant capitalist parties—was well received in Iowa. Many young people were eager to get involved in some way and were in agreement with a political program of peace, jobs, equality, health care, housing and socialism.

    In every city where the PSL petitioned, there were dozens of people who expressed interest in a genuinely independent and fighting campaign.

    As IPR noted earlier, the PSL’s presidential candidate Gloria La Riva recently visited Iowa together with Chicago PSL activists to participate in the sandbagging efforts there last month. The majority of the petitioning was done in May, prior to the regional floods.


    PERU: Social Rebellion Spreads Nationwide

    By Milagros Salazar LIMA The Peruvian capital, faced with rapidly rising cost of living, was the epicentre of protests calling for fulfilment of social and wage agreements signed by the government. Although only one violent incident occurred, some 200 demonstrators were arrested. Protests by farmers and indigenous communities early last week were joined by a mass demonstration by teachers, construction workers and state employees in Lima and several other cities and towns. The general strike also included roadblocks. New street protests were called for Thursday in some Amazon regions, in response to decrees issued by President Alan García, making it easier for private investors to enter the territories of native communities. The decrees were set in motion thanks to the powers granted by the legislative branch to the executive under the free trade agreement (FTA) signed with the United States. Political analysts say the government has exceeded its legal powers. "This is not a strike by terrorists, or people seeking to destabilise the country, nor Chavistas [supporters of Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez]," said the secretary general of the National Confederation of Peruvian Workers (CGTP), Mario Huamán, stressing that these were peaceful demonstrations. The only exception was in the Amazon region of Madre de Dios, where the seat of local government was set ablaze. For his part, Interior Minister Luis Alva Castro called the day of protest a failure, and said that 11,000 police officers were deployed and that 200 demonstrators had been arrested. The government also mobilised a number of military troops, triggering condemnation from social leaders and political analysts who consider that the armed forces lack the training and experience to deal with demonstrations. "We can learn from every situation, and the government accepts its own lesson, without triumphalism or defeatism, because it knows that it must continue to work, as it has set out to do, for the poor of Peru," said García when he summed up the impact of the strike and hinted that he recognised that many of his promises had been broken. The CGTP is demanding urgent measures to curb the cost of living, pay the wage increases agreed with workers, and change the free-market economic model imposed by García. With respect to the economic model, the CGTP wants the government to tax the windfall profits of mining companies arising from the sharp rise of mineral prices on the international market. This was one of García’s electoral campaign promises, along with a wide-ranging tax reform plan that would ensure a more equitable distribution of resources. Regional labour organisations -- also participating in the strike -- are invoking not only the CGTP’s demands, but also the fulfilment of several undertakings signed by the executive branch. In the two-and-a-half years that the Peruvian Aprista Party (PAP) has been in government, García has signed 35 agreements with social organisations and local and regional authorities, of which, according to the Conflict Prevention Unit of the Presidency of the Council of Ministers (PCM), more than 60 percent have been fulfilled. However, the protest organisers say only between 15 and 30 percent of the agreements have been fulfilled. "It’s a hoax. The government calls for dialogue when we protest, and then doesn’t do as it promised because it prefers to maintain centralised power," the head of workers’ organisations in the southern Andean region province of Cusco, Efraín Yepez, told IPS. According to Yepez, the government has only fulfilled 15 percent of the agreements reached with his region. The main demands of Cusco are that construction of a gas pipeline and an international airport get under way. "I understand their desperation, but we are making progress with the technical plans for these projects, because we must invest responsibly. Everything is part of a process," PCM coordination adviser Juan Manuel Figueroa told IPS. A similar situation exists in the Arequipa region, which borders Cusco. The government says it has fulfilled an average of 70 percent of the agreements, which include the construction of the southern gas pipeline and the Majes Siguas II irrigation project. But social organisations and local authorities report that the projects are delayed. For instance, in the case of Majes Siguas II, the government promised that the tendering process to choose a contractor for its construction would be completed by August, but the project’s economic feasibility study has not yet been done. The PCM said that several of the projects that the regions are complaining about are now in the hands of Proinversión -- a government agency promoting private investment in the country -- and offices of the executive branch including the Transport and Finance Ministries. "They are no longer in the hands of the PCM," Figueroa said. Regardless of which government department is responsible for the delays and non-fulfilment, it is clear that the regime has become discredited. In July 2007, the executive branch committed itself in writing to the Federation of Administrative Workers in the Education Sector (FENTASE) to pay the workers an increase of 100 sols (35 dollars) a month, but one year later the promise is still on ice. FENTASE went on indefinite strike more than 20 days ago. "They have not included us in the national budget, although we are the worst paid state workers. Why do they make promises they aren’t going to keep?" asked FENTASE secretary Juan Silva Julián. Figueroa’s reply was that, owing to the international context, the government decided to prioritise "the welfare of the majority, by subsidising oil," in order to mitigate the rise in food prices, before dealing with sectoral demands. He also said that a technical proposal to make it possible to pay workers the wage increases promised has been sent to the Finance Ministry. Analyst Carlos Reyna told IPS that one of the main hurdles to the government’s fulfilment of its commitments to social organisations is the free-market economic regime that it is trying to maintain, and its centralisation of power. Other reasons have to do with President García himself. "Part of the population find him disagreeable, and he is aggressive in his dealings with social leaders. That does not help in conflict management," Reyna said. In fact, the government broadcast a publicity spot that portrays Vladimiro Montesinos -- an adviser to former President Alberto Fujimori (1990-2000) - - who is now in jail for crimes against humanity and corruption, in order to discredit the strikers. The spot shows part of Fujimori’s ongoing trial, in which Montesinos says that the United Trade Union of Education Workers of Peru (SUTEP) never went on strike in his day. SUTEP publicly denied Montesinos’ statement -- reporting that during the Fujimori administration the union had held as many as six strikes -- and protested the possibility that state funding had been used for the spot. A local television channel showed an invoice for producing the video spot on which the PCM appears as the client. Prime Minister Jorge del Castillo said that was a mistake, and that the PAP had really paid for it. While the government shot itself in the foot on last week, social conflicts keep growing. According to the governmental Ombudsman’s Office, 16 new conflicts started in June and six were reactivated, bringing the total to 86. In addition, the CGTP announced that on Nov. 4 it would convene a National Peoples’ Assembly to broaden the social base and consolidate the opposition.

    Colombia: Celebrate the Release, Not the Regime

    By Amy Goodman

    It is fantastic to see Ingrid Betancourt free. She was the Green Party candidate running for president of Colombia against Alvaro Uribe in 2002 when she was kidnapped by the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) just days after appealing to the FARC to stop its campaign of kidnapping. She was held hostage for more than six years and was released last week along with 14 others. The flamboyant rescue operation by the Colombian army has been splashed across newspapers and TV screens globally, but the celebration of their release should not be confused with celebration of the Colombian government.

    I reached Manuel Rozental at his home in Canada. He’s a Colombian doctor and human-rights activist who fled Colombia after receiving several threats on his life: “We’re talking about the regime with the worst human-rights record in the continent and the army with the worst human-rights record in the continent with the greatest U.S. support, including the contractors or mercenaries. So the fact that this regime was involved in this liberation does not and should not and cannot cover up the fact that it is a horrendous regime.”

    Colombia has been the largest recipient of U.S. foreign aid outside of Israel and Egypt. Amnesty International USA has called for a halt to all support for Colombia, saying “ ... torture, massacres, ‘disappearances’ and killings of noncombatants are widespread, and collusion between the armed forces and paramilitary groups continues to this day. In 2006, U.S. assistance to Colombia amounted to an estimated $728 million, approximately 80 percent of which was military and police assistance.”

    John McCain was in Colombia on July 2, the day Betancourt was released along with U.S. military contractors and Colombian soldiers and police officers who were held. McCain’s links to Colombia are worth noting. The Huffington Post reports that a McCain fundraising event was just given by billionaire Carl Lindner of Cincinnati, the former CEO of Chiquita Brands International. Chiquita, under Lindner’s watch, paid and armed one of the most notorious right-wing paramilitary groups in Colombia, the United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC). The U.S. government fined Chiquita $25 million for its funding and arming of the AUC, designated a “foreign terrorist organization” by the U.S. State Department as early as 2001. One of the conditions of the deal was that Chiquita would not have to name the top executives involved.

    The Huffington Post and The New York Times recently reported another McCain connection to Colombia. His top adviser, Charlie Black, resigned in March as chairman of the Washington, D.C., lobbying firm BKSH & Associates in order to work full time on the McCain campaign. Since 1998, BKSH has earned $1.8 million representing Occidental Petroleum, which has controversial oil operations in Colombia. Occidental worked with a military contractor and the Colombian military to counter pipeline attacks. In December 1998, the Colombian military dropped a bomb on the village of Santa Domingo, killing 11 adults and seven children. According to the Los Angeles Times, Occidental “supplied, directly or through contractors, troop transportation, planning facilities and fuel to Colombian military aircraft, including the helicopter crew accused of dropping the bomb.”

    It was a photographed hug that grabbed the attention of Inter Press Service, an independent, global news agency. Soon after Betancourt was released, IPS published a story, “The General Ingrid Hugged,” about the national commander of the Colombian army, Gen. Mario Montoya. Montoya has been linked to a secret commando group from the late 1970s that bombed and massacred political opponents of the right wing. While the initial flurry of photo ops, with Betancourt hugging Montoya and standing with Uribe, has boosted public acclaim for the Uribe administration and the Colombian military, Betancourt is beginning to assert her traditionally oppositional status. She told RFI radio in France: “President Uribe, and not just President Uribe but Colombia as a whole, should change some things. ... I think the time has come to change the language of radicalism, extremism and hatred, the very strong words that cause deep hurt to a human being. ... There comes a time when one has to agree to talk to the people you hate.”

    Amy Goodman is the host of “Democracy Now!,” a daily international TV/radio news hour airing on more than 700 stations in North America.

    © 2008 Amy Goodman


    Chávez, Correa, Ortega kick off ambitious oil works

    [Thanks to cent for this link]

    Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez and his Ecuadorian counterpart Rafael Correa launched on Tuesday a plan to build the largest petrochemical plant in the South American Pacific during a ceremony that turned into mini-summit due to the attendance at the very last minute of Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega.

    Concomitantly, the left-wing presidents will meet to discuss Latin American integration and the sensitive issue of Colombia, with which the three of them once broke or froze relations following a raid by the Colombian army on a camp of the Colombian Revolutionary Armed Forces (FARC) last March 1st in Ecuadorian territory.

    The project prompted by the Ecuadorian and Venezuelan presidents amounts to at least USD 6.6 billion, with a capacity to process 300,000 bpd of oil. The works are expected to be completed by 2012, according to both governments.

    Chávez and Ortega plan to return to their respective countries on this very Tuesday.


    PSL completes petitioning for presidential ballot access in Iowa

    Strong support for peace, jobs, health care, housing

    On July 6, the Party for Socialism and Liberation successfully completed petitioning in Iowa to get on the ballot for President and Vice President in that state. Over 1,900 signatures were collected.

    Members of the Chicago branch of the PSL made weekend trips to Iowa City, Des Moines, Waterloo and Davenport to collect signatures.

    The message put forward by PSL volunteers—that an alternative is needed to the program of war, racism and exploitation shared by the two dominant capitalist parties—was well received in Iowa. Many young people were eager to get involved in some way and were in agreement with a political program of peace, jobs, equality, health care, housing and socialism.

    In every city where the PSL petitioned, there were dozens of people who expressed interest in a genuinely independent and fighting campaign.

    In Iowa City, home to the University of Iowa, several young people and students were enthusiastic about helping to get a Socialist party like the PSL on the ballot.

    In Des Moines, many people signed saying that they wanted to see more candidates for universal health care on the ballot.

    In strongly working-class Waterloo, signers responded to the PSL's call to put grassroots antiwar and anti-racist activists on the ballot.

    Signers in Davenport were encouraged by PSL’s platform of full aid and relief to all the victims of the recent flooding in the Midwest.

    The bulk of petitioning was completed in May. In June, floods devastated Iowa and many surrounding states. PSL presidential candidate Gloria La Riva traveled to Iowa with PSL Chicago organizers on June 16 and 17 to assist flood victims and report on the ongoing disaster.

    Members of the Chicago branch of the PSL will be petitioning in Wisconsin in August to get Gloria La Riva and Eugene Puryear on the ballot there as well.


    Tuesday, July 15, 2008

    ∞♥∞

    A young couple seeks refuge under a bridge during the Tiananmen Square Massacre on June 5, 1989. Photographer: Liu Heung Shing

    Biofuels and the Global Food Crisis - Who Is to Blame?

    U.S.-Brazil tension, a relatively recent development, resurfaced during the UN World Food Summit in Rome on June 3-5, encouraging the booming Brazilian sugar-based ethanol market to increase its new development projects. This rift represents a de facto counter move against the far less-efficient U.S. model predicated on corn-based ethanol production. Following the summit, Brazilian officials began a weeklong tour, stopping in Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia, during which they discussed a set of commercial agreements that will boost multilateral cooperation with several African countries. The trade agreements, projected to begin in 2009, include an expansion in ethanol investment, urbanism, air and sea transport, and cooperation in professional training between the two regions.

    In a statement that appeared in Brazzil magazine, Brazilian Secretary of Development Ivan Ramalho remarked that he hoped the meetings would enhance trade with other countries in order to diminish Brazil’s over-reliance on the U.S. market. Brazil’s recent trade initiatives with other developing countries have emerged largely due to the reluctance of some developed nations to lower trade subsidies. This impedes Brazil’s ability to trade, adding significantly to the current debate over rising food prices. In an official statement released after the first set of meetings, Michel Alaby, Secretary General of the Arab Brazilian Chamber of Commerce, called for solidarity among countries suffering from rising food prices and demanded that developed countries, especially the U.S. and Europe, eliminate international trade barriers in the agricultural sector (Brazzil). With the emerging agreements, Brazilian officials hope to call attention to the U.S.’ highly inefficient corn-based ethanol production at the height of a snowballing food crisis. The government aspires to be a strong actor in the midst of the food crisis and plans to show the rest of the world the benefits of Brazil’s efficient sugar ethanol market, while simultaneously insisting that it is executing projects stalling the destruction of the Amazon rainforest.

    The Ramifications of American Subsidies and the Growing World Food Crisis On June 16, following petitions from the Brazilian government, the World Trade Organization (WTO) condemned the U.S. for its agricultural subsidies that unfairly favor domestic producers. The WTO largely blamed Washington’s practices for the world food crisis that may leave an additional 100 million people hungry by the end of 2008. The WTO criticized U.S. actions as “an attempt to disrespect international commercial regulation with subsidies that drastically reduced domestic prices and could have been seriously damaging for developing nations like Brazil” (New York Times).

    During the Food Summit, which was hosted by the UN Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO), U.S. representatives argued in favor of their protectionist policies, claiming that biofuels are environmentally safer than petroleum, and also benefit farmers, entrepreneurs, and consumers. Under pressure from formidable agricultural lobby groups, the U.S. Congress recently placed a 54-cent per gallon tariff on sugar-based ethanol, hoping to encourage domestic ethanol production. As a result of the tariff, U.S. ethanol production increased and Brazilian ethanol exports fell significantly in 2007. Efforts to remove the tariffs have faced strong resistance from both corn and sugar lobbyists, impeding any kind of remedial actions on surging grain prices. As economist C. Ford Runge, a commodity and trade specialist at the Center for International Food and Agricultural Policy, confirms, “If you want to take some of the pressure off the U.S. market, the obvious thing to do is lower that tariff and let some Brazilian ethanol come in.” Supporters of this policy believe that increasing Brazilian ethanol production would push down overall energy costs.

    Since the Summit, the UN has called on the international community to increase its assistance to developing countries severely affected by the current food crisis. UN officials have planned visits to several African countries to discuss possible food security solutions. In addition, the FAO published several reports criticizing the U.S. and Europe for unnecessarily subsidizing crops and inadvertently driving up food prices while shifting food production in less-developed countries where small farmers cannot effectively compete. The Guardian noted from the reports that the U.S. government is currently spending $7 billion annually on subsidies, while the European Union spends around ∈43 billion ($67.5 billion) (BBC News). A striking example can be seen in France, where the average French cow receives more financial support than half the world’s population earns daily. With rich countries dominating global trade, greatly affecting ethanol, FAO General Director Jacques Diouf says that funding for agricultural programs in developing countries increasingly suffers, with agricultural aid to poor countries having dropped 56 percent from 1980 to 2005. “Now more than ever private decisions being made about food production into ethanol are affecting all parts of the globe, with little response from the leaders that could do the most,” Diouf observed.

    One main concern over how biofuel policy disrupts the market is the current excessive power that interest groups have in the debate on subsidies in developed nations (Runge). Instead of catering to special interests, U.S. politicians would be well advised to cooperate with other countries. While the UN works diligently to halt the growing food shortage, world leaders refuse to amend restrictions on food exports. This negligence is inexcusable on both economic and humanitarian grounds.

    Not All Ethanol is The Same In defense of sugar-based ethanol, Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva stated that the U.S. misguidedly produces corn for ethanol instead of other agricultural products, while keeping subsidies high to benefit U.S. multinational companies. Lula argues that this is another case where the U.S. keeps developing countries from playing an influential role in the world economy. He claimed, “I am sorry to see that many of those who blame ethanol, including from sugarcane, for the high price of food are the same ones who for decades have maintained protectionist policies to the detriment of farmers in poor countries and of consumers in the entire world.”

    In comparison with corn-based ethanol, sugar-based ethanol is more efficient, cheaper to produce, and uses less valuable land. According to the World Bank’s Biofuels: the Promises and the Risks, the U.S. ethanol industry currently uses 10 million hectares, while Brazil only uses 3.6 million of such terrain and produces eight to ten times more energy than that produced from corn. Brazil does not subsidize sugar, which helps sustain global sugar prices. Whereas corn prices have surged 65 percent in the last five years, which many argue is the result of U.S. subsidies. Brazilian ethanol also yields 8.3 times more energy than the fossil fuels used to produce it, while corn ethanol yields only 1.5 times the energy it consumes.

    Environmental Concerns and Lula’s Response Further ethanol controversy surrounds environmentalist concerns that Brazil’s sugar industry is permanently destroying large areas of the Amazon rainforest. The industry has forced small farmers to sell their land at low prices and work for large multi-national companies, under poor conditions and scant pay. In addition, Brazil’s ethanol production has pushed soybean cultivation and cattle ranching into the Amazon area, making room for sugarcane production in the southeastern part of the country. This region, once home to coffee and fruit plantations, was originally part of the southeastern portion of the Amazon rainforest, of which only 7 percent remains today. Another environmental concern regarding sugar cane cultivation involves the burning of the old cane to get rid of dry leaves and dispensable biomass. This hazardous practice creates health problems for local populations, and spreads the fires into some of the remaining Amazon rainforests.

    President Lula has increasingly displayed support to protect the Amazon from ongoing destruction. On June 19, the government extended its two-year ban on the sale of soy from the deforested land in Amazonia until July 2009. Additionally, officials from the Brazilian Institute of Environment and Renewable Natural Resources have already begun bans on beef and timber from illegal Amazon lands (Mercopress). This recent commitment could signify the government’s sincerity regarding prevention of deforestation and “its commitment to a policy of environmental registration and licensing for land in Amazonia (Brazzil). New policies also present Brazil as environmentally conscious to international groups such as Greenpeace, who have in the past heavily criticized the country’s lack of effort in sustaining the Amazon’s integrity. Greenpeace director Paulo Adario applauded Lula, stating, “Today’s decision is important because it proves that it’s possible to guarantee food production without cutting down one more hectare of Amazon forest.” Also, in an attempt to speed the recovery of Amazonian pastures and degraded soils, the government will offer soft loans, ample credit for small farmers, and an insurance system designed to reduce the risks of climate change. With the appointment of strong conservationists such as the Minister of Environment, Carlos Minc, a UN awarded defender of the environment, the Lula administration is taking urgent steps to enhance agricultural production and increase Amazonian protection. If action indeed follows such rhetoric, Brazilian planners could be on the verge of helping the country become a world player in trade while it attempts to keep domestic prices low.

    The Future of Brazilian Ethanol Currently, Brazil produces 5.8 billion gallons of ethanol annually, but exports only 960 million gallons. Yet the energy giant is capable of providing the world with 52 billion gallons a year if, through new foreign investment, the government can put in an additional $9.5 billion for financing pipelines, terminals and new plants, offsetting the international dependence on OPEC (U.S. Energy Information Administration). As ethanol increasingly becomes a fixture in the global energy debate, these new steps could mark significant progress in fighting the global food crisis, while drawing increasing international scrutiny to the irresponsible, self-interested subsidy initiatives stealthily exhibited by the U.S., Europe, and Japan.

    This analysis was prepared by COHA Research Associate Maggie Airriess

    Secrets of the Occult:

    Part 1 The Magicians

    Secrets of the Occult: Part 1 The Magicians

    Monday, July 14, 2008

    Radar Data Supports Stephenville, Texas UFO Sightings

    The Mutual UFO Network (MUFON) releases its full report on the Stephenville sightings of January 8th, 2008 Radar data obtained by MUFON confirms that there were Unidentified Flying Objects (UFOs) flying above Stephenville, Texas, January 8th, 2008, just as many eyewitnesses had reported and which made headlines worldwide. MUFON's analysis of the radar data obtained through freedom of information act (FOIA) requests to the National Weather Service and the FAA show that unknown flying objects were on a direct course to President Bush's Crawford ranch and were separate from the known F-16 jets the same radar data confirmed were flying in the area that night. The unknown radar targets, which did not have required identification transponders, exhibited strange flight characteristics beyond that of known civilian or military aircraft. A press conference to explain MUFON's findings in complete detail will be held on Friday, July 25th, 2008 at 11 am at the Double Tree Hotel in San Jose, California, in conjunction with MUFON's annual Symposium. A full version of MUFON's report and information about the Symposium can be found at the MUFON 2008 Symposium information page.

    Teen Angst & Library Horror: a Benefit for Radical Reference

    TEEN ANGST & LIBRARY HORROR a benefit for Radical Reference

    Fri., July 25, 2008, 7:30 pm - 11 pm ABC No Rio - 156 Rivington St, NYC

    Radical Reference - Answers for People Who Question Authority

    Support Radical Reference, a volunteer collective of library workers that sees to the information needs of activists and independent journalists.

    Screenings of excerpts from Degrassi High, Freaks and Geeks, and My So-Called Life

    - interspersed with -

    Open mic for library workers to share stories that are so awful they're funny and vice versa.

    $5-$10 sliding scale $1-$3 drinks (beer, soda)

    Flyers are attached-feel free to print and spread the word!

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    Peace & Freedom State Convention Will Have Big Attendance

    July 13th, 2008

    The California Peace & Freedom Party state convention will attract a large attendance, since it will be choosing the party’s presidential candidate. The convention is August 1-3 in Sacramento, at the Hawthorn Suites, 321 Bercut Drive, in the northwest corner of the city. The Sutter Room has enough room for 150 people. Presidential candidates are invited to a forum, Friday evening, August 1. The presidential vote is set for 4 p.m. on Saturday, August 2.

    One long-time activist in the party estimates that between 35 and 40 members of the State Central Committee are in favor of Ralph Nader; approximately 25 are in favor of Gloria La Riva; approximately 12 are in favor of Brian Moore; approximately 8 are in favor of Cynthia McKinney. There are 100 elected members of the State Central Committee. This is the largest number of elected members of the PFP State Central Committee since 1992. The 1992 state convention had a spirited contest between Ron Daniels and Lenora Fulani, which Daniels won.

    26 Responses to “Peace & Freedom State Convention Will Have Big Attendance”

    1. Pro-Democracy Says:

      Attention all Nader and Barr supporters! Check out the article in the NY Times today by Kate Zernike. A number of veterans groups called the Fort Hood Presidential Town Hall Consortium are organizing a town hall meeting and inviting the presidential candidates. McCain has accepted but so far Obama has not. According to the article, “CBS has agreed to broadcast the meeting live from 9 to 11 p.m. Eastern time on Monday, Aug. 11. The candidates would face questions directly from an audience of 6,000 people, made up of veterans, service members and military families from the base.” This would be a great event for Nader and Barr to participate in—irrespective of whether Obama participates. Below is the list of organizers along with their respective websites. I encourage you to contact all of them, in addition to CBS, and to encourage them to invite Nader and Barr to participate in the town hall meeting, too.

      American Veterans Disabled American Veterans Military Order of the Purple Heart Veterans for Common Sense Military Spouse Corporate Career Network


    McKinney still in the hunt for matching funds

    In a message to supporters today, Cynthia McKinney explained that while she has secured the Green Party nomination, she is still in the running for the Peace and Freedom Party nomination in California. As the nominee of the Green Party she is assured of that ballot line in November, but her seeking the P&FP nomination means she has two more weeks to bring in a minimum of $5000 each in 20 states in donations of $250 or less to qualify for primary matching funds. Those who want to contribute to her campaign can do so here.

    Cynthia McKinney's Acceptance Speech

    The Power to the People Campaign sent supporters a copy of her acceptance speech to the Green Party of the United States nominating convention, delivered yesterday. For the text, hit the headline…

    Cynthia McKinney Acceptance Remarks Green Party Convention Chicago, Illinois July 12, 2008

    Let me introduce to you my family and your Power to the People Committee!

    My mother and father, Billy and Leola McKinney.

    My son, Coy, who just graduated from college in Canada!

    I want you to know that there is no way I could do this without their love and support.

    Your Power to the People Committee members who are with us today:

    You’ve all shared e-mails with her and heard her lovely voice on the telephone: Lucy Grider-Bradley, the campaign manager of my 2004 comeback campaign and FEC Compliance team leader for the Power to the People Committee!

    I’ve known him all of my political life. You’ve known him for years if you’re a Green party member. Hugh Esco, website man with the Power to the People Committee!

    In two long road trips from Georgia to Maine, one trip through California, Oregon, and Washington, and by way of numerous e-mails, you all have come to know my friend, personal assistant, proud Haitian-American activist, et aussi, l’homme avec qui je pratique mon français, David Josué, standing firm against the occupation of Haiti.

    John Judge is my friend. He shared U.S. government COINTELPRO documents with me that few except researchers have ever seen. John Judge is an expert on the murders of Malcolm X, John Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Jr., Bobby Kennedy, COINTELPRO, other government covert operations directed at certain U.S. citizens, and what really happened on 9/11. Maybe John can tell me how our military and intelligence infrastructures failed four times in one day after the taxpayers invested trillions of dollars in them.

    Janet Young, proud accountant for the Power to the People Committee! Learned the true meaning of politics when she saw what happened to me after I put impeachment on the table.

    I am also joined on the platform by members of the Reconstruction Movement who have come into the Green Party to support our Power to the People campaign! The Reconstruction Movement came into being as a result of dissatisfaction around government failures and unmet needs of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita survivors and the many communities across our country in need of reconstruction.

    The RunCynthiaRun visionaries from California who are responsible for bringing me to the Party’s Presidential process!

    All of the Green Party candidates who are running for election in 2008!

    And Rosa Clemente, your Vice Presidential nominee!

    Thank you all for being here and standing with me today.

    In 1851, in Akron, Ohio a former slave woman, abolitionist, and woman’s rights activist by the name of Sojourner Truth gave a speech now known as “Ain’t I a Woman.” Sojourner Truth began her remarks, “Well children, where there is so much racket, there must be something out of kilter.” She then went on to say that even though she was a woman, no one had ever helped her out of carriages or lifted her over ditches or given her a seat of honor in any place. Instead, she acknowledged, that as a former slave and as a black woman, she had had to bear the lash as well as any man; and that she had borne “thirteen children, and seen most all sold off to slavery, and when I cried out with my mother’s grief, none but Jesus heard me! And Ain’t I a woman?” Finally, Sojourner Truth says, “If the first woman God ever made was strong enough to turn the world upside down all alone, these women together ought to be able to turn it back, and get it right side up again!”

    As it was in 1851, so too it is in 2008. There is so much racket that we, too, know something is out of kilter. In 1851, the racket was about a woman’s right to vote. In 1848, just a few years before Sojourner uttered those now famous words, “Ain’t I a Woman?” suffragists met in Seneca Falls, New York and issued a declaration.

    That declaration began:

    “We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men and women are created equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness; that to secure these rights governments are instituted, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. Whenever any form of government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the right of those who suffer from it to refuse allegiance to it, and to insist upon the institution of a new government . . . But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute despotism, it is their duty to throw off such government, and to provide new guards for their future security. Such has been the patient sufferance of the women under this government, and such is now the necessity which constrains them to demand the equal station to which they are entitled.”

    Two hundred sixty women and forty men gathered in Seneca Falls, NY and declared their independence from the politics of their present and embarked upon a struggle to create a politics for the future. That bold move by a handful of people in one relatively small room laid the groundwork and is the precedent for what we do today. The Seneca Falls Declaration represented a clean break from the past: Freedom, at last, from mental slavery. The Seneca Falls Declaration and the Akron, Ohio meeting inaugurated 72 years of struggle that ended with the passage of the 19th Amendment in August of 1920, granting women the right to vote. And 88 years later, with the Green Party as its conductor, the History Train is rolling down the tracks.

    The Green Party is making history today. According to one source, 45 women have run for President in primary elections in the United States in the 20th Century; 22 have made it on the ballot in at least one state in November. Thank you, Green Party, for pulling this history train from the station.

    But we make history today only because we must. In 2008, after two stolen Presidential elections and eight years of George W. Bush, and at least two years of Democratic Party complicity, the racket is about war crimes, torture, crimes against the peace; the racket is about crimes against the Constitution, crimes against the American people, and crimes against the global community. The racket is even about values that we thought were long settled as reasonable to pursue, like liberty and justice, and economic opportunity, for all. Yes, Sojourner, there’s a lot out of kilter now, but these two women, Rosa and me, joined by all the men and women in this room, are going to do our best to turn this country right side up again.

    And just like the women and men at the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848 who declared their independence from the Old Order, I celebrated my birthday last year by doing something I had done a dozen times in my head, but had never done publicly: I declared my independence from every bomb dropped, every threat leveled, every civil liberties rollback, every child killed, every veteran maimed, every man tortured, and the national leadership that let this happen. At that pro-peace rally in front of the Pentagon, I noted that nowhere on the Democratic Party’s Congressional Agenda for their first 100 days in the majority was any mention at all of a livable wage, the right of return for Katrina survivors, repealing the Patriot Acts, the Secret Evidence Act, the Military Commissions Act, or bringing our troops home now. Nowhere on the Congressional Democrats’ agenda was an investigation into the Pentagon’s “loss” of $2.3 trillion that Rumsfeld admitted to just before September 11th. And nowhere was there any plan to get that money back for jobs, health care, education, and for veterans. Not even repeal of the Bush tax cuts that have helped to usher in, according to some, levels of income inequality not experienced in this country since the Great Depression. And instead of Articles of Impeachment to hold the criminals accountable, impeachment was taken “off the table.”

    And so, taking these words directly from our own Declaration of Independence, and from the Seneca Falls document “it is the right of those who suffer from it to refuse allegiance to it.”

    There is no doubt that the people of this country and in the global community are suffering from Washington, D.C.’s policies today.

    Even as the ice in the Arctic Ocean reportedly was melting, the United States was obstructing an international discussion of climate change goals-setting for 2020 at the recently-concluded G-8 Summit. Even while George Bush has made himself an international climate change villain by not signing onto the Kyoto Protocol, his own scientists at the U.S. Climate Change Science Program have predicted more heat waves, intense rains, increased drought, and stronger hurricanes to affect the U.S. due to the worsening effects of climate change.

    Public policy can be our friend or it can be our foe in understanding and working through the immense changes our planet is undergoing. We the voters, the activists, the policy wonks, the candidates, and the elected officials all have a role to play in making public policy. As I have said so many times during this campaign for the Green Party nomination, politics is not a beauty contest; it is not a fashion show; it is not a horse race. Politics is the authoritative allocation of values in a society. Politics is about values being reflected in public policy. It is about having power over public policy. And we engage in the political process because we want our values reflected in public policy.

    Had the Green Party’s values been reflected in public policy since the beginnings of the Green Party in this country, the United States would have long ago implemented a livable wage; there would be no civil liberties erosion; diversity would be respected, appreciated and welcomed; education would be interesting and relevant to students’ lives and no student would graduate from college $100,000 in debt in a Green Party USA because education, not incarceration and militarization, would be subsidized by the state. In a Green Party USA, health care would be provided for everyone here through a single payer, Medicare-for-all type health care system. We would have no homeless men and women sleeping on our streets and everyone who could work would have work. Rebuilding our infrastructure, manufacturing green technology, retooling our economy so that those who protect us, train us, heal us and prepare us for tomorrow are compensated in what is their true value to our culture and our society, based on their contribution to our civilization. Vietnam War-era veterans would be our last war veterans because we would never have been engaged in war and occupation against Afghanistan and Iraq. We would forego imperial designs on our neighbors to the north and south, never building any wall of division, not ever encroaching on their geographic or cultural sovereignty. In fact, if Green Party values were now reflected in U.S. public policy, our country not only would not be engaged in war and occupation, there would be peace in the Middle East based on self-determination, respect for human rights, and justice. We would strive to perfect our democracy at home through election integrity and no one would be denied their rightful place in our Union due to discrimination. Our neighbors in the global community would look up to us for our cultural and technological accomplishments. We would have apologized for genocide against the indigenous peoples of this land and the abomination of chattel slavery. Our country would have dignity on the world stage and in every international forum, and no one in this country would be made to live in fear.

    Oh, if it could be true: that the values of the Green Party were reflected in the Federal Government’s public policy. Let me wake up and snap out of my reverie. Yes, today’s reality is harsh. Abu Ghraib, torture, rendition, lying, spying, war, stolen elections, Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, New Orleans, poverty, racial profiling, Sean Bell, the San Francisco 8, Benton Harbor’s Reverend Pinkney, the Holy Land Foundation, 9/11/01.

    Embargo, blockade, friendly fire, depleted uranium, white phosphorus, cluster bombs, bunker busters, shock and awe.

    Predatory lending, mortgage crisis, foreclosures, a country $53 trillion in debt. And while Bear Stearns gets a bailout, you and I sink or swim.

    Harsh? Today’s reality is harsh. But what’s even harder for many to accept and admit is that our quality of life today is the making of the Democratic and Republican Parties.

    What our country has become through their public policy is reflective of their values.

    We will never get a United States that is reflective of different values if we continue to do the same thing. Those who delivered us into this mess cannot be trusted to get us out of it.

    That’s why I signed up to do something I’ve never done before so I can have something I’ve never had before: My country, made in the likeness of the values of the Green Party.

    When my father first started out in the world of politics in Georgia, he began as a Republican, because Georgia Democrats would not allow blacks to vote in their primaries. Some of my father’s closest friends today are still Republicans because of that history.

    My father served 30 years in the Georgia Legislature as a Democrat. Because of him, I served 4 years in the Georgia Legislature, where we were the country’s only father daughter legislative team. And then I went to Congress and served 12 years working with the Democratic Party and its current leadership representing the State of Georgia.

    My son grew up playing on the Floor underneath my desk in the Chamber of the Georgia House of Representatives. His buddies were the legislators down there, under the Gold Dome, who were my and my father’s colleagues.

    My mother is the genteel Southern lady who keeps our family glued together. A nurse by profession, a nurturer by instinct, she could patch over all the times I had a political disagreements with my Dad and it ended up being discussed, not only at the family dinner table, but also on the evening news.

    My father and I stumped for candidates, and helped keep Georgia in the Democratic Party fold, until on my election night in 2002, I was forced to admit that the Republicans wanted to beat me more than the Democrats wanted to keep me. Both my father and I were put out of office after being targeted by a convergence of special interests operating in both the Democratic and Republican parties. In November of 2002, after the Primary Election losses of my father and me, Georgia went Republican: the first time since Reconstruction. With all kinds of certainty, I can say that my father and I—we McKinneys—we know too well how both the Republican and Democratic Parties operate.

    And that’s why I know we need an opposition party in this country. With 200 elected officials already, the Green Party can become this country’s premier opposition Party. One thing is clear, Democratic and Republican values are not Green Party values. And honestly, I believe, Green Party values are the values held by the majority in this country. And through our vigorous Power to the People campaign, we will proclaim our presence to every nook and cranny of this country. We are needed now, more than ever and here’s an example of why.

    It is hard to not hear the warning signs of a new war: a war against Iran. Dick Cheney told us to expect war for the next generation. The Republicans launched this war economy and their presumptive nominee said that we could stay in Iraq for the next 100 years and even sang a song for the bombing of Iran. The Democratic majority in Congress just voted to fund the war into 2009 and has 200 sponsors on a bill that declares war on Iran by calling for a naval blockade. A naval blockade is a declaration of war. The Democratic presumptive nominee wants to increase the size of the overused military and the budget for an already-bloated and wasteful Pentagon. I am the only candidate who has consistently voted against the Pentagon budget, voted against the war in Iraq, and I voted against the bills that funded it. The Green Party was against the war when it started, is against the war now, and is against any military action against Iran that might take place tomorrow. The Green Party is a peace party. A Green vote is a peace vote.

    Not a word has been mentioned in this political season about the disparities that exist within our country with the recognition that public policy can erase them. And even though for the first time a woman and an African-American were being taken seriously in national primaries, a real discussion of race and gender has been studiously avoided on all sides. At a time when the United States is under review, itself, by the United Nations for its poor record on domestic respect for human rights, particularly in the aftermath of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, a real discussion of race and gender is needed now more than ever. On some indices, according to United for a Fair Economy, the racial disparities that exist today are worse than at the time of the murder of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Right here in Chicago, Hull House reported that it would take 200 years, without a public policy intervention from elected leadership, for the quality of life experienced by black Chicagoans to equal that of white Chicagoans.

    Women are still the overwhelming profile of the minimum wage worker in this country. 65% of all minimum wage workers are women, according to 2005 statistics. Despite the law, women still go to work every day, performing the same tasks as men, yet bring home less pay than their male counterparts. Asian-American and Pacific Island women make 88 cents for every dollar earned by men, but African-American women earn only 72 cents and my Latina sisters earn only 60 cents for every dollar earned by men. Overall, according to 2007 statistics, women with similar education, skills, and experience are paid 77 cents for every dollar a man makes. Equal pay for equal work is not yet a reality for working women in this country. And the glass ceiling is all too real.

    I’m very proud of my second cousin, Shonté, whose mother, a divorcée, raised her pretty much as a single mother. Shonté’s mother, Shara, understood the value of her child getting a good education and helped her as much as she could with university tuition. The rest Shonté was able to secure by working on campus and in student loans. Shonté graduated from college, and then took a one-year Master’s program in Social Work, and now wants to get her Ph.D. But she’s already over $90,000 in debt. It doesn’t have to be this way and we don’t have to accept it. In other countries around the world, higher education is valued and is made affordable to all who want it. Only a sick government would place a banker in-between a student and her teacher.

    An insurance lobbyist in-between a patient and his doctor.

    Lying and spying before 9/11 Truth and the Constitution.

    Only a sick government would place a wealthy family and their huge corporation and its genetically-modified frankenfood peddled by force in-between us and the organic food that’s healthy for us to eat and that farmers would prefer to grow.

    Only a sick government would do this.

    And I am no longer willing to trust the ones who are responsible for getting us into this mess to provide the solution to get us out of it.

    The Green Party long ago took a stand for racial justice: against profiling, against police brutality, against discrimination of any sort, and for reparations stemming from the trans-Atlantic slave trade.

    The Green Party long ago took a stand for gender equity.

    The Green Party long ago took a stand against all discrimination.

    The Green Party is a justice party. A Green vote is a justice vote.

    And the day after the election, if voters have been disfranchised and don’t believe the announced election results, it will be the Green Party that will be there, as it was in 2004, to demand election integrity.

    It is for all these reasons and more that I redeclare my goals in the language of my sisters who convened at Seneca Falls, NY 160 years ago. They wrote:

    “It is their duty to throw off such government, and to provide new guards for their future security.” That declaration not only avoids the politics of the past, it contains a kernel for the future. How can those new guards for the future be won?

    Here’s how:

    When I was first running for Congress and it was the year of the woman, women all over the country were saying, “We want our seat at the table.” And when I got to Washington, I saw that policy was really made in a room, at a table. There were real seats at the table. Well, imagine what has happened to public policy making now.

    There is a real room, with a window and a door and there’s two seats at the table. The window is for us to look through while our representatives make policy for us so we can see what they’re doing. At the table, one seat is for the Democrats and one seat is for the Republicans. Now, we don’t know who did it, but one of them put a lock on the door and slipped a key to the corporate lobbyists who can come and go at will and whisper what they want to the Democrats, and then whisper what they want to the Republicans, and the result is that we the people, who pay for those seats and determine who sits in them, want one thing, but because the corporate lobbyists can come and go at will, our values get overridden and our representatives give us something else.

    That’s how we end up with everyone saying they’re against the war and occupation, but war and occupation still gets funding.

    That’s how we end up with everyone saying they’re against illegal spying on innocent people, yet end up with a telecom immunity bill being signed into law.

    That’s how we end up with everyone saying they’re in favor of universal access to health care and no one implementing what the physicians, nurses, and health care providers support, and that’s a single payer health care system in this country.

    That’s why my cousin and so many other students in this country face staggering personal debt just to get an education, yet our elected representatives keep voting to spend 720 million dollars a day on war and occupation, war crimes, and crimes against the peace.

    Now, if we can entice people who have stopped voting because they see the system as rigged, to become active again, and to vote Green . . .

    If we can convince those first-time voters from the previous two Presidential elections, though they might be discouraged because they saw their vote obstructed and then not counted while neither of the big parties fought to protect them, if we can convince them to vote Green . . .

    If we can convince those who see two parties, but only one political agenda, to vote Green, then it is possible for the Green Party to get 5% of the national vote.

    5% of the vote makes the Green Party, not a minor party in the eyes of the federal government, but a major party.

    5% confers on the Green Party major party status. And with that 5%, we can pull up another chair at the table of public policy making. It only takes 5% of those who vote, including the near majority who don’t vote, to come out for a Green Party President and then we will have an official third party in this country, and public policy that truly reflects our values. Now, I’m known for taking bold positions, based on my own research, that have put me ahead of the curve. I was there on private militaries hired by the Pentagon and our State Department long before Blackwater began patrolling the streets of New Orleans in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

    I was there on corporate accountability and military contracting scandals before Iraq and Afghanistan.

    I was there on enlisted members’ and veterans’ rights and health issues, like forced vaccinations and conscientious objection.

    I was there on Hurricanes Katrina and Rita recovery and detoxification, restoration, and return issues.

    I was there on 9/11 foreknowledge.

    And I put impeachment “on the table.”

    I’m not afraid to address the issues that no one else will dare to talk about.

    I’m not afraid to speak truth to empower.

    Let me close with this.

    Don’t expect me to keep a count of the major party flip flops from now to November. I’m sure there will be many. But, in the end, that’s not the important issue to understand. What is more fundamental to understand is this: the other political parties find themselves in this flip-flop predicament because they have to appear to share our values while they serve someone else’s.

    The Green Party doesn’t have to engage in shapeshifting because the Green Party is funded by and belongs to you.

    All over the world, Green Party members are working as elected leaders in government to make public policy reflect our Green values. Wangari Mathai, former Parliamentarian from Kenya, Nobel Peace Prize Laureate. Green Party member. Ingrid Betancourt, recently released hostage in Colombia, former Senator and Presidential candidate. Green Party member. Green Party members make public policy at the national level on every Continent, but not yet in our country.

    Twenty years ago, Green party activists saw through this two-party box that voters have been put into in this country and started the Green Party here. And what we have to remember is this: whatever it is that we want in the realm of public policy, we can get if we have the right elected officials in office. Nothing for us is impossible. Politics is about shared values being reflected in public policy. And these Green party candidates standing with me are the right kind of people who will implement the right kind of public policy that reflects our shared values.

    Voters in this country are scared into not voting their hopes, their dreams, their aspirations. But in Bolivia and Ecuador and Argentina and Chile and Nicaragua and Spain, and India and Cote d’Ivoire and Haiti, voters were not afraid to vote their hopes and dreams and guess, what. Their dreams came true. Ours can, too.

    Every one of you in this room today and each of the individuals I’ve met and communicated with online across our country has made a difference in my life. And moreover, the 5% who will vote for us, will help us make a positive difference in the lives of people around the world. Who we are makes a difference. What we do makes a difference.

    We are in this to build a movement. We are willing to struggle for as long as it takes to have our values prevail in public policy. A vote for the Green Party is a vote for the movement that will turn this country right side up again.

    I want to invite everyone who shares our values to join our Power to the People campaign. C-Span viewers can learn more about us at www.runcynthiarun.org. I want to work with the nominees of the other small political parties so we can form a united front. I’m asking for your vote because in reality the only “wasted” vote is a vote against conscience, a vote against our dreams. Vote your dreams, Vote your conscience. Vote our future. Vote Green.

    Thank you, Green Party, for granting Rosa and me this supreme honor. Now let’s go out there and get busier. We’ve got a lot of work to do.

    Power to the People!


    4 Ways to Change Your Thoughts

    Begin a search into personal development techniques and you will quickly come across the statement that your thoughts create your reality. From channeled books by Seth and Jane Roberts to Depak Chopra , Wayne Dyer, and the film The Secret; the message is the same. You can change the reality that you experience by changing what you think. So, the next question to address is "How do I effectively change my thoughts?" As you work on changing your thoughts it is helpful to realize that your thoughts are nothing more than an electrical impulse between two synapses, the result of a chemical reaction in your brain. Steps to Change Your Thoughts 1)Pay attention to your thoughts: When a thought comes up simply ask yourself is this thought true? You see, you are not enjoying reality because you are lying to your self, well at least your thoughts are. If you pay attention to your inner dialog you will find that many of the thoughts you are having are negative, creating for you a negative life experience. Your thoughts lie to you, but you don't have to believe it. 2)Retrain yourself through repetition: Repeatedly writing out what you want to believe, you retrain yourself into having the positive thoughts you desire. BY repeatedly writing down what you wish to create in your life you will draw it to you, just through having focus on it. 3)The benefits of Visualization: If you use creative visualization and picture yourself pursuing the activities you wish to do, you begin to create reality to match your vision. Visualization exercises draw to you the things and circumstances you envision in your mind, reality follows at a slower pace but it will eventually catch up. The key to powerful visualization manifestation is daily practice. The more you see the results that you desire in your mind the quicker they will manifest in your reality. 4)Witness: By witnessing or watching yourself you can detach from repetitive negative thought patterns. You can allow the negative thoughts to pass, replacing them with positive messages. You are what you believe you are. If you believe you can do something, you will find the way to accomplish it. If you don't believe in yourself you give up before even trying. "Believe it can be done. When you believe something can be done, really believe, your mind will find the ways to do it. Believing a solution paves the way to solution." (Dr. David Schwartz) For more information on visualization, motivation, personal development, and the law of attraction and to learn about visualization tools visit www.thrivingnotsurviving.com Be sure to sign up for the free e-course Sure-Thrival of the Fittest.

    8 Destructive thinking patterns and how to change them

    Check out this possible life changing article by Steven Aitchison. And pay attention in the media how much these limiting "loser scripts" are actually projected in your mind. If you want a course in how to be any kind of loser, just turn on the tv. Which seems to run on limited scripts and negative embedded suggestions. You can learn a lot by looking deeper and further into what you're being presented, by being a little more aware so you can transmute all that negativity being thrown at you and already within yourself into the positive. Here are the winner/loser scripts for the 8 Circuit Model. From: dedroidify

    EU’s Lifted Sanctions Could Be Turning Point For Cuba

    On June 19, at a summit in Brussels, the European Union announced that it would lift its diplomatic sanctions against Cuba. The gesture was predominantly symbolic, as the restraints, which had been put in place in 2003, had been temporarily suspended since 2005. The decision came about largely due to Spain’s 2005 initiative to normalize its relations with Cuba, despite opposition from several other EU members. While the EU’s sanctions only froze development aid and visits to Cuba by high-level European officials, the move to lift them signals a commitment to increased dialogue and openness between the EU and Havana. It will surely have positive effects not just for Cuba but for the EU’s currently frosty relationship with Latin America over immigration issues. Perhaps most importantly, it serves as a contrast to the hard-line policy of the United States, which has maintained an unbending trade embargo against Cuba since 1964.

    The End of a Long Battle The EU’s sanctions were enacted in response to a March 2003 crackdown on Cuban dissidents after Havana had executed three men for hijacking a U.S.-bound ferry, in which a government official was murdered. The crackdown resulted in the imprisonment of seventy-five other Cubans for up to twenty-eight years. At the time, the EU condemned the crackdown, calling it “deplorable,” and refused to negotiate with Cuba until it improved its human rights record. According to the EU Report, an angry Fidel Castro accused the European body of “bowing to Nazi-Fascist US policy,” and he was further outraged when EU member nations began inviting Cuban dissidents to their Havana embassy functions.

    The strained relations between the EU and Cuba began to thaw in January 2005, when Spain’s new Socialist government under José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero began a movement within the EU to improve EU-Cuba relations. Many believe Spain is in the best position to attempt to normalize relations with Cuba due to a shared culture and language as well as its own authoritarian past. Following the release of fourteen of the seventy-five dissidents, Spain successfully urged the EU to suspend its sanctions, and restore “formal contact” with Havana, according to Cuba’s Foreign Minister Felipe Pérez Roque. Despite heavy criticism from other EU members, in April 2007, Spain’s foreign minister, Miguel Ángel Moratinos, visited Cuba in the first trip by a Spanish foreign minister since 1998. This was the first visit by an EU member since the sanctions were imposed, and reflected Spain’s desire to have a real dialogue with the island. Several EU members, including Cyprus, Greece, Italy, and Portugal, backed Spain’s decision to renew ties with Cuba. However, others, most notably the Czech Republic, remained adamantly opposed to the visit, calling Spain’s decision “unilateral” and remarked that the meeting was “unlikely to produce anything new.”

    The Opposition It is not surprising that Cuba’s toughest EU critics come mainly from Eastern European countries, some of which have painful memories of Soviet-era repression. The Czech Republic’s harsh handling by the former Soviet Union during the Prague Spring of 1968 has made it the leader of the anti-Cuban bloc within the European Union due to Cuba’s staunch support of Moscow at that time. With support also from the Netherlands, Denmark, Poland, and Sweden, Cuba’s opposition refused to budge on its stance in favor of the sanctions until Havana demonstrated real strides toward democracy, including an improved human rights policy and less repression of dissident groups.

    Cuban dissidents also vehemently opposed the lifting of the sanctions, believing that this action would “punish” the Cuban people and allow Havana to continue violating human rights. According to the leaders of the dissident group Agenda for Transition, any action taken by the EU to normalize relations with Cuba would be understood by Cuban authorities as affording legitimacy to the government’s recent actions and would “[punish] those who fight for democracy.”

    The Turning Point: Raúl and Reforms The EU decision to lift the sanctions was ultimately achieved as a result of Cuba’s subsequent reforms. On February 24, 2008, Fidel Castro stepped down as president of Cuba on health grounds, after nearly five decades of rule. His vice president and younger brother, Raúl, was officially elected to take his place, after having been acting president since July 2006. In his acceptance speech, Raúl promised social and economic reforms meant to ease the burden on the everyday lives of Cubans. Many believed that any concessions made to Cuba under Raúl should be limited, but on March 4, Raúl signed two UN human rights pacts, the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, in what EUBusiness called an “unprecedented gesture.” The EU received this as a “positive development,” which could signal the beginning of more democratic reforms in Cuba. On March 9, EU aid commissioner Louis Michel remarked that “the time is right for the European Union to begin a dialogue with Cuba towards normalizing ties and removing sanctions…”

    The willingness and flexibility Raúl has shown in carrying out reforms demonstrates Cuba’s potential to become a more open society, both socially and economically. These efforts have provided the impetus for the EU’s decision to reverse its policy of sanctions. In stark contrast to his doctrinaire brother Fidel, Raúl has demonstrated a more pragmatic approach to governance, proving himself to be flexible and open to constructive engagement. In April, Raúl carried out reforms that would decentralize Cuba’s agricultural sector by allowing farmers to increase their earnings, and provide more flexibility to purchase seeds and machinery. The Cuban newspaper Granma announced that these reforms could be a “springboard for more changes.” In May, greater access to information was achieved when the government lifted the ban on personal computers and mobile phones, in addition to the use of rental cars and tourist hotels. In June, the government announced plans to abandon salary equality, a measure meant to increase worker productivity. In addition to these reforms, Raúl has demonstrated a commitment to human rights by commuting thirty death sentences, as well as releasing a number of political prisoners.

    A Fresh Start The decision to restore relations with Cuba, handed down by the EU on June 20, comes with a caveat: it will be reviewed at the end of one year, at which time Cuba must meet several criteria in the fields of human rights and democratization. This decision went some way in placating the nations that opposed the EU’s measure, but the reassessment does not provide for a renewal of sanctions. The EU is facing criticism from Cuban dissidents for not laying down conditions on Cuba before lifting the sanctions. Though it is criticized, this move is viewed by the EU majority as a positive step forward for EU-Cuba relations. It also envisages a dialogue between the two entities that is neither conditioned nor restricted.

    For Cuba, this EU attitude could lead to more reforms in the fields of democracy and human rights. As the agricultural overhauls in April were deemed a starting point for further change in that sector, so too could these sanctions be seen as a launching pad for more democratic reforms. The fact that the EU attached no conditions to its revoking of sanctions demonstrates that Europe is ready to deal with Cuba in a more dignified manner and means to encourage it to carry out further democratic advancement. The EU’s decision is also a positive step for Cuba’s economy. While the sanctions on Cuba were not economic in nature, trade between the two blocs fell in 2003 and 2004 while they remained in place, according to the European Commission’s 2006 report on EU-Cuba bilateral trade. About 36% of Cuba’s imports and 31.3% of its exports in 2006 were from the EU, making it the island’s number one trading partner. European investment in Cuba could increase further now that the sanctions have been fully removed. This, coupled with more openness and additional reforms on Cuban society, are likely to lead to an improvement in the quality of life of the average Cuban.

    Removing the sanctions also serves as a contrast between the EU and the U.S.’s policy when it comes to Cuba. According to Diego López Garrido, Spain’s Secretary of State to the EU, the decision markedly contradicts the U.S.’s policy of isolation of the island, Europe’s action shows that the EU is “capable of…choosing its own foreign policy path.” The U.S. was unable to convince the EU to refuse to lift anti-Havana sanctions, exhibiting its independence from Washington’s influence. On June 26, U.S. State Department deputy spokesman Tom Casey publicly worried that the EU’s decision would give “additional legitimacy” to the Cuban regime. However, the latter’s approach to Cuba has always been on the side of being less severe than that of the U.S., whose crippling economic sanctions have been responsible for endemic food and fuel shortages and bitterness among Cubans. If normalized relations between the EU and Cuba lead to more openness and democracy in Cuba, then perhaps the U.S. might want to reconsider its damaging and chronically ineffective policy toward the island.

    This analysis was prepared by COHA Research Associate Amy Coonradt

    I'll Take Your Brain To Another Dimension

    From: http://www.disclose.tv

    Animated Version of Howard Zinn’s History of the American Empire

    From: http://oculture.com Howard Zinn, a historian from Boston University, best known for his book People’s History of the United States: 1492 to Present, has been brought to YouTube. This video presents an animated version of Zinn’s essay, Empire or Humanity? What the Classroom Didn’t Teach Me about the American Empire. Zinn cartoon-style, here it goes (and you can otherwise find it on our YouTube playlist):


    Sunday, July 13, 2008

    PROTEST OVER CHAVEZ ‘BLACKLIST’

    Thousands of Venezuelans protested in the capital Caracas to demand the Supreme Court overturn a “blacklist” blocking key opponents of President Hugo Chavez from running in elections.

    Chanting: “Freedom!” and waving Venezuelan flags, the demonstrators marched to the court, where they urged justices to strike down the list.

    “We cannot allow our civil rights to be trampled upon,” said Veronica Pino, a 35-year-old secretary who held a sign reading: “Restrictions, No! Constitution, Yes!”

    Unveiled in February by the country’s top anti-corruption official, the list disqualifies 272 politicians - most of them aligned with the opposition - from participating in November’s state and municipal elections.

    Comptroller General Clodosbaldo Russian, a close Chavez ally, argues that Venezuelan law allows him to impose the restrictions on potential candidates suspected of corruption.

    Opposition leaders say the ban violates Venezuela’s constitution, which upholds the political rights of all citizens unless they have been charged with a crime and sentenced by a court. None of those on the list has been formally sentenced.

    Venezuela’s Roman Catholic Church joined the mounting criticism this week, calling the list “a measure that tarnishes the democratic environment”.

    More than a dozen members of the 1999 assembly that drafted the current constitution, including Mr Chavez’s ex-wife Marisabel Rodriguez, accuse Mr Russian of breaking the law.

    The comptroller general was “illegally excluding those who don’t share the president’s socialist agenda”, she said during the march, where she was mobbed by supporters. Mr Chavez has backed Mr Russian.

    “Now they accuse him of following my orders. No, they are not my orders,” Mr Chavez said on Friday at a rally. The protesters “should be ashamed of themselves” for defending candidates suspected of corruption, many of whom should be in prison, he added.


    HISTORY MADE TODAY IN CHICAGO

    by Bruce K. Gagnon The Greens chose Cynthia McKinney on the first ballot today in Chicago to be the party presidential nominee. Cynthia then nominated Rosa Clemente to be her running mate who was quickly approved by near unanimous acclaim. Born and raised in the South Bronx she is a graduate of the University of Albany and Cornell University. Clemente is a highly regarded commentator, political activist, community organizer, Hip-Hop activist, and independent reporter. Chuck D of Public Enemy says that Clemente "is one of this generations' most important political voices and community organizers." In her acceptance speech McKinney defined winning as setting a goal to garner 5% of the national vote which would give the Green Party major party status on the national level. McKinney made it clear that her run for president is all about building an alternative to the two war parties. The corporate parties have to flip-flop on the issues she said "because they have to appear" to agree with our progressive values while they then do the bidding of the corporations who pay their freight. Maine delegates gave McKinney the 5th most votes of any state during the first round of balloting. Only New York, Illinois, California, and Wisconsin gave her more presidential delegate votes. Ralph Nader came in a distant second in the presidential balloting which indicated that while people still respect him, his day of gaining the ballot lines via the Green Party across the nation are over. At this point McKinney will be on the ballot in at least 25 states across the nation next November . Greens in other states are still attempting to cross the enormously difficult ballot status barriers that keep the Republicans and Democrats from being challenged. Just after the nomination process concluded 2004 Green Party presidential candidate David Cobb made a rousing introduction speech of McKinney. It was Cobb, and the Green Party, that challenged the well-documented vote fraud in Ohio in 2004 that put Bush in the White House again. While John Kerry, and the Democratic Party, violated their promise to "fight for every vote" it fell to the Greens to file the legal challenge to protect disenfranchised voters in Ohio. Before McKinney's acceptance speech, a video was played on the huge screen above the stage in the Chicago Symphony Center with John Lennon singing his song "Power to the People." McKinney has adopted that slogan as her campaign theme and it brought tears to me eyes to see her dancing on the stage during the Lennon song. I felt that it was a moment of liberation for McKinney and the Green Party. McKinney was free of the restraints that come from being a "good" Democratic Party elected official where you are expected to toe the party line and not challenge the party orthodoxy. Now McKinney is free to be herself - to speak truth to power as she so effectively does. In fact on the podium, as McKinney spoke, was a sign that read TRUTH. With the nomination of McKinney and Clemente the Green Party is now free to become the real radical alternative party that it should be - radical in the sense of "getting to the roots" of the issues at hand and building the political base to make the needed changes. The Green Party took a huge step today in the creation of a multi-ethnic party with leadership from black and Latino communities. This is a must as we look at the coming demographic changes in America. There will be no progressive movement in America without active leadership from people of color working alongside of progressive white activists. To say the least it was refreshing. I've been a McKinney watcher for years as she was one of the key voices in the Congress who time and again spoke on behalf of "the people". McKinney has been run out of office twice by the power structure and vilified by the corporate media for having the audacity to speak against war and corporate domination. I am sure her nomination will be greeted with scorn by the corporate masters. For me today was a revolutionary moment. Since working on the Jesse Jackson presidential campaign in 1984, and seeing the hope of a "Rainbow coalition" whither away, I've thirsted for the coming together of the movements. Today's event clearly indicated the enormous possibilities that exist for revolutionary peace, social justice, and ecological organizing in the U.S. if people are willing to step into this historic moment. The change we all long for will not come from the Democratic Party. A new positive and earth shaking train has just left the station. The question remains will people who see themselves as progressive have the wisdom to get on-board and not be left behind sorting through the crumbs left behind by the corporate parties. http://www.space4peace.org Bruce Gagnon is the Coordinator of the Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space.

    Saturday, July 12, 2008

    Colombian Reality: An Internal Conflict Analysis

    by David Gash / July 12th, 2008 Social circumstances cultivate civil insurrection Colombia’s Marxist guerrilla group, las Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia (FARC), or the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, has been misunderstood and underestimated since its germination. Even today they are mistakenly labeled as the sole offenders and primary cause of violence in the country, as Colombia and its armed forces, along with U.S. assistance, continue attempting to extirpate them. This notion of the FARC, while common around the world, contradicts reality. Violence in Colombia was a regular occurrence long before the FARC arose from the country’s blood-stained soils. In fact, during the past half millennium, “war torn and oppressed” is the most accurately succinct description for civil society in this country of extreme contrasts. When dissecting Colombia’s internal conflict, the objective should be to develop a comprehensive understanding, even it if juxtaposes mainstream imagery. Awareness as such begins by realizing that the majority of people affected by the conflict are the impoverished indigenous communities, rural farmers, and common folk. However, their accounts of the violence are rarely printed or reported, an important point to keep in mind. Information that is traditionally reported are testaments by the government, military and national police force. This is the news that makes its way around the world, and this is what produces popular perception. In fact, personal accounts that contradict this news, often surfacing weeks or months later, rarely reach the public here in Colombia, let alone around the world. In order to have a more integral and impartial understanding of Colombia’s Marxist revolutionary group, one must examine the socio-political climate at least two decades prior to their inception. By doing so, it is clear to see that a particular social impetus was the cause of this revolutionary effect. When viewing a time-line depicting the events, one also notices that Washington’s involvement in this Latin American paradise has been incessant since shortly after WWII. That preliminary involvement was initially rationalized to fight communism which was sprouting in the backyard. So, who were the supposed communist elements in Colombia in 1948? Well, on 9 April of that year, only a day after meeting with Cuba’s “Fidel Castro at a conference of anti-imperialist student leaders,”1 the country’s most publicly supported populist leader and presidential candidate of the people, “Dr. Jorge Eliecer Gaitan, was assassinated in Bogota’s downtown center at roughly 1:15 p.m.”2 The capital city and national provinces were quickly destroyed after erupting into absolute chaotic rebellion. The supposed patsy of that day, Juan Roa Sierra, was found by the infuriated mob in a local store, removed from the establishment, beaten to death, dragged through the streets and finally put on display in the city’s center. All the while, neither the government nor the armed forces did anything to stop the resulting civil violence. On the contrary, they set out against the enraged mob. Since then, that day has become famously known throughout the country as the Bogotazo, at the cockcrow of an era notoriously called The Violence. It’s quite relevant to point out that Dr. Gaitan was a genuine populist, estimated to have had more than 80% of the populace’s support – a sure winner for the coming elections of 1950. He was also a member of the Colombian Liberal Party, courageously hoping to overturn the oligarchic stranglehold and implement social programs for the common people; education, health care, infrastructure development and centralized resource management were a few cornerstones of his campaign. The entrenched rulers of the oligarchic class however, likely found it difficult to accept the occupation of the House of Narino (Presidential Palace) by a people’s president like Gaitan, as they certainly didn’t share his social interests. The country’s history consistently demonstrates this dominant, plutocratic attitude since the curtailing of the Independence Wars against Spain in 1848. The insurgency organizes What then became of that impetuously black April afternoon in Bogota? Some of the people who supported Dr. Gaitan and his political ideology became known as Gaitanists. In the department of Tolima, neighboring Cundinamarca of which Bogota is the capital, these Gaitanists took up arms against the inveterate system. One member of this guerrilla group was Pedro Marin, commonly known as Manuel Marulanda, or Tirofijo (Sureshot). By 1950, the fledgling, Gaitanist guerrilla group of peasants formed ranks in the countryside with fighters from the Social Democratic Party (PSD). This group would gain momentum over the next sixteen years in the defense of peasant-proletariats. Marulanda would go on to officially name this group the FARC, which he then presided over, in 1966. He would assume this position until his recent death, reported to have been this past March 26, 2008. The origins of the FARC are rooted in the soils of socialist ideology. Contrary to popular belief, their inception had nothing to do with drugs. The core of their doctrine sought to establish overdue land rights for the peasants. Along with this they promoted the development of unions within the controlling sectors of agricultural big business, which was becoming monopolized and yet ever more oppressive by the national and foreign oligarchs of the day. The FARC originally functioned as a “regional structure of social warfare, of individual and collective survival”, and eventually became “a setting for the building of real local power.”3 This is the course they maintained throughout the 1970’s. However, since the 1980’s, with the emergence of cocaine trafficking and counter-insurgent, state-sponsored paramilitary troops to contend with, their ideological roots began to wither somewhat. Cause and effect are often unavoidable and inherently universal principles. As such, if the governing body decides to abandon or abuse the people in favor of power and profit, the people will likely resort to their own measures. This is precisely what happened after the Bogotazo. Thus, conditions were optimal for a group like the FARC to sprout in response to calculated, systemic corruption which had been oppressing the less affluent portion of the population since Spanish colonial times. This is the communist force that Washington intended to uproot while in vegetative growth, yet they somehow failed to succeed. Today, forty-odd years into its commemoration, the FARC still stand their ground. Over the decades they’ve been labeled as communists, as narcotraffickers and today as terrorists. And though at present they are estimated to be weakening, they nonetheless continue to exist as an armed opposition to be reckoned with. Resistance as such helps Washington justify its gracious annual donations to the Colombian government of roughly $700 million dollars in US taxpayer’s money under Bill Clinton’s Plan Colombia, which has only sustained the internal conflict, poisoned the environment and produced the highest internal human displacement figure in the world. In fact, the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre reveals that even Iraq, at nearly 2,000,000 internally displaced people, still fails to fit the crown.4 Although this constitutes imperative data to consider in achieving our initial objective of developing a comprehensive understanding, we shall postpone any further analysis of this anti-terrorist/anti-drug program for another article. Redefining the conflict’s perpetual scapegoat Taking into account the historical origins of Colombia’s primary guerrilla group is a requisite for any degree of comprehension apropos of the conflict. However, by no means is this to suggest that the FARC are exempt from having committed illegal and atrocious crimes over the decades. Nor is this to indicate that they should continue to be granted impunity as numerous paramilitary and guerrilla forces have already been fortunate to achieve under President Alvaro Uribe’s transparency-lacking Justice and Peace Law of 2005. This paper seeks not to validate the FARC’s immorality, but simply to reveal for the reader a more accurate depiction of Colombia’s conflict relevant to this group. Let us now proceed by establishing some parallels and deviations between the two previously mentioned groups. Paramilitaries are organized civilians developed militarily to act as, or assist, regular military troops. The reference mentioned in the previous paragraph coincides with this definition. The FARC, on the other hand, are not a paramilitary group. They are classified as guerrillas, like Castro’s revolutionary players, combating against the military and their paramilitary associates. So, it has been guerrilla groups like the FARC, the National Liberation Army (ELN), and M-19 that throughout the years have held up arms against the Colombian government, its army, national police and paramilitary group, the United Self-Defense Force (AUC). Aside from the inaccurate assertion of many Colombians and others in foreign circles that comfort themselves by exclusively condemning the conflict on the guerrillas, it would be naive to believe that the FARC are the sole culprits in this condemnable chaos. Observation from Amnesty International contradicts the blind-eyed and wide-held belief completely by stating that “although all parties to Colombia’s internal armed conflict - the security forces, paramilitaries and the guerrilla - have systematically violated human rights and international humanitarian law, the paramilitaries have, in recent years, been responsible for most of the killings of civilians, “disappearances”, and cases of torture, while the guerrilla have been responsible for most politically-motivated kidnappings.”5 Reports such as this aren’t any more reassuring when attempting to construct a comprehensive understanding of the conflict, because in essence the scenario has just become even more complicated with additional factors. Unfortunately though, that is Colombia’s conflict in a nutshell, a monumentally complex, socio-political quagmire. Just the same, if one sincerely aims to arrive at a more realistic awareness regarding this country’s internal conflict, stereotypes of the Marxist guerrilla movement and preconceived notions of its rebellion must be abandoned in order to see the real picture. The contemporary reality of massacres, torture and other human rights violations are indeed not dominated by the FARC, as popular opinion has been intentionally and irrationally shaped. The majority of these violations, rather, are by a dominate force and its associates, whose concentration of power permeates the country’s social, economic and political realms. One has to look no further than the Colombian government to identify the principle agitator. That may read like a bold claim, but the majority of rural Colombians with whom this writer speaks concur nearly unanimously. In an interview conducted in 2002, Noam Chomsky shares some of his personal experiences, while in Colombia on a humanitarian agenda to the militarily active department of Cauca, which confirm this reality. In response to a question establishing that the Colombian government claims it’s caught between a guerrilla insurgency and a paramilitary army, neither of which it can control, Chomsky responds by stressing that “both international and Colombian human rights organizations now attribute the large majority of atrocities to paramilitaries, who are so closely, and so visibly, allied to the military that Human Rights Watch calls them the ‘Sixth Division,’ alongside the five official divisions. There’s overwhelming evidence of intimate connections and cooperation, both from ample personal testimony and published reports of the major human rights organizations, which are detailed and informative. The proportion of atrocities attributed to the military/paras has been steady over the years: about 75%-80%, with the military component declining as atrocities are ‘farmed out’ to the paras in ways that are familiar elsewhere.”6. This doesn’t constitute acceptable information that either the US or Colombian establishments care to have the global public contemplating around dinner tables, as it contradicts la carte du jour. Conclusion By reflecting on these latter diagnoses from Amnesty International and Chomsky, previous assumptions of the FARC as the “lone Marxist group” being the sole conspirator of terroristic violence in Colombia, hereby begin to fade and lose credibility. This is especially true when comparing information released by the government and mainstream sources, with that which one would expect to be more reliable and objective data supplied by humanitarian groups and intellectuals, whose commitment to compiling accurate information is not subject to imposing forces. Personal testimonies of peasants who have been caught in the crossfire weaken those assumptions even more. In order to develop a more accurate understanding of the FARC and Colombia’s conflict, one must look beyond the biased headlines, the nightly 6 o’clock cover stories and back-page snippets of the dominating media sources, to the wellspring of alternative media. If that fails to suffice, an excursion to the country itself will provide plenty of opportunity to discuss the issue with those directly affected. This is the most forthright manner to change perception while grasping the reality of the FARC as participants in Colombia’s conflict. 1. Hylton, Forrest; Evil Hour in Colombia; 2006, p40. # 2. El Tiempo, 9 April 2008. # 3. Pizarro Leongomez, “Revolutionary Guerrilla Groups”, in Bergquist et al, eds, Violence in Colombia: Historical Perspectives, p181-182. # 4. International Displacement Monitoring Center. # 5. Press release, “Colombia: The Justice and Peace law will benefit human rights abusers,” Amnesty International, 12 September 2005. # 6. Noam Chomsky interview with Justin Podur; Cauca: Their fate lies in our hands, 12 July 2002 # David Gash is a high school English teacher, who lived almost three years in Colombia, and a lifetime student who contributes socially as a free-lance writer. Read other articles by David.

    Illuminatus Audiobook part III Leviathan is out

    AUDIOBOOK DESCRIPTION "The ultimate weapon isn't this plague out in Vegas, or any new super H-bomb. The ultimate weapon has always existed. Every man, every woman, and every child owns it. It's the ability to say No and take the consequences." - Hagbard Celine, Leviathan Illuminatus! Part III ushers in the apocalyptic high-camp conclusion of the Illuminatus! Trilogy. The 9th and 10th Trips are performed by a grand ensemble cast. The Appendices (which are most instructive) are performed by the incomparable Ken Campbell, bringing the audiobook trilogy full circle. Part III includes the PROLOGUE, only published in the original separate editions of the The Trilogy. The Illuminati has never looked so good. ALL HAIL ERIS!

    Cats added to Terrorist lists

    From: http://dedroidify.blogspot.com

    Friday, July 11, 2008

    Uribe and Chavez hail 'new era'

    Hugo Chavez (left) and Alvaro Uribe - 11/07/2008
    The left-leaning Mr Chavez and pro-US Mr Uribe have made conciliatory noises

    President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela and his Colombian counterpart Alvaro Uribe say they want to promote closer ties, after months of political tension.

    Speaking after a one-day meeting in Venezuela, Mr Chavez said that a new era of co-operation was dawning.

    For his part, Mr Uribe said the two countries could resolve their disputes.

    Relations hit their lowest point in March, when Mr Chavez sent troops to the border following a Colombian raid against a rebel camp inside Ecuador.

    Analysts say improving links will be of political and economic benefit to both.

    Although the two countries are major trading partners, relations have suffered because their two leaders come from opposite ends of the political spectrum.

    Hugo Chavez presents Alvaro Uribe with a portrait of Simon Bolivar
    Chavez presented Uribe with a portrait of Latin American hero Simon Bolivar

    Mr Uribe is a right-winger who is a close ally of the United States, while socialist Mr Chavez regularly denounces Washington and has allied himself with Cuba.

    The two men also differed sharply over Colombia's Farc rebel group, with Mr Uribe seeking military action against it, while Mr Chavez gave them some ideological support.

    But the freeing of 15 high-profile Farc hostages - including former presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt - by the Colombian army last week has strengthened Mr Uribe's position, correspondents say.

    'Turn the page'

    Before meeting Mr Uribe in the northern Venezuelan town of Punto Fijo, Hugo Chavez said he would treat his Colombian counterpart as a "brother".

    We said some harsh things, [but] between brothers these things happen
    Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez

    After their talks, Mr Chavez said: "As of now, a new era begins with Colombia."

    "We can completely turn the page on a stormy past."

    At the height of their dispute earlier this year, Bogota accused President Chavez of funding the Farc - the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia.

    Mr Chavez denies the claims, saying any contact was related to negotiations to secure the release of hostages it was holding.

    Interdependent

    President Chavez has distanced himself from the Farc in recent weeks, calling on them to end their campaign of violence.

    Front pages of French daily newspapers carry the news of Ingrid Betancourt's rescue
    Ingrid Betancourt's rescue has strengthened Uribe's position

    The BBC's Jeremy McDermott in Colombia says that despite the political differences between their leaders, the two neighbours need to get on for their mutual political and economic health.

    Mr Chavez's open support for the Farc was not popular in Venezuela and he wants his supporters to do well in November's elections for the National Assembly, our correspondent says.

    Mr Uribe is still basking in international praise since the Colombian army freed Ms Betancourt and 14 other prominent hostages from the guerrillas this month, he adds.

    The two presidents are expected to sign a number of accords on trade, taxes and border co-operation.

    Colombia is Venezuela's second-largest trading partner after the United States, and enjoys a trade surplus with its neighbour.


    More Details On Presidential Candidates on Colorado Ballot

    Colorado is expected to have 18 presidential candidates on its November ballot, the most for any state in U.S. history. The prior record had been 14 presidential candidates, set in 1992 in Iowa, Tennessee, and Wisconsin. Colorado has five qualified parties: Democratic, Republican, Constitution, Green, and Libertarian. In addition to the presidential nominees of those five parties, thireteen other presidential candidates filed by the June 17 deadline. They needed no petition; they just needed $500 and a list of presidential elector candidates.

    The 13 pairs include:

    Unaffiliated: Alan Keyes for president and Brian Rohrbough for vice-president. Rohrbough lives in Morrison, Colorado, and is president of American Right to Life. One of his children was killed in the Columbine School shooting. Rohrbough is somewhat well-known for having a monument erected that blames the incident on legalized abortion and the policy of not allowing teachers to lead public school students in prayer, in the classroom.

    Unaffiliated: Elvena Lloyd-Duffie for president, no one listed for vice-president. She can add a vice-presidential candidate later. She lives in Chicago. She chose the ballot label “Republican” but the state will require her to change that, and if she doesn’t, she will be “Unaffiliated” on the ballot.

    Unaffiliated: William Koenig for president, no one for vice-president. He lives in Alexandria, Virginia.

    Unaffiliated: Frank McEnulty for president, David Mangan for vice-president. They are the nominees of the New American Independent Party but they chose not to use that ballot labe.

    Unaffiliated: Ralph Nader and Matt Gonzalez.

    Boston Tea: Charles Jay and Dan Sallis. Jay lives in Hollywood, Florida; Sallis lives in Littleton, Colorado.

    Heartquake ‘08: Jonathan Allen of Olathe, Colorado, and Jeffrey Stath, Ventura, California.

    Objectivist: Thomas Stevens of Fresh Meadows, N.Y., and Alden Link of Paramus, N.J.

    Pacifist: Bradford Lyttle and Abraham Bassford, both of Chicago.

    Prohibition: Gene Amondson and Howard Lydick.

    Socialism: Gloria La Riva and Robert Moses. The party’s actual vice-presidential candidate is under age 35, so Moses is a stand-in.

    Socialist: Brian Moore and Stewart Alexander.

    Socialist Workers: James Harris and Alyson Kennedy. The party’s actual presidential candidate was not born in the U.S., so Harris is a stand-in.


    Indians Close Ranks Against Dams in the Amazon

    The government of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva this year has proposed construction of the Jirau and San Antonio dams, the first part of the complex in Brazilian territory. But Bolivian residents of the northern Amazon fear it will unleash environmental harm and devastate their lands. The organisations representing them met Jun. 29 in the northern city of Riberalta and declared an emergency. A declaration by seven labour groups and the Movement of People Affected by Dams of the western Brazilian state of Rondonia, seen by Tierramérica, called on the Bolivian government "not to negotiate or sign any type of agreement" with Brazil. The Madera, the Spanish name of the river where it begins in Bolivia, or the Madeira, its Portuguese name in Brazil, originates in the Andes Mountains, formed by the Beni and Madre de Dios rivers, and ultimately flows into the Amazon River. The Madera crosses a biodiverse region, with a binational path of rapids and "cachuelas", or low cascades. This geography is not suitable for river navigation, but has hydroelectric potential. Researchers at the Institute of Hydrology and Hydraulics of the Universidad Mayor de San Andrés (UMSA) and of the Research for Development Institute, along with experts supported by the non-governmental Bolivian Forum for Environment and Development (Fobomade) are trying to determine the risks Bolivia faces in the construction of the dams. Although the dam is to be built in Brazilian taerritory, there will be impacts in Bolivia as well, UMSA researcher Jorge Molina told Tierramérica. The preliminary results of the study indicate that there would be blockage of rivers and tributaries, with subsequent flooding, severe losses of aquatic diversity and of farmable land, as well as displacement of indigenous communities. ...

    Everything for Everyone

    A DNC/RNC Callout Everything for Everyone: A Small Demand On the evening of August 25, the night of the Democratic Party’s fundraising events, we will manifest ourselves not as a focus group but as a force: Against capitalism and in solidarity with those who fight against policing on a daily basis, (in memory of Paul Childs and Frank Lobato both murdered by the Denver police); against the destruction of the planet and for our own needs for a total transformation of society. At 6 p.m. gather as a Black Bloc at Civil Center Park in downtown Denver. Wear black tops and blue denim bottoms. Bring flags and banners. Be materially prepared. We do not seek a mere march against capitalism but rather a communication mechanism to inquire of others a modest question: “We want everything. Do you?” For the destruction of capitalism and the state, —A precarious workers-council of Unconventional Action, and comrades from the West Coast, Northwest, Southwest, Midwest, Southeast, East Coast, the UK, and Europe

    Farc rebels denounce 'betrayal'

    Antonio Aguilar, known as Cesar, and Alexander Fanfan, known as Enrique Gafas.
    The two Farc rebels were captured during the operati

    Colombia's Farc rebels say betrayal by two of their own fighters led to the dramatic release of Ingrid Betancourt and 14 other hostages last week.

    The two guerrillas were captured by Colombian soldiers posing as aid workers, in a move which freed the hostages without a shot being fired.

    In its first communique since the release, Farc said the pair betrayed their revolutionary principles.

    It added it was ready to negotiate the freeing of other hostages.

    The two Farc members were seized by Colombian soldiers and will face trial: Antonio Aguilar, known as Cesar, and Alexander Fanfan, known as Enrique Gafas.

    Ingrid Betancourt, Paris, 9 July 2008

    Colombia says they had been tricked into thinking that they - and their hostages - were being taken by helicopter to see the Farc leader, but in fact the craft was piloted by intelligence agents.

    The Farc statement says that the incident was "the direct consequence of the despicable conduct of Cesar and Enrique, who betrayed their revolutionary ideals and the trust we had put in them".

    Both men are now facing extradition to the United States.

    As well as the French-Colombian national Ingrid Betancourt, three US defence contractors were among the 15 hostages freed.

    The Farc communique, carried on the Bolivarian press agency, was dated 5 July, three days after the hostages were freed.


    Thursday, July 10, 2008

    "Hai," releases me from the dance. I am happy, tired, sweating, pleased. ...

    2008 CrimethInc. Convergence July 16-20: Policies

    Anarchist EventsThe CrimethInc. Convergence is right around the corner. On July 16, hundreds of wild-eyed ex-regular people will meet in Milwaukee at Gordon Park (Locust St. & Humboldt Blvd) to begin five days of plotting, scheming, debating, learning, chicanery, and what have you. 2008 CrimethInc. Convergence July 16-20: Policies The CrimethInc. Convergence is right around the corner. On July 16, hundreds of wild-eyed ex-regular people will meet in Milwaukee at Gordon Park (Locust St. & Humboldt Blvd) to begin five days of plotting, scheming, debating, learning, chicanery, and what have you. Attendees -- expect a lot from yourselves. It's up to you to challenge yourselves and everyone else to break out of routines and into restricted spaces. Arrive with the understanding that you are responsible for yourselves--and for a lot more than that. Bring plans, bring surprises, bring infernal machines. ...

    Giving Neocons the Fingar

    by Robert Dreyfuss (source: The Nation)
    Thursday, July 10, 2008

    The Nation -- Yesterday afternoon, as guests balanced buffet lunches on their knees, one of America's top intelligence official made some provocative and fascinating comments about the current US-Iranian impasse.

    What he said was like a thumb in the eye to neoconservatives and assorted other sabre-rattlers.

    The official was Thomas Fingar, director of the National Intelligence Council and deputy director for analysis at the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. In effect, Fingar is the nation's top intelligence analyst. Previously, he headed the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research, one of the few (very few) US intelligence agencies to have mostly gotten Iraq right in 2002, when the CIA and Pentagon agencies were hyperventilating about the threat of Iraqi WMDs. More recently, Fingar oversaw the production of the 2007 National Intelligence Estimate that famously concluded that Iran had likely halted the development of nuclear weapons in 2003.

    In his presentation yesterday, at the Center for National Policy, Fingar opened a window onto the thinking of the US intelligence community on Iran. It was decidedly unwarlike.

    First, Fingar insisted that the United States has to take Iran's legitimate security concerns into account. "Iran," he said, "like the classic 'even paranoids have enemies' idea, lives in a tough neighborhood. It has reason to feel insecure." Part of the reason for Iran's insecurity, he said, was the fact that the United States has armies in Iraq and Afghanistan. "Recognizing that Iran has real security needs is a good starting point" for US policy, he said. "We are part of the reason why Iran feels insecure."

    The answer, he added, is to talk to Iran. "It argues for engagement," he said. "From bilateral to multilateral to using international institutions."

    In regard to Iran's current round of missile tests -- Tehran conducted a second round today -- Fingar was calm. The tests, he suggested, were more defense-minded warnings that a signal of planned aggression. "Iran has kind of a hedgehog strategy," he said. "It's 'Mess with me and you get stuck.' They're saying, 'I have the capacity to inflict pain.'"

    Fingar explicitly tied the issue of Iran to energy supplies. "Iran," he said, "is located in a part of the world where energy supplies are." In his talk, Fingar referred several times to "competition for energy" as source of future instability and conflict. I asked him to elaborate. He said that such competition could include everything from "the workings of the market, that is, you compete by price, and who has the most money" to more political and strategic competition. Sometimes, he said, it's a question of affinity and friendship, where like-minded countries favor each other in the energy supply-and-demand relationship. But he also worried about efforts at "sewing up access to resources in a quasi-colonial sense." That, of course, could apply to the American occupation of Iraq, but Fingar didn't go there.

    He also said that state-owned oil companies pose a challenge for American policy. Though he didn't specify exactly what he meant, he seemed to suggest that because major consuming countries such as China and major producing countries such as Iran and Saudi Arabia have state-owned oil industries, they are able to combine economic and state political power to strike oil bargains. (It seems clear that the current government of Iraq, still dependent on if not controlled by the United States, has deliberately blocked access to Iraqi oil so far to Chinese, Russian and other oil companies while favoring the American, British, French and Dutch oil firms that controlled Iraqi oil back in the good old days of imperialism.)

    When I asked Fingar about America's traditional role of serving as the protector of the Persian Gulf -- an unbroken succession of US administrations has proclaimed the Gulf to be an American 'lake" -- he implied that that arrangement was fine with the rest of the world until now. "The world has benefited, including the rising powers, from the role that the United States has played." Still, he said, in rather Delphic terms, "The chickens are coming home to roost." He mused, "Are there alternatives? What are the downsides?" Indeed, that is a central problem for American strategy in the coming decades. An effort by the United States to maintain its hegemonic control of the Gulf will likely face determined resistance from much of the world, especially from the rising powers of Asia that need the Gulf's oil. And Iran, sitting the middle of that, is not unaware of the issue. During my visit to Iran in March, a top Iranian official told me bluntly that Iran sees itself as the chief obstacle to America's ability to consolidate control of the Persian Gulf and its oil, and he said that the United States sees it in exactly the same way.


    Trident tested

    By Angie Zelter New Internationalist On the beautiful and rugged western coast of Scotland is an exceptionally deep natural harbour called Faslane. It is home to a British naval base and four Trident submarines equipped with up to 200 warheads. Just one of these has the capacity to deliver eight times the destructive power of the bombs that flattened Hiroshima and Nagasaki. ... Angie Zelter is a campaigner specializing in nonviolent direct action. She has been arrested over 100 times and served 16 prison sentences. In 1996 she and three other women disarmed a BAE Hawk Jet bound for East Timor, causing $3 million worth of damage. A jury found them ‘not guilty’. Her book Faslane 365 – a year of anti-nuclear blockades (Luath) will be launched in June 2008. http://www.ukwatch.net/article/trident_tested

    Colombia: The Betancourt Rescue and Beyond

    In spite of Ingrid Betancourt’s extraordinary rescue, the fate of Colombia is unlikely to be any brighter than before unless she accepts a new mission and returns to the public life, and President Alvaro Uribe commits a patriotic act by declining to seek a constitutional change allowing him to run for a third term in 2010.

    • Betancourt’s unlikely but “impeccable” rescue may involve less than meets the eye • Uribe – a divisive figure who may now shine, but reflects Colombia’s deep malaise • Largely due to its own self interest, U.S. policy is blindly pro-Uribe • Ingrid Betancourt is a proven quantity, having run a very respectable presidential campaign in 2002

    The liberation of Ingrid Betancourt The liberation of Ingrid Betancourt, three American citizens, and 11 public officials by an elite unit of the Colombian military is one of the gravest blows ever dealt to the FARC in its more than 44 years of armed struggle. Most importantly, the exploit served to reveal the FARC’s institutional weaknesses, their impaired internal communication, and a plummeting public standing, both throughout the region and with the Colombian public. The unlikely incident further discredits the myth that the guerrilla group is a monolithic and impenetrable organization and suggests that the continued viability of the FARC as a coherent initiative is open to doubt.

    Betancourt’s rescue, although simple in theory, was highly implausible in practice. The rescue operation called Jaque, had been in progress for over a year, according to Army Commander Freddy Padilla, and was able to penetrate the FARC secretariat and other FARC quarters. Ostensibly, the story is that the Colombian military infiltrated a FARC administrative zone and then ensured, by means of a fiendishly clever ruse, that many of the high-profile FARC hostages, including trophy detainee Ingrid Betancourt, were gathered in the same proximity and at the same time, allegedly at the behest of the FARC high command. At this point, an elite squad of the Colombian military, using two unmarked Russian helicopters, went into action. Pretending to be an international NGO squad and garbed in Che Guevara T-shirts, the personnel on board at the helicopter reaffirmed to the FARC forces on the ground that they had been entrusted to transport the hostages to a rendezvous point with Alfonso Cano, FARC’s new supreme leader. Immediately after taking off, the Colombian helicopter crew (in reality a Colombian intelligence unit) neutralized the FARC rebels accompanying the hostages, who had been tricked into boarding the helicopter. The helicopter then flew the hostages to freedom. Ingrid Betancourt describes the rescue as “absolutely impeccable,” for “there was no violence—not even one bullet was shot.”

    The ultimate winner: Alvaro Uribe Velez? Ingrid Betancourt? Or the Colombian people? President Uribe’s already high approval rating spiked to a record 91 percent after the military rescue, according to the Colombian newspaper, El Espectador. One would think, then, that Colombians would be likely to consider his mandate as anything but illegitimate, taking into account that the FARC has certainly lost much of its political clout and geopolitical leverage as a result of the brilliant rescue, as reflected in Uribe’s astronomical poll rating. Thus, the government currently has almost unlimited leverage to set the conditions for negotiations with the FARC, now that Uribe has called for a humanitarian agreement to be achieved between the two contending parties.

    If President Uribe voluntarily leaves office after his current term ends in 2010, he will leave with the gratitude of the nation and could go down as one of the greatest presidents in the country’s recent history. However, due to the controversial nature of his presidency, including the numerous scandals affecting his office administration, and the corruption surrounding para-politics, his military policies and the Yidis Medina case, it is best for the sake of Colombia’s democracy that he leave office after his second mandate. If he remains in the race, however, his divisive and combative personality will prevent him from making compromises with Venezuela and Ecuador, let alone the FARC. Although the FARC is undisputedly at one of its weakest points in its history, it still deeply resents Uribe for his past actions: for his sanctioning brutality, his indifference to violence and for giving the army free rein in its operations. Amongst these actions were Colombia’s military initiative against FARC in Ecuador on March 1st, Bogota’s payment of a bribe of up to two and a half million dollars for the commissioned killing of one of FARC’s top leaders, Ivan Rios, and Uribe’s enthusiastic support for the controversial Convivir initiative, which included the creation of local self-defense cooperatives that resorted to brutal tactics to defend against guerrilla attacks. These measures have made carrying on negotiations with the FARC very difficult.

    With the muscular denouncement of FARC’s kidnapping tactics by Ecuador’s President Correa and Fidel Castro, the guerrilla force has never been more isolated. Furthermore with the meeting between President Uribe and Chavez in Venezuela on July 11th, with the purpose of ameliorating relations between the two countries, it looks like even some of those who seemed sympathetic to the FARC have now either disassociated completely from the guerrilla or are willing to take a more temperate attitude to the Colombian government, if it really seeks a settlement with the guerrilla forces. Yet, it might well be that the FARC, out of principle or zealotry and due to their passionately held goal centered on what the new Colombia should look like, will do whatever is necessary to thwart President Uribe from receiving the glory of being the one Colombian president who was able to achieve the FARC’s demilitarization and demobilization.

    Operation Jaque, was it all a set-up? The remarkably intricate nature of the rescue has raised some speculation whether it might have been, in spite of the military’s insistence, not an all-Colombian Armed Forces operation, but a joint effort by the Colombian military and one or more FARC deserters, and that massive bribes may have been involved. An organization that has been surviving for over 40 years and was known for its capacity to endure under the most trying of conditions is not likely to have fallen for such an obvious trap. One explanation can be found in the fact that, according to Ingrid Betancourt, the FARC, prior to the rescue mission, seemed to be going through a period of pronounced scarcity of supplies and had been enduring severe operative problems in the recent months. She states that the government seemed to have cornered the FARC, and that heavy pressure was being put on it, causing desertions and various acts of bribery to occur at an alarming rate. Therefore, it is conceivable that some FARC rebels from that sector had defected and were cooperating in the operation with the Colombian military, and that hundreds of thousands—even millions—of dollars had exchanged hands.

    Furthermore, the timing of Uribe’s rescue was suspiciously perfect. Just when the legislator Yidis Medina had been found guilty of bribery for changing her vote to allow Uribe to be reelected, and just when Colombia was going through a profound institutional crisis which put Uribe’s mandate into question, the paramount success of Betancourt’s rescue hurried all of the previous legitimate concerns over Uribe into the trash bin. However, there are increasing doubts concerning the details of the rescue and the fact that some of them might not have occurred in their entirety as related by the Colombian authorities. For example Swiss radio Romande journalist, Frederich Blassel, claims that reliable sources indicate that 20 million U.S. dollars were in fact paid to the FARC to facilitate the escape of the 15 hostages. The channel said that the hostages “were in reality ransomed for a high price, and the whole operation afterwards was a set-up,” and that the U.S. was somehow involved in securing the funds, providing intelligence, performing logistical services, providing infrastructure and training availability in general.

    Operation Ingrid A very different scenario for Colombia could present itself in the near future if Ingrid Betancourt decides to enter the Colombian presidential elections in 2010. Although a notable politician before her kidnapping, she has acknowledged that her campaign was running out of steam when her kidnapping occurred, and that she was becoming marginalized in the race. Nonetheless, her capture by the FARC mesmerized average Colombians and brought growing shame upon the guerrilla force for visiting such pain upon her, while it gave Betancourt a much higher international political profile. Both the French and the Colombian governments recognized Betancourt’s humanitarian plight as a top priority, and by the time she and her colleagues were freed, Colombian civil society had become very involved in calling for a humanitarian agreement that would free all the remaining hostages held by both sides from captivity.

    During her six and a half years as a hostage, Betancourt was held under tight control. At the same time, during this period she had become one of Colombia’s most revered and admired political figures. If she in fact decides to run in 2010, and if Uribe decides against running for an unprecedented third term, the incumbent president would be recognized by this generation as having performed what will be seen as a grand gesture, while helping to transform her into being the most formidable possible candidate for 2010. An alternative scenario might be that Uribe’s rescue of Betancourt will end up with his inadvertently having created the political force that might eventually oust him from the presidency in the next elections, if he chooses to run. According to Colombian newspaper La Semana and Gallup Poll, President Uribe’s and Betancourt’s popularity are head to head at 85 percent and 83 percent respectively. If the three percent margin of error of the poll is taken into account, these two political figures are technically equally popular in Colombia, making Betancourt a very palpable political threat to Uribe. Furthermore, Betancourt, who certainly has had first-hand experience with the FARC, has now undertaken, as her personal mission, to liberate the remaining hostages and for treating her former FARC captors without “hate.” Today’s reality may be that uniquely, Betancourt might be the one person in Colombia able to bring an end to her ravished country’s bitter armed conflict.

    Ingrid’s new mission After being reunited with her sons and daughter, Betancourt called for international support to achieve the liberation of the rest of the hostages. She called on the presidents of Venezuela, Ecuador and Argentina to help with Colombia’s peace efforts by strengthening its democratic institution. Now may be the ideal moment for peace negotiations between the FARC and the government to once again commence. Since Colombian authorities find themselves in an indisputably advantageous position in their prospects to resolve the current conflict, they now have the opportunity to make reasonable demands, and then call upon all countries involved in the current deadlock to reach a humanitarian agreement instead of perpetuating an armed conflict with the guerrilla forces. At the same time, the hope is that Uribe will not “get drunk in his own success,” as the Colombian press agency Anncol warned last Thursday, July 3rd. However, new signs of danger have started to manifest themselves. For instance, according to the major Colombian newspaper El Tiempo, on July 8th, Commissioner of Peace, Luis Carlos Restrepo announced that the government would seek to negotiate the armed conflict without turning to the international community because of “the difficulties with the [international] mediators, and since the FARC are already fractured, it is better to establish direct contact.” However, the lack of international support and mediation was one of the biggest reasons why the negotiations failed in the previous administrations. Uribe would be wise to learn from the lessons of the past, to draw upon as much help as he can get when it comes to achieving a lasting peace in Colombia. Shunning international mediators now might be very detrimental to Colombia’s future and this should be the Colombian President’s main concern.

    A now crippled FARC organization is being called upon by a number of well-wishers to lay down its arms and achieve change by entering into a sincere political dialogue and the pursuit of a meaningful compromise. Optimistically, as former Colombian President Andres Pastrana reasons, “leaders of the FARC will come to an understanding that they need to sit down and negotiate.” Meanwhile, newly installed FARC leader Alfonso Cano must come to recognize that the time has come for his group to step up and make a sincere commitment to peace. In the last few days, both Fidel Castro and President Correa of Ecuador have called upon the FARC to release all their hostages and no longer look upon kidnapping as a legitimate revolutionary tactic, even though the Cuban strongman advised FARC not to lay down their arms. As Hugo Chavez stated on June 27th, “the time for guerrilla fronts have passed” and “there should be a greater effort towards peace…from my point of view the time of the guns already passed.” Furthermore, the FARC needs to realize that its armed struggle is not helping to achieve social reform or ameliorate Colombia’s profound economic and agrarian concerns, or deal with the massive problems posed by poverty along with millions of displaced refugees.

    Ingrid Betancourt can play a big role in this unfolding script by not resorting to old political veneers, but through seeking after bold new formulas. Perhaps Hugo Chavez could be called upon again to resume his past efforts to negotiate with the FARC rebels in order for them to agree to give up the captives in their hands, and perhaps he would agree to take in thousands of demobilized guerrilla fighters and offer them a temporary safe haven in Venezuela in order to safeguard their future security, which could not be guaranteed in Colombia. Betancourt, too, could call upon regional figures to offer them guarantees as an act of good will, even though this might be illusory. This would be one way that the FARC combatants could be protected against being sitting ducks for further political assaults. The government must ensure the FARC that past bloody incidents such as the extermination of the Patriotic Union during the middle of the 1980’s, when the paramilitary and the military forces annihilated the political party faction of the FARC, will not be repeated.

    However, the final analysis is that it must be Uribe who shows that although his military forces recently have achieved a stunning blow against the FARC militants, his finest hour could be his decision not to run again for president, for there have been too many scandals, too many sanctioned human rights violations, and too much bloodshed between the FARC and his government for his bona fides to have credibility. If his commitment to peace in Colombia is true, and if he genuinely wants the best for Colombia’s future, a decision not to seek the presidential office for a third term would be a positive factor in resolving his nation’s persistent woes and would offer an opportunity for Colombia to end the four decade old armed conflict.

    This analysis was prepared by COHA Research Associate Erina Uozumi

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    News International Threatens Media Lens with Legal and Police Action

    On June 28 and July 3, Media Lens received repeated threats of both legal and police action from Alastair Brett, legal manager of News International’s Times Newspapers.

    Noam Chomsky described the threat, pithily, as “pretty sick.” (Email, June 28, 2008) David Miller, professor of sociology at the University of Strathclyde and founder member of Spinwatch, commented:

    “The response from the Times is an absolutely outrageous attempt to bully and censor you. It is not – unfortunately – surprising though, as the Murdoch empire is determined to attempt to snuff out those voices which try to bear witness to the truths of our age. Those that unmask naked power will be targeted by the Murdoch empire and its hench people. Maddox is the latest in a long line and is evidently a well networked member of the political elite – being a governor of the shadowy Ditchley Foundation. It is simply laughable that sending emails to complain about her distorted coverage constitutes harassment. Frankly, the drumbeat for war with Iran, to which she adds her voice, is much more like harassment, but of a whole nation. Its consequences are already more deadly serious for the people of Iran than any amount of emails from Medialens readers.” (Email, July 8, 2008)

    Brett claimed Times journalist Bronwen Maddox had been subject to “vexatious and threatening” emails from Media Lens readers, which constituted “harassment”. If this did not stop, Brett told us, he would notify the police who might wish to investigate the matter with a view to bringing a criminal prosecution. As former New Statesman editor, Peter Wilby, noted in his Guardian article on the Times threat, this was no joke – prosecution for criminal harassment “can lead to six months’ imprisonment or, if a court order is breached, up to five years”.

    Maddox claimed to have received “dozens of emails, many abusive or threatening”. (Ibid)

    Beginning with our very first media alert, published seven years ago yesterday, we have always advised our readers to treat journalists with respect:

    “The goal of Media Lens is to promote rationality, compassion and respect for others. If you do write to journalists, we strongly urge you to maintain a polite, non-aggressive and non-abusive tone.”

    As usual, many emails were copied or forwarded to us. We saw precisely one that could conceivably be described as “vexatious and threatening”. The email read:

    “You have know [sic] idea who you are dealing with here. But I do like to help. I suggest that you read this [an inaccessible Facebook website entry] very, very carefully and fully. You have until 4pm Monday to respond to my original email or I will deem you to be fired.”

    This was also the only email offered up as evidence to Wilby for his Guardian piece. Unprompted by us, the offending emailer had earlier written to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, informing one executive:

    “If you take more than 1 working day to reply to this email without a reason that I consider acceptable you can consider yourself fired.”

    He also wrote to around 40 senior UK editors and journalists in June describing Media Lens as “a pack of absolute tossers”.

    Ironically, we have been subject to far worse abuse than Maddox and Brett, and at the hands of mainstream journalists. Before becoming editor of the Independent, the former Observer editor, Roger Alton, asked one of our readers:

    “Have you just been told to write in by those c*nts at medialens?” (Email forwarded, June 1, 2006 – original uncensored. Changed here to avoid triggering spam filters)

    An online Observer article by Peter Beaumont described Media Lens as “a curious willy-waving exercise… Think a train spotters’ club run by Uncle Joe Stalin.” (Beaumont, ‘Microscope on Medialens,’ June 18, 2006)

    We have always found these insults more chucklesome than vexatious. Chomsky was once asked for his reaction to the abuse he receives:

    Man: ‘Noam… You’ve been called a neo-Nazi, your books have been burned, you’ve been called anti-Israeli – don’t you get a bit upset by the way that your views are always distorted by the media and by intellectuals?’

    Noam: ‘No why should I? I get called anything, I’m accused of everything you can think of: being a Communist propagandist, a Nazi propagandist, a pawn of freedom of speech, an anti-Semite, liar, whatever you want. Actually, I think that’s all a good sign. I mean, if you are a dissident, typically you are ignored. If you can’t be ignored, and you can’t be answered, you’re vilified – that’s obvious: no institution is going to help people undermine it. So I would only regard the kind of things you’re talking about as signs of progress.’” (Noam Chomsky, Understanding Power, The New Press, 2002, pp.204-5)

    Questions Of Copyright

    Brett also claimed that we would be acting unlawfully by publishing an email from Maddox without permission. We sought advice and one legal expert told us:

    “The Times has no case over the confidentiality of email correspondence. Email correspondence, in itself, is not considered confidential – unless the precise contents of an email are confidential.”

    Another suggested that the law is less clear and that the Times might carry out its threat. Another reminded us:

    “Added weight to your cause is that the statements expressed and reproduced on your site represent important ‘political commentary’ (as opposed to artistic or commercial commentary). Political commentary is the most heavily protected type of expression under Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights (via the Human Rights Act 1998 in the UK).”

    Another lawyer cited a barrister friend who nutshelled his view of the credibility of the Times’s case: “Tell them to f*ck off.”

    Douwe Korff, Professor of International Law at London Metropolitan University and an expert on the European Convention on Human Rights, commented:

    “I find the stance of the Times appalling in moral terms and flimsy at best in law. Their legal position, if endorsed by the courts, would severely limit freedom of the press over issues of major public concern. Is that what they want? I have little doubt their arguments would be kicked out by the UK courts if they pursued them here; they would certainly not be upheld by the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg. This is simply an attempt by a heavy-weight corporation to brow-beat a small freelance news operation that dares to be critical of its editorial line. It is quite scandalous. The Times should be ashamed of itself.” (Email to Media Lens, July 8, 2008)

    Having minimal resources for fighting a court case, either in terms of time or money, we decided to delete Maddox’s email from our media alert, ‘Selling The Fireball’, as demanded. You can see the amended version here

    We also published a message on our website emphasising the need for respectful communication with journalists. Coincidentally, we had previously discussed the issue at length in ’Compassionate Media Activism,’ an interview with former Buddhist monk, Matthew Bain, published this week on the new Elephant Skin website.

    The happy result of this episode is that a number of high-powered legal minds have offered us their services free of charge should the need arise in future.

    Peter Wilby wrote about the Times’ threat in the Guardian:

    “We journalists are accustomed to dishing it out, but have the thinnest of skins. At the merest hint of criticism, we are apt to turn to our lawyers. One reason for this professional sensitivity, I suppose, is that journalists are insecure egotists who like to occupy the high moral ground. Criticism assaults their sense of self-worth and, since their colleagues and potential employers are assiduous consumers of print, it may damage their future prospects.”

    Wilby quoted from the banned email, perhaps thereby indicating his own feelings on the matter. But his piece was ’balanced’. He criticised us for not providing a link to Maddox’s original article, for not urging readers to always read journalists’ work before writing, and for not making clear to Maddox who we were when we wrote to her. He contrasted these “failings” with the Times’s “professional sensitivities”, which he suggested were over-developed.

    There was something missing from Wilby’s article, however: the human catastrophe that provides the moral backdrop to the entire debate. George Monbiot alluded to it in 2004 when he wrote: “the falsehoods reproduced by the media before the invasion of Iraq were massive and consequential: it is hard to see how Britain could have gone to war if the press had done its job.”

    Like the rest of the British media, the Times played a vital role in selling the public a pack of outrageous government lies that presented a totally non-existent and obviously risible ‘threat’ as somehow serious, plausible, and even (god help us!) urgent.

    Many of the most sophisticated philosophies of human culture contend that rational understanding is the result, not just of wisdom, but also of compassion. This is certainly true of the current discussion. Brett’s complaints that our actions caused distress to one of his journalists, and Wilby’s ’balanced’ response, can seem almost reasonable, until we focus our minds and hearts (if we are able) on a single overwhelming fact. In significant part as a result of the actions of the British media, more than one million human beings are now lying dead in Iraq. In fact, the entire country has been subject to unrelenting destruction and slaughter by two decades of Western policy rooted in selfish greed. All of this has been buried in official propaganda, media silence and compromised ’balance’ – it barely exists for the public.

    And of course there is more and worse. Almost unbelievably, the media’s Iran focus 2008 is near-identical to the media’s Iraq focus 2002-2003. It is entirely possible that hundreds of thousands of people will soon be lying dead in Iran as a result of sanctions and war, just across the border from Iraq