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Showing posts with label counter currents. Show all posts
Showing posts with label counter currents. Show all posts

Sunday, August 12

Incarcerated Inside Israel Palestinians Tortured And Isolated

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By Graham Peebles
12 August, 2012
Countercurrents.org

Detention without trial, the presumption of guilt, denial of family visits, solitary confinement, torture, violent interrogation, and denial of access to appropriate health care, such is the Israeli judicial system and prison confinement experienced by Palestinian men, women and indeed children.

Currently there are, according to B'T selem “4,484 Palestinians – security detainees, confined in Israeli prisons.” Family contact is virtually impossible for prisoners, most of who are held inside Israel . This contravenes international law in the form of the universally trumpeted Fourth Geneva Convention (Article's 49 & 76), consistently violated and disregarded by Israel .

International laws – legally binding upon Israel , who are not above the rule of law, must be respected and enforced. Richard Falk UN Special Rapporteur on the occupied Palestinian territories, in the UN news 2/5/12 called “on the international community to ensure that Israel complies with international human rights laws and norms in its treatment of Palestinian prisoners.” The UN makes its feelings clear in the ‘Question of Palestine Administrative Detention' report (UNQAP) when it says, Israel “has historically ratified international agreements regarding human rights protection, whilst at the same time refusing to apply the agreements within the Occupied Palestinian Territory , attempting to create legal justifications for its illegal actions.” A comprehensive list of international legally binding agreements dutifully signed, ratified and consequently disregarded by various Israeli governments are cited by the UN, which sits hands tied, impotent it seems in the face of Israel's illegal and violent occupation (a fact that cannot be stated often or loudly enough), submissive to the imperialist Godfather. America .

Wednesday, July 25

Drone Attacks Stir Anti-Americanism


By Nazia Nazar25 July, 2012
Countercurrents.org

After the US tendered an apology over NATO air strikes on Salala check posts though belatedly, there has been key development vis-à-vis thaw in Pak-US ties. According to reports in national newspapers, chief of the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) Lt. General Zaheer-ul-Islam will visit the US in last week of July or first week of August 2012. 

Reportedly, the visit has been approved by the government, and it will be the first visit by the army chief or an intelligence chief to the US after the 2nd May 2011 when the US Marines had conducted operation at Abbottabad compound, showing utter disregard to international law and Pakistan’s sovereignty. The ISI chief will meet his US counterpart, Director Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) David Petraeus and other senior American officials to discuss matters related to counter-terrorism cooperation. The sources stated that Lt-General Islam will also focus on unilateral drone attacks by the US and press for their cessation.

There is hope that the meeting between two spy-masters would be fruitful, and could prove to be the first step in normalizing relations between Pentagon and Pakistan military. In western press also, there is speculation as to what DG ISI will talk to his counterpart. They reckon that he will ask to stop drone attacks and provide strategic and technical intelligence input obtained through drones/Unmanned Arial Vehicles so that Pak can take action against the terrorists. Though America had in the past refused to transfer drone technology, DG ISI is poised to discuss possibility of transfer of drone technology and capacity building of Pakistani forces. It has to be mentioned that civil and military leaderships are on the same page so far as drone attacks are concerned. Lt. General Zaheer-ul-Islam is committed to follow the guidelines given by the Parliament; it is therefore for sure he would to say no to drone attacks and no to US troops on ground.

Monday, July 16

The Great Transformation: United States From The Welfare State To The Imperial Police State

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By James Petras

Introduction: The United States has experienced the biggest political upheaval in its recent history: the transformation of a burgeoning welfare state into a rapidly expanding, highly intrusive and deeply entrenched police state, linked to the most developed technological innovations.

The ‘Great Transformation’ occurred exclusively from above, organized by the upper echelons of the civil and military bureaucracy under the direction of the Executive and his National Security Council. The ‘Great Transformation’ was not a single event but a process of the accumulation of powers, via executive fiats, supported and approved by compliant Congressional leaders. At no time in the recent and distant past has this nation witnessed the growth of such repressive powers and the proliferation of so many policing agencies engaged in so many areas of life over such a prolonged period of time (a time of virtually no internal mass dissent). Never has the executive branch of government secured so many powers to detain, interrogate, kidnap and assassinate its own citizens without judicial restraint.

Friday, July 13

Before The Collapse


By Timothy V. Gatto

A few observations:

1. The Media is controlled by the government and most of what you see and hear from it is a lie.

2. The United States is engaged in wars all over the planet for resources.

3. Sociopaths run our government.

4. The U.S. government is attempting to destroy our basic civil liberties to consolidate their power.

5. The Bankers are stealing America's wealth.

6. Our economy in America is collapsing.

7. Anyone that is critical of the current policies is considered to be mentally ill, a malcontent or a "terrorist".

8. The U.S. is in an economic depression.

9. There is no difference between the Democrats and Republicans.

10. (Most importantly) Many people understand what is going on (and the numbers are growing larger every day) and the government of the USA had no idea this would come so swiftly.

This is the situation we find ourselves in. We have a few ways to deal with it. Americans can revolt, remain passive or ignore reality. We can move to another country, commit suicide or spend all of our savings like there will be no tomorrow.

Basically, the day has arrived where the proverbial piper is rolling into town and someone's got to pay him. The trouble is that there is no money in the bank. Obama isn't going to pay him, and neither is Congress. Nobody in Washington will part with any money unless it's for weapons.

We are not in a good position. The government of this country actually believed that we would remain ignorant forever. The truth is I also believed the people of this nation would prefer to remain ignorant of the true state of affairs. I still believe that if there were a way for Americans to stick their fingers in their ears and sing until the situation resolved itself, they would.

But the reality is they can't. The situation is not going to resolve itself and go away. Things will get better or things will get worse, but they will not remain the same. The banks are going to fail, we are going to find ourselves getting shot at or bombed or many of us will get arrested for expressing our opinion.

I don't exactly know where I'm going with this piece, but I know that I want to make one thing clear to anyone that reads this: If you believe that "someday" the American people will wake up, or that "someday" Americans will understand the true nature of the corporate duopoly (Republicans and Democrats) or that "someday" the floor is going to drop out beneath this huge pack of lies we call our nation's history, that "someday" is today.

I'm oversimplifying the situation but not too much. The country won't go to pieces before midnight, but in historical terms, the fall of the empire is right around the corner. Many people today (but not as many as yesterday) will see everything collapse and won't have a clue as to why the collapse is occurring. There are others that will wonder why it didn't happen sooner. One thing will be apparent; no one will be able to ignore it.

I'd like to see a few things happen before the fall;

1. Trials for war crimes to include people in the two Bush regimes, the Clinton and the Obama regimes. Some of the charges should be murder, conspiracy, torture, unlawful imprisonment and blackmail.

2. For the bankers and other members of the Wall Street criminal gang: Conspiracy, blackmail. Theft and racketeering.

3. For the Flag Grade Officers of the military (Admirals and Generals): Conspiracy, numerous war crimes in violation of the UCMJ (Uniform Code of Military Justice), murder and graft.

4. For Members of Congress: Impeachment for dereliction of duty and failure to do their oversight duties as spelled out in easily read English contained in the U.S. Constitution.

5. For the U.S. Supreme Court: Impeachment for favors given to wealthy corporations in violation of the People's General Welfare provision in the U.S. Constitution.

Of course there should be others that should be charged with crimes, but that would be determined by the Attorney General or a Special Prosecutor. I only hope that charges be brought against those who are guilty of malfeasances or murders or any other violations of the law.

My other hope is that this all occurs before the collapse of the U.S., and I hope its televised and in color.

Tim Gatto is former Chairman of the Liberal Party of America, Tim is a retired Army Sergeant. He currently lives in South Carolina. He is the author of "Complicity to Contempt" and "Kimchee Days" available at Oliver Arts and Open Press.

Sunday, June 17

Better NO Health Care, Housing or Jobs For Americans Continuing To Mass-Murder Overseas

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By Jay Janson

Better health care, housing and jobs for soldiers of the great nation crucifying the poor overseas? continuing to destroy homes of non-Americans (with their children inside)? No, If Amers got zero health care, housing and jobs from their Wall Street investor rulers, they might stop participating in, paying for, and silently accepting Wall Street created illegal undeclared killing-field wars on majority humanity. King held himself and ordinary citizens responsible.

An otherwise life enjoying eighty-one old historian who has lived most of his life in countries bombed by the United States is sick and tired.

Sick to my stomach of a life long watching of Amers partying while their sons, brothers, fathers and friends were or are massacring Koreans and in Korea, Vietnamese in Vietnam, Laotians in Laos, Cambodians in Cambodia, Dominicans in the Dominican Republic, Cubans in Cuba, Panamanians in Panama, Grenadians in Grenada, Somalis in Somalia, Afghanis in Afghanistan, Iraqis in Iraq, Lebanese in Lebanon, Pakistani in Pakistan, Libyans in Libya and apparently now willing to do the same being planned for Iran, while encircling China with bases and military alliances, never forgetting their having arranged massacres of Greeks in Greece, Guatemalans in Guatemala, Iranians in Iran, Congolese in Congo, Argentinians in Argentina, Peruvians in Peru, Chileans in Chile, Haitians in Haiti, Colombians in Colombia, Salvadorians in El Salvador, Nicaraguans in Nicaragua and now Syrians in Syria.*

Tired of reading and listening to Amer progressives with no intention of ending the illegal and undeclared wars, but rather to look good denouncing them as the mistaken acts of US presidents, other elected politicians and appointed public servants, never the acts of ordinary Americans, as if ordinary Amers were not pulling the triggers willingly and with fervor on their own brothers and sisters and their children overseas;

- as if ordinary Americans were not watching it all on TV, cheering on Amers murdering poor people in their own beloved countries, their cities, villages and countryside, as often as not, in their very own homes.

- as if ordinary Americans were not excitedly voting to elect those calling for more wars, and proud of the past ones, so bloody obviously beholden to pitiful criminally insane for power tycoons and investment bankers and CEOs of the wealthy that fund their campaigns;

- as if ordinary Americans were not going to their ordinary churches to listen to their ordinary ministers and priests bless the troops shipping out and those returning for burial from undeclared illegal wars blessed as 'just wars.'

- as if ordinary Americans were not condoning crimes against humanity described as having been done and still being done in the name of all Americans, for the good of all Amers;

- as if ordinary Americans have had no choice during the last sixty-three years but to believe their corporate TV networks and news publications concocting illogical justifications for each US bombing, for each US invasion, for each US violent military occupation, for each CIA sneaky inhumanity;

- as if America's most respected intellect, Noam Chomsky of MIT, had not told Amers over and over again that every president after FDR could have been hung if tried and convicted under the same UN Nuremberg Principle under which the Nazi war criminals were tried.

- as if Americans hadn't held the German people responsible for the invasions and crimes of their government.

- as if the mind of the century, had never made it clear "Wars will stop when people refuse to fight. Heroism at command, senseless brutality, and all the loathsome nonsense that goes by the name of patriotism, how violently I hate all this, how despicable and ignoble war is; I would rather be torn to shreds than be part of so base an action! - Albert Einstein

- and as if Martin Luther King Jr. had not counseled conscientious objection as an alternative to following criminal orders to kill, maim and destroy.

Sick and tired of being gazed at by family and friends dumbfounded that the person before them is incomprehensibly concerning himself with something embarrassingly uncomfortable and of little interest. 'Here we are chatting about ourselves, our problems, bad weather, ballgame scores, sex scandals, latest model cars, new diets and anti-depressants, personal confrontations, trying to boost our spirits with jokes and pleasantries. What is this guy's problem? We all vote in elections, why is he bothering us? - he must crave attention - we have enough of our own problems - just ignore his emotional bleeding heart ranting - or humor him, be understanding of his distress, and tolerant of his loose mouth and not minding his own business - forgive his anti-Americanism.'

Whatever be yours truly shortcomings, I know, and everyone should, that Martin Luther King Jr. held himself and all Americans responsible for the 'atrocities of US foreign policy meant to maintain unfair predatory investments overseas through media deception' and anguished over this previous silence. And Americans will some day soon know that King demanded them to stop participating, supporting, condoning US imperialist wars in silence, which he labeled "betrayal." He encouraged Americans to understand their being morally endowed and being perfectly capable of behaving humanely and peacefully toward the much greater rest of mankind and capable of making these US undeclared wars unacceptable and inoperable. [Beyond Vietnam - a Time to Break Silence, Riverside Church, April 4, 1967]

As King had led successful marches to prosecute segregation in the court of public opinion, would he have led the prosecution of atrocity wars for Wall Street profits in the court of public opinion along with prosecution of resultant injustices the produced at home. "King planned "civil disobedience on a massive scale" in order "to cripple the operations of an oppressive society." There would be sit-ins of the unemployed at factory entrances across the country, "a hungry people's sit-in' at the Department of Labor" and a Poor People's March on Washington, where thousands of demonstrators of all races would pitch their tents in the nation's capitol and stay until they'd been heard. There were even rumors (though King denied them) that he might run in the 1968 presidential election on an antiwar, third-party ticket with Dr. Benjamin Spock." [Who Killed Martin Luther King, Ododion Press, Phillip Melanson, 1993*] http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/FBI/Who_Killed_MLK.html

A bullet shot into King's brain and an obedient media burying his condemnations of US wars forever, solved the problem of investment banking fears that its wars, so necessary to capital accumulation, would be discredited and made inoperable by an aroused American public led by a determined charismatic national personality with no regard for the inexpressibly enormous and unbearable financial loss to the Military-Industrial-Complex that would result from ending imperialist military backed expansion.

However, great words of wisdom have a life of their own, and the conscience of the American people once awakened to their national hero's condemnation of US mass-murderous imperialism to maintain "unfair predatory investments" will produce other Martin Luther Kings who will condemn the US homicidal thieving empire and its close collaborating allies, the remnants of the British, French, Dutch, German, Japanese, Italian, Spanish and Portuguese investor driven empires of founded in preceding centuries.

An entirely new United States will be born, unlike the American empire at the turn of the century that had American investment backed armies shooting Bolsheviks (Majorityists)*** in the brand new war renouncing Soviet Union, shooting and massively stealing from Chinese in Beijing rebelling against the world colonial powers and shooting down Filipinos in Philippines to colonize them.

It will be a nation with a desire to learn from the descendant culture of noble Native Americans and African slaves whose ancestors bore such a bitter fate in the savage America of business like collateral death. It will be a healthy US of the unbounded wondrous human nature that is the heritage of all nations.

To this end your author is dedicated to the King Condemned US Wars International Awareness Campaign
http://kingcondemneduswars.blogspot.com/

In the meantime-present, the world watches satellite powered network videos of Americans demonstrating for a larger cut of the imperialist pie with here and there among the protestors a token placard raised decrying the wars as too expensive. The cadre of the movement for social and economic justice discount Martin Luther King Jr.' teaching that no social progress will be possible at home while Americans continue to deny the very right to life to the poor overseas at such a high cost and loss of human and financial resources.
Better health care, housing and jobs for the soldiers of the great nation crucifying the poor overseas?

Stopping the swindling of Amers so they can live better while they continue destroying the homes of others (with their non-American inhabitants inside)?

No, count this author out. If Amers got zero health care, housing and jobs from their Wall Street investor rulers, they might stop participating, assisting, supporting, condoning and accepting Wall Street created illegal undeclared killing field wars on majority humanity. We will in King's name stop these wars. And then social and economic progress will surge forward naturally and easily "when justice will roll down like waters, and righteousness like a mighty stream." Martin Luther King Jr.

-----------------------
* see Timeline of United States military operations, Wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_United_States_military_operations
and Killing Hope: US Military and CIA Interventions Since World War II. http://killinghope.org/ or
A Brief History of U.S. Interventions: 1945 to the Present by William Blum Z magazine , June 1999
http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Blum/US_Interventions_WBlumZ.html
** -Philip H. Melanson (1944 – September 18, 2006) was a Chancellor Professor of Policy Studies at University of Massachusetts Dartmouth. He served as coordinator of the Robert F. Kennedy Assassination Archive, which is the world's largest collection on the subject, and also served as chair of the Political Science Department for 12 years.

An internationally recognized expert on political violence and governmental secrecy, Melanson wrote numerous books and articles related to these subjects. He appeared on NPR, BBC, CBS, and CNN news programs.

He made 95 Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests, which resulted in the release of over 200,000 pages of federal government documents on topics relevant to his research. [
*** Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War, Wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allied_intervention_in_the_Russian_Civil_War

Jay Janson, 80, is an archival research peoples historian activist, musician and writer, who has lived and worked on all the continents and whose articles on media have been published in China, Italy, England, India and the US, and now resides in New York City. Howard Zinn lent his name to various projects of his.

Tuesday, June 12

The Loss of American Democracy

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By Timothy V. Gatto

We can evaluate Obama's track record using statistics and apply them to unemployment, GNP, military spending and inflation (or deflation). This is probably how the GOP will try to portray his presidency. It's an effective strategy mainly because many economic indicators were better when he took office then they are today. It's easy to point to statistics and convince people, based on empirical evidence , that this nation was in better shape when George W. Bush was President. In fact, it's so easy to manipulate numbers, that even a brain-dead candidate like Romney could "prove" that things have undoubtedly gone downhill since Obama took office.

There is no doubt that the Republicans will do their level best to keep Obama's track record front and center. I believe that the GOP will consistently present charts and graphs, all the while whining about "free trade and budget deficits". The prime motivator for this is because this is the only thing they have to run on.

It would be an un "MITT" tigated nightmare if they chose to run on Romney's track record as Governor of Massachusetts. The Democrats will undoubtedly use their own graphs and statistics to portray Gov. Romney as a Governor presiding over a colossal economic failure. There is plenty of cannon-fodder for ensuring that both candidates, by the end of this Presidential race, will have lost any luster that they had at the beginning of their campaigns.
While both corporate-candidates will be throwing numbers and percentages around until November, I believe that this time would be better spent examining all of the candidates. Not on their economic track record alone, but on their qualifications for holding office, especially the office of President. This means examiningeverything they have done, and everything they have failed to do in their political careers and in their lives.

I would like at this time, to include the candidate from the Justice Party , former Mayor of Salt Lake City, Rocky Anderson. Evaluating the qualifications of a Presidential Candidate should be an in-depth and comprehensive vetting process. Using graphs and flow charts, along with power-point presentations and ringing endorsements, is just not enough to be able match the candidate to the job. In fact, having only two major political parties to represent over 350 million people with diverse views on everything from economic policies to social activism is patently ridiculous.

Only two points of view shared between 350 million people is mind-boggling, especially when you consider that the two main parties are both controlled by corporate money and don't operate in the American people's best interests. They operate in their corporate benefactors' best interests. This is fact, not fiction. Money decides the parameters of any American political debate today. While this has always been the case, it's been especially true since the early 70's. Since the Supreme Court decision on Citizen United, corporate political funds will undoubtedly run the discourse in American politics until this decision is overturned by a constitutional amendment.

This state of affairs should be repugnant to anyone that has a modicum of commonsense. No matter who wins this presidential race, all American citizen's lose. This country is firmly in the grip of two political parties that depend on corporate funding to win elections. The Democrats will appeal to their base and claim that their party represents the much-touted but fast-disappearing "middle-class". In reality, any thinking person must reject that view. To believe in that would mean that the Democrats will work just as hard to advance the average citizen's point of view over the wishes of the corporate sector that provides the lion's share of their campaign funding.

All of this means that the individual American citizen, unless they provide millions of dollars to either party, has no real representation in the White House or in Congress. The days of "one-man (or woman) one vote" are gone. This isn't something that either candidate will focus on. To do so would mean that corporate America will support the candidate that accepts the status quo. It would mean political suicide for the candidate that rejects it. Maybe, if we are extremely fortunate after this election, brave politicians from the corporate-controlled political parties will fight to change this situation.

We have another alternative that doesn't rely on the hope that these corporately funded politicians will develop a conscience. We can elect someone that rejects corporate funding of political campaigns. Still, after the debacle in Wisconsin and the demonstration of what corporate funding can do, I don't see any evidence of conscience-based politicians emerging from either major political party. The only viable solution for getting corporate money out of politics is to elect someone that rejects this scenario, and the only one that has done this is Rocky Anderson.

Anyone that claims that it is impossible to elect a third-party candidate to the presidency should reconsider that claim in light of the new political scenario playing out across the nation. One undeniable fact is that Americans are extremely angry with both major political parties. Both corporately controlled political parties should be extremely nervous right now. The backlash from the Citizen's United ruling by the Supreme Court is still an unknown factor. There is still five months before Americans go to the polls and elect a president.

I don't see either corporately controlled political party refraining from using the Citizen United ruling as a campaign issue. They may attempt to refrain from doing so in the early days of campaigning, but once things start to look bad for either party, the ruling will become a central issue with both parties claiming that they represent the average citizen.

There is no doubt in my mind that both candidates will try to represent themselves as the champion of the "middle-class". Once they do this, Americans will be exposed to what the Citizen United ruling really means. When the campaigns of both parties get down and dirty, nothing will be off the table. The more they claim to represent the majority of Americans in the "Middle-Class", the more Americans will question their relevance compared to those that represent corporate America.

This is when Americans will decide to look around for an alternative. They will realize that the only real alternative is a candidate that doesn't speak out of both sides of his mouth. This is when Americans will be guided to look at which party is supporting the corporate agenda. What they will find of course, is that both major political parties are funded by corporate America and corporately controlled PAC's.

Most Americans realize that we have sold much of our manufacturing sector to countries overseas that provide cheap labor. Americans also realize that both political parties presided over this. When it comes to the financial sector's bail-outs, most Americans have seen little improvement in their financial situation, even though Bush and Obama handed out trillions of dollars to the financial sector. Now they are seeing both political parties pointing their fingers at each other.

The Republicans are claiming that the reason we are in dire straits is because of the budget deficits and uncontrolled spending by the Federal government. They are also claiming that oversight and Federal regulations are strangling our economy. Meanwhile, Americans haven't forgotten that the unregulated financial sector was responsible for the derivative debacle, and they are seeing this same unregulated economic sector still involved with this type of "casino economics".

The Democrats are claiming that they are the ones that had to clean up the mess that the Republicans left them in 2008. They claim that they are the ones that stopped the melt-down of the economy when the housing market went belly-up. Still, even though we poured trillions of dollars into the financial sector, most Americans are finding that it is nearly impossible to secure a small business loan or a mortgage. The administration touts the claim that they have enabled millions of Americans to refinance their mortgages, the truth is that in reality it was thousands, not millions, that had their debt refinanced.

I could go on and on about Democrats and Republicans. We could go down the line and examine every decision by every politician and come up with a damning list of bad decisions. It would be a great idea for Congress and the Administration to reviewe all of their decisions over the last few years This won't happen of course, but that doesn't make it a bad idea.

A definition of insanity is doing the same thing and expecting different results. This is precisely what we do every four years. This is what we will do in November. Maybe it's time that we stopped this behavior. For decades we have been electing the "lesser of two evils", voting for whomever they give us to vote for. Stop electing the people whom they decide we should elect. The time is right to start thinking "outside the box". A vote for Obama or Romney is a decision to allow the "robber barons" to set the direction our nation will follow. Voting for Obama or Romney means more military adventures. A vote for Romney or Obama means ridiculous defense budgets even though there have been no declarations of war by Congress.

Voting for Romney or Obama will give us no effective controls of bad behavior by Wall Street. Voting for the Democrat or the Republican will give us four more years of drone strikes, extra-ordinary renditions, a continuation of the "War on Terror" and a continuation of the loss of our civil liberties. We are doing what Benjamin Franklin talked about and advised us against; Gaining security from the loss of liberty.

We Americans have a choice. We can either continue to make bad choices while expecting different results, or we can or we can refuse to vote and/or work for the lesser of two evils. Both corporate political parties will expound on the differences between Romney and Obama. Both parties will make it seem that the results of this election are extremely important, and that if their candidate loses this election, dire consequences will result.

In reality, there isn't a dimes worth of difference between ether candidate. If Romney wins, the wars will continue. If Obama wins, the wars will continue. There will be little change on Wall Street no matter who wins the presidency. We will move further towards becoming a fascist security state. This is the direction in which we are headed.

It seems that Americans will be facing a tough challenge ahead. The loss of our democracy, our civil liberties and our representative form of government is at stake. The only way we will stop the slide into fascism is to turn our backs to the corporate political parties, elect Anderson, and amend the constitution so that corporate money, defense industry money and donations from the 1% are limited in order that all Americans have an equal voice in a participatory democracy.

This is our moment in history. Americans will either rise to the challenge, or sink into a society where the richest segment of our society becomes the ruling class. Although the rich in this nation have always had a greater say in which direction we will be heading, soon it will be codified unless we fight back. If we ignore this moment in our history, if we don't rise to this challenge, we lose our participatory form of government. The majority of Americans will lose their representation. It's that important.

Some of you reading this might consider me n "alarmist". I don't believe I am. When the elections are over and Obama get four more years or Romney becomes president, will Congress really attempt to amend the Constitution? Are there representatives or Senators that will actually introduce legislation to amend the Constitution? Senator Bernie Sanders has already introduced an amendment to stop corporate influence by changing the Constitution so that corporations do not have First Amendment rights and are not considered "people". So far, the legislation has been dead in the water since he introduced it.

This is what we can expect in the future. Professional politicians (that make up the majority in Congress) will not support something that will negatively affect their campaign contributions, regardless of what they say in public. The time to have this discussion in America is now. We can't put this off any longer. Just like the nations that rose up during the Arab Spring, we Americans must rise up and stop this charade now. We have no other options if we want to save our representative democracy.
Tim Gatto is former Chairman of the Liberal Party of America, Tim is a retired Army Sergeant. He currently lives in South Carolina. He is the author of "Complicity to Contempt" and "Kimchee Days" available at Oliver Arts and Open Press.

Sunday, May 20

Is The Occupy Movement Justified?

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By Timothy V. Gatto

We all know that the economy is a mess. The public's perception of how bad the economy really is, and what is in store for us in the future, varies from one individual to another. One continuous perception that is reported on is that during the great depression, the majority view was that things would get better, that manufacturing jobs would come back, and that better times were ahead. These viewpoints are not held, according to different polls, by the American public today.

Americans have seen our manufacturing sector shipped overseas mainly to take advantage of cheap labor and also because of more liberal oversight of government regulations. 

Working conditions are not regulated as much, unions are either non-existent or ineffective, and the cost of doing business is much lower overseas. It is really not too difficult to see why our manufacturing base has been outsourced.

Most corporations are now trans-national. Companies that were once American owned and operated are now have board meetings with board members from every continent. There is no loyalty to any one nation in much of the corporate world. As the global economy changes however, and the United States escapes the financial crisis that is plaguing Europe with the collapse of many EU members economies, it may become an asset to remain in the US.

Asia and Latin America have become players in the new world economy. As Europe gradually becomes fractured, new opportunities appear in nations that have healthy economies such as the BRIC nations (Brazil, Russia, India and China along with nations such as South Korea, the Philippines and others). The competition is fierce. The United States, while still the world's largest economy, can take nothing for granted the way it did in the twentieth century.

It's a given that both the workers in the U.S. and the employers must face a new reality. The main problem that faces the U.S. is unemployment or under-employment. Young people graduating from college are finding that getting a job is tough. Getting a job that matches their degrees is even tougher. Many people hold the corporate sector accountable for unemployment, but it is much more complicated than that.

The sad truth is that since 1970, the pay of the American working class has been more or less stagnant, while productivity has skyrocketed. This is a new model for Americans. In the past, as a company made money, the workers also made money. This is not the case since the 70's.

Productivity has surged, but income and wages have stagnated for most Americans. If the median household income had kept pace with the economy since 1970, it would now be nearly $92,000, not $50,000. ( Crooks and Liars )

The wages of the American worker since the 70's has risen approximately 15% while productivity has risen approximately 82%. Factors such as automation on the assembly line and computers in the personnel department have contributed to this. These factors also can be figured into job losses overall, this means less people on the assembly line and less people in the personnel department means fewer people on the payroll.

According to IPS, American CEOs make 263 times the average compensation for American workers, up from the 30 to 1 ratio in the 1970s. For comparison, the average compensation of a Japanese CEO is less than one-sixth that of their American counterpart and 16 times more than the average Japanese worker.

So who is making money in the world's largest economy? What sector is the wealth going to? 

Here are some facts that The NY Times doesn't put on their front page. In 2007 according to a University of California study, the top 1% received 346% of the income in the US, while the next 19% got 50.5% and the bottom 80% received a huge 15%. That means that the top 20% received 85% of the nation's wealth. The top 1% average $380,354.00 and the bottom 50% averaged <$33,048.

The top 1 percent of earners receive about a fifth of all American income; on the other hand, the top 1 percent of Americans by net worth hold about a third of American wealth. (Note that the top income earners are not necessarily the same people as the top net-worth Americans — after all, lots of high-net-worth people don't work or have much else in the way of sources of new income.) Wealth-related inequality has also been relatively stable over the last few decades, whereas income-related inequality has been growing since the '70s. ( NY Times 3/30/2011 )

That covers income distribution, now let's examine wealth in the United States. In 2007, according to the same University of California paper UI mentioned earlier, in 2007, the top 1% possessed 42.7% of the nation's wealth. The next 19% had 50.3%. That left the bottom 80% of Americans with 7% of the nation's wealth.

In total net worth, in 2007, before the housing crisis , total net worth of Americans broke down with the top 1% having 34.6%, the next 19% with 50.5% and the bottom 80% owning 15%. That's a little better, but not much. In 2009 the top 1% had 42.7%, the next 19% 40.2% and the bottom 80% with 15%.

This last bit of information means that 80% of us share 15% of the total wealth of this nation that the government doesn't own. 15% of all private wealth! Meanwhile, the detractors of the Occupy movement suggest that we all wear tin hats. I beg to differ.

This is information that every person in the bottom 80% should memorize. Every time people ask for information, you should direct them to this article. The figures above say it all. The only way that Americans are going to get a better shake, is to realize that we as a people are being taken advantage of by the same people we make rich. Don't be fooled by the well dressed people on TV in the shows and on the commercials. They portray an America that simply doesn't exist. It's all a ruse to keep us dumb and happy, while the rich get richer and the poor make do with whatever scraps they send our way

Has capitalism failed? You be the judge. It sure shows that the predatory capitalism practiced in the US has left 80% of this nation poor. Don't be fooled by Obama's speeches about fairness to the Middle Class. We have hardly any Middle Class in America unless you count the 19% behind the 1% as "Middle-Class". As George Carlin said;

"The game is rigged folks, you haven't got a chance. They want it all...they want it all. Soon they'll be coming for your social security and you know what? They'll get it They'll take it all!"

That was said in 1999. Everyone laughed. They aren't laughing anymore. The game is rigged and the only way we will unrig it is to make them do so. How will this be accomplished? That is the question of this century. Sooner or later, the people of this nation will realize they are left out in the cold to get by with whatever scraps that are disappearing faster every day, will march on Washington and throw this government out on the streets.

Our public servants, our Representatives and our Senators are bought and paid for by the very same corporate system that has everyone on austerity. They are kept in office by the same corporations that pay their CEO's 263% of the average worker's pay. This is the world you live in. This is the way out. These people are not going to give up their wealth because you vote third party at the ballot box or throw your vote away on the Democrats. We are beyond that point.

Tim Gatto is former Chairman of the Liberal Party of America, Tim is a retired Army Sergeant. He currently lives in South Carolina. He is the author of "Complicity to Contempt" and "Kimchee Days" available at Oliver Arts and Open Press.

Occupy For All Species




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By Mickey Z

"If you don't want to be beaten, imprisoned, mutilated, killed, or tortured then you shouldn't condone such behavior towards anyone, be they human or not." --Moby

There I was, walking along 30th Ave. in Astoria, Queens. Just a few steps in front of me, two men and a little girl were strolling at a casual pace. The men, in their late 20s, were deep in conversation but one was clearly keeping an eye on the girl. She was no more than five-years-old but had a precocious and confident air that you could detect in a single glance.

As we all passed one of the many Italian delis that dot the Astoria landscape, the young gal looked to her left and then turned to one of the men.

"Dad," she said, giggling uncontrollably. "The sign on that store said 'We carry frozen snails.'"
With comic timing that would make any Vaudevillian drool, he replied: "I bet their hands are cold." (insert rimshot here) And dig this: his daughter got the pun. She was laughing her little head off the rest of the way down the block.

What she didn't get -- what so few of us get -- is how the tragic realities of the standard American diet are rendered invisible.

As I continued my way down 30th Ave., I saw a butcher standing in front of his shop -- chatting amiably with passersby -- his white frock stained deep red with blood.
He was casually standing there -- as he does every day -- drenched in the blood of a murdered creature but essentially nobody chose to notice the crimson splatter. Those that did notice, well, they didn't even flinch.

Behind the butcher, sheep carcasses hung from large hooks in the window... their bulging lifeless eyes seemed to stare accusingly at the butcher's back. He didn't appear to notice. Essentially nobody noticed and those that did, well, they didn't even flinch.

The next block brought me in contact with a fish store. Wet cardboard boxes filled with marine corpses piled in front... the street reeking of death. Beyond the stench, essentially nobody noticed and those that did, well, they didn't even flinch.

Looking into the fish store window, I saw a tiny aquarium tank. At least a dozen doomed lobsters were piled atop one another... their claws taped shut. Essentially nobody noticed and those that did, well, they didn't even flinch.

What happens when someone points all this out, refuses to participate, and urges others to do the same? You can be damn fuckin' sure plenty of folks will notice and, yeah... the flinching will begin in earnest.

Mic Check: We need more flinching, we need less denial, and we must make holistic connections.
"One thing to remember is to talk to the animals. If you do, they will talk back to you. But if you don't talk to the animals, they won't talk back to you, then you won't understand, and when you don't understand you will fear and when you fear you will destroy the animals, and if you destroy the animals, you will destroy yourself." --Chief Dan George
The correlation between animal rights and the Occupy movement is clear. The corporate powers-that-be manipulate and twist our minds in the name of profit and they're damn sure not gonna let animal abuse get in their avaricious way.

Mic Check: If the new wave of occupants and the old guard of animal rights activists join hands, well... the 99% becomes that much more unstoppable.

As I've said over and over, the system being challenged by OWS is built, in a major way, on the exploitation of non-human animals and the eco-system. It's all connected within a culture constructed on the premise of unlimited growth and it must all remain connected within a movement aiming for holistic justice.

If you're already working to dismantle corporate power, expand freedoms, and create a safer, more sane culture, you already have plenty in common with animal rights activists.

Why not take things even further and recognize that the mighty 99% also includes non-human animals -- and the entire ecosystem itself?

Mic Check: If you're in the New York City area, join us for an afternoon of solidarity at the Veggie Pride Parade event at Union Square Park on Sun., May 27. I'm the keynote speaker and I will be connecting animal rights activists with occupiers that day.
We are the 99%. Expect us. Join us...

***
Mickey Z. is the author of 11 books, most recently the novel Darker Shade of Green. Until the laws are changed or the power runs out, he can be found on an obscure website called Facebook.

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Thursday, May 10

Why The Civil Rights Model Will Not Work For Occupy








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By Katherine M Acosta

The black civil rights movement of the 1950s and ‘60s is one of the most studied and analyzed social movements in American history - with good reason.  After centuries of slavery, followed by another 90 years or so of segregation, economic oppression, and political disenfranchisement, African Americans managed to reverse some of the most egregious denials of their civil rights in just a couple of decades.

By now, the movement has achieved near legendary status.  Who among us doesn't recall the iconic images of courageous nonviolent protesters facing down the shocking violence that enforced the Southern caste system?  If we are not old enough to have seen the news reports back in the day, we surely saw the images in documentary films shown at school or on television.

For many Americans, the strategies and tactics of the early civil rights era have become the gold standard by which later movements, strategies, and tactics are judged.  However, the successful template of one social movement cannot be applied in assembly line fashion to every social movement that follows.  What worked for the black civil rights movement (in the South – the strategy was less successful in the North ) will not work for Occupy.  This is due, in part, to a changed political and economic environment, and in part to differing goals and values of the two movements.

The strategy of the civil rights movement began with a legal agenda pursued by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), resulting in a number of Supreme Court decisions in the 1940s and 1950s affirming the civil rights of African Americans.  Activists then attempted to nonviolently assert those rights, knowing that segregationists would respond with violence.  The ensuing crisis would compel the federal government to enforce rights upheld by the courts.

So, for example, the Supreme Court decision, Brown vs the Board of Education (1954), which prohibited segregated public schools, prepared the way for the integration of Central High in Little Rock, Arkansas in 1957.  When the nine black students chosen to integrate Central High arrived on the first day of school, they were met by an angry crowd and denied entry by the Alabama National Guard under orders from Governor Orval Faubus.

Ultimately, President Eisenhower sent the 101 st Airborne to protect the students and compel the integration.  “Mob rule cannot be allowed to overrule the decisions of our courts,” said Eisenhower.  That year, the black students rode to school escorted by armed soldiers in jeeps in front of and behind their vehicle.  Once at school, a soldier was assigned to each student and walked the students to their classes.  Nevertheless, the Little Rock Nine, as they were called, were taunted and physically attacked by white students in places like restrooms and gym class, where the soldiers did not follow them.

The Freedom Rides, begun in May of 1961, employed the same strategy.  The goal of the rides on interstate buses, initially organized by the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), was to compel the federal government to enforce two Supreme Court decisions ( Boynton v. Virginia (1960) and Irene Morgan v. Commonwealth of Virginia (1946)) that banned segregated interstate travel.  James Farmer, then director of CORE, explains:

We decided the way to do it was to have an inter-racial group ride through the south.  This was not civil disobedience, really, because we would be doing merely what the Supreme Court said we had a right to do…  We felt that we could then count upon the racists of the South to create a crisis so that the federal government would be compelled to enforce federal law.  And that was the rationale for the Freedom Ride  ( Eyes on the Prize , 1987).

The riders were met with savage violence in the Deep South .  Outside Anniston , Alabama , the lead bus was firebombed and the exits blocked.  A loud explosion scared off attackers, which allowed the riders to escape the bus.  However, they were then beaten by the mob, twelve were hospitalized, and the bus was destroyed.  The riders were later evacuated from the hospital as staff feared for their safety from the mob outside.

In Birmingham , despite advance information obtained by the FBI that was “quite specific” ( Eyes on the Prize, 1987) about the planned attack on riders, both the FBI and the local police stood down.  Freedom Riders were brutally beaten with baseball bats, pipes, and bicycle chains by a mob organized by the Ku Klux Klan.

Remarkably, Attorney General Robert Kennedy called for “restraint” – not from the Klan and white racists, but from the Freedom Riders.   When SNCC (the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee) got involved and it became clear the rides would continue, Kennedy demanded protection for the riders from Alabama governor John Patterson.   If Patterson would not provide it, Kennedy announced, the federal government would intervene.

The governor appeared to relent and provide protection for the bus leaving Birmingham for Montgomery .  But about 40 miles outside of Montgomery , the squad cars and plane disappeared.  A vicious mob attacked the riders as they got off the bus.  Freedom Rider Frederick Leonard recalled attacks with sticks and bricks and shouts to “Kill the niggers.”  Some riders, including James Zwerg, the first off the bus, were severely beaten.  According to Leonard, Zwerg and others were “damaged for life” ( Eyes on the Prize , 1987).

In Mississippi , riders were met only by police, who herded them off the buses, through the bus station waiting rooms, out the back door, and into paddy wagons.  Robert Kennedy had made a deal with local officials:  They would see to it that there was no violence and the federal government would not enforce the Supreme Court decision on segregation and interstate travel.   Consequently, the riders were not attacked by mobs, but were left to the mercy of local judges.  They were sentenced to 60 days in a maximum security penitentiary by a judge who literally turned his back on the riders' lawyer in court and faced the wall.

That summer Robert Kennedy at last petitioned the Interstate Commerce Commission to issue regulations banning segregation, and the ICC complied.

Success took longer to achieve where court decisions and extreme violence perpetrated by segregationists against activists could not be depended upon to force federal action.  The Montgomery bus boycott (1955-56) lasted just over a year.  Although the Supreme Court had overturned segregation in interstate travel, southern bus companies circumvented the law instituting local regulations. As black citizens of Montgomery , Alabama , led by Martin Luther King, Jr., refused to ride the buses until they were desegregated, the NAACP filed suit in federal court.  The bus companies were hit hard by the boycott, but they refused to give in until the Supreme Court heard the case filed by the NAACP and ruled bus segregation unconstitutional.

In Albany , Georgia (1961), the strategy broke down entirely.  Invited by locals to help organize against segregation, SNCC challenged the system in bus stations, libraries, schools, and movie theatres.  But Police Chief Laurie Pritchett had read Dr. King's book and understood the strategy of drawing out violence and filling up jails.  He prevented violence against the demonstrators and arranged for jails in surrounding areas to accept arrestees.

Meanwhile, the city filed suit in federal court requesting a restraining order to stop the demonstrations.

Stymied, and with hundreds of local activists in jail, black leaders invited Dr. King to help out.  King had other commitments, but spent some time in Albany giving speeches and leading marches.  After almost nine months of action, a federal judge sided with the city, and issued the restraining order.  Coretta Scott King explains the dilemma:

When the federal courts started ruling against us, that created a whole different thing in terms of what strategy do you use now?  Because, up to that point, Martin had been willing to break state laws that were unjust laws.  And our ally was the federal judiciary.  So, if we would take our case to the federal court, and the court ruled against us, what recourse did we have?  ( Eyes On the Prize , 1987).

King asked President Kennedy to intervene, but he declined.  Defeated, King left Albany.  (SNCC, however, remained to carry on the fight).

The strategy of some of the most famous actions of the civil rights era depended upon favorable decisions from the federal judiciary and the willingness of the federal government to exert its power – backed by violence, as is the power of all governments – to enforce those decisions.  Note also that the activists' goal of exposing the violence that enforced the Southern caste system was intended primarily to force a confrontation between the federal and state governments and secondarily to appeal to Northern and international supporters.

The notion, further developed by Gene Sharp, that violence inflicted on nonviolent protesters will eventually win the hearts and minds of individual civil servants, police officers, and others who uphold the system, and that those individuals will then withdraw their cooperation with the system, thereby enabling a victory for the activists, quickly went out the window.  Reverend Fred Shuttlesworth (SCLC) explained in a discussion of the 1955 Montgomery Bus Boycott:

We thought we could shame America …  But you can't shame segregation… Rattlesnakes don't commit suicide.  Ball teams don't strike themselves out.  You've got to put ‘em out ( Eyes on the Prize , 1987).

Occupy cannot employ a strategy similar to that of the civil rights movement for a number of reasons.  To begin with, the focus of the Occupy movement is corporate power – the economic, political, and social inequality it creates, as well as the destruction of the environment it perpetrates.  Supreme Court decisions in recent years increasingly favor corporations over individual citizens.  The most egregious of these is the 2010 Citizens United decision asserting first amendment rights for corporations and thereby banning limits on their campaign contributions.

Indeed, the Supreme Court increasingly appears unwilling to uphold even basic civil rights. 

Witness the recent decision allowing police to strip search citizens arrested for any offense, no matter how minor – a practice banned by international human rights treaties.  The Court has also signaled that it may uphold portions of Arizona 's controversial immigration law; in particular, the requirement that police officers check the immigration status of anybody who looks like they might be an illegal immigrant.

With or without favorable court decisions, it's a pretty safe bet that the Obama administration will not be sending in the 101 st Airborne to protect us from corporate malfeasance anytime soon – or even to protect Occupiers against the violence of local police.

A more likely scenario is that the Department of Homeland Security, the FBI, and federal law enforcement worked with local officials and law enforcement, suggesting tactics and offering advice that resulted in a semi-coordinated and brutal crackdown on encampments late last year.

Even if the contemporary political climate was favorable to a legislative agenda enforced by the federal government, it is unlikely that Occupy would pursue that strategy.  Appealing for concessions from a higher authority is not consistent with the overlapping values and goals of horizontalism and anarchism that shape the Occupy movement.  Horizontalism, as Marina Sitrin explains , involves a concept of power as “something we create together…  It's not about asking, or demanding of a government or an institutional power.”  It's a way of relating to one another, as equals, rather than according to positions in a social hierarchy.

Horizontalism, or horizontalidad , emerged in Argentina , after that country's 2001 economic crisis.  People gathered in the streets, at first banging pots and pans and generally registering protest.  Eventually, taking their cue from the landless movement in Brazil, which organized around the slogan, Occupy, Resist, Produce , Argentineans “recuperated,” or reclaimed workplaces such as factories, schools, and clinics and collectively managed them.  Similarly, anarchism envisions an ideal society organized voluntarily and cooperatively, with no one having power over another.   The bottom-up organizing principle of Occupy, then, is inconsistent with appeals to a higher power.

In their classic text, Poor People's Movements (1977), Frances Fox Piven and Richard Cloward argue that opportunities for insurgencies to emerge are not available most of the time, and when they are, those insurgencies are shaped by contemporary social conditions.  

In this view, both the civil rights movement and Occupy were and are shaped by the historical moment in which they appeared. I admire the veterans of the civil rights movement and what they were able to achieve.  Contemporary economic and political conditions preclude that strategy for Occupy, but at the same time present different, and in my view, more exciting opportunities, for social change. The possibility of relating to one another in a more egalitarian way, of empowering people rather than seeking relief from a higher power, and of, as Noam Chomsky says , working toward a different way of living "not based on maximizing consumer goods, but on maximizing values that are important for life," is deeply appealing.  Occupy is the movement for our time – and I am deeply grateful to all of those on the front lines.

Katherine M Acosta is freelance writer currently based in Madison, Wisconsin.  Contact her at kacosta at undisciplinedphd dot com.  Her blog is UndisciplinedPhD .

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