You might be a socialist if… An interview with Kshama Sawant
Fliers for Kshama Sawant, a socialist candidate running
for state legislature, are plastered around Capitol Hill (Photo courtesy
votesawant.org)
Kshama
Sawant is a pretty cool lady.She’s a socialist who won the opportunity to challenge entrenched State House Speaker Frank Chopp to represent the 43rd Legislative District as a write-in candidate in the primaries. She teaches economics at Seattle Central Community College (she’s got a PhD!) And she’s a great example of how third party candidates aren’t all variations on that Goodspaceguy. She has a dog named “Che,” makes fun of Marxists (“they all talk too much”) and has a uniquely socialist perspective on the Globalist-y aspects of the upcoming local elections. She’s also super laid back about things not going according to plan. I first heard of Sawant through the bright yellow and pink “Vote Sawant” posters I’d seen all over Capitol Hill. When I found out she had grown up in Mumbai, India I figured the Seattle Globalist had to meet her. We agreed to meet at B&O Espresso for a coffee. But when I arrived there I couldn’t get my 1990 Cutlass Sierra Oldsmobile to turn off (seriously, the key just wouldn’t turn!) and had to introduce myself – the Cutlass idling around the corner – with “Hi, I’m Sarah Stuteville, you must be Kshama, any chance you know something about cars?” She didn’t, but she was eager to help. She jiggled the key, banged on the dashboard and ultimately looked up the nearest mechanic on her smartphone. Embarrassed, I offered to reschedule our interview but Sawant was up for the adventure. Once the car was deposited with a head-scratching mechanic and we’d found a new cafe, Sawant opened with proof that she sees the political in everything, “I could not make a better case than this for fully functional public transit.”
Sawant sports her Socialist Alternative colors at the
2012 Slutwalk Seattle (Photo courtesy votesawant.org)
I knew I was in for an interesting cup of coffee.What international perspective do you bring to these local elections? I grew up in India. I didn’t grow up poor myself, but I wasn’t rich either and one all-consuming question that I was consumed with from a very young age, maybe 8 or 9 was ‘why do we have so much inequality and poverty?’ The answers I got were so dissatisfying, ‘oh this is fate or they didn’t work hard enough,’ it’s the same kind of nonsense in the US. On first arriving in the US: When I came to the US I expected it to be very prosperous, but what was most telling to me as an international person was to come here and see the same problems here but to a smaller magnitude… and really that’s what led me to have more of a critique of capitalism. Are we experiencing an international moment of capitalist critique, especially among young people? The issues in Egypt and Tunisia were sort of universal, they were unemployment, youth dissension, look how common this theme is right? It’s running throughout the globe. Students are dealing with the double whammy of bleak job prospects and huge debt. There are cracks appearing in the American Dream and young people are realizing ‘I’m going to have a worse lifestyle than my parents, who already had to work so hard to get what little they had.’ Why didn’t you go into politics in India? Why the US instead? The reason I did not go into politics there was because none of the political options I saw [were what I was looking for]. They only play lip service to the issues that people care about, they co-opt [people’s] movements and use them for their votes but otherwise disregard them.
A young Sawant supporter hands out literature on
Capitol Hill. A rare grassroots write-in campaign earned her over ten percent of
the primary vote. (Photo courtesy votesawant.org)
Is Socialism as stigmatized in India as it is in the US?In other countries Socialism is not tarred with the same stigma that it is here in the US. The US is a special case…but I would say that the younger generations in the US are now moving away from that stigma and actually seeing the system collapse around themselves. On a Socialist future: In a future world I don’t think there should be any borders. Nationality has no place in human society…I know it sounds like an extreme thing, but the point is that nationhood and national pride and patriotism is often being used to take young people to war–mostly young poor kids to fight the rich man’s war. As long as you’re thinking about these things in terms of America or India then you’re not able to see that ‘hey, I have my brother and sister in India that are facing the same conditions and we need to come together.’ On Seattle: It’s great to come to a place like Seattle because you fit right in, because there are people from everywhere, everyone fits in and that’s what we want the world to be.
Sawant and a supporter at the 2012 Seattle Slutwalk.
(Photo courtesy votesawant.org)
Sawant is willing to think about how radically different the
world could be, not in the sound bites and platitudes of your usual politician,
but even in the concrete terms of our own city.She says that there are intermediate steps required to move a society towards socialism (she cites ending budget cuts, racial profiling, the “racist war on drugs” and addressing homelessness as concrete examples) but walking around Capitol Hill after our coffee (my car problem still far from solved) Sawant openly muses about how Seattle might change under socialism. She points out that coffee shops (because they’re a kind of public space) never have the stunning views of wealthy homes and high-powered offices and imagines the old mansions of Millionaire Row publicly owned and turned into shared housing. “When things are exquisitely beautiful and rare,” she argues, “they shouldn’t be privately owned,” She has me imagine how my own life might change (more shared labor, more healthy food, less anxiety about how to pay for those car repairs) and laughs saying, “Seattle is so beautiful, all it needs is Socialism.” This post was produced with support from CityClub. The opinions expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of CityClub. This interview was edited for clarity and length. |
This space is dedicated to the proposition that we need to know the history of the struggles on the left and of earlier progressive movements here and world-wide. If we can learn from the mistakes made in the past (as well as what went right) we can move forward in the future to create a more just and equitable society. We will be reviewing books, CDs, and movies we believe everyone needs to read, hear and look at as well as making commentary from time to time. Greg Green, site manager
Friday, November 16, 2012
Yarra elections: One in five people vote socialist across city
Yarra elections: One in five people vote socialist across city
Socialists increase vote and retain Stephen Jolly’s seat
October 27 saw elections take place across Victorian councils. The Socialist Party stood five candidates in the City of Yarra municipality which is located in the inner north of Melbourne.
The press widely reported these elections being some of the ‘dirtiest’ in recent times. In many electorates reports of stolen ballots, scuffles between candidates, and misrepresentations of party affiliations were the dominant focus.
By Socialist Party reporters Melbourne
In contrast, the Yarra Council election was much more political. It was one of the few places where there were genuine differences between the candidates: the choice in Yarra was between the Socialist Party and the establishment forces of the Labor Party, Greens and right-wing independents.
The Socialist Party had two sitting Councillors going into the election. Stephen Jolly was first elected in 2004 with 12.34% and was re-elected in 2008 after topping the polls with 29.18%. Anthony Main was elected in early 2011 after a Labor Councillor resigned. Main polled 5.55% and was elected on preferences.
The Council has 9 seats divided into 3 separate wards (3 seats in each ward). To be elected candidates need to win 25% plus 1 vote. Preferences are allocated until 3 candidates in each ward reach this target. The goal of the Socialist Party in this election was to retain Stephen Jolly’s seat in the Langridge ward and to increase our vote and deepen our support base in the other two wards, Nicholls and Melba.
It was clear on election day that many people voted for Labor or the Greens on the basis of state or federal issues. As the Socialist Party does not have the same national profile as these parties, we needed to actively win every vote we received.
We were also up against difficult objective conditions for socialists given the fact that the mining boom in Australia is giving people a false sense of security about the state of the economy and the system in general.
However, at a national level there is much disappointment in the federal Labor government. While the Greens are in de facto coalition with Labor they have been able to maintain an illusion of distance to some extent. Because of this they are still seen by many as a progressive alternative to the two major parties. However, there have also been some swings against the Greens in recent elections in various parts of Australia.
On Yarra Council the Greens and the Labor Party have also been in coalition from 2008 – 2012. They have shared the position of Mayor and have jointly voted for neo-liberal budgets. They have overseen year on year over inflation rate rises, cuts to some services and the attempted sell off of Council assets – although they claimed the opposite during the campaign!
In the lead up to the election the Greens were desperately trying to decouple themselves from Labor. To this end they had some success. Labor has been faring poorly in the polls nationally and the Greens recognised that if they were seen to be in partnership they too could lose support.
While in coalition locally, federally and in some states, in the inner suburbs of Melbourne the Greens are the major electoral challenger to Labor. The area of Yarra is part of the federal seat of Melbourne – the only lower house seat that Labor has lost to the Greens. The difference in Yarra compared to other inner city Councils is that it is also the only place that the Greens face a credible left-wing challenge in the Socialist Party.
Left-wing challenge to the Greens
It was clear from the election results that the work of the Socialist Party in the area is starting to become more widely recognised. For over 25 years now we have been involved in community campaigns in the area. Since 2004 we have also been the voice of opposition in the Council Chamber.
In this election, city wide, we managed to increase our vote from 12.16% in 2008 to 19.59% in 2012, with almost one in five people across the municipality voting socialist. This is by far the best result achieved by socialists anywhere in Australia in recent history.
Given that many people do not follow politics at a local level we see our vote as much more conscious than the votes for the other parties. While there is a layer who vote for the Socialist Party because we are anti-capitalist, most people who vote for us do so because they have been touched by our work or appreciate our local campaigning.
Our long term and consistent approach to community campaigning has meant that we have been successful in eating into the electoral support of the Labor Party and the Greens. Our highest votes were recorded at the booths where public housing tenants voted in big numbers, most of whom previously voted Labor.
At the Fitzroy Town Hall pre-poll booth near the Fitzroy estate we won 38.2%. At Collingwood College near the Collingwood estate we won 37.9% and at the Richmond estate, the biggest public housing estate in Victoria, and a stronghold of the Labor Party, we won an impressive 26% of the vote.
The Labor vote across Yarra went down by 1.88% while the Socialist Party vote increased by 7.43%. The Greens managed to increase their vote by 6.65% but this was largely due to the fact that they appealed to a more conservative constituency.
Many of the Greens candidates were extremely right-wing and would find themselves just as much at home in the Liberal Party. In fact one Greens candidate proudly described himself a Green with Liberal Party values while another was a former CEO.
Despite winning almost 20% of the vote the Socialist Party was rewarded with only 1 seat on the Council. In contrast the Labor Party won only 24.83% and was rewarded with 3 seats.
Langridge ward
Stephen Jolly, standing for the Socialist Party in the Langridge ward increased his vote to an impressive 34.24%. He topped the polls for the second time in a row. Stephen is by far the most popular Councillor at Yarra and is widely respected for his many years of struggle in the area.
Second elected in the Langridge ward was the lead Greens candidate, and the 2012 Labor Party Mayor scraped into the final spot on preferences. In the Langridge ward the Labor vote was reduced by 2.4%. With just a few hundred more votes it would have been possible for our second candidate, Mel Gregson, to be elected on preferences. Together Mel Gregson and Stephen Jolly won 37.06% of the vote – the highest of any party.
Melba ward
Our other sitting Councillor Anthony Main stood in the Melba ward this time around. The Socialist party has never had a Councillor on this area. It is also the area of Yarra where the Labor Party is strongest.
Anthony was asked by the party to change from Nicholls to the Melba ward given the huge amount of inappropriate development taking place in the area and the utter incompetence of the right-wing Labor, Greens and Independent Councillors. The Socialist Party Councillors have initiated and been involved in campaigns in this area, particularly in struggles between ordinary residents and big developers. In 2008 we polled a mere 2.13% in this ward.
This was always going to a difficult position to win but given the circumstances we did extremely well. Anthony polled 11.74% of the vote beating two sitting Councillors including a former Mayor. The first position was won by the Labor Party. Uniquely they managed to increase their vote, partly through the luck of appearing on the top of the ballot paper but largely because of the absence of the ‘ALP endorsed’ Independent that stood in 2008.
The Greens also managed to increase their vote – in this case by 15.14%. It seemed that the Greens won most of this increase from a conservative layer who voted for one or another of the right-wing Independents last time around.
The Labor Party won the first seat in Melba with the Greens winning the second. The third spot ended up being a close race between Anthony Main from the Socialist Party and Phillip Vlahogiannis, a right-wing Independent.
There was much speculation during the campaign about the motivations of Vlahogiannis. He claimed to stand against inappropriate development and against the overuse of parking waivers in new blocks of units, yet he decided to preference the Labor Party – the party who stand for exactly the opposite!
To make matters worse he was also photographed handing out Labor Party how-to-vote cards at a pre-polling booth. This suggests that he may be a Labor Party ‘stooge’ candidate, put there to edge out Labor’s opponents. Unfortunately these facts were ignored by the mainstream media and he managed to avoid any serious criticisms during the campaign.
He managed to win a significant vote amongst the large Greek community and received preferences from another right-wing Independent and from the Labor Party. This pushed him just in front of Anthony Main, winning him the last spot in the Melba ward.
Nicholls ward
The Nicholls ward was where we won our second Council seat via a count back in 2011, winning 5.55% in the last election. Due to the work that we have done in this area over the past two years, our candidates Chris Dite and David Elliott managed to almost double our vote to 10.81%.
Again a few hundred more votes at the expense of the Labor Party in this ward could have seen Chris Dite elected on preferences. In the end the Greens won the first position and right-wing Independent Jackie Fristacky won the second position. The Labor candidate scraped into the last spot on preferences and thanks to an advantageous position on the ballot paper, despite seeing Labor’s vote drop by 5.15% since 2008.
Mass campaign
While most of our vote came from a conscious layer of supporters our election campaign played a significant role in popularising our ideas and consolidating our support. Over the course of about 2 months we managed to letterbox over 90,000 leaflets and knock on the doors of almost 15,000 homes. We did regular street stalls and put up thousands of posters across the municipality.
All up more than 150 people helped during the campaign. Alongside our polling both volunteers, letterboxers and door knockers, dozens of musicians, comedians, DJs, film makers and artists helped with fundraising and publicity for the campaign.
Our long term work and active campaigning in Yarra has meant the term socialism has been rebranded in the area. Rather than socialist ideas being seen as a relic of the past, Socialist Party members are seen as the best fighters against big developer greed, for more council services and as the best representatives of ordinary people residents and public housing tenants.
In 2002 three Socialist Party candidates won 3.5% across Yarra. In 2004 our three candidates won 4.5% and in 2008 we won 12.1%. Our vote this year of nearly 20% clearly shows that people are not afraid of socialist ideas if they are explained clearly and made relevant to people’s everyday lives.
The Socialist Party will continue to play a role in all the major struggles in Yarra and continue to win support for socialist ideas amongst a growing layer of people. While campaigning Councillors can play a useful auxiliary role, as we have shown in Yarra, real change happens when people organise and mobilise in their workplaces, in their communities and on the streets.
The challenge ahead for the Socialist Party is expand this work, side by side with building our organisation so that we can spread these examples beyond Yarra. Stephen Jolly will continue to be the voice of opposition to the establishment parties inside the Council Chamber and we will continue to campaign on the ground.
This election demonstrated that a small party like ours is able to win significant support on the basis of socialist ideas and action. This shows the potential a new mass workers party would have, with the support of left-wing unions, community groups and other activists, to replicate this success on a much wider scale.
More and more people are becoming fed up with the rightward drift of the Labor Party and the inaction of the Greens. As the mining boom winds down and economic conditions begin to worsen a growing number of workers and young people are recognising the need for an alternative way of running society. We consider our work in Yarra an important contribution towards building the political alternative that is necessary.
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From The Pen Of Joshua Lawrence Breslin- When Horses Were Smarter Than Men-Steven Spielberg’s“War Horse”
Click on the headline to link to a Wikipedia entry for Steven Spielberg’s War Horse.
DVD Review
War Horse, starring horses, Jeremy Irvine, Emily Watson, directed by Steven Spielberg, DreamWorks Pictures, 2011
What is there not to like about a movie (even if based, or maybe particularly because it is based on a children’s novel) about a man (okay, a boy starting out) and his horse, their bonding together, their trials and tribulations and their successes (if that is an appropriate term in the midst of bloody carnage).Well, nothing, nothing on this good green earth (and the slice of England portrayed in the film is a very good example of that).
Nothing, except man getting in the way of an obviously smarter member of the animal kingdom, one Joey the horse. Why? Well, man and horse come of age just around the time of World War I when “civilized”Europe decided that a war to end all wars (they came up a little short, about 300 plus wars somewhere on the planet short since, on that proposition) was necessary to sort things out. So England and its colonies, France and its colonies, Russia and its colonies, and German and its colonies, decided to tear up half of continental Europe to see who the king hell king was anyway. And this war to end all wars happened to occur at just that point when humankind had exponentially increased its technological capacity to kill, to murder, and to maim at will.
But not at 2012 levels, so one Joey the horse got “drafted” into the war and wound up “serving,” one way or the other, both sides as beast of burden. But modern wars are not kind to those military whizzes who lived (pardon the expression) in the “horse and buggy era,” in the thinking of the last war, and so produced sickeningly destructive trench static warfare complete with barbed wire, maddened gas attacks, cavalry charges against fixed machine gun positions and used horse, including Joey (and his horse friend) to lug artillery into position. Madness, pure and simple.
And that is where Joey, unlike the Brits, Germans, etc. showed he was smarter than all those guys who knowingly and hopelessly kept going up over those bloody trenches without a murmur. When he had the chance he ran like hell, he“deserted” like any sane person would. And lived to tell about it (or have it told). Chalk one up for the horse set. And see this film as we near the one hundredth anniversary of the start of World War I in 1914.
From The Partisan Defense Committee
Workers Vanguard No. 1012 |
9 November 2012
|
Free the Class-War Prisoners!
27th Annual PDC Holiday Appeal
(Class-Struggle Defense Notes)
This year marks the 27th Holiday Appeal for class-war prisoners,
those thrown behind bars for their opposition to racist capitalist oppression.
The Partisan Defense Committee provides monthly stipends to 16 of these
prisoners as well as holiday gifts for them and their families. This is a
revival of the tradition of the early International Labor Defense (ILD) under
its secretary and founder James P. Cannon. The stipends are a necessary
expression of solidarity with the prisoners—a message that they are not
forgotten.
Launching the ILD’s appeal for the prisoners, Cannon wrote, “The
men in prison are still part of the living class movement” (“A Christmas Fund of
our Own,” Daily Worker, 17 October 1927). Cannon noted that the stipends
program “is a means of informing them that the workers of America have not
forgotten their duty toward the men to whom we are all linked by bonds of
solidarity.” This motivation inspires our program today. The PDC also continues
to publicize the causes of the prisoners in the pages of Workers
Vanguard, the PDC newsletter, Class-Struggle Defense Notes, and our
Web site partisandefense.org. We provide subscriptions to WV and
accompany the stipends with reports on the PDC’s work. In a recent letter, MOVE
prisoner Eddie Africa wrote, “I received the letters and the money, thank you
for both, it’s a good feeling to have friends remembering you with
affection!”
The Holiday Appeal raises the funds for this vital program. The PDC
provides $25 per month to the prisoners, and extra for their birthdays and
during the holiday season. We would like to provide more. The prisoners
generally use the funds for basic necessities: supplementing the inadequate
prison diet, purchasing stamps and writing materials needed to maintain contact
with family and comrades, and pursuing literary, artistic, musical and other
pursuits to mollify a bit the living hell of prison. The costs of these have
obviously grown, including the exponential growth in prison phone charges.
The capitalist rulers have made clear their continuing
determination to slam the prison doors on those who stand in the way of brutal
exploitation, imperialist depredations and racist oppression. We encourage
WV readers, trade-union activists and fighters against racist oppression
to dig deep for the class-war prisoners. The 16 class-war prisoners receiving
stipends from the PDC are listed below:
* * *
Mumia Abu-Jamal is a former Black Panther Party spokesman, a
well-known supporter of the MOVE organization and an award-winning journalist
known as “the voice of the voiceless.” Last December the Philadelphia district
attorney’s office announced it was dropping its longstanding efforts to execute
America’s foremost class-war prisoner. While this brings to an end the legal
lynching campaign, Mumia remains condemned to spend the rest of his life in
prison with no chance of parole, despite overwhelming evidence of his
innocence.
Mumia was framed up for the 1981 killing of Philadelphia police
officer Daniel Faulkner and was initially sentenced to death explicitly for his
political views. Mountains of documentation proving his innocence, including the
sworn confession of Arnold Beverly that he, not Mumia, shot and killed Faulkner,
have been submitted to the courts. But from top to bottom, the courts have
repeatedly refused to hear the exculpatory evidence.
The state authorities hope that with the transfer of Mumia from
death row his cause will be forgotten and that he will rot in prison until he
dies. This must not be Mumia’s fate. Fighters for Mumia’s freedom must link his
cause to the class struggles of the multiracial proletariat. Trade unionists,
opponents of the racist death penalty and fighters for black rights must
continue the fight to free Mumia from “slow death” row in the racist dungeons of
Pennsylvania.
Leonard Peltier is an internationally renowned class-war
prisoner. Peltier’s incarceration for his activism in the American Indian
Movement has come to symbolize this country’s racist repression of its native
peoples, the survivors of centuries of genocidal oppression. Peltier’s frame-up
for the 1975 deaths of two marauding FBI agents in what had become a war zone on
the South Dakota Pine Ridge Reservation, shows what capitalist “justice” is all
about. Although the lead government attorney has admitted, “We can’t prove who
shot those agents,” and the courts have acknowledged blatant prosecutorial
misconduct, the 68-year-old Peltier is still locked away. Peltier suffers from
multiple serious medical conditions and is incarcerated far from his people and
family. He is not scheduled to be reconsidered for parole for another 12
years!
Eight MOVE members—Chuck Africa, Michael
Africa, Debbie Africa, Janet Africa, Janine Africa,
Delbert Africa, Eddie Africa and Phil Africa—are in their
35th year of prison. They were sentenced to 30-100 years after the 8 August 1978
siege of their Philadelphia home by over 600 heavily armed cops, having been
falsely convicted of killing a police officer who died in the cops’ own cross
fire. In 1985, eleven of their MOVE family members, including five children,
were massacred by Philly cops when a bomb was dropped on their living quarters.
After more than three decades of unjust incarceration, these innocent prisoners
are routinely turned down at parole hearings. None have been released.
Lynne Stewart is a radical lawyer sentenced to ten years for
defending her client, a blind Egyptian cleric imprisoned for an alleged plot to
blow up New York City landmarks in the early 1990s. For this advocate known for
defense of Black Panthers, radical leftists and others reviled by the capitalist
state, her sentence may well amount to a death sentence as she is 73 years old
and suffers from breast cancer. Originally sentenced to 28 months, her
resentencing more than quadrupled her prison time in a loud affirmation by the
Obama administration that there will be no letup in the massive attack on
democratic rights under the “war on terror.” This year her appeal of the onerous
sentence was turned down.
Jaan Laaman and Thomas Manning are the two remaining
anti-imperialist activists known as the Ohio 7 still in prison, convicted for
their roles in a radical group that took credit for bank “expropriations” and
bombings of symbols of U.S. imperialism, such as military and corporate offices,
in the late 1970s and ’80s. Before their arrests in 1984 and 1985, the Ohio 7
were targets of massive manhunts. Their children were kidnapped at gunpoint by
the Feds.
The Ohio 7’s politics were once shared by thousands of radicals
during the Vietnam antiwar movement and by New Leftists who wrote off the
possibility of winning the working class to a revolutionary program and saw
themselves as an auxiliary of Third World liberation movements. But, like the
Weathermen before them, the Ohio 7 were spurned by the “respectable” left. From
a proletarian standpoint, the actions of these leftist activists against
imperialism and racist injustice are not a crime. They should not have served a
day in prison.
Ed Poindexter and Wopashitwe Mondo Eyen we Langa are
former Black Panther supporters and leaders of the Omaha, Nebraska, National
Committee to Combat Fascism. They were victims of the FBI’s deadly COINTELPRO
operation under which 38 Black Panther Party members were killed and hundreds
more imprisoned on frame-up charges. Poindexter and Mondo were railroaded to
prison and sentenced to life for a 1970 explosion that killed a cop, and they
have now spent more than 40 years behind bars. Nebraska courts have repeatedly
denied Poindexter and Mondo new trials despite the fact that a crucial piece of
evidence excluded from the original trial, a 911 audio tape long-suppressed by
the FBI, proved that testimony of the state’s key witness was perjured.
Hugo Pinell, the last of the San Quentin 6 still in prison,
has been in solitary isolation for more than four decades. He was a militant
anti-racist leader of prison rights organizing along with George Jackson, his
comrade and mentor, who was gunned down by prison guards in 1971. Despite
numerous letters of support and no disciplinary write-ups for over 28 years,
Pinell was again denied parole in 2009. Now in his 60s, Pinell continues to
serve a life sentence at the notorious torture chamber, Pelican Bay Security
Housing Unit in California, a focal point for hunger strikes against grotesquely
inhuman conditions.
Send your contributions to: PDC, P.O. Box 99, Canal Street
Station, New York, NY 10013; (212) 406-4252.
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Dear Friend,
Monday, November 19, at 5:30PM,
Boston University School of Law will
host a screening the film "Doctors of the Darkside." A panel discussion on doctors' role in the
US's torture programs will follow.
The panel will feature BU Law alum, Cmdr. Suzanne Lachelier, a lawyer and Commander with the US military, as well as Kristine Huskey, Director of Physicians for Human Rights' anti-torture program and Boston University School of Public Health professors Dr. Michael Grodin and George Annas. Exploring the legal and medical dimensions of the use of torture and the war on terror, the panelists will discuss current efforts in the legislature to address doctors' complicity. Join us Monday, November 19, at 5:30PM in Room 1270 at the Boston University School of Law, 765 Commonwealth Ave, Boston, MA 02215.
The event is free and
open to the public. There is limited seating, so please arrive early. Refreshments will be provided.
Tickets may be reserved with registration online. View the "Doctors of the Darkside" website for additional
information.
Hope to see you there, Samantha A. Peetros Communications Specialist
Bill of Rights Defense
Committee
8 Bridge Street, Suite A, Northampton, MA 01060 www.bordc.org info@bordc.org Telephone: 413-582-0110 Fax: 413-582-0116 |
Bradley Manning acknowledges act of conscience
| |||||||||||
Veterans Administration Won’t Talk, Treats Vets Like the Enemy
Veterans Administration Won’t Talk, Treats Vets Like the Enemy
By William Boardman
On October
4, a small group of American veterans went to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) in Washington,
DC, to talk to officials there about veteran suicides, veteran homelessness, veteran joblessness, and other
veteran struggles. No one from the department would talk to them.
Even the contingent of Homeland Security guards blocking the door wouldn’t explain to the veterans why they couldn’t come in. So they stayed on the sidewalk in front of 810 Vermont Avenue, a few hundred yards from the White House, and established Occupy Dep’t of Veterans Affairs and they’ve been there ever since, even through Hurricane Sandy.
After more than a month, Veterans Affairs officials still have not talked to any of the diverse group. Instead, the VA has continued low level police harassment and frequent power washing of the sidewalk, threatening to arrest anyone who interfered with the power washing. Trinity Church in New York City used similar tactics against Occupy Wall Street in 2011.
Despite the length of this occupation in the nation’s capitol and the importance of the issues it raises, there has been almost no media coverage other than a couple of pieces by Cory V. Clark on OpEd News and scattered social media posts. Searches of the Washington Post, New York Times, and DemocracyNOW all produced the same result – nothing.
Medic in Viet-Nam, Still Trying to Heal People
In a USTREAM video by Occupy Eye on Common Dreams that was about the Tar Sands Blockade in East Texas, the coverage gets to the Veterans Affairs about 40 minutes in. There a man who calls himself “Frosty,” a Viet-Nam veteran and former medic, with a bushy white beard, describes what it’s been like spending a month on the sidewalk trying to get to talk to the bureaucrats charged with looking after his welfare and that of his fellow vets from half a dozen American wars.
Articulate and friendly in demeanor, Frosty has intense things to say – for example, that the VA has only 19 suicide hotlines in the whole country, and that a caller reaches only a recording and gets only a recorded promise of a callback within 24 hours. “The VA doesn’t care,” he says, noting that the suicide rate among veterans is currently estimated an 18 a day, and likely under-reported.
Like the other vets sharing the sidewalk in front of the VA, the first thing Frosty wants is to establish a veterans’ council that will have direct access to the VA, and to which the VA will have to be responsive. Some of the veterans are trying to work with Congress to make this happen, to improve VA response to all veterans’ issues, but especially suicides, homelessness, and joblessness.
Current estimates cited by vets are that there are more than 750,000 homeless veterans in the United States, about a quarter of the total homeless population of three million. The Department of Veterans Affairs puts the number much lower, based on a January 2011 survey. The VA Secretary, retired general Eric Shinseki has, according to the VA website, “announced the federal government’s goal to end Veteran homelessness by 2015.” In May 2011, the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the VA’s “unchecked incompetence” was an unconstitutional of veterans’ benefits.
The current jobless rate for veterans aged 18-24 is 29%, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
No One’s Talking About Depleted Uranium Poisoning, Yet
Not all veterans are supportive of Occupy the VA. The website “This Ain’t Hell, But you can see it from here” refers to the vets at the VA as “a bunch of scruffy-looking folks claiming to be veterans,” then misrepresents why they’re there. Among the mostly hostile comments is this one from November 6 (which was immediately attacked):
I was there just yesterday, and I have to say, those scruffy people are Occupiers, they want a different world, and there is nothing wrong with that. they are supporting those that are standing up for our veterans. To put them down is a symptom of what is wrong with this country. Didn’t we ignore our veterans when they were in Vietnam, and did not learn a lesson. They are not getting their benefits, because of a new computer program, and the vets are 900,000 behind, and are waiting a year or more for those benefits. 18 soldiers commit suicide a day because of no mental health treatment. Wake up, stop criticizing people who are standing up instead of sitting at a computer. By the way my husband died of Agent Orange at age 47, my neighbor 29 Afghan vet shot himself in the head, so don’t put down those standing up. Shame on you.
Veterans Affairs has been a troubled agency for decades now, sometimes better, sometimes worse, rarely adequate to meet the need. After Viet-Nam the agency was in denial about Agent Orange poisoning the troops and Vietnamese alike. Later it took a decade or more for the agency to accept the reality of PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder. Today, only Frosty is talking about depleted uranium poisoning the troops, Iraqis, Afghanis, and people anywhere else our military has used it.
Even the contingent of Homeland Security guards blocking the door wouldn’t explain to the veterans why they couldn’t come in. So they stayed on the sidewalk in front of 810 Vermont Avenue, a few hundred yards from the White House, and established Occupy Dep’t of Veterans Affairs and they’ve been there ever since, even through Hurricane Sandy.
After more than a month, Veterans Affairs officials still have not talked to any of the diverse group. Instead, the VA has continued low level police harassment and frequent power washing of the sidewalk, threatening to arrest anyone who interfered with the power washing. Trinity Church in New York City used similar tactics against Occupy Wall Street in 2011.
Despite the length of this occupation in the nation’s capitol and the importance of the issues it raises, there has been almost no media coverage other than a couple of pieces by Cory V. Clark on OpEd News and scattered social media posts. Searches of the Washington Post, New York Times, and DemocracyNOW all produced the same result – nothing.
Medic in Viet-Nam, Still Trying to Heal People
In a USTREAM video by Occupy Eye on Common Dreams that was about the Tar Sands Blockade in East Texas, the coverage gets to the Veterans Affairs about 40 minutes in. There a man who calls himself “Frosty,” a Viet-Nam veteran and former medic, with a bushy white beard, describes what it’s been like spending a month on the sidewalk trying to get to talk to the bureaucrats charged with looking after his welfare and that of his fellow vets from half a dozen American wars.
Articulate and friendly in demeanor, Frosty has intense things to say – for example, that the VA has only 19 suicide hotlines in the whole country, and that a caller reaches only a recording and gets only a recorded promise of a callback within 24 hours. “The VA doesn’t care,” he says, noting that the suicide rate among veterans is currently estimated an 18 a day, and likely under-reported.
Like the other vets sharing the sidewalk in front of the VA, the first thing Frosty wants is to establish a veterans’ council that will have direct access to the VA, and to which the VA will have to be responsive. Some of the veterans are trying to work with Congress to make this happen, to improve VA response to all veterans’ issues, but especially suicides, homelessness, and joblessness.
Current estimates cited by vets are that there are more than 750,000 homeless veterans in the United States, about a quarter of the total homeless population of three million. The Department of Veterans Affairs puts the number much lower, based on a January 2011 survey. The VA Secretary, retired general Eric Shinseki has, according to the VA website, “announced the federal government’s goal to end Veteran homelessness by 2015.” In May 2011, the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the VA’s “unchecked incompetence” was an unconstitutional of veterans’ benefits.
The current jobless rate for veterans aged 18-24 is 29%, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
No One’s Talking About Depleted Uranium Poisoning, Yet
Not all veterans are supportive of Occupy the VA. The website “This Ain’t Hell, But you can see it from here” refers to the vets at the VA as “a bunch of scruffy-looking folks claiming to be veterans,” then misrepresents why they’re there. Among the mostly hostile comments is this one from November 6 (which was immediately attacked):
I was there just yesterday, and I have to say, those scruffy people are Occupiers, they want a different world, and there is nothing wrong with that. they are supporting those that are standing up for our veterans. To put them down is a symptom of what is wrong with this country. Didn’t we ignore our veterans when they were in Vietnam, and did not learn a lesson. They are not getting their benefits, because of a new computer program, and the vets are 900,000 behind, and are waiting a year or more for those benefits. 18 soldiers commit suicide a day because of no mental health treatment. Wake up, stop criticizing people who are standing up instead of sitting at a computer. By the way my husband died of Agent Orange at age 47, my neighbor 29 Afghan vet shot himself in the head, so don’t put down those standing up. Shame on you.
Veterans Affairs has been a troubled agency for decades now, sometimes better, sometimes worse, rarely adequate to meet the need. After Viet-Nam the agency was in denial about Agent Orange poisoning the troops and Vietnamese alike. Later it took a decade or more for the agency to accept the reality of PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder. Today, only Frosty is talking about depleted uranium poisoning the troops, Iraqis, Afghanis, and people anywhere else our military has used it.
This article was published at NationofChange at: http://www.nationofchange.org/veterans-administration-won-t-talk-treats-vets-enemy-1352976949. All rights are reserved.
__._,_.___
Defend The Palestinian People-U.S.Out Of The Middle East
This spirited rally for Gaza was attended by at least 300 people; note that
there will be another tonight. While the focus here is on Palestine, the peace
community's perspectives on the Israeli and US governments are also relevant to
VFP's current discussion about Leah's trip to Iran, a country already suffering
from crippling US sanctions (remember our February Iran action? the "No War On
Iran" meme in every march?), despite its adherence to international law. It has
signed the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, for example.
A few simple points of fact: The U.S. has a vast nuclear arsenal and is
the only country that has ever deployed these weapons (Iran has none). Israel is
in open violation of the NPT with its huge "secret" stockpiles of nuclear
weapons. America's economic and military support of Israel has caused suffering
and death in Palestine, Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, and elsewhere.
Leah (and others with CodePink, UNAC, etc.) did the world a tremendous
service by trying to shine a light on U.S. drone killing of civilians in
Pakistan; her effort to do the same for what US sanctions are doing to the
citizens of Iran should, in my judgment, be encouraged. Obviously many Smedleys
disagree; but before decrying the mission, why not consider what's actually
known, and not known, about Iran, and what a delegation to Iran might teach
Americans?
Those of us who regularly attend local and national peace vigils and
speak-outs often discuss, to anyone willing to listen, the number of countries
the Obama administration is actually at war with; the reality of drone strikes,
"diplomatic" interventions and "humanitarian" wars; and (as only Nate and Tony
acknowledge) the fact that economic sanctions are indeed an act of war against
ordinary citizens. So even if Iran's leaders *were* "evil," it's important to
recognize that sanctions do nothing to hurt Iran's leaders.
Hope the following video provides more food for thought on how military
policy targets citizens/civilians. Peace, Joan
Re: Video: "March and rally for Gaza, Boston, Mass., November 15, 2012"
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Joan Livingston has shared a video with you on YouTube
For VFP, which (except for Ross Caputi) missed this event. There will be another march tonight in solidarity with Gaza, whose bombing was approved by Obama on Monday.
![]()
March and rally for Gaza, Boston, Mass., November 15, 2012
Supporters of Palestine in Boston protest Israel's killing of civilians in the Gaza Strip, marching to the Israeli consulate with music, visuals, and chants against Israeli apartheid, the occupation of Palestinian territories, and US military/economic support for Israel's crimes. Hundreds of activists from many area groups, including Jews for Palestine, CodePink, the United National Antiwar Coalition, and OccupyBoston, joined pro-Gaza protestors in other cities around the globe; they also encountered a counter-demonstration by Zionists.
©2012 YouTube, LLC 901 Cherry Ave, San Bruno, CA 94066
Thursday, November 15, 2012
From The Pen Of V.I.Lenin
Soviet Democracy and Workers Rule
(Quote of the Week)
As with the current presidential election, the exploited and the
poor in the U.S. are asked every four years to vote for a representative of the
capitalist ruling class who will oversee their oppression. Addressing American
workers following the 1917 workers revolution in Russia, whose 95th anniversary
we celebrate this month, Bolshevik leader V.I. Lenin denounced the fraud of
democracy under capitalist rule, counterposing to it the workers democracy
instituted by the soviet regime as part of the fight to establish a worldwide
socialist order.
—V.I. Lenin, “Letter to American Workers” (August 1918)
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From The Pen Of Joshua Lawrence Breslin-Rock And Roll Is …, Take Two
Rock and roll was (is) big,
sweaty cities, hot time summertime and the living is easy cities, New York-sized
outlandish skyscrapers to the stars (if you could see them out on those
lonesome canyon wall) cities, Chicago big windy, sloppy hog butcher to the
world (reeking of stinks, animal stinks, vegetable stinks, two in the morning
whiskey stinks) cities, seven hills rolling to the golden pacific wash and
Japan seas great American west night San Francisco (visions of endless North
Beach City Lights Bookstore-Hungry Eye –black bereted, black stockings, black
chinos, black, hell, black everything down to those midnight sunglasses worn
24/7/365 beat, beat down, beat around, beat six- ways-to- Sunday beat, but
beatitude beat too, Kerouac on the road beatitude beat although
undiscovered, Howl , beat)cities, sprawling sun-sweated, be-fogged, brown hills
and all swish and swirl coreless arroyo Los Angeles ( searching for perfect
Malibu waves, for Venice Beach muscle boys, for bikini-ed tanned golden girls,
and, and Hollywood angst , Rebel Without
A Cause angst, Blackboard Jungle
angst, max daddy Asphalt Jungle angst, hell again, just
cruising Saturday night Hollywood Boulevard (and Vine, okay) looking for a
walking daddy cities.
Be-bop cities okay, kids be-bopping,
doo-wopping, do-langing, sha-sha –sha-ing (if such a sound is possible) acting like king hell king
long gone walking daddies and mamas (okay, okay chicks, twists, frails) sitting
around Washington Square , Central Park, Union Square, Lincoln Park, Grant
Park, Russian Hill, Telegraph Hill,
Golden Gate Park, Venice Beach, Santa Monica Pier, Malibu surf run, name your
square, park, hill, beach, run, what the hell is a surf run (perfect wave, huh),
or be square, be-bopping away, waiting,
waiting impatiently, waiting out of their shoes, blue suede Carl Perkins stolen
like a thief by Elvis shoes or not, maybe fearful Pat Boone, Pat Boone!!! white
bucks, whatever, impatiently for the big
freeze red scare (hell, no far away, big freeze red scare right down in big
city New York Foley Square and dead commie Rosenburgs, stalinite jews for god’s
sakes, why did they do it, Hollywood Ten cinematic villains writing up some
Malibu night mare scenes to scare young children, future golden boy perfect
wave surfers, to death Chi town Wobblies turned red never getting over
Haymarket 1886 and doing hard time in Joliet, Longshoremen Harry Bridges and
golden gate breach) cold war night to turn warm and provide some fresh air to breath, to breath a
not parentcoppriestteacherauthority, not air raid shelter, head down, ass up
breathe.
Clapping hands by twos and
threes as some bopping horn, or better sexed-up sax (not some old time, teen
old time, tenor or alto Johnny Hodges/ Lester Young/ Charlie Parker/Dizzy
be-bopping thing but chained, chained hard and fast to that riffing guitar),
parent wary too sexed-up sax that made junior toss in his bed at night and sis,
well, made her, cool and collected, toss a few sweaty wet nights too, make of
that what you will, always sax wails, whales, wales, away with that big beat,
beat down, beat around, beat six- ways-to- Sunday (the day exactly), some
guitar riff out of Les Paul or some jazz Charlie Christian saint, maybe some Ike
Turner Rocket 88 turbo-blast, trying
to make sense of that off-beat Bill Haley and the Comets Rock Around The Clock beat that framed, hell, beat to hell
that silly Asphalt Jungle j. d.
(juvenile delinquent for the clueless squares, jack-rollers, corner boys, whip
chain-slashers for those in the know also looking for that freeze to thaw in
their own coping way) movie seen down at the Majestic on that cool off Saturday
popcorn afternoon.
Stag (stag, meaning no girl,
not solo, but with full corner boy regiment, white shirted, maybe white
tee-shirted, black chinos, some Thom McAn mother bought shoes, ugh,
slick-backed hair, and wisp of Elvis king sideburns, (wisp, just like wisp
beards, later, damn and corner boy laughs and fag-baits) in tow, the crowd from
42nd Street hangs, Division Street hangs, Post Street hand, and yah,
again Hollywood Boulevard hangs), later, intermission later, seeing she, Public
School 63 (or name your school la, la, la, do I have to do all the work?) sweet
Madonna and then to Eddie Cochran Sitting
in the Balcony, Zooey (maybe jewish and no madonna, no frozen irish Catherine
Madonna, Muffy wasp Madonna , Rita italian Madonna , Greta german Madonna
thing, thank god but not caring not caring a fig just following that Zooey ivory bath soap, could it be perfume smell,
that has hooked guys, smart guys too, guys who know up from down, since, well
Adam), and off to private upstairs balcony screenings.
Later, maybe four o’clock
later, strolling (got to learn how to get the hang of that damn thing, the
stroll, no not the dance, jesus not the dance, the walking in such a way that
it takes half an hour to get Zooey homeward rather than the ten real minutes it
takes, if you want to hang on to Zooey, boy) off to Schrafft’s corner lunchroom
( Harry’s Variety, Doc’s Drugstore, Hayes-Bickford, Friendly’s, Brigham’s,
Howard Johnson, okay) and quarters for jukebox, endless cadges; play this and
that six, twelve, infinite times. And our father, Elvis, Elvis, all shakes,
shiver, making girls, making Zooey (he heard, heard from the corner boy
grapevine, really the corner boy Be-Bop Kid’s sister who overheard that blessed
news at one Monday morning before school girls’ “lav” talkfest when they were
discussing, ah, discussing what made them “wet”) sweat (and Zooey, cool fragrance
bath soap smell Zooey does not sweat even in sweaty New York/Chi Town/Frisco/LA
LA land cities) and do things up in cloistered rooms (so he heard, a separate
corner boy sister’s wisdom as source) while they (boys “they” in case you didn’t
figure that out) ran the clerks at Mr. Sam’s clothing store ragged looking for
just the right look, and old Mr. Mack at Doc’s Drugstore too benefited selling
combs, gels, and six other things, except correctives for two left feet.
Rock was (is) small Podunk
towns, every boy knows every girl (and maybe desires each and every one and the
reverse too although that would cause a scandal in monogamous protestant-driven
podunk), small , sweaty towns and villages, hell, one street main street
crossroads down in dusty Texas, pass throughs for Greyhound buses and oil
tankers, summertime and the living is easy crossroads, Podunk outlandishly
named towns, Boise (big, two-hearted rivers and endless forests between jukebox
locales, jesus, and those bad ass city corner boy thought they had it tough),
Helena (and old time whiskey dreams filled with unfulfilled gold dust dreams,
Ponticello (big-hearted in its own way), Big Sur (sleepy town before the
invasion), Olde Saco filled with raven-haired, smooth-cheeked French-Canadian
boys calling out the songs in patois French (no Arcadia here), be-bop (okay,
half be-bop towns, dusty old towns soon,
how soon, to be de-populated by every boy and girl and off to the big sweaty
rock and roll cities). Kids sitting around the village green, the fourth of
july bandstand, the monument to the civil war, maybe on ocean edge towns down
some salty beach fighting off King Neptune for some sea wall space or some
hidden Seal Rock lovers lane fighting off some enterprising corner boy (senior set) in his father’s
passed- on car, be-bopping away, waiting, waiting just like big sweaty city
waiting ,for the big freeze red scare (hell, no far away, they ran those pink,
red NAACP guys, white guys, students
making strange noises about black was right if white was right, right out of
town, right onto those Trailways buses, one way, pronto) cold war night to turn
warm and provide some fresh air to
breath to breath a not parentcoppriestteacherauthority, not air raid shelter
(or under old time mahogany inkwell desks for real Podunk towns), head down,
ass up breathe.
Clapping hands by twos and
threes as some bopping horn, or better sexed-up sax (not some old time, teen
old time, tenor or alto Johnny Hodges/ Lester Young/ Charlie Parker/Dizzy be-bopping
thing but chained, chained hard and fast to that riffing guitar), parent wary
too sexed-up sax that made junior toss in his bed at night and sis, well, made
her, cool and collected, toss a few sweaty wet nights too, make of that what
you will, always sax wails, whales, wales, away with that big beat, beat down,
beat around, beat six- ways-to- Sunday (the day exactly), some guitar riff out
of Les Paul or some jazz Charlie Christian saint, maybe some Ike Turner Rocket 88 turbo-blast, trying to make sense
of that off-beat Bill Haley and the Comets Rock
Around The Clock beat that framed, hell, beat to hell that silly Asphalt
Jungle j. d. (juvenile delinquent
for the clueless squares, jack-rollers, corner boys, whip chain-slashers for
those in the know also looking for that freeze to thaw in their own coping way)
movie seen down at the Bijou (imitation big city Majestic, really doubling for
Sunday morning pancake all you can eat, bring the family socials too, doors
open at eight, eight in the morning, jesus), on that cool off Saturday popcorn
(popcorn addicted same as in sweaty cities) afternoon. Stag (ditto, cities,
maybe corner boys, some innocent when you dream Mama’s Pizza Parlor corner,
closing when main street closes at 9:00 PM , maybe no), but later, intermission
later, seeing she, Olde Saco South Junior High School, for example, she (no
blank big city Public School X number here) sweet Madonna (same as big city on
that) and then to Eddie Cochran Sitting in
the Balcony, Betty (or Jane, Mary, nothing as exotic as big city, maybe
jew, big city Zooey) and off to private upstairs balcony screenings.
Later, maybe four o’clock
later, strolling (got to learn how to get the hang of that damn thing, the
stroll, if you want to hang on to Betty/Jane/ Mary, boy) off to Doc’s corner
drugstore and quarters for jukebox, endless cadges, play this and that six,
twelve, infinite times. And our father, Elvis, Elvis, all shakes, shiver,
making girls, making Betty (he heard) sweat (and Betty, Zooey-like, cool Betty
does not sweat even in sweaty summer midday corn-picking fields) and do things,
universal do things, private girl things, up in cloistered rooms (so he heard,
though that same universal Monday morning before school “lav” talkfest- and lie-fest) while they (boys
“they” in case you didn’t figure that out) ran the Sears catalogue (and Ma)
ragged looking for just the right look, and old Doc (Doc Andrews and no doctor
but just a guy who crushed pills and
sold liquor as medicine for what ailed people to get by) and his
fuddy-duddy drugstore with odd medicines for sick people what-a- drag- to-
be-old-and- it- ain’t- never- going- to- come- to- that- for- me benefited selling combs, gels, and six other
things, except correctives for two left feet.
Rock was (is)…
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