Saturday, November 17, 2012

Joan Livingston has shared a video with you on YouTube
CodePink's Pakistan delegation on US drone warfare
CodePink members traveled to Pakistan to meet with local officials and victims of U.S. drone strikes in that country. Now back home, they are telling Americans about President Obama's "secret" drone wars. This report at the Community Church of Boston is by Paki Weiland and Lois Mastrangelo. (CodePink co-founder Medea Benjamin, part of the delegation, is the author of "Drone Warfare.")
©2012 YouTube, LLC 901 Cherry Ave, San Bruno, CA 94066



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    <*> To visit your group on the web, go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/smedleyvfp/

    Stop the Drones

    Report Back from the October CodePink
    Anti-Drone Peace Delegation to Pakistan

    When: Monday, November 26, 2012, 7:30 pm
    Where: MIT Room 32-141 • 32 Vassar St • Cambridge
    Stop the DronesOn October 7 (the anniversary of the US attack on Afghanistan), a delegation of 31 US antiwar activists marched with tens of thousands of Pakistanis sickened by the civilian death toll and growth of rightwing reaction brought on by the US drone war in Waziristan. Hear first-hand reports and view slides from delegation members who just met with the families of drone victims, with intellectuals, political activists, and others in Islamabad, Lahore, and the tribal areas. We will also hear from Pakistanis on the impact of the US “War on Terror” and drone attacks on Pakistan.
    Learn about the growing use of drones for military attacks and for domestic surveillance. Discuss what we can do to stop the use and proliferation of these deadly weapons.
    Panelists:
    • Joe Lombardo, Co-Coordinator, United National Antiwar Coalition; member of the Troy Area Labor Council (New York); tour member
    • Paki Wieland, Arrested Hancock AFB drone resister; Engages in peacekeeper & nonviolence training and education; tour member
    • Lois Mastrangelo, United for Justice with Peace; CodePink of Greater Boston; tour member
    • Osman Khan, Radical economist pursuing his doctorate; just returned from six months in Pakistan researching the impact of drone attacks and war on the tribal peoples of western Pakistan
    • Waqas Mirza, Recent Political Science graduate University of Massachusetts Amherst; Writes and speaks about impact of “War on Terror” on Pakistan
    Endorsed by United National Antiwar Coalition, United for Justice with Peace, Code Pink Greater Boston, Alliance for a Democratic and Secular South Asia, Muslim Peace Coalition, Veterans For Peace, Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, Massachusetts Global Action
    Suggested donation $5.00. Proceeds to support anti-drone protests
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    Thursday, November 15, 2012
    12:00 pm - 1:00 pm
    Harvard Yard


    Do you believe STRONG, STABLE JOBS and RESPECT FOR WORKERS should be central to Harvard’s mission?


    It is time to STAND UP with Harvard’s 4600+ employees represented by HUCTW!


    HUCTW workers have been without a contract for months.

    Meanwhile, Harvard continues to insist that it cannot afford decent wage increases and affordable health care plans for workers.



    Harvard College Student Labor Action Movement -- PLEASE FORWARD!



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    Home > Justice at Walmart > Stand with Walmart Strikers on Black Friday
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    Stand with Walmart Strikers on Black Friday

    Event

    Quincy Supports Walmart Workers on Black Friday

    Time-iconNovember 23 • 08:00 am
    Location-iconQuincy, MA
    User-iconMassUniting
    Contact-mail-icondarrin@massuniting.org
    MORE DETAILS TO COME! Please RSVP for more information.

    Stand with Walmart workers in their fight for their rights. For decades, Walmart Stores, Inc have dragged down wages, forcing their workers to work irregular schedules, and intimidated and took retribution on any workers who fought back. It's time for the retribution to end, so come to this local Walmart to show your solidarity and tell Walmart that they need to pay their fair share.
    Join this event!

    Got a website? Click here to embed a widget of this event on your site.

    Iraq Veterans Against the WarSupport Our Work: Donate Now
    Dear ,
    In honor of Veterans Day last weekend, Under the Hood Cafe and Outreach Center along with members of IVAW marched in the local parade outside of Fort Hood to carry the message of veterans' and service members' Right to Heal.
    In this photo, IVAW member, Malachi Muncy, dramatizes the issue of reliance on medication to treat soldiers and veterans suffering from various forms of military trauma:
    Malaichi said, “It’s easy to remember the veterans coming home on planes and impossible to forget those coming back in boxes. It’s those locked up at home with mounting prescriptions, those falling into the judicial system, and those dying senseless accidents that are being forgotten.”
    For more photos of this event, you can go to the Under the Hood Facebook page (and like it!).
    Under the Hood and IVAW also used the parade to spread the word to active duty soldiers about the Appeal for Redress, a project that makes it easy for service members and veterans to reach out to members of Congress about the lack of access to proper health treatment for PTSD, Military Sexual Trauma, and Traumatic Brain Injury. If you are a veteran or service member, you can add your name to send a letter urging members of Congress to take action around issues of proper health care in the military and VA systems.
    In Solidarity,
    Iraq Veterans Against the War and the Afghanistan Veterans Against the War Committee
    P.S. Please support the important work of Under the Hood Cafe and Outreach Center, a safe haven outside of Fort Hood for soldiers and their families to get support and alternative information about their rights.
    P.O. Box 3565, New York, NY 10008. All Right Reserved. | Unsubscribe
    To ensure delivery of IVAW emails please add webmaster@ivaw.org to your address book.

    The World Can't Wait
    Stop the Crimes of Your Government
    Donate | Local Chapters | Store | Previous Newsletters
    Dear

    Mourning familyI am writing you very quickly today. World Can't Wait has a mission of stopping the crimes of our government. All day yesterday, in court (see below) we were getting messages and calls about the aerial assault on Gaza by Israel. Reading the news, we learned that Israel is preparing a ground attack, and that three Israelis were killed by missiles from Gaza. The death toll in Gaza is reported now to be 15, including children, and the widely circulated photo of a parents holding a baby they buried today.

    From Dr. Mona Al-Farra in Gaza City, an urgent message on Facebook:

    Dear Friends, Gaza is under extensive Israeli military attack, in less than 2 hours, 14 military attacks against different targets in different parts of Gaza Strip, 6 were killed including 2 young girls age 4 and 7, 11 were injured, the hospitals are already lacking essential emergency medications, and citizens were called for blood donation, we do not have power, iam using UBS, the first stage of this operation has been accomplished, we expect more escalation. your solidarity means a lot at this difficult times, pass the word, this aggression, should stop now.


    One of the most popular tweets under the hashtag #gazaunderattack was, "I am embarassed to be an American today. How can we sit and watch innocent civilians murdered in Gaza, again." And, "Obama sleeps soundly while all of Gaza is awake to the sound of US supplied bombs and rockets." There were protests in last night in Seattle, DC, NY, San Francisco, Chicago, and more protests are planned around the country and around the world today.

    Find a protest near you!



    Queens Defendants Found NOT Guilty of Serious OGA Charges; Guilty of Lesser Disorderly Conduct Charge

    Queens, NY – A Queens jury today found four men not guilty of obstructing the NYPD’s 103rd Precinct last year. The high-stakes trial for political protesters began October 23, delayed several times by weather, and almost ended with a mistrial because of the highly unusual arrest of a sitting juror last week.

    Carl Dix, Jamel Mims, Morgan Rhodewalt and Robert Parsons were charged with two counts of Obstruction of Government Administration, a Class A misdemeanor which carries a possible sentence of 12 months in jail. Prosecutors failed to convince the jury that the men, who were part of a group of 20 who loudly protested the NYPD stop-and-frisk policy last November 19, had disrupted normal functioning of the precinct.

    Dix said today, “The prosecution attempted to make us pay a heavy price for protesting against stop and frisk. They crafted the case from the beginning, and failed in this objective. They put on a case, but couldn’t provide any evidence that we obstructed the precinct, or that we intended to do that. At the 103rdPrecinct last year, and today in court, we delivered a loud message against NYPD’s stop-and-frisk policy, and we won’t stop protesting this unjust, unconstitutional, racist, policy.”

    The jury found the defendants guilty of one count of disorderly conduct, a violation. They will be sentenced January 7. 13 more defendants await trial next year for the same incident.
    More coverage
    Debra Sweet, Director, The World Can't Wait
    Click to tweet or share on Facebook:

    From The Smedley Butler Brigade -Veterans For Peace

    Hi Smedleys & Samanthas,
     
    Someone just asked me to post the song I wrote that I read at the Veterans / Armistice Day Rally at Faneuil Hall. It is entitled "Extremists" and was inspired by the ACLUM's "Policing Descent", the monitoring of Peace Groups by the Boston Police.

    Extremists
    Chorus
    They say that we’re extremists
    Cause we’re out here in the street
    How unpatriotic to be marching for peace
    They say “we better watch them, like never before”
    Cause there’s nothing more dangerous
    Than Veterans Against War
    Verse
    So they stand on every corner, with their cameras in their hands
    Taking film and snapping pictures of everything they can
    They develop film and write reports on everything they saw
    Protecting all our citizens from folks who broke no law
    They’ve been doing this so long, they know us to our core
    They know we’re peaceful veterans, who know the cost of war
    Because we’ve seen the horror, and the price we always pay
    They have to document everything we do and say
    They got Home Land Security, FBI and DIA
    State and local police, don’t forget the CIA
    Why, we are so important, a clear danger to the land
    Can’t let this love and peace thing, get too far out of hand
    Well they got their Bric, play all their tricks, wasting all our dough
    All those files and pictures, with nothing much to show
    So we raise our voices here today, to let them know it’s time
    Stop hassling the peace groups, go back to fighting crime
    © Patrick J. Scanlon 2012

    15 November 2012

    Tom Hayden : Sticking It to Wall Street

    The fallen bull. Image from Tumblr.

    A legacy of Occupy:
    Sticking it to Wall Street
    The Occupy movement energized a vanguard of voters to become more populist in their demands.
    By Tom Hayden / The Rag Blog / November 15, 2012

    It is unfortunate that Occupy Wall Street lost its momentum after the uprisings of 2011, because the election and its results have opened another opportunity to stick it to Wall Street and choke and reform the “great vampire squid” for another next generation. As I wrote six months ago in The Nation:
    This year marks the first presidential campaign in our lifetime when the gluttony of Wall Street, the failures of capitalism, the evils of big money in politics and a discussion of fundamental reform will be front and center in election debates. No doubt the crisis that gave rise to Occupy will not be fixed by an election, but that’s beside the point. Elections produce popular mandates, and mandates spur popular activism. It’s time to organize a progressive majority.
    From the general Occupy standpoint, Obama was just another Wall Street candidate, and the elections did not matter much anyway. That is a tragic view to take, since it robbed Occupy of an occasion to take credit and feel empowered -- “Fired up! Ready to go!” as the Obama multitudes say. In fact, Occupy did influence the election, did influence the outcome, and did shape the mandate, without, in most cases, its members even voting for Obama. Hopefully they will try to shape the terms of the bailout ahead.

    The Occupy movement influenced the political climate in which Obama and his advisers chose to attack Romney as an agent of Bain Capital; incidentally, against the strong preferences of such powerful Democratic figures as Bill Clinton and Cory Booker, the Newark mayor who publicly said he was “nauseated” by the president’s attack on private equity.

    The Occupy movement energized a vanguard of voters to become more populist in their demands. The Occupy movement surely helped make it possible for Elizabeth Warren to ride the wave to Washington. And those were only some of the aftershocks of Occupy long after it faded from the streets and headlines.

    Wall Street, which did everything in its considerable power to turn on and defeat Obama, now thinks it is “time to mend fences.” (New York Times, November 8, 2012) But if Obama and Axelrod retain any of their Chicago political instincts, there should be some payback before any mending takes place. If Obama is forced to compromise his preferences on the fiscal cliff, reforming Wall Street is where he should be able to implement his words from the campaign trail.

    If Obama had to stock his cabinet with Wall Street players in order to avoid total economic disaster in 2009, now he can offer some new choices and directions. Where is Ralph Nader when we need him?

    Obama should stick it to Wall Street and make it hurt so badly that they will never forget the screws in this lifetime.

    First, Obama should encourage Harry Reid to put Elizabeth Warren on the Senate Banking Committee and empower a de facto reform bloc of Sherrod Brown, Bernie Sanders, Tammy Baldwin, Richard Blumenthal, Tom Harkin, Chris Murphy, Al Franken, Jon Tester, and Warren, among others. Let progressive populist leadership come out of the new Senate. Second, deeper public hearings should bore into the scandal and call the attention of public watchdogs over the obscure process of writing Dodd-Frank regulations on derivatives and hedge fund manipulations.

    Wall Street lobbyists are already preparing a "lobbying frenzy” against the administration’s tentative plan to “apply derivatives rules to American banks trading overseas.” (New York Times, November 8, 2012) As Obama promised long ago about health care, such Wall Street plans should be exposed on television at every turn because, like mushrooms, they only grow in the dark.

    This opening of the process for all to see can be achieved if there is aggressive monitoring of a U.S. senator. Wall Street somehow thinks its world will conveniently go dark as they lobby in stealth to weaken the Volcker Rule, contain the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, and legislate a diluted authority for other key agencies.

    The opportunity to prolong the recent ideological and values debate may increase, not subside. On the left, an opportunity still exists to enter the debate loud and clear with concrete demands.

    To “occupy” Wall Street is no longer a policy demand, if it ever was. Extending democracy to Wall Street might be a better and bolder banner -- with proposals for greater disclosure, accountability, regulation in the public interest, a ban on secret donors to campaigns, a Robin Hood transactions tax, and a long state-by-state campaign to eliminate the Citizens United decision.

    The theme song might be Leonard Cohen’s “Democracy Is Coming to the USA.”

    [Tom Hayden is a former California state senator and leader of Sixties peace, justice, and environmental movements. He currently teaches at Pitzer College in Los Angeles. His latest book is The Long Sixties. Hayden is director of the Peace and Justice Resource center and editor of The Peace Exchange Bulletin. Read more of Tom Hayden's writing on The Rag Blog.]

    The Rag Blog

    15 November 2012

    Alice Embree / Terry DuBose : Defend the Soldiers' Right to Heal

    Under the Hood contingent at Veterans Day Parade, Killeen, Texas, Saturday, November 10, 2012. Photo by Susan Van Haitsma / The Rag Blog.

    Defend the right to heal:
    Veterans’ Day parade in Killeen
    As the deployments wind down from this decade of combat, service members are finding that their access to medical care is restricted, denied, delayed, and stigmatized.
    By Alice Embree / The Rag Blog / November 15, 2012
    See story by Terry J. DuBose and photos by Alice Embree and Susan Van Haitsma, Below.
    Malachi Muncy’s vision was obscured, but he could hear a boy’s voice saying:“It’s a soldier in a pill bottle. Break out! Break out!”
    The boy, a spectator along the Veterans Day parade route in Killeen, Texas, got it. So did most of those who saw Under the Hood’s message on Saturday, November 10.

    Under the Hood (UtH) is a GI coffeehouse that opened in 2009 in Killeen, a mile from Fort Hood, the largest U.S. military post in the world. The UtH contingent marched for the second time in Killeen’s Veterans’ Day event. Three veterans led the march with this banner: “Honor All Who Served: Defend Service Members’ and Veterans’ Right to Heal.”

    Behind the banner, on the bed of a pickup truck, was Malachi Muncy, a veteran of two Iraq deployments, a writer and an artist. Malachi had produced the pill bottle image as a print on paper made of combat uniforms. For the parade he took his art large, constructing a six-foot tall orange pill bottle with a white cap. Malachi, in uniform, stood inside the bottle, occasionally reaching his hands above him into the air. The prescription read: “RX: We Deserve Better.”

    Although Malachi’s vision was somewhat limited by the orange acetate he was behind, he could hear the crowd’s response. Those seated along the parade route would begin asking each other what was on the truck, then talk amongst themselves as they realized it was a soldier in a pill bottle. There was occasional laughter, even applause. Some spectators made comments about the medicines they were on.

    Along the route, UtH supporters handed out leaflets supporting soldiers’ right to heal -- for real treatment beyond pills for the hidden injuries that are now so prevalent -- Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, Military Sexual Trauma, and Traumatic Brain Injury.

    Supporters also carried signs with the grim markers of this decade of war.“A veteran commits suicide every 80 minutes. Stop the cycle!” “There were 154 service member suicides in the first 155 days of this year. 154 suicides vs. 134 combat deaths.”

    In an October 23 article, the Austin American-Statesman dug deep into the Texas face of these statistics: “Special Report: Uncounted Casualties,” reporting on the recent Texas veterans who have died of overdoses, suicide, and vehicle crashes.

    As the deployments wind down from this decade of combat, service members are finding that their access to medical care is restricted, denied, delayed, and stigmatized. An appeal to Congress for redress for service members’ and Veterans’ right to heal can be found at www.RighttoHeal.org. You are urged to sign this petition and to continue to support Under the Hood -- a space for free speech, peer support, and decompression.

    [Alice Embree is a long-time Austin activist, organizer, and member of the Texas State Employees Union. A former staff member of underground papers The Rag in Austin and RAT in New York, and a veteran of SDS and the women's liberation movement, she is now active with CodePink Austin and Under the Hood Café. Embree is a contributing editor to The Rag Blog and is treasurer of the New Journalism Project. Read more articles by Alice Embree on The Rag Blog.]


    "Trapped." Print by Malachi Muncy on paper made from old combat uniform.
    Malachi Muncy:A veteran artist

    Malachi Muncy, a veteran of two deployments to Iraq, uses art and theater to express his frustration, situation, and anger. Two of his prints, “Trapped” and “Escape,” carry strong messages in this era of record suicide rates among troops and veterans.

    Malachi prints on paper made from his combat uniforms. As guerrilla theater for the Veterans’ Day Parade in Killeen, Malachi designed and built a giant pill bottle. Standing in uniform in the bottle on the back of a pickup truck his art reached hundreds along the parade route.

    Malachi served in the Texas Army National Guard as a motor vehicle operator from 2003 to 2009, with service in Iraq from 2004-2005 and 2006-2007. He has a BA in journalism form Texas State University (TSU) and is currently pursuing a BA in English.

    Malachi’s writing has appeared in the Copperas Cove Leader Press, SKUNK Magazine, and at RawStory.com. His poetry and prose have been included in the Warrior Writers anthologies. Malachi’s print and papermaking artwork has been exhibited at The National Veterans Art Museum in Chicago.

    Malachi has volunteered as arts coordinator at Under the Hood Café, a GI Outreach Center in Killeen. He has conducted workshops there on making “combat paper” from uniforms -- transforming war experiences into art. In December he will become the new manager of Under the Hood.

    -- Terry J. DuBose / The Rag Blog

    [Terry J. DuBose, who was an organizer for Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW) in Texas, is an Associate Professor Emeritus of Diagnostic Medical Sonography at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences.]
    "Escape." Print by Malachi Muncy.


    Photo Gallery:
    Under the Hood at Veterans Day Parade

    Photo by Alice Embree / The Rag Blog.

    Photo by Alice Embree / The Rag Blog.

    Photo by Alice Embree / The Rag Blog.

    Photo by Susan Van Haitsma / The Rag Blog.

    Photo by Alice Embree / The Rag Blog.

    Photo by Susan Van Haitsma / The Rag Blog.

    Photo by Susan Van Haitsma / The Rag Blog.

    Photo by Susan Van Haitsma / The Rag Blog.

    Photo by Susan Van Haitsma / The Rag Blog.

    Photo by Susan Van Haitsma / The Rag Blog.

    Photo by Susan Van Haitsma / The Rag Blog.

    Photo by Susan Van Haitsma / The Rag Blog.

    Photo by Susan Van Haitsma / The Rag Blog.

    Find more photos of Under the Hood and the Veterans Day parade by Alice Embree and Susan Van Haitsma.

    The Rag Blog