Tuesday, June 10, 2014


 ***The Roots Is The Toots-The Music That Got The Generation Of ’68 Through The 1950s Red Scare Cold War Night-Elvis’ One Night With You  

 

A lot of boy-girl things didn’t make sense in the mad world of the iced down 1950s (we will keep ourselves to the boy-girl thing here recognizing except in exotic Hollywood/ North Beach/Village outposts that other now acceptable relationships were below the radar, below the radar in North Adamsville anyway, except in a titter of faggot/dyke-baiting in the boys’ gym locker room after school). Nobody, or almost nobody, talked about sex in any but very hushed tones except maybe the school tramps and whoremongers who were more than happy to explain the facts of life to innocent youth. But they were not listened to as a rule so that it was up to you to ask your older brother or sister as the case may have been in order to get some information they picked up from the streets to fill you in where parents with their birds and bees silliness, the church (you name the denomination at your leisure) banned the words and talk of such words like things were done by osmosis or tarot cards as one guy actually explained to one gal one night and she believed him, Jesus, or school, locus parentis school and thus as clueless as parents about their charges, came up nada. Empty. 

Of course half, maybe more, of that street talk was wrong, dead-ass wrong coming from sources that barely knew more than those asking the questions. And so there was an epidemic of young women being plucked out of school for a time to visit some forlorn aunt in Topeka (sorry, Topeka).The whole wide world had never known such devotion of wayward young nieces for out-of-town aunts during those times. So when boys and girls started getting attracted to each other, when they touched, when they danced swaying with the big new beat coming up to grab them out in that cold war night sure they were confused, sure they wanted to know what those tingles were all about –and do something about it just like the “he” and “she” of this sketch…     

…she was not exactly sure why she felt that way, felt warm in what all the girls in the before school “lav” called their “honey pot.”  Honey pot a term picked up from some older guys they dated who got it from around jazz clubs or who talked fresh to them trying to pick them up around town and who had picked it up from who knows where, maybe sailors in Boston, or those older brothers trying to be hip. Some of the rougher girls, the girls who smoked in the “lav” against school rules, drank cheapjack liquor, mainly whiskey, on dates and “did the deed” as some modest girls called the sexual act and they called it “fucking” called that spot other things, pussy/ cunt kind of things which she did not find out until later, much later, and not much before she got married that guys called that spot those words too but she modest then stuck to the euphemism and even saying that term out loud made her blush crimson red).

That warm feeling had come over her lately, since turning sixteen  lately,  whenever she heard the local radio station, WJDA, the station teenagers were now tuned into since the station manager bowing to demographic shifts changed the format from jazz to what the station called popular music or when the kids at Sal’s Pizza Parlor up in Adamsville Center were on the juke-box endlessly playing Elvis’ suggestive One Night With You (suggestive of what she would not find out until later, until Tommy one night tried to have his way with her and she kind of let him, kind of, kind of also did not let him, which she would not explain at the Monday morning before school “lav” talk about what went on over everybody’s weekend except to say they were finished, done as an “item,” no further explanation given).

Someone, Betty Arlen, she thought, one time said it was just her coming into “her time,” although she did not know what to make of that idea since she had that same feeling before and after she came into her time. She had thought Betty meant “got her friend” (translation: began to have her period, her cycle, which was late since at least most of the girls she knew had gotten their “friend” a year or two before her). Betty had giggled and said she did not mean that, that thing every girl had, her “friend” (Jesus, would no one but tramps and whoremongers use anything but prissy words when speaking of sex and its functions) but the time when everything was confused and when a teenager did, or did not, know which way to jump. A time of teen angst and alienation which created sullen jack-rolling corner boys (guys in white tee-shirts and denims hanging their feet against storefront walls daring said walls to object, formally called juvenile delinquents), made heroes of hot-rodding “chicken run” kings out on Thunder Road, and icons of “cool” actors like Marlon Brando and James Dean.

Betty said the stuff was news in all the newspapers and her father had mentioned it to her and asked her if she felt alienated. Betty said “no” quickly under the circumstances since “yes” would have probably kept her in the house until her father determined that the epidemic had run its course. All our distraught she knew was that the old songs on the jukebox or radio, the ones that she loved to listen to last year (on that same WJDA that now was formatted for popular music meaning not her parents’ music) Frank, Bing, Patti, Rosemary, did not make her feel that way anymore. Didn’t make her feel that she wanted to jump out of her skin.

One night as she thought wistfully back to when her urges had all began, thought about her now seemingly girlish silliness since she had moved on in her big beat tastes, when Big Joe Turner’s Shake, Rattle and Roll came on the radio and she swaying to the beat at Doc’s or up in her room dancing by herself would get warm in her “honey pot.” She also gave a thought about Tommy Murphy from school, from North Adamsville High, from her class, her Problems in Democracy class, whom she had thought might have had a better handle on it, have had a better sense of what turbulence was going on inside her when he told the whole class in Current Events that there were some new songs coming out of the radio, some stuff from down south, some negro guys sound from out of Mississippi plantations heading North from down in Memphis somewhere, some white hillbilly guys sound from the farms and small towns from that same town, that he would listen to late at night on WJKA from Chicago when the air was just right. Sounds that made him want to jump right out of his skin. (She never dared to ask whether it made him feel warm in his “honey pot” since she didn’t know much then about whether boys had such pots, or got even warm there like she did when the beat jumped). When he said that, said it was about the music, she knew that she was not alone, not alone in feeling that a fresh breeze was coming over the land, although she, confused as she was would not have articulated it that way (that would come later).

As she continued to muse she remembered that she had asked Tommy about it after class and talking awhile both getting animated on the subject agreed to let him walk her home after school. One thing led to another as they found that they had so much in common, and then a few weeks later they had their first date, first date to go to the Surf Ballroom down at Adamsville Beach and listen to some guys, a band,  The Ready Rockers, play the new music. She had wondered to herself before he picked her up at her house whether she would feel warm again in her honey pot when they danced (she could not speak of such things to Tommy), she had hoped so.

Later, not that night but a few weeks later, when they skipped the dance part and just went to the far end of Adamsville Beach in his father’s car and they listened to the radio and the song that got her going, going strong as Tommy made his moves, was Elvis’ One Night With You which got her fantasizing about him all swaying hips, snapping be-bop fingers, snarl and slicked-back hair and between the beat and Tommy’s hands she let him have his way with her, kind of. The kind of part being that while she let him undress her, partially anyway, she was not sure what he did, not sure if they had done the deed. In any case she got angry at Tommy, got angry assuming that he had had his way with her and that he should have stopped. That night was the beginning of the end of their short romance especially after she had heard at the Monday morning before school “lav” talkfest some girls mention that they had successfully held off their boyfriends who wanted to “go all the way” and she was doubly furious. (Later, much later, she found out that one of those girls who had claimed to have fended off her boyfriend suddenly announced she had to go see an ailing aunt in Topeka or some place like that. More importantly Tommy, as inexperienced as her, had not really done anything, any penetration anyway. Poor Tommy).  

After giving Tommy his walking papers she still got those urges and still wanted to try to figure out what to do about them when Elvis or Jerry Lee came on the radio (and, truth, had secretly thrilled when she thought Tommy had done the deed, had made her a woman, although she believed he really should have stopped and thus the break-up). One night, one Friday night she went with Betty and another girl to the Surf Ballroom to hear the Ready Rockers play. And maybe find another guy, a guy who would respect her. Then she saw Lance, Lance all black hair and brown eyes, slim, dancing up a storm to Bo Diddley’s Who Do You Love. Later she went over to see if she could talk to him, to see if the music hit him the same way as it did her and they talked.

Later, not that night, they had their first date and after he picked her up in his ’55 Chevy he suggested they skip the dance and go to the far end of Adamsville Beach. She said she would really wanted to but told him he should stop before things got out of hand. Once they got there Lance turned on the radio and turned on his hands. She didn’t resist and while she was not sure which song got her going that night between Lance’s quick moving hands, the moon, the sound of the ocean roar and her own desire Lance had his way with her. And she knew this time from her aching hips and other stuff that he had “done the deed.” Come Monday morning before school girls’ “lav” talkfest she was the first girl to tell the group how she had successfully fended Lance off that weekend.  

Let’s tune into Tommy Murphy’s take on the situation now that he is single and lonely.       

… he could hardly wait until the weekend, wait to hear the new sounds coming out of the south, rhythm and blues stuff, rockabilly stuff, that he could hear on his transistor radio up in his room coming on clear nights out of WJKA in Chicago, stuff called rock and roll. It didn’t come in clear every week but when it did he would start snapping his fingers to the beat, the swinging beat that “spoke” to him somehow. He could not explain it but it made him feel good when he was down, was confused about life, okay, okay, about girls, school, and that getting ahead in the world that his parents, his mother especially, kept harping on. Made him think that maybe he would be a musician and play that stuff, play and make all the girls wet. Yeah, as little as he knew, he knew all that part about girls, about how this music was making them get warm, warm in all the right places, in their “honey pots,” according to George his older brother who knew all about girls and had explained what that term meant (and who really knew all he knew like everybody else from the streets). Make that new girl of his, Susie, warm too. He hoped.

Funny how they met, he and Susie met, or not really met but started out, started out in school of all places, in class. Jesus. In Current Events one week when it was his turn to make a presentation and he chose to talk about that radio station in Chicago and about the sounds he heard that made him want to jump out of his skin. He couldn’t exactly explain why when Mr. Merritt asked about why he felt that way except to say that it made him feel good, made him less angry, less confused. After class Susie had come up to him and practically begged him to tell her his feelings because she had said when she heard Big Joe Turner coming all snapping fingers on the radio on Shake, Rattle and Roll, she felt funny inside. (He knew what kind of funny but he knew, knew because George had told him, not to say that to girls.) That had started it since he walked her home a few times and he found that she was easy to talk to. So before he knew it he had asked her to go see the Ready Rockers at the Surf Ballroom down at Adamsville Beach who were playing the new sounds.

He didn’t know what would happen but he hoped that she would get that funny feeling inside when they danced, he sure hoped so. And she did, but nothing happened that night. A few weeks later, when he had his father’s car and suggested that they skip the dance and head straight down to the far end of Adamsville Beach, he had turned on the radio while they were “making out” (kissing and some fondling of her breasts with his hands moving nervously all over the place and she sighing at the touch) when Elvis came on with his One Night With You and she did not stop him when he took off her underpants and he got on top. He made a bunch of moves but she was not paying any particular attention. Fact was he did not know what to do so he just rubbed his “thing” against her “honey pot” but did not go inside. At least he thought he had not gone inside. After he was done she asked him whether he had “done the deed.” In a panic and not wanting to show his inexperience he said yes. She got furious, said he should have stopped and what if she got pregnant and had go visit an aunt. That, in any case, was the beginning of the end of their short romance. She gave him his walking papers that next Monday afternoon saying that he should have been like other girls said their boyfriends did and stopped before anything happened. Tommy had no comeback that would work and so he just walked away, forlorn…                 

*In Honor Of Our Class-War Prisoners- Free All The Class-War Prisoners!- Anthony Jalil Bottom,

 

http://www.thejerichomovement.com/prisoners.html

 

A link above to more information about the class-war prisoner honored in this entry.

Make June Class-War Prisoners Freedom Month

Markin comment (reposted from 2010)


In “surfing” the National Jericho Movement Website recently in order to find out more, if possible, about class- war prisoner and 1960s radical, Marilyn Buck, whom I had read about in a The Rag Blog post I linked to the Jericho list of class war prisoners. I found Marilyn Buck listed there but also others, some of whose cases, like that of the “voice of the voiceless” Pennsylvania death row prisoner, Mumia Abu-Jamal, are well-known and others who seemingly have languished in obscurity. All of the cases, at least from the information that I could glean from the site, seemed compelling. And all seemed worthy of far more publicity and of a more public fight for their freedom.

That last notion set me to the task at hand. Readers of this space know that I am a longtime supporter of the Partisan Defense Committee, a class struggle, non-sectarian legal and social defense organization which supports class war prisoners as part of the process of advancing the international working class’ struggle for socialism. In that spirit I am honoring the class war prisoners on the National Jericho Movement list this June as the start of what I hope will be an on-going attempt by all serious leftist militants to do their duty- fighting for freedom for these brothers and sisters. We will fight out our political differences and disagreements as a separate matter. What matters here and now is the old Wobblie (IWW) slogan - An injury to one is an injury to all.

Note: This list, right now, is composed of class-war prisoners held in American detention. If others are likewise incarcerated that are not listed here feel free to leave information on their cases in the comment section. Likewise any cases, internationally, that come to your attention. I am sure there are many, many such cases out there. Make this June, and every June, a Class-War Prisoners Freedom Month- Free All Class-War Prisoners Now!

*In Honor Of Our Class-War Prisoners- Free All The Class-War Prisoners!-Sababu, Kojo Bomani (Grailing Brown)

 

 

http://www.thejerichomovement.com/prisoners.html

 

A link above to more information about the class-war prisoner honored in this entry.

Make June Class-War Prisoners Freedom Month

Markin comment (reposted from 2010)


In “surfing” the National Jericho Movement Website recently in order to find out more, if possible, about class- war prisoner and 1960s radical, Marilyn Buck, whom I had read about in a The Rag Blog post I linked to the Jericho list of class war prisoners. I found Marilyn Buck listed there but also others, some of whose cases, like that of the “voice of the voiceless” Pennsylvania death row prisoner, Mumia Abu-Jamal, are well-known and others who seemingly have languished in obscurity. All of the cases, at least from the information that I could glean from the site, seemed compelling. And all seemed worthy of far more publicity and of a more public fight for their freedom.

That last notion set me to the task at hand. Readers of this space know that I am a longtime supporter of the Partisan Defense Committee, a class struggle, non-sectarian legal and social defense organization which supports class war prisoners as part of the process of advancing the international working class’ struggle for socialism. In that spirit I am honoring the class war prisoners on the National Jericho Movement list this June as the start of what I hope will be an on-going attempt by all serious leftist militants to do their duty- fighting for freedom for these brothers and sisters. We will fight out our political differences and disagreements as a separate matter. What matters here and now is the old Wobblie (IWW) slogan - An injury to one is an injury to all.

Note: This list, right now, is composed of class-war prisoners held in American detention. If others are likewise incarcerated that are not listed here feel free to leave information on their cases in the comment section. Likewise any cases, internationally, that come to your attention. I am sure there are many, many such cases out there. Make this June, and every June, a Class-War Prisoners Freedom Month- Free All Class-War Prisoners Now!

*In Honor Of Our Class-War Prisoners- Free All The Class-War Prisoners!-Nathan Block,

 

http://www.thejerichomovement.com/prisoners.html

 

A link above to more information about the class-war prisoner honored in this entry.

Make June Class-War Prisoners Freedom Month

Markin comment (reposted from 2010)


In “surfing” the National Jericho Movement Website recently in order to find out more, if possible, about class- war prisoner and 1960s radical, Marilyn Buck, whom I had read about in a The Rag Blog post I linked to the Jericho list of class war prisoners. I found Marilyn Buck listed there but also others, some of whose cases, like that of the “voice of the voiceless” Pennsylvania death row prisoner, Mumia Abu-Jamal, are well-known and others who seemingly have languished in obscurity. All of the cases, at least from the information that I could glean from the site, seemed compelling. And all seemed worthy of far more publicity and of a more public fight for their freedom.

That last notion set me to the task at hand. Readers of this space know that I am a longtime supporter of the Partisan Defense Committee, a class struggle, non-sectarian legal and social defense organization which supports class war prisoners as part of the process of advancing the international working class’ struggle for socialism. In that spirit I am honoring the class war prisoners on the National Jericho Movement list this June as the start of what I hope will be an on-going attempt by all serious leftist militants to do their duty- fighting for freedom for these brothers and sisters. We will fight out our political differences and disagreements as a separate matter. What matters here and now is the old Wobblie (IWW) slogan - An injury to one is an injury to all.

Note: This list, right now, is composed of class-war prisoners held in American detention. If others are likewise incarcerated that are not listed here feel free to leave information on their cases in the comment section. Likewise any cases, internationally, that come to your attention. I am sure there are many, many such cases out there. Make this June, and every June, a Class-War Prisoners Freedom Month- Free All Class-War Prisoners Now!
As The 100th Anniversary Of The Beginning of World War I (Remember The War To End All Wars) Approaches ... Some RemembrancesKarl Liebknecht 1912-Where Will Peace Come From?






The events leading up to World War I from the massive military armament of almost all the capitalist and imperialist parties in Europe and elsewhere in order to stake their claim to their unimpeded share of the world’s resources to the supposedly eternal pledges by the Social-Democrats and other militant leftist formations representing the historic interest of the international working-class to stop those parties in their tracks at the approach of war were decisive for 20th century history. Over the next period as we lead up to the 100th anniversary of the start of World War I and beyond I will under this headline post various documents, manifestos and cultural expressions from that time in order to give a sense of what the lead up to that war looked like, the struggle against its outbreak before, the forlorn struggle during and the massive struggles in order to create a newer world out of the shambles of the battlefields.     

********

Teddy Martin had come from a long line of workers, some of his forbears had been among the first domestic weavers in Spitalfield, the first machine-tenders in Manchester and had been workers like him and his father in the London shipbuilding trade. He knew deep in his blood there was an “us” and “them” in the world without his party, the Labor Party, having to tell him word one on the subject. He had even read Karl Marx in his early teens when he was trying to figure out why his family was stuck in the faraway outer tenements with their squalor and their human closeness (he never could get over being in close quarters ever since then). So yes he was ready to listen to what some left members of the party had to say if the war clouds on the horizon turned any darker. But, and hear him true, his was like his forbears and his father before him as loyal a man as to be found in the country. Loyal to his king (queen too if it came to that) and his country. So he would have to think, think carefully, about what to do if those nasty Huns and their craven allies making loud noises of late threatened his way of life. Most of his mates to the extent that they had any opinion were beginning to be swept up in the idea that a little war might not be such a bad thing to settle some long smoldering disputes. Still he, Teddy Martin, was not a man to be rushed and so he would think, think hard, about what to do if there was a mass mobilization.            

********

The German Social-Democratic Party had given Fritz Klein everything. Had taken him from a small furniture-making factory(less than one hundred employees constituting in those days small) where he led the fight for unionization (against all odds for that woefully unorganized industry and against the then still standing laws against unionization pressed by the state as well as well as the outlaw status of the S-D Party in those pre-legal days) and brought him along into the burgeoning party bureaucracy (boasting of this number of party publications, that number of members, and the pinnacle the votes attained for the growing number of party parliamentarians in the Reichstag). Made him a local then regional shop steward agent. Later found him a spot in the party publications department and from there to alternate member of the party’s national committee. As he grew older, got married, had two lovely children the party had severely sapped the youthful idealism out of him. Still he was stirred whenever Karl Liebknecht, old Wilhelm’s son, the father whom he knew from the old days, delivered one of his intellectual and rational attacks against the war aims of the Kaiser and his cabal. Still too though he worried, worried to perdition, that the British and, especially the French were deliberately stepping on German toes. Although tired, endlessly tired, he hoped that he would be able to stick to the Second International’s pledge made at Basle in 1912 to do everything to stop war in case it came, as was now likely. He just didn’t know how he would react, didn’t know at all.   

********

Jacques Rous (and yes he traced his family roots back to the revolution, back to the “red” priest who he was named after who had led some of the plebeian struggles back then that were defeated by those damn moderate cutthroats Robespierre and Saint Just) had long been a leader the anarchist delegation in his Parisian district, had been in a few fights in his time with the damn city bourgeoisie, and had a long, very long memory of what the Germans had, and not done, in Paris in ’71,in the time of the bloodedly suppressed Commune. Also Jacques had long memories of his long past forbears who had come from Alsace-Lorraine now in German hands. And it galled him, galled him that there were war clouds gathering daily over his head, over his district and over his beloved Paris.  

 But that was not what was troubling Jacques Rous in the spring of 1914. He knew, knew deep in his bones like a lot of his fellow anarchists, like a lot of the guys in the small pottery factory he had worked in for the past several years after being laid off from the big textile factory across the river that if war came they would know what to do. Quatrain from the CGT (the large trade union organization to which he and others in the factory belonged to) had clued them in, had told them enough to know some surprises were headed the government’s way if they decided to use the youth of the neighborhoods as cannon fodder. What bothered Jacques was not his conduct but that of his son, Jacques too named in honor of that same ancient red priest who was the lifeblood of the family. Young Jacques something of a dandy like many youth in those days, something of a lady’s man (he had reportedly a married mistress and somebody else on the side), had told one and all (although not his father directly) who would listen one night that he planned to enlist in the Grenadiers just as soon as it looked like trouble was coming. Old Jacques wondered if other fathers were standing in fear of such rash actions by their sons just then.  

*******

George Jenkins dreamed the dream of many young men out in the heartland, out in the wheat fields of Kansas a dream that America, his America would keep the hell out of what looked like war clouds coming from Europe in the spring of 1914 (although dreams and dreamers were located not just on the farms since George was not a Kansas farm boy but a rising young clerk in Doc Dell’s Drugstore located in the college town of Lawrence). George was keenly interested in such matters and would, while on break or when things were slow, glance through the day later copy of the New York Times or Washington Post that Doc provided for his more worldly customers via the passing trains. What really kept George informed though was William White’s home grown Emporia Gazette which kept a close eye on the situation in Europe for the folks.      

And with all of that information here is what George Jenkins, American citizen, concluded: America had its own problems best tended to by keeping out of foreign entanglements except when America’s direct interests were threatened. So George naturally cast skeptical eyes on Washington, on President Wilson, despite his protestations that European affairs were not our business. George had small town ideas about people minding their own business. See also George had voted for Eugene V. Debs himself, the Socialist party candidate for President, and while he was somewhat skeptical about some of the Socialist Party leaders back East he truly believed that Brother Debs would help keep us out of war. 

 

********

Ivan Smirnov was no kid, had been around the block a few times in this war business. Had been in the Russian fleet that got its ass kicked by the Japanese in 1904 (he never called them “Nips” like lots of his crewmates did not after that beating they took that did not have to happen if the damn Czar’s naval officers had been anything but lackeys and anything but overconfident that they could beat the Johnny-come-lately Japanese in the naval war game). More importantly he had been in the Baltic fleet when the revolution of 1905 came thundering over their heads and each man, each sailor, each officer had to choice sides. He had gone with rebels and while he did not face the fate of his comrades on the Potemkin his naval career was over.

Just as well Ivan had thought many times since he was then able to come ashore and get work on the docks through some connections, and think. And what he was thinking in the spring of 1914 with some ominous war clouds in the air that that unfinished task from 1905 was going to come to a head. Ivan knew enough about the state of the navy, and more importantly, the army to know that without some quick decisive military action the monarchy was finished and good riddance. The hard part, the extremely hard part, was to get those future peasant conscripts who would provide cannon fodder for the Czar’s ill-thought out land adventures to listen up for a minute rather than go unknowingly head-long into the Czar’s arm (the father’s arms for many of them). So there was plenty of work to do. Ivan just that moment was glad that he was not a kid.     
*********
Karl Liebknecht 1912-Where Will Peace Come From?

Source: Le Socialisme, November 2, 1912;
Translated: for marxists.org by Mitch Abidor.

Dear and Venerated Comrade Guesde,
Incendiary capitalism is carrying its out evil works more dangerously than ever, and is doing so in the increasingly dangerous neighborhood of the powder kegs that are the great European military powers. Starving slaves traverse the countryside at the foot of the Balkans, waving war torches; lulled by their despots into the illusion that they are the flame carriers of liberty for the slaves on the other side of the frontiers, behind which they themselves live deprived of rights and economically reduced to a state of poverty. All the international conflicts have been brought to their greatest point of intensity. Like a cyclone, imperialism spins across the globe; militarism crushes peoples and sucks their blood like a vampire. The Horsemen of the Apocalypse, Famine and Massacre, gallop across the world.
All the diplomatic plotting was in vain: they were naught but charlatanism and mirage. For capitalism, war and peace are business and nothing but business. As far as it’s concerned, the lives and wellbeing of the millions of men that constitute the proletariat of all countries are an object of exploitation and nothing but that.
Only the international proletariat can avert this horrific danger, for only the interests of the proletariat are the same in all capitalist countries. The international solidarity of the proletariat without accepting frontiers, the common fight against common enemies — national and international — of the proletariat: those who profit by political pressure, those who live off economic exploitation and the misery of the masses.
Capitalism is war; socialism is peace. Will socialism have the strength to halt the war fury? It will have this strength if the proletariat of France, England, Austria and Germany fulfill their obligations. And they will fulfill their obligations, as the past has shown and as the fatal month of January 1911 — with its great workers’ movements in France and England and the imposing peace demonstrations in Germany — has shown. Sunday October 20 the German working class once again demonstrated its desire for peace in huge public demonstrations.
The capitalist and imperialist war- mongers must know what is at risk if they throw down Mars’ iron dice. We will warn them, we will threaten them: we in Germany, like our friends in France and England. It is only internationally that we can carry out our war against war, and it is internationally that it is being carried out. Just as we have confidence in our brothers in France, England an Austria, you can have confidence in us, in the German proletariat in struggle.
Internal war against the internal enemy: the oppressors and the exploiters of the masses. Class struggle: external peace, international solidarity, peace among peoples. This is the sacred slogan of international socialist democracy that liberates nations. It is under this sign that we can and we must win, even against a world of enemies. No hesitation! Confident of victory! Whatever the cost, brothers of France: Into battle! Long live socialism!
       

***Of This And That In The Old North Adamsville Neighborhood-In Search Of…..Marital Advise    

 

From The Pen Of Frank Jackman

For those who have been following this series about the old days in my old home town of North Adamsville, particularly the high school day as the 50th anniversary of my graduation creeps up, will notice that recently I have been doing sketches based on my reaction to various e-mails sent to me by fellow classmates via the class website. Also classmates have placed messages on the Message Forum page when they have something they want to share generally like health issues, new family arrivals or trips down memory lane on any number of subjects from old time athletic prowess to reflections on growing up in the old home town. Thus I have been forced to take on the tough tasks of sending kisses to raging grandmothers, talking up old flames with guys I used to hang around the corners with, remembering those long ago searches for the heart of Saturday night, getting wistful about elementary school daydreams, taking up the cudgels for be-bop lost boys and the like. These responses are no accident as I have of late been avidly perusing the personal profiles of various members of the North Adamsville Class of 1964 website as fellow classmates have come on to the site and lost their shyness about telling their life stories (or have increased their computer technology capacities, not an unimportant consideration for the generation of ’68, a generation on the cusp of the computer revolution and so not necessarily as computer savvy as the average eight-year old today).

Some stuff is interesting to a point, you know, including those endless tales about the doings and not doings of the grandchildren, odd hobbies and other ventures taken up in retirement and so on although not worthy of me making a little off-hand commentary on. Some other stuff is either too sensitive or too risqué to publish on a family-friendly site. Some stuff, some stuff about the old days and what did, or did not, happened to, or between, fellow classmates, you know the boy-girl thing (other now acceptable relationships were below the radar then) has naturally perked my interest.

Other stuff defies simple classification as is the case here in dealing with a posting by a well-meaning classmate on the Message Forum page. One of the sections on the class website is dedicated to those fifteen class sweetheart couples who have been together all this time, most of it in marriage (perhaps there are more couples but these are the ones who have come forward thus far, have logged into the site, and are not among the “missing,” the designation for classmates that have not logged in yet and which the reunion committee has been unable contact using various North Adamsville alumni-related sites, sending out a mailing or by using the very helpful White Pages telephoning).

One of our classmates, Clara, wrote a very moving tribute to them after the section was set up which I posted here a while back. Part of her idea in writing the piece was to elicit information from the couples about how they met, and how they have managed to stay together so long (a not unimportant point since Clara has been twice divorced and this writer three times). The couples have not seen fit to enlighten us so Clara posted this message to try to move things along. As for me I am very interested in how they stuck together like glue since my marriages except the dough part have been like Teflon. Here is Clara’s message:             

 

“Hello- Well I have done my part. I have written a tribute to the Class of 1964 sweethearts that are celebrating 50 years together on the Message Forum page. So the ball is in your court. Now you have tell us all about how you met (your version), or anything else you would like including those bumps in the road during your time together if you like. We have all been there so just write away. Later Clara Ash”

 Enough said.            

Sign the ZERO TROOPS IN AFGHANISTAN Petition asking President Obama to bring all our troops home NOW




 


President Obama announced that the U.S. would extend the deployment of U.S. Troops in Afghanistan an additional 2-1/2 years leaving 9,800 troops after 2014.  He says the “war” will be over and that our troops will continue their military involvement by training the Afghan army and supporting counterterrorism operations (night raids). Whatever he wants to call it, our troops will still be at war, still risking their lives.  
There is no need to keep troops in Afghanistan through 2016 because there is NO MILITARY SOLUTION, it will not solve Afghanistan’s problems.  As Barbara Lee states “After 13 years and more than $778 billion invested in an unstable country and the corrupt Karzai government, it’s time to bring our troops and tax dollars home.”  
Also, Senator Merkley has Senate Resolution 347 (S. Res. 347) calling for a congressional vote on any US troop presence in Afghanistan after 2014.  We agree with Senator Merkley “if the administration wants to keep troops in Afghanistan beyond this year, Congress should vote.  The American people deserve a voice in issues of war and peace.”  
Call your Senators TODAY asking them to co-sponsor Merkley’s bipartisan S. Res. 347 calling for a Congressional vote before troops can be kept in Afghanistan.  Capitol Hill Switchboard 866-338-1015.    
The U.S. and the international community should play a supportive, non-military role in building a future for the Afghan people.  There should be a focus on diplomacy, negotiation and economic development to end the violence in Afghanistan.   A lasting solution will depend on Afghans and their neighbors not military personnel.  
“A future of hope and opportunity for Afghanistan begins with the full withdrawal of U.S. troops.” (Rep. Barbara Lee).  
Sign the ZERO TROOPS IN AFGHANISTAN Petition asking President Obama to bring all our troops home NOW. The sacrifices of our troops, their families and Afghan civilians have been enormous.  It is time for our troops to come home. 
If you appreciate receiving timely action alerts like this, please make a donation to UFPJ so that we can continue to keep our member groups and dedicated activists linked together for effective action and impact.
 
Petition developed by Peace Action: http://org.salsalabs.com/o/161/p/dia/action3/common/public/?action_KEY=15153   

Help us continue to do this critical work: Make a donation to UFPJ today.

Monday, June 09, 2014

Union Postal Workers Picket 'Staples'
08 May 2014
Staples wants minimum wage non-union workers to handle US mail to increase private profits.
Click on image for a larger version

image.jpg
Postal Workers Union Pickets Staples

Postal workers rallied in 56 locations around the country yesterday, protesting the piecemeal outsourcing of postal work to the low-wage retailer Staples.

In Manhattan, the crowd rallied at a midtown post office, then marched to a Staples store near the Empire State Building, where they leaned across the low protest fence to hand leaflets to customers and pedestrians.

Last year Staples and the U.S. Postal Service launched a pilot program to accept packages at “postal units” inside 82 stores in four states—staffed non-union by the big-box retailer. Their plan is to expand the program to all 1,600 Staples locations.

The APWU, which represents 200,000 postal clerks, maintenance workers, and drivers, is escalating its fight against the scheme.

“When we were hired, we took an oath to protect the sanctity of the mail,” said Diane Erlanger, an American Postal Workers Union (APWU) delegate and sales service associate at the post office. Staples won’t give the same rigorous training, she said. “Packages will be put in unsecured places... It’s just a business to them. For us it’s a service to the American people.”

Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe claims his goal is to expand the public’s access to postal services—but if so, the rest of his behavior is a funny way to show it. He cut the deal with Staples while continuing to push wave after wave of closures of post offices and mail plants, despite local outcry in many affected areas, and he keeps trying to end Saturday delivery.

It’s evident his plan is to substitute private Staples counters for public post offices—not supplement them. Soon, “you’re going to go to your local post office and find a sign on the door: ‘We’re closed, go to the nearest Staples,” said Letter Carriers (NALC) Branch 36 President Charlie Heege.

“The truth is, Donahoe must go!” said New York Metro Area APWU President Jonathan Smith. “The postal service is a service to the American people, given by the Constitution, and he has turned it into a for-profit operation.”

’Destroyed from the Inside Out’

New York’s protesters included members and local officers of the APWU, NALC, and Mail Handlers unions, along with community activists. After years of dischord, the four postal unions announced a new alliance in March, pledging to work together to defend the public postal service against cuts, privatization, and subcontracting.

The alliance comes not a moment too soon, as all four unions fight for their survival. Even those post offices that have survived the waves of cuts are feeling the crunch of understaffing.

Lines go out the door, and 45-minute waits are the norm with only one or two windows open, said Kevin Walsh, the New York local’s director of organization. “Our biggest supporters have always been the customers… but things like this make customers irate,” he said. “The customer sees this and says, ‘Maybe they do need to be overhauled and privatized.’ This is being destroyed from the inside out.”

Why sabotage the post office from within? Because it’s a cash cow for the unscrupulous profiteer. Though a 2006 law created the accounting illusion that postal services are losing money—USPS is required to prefund retiree health benefits 75 years in advance—in fact, business is booming. Letters are down, but packages are up in the age of online retail.

Unlike for-profit companies, USPS as a public service is mandated to deliver everywhere—and to charge everyone the same rates. Its traditional competitors UPS and FedEx don’t have to do that. And now e-commerce contenders including Amazon, Staples, eBay, and Walmart are trying to get in on the action with a variety of new schemes to make delivery even cheaper (for them, not for you).

Amazon recently made headlines with a farfetched plan to deliver items by drone. But a new Huffington Post investigation found the real “drones” doing Amazon Prime deliveries are human beings getting $1.50 a door, minus their own gas and vehicle costs, independent contractors of a subcontractor—their jobs even more precarious and marginal than non-union FedEx drivers’.

Together at Last

Reports from across the country showed members of NALC and the Mail Handlers as well as APWU turned out for many local rallies.

More than 100 protesters distributed at least 1,000 flyers outside a Los Angeles Staples, said Kevin Cole of the Anaheim APWU. A posted sign announced this store would soon be closing. Staples, which is struggling financially, has said it will close 225 stores by 2015.

In Greensboro, North Carolina, over 100 people turned out for a picket that lasted nearly all day, said Richard Koritz of NALC Branch 630. In Pittsburgh, “there were lots of car horn salutes and thumbs-up signs from folks passing,” said Mel Packer. Protesters there included an angry woman who’d been kept on temp status for 11 years in a mail processing plant.

In Providence, a labor coalition called Working Rhode Island turned out members of various locals. “The Teamsters’ semi drove around and around the block, blowing its horn,” said Linda LaClair, a field rep for the National Education Association chapter.

Teachers are a particularly strategic ally in the Staples fight—they’re big buyers of office supplies for their classrooms, often paying the costs out of their own pockets. "Our informal surveys over the years have found the average teachers spends between $500 and $1,000 a year on supplies, due to the lack of them," said Fred Glass of the California Federation of Teachers. The executive council of the 120,000-member CFT will vote April 28 on a resolution urging its members not to buy from Staples.

A Public Service

Seniors and low-income people are especially reliant on the post office. The mail “isn’t supposed to be a business. It’s supposed to be affordable,” said Johnnie Stevens of the group Community Labor United for Postal Jobs and Services.

“You take a viable, working service out of the community and put in a store, a lot of jobs are going to be missing right away,” he said, “and it will affect us very badly as a community, as well.”

The average full-time worker at Staples makes $18,000 a year, APWU says. New hires are subjected to an anti-union video as part of their training. And a recent online petition by a Staples employee calling herself “Sue Whistleblower” drew attention to a company policy to cut part-time workers to fewer than 25 hours per week so they wouldn’t qualify for health insurance.

The Staples battle looks like a re-run of one the union fought—and won—25 years ago, when Sears announced a similar pilot program at 11 stores. Union members sent the corporation thousands of protest letters. Some cut up their Sears credit cards and sent in the plastic shreds. The company backed off, abandoning the program.

“It took us a couple months before they got the message,” remembered Eleanor Bailey,
president of New York area APWU retirees’ chapter and a longtime community activist. She believes with Staples too, “if enough of the public objects, they will back out

http://labornotes.org/2014/04/postal-unions-teachers-turn-heat-staples
Union Postal Workers Picket 'Staples'
08 May 2014
Staples wants minimum wage non-union workers to handle US mail to increase private profits.
Click on image for a larger version

image.jpg
Postal Workers Union Pickets Staples

Postal workers rallied in 56 locations around the country yesterday, protesting the piecemeal outsourcing of postal work to the low-wage retailer Staples.

In Manhattan, the crowd rallied at a midtown post office, then marched to a Staples store near the Empire State Building, where they leaned across the low protest fence to hand leaflets to customers and pedestrians.

Last year Staples and the U.S. Postal Service launched a pilot program to accept packages at “postal units” inside 82 stores in four states—staffed non-union by the big-box retailer. Their plan is to expand the program to all 1,600 Staples locations.

The APWU, which represents 200,000 postal clerks, maintenance workers, and drivers, is escalating its fight against the scheme.

“When we were hired, we took an oath to protect the sanctity of the mail,” said Diane Erlanger, an American Postal Workers Union (APWU) delegate and sales service associate at the post office. Staples won’t give the same rigorous training, she said. “Packages will be put in unsecured places... It’s just a business to them. For us it’s a service to the American people.”

Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe claims his goal is to expand the public’s access to postal services—but if so, the rest of his behavior is a funny way to show it. He cut the deal with Staples while continuing to push wave after wave of closures of post offices and mail plants, despite local outcry in many affected areas, and he keeps trying to end Saturday delivery.

It’s evident his plan is to substitute private Staples counters for public post offices—not supplement them. Soon, “you’re going to go to your local post office and find a sign on the door: ‘We’re closed, go to the nearest Staples,” said Letter Carriers (NALC) Branch 36 President Charlie Heege.

“The truth is, Donahoe must go!” said New York Metro Area APWU President Jonathan Smith. “The postal service is a service to the American people, given by the Constitution, and he has turned it into a for-profit operation.”

’Destroyed from the Inside Out’

New York’s protesters included members and local officers of the APWU, NALC, and Mail Handlers unions, along with community activists. After years of dischord, the four postal unions announced a new alliance in March, pledging to work together to defend the public postal service against cuts, privatization, and subcontracting.

The alliance comes not a moment too soon, as all four unions fight for their survival. Even those post offices that have survived the waves of cuts are feeling the crunch of understaffing.

Lines go out the door, and 45-minute waits are the norm with only one or two windows open, said Kevin Walsh, the New York local’s director of organization. “Our biggest supporters have always been the customers… but things like this make customers irate,” he said. “The customer sees this and says, ‘Maybe they do need to be overhauled and privatized.’ This is being destroyed from the inside out.”

Why sabotage the post office from within? Because it’s a cash cow for the unscrupulous profiteer. Though a 2006 law created the accounting illusion that postal services are losing money—USPS is required to prefund retiree health benefits 75 years in advance—in fact, business is booming. Letters are down, but packages are up in the age of online retail.

Unlike for-profit companies, USPS as a public service is mandated to deliver everywhere—and to charge everyone the same rates. Its traditional competitors UPS and FedEx don’t have to do that. And now e-commerce contenders including Amazon, Staples, eBay, and Walmart are trying to get in on the action with a variety of new schemes to make delivery even cheaper (for them, not for you).

Amazon recently made headlines with a farfetched plan to deliver items by drone. But a new Huffington Post investigation found the real “drones” doing Amazon Prime deliveries are human beings getting $1.50 a door, minus their own gas and vehicle costs, independent contractors of a subcontractor—their jobs even more precarious and marginal than non-union FedEx drivers’.

Together at Last

Reports from across the country showed members of NALC and the Mail Handlers as well as APWU turned out for many local rallies.

More than 100 protesters distributed at least 1,000 flyers outside a Los Angeles Staples, said Kevin Cole of the Anaheim APWU. A posted sign announced this store would soon be closing. Staples, which is struggling financially, has said it will close 225 stores by 2015.

In Greensboro, North Carolina, over 100 people turned out for a picket that lasted nearly all day, said Richard Koritz of NALC Branch 630. In Pittsburgh, “there were lots of car horn salutes and thumbs-up signs from folks passing,” said Mel Packer. Protesters there included an angry woman who’d been kept on temp status for 11 years in a mail processing plant.

In Providence, a labor coalition called Working Rhode Island turned out members of various locals. “The Teamsters’ semi drove around and around the block, blowing its horn,” said Linda LaClair, a field rep for the National Education Association chapter.

Teachers are a particularly strategic ally in the Staples fight—they’re big buyers of office supplies for their classrooms, often paying the costs out of their own pockets. "Our informal surveys over the years have found the average teachers spends between $500 and $1,000 a year on supplies, due to the lack of them," said Fred Glass of the California Federation of Teachers. The executive council of the 120,000-member CFT will vote April 28 on a resolution urging its members not to buy from Staples.

A Public Service

Seniors and low-income people are especially reliant on the post office. The mail “isn’t supposed to be a business. It’s supposed to be affordable,” said Johnnie Stevens of the group Community Labor United for Postal Jobs and Services.

“You take a viable, working service out of the community and put in a store, a lot of jobs are going to be missing right away,” he said, “and it will affect us very badly as a community, as well.”

The average full-time worker at Staples makes $18,000 a year, APWU says. New hires are subjected to an anti-union video as part of their training. And a recent online petition by a Staples employee calling herself “Sue Whistleblower” drew attention to a company policy to cut part-time workers to fewer than 25 hours per week so they wouldn’t qualify for health insurance.

The Staples battle looks like a re-run of one the union fought—and won—25 years ago, when Sears announced a similar pilot program at 11 stores. Union members sent the corporation thousands of protest letters. Some cut up their Sears credit cards and sent in the plastic shreds. The company backed off, abandoning the program.

“It took us a couple months before they got the message,” remembered Eleanor Bailey,
president of New York area APWU retirees’ chapter and a longtime community activist. She believes with Staples too, “if enough of the public objects, they will back out

http://labornotes.org/2014/04/postal-unions-teachers-turn-heat-staples
US Media Steps Up Espionage Slander Against Edward Snowden
13 May 2014
US media steps up espionage slander against Edward Snowden
By Barry Grey
13 May 2014

As the one-year anniversary of the publication of the first of Edward Snowden’s revelations of massive and illegal government spying on the American and world population approaches, the campaign of vilification and character assassination against the former National Security Agency contractor is being stepped up.
A particularly filthy example is a column published Saturday in the Wall Street Journal by author Edward Jay Epstein, entitled “Was Snowden’s Heist a Foreign Espionage Operation?”

The author does not advance a shred of actual evidence to back up his accusation, which may explain why the headline is in the form of a question. The charge is stated more plainly in a blowout that accompanies the piece: “Those who know the files he stole think he was working for a foreign power, perhaps Russia, where he now lives.”

This is but one of thousands of propaganda pieces being pumped out that have nothing to do with legitimate journalism. It is witch-hunting and frame-up either commissioned by the state intelligence agencies or tailored to their specifications. Its modus operandi is distortion, innuendo and falsification.
Epstein is the author of a series of books on the assassination of John F. Kennedy, including Legend: The Secret World of Lee Harvey Oswald, and works on US intelligence operations, including Deception: The Invisible War Between the KGB & the CIA. He is well connected to the NSA, the CIA and the American intelligence complex.

He begins by attacking the notion that Snowden is a whistle-blower, attributing that view—held by the vast majority of the American and world public—to a “narrative designed by Mr. Snowden himself.” Epstein snidely dismisses the notion that “Snowden, acting alone … heroically exposed the evils of government surveillance beginning in 2013.”

He cites as witnesses against Snowden military, intelligence and political figures such as Gen. Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; Republican head of the House Intelligence Committee Mike Rogers; Chairperson of the Senate Intelligence Committee Dianne Feinstein; Rick Ledgett, an NSA executive; and recently retired NSA Director Keith Alexander. Both Rogers and Feinstein are on record calling Snowden a traitor and demanding that he be sent back to the US and prosecuted for espionage.

Epstein adds that a “former member of President Obama’s cabinet went even further, suggesting to me off the record in March this year that there are only three possible explanations for the Snowden heist: 1) It was a Russian espionage operation; 2) It was a Chinese espionage operation, or 3) It was a joint Sino-Russian operation.”

The evidence? The fact that only a small portion of the documents Snowden downloaded deal directly with mass spying programs against civilians. That is it, except for the following supposedly damning fact:

“The suspicions that whistle-blowing was a cover for espionage by Mr. Snowden are further heightened by his winding up under the protection of the Russian security service, the FSB, in Moscow.”

Play fast and loose with the truth, Mr. Epstein, but give the public credit for at least a smattering of intelligence!

Anyone familiar with the Snowden story knows that he ended up in Russia not by choice, but because of the actions of the United States government. Last June 23, Snowden flew to Moscow’s Sheremetyevo International Airport with a ticket for an onward flight to Latin America via Cuba. The Obama administration, which had already accused Snowden of violating the Espionage Act and stealing government property, and had lifted his passport, announced that it would have him arrested and deported to the US if he stepped out of the airport transit zone.
After being stranded in the airport for more than a month, he accepted the offer of the Russian government for a one-year temporary renewable asylum. So much for his sinister decision to “live in Russia”!

Epstein then goes on to argue that Snowden’s state enemies are a more reliable source of information than Snowden or the media outlets that have published his revelations. He writes: “His detractors are the people who know enough about what happened to conclude that far from being a whistle-blower, Mr. Snowden was a participant in an espionage operation…”

Of course, they are also complicit in the massive crimes against the US Constitution and the democratic rights of the people that Snowden has exposed, and therefore have a huge vested interest in demonizing and silencing the whistle-blower—including the possibility that they could be criminally prosecuted in the future.
That Epstein’s article is part of a broader campaign is demonstrated by the inclusion in Sunday’s edition of ABC News’ “This Week” interview program of a segment introduced with the question: “Is Edward Snowden a spy?”

ABC News correspondent Pierre Thomas states: “Edward Snowden is a traitor and could be a spy recruited by Russia to target the US. That’s the suspicion of the man who was running the NSA when the breach happened last year.”

Asked, “Is he a spy?” former NSA Director Alexander replies with innuendo to the effect that he is, stating: “I don’t know the answer to that. I am concerned that where he is now, he is at least influenced by Russia. The real question—and we don’t know an answer to—is how far back did that go?”

The implication is that the US government must get its hands on Snowden to extract the information from him.

Alexander goes on to repeat the official smear that Snowden is aiding and abetting terrorists, declaring: “We’re losing capabilities to track terrorists. This is a huge impact.”

Next, moderator Martha Raddatz brings in former White House counterterrorism adviser Richard Clarke to pile on against Snowden. Asked by Raddatz, “Do you think that Edward Snowden damaged national security?” Clarke replies, “I know he did.”

This is a scurrilous operation, directed in the first instance against an individual who heroically sacrificed his career, and possibly his life, to expose to the people of America and the world a secret police state operation that tracks virtually every communication of a large proportion of the earth’s inhabitants. More fundamentally, the witch-hunt of Snowden is directed against the democratic rights of the working class.

It demonstrates the complete integration of the corporate-controlled media into the apparatus of the state and the complicity of pseudo-journalists who churn out propaganda and lies to assist in the destruction of democratic rights.
Russell Maroon Shoatz: One of Thousands of US Political Prisoners
13 May 2014
police state
Russell Maroon Shoatz: One of Thousands of US Political Prisoners

by Stephen Lendman

Thousands of political prisoners languish in America's gulag. It's one of the world's worst. It's the largest by far.

It's supplemented by dozens of global torture prisoners. They're in numerous countries. They're black holes of viciousness. Their existence alone reveals America's dark side.

Marc Mauer heads the Sentencing Project. He's a leading criminal justice system authority. His "Race to Incarcerate" book was groundbreaking.

It focuses on America's rage to punish. To imprison. To fill prison beds. To commodify criminal injustice. To harm society's most vulnerable.

To deny ethnic justice. To target racial emancipation. To spurn economic and social equality across gender and color lines.

To lock people away unjustly. To victimize them by judicial unfairness. To do so by get tough on crime policies. By guilty unless proved innocent. By three strikes and you're out.

Russell Maroon Shoatz is a political prisoner. He calls himself a prisoner of war He's a dedicated community activist. He's a founding Black Unity Council member.

He's a former Black Panther Party/Black Liberation Army member. He's serving multiple unjust life sentences.

A petition to free Maroon reads as follows:

He's (#AF-3855) "a 68-year-old prisoner held at the State Correctional Institution (SCI) Greene in southwestern Pennsylvania, has been kept in solitary confinement for more than 21 years. He has been unable to hold his children or grandchildren or interact with others in a humane setting during this time, despite not having violated prison rules in two decades. He has suffered severe psychological anguish and his physical health has been worsened by the stress of prolonged isolation."

He "spent nearly 40 years within the Pennsylvania prison system, 30 of those in solitary confinement."

"During this time he has earned a reputation amongst prison staff and prisoners as a leader because of his consistent support for human rights inside and outside the walls."

"We are distressed and outraged that an elderly man who is nearing his 70th birthday continues to be treated in such a cruel manner based on his constitutionally-protected support for human rights and in retaliation for his expressing political opinions disfavored by the prison administration."

"Not having committed an infraction in more than two decades reveals that Russell Shoats is more than ready to re-enter the general prison population."

"We, the undersigned, are calling on prison officials to end the solitary confinement torture of Russell Maroon Shoatz by releasing him into the general population of the prison immediately."

Sign the Petition
Shoatz calls himself "a New African Political Prisoner of War, who at this moment" is serving multiple life sentences.

His ordeal began in 1970. He was convicted of involvement in killing a police officer.

He spent over four decades in numerous state, county and federal prisons. He was in maximum security ones. He was isolated in solitary confinement from 1991 through February 20, 2014.

He was held there despite his exemplary prison record. An earlier refusal to release him into the general prison population lied, saying:

"In the volatile atmosphere of a prison, an inmate easily may constitute an unacceptable threat to the safety of other prisoners and guards even if he himself has committed no misconduct; rumor, reputation, and even more imponderable factors may suffice to spark potentially disastrous incidents."

"The judgment of prison officials in this context, like that of those making parole decisions, turns largely on purely subjective evaluations and on predictions of future behavior."

In February, his lawyer confirmed his solitary confinement release. His son Russell Shoatz III said:

"We are very excited that this day has finally come. My father being released from solitary confinement is proof of the power of people organizing against injustice, and the importance of building strong coalitions."

"I especially want to thank all of those who have supported the collective struggle to end my father’s solitary confinement, including my siblings and members of the Shoatz family, the Human Rights Coalition, Abolitionist Law Center, Scientific Soul Sessions, the entire legal team, UN Special Rapporteur Juan Mendez, the 5 Nobel Peace Laureates, the National Lawyers Guild, Center for Constitutional Rights, along with the dozens of other organizations and thousands of individuals who have participated in this effort."

Shoatz explained his ordeal earlier as follows:

"The torture technicians who developed the paradigm used in (prison) ‘control units' realized that they not only had to separate those with leadership qualities, but also break (their) minds and bodies and keep them separated until they are dead."

He turns 71 in August. In the past nine months, he was transferred to three different Pennsylvania prisons.

He was isolated for working with the Pennsylvania Association of Lifers. It advocates abolishing life without parole sentences.

Commutation is the only possible way now. It entails petitioning Board of Pardons members. It requires gubernatorial approval.

It involves what rarely happens. Virtually never some say. It reflects societal injustice writ large. America is its epicenter.

Abolitionist Law Center Executive Director Bret Grote is a Human Rights Coalition investigator. It's a Pennsylvania-based prison abolitionist/rights organization. He spoke to Maroon. He called it "moving."

"There are no words to adequately convey the significance of his release to the general population for him and his family," he said.

"This is a significant victory for a growing people’s movement against solitary confinement and the human rights violations inherent in mass incarceration."

"If we continue to work hard and support one another in this movement, these victories could very well become a habit."

Maroon was born in August 1943. He's one of 12 children. He was in and out of reform schools and youth institutions until age 18.

It was mainly from involvement in gang activities. They were unrelated to illicit drugs. He was married twice. He has seven children.

In the mid-1960s, he became politically active. He was a founding Black Unity Council member. In 1969, it merged with the Black Panther Party.

In August 1970, he and four others became known as the "Philly 5." It was after a police officer was killed. Another was wounded at the time.

It followed a Philadelphia police station retaliatory attack. It responded to heightened community repression. It included cops killing a New African youth.

Maroon "was active on the armed front of the New African Liberation Army," he said.

"All of my actions and activities during this period were in direct response to, and in direct support of the movement's activities."

"I was tried and convicted for the attack on the police station and sentenced to Life-Plus Imprisonment," he added.

He escaped. He remained at large for weeks. He was hunted down. In October 1977, he was captured. From then through November 1989, he was kept in various "holes," he said.

In numerous state, county and federal prisons, he added. In brutalizing maximum security ones. In one, he was forcibly drugged.

He was hospitalized once from criminal overdosing. In March 1980, he escaped again. He was recaptured. He remains in prison.

He deserves much better than he's gotten. In May 2012, an international campaign to free him headlined "25 years in prison + 50 years of age = OUT."

It was launched concurrently in New York and London. Theresa Shoatz is Maroon's daughter. She advocates on her father's behalf. She does it courageously.

Matt Meyer is a New York-based educator/activist/author/War Resisters International Africa Support Network Coordinator. He campaigns on Maroon's behalf.

He and Theresa call his case "one of the most shocking examples of US torture of political prisoners, and one of the most egregious examples of human rights violations regarding prison conditions anywhere in the world."

"His 'Maroon' nickname is, in part, due to his continued resistance - which twice led him to escape confinement."

It's "based on his continued clear analysis, including recent writings on ecology and matriarchy."

He hadn't had a serious rule violation in over two decades. He was targeted for working as an educator.

For his political ideas. For being elected president of an officially sanctioned prison-based support group.

Punishing him violated his fundamental constitutional rights. Cruel and unusual punishment is prohibited.

His new book is titled "Maroon the Implacable: The Collected Writings of Russell Maroon Shoatz."

It includes essays on a wide range of topics. They include honest self-criticism.

One chapter is titled "The Question of Violence." In it, Maroon wrote:

"More troubling is the fact that this male exhibitionist violence has also permeated the minds, practices, and circles of otherwise brilliant and well-meaning revolutionary thinkers."

"Such theorists as the renowned Frantz Fanon, icons like Malcolm X and Kwane Ture (formerly Stokely Carmichael) and others have unconsciously conflated the necessary utilization of defensive revolutionary violence, in seeking meaningful revolutionary socioeconomic and cultural change, with what they believed was a need for males to use 'revolutionary violence' to also ‘liberate their minds and spirits’ subservience imposed on them by the vestiges of slavery and the colonialism/neocolonialism of their times."

"These individuals failed to recognize that their 'revolutionary' worldview would still leave in place the entire male-supremacist/patriarchal framework, an edifice that we can term the 'father of oppression.' "

"The destruction of this edifice will signal the true liberation they sought."

"Otherwise, the 'revolutionary violence' they formulated must also be recognized for what it is: exhibitionist, ego-based male violence."

State-sponsored viciousness defines America's prison system. Gulag cruelty best describes it. It's abhorrently discriminatory. It's deplorably racially and ethnically biased.

It targets society's most vulnerable. It's unrelated to crime control.

Bret Grote said Maroon was transferred from one "torture chamber" to another.

Brutalizing treatment continued for decades. His dedication to helping other prisoners was "thwarted at every turn."

He was punished for doing the right thing. He's back in the general prison population. For how long remains to be seen.

Societies are best judged by how they treat children, the elderly, the infirm, their most disadvantaged and prisoners. America fails on all counts.

Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago. He can be reached at lendmanstephen (at) sbcglobal.net.

His new book as editor and contributor is titled "Flashpoint in Ukraine: US Drive for Hegemony Risks WW III."

http://www.claritypress.com/LendmanIII.html

Visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com.

Listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio Network.

It airs three times weekly: live on Sundays at 1PM Central time plus two prerecorded archived programs.

http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour
Ho Chi Minh
23 May 2014
Ho Chi Minh mistakenly thought the US, founded by a revolution against colonial invaders, would help Vietnam free itself from the
French
index.jpg
Ho at the age of 31 in 19215
HO CHI MINH

The vast majority oppose current illegal wars, while remembering to respect all
warriors. . Ho had lived in the US from 1911 to 1919, working as a line manager at General Motors and other jobs. He also lived later in the UK and France and traveled to Russia and China, in each place learning the language. Few have been told that Ho Chi Minh first petitioned President Woodrow
Wilson after World War I for help in freeing Vietnam from the colonizing French invaders
He had mistakenly thought that America would help other countries trying to free themselves
from white European colonizers. Next Ho was promised in World War II by President Roosevelt that if the Vietnamese helped fight the Japanese, the US would help free Vietnam after the war from French oppression.

Roosevelt died and Truman broke the promise. Dulles in the Eisenhower administration
even offered nuclear weapons to the French. John F Kennedy was murdered for wanting to withdraw from Vietnam (as well as wanting to abolish the CIA, the Federal Reserve, and to remove nuclear weapons from Israel). Lyndon Johnson resigned because of popular opposition to the war he expanded as General William Westmoreland hid Americnn casualties while multiplying the 'kill' numbers of the Viet Cong. Nixon and Kissinger further expanded the genocide, bombing Cambodia.

Millions of Vietnamese died along with 58,000 Americans who
died, many drafted into fighting a war they opposed. The jungles were burned with napalm. Countless animals, birds, reptiles were bombed or burned.

Herbicides such as agent orange (a toxic defoliant) poisoned plants and trees while even today Vietnam vets and Vietnamese are dying from the carcinogens which drenched Vietnam.

Soldiers were programmed to sacrifice themselves for their country, but that was not
the case. They were dying for the greed of the rich who wanted to expand capital markets.

Even today, the Military Channel, History Channel, Fox News, and countless other media
contrast communism with democracy, a falsehood since communism, socialism and capitalism
are economic systems, while monarchy, oligarchy, democracy are political systems.

- s shriver-

Picture is of Ho Chi Minh at the age of 31.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/
Boston College and the Belfast Tapes
25 May 2014
A voice from the grave, or a foot in the mouth?
BOSTON COLLEGE has accused Ed Moloney and Anthony McIntyre of a “shameful attempt” not to accept any responsibility for the fiasco and fall-out from the ‘Boston College Tapes’ interviews with former republican and unionist activists.

The tapes include the late Brendan Hughes and Dolours Price and were obtained by the PSNI through the US courts to pursue possible prosecutions and reportedly cited in the arrest of Gerry Adams last week before the Sinn Féin leader was released without charge.

Admitting that everyone involved, including Boston College, had “made mistakes” Jack Dunn, a spokesperson for Boston College, on RTÉ Radio’s Morning Ireland programme on Wednesday accused Moloney and McIntyre of “trying to deflect blame away from themselves consistently that does not stand up in the light of scrutiny”.

Ed Moloney was Director of the Belfast Project, initiated by Lord Paul Bew. Bew, a former adviser to Unionist Party leader David Trimble and a politics professor at Queens University Belfast, was a visiting professor at Boston College’s Burns Library. He later recommended to Burns Librarian Robert O’Neill an oral history project recording first-hand accounts of participants in ‘The Troubles’ in the North of Ireland for scholars and researchers of conflict. The Belfast Project began in 2001.

Lord Bew appointed as Belfast Project Director Ed Moloney, a trenchant critic of Gerry Adams. Moloney subsequently recruited as Researcher Anthony McIntyre, a former IRA member and long-time open critic of Sinn Féin. This has led to such widespread accusations of bias that Jack Dunn and Boston College now feel have “called the validity of the archive into question”.

Jack Dunn said that the Anglo-US Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty (MLAT) under which the PSNI sought and obtained the ‘confidential’ interviews given to Moloney and McIntyre under guarantees by them had been signed in 1994.

He said a legal clause was inserted in the contract signed by Ed Moloney as Director of the Belfast Project and it was confirmed in a letter to Moloney by Robert O’Neill that confidentiality could only be assured by Boston College “to the extent that American law would allow”, Jack Dunn said. American law included MLAT.

Jack Dunn told RTÉ he thinks it was “a caveat that was ignored” by Moloney and McIntyre. There was also a general assumption that the British, Irish and US governments would not consider a move to obtain the tapes given the bedding down of the Peace Process.

The Boston College spokesperson said that he found it “impossible to believe” that an experienced journalist such as Ed Moloney (who has been based in the USA for many years) could not know that MLAT was in existence well before the Belfast Project was launched.

“It is unconscionable to me that they [Moloney and McIntyre] would claim not to know this when the court records state otherwise.”

Claims by Anthony McIntyre and Ed Moloney that Boston College had not done enough to fight the PSNI action in the US courts despite a two-year legal battle were described by the Boston College spokesperson as “tired rhetoric issued repeatedly by Ed Moloney and Anthony McIntyre and, quite frankly, that’s been too willingly accepted by the Irish media”. He pointed out that US academic institutions have no protection against federal court subpoenas against oral history projects.

• The scandal has prompted Boston College’s History Department to publicly disown the Belfast Project, saying it “is not and never was a Boston College History Department project”.