Thursday, June 12, 2014

Ruby Dee dead at 91: Legendary stage and screen actress — and Civil Rights leader — frequently costarred with husband Ossie Davis 

Family member confirms death. Dee was living in New Rochelle.

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Published: Thursday, June 12, 2014, 12:22 PM
Updated: Thursday, June 12, 2014, 5:57 PM
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Ruby Dee in 1960.Afro Newspaper/Gado/Getty ImagesRuby Dee in 1960.
Stage and screen legend Ruby Dee, who personified grace, grit and progress at a time when African-American women were given little space in movies and on stage, died Wednesday in New Rochelle, N.Y. She was 91.
The death was confirmed Thursday by a family member, who declined to answer any questions pending the release of a statement.
"She died late (Wednesday) with her whole family around her," family friend Latifah Salahudin told the Daily News. "All three kids and seven grandkids were there, surrounding her with so much love. She went peacefully from natural causes. We should all be so lucky."
"She was so full of life and so strong. Such a powerful woman. We're all going to miss her," Salahudin added.
The Cleveland-born, New York-raised actress and activist — winner of an Emmy, a Grammy and a Screen Actors Guild award, among others — not only starred on Broadway (“Take It From the Top!” “Two Hah Hahs and a Homeboy”), film (Spike Lee’s “Do the Right Thing” and “Jungle Fever”), and TV (“All God’s Children,” “Feast of All Saints”), but, with her husband and collaborator Ossie Davis, was a major figure in the Civil Rights movement.
Ruby Dee gives a reading at the March on Washington in 1963.The Washington Post/The Washington Post/Getty Images Ruby Dee gives a reading at the March on Washington in 1963.Enlarge
Dee (with Sidney Poitier) starred in "A Raisin in the Sun" in 1961.Everett Collection / Everett Col Dee (with Sidney Poitier) starred in "A Raisin in the Sun" in 1961.Enlarge
In 2005, Dee and Davis received the National Civil Rights Museum’s Lifetime Achievement Freedom award. Davis died in February of that year.
Dee’s first film role came in 1949, in the musical drama “That Man of Mine.” She played Rachel Robinson in “The Jackie Robinson Story” in 1950, and costarred opposite Nat King Cole, Eartha Kitt and Cab Calloway in “St. Louis Blues” (1958).
She appeared in the 1979 TV movie “Roots: The Next Generations,” and costarred with Davis in their own short-lived 1980-81 show, “Ossie and Ruby!”
The two played contentious neighbors who embodied, and recalled, the social unrest of the ’60s in Lee’s “Do the Right Thing” (1989). She earned her sole Academy Award nomination, for Best Supporting Actress, for “American Gangster” (2007).

Ruby Dee Dead At 91: Legendary Stage And Screen Actress —...

NY Daily News

Ruby Dee, an American actress, poet, playwright, screenwriter, journalist, and activist died Wednesday in New Rochelle, NY. She was 91. The Cleveland-born,...

Her final film was the still-in-production crime drama “King Dog,” opposite Ice-T.
Dee was a frequent presence on New York stages for four decades, since joining the American Negro Theatre in 1941 before her stage debut two years later in the Broadway drama "South Pacific."
In 1946 she costarred in the play "Jeb" with Davis, whom she married in 1948.
In 1953, Dee starred in the Broadway premiere of "A Raisin in the Sun," playing the wife of Sidney Poitier — and reprised that role in the film eight years later.
Dee poses with husband Ossie Davis when the pair won ;ifetime achievment awards from the Screen Actors Guild in 2001.Reed Saxon/ASSOCIATED PRESSDee poses with husband Ossie Davis when the pair won ;ifetime achievment awards from the Screen Actors Guild in 2001.
Dee's last Broadway performance was in the 1988 comedy "Checkmates," which marked the debut of Denzel Washington, who is currently on the boards in Poitier role in “A Raisin in the Sun.”
Washington declined to comment: "Not today," a spokesperson said.
But the Rev. Al Sharpton issued a statement calling Dee "a phenomenally rare artist and a jewel to our nation and community."
"I was privileged to work on several civil rights cases with her and her husband Ossie Davis," the statement added. "She was as committed to social justice as she was to the screen and stage. She will be greatly missed.”
Dee attended "The African Americans: Many Rivers to Cross" in 2013.Astrid Stawiarz/Getty ImagesDee attended "The African Americans: Many Rivers to Cross" in 2013.
Dee's absence from the stage never dimmed her status as a trailblazer. Accepting her best actress Tony Award on June 8, Audra McDonald heralded a number including women, including Dee, saying, "I am standing on Lena Horne's shoulders. I am standing on Maya Angelou's shoulders. I am standing on Dianne Caroll and Ruby Dee."
Beyond her artistic work, Dee is best known for her work as an activist. She was long a member of such organizations as the Congress of Racial Equality, the NAACP, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee), and Southern Christian Leadership Conference. She and Davis were personal friends of both Martin Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X, whose eulogy Davis gave in 1965, two years after Dee gave a stirring reading at King’s March on Washington.
Dee was born Ruby Wallace, but kept her married surname even after she divorced her first husband, blues singer Frankie Dee, in the 1940s. She married Davis in 1948 and the two collaborated for decades on art, activism and family, having three children, blues musician Guy Davis, and two daughters, Nora Day and Hasna Muhammad, all of whom survive Dee.
The couple also raised eyebrows with an autobiography that advocated open marriage, saying that lies, not extramarital affairs, destroy marriages. They later said that they came to realize that they didn't need anyone else.
A documentary on the couple's trailblazing career and personal history, "Life's Essentials with Ruby Dee," will screen on June 22 at the 18th Annual American Black Film Festival in Chelsea. The film was directed by Dee and Davis' grandson Muta’Ali.
On a mobile device? Click here to watch video.


Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/movies/ruby-dee-dead-91-article-1.1827040#ixzz34TIsvE8a


Budget for All Rally at Democratic State Convention

June 14 @ 8:00 am - 2:00 pm 

5,000 Democratic party activists, elected at town or ward caucuses, will gather in Worcester this Saturday to hear candidates for Governor and other offices and vote for their favorites.   Join us there: http://bit.ly/1jcnoBu
Budget for All and Massachusetts Peace Action will be there with a literature table and a petition, “Funding for Education — or Nuclear Weapons?” The delegates are very open to our message, but until we reach them, they may not realize that our politicians need to do much more to support a progressive budget.  We’ll also gather signatures for RaiseUp Massachusetts’ minimum wage and earned sick time questions.
We’ll do a standout from 8-10 am as delegates enter the hall, then leaflet and petition delegates for the rest of the day.   Standing out is free, but to enter the hall, you’ll have to buy a guest pass for $25.   Please contact us if you need help to afford the $25.
ARE YOU A DELEGATE?  While you’ll mostly be sitting with your district, we’d like you to circulate RaiseUP petitions among them while you’re waiting, so please sign up and let us know you’ll be there: http://bit.ly/1jcnoBu
PLEASE CARPOOL – parking will be at a premium.  Contact our office at 617-354-2169 or email info@masspeaceaction.org to arrange carpools.
STANDOUT: 8-10am
TABLE and PETITIONING: 10am- (?) 4pm

Join Massachusetts Peace Action - or renew your membership today!  
Dues are $40/year for an individual, $65 for a family, or $10 for student/unemployed/low income.  Members vote for leadership and endorsements, receive newsletters and discounts on event admissions.  Donate now and you will be a member in good standing through December 2014!  Your financial support makes this work possible!
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Worcester City Rules Committee Meeting
5:30 Thursday, June 12th
455 Main St, Esther Howland (South) Chamber, 3rd Fl.
Worcester, MA


*Purpose of the city's meeting*

To vote on recommending (or not) our anti-NDAA resolution, Restore Constitutional Governance (RCGR) to the City Council.

*Our objective*

To persuade the 3 members of the City's Rules Committee to recommend the RCGR to the City Council.

*Background: *

Last October 15th Ron Madnick filed at the Worcester City Council meeting
Restore Constitutional Governance Resolution (RCGR) which states that all
residents of Worcester will be guaranteed due process rights under the US
Constitution despite Sections 1021 and 1022 of the 2012 NDAA***.

Instead of voting that night, the council voted to put the Resolution in
the Rules Committee. Later the City's Solicitor wrote a legal opinion
against our resolution stating it was not within the purview of city
business and besides the NDAA isn't so bad anyway. We answered that
(1) public safety IS city business (the threat if indefinite detention of
any Worcester residents without evidence or charges is a public safety
issue); (2) Council members are obliged to honor their oath to uphold the
US Constitution; (3) the NDAA goes much further than the AUMF which was
limited to accused perpetrators of 9/11 - the offensive sections of the
NDAA has no such limitations. Furthermore, those sections do not
specifically exempt citizens from the extrajudicial process of indefinite
detention (see below*).

Over the next few months, we became aware that the Rules Committee was not
planning to do anything further. Through a phone-calling campaign they
finally relented to hold a hearing, which is the June 12th meeting above.
Whether or not the Rules Committee recommends, the RCGR will return to the
City Council to vote upon, most likely early next Fall.


** **Definition:*

NDAA, National Defense Authorization Act, is voted every year for the past
50 years to fund the military. All sections pertaining to budgetary items
expire and need renewal with subsequent NDAA's; all POLICY sections stand
indefinitely until specifically struck down by future NDAA's. Democrats and
Republicans, who generally can't agree on anything, get together and vote
every year to pass the NDAA.

Because it is a "slam-dunk", sometimes unrelated items are slipped into the
700+ page document. On New Year’s Eve 2011, the 2012 NDAA was passed
including sections 1021 and 1022 which state that the President alone and
without need for evidence nor official charges may order the indefinite
detention of anyone "suspected" of material support to a terrorist entity.
It specifically states that the extrajudicial process applies to "covered
persons". But the definition in the document of "covered persons" is
deliberately vague, leaving too much discretion on the part of just one
person, the President. Defenders of the NDAA cite the section within that
states "not required" to detain American citizens. The word "required" is
deliberately misleading. Just to illustrate and example: Is a police
officer required to give you a ticket? No, but he is authorized to do so.
 Saying indefinite detention of citizens is *not "required"* is not the
same as saying it is *not authorized*. As it stands now, yes,
the President IS authorized to detain anyone at all without ANY Due Process
and the 2012 NDAA policy pertains to all future Presidents' authorization
until specifically overturned.

Attempts to correct and overturn sections 1021 and 1022 were made and failed:
(1) in Congress (the Smith-Amash Amendment) and
(2) in the Supreme Court (Chris Hedges lawsuit)

President Obama signed the 2012 NDAA with the statement that he would not use the offensive
authorizations, but then his administration actively interceded when
US District *Judge* Katherine B. *Forrest* ruled the indefinite detention sections of the NDAA  unconstitutional

Maybe the current President is to be trusted and maybe not - but should we trust ALL future Presidents with this much unlimited power?

*All three branches of the Federal government have failed to preserve our Due Process rights. 
It is up to us now at the local level to claim our rights.  *

*Below is the Worcester Restore Constitutional Governance Resolution (RCGR)*

*RESTORING CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNANCE RESOLUTION OF WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS*

WHEREAS, the city of Worcester, Massachusetts is not a “battlefield” subject to the “laws of war;” and

WHEREAS, Federal Judge Katherine Forrest has ruled Section 1021 of the 2012 NDAA is unconstitutional;

WHEREAS, the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that neither Congress nor the
President can constitutionally authorize the detention and/or disposition
of any person in the United States, or citizen of the United States “under
the law of war” who is not serving “in the land or naval forces, or in the
Militia, when in actual service in time of War or public danger;” and

WHEREAS, for the purposes of this resolution, the terms “arrest,”
“capture,” “detention under the law of war,” “disposition under the law of
war,” and “law of war” are used in the same sense and shall have the same
meaning as such terms have in the 2012 NDAA, Section 1021(c); and therefore

BE IT RESOLVED, that notwithstanding any treaty, federal, state, or local
law or authority, enacted or claimed, including, but not limited to, an
authorization for use of military force, national defense authorization
act, or any similar law or authority enacted or claimed by Congress or the
Office of the President directed at any person in Worcester, who is not
serving “in the land or naval forces, or in the Militia, when in actual
service in time of War or public danger,” it is unconstitutional, and
therefore unlawful for any person to:

a. arrest or capture any person in Worcester, or citizen of Worcester,
within the United States, with the intent of “detention under the law of war,” or

b. actually subject a person in Worcester, to “disposition under the law of war,” or

c. subject any person to targeted killing in Worcester, or citizen of
Worcester, within the United States; and be it further

RESOLVED, that Worcester requests the Massachusetts State Legislature
recognize the duty of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts to interpose
itself, to protect our civil rights, between unconstitutional usurpations
by the federal government or its agents and the people of this state, as
well as the duty to defend the unalienable natural rights of the people,
all of which is consistent with our oaths to defend the Constitution of the
United States and the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts
against all enemies, foreign and domestic; and be it further

RESOLVED, that Worcester, requests our Congressional delegation commence
immediately with efforts to repeal the unconstitutional sections of the
2012 NDAA, towit,

sections 1021 and 1022, and any other section or provision which will have
the same or substantially the same effect on any person in the United
States not serving “in the land or naval forces, or in the Militia, when in
actual service in time of War or public danger;” and be it finally

RESOLVED, that Worcester, requests our Congressional delegation introduce,
support, and secure the passage of legislation which clearly states that
Congress not only does not authorize, but in fact prohibits the use of
military force, military detention, military trial, extraordinary
rendition, or any other power of the “law of war” against any person in the
United States not serving “in the land or naval forces, or in the
Militia, when in actual service in time of War or public danger.”

Recognizing our duty to defend the Constitution of the United States and
the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, as well as
recognizing the duty of “We the People” to protect our unalienable natural
rights to “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness” as articulated in
the Declaration of Independence, we, the City Council of Worcester,
Massachusetts, do hereby adopt this resolution.



# # # #

Susan Serpa













on the web here.
We had a very successful week with the "People's Firewall" Occupy the FCC encampment to save the Internet. We'll describe this in more detail below.

Tonight we begin the Baltimore Economic Democracy Conference - "Building Our New Economy Together." You can watch the opening plenary at The Real News studio space in Baltimore by clicking on this link. It runs from 7 to 9 pm Eastern, Friday May 16. And the rest of the conference takes place on Saturday, May 17.

The protest to save the Internet and building new economic structures in which people have more participation and benefit are in line with our overall strategy to Resist and Create, to Stop the Machine and Build a New World. The Internet is an essential tool for people, especially advocates for justice. And changing the economy so that people's needs are met and wealth inequality is reduced is essential to shifting political power.

We are a bit swamped with these events. You will find summaries of the articles we posted on PopularResistance.org recently by clicking here. We will return to our usual newsletter format next week.

Saving the Internet!

The campaign pushed the door open, now we all have to go through it and raise our voices louder than Comcast’s lobbyists to save the people’s internet.

The next four months are going to determine the future of the Internet. Will it remain free and open with equal access to all? There are powerful corporate interests that want to profit even more than they already do from the Internet at the expense of the public interest.  But as a result of the public’s work this week, we now have an opportunity to create the Internet we want.
We intend to make this a major focus of our work because the Internet is an essential tool for people to have access to information and to communicate with each other and it is central to our work. We want your advice and involvement; your creativity and activism. To win the Internet that can’t discriminate is going to require solidarity across issues and unity in our demands.
CLICK HERE TO READ THE REST OF THIS ARTICLE, SEE MORE PHOTOS AND VIDEOS (INCLUDING OUR REMOVAL BY SECURITY) AND FIND OUT WHAT YOU CAN DO TO SAVE THE INTERNET
Copyright © 2013 PopularResistance.org, All rights reserved.
Our mailing address is:
PopularResistance.org
402 E. Lake Ave.
Baltimore, MD 21212
"Because a sustainable future depends on the people willing to see the truth for what it is, and for those to stand up in unison in order to make a difference." — Jake Edwards Keli'i Eakin











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Like what you're reading this week in Black Agenda Report?  Click here to subscribe to our list so that you won't miss new articles in Black Agenda Report every Wednesday.  And be sure to forward this email widely to your friends and associates.  Sharing via Facebook or Twitter only reaches a fraction of your friends.  Our reach depends on YOU.  Forward us, please.

 

The White Right’s Impunity

 

 

by BAR executive editor Glen Ford

 

If a thousand armed Blacks had gathered in one place, pointing rifles at federal officers, and two of them later cold-bloodedly assassinated policemen, the federal response would touch every Black neighborhood in America. But the armed white Right gets a pass. Racists are resources to those in power. “The national security state’s legitimacy is based on (white) mass fear and loathing of the Other.”

Black Leadership Response to the Koch $25 Million “Gift” Should Be a Movement For Free College Tuition

 

 

A Black Agenda Radio Commentary by BAR managing editor Bruce A. Dixon

 

Seven generations after the founding of our first historically black colleges and universities, they are still dependent on the whims of white philanthropy, just begging smarter and/or harder. If black leaders won't pick the necessary fight and demand higher ed as a human right for everybody HBCUs will not survive the current crisis. Do they have the vision, the will, the courage? Do we?

Freedom Rider: Working Families Party Betrayal

 

 

by BAR editor and senior columnist Margaret Kimberley

 

As the Democrats bear steadily rightward, their so-called “progressive” camp followers do likewise. In New York, the Working Families Party endorses businessman’s champion Andrew Cuomo and, in Chicago, an SEIU local donates $25,000 of the members’ money to corporate mayor Rahm Emanuel. From compromise to collapse, the left-liberals and union careerists are on the road to oblivion.

CA Supermax Prisoners Win Right To Sue As A Class Over Torture, Decades-Long Solitary

 

 

A Black Agenda Radio commentary by executive editor Glen Ford

 

The state of California may soon have to defend the indefensible. A federal judge has allowed inmates at the dreaded Pelican Bay supermax prison to challenge the constitutionality of decades-long terms of solitary confinement. The state will be compelled to prove that it is not in the business of mass torture.

Act NOW! Obama FCC "Fast Lane Internet" Proposals Are The End of the Open Internet

 

 

A Black Agenda Radio Commentary by managing editor Bruce A. Dixon

 

The pending “internet fast lane” proposal advanced by President Obama's FCC chairman and telecom lobbyist Tom Wheeler isn't the end of the world, but it is the end of the internet as we know it. The FCC's proposal establishes the legal right of telecom monopolies to apply “market-based” charges for any kind of internet service they choose, for any reason they might invent.

U.S. Discrimination Penalty Bill is $1 Billion and Counting: We've Got Their Number

 

 

by BAR editor and columnist Dr. Marsha Coleman-Adebayo

 

The U.S. would rather pay victims $1 billion in settlements, than root out racism in the federal government. That’s the first of what will be many revelations to ExposeFacts.org, “an electronic alternative for whistleblowers to disclose information important for public safety without exposing themselves to government reprisals.”

The Prospects and Problems of 21st Century Socialism in the US

 

 

by Danny Haiphong

 

Socialism is by no means dead, except in the minds of much of what passes for the Left in the West. Socialists are struggling to overcome capitalist relations of power in various places around the world. “Radicals would benefit much from studying the cooperative economic and political structures of the Bolivarian process.”

Race, Class and the World Cup in Brazil

 

 

by Mike LaSusa

 

The Brazilian government and big business wanted the World Cup very badly. But the people wanted better public services – especially the majority that identify as non-white. “Government studies have shown that people who identify as black or brown make incomes that are less than half those of their white counterparts and they are much more likely to lack access to basic services like security, education, healthcare and sanitation.”

The Menace of Boko Haram and Fundamentalism in Nigeria

 

 

by Horace G. Campbell

 

The hardline military approach to Boko Haram by the Nigerian government is inadequate. Boko Haram's challenge has economic, political and social dimensions that government ignores to the detriment of Nigerians. All progressive forces will now have to wade in to oppose both Boko Haram and the states that provide the enabling conditions for the growth of terror elements.

HBO's John Oliver Explains Obama FCC's Internet "Fast Lanes"

 

 
HBO's John Oliver
                          on net neutrality

HBO's John Oliver Explains Obama FCC's Internet "Fast Lanes" VS Net Neutrality

 

Listen to Black Agenda Radio on the Progressive Radio Network, with Glen Ford and Nellie Bailey – Week of 6/9/14

 

 

Black America and the Empire in Crisis

 

Black Agenda Report at Left Forum
President Obama “sounds more and more like Bush, who left office so unpopular that Republican marketing is still damaged by it,” said editor and senior columnist Margaret Kimberley at BAR’s Left Forum panel, “Black America and the Empire in Crisis.” In his West Point speech, Obama “told the world there will be no freedom, no democracy, no self-determination,” said Kimberley. “Any nation, any state, any people who try to make their own decisions is in danger of being crushed by the United States.”
Internet’s Days are Numbered
FCC proposals to allow “market” pricing for the Internet would smother Left political discourse. “The fast-lane, slow-lane thing will result in the total privatization of the Internet, restricting our ability to communicate with each other, forever,” said BAR managing editor Bruce Dixon. “If you think our conversation [on the Left] has no power, why are they going to all this trouble to shut it down?”
Obama’s Most Effective Evil
In one key arena, Barack Obama “has done more damage than any white president could possibly inflict,” said BAR executive editor Glen Ford. “He has caused Black people to behave like white people – or even worse than white people – on issues of war and peace.” Polls showed Blacks were more supportive than whites of Obama’s threats to bomb Syria, in 2013. When Obama is gone, “we will have to rebuild the Black consensus for peace all over again,” said Ford.

A “Secure Drop” for Whistleblowers

 

There’s a new and safer way to alert the public to government crimes, said Dr. Marsha Coleman-Adebayo, renowned whistleblower and BAR editor and columnist. “People are afraid to step forward, for fear of getting the Chelsea Manning life imprisonment response from the government,” she said.ExposeFacts.org has unveiled a “drop-box” system that is encrypted and anonymous. “We’re looking forward to people taking advantage of this opportunity to get the information out without having to put their neck on the guillotine,” said Coleman-Adebayo, who serves on the new organization’s advisory board.

A Salute to General Baker

 

General Gordon Baker Jr., the legendary co-founder of League of Revolutionary Black Workers, died in Detroit at the age 72. Black Agenda Radio co-host Nellie Bailey spoke with Cleo Silvers, an organizer under General Baker for most of the Seventies. “He taught us the importance of understanding the need for unity between all the sectors of the working class,” said Silvers. Racism was rampant in organized labor. “U.A.W. meant ‘You Ain’t White,’” Silvers remembered. “The U.A.W. didn’t take on the issues that were specifically related to the needs of the Black workers who were in those plants, who were becoming a majority in Detroit.”
 

Please help us get the word out by forwarding these weekly email alerts to any and everyone you think needs to know.  Facebook won't do that.  It only shows content to a small fraction of your "friends".  Twiiter also manipulates "trending topics" to benefit its advertisers as well.  Only YOU can help spread the word.  


130 Pemberton
Plainfield, NJ 07060
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The Grim Farce that is Guantanamo
Guantanamo
Guantanamo attorney Ramzi Kassem, in his op-ed in Saturday's New York Times, A View from Gitmo, said, “Guantánamo remains at its core a lawless place.”

The torture camp was set in Cuba in 2002 to avoid U.S. and international law, but mostly to provide a place where the Bush regime could make it known, “here, we can do anything we choose to you.”  

Obama's administration now has no legitimate basis on which to continue holding most of the remaining prisoners for more than 10 years with no charges.  Debating whether the President or Congress is responsible for this outrage misses the point that, regardless of what laws are produced, the whole enterprise is fundamentally illegitimate.

The release of 5 prisoners the government says are “Taliban commanders” has brought Gitmo back in the news, mostly so McCain and Cruz can rant on and lie that the men remaining there are “the worst of the worst.”  We should do all we can to get out two important stories that make clear the crimes carried out against the prisoners:

The government hid information on the 2006 “suicides” of three Guantanamo prisoners.

New Report: NCIS Hid Medical Evidence About Guantanamo Suicides  Jeff Kaye pulls together new information on the immediate aftermath of when and how three prisoners died, building on Scott Horton's Harper's story from last month, and a new investigatory report published last month by The Center for Policy and Research (CPR) at Seton Hall University School of Law.

Government authorities contend the three prisoners died in an act of simultaneous suicide by hanging, an act JTF Guantanamo Commander Harry Harris described only one day after the deaths as “asymmetrical warfare.” It is this version of what happened that has been accepted by a wide section of the press. Horton’s article surmises that the prisoners may have died at Guantanamo’s “Camp No,” also known as “Penny Lane,” thought to be a special CIA black site at Guantanamo used to coerce prisoners, including through torture, to turn informants for the U.S. government.

Kaye says that the Senior Medical Officer (SMO) at Guantanamo, who was never interviewed later by investigators, “attended at least two of three high-profile 'suicides' at Guantanamo nearly eight years ago concluded at the time that, contrary to the conclusions of a later government investigation, the detainees did not die by hanging but by 'likely asphyxiation' from 'obstruction' of the airway."

In Effect, Appeals Court Rules Torture & Abuse Is All ‘Foreseeable’ Part of Job at Guantanamo Bay


Four former prisoners tried to sue Donald Rumsfeld and others at the Defense Department for abuse at Guantanamo.  The DC Circuit Court of Appeals, which almost never finds in favor of a prisoner for any reason, ruled against the suit, saying, “The treatment of the detainees in this case appears to be standard for all those similarly situated.” 

True, and outrageous.  Kevin Gosztola writes:
Yuksel Celikgogus, Ibrahim Sen, Nuri Mert, Zakirjan Hasam and Abu Muhammad were subjected to “prolonged solitary confinement, sleep deprivation, exposure to temperature extremes, light and sound manipulation, beatings, threats of transfer to a foreign country for torture, sexual harassment, forced nudity, exploitation of individual phobias, forced stress positions, the removal of ‘comfort items,’ including religious items, deprivation of medical treatment or the provision of medical treatment on the condition of cooperation with interrogators and prolonged ‘short-shackling’ with wrists and ankles bound together and to the floor.”
It's our responsibility to do all we can to force the Obama administration, and whoever follows it, not only to close down the prison, but end indefinite detention.

Protest at NYC's Hunter High School Friday Over Honor for Deputy CIA Director

Thursday, June 12th, is a special call-in day to demand the withdrawal of the Distinguished Graduate award to Avril Haines, Deputy CIA Director. Call or email Jennifer J. Raab, President of Hunter College, who advocated for her selection: (212) 772-4242, president@hunter.cuny.edu. You can also call Hunter College HS. Tell the administration to cancel giving Avril Haines an award. Dr. Tony Fisher, Principal, 212.860.1406.  If you are a Hunter High alumnus, please email us a public statement of why you are opposed to the granting of this award.

Avril Haines, currently at the CIA, and late of the White House Office of Legal Counsel, will not be present to receive the award Friday, but protesters will be (see an incredible puff piece of “journalism” from Newsweek).

Protest
June 13, 12:45
Hunter North Assembly Hall
Outside the 69th Street entrance between Lexington and Park Avenues


The fact that the school administration kept the award quiet is an indication of how unacceptable their choice for this year's award is.

Just since the members of the Hunter High Class of 2014 were born, the CIA has moved dramatically from its stated mission of collecting intelligence to openly advocating its "operations" role of killing and torturing people and spying on US citizens.  For example:

After 9/11/01, the CIA set up a network of secret "black" sites spread around the world, using torture, and in up to 100 known cases, causing death.  Ms. Haines' boss, CIA Director John Brennan, spoke favorably of this practice which for a time kept him from his current job.

Since 2009, the CIA has run the secret "targeted assassination" program of drone strikes in Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia.  These horrific weapons, used in countries with which the US is not at war, have killed thousands, including women and children.

Before Ms. Haines went to the CIA last year, she was in the Office of Legal Counsel of the White House, providing legal cover to President Obama for his personal role in approving "kill lists" targeting people for death who have not been charged, tried or sentenced in any court, but are nonetheless killed by flying robots controlled from thousands of miles away.  The Washington Post says the Obama administration is working to bring the CIA together with the secretive Joint Special Operations Command (the subject of the book and film “Dirty Wars” by Jeremy Scahill) to perfect the “find, fix and finish process” as they refer to the targeted kills by drone assassination.

If Hunter College High School wants to distinguish itself as a leader in the rights of people, its administration should withdraw from Ms. Haines the Distinguished Graduate Award.  Further, it should ask her to renounce her role in the Orwellian war and killing machine.
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Cheers to Students Against Surveillance
Students Against Surveillance
Students from 17 campuses have sent open letters on the danger of government surveillance to free inquiry. 

From
Students vs. NSA Internet Spying:Students launching these initiatives are fighting for university and college campuses to be places where critical thought is encouraged, not chilled and monitored; where dissenting ideas and inquiries are valued and studied for their merit, not dismissed and attacked because they are outside government-established norms; where people can lead their lives and conduct their personal, political, social, and academic activities without being under a constant government watch. They must be supported and their efforts learned from and spread.

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A poem by Rich Greve, inspired by Barack Obama's defense of American exceptionalism at West Point last month:

We are the Exceptional Ones. 

We are The Irreplaceables.

The Magnificent War Machiners.

The Indespensibles.   We like the Rule of Our Money too.

The Dollar is still Exceptional, isn't it?

We bring "Democracy" with our wars — now that's quite Exceptional to pull off.

Killing is okay when you're Exceptional.

How can Exceptionals be wrong?

We are just too grand when the 1% have 40%

How can one get grander than that?

Of course, these are the Exceptional of the Exceptionals

And they must Rule — and they do

We scorn health care for all and education too.

Why would the Exceptionals need to be educated at all?

We have everything figured out already.

The Exceptionals can spy on Everyone because

We are Exceptional.   Case Closed.   Diagnosis:   Exceptional Hubris
— Richard F. Greve,
Citizen of Exceptionalland.
Debra Sweet, Director, The World Can't Wait