Friday, October 19, 2018

A View From The Left -WARS ABROAD, WARS AT HOME

WARS ABROAD, WARS AT HOME

Trump Won in 2016 Thanks to Voter Suppression
And so, that narrow margin that Trump won in Wisconsin, that is due to what happened there in Milwaukee. And, in fact, a study showed that 8 percent of whites could not vote because of voter ID laws, but 27 percent of African Americans in Wisconsin could not vote because of voter ID laws. Voter suppression swung the Electoral College in Wisconsin to Trump. And then, with felony disenfranchisement in Florida, just looking at the numbers there, and the numbers show that 80 percent of those who are disenfranchised are Democrats…  Just running those numbers alone, it showed that the hundred-plus-thousand margin that Trump won in fact would have flipped to over 200-plus-thousand for Hillary Clinton. Those two states alone—the Electoral College victory in those two states alone would have swung to Hillary Clinton. Trump won by voter suppression.  More

The Democrats’ Left Turn Is Not an Illusion
Over the past 18 years, the Democratic electorate has moved steadily to the left, as liberals have displaced moderates. Self-identifiedliberals of all races and ethnicities now command a majority in the party, raising the possibility that views once confined mainly to the party elite have spread into the rank and file…  Among white liberals, according to Pew survey data collected in 2017, 79.2 percent agreed that “racial discrimination is the main reason why many black people can’t get ahead these days.” … Whereas just 39 percent of white Democrats said they were liberal on social issues back in 2001-2005, that has risen to 61 percent since 2015-2017…  The party’s strengthened social liberalism may help Democrats mobilize more left-leaning Gen Y and Gen Z voters (those between the ages of 18 and 28), Drutman pointed out, which would be crucial. But Drutman added a cautionary note for liberal enthusiasts: “Democrats have consistently been disappointed by hopes of mobilizing younger voters, particularly in midterms.”   More

Few Democrats Offer Alternatives to War-Weary Voters
While Trump’s 2016 victories in swing states may well have been aided by his posing as a foe of protracted war, his administration’s Mideast policies have largely exposed that masquerade. Unfortunately, the weak and confused positions of Democratic leaders on endless war and bloated military spending offer little alternative to war-weary voters. Polls show the popularity of a progressive domestic agenda on issues from jobs to healthcare to free public college, but few Democrats in Congress are willing to strongly challenge the unaccountable military budget, which soaks up most discretionary spending that could be redirected toward the party’s proclaimed domestic agenda…  With consistently moral foreign policies that reject costly militarism and continuous intervention, Democrats could inspire the party base and gain support among swing voters and independents (especially third-party voters). But advocacy of those policies come mostly from a minority of Democratic “backbenchers,” not leaders.

ANDREW BACEVICH: “Dear Elizabeth Warren,” Time to Rethink National Security
There is, to put it mildly, a lot going on in our world today, much of it not good: terrorism, whether Islamist or otherwise; unchecked refugee flows; cross-border trafficking in drugs, weapons, and human beings; escalating Saudi-Iranian competition to dominate the Persian Gulf; pent-up resentment among Palestinians, Kurds, and other communities denied their right to self-determination; the provocations of “rogue states” like Russia, Pakistan, and North Korea; and, not to be forgotten, the ever-present danger of unintended nuclear war. As a candidate, you will need to have informed views on each of these…  The point of departure for the Warren Doctrine should be to subject this imperial project to an honest cost-benefit appraisal, demonstrating that it leads inexorably to bankruptcy, both fiscal and moral. Allow militarized imperialism to stand as the central theme of U.S. policy and the national security status quo will remain sacrosanct. Expose its defects and the reordering of national security and other priorities becomes eminently possible.   More

KAREEM ABDUL-JABBAR:  1968 Olympics Protest: A Summer of Love and a Reckoning 
For me, the sight of those two proud athletes raising their fists to call attention to social injustices, knowing they would face death threats and probable expulsion from the Games, made my heart swell. The public backlash only proved their point: on one hand, you had voter suppression, police brutality, poverty, starving children, lesser education, lesser job opportunities, and a government doing very little to change it. On the other hand, you had people worried that their enjoyment of a sporting event was momentarily “ruined” because someone silently expressed a shameful truth…  We all long for the day when no athlete will raise a gloved fist or take a knee or wear a t-shirt that says, “I can’t breathe.” But most of us want that day to come about because there’s no more need for those gestures, because America has finally committed to following its own Constitution. Until that day … well, you know.   More  (with a short video explainer here)



A View From The Left- NEW WARS / OLD WARS – What Could Possibly Go Wrong WHO LOVES SAUDI ARABIA?

NEW WARS / OLD WARS – What Could Possibly Go Wrong

WHO LOVES SAUDI ARABIA?
Answer:  Both Republican and Democratic Elites (and look here for Seventy Years of the New York Times Describing Saudi Royals as Reformers)


Here’s a letter I wrote to the Globe last week: 

“Saudi Arabia has been a repressive and backward absolute monarchy for its entire modern history.  It has executed scores of non-violent critics -- including just last year a cleric who was the leader of a large and repressed Shia minority – without much complaint from its Western partners.  Saudi Arabia’s toxic version of fundamentalist Wahhabi Islam has been the source of untold mayhem throughout the world, including the rise of Al-Qaeda/ISIS and the 9/11 attacks against the U.S. 

Yet American corporations, universities, think-tanks and cultural institutions have maintained uninterrupted ties with this rogue state.  Saudi Arabia has been by far the largest purchaser of U.S. military hardware, which it has been employing lately, with American logistic support, in its genocidal war against Yemen. Last year its de facto leader, Prince Mohammed bin Salman, made a triumphant U.S. tour where he was feted and praised by politicians and journalists alike as a promising young reformer.

Now that the Saudi government has apparently murdered a U.S.-based journalist who was a mild critic of the regime, American commentators and business leaders are shocked, shocked to discover that something is rotten in the state of Saudi Arabia.  But this was not just the isolated crime of particular Saudi leaders.  It reflects the habitual behavior of a poisonous regime.

Cutting our ties with Saudi Arabia is long overdue.  The shame is that the Saudi monarchy has so long enjoyed warm relations with the U.S. under both Republican and Democratic Presidents.”

In case you were wondering: 
Khashoggi, as it is usually spelled in English, is Kh-a-sh-q-j-i in Arabic but it’s pronounced differently in different Arabic dialects.  So, Khashuqji, Khashu’ji, Khashogji and Khashoggi are all possible ways to say it. Tomayto/Tomahto . . .

WHY IS SAUDI ARABIA UNDER FIRE OVER JAMAL KHASHOGGI, BUT NOT YEMEN?
Many journalists working on the story, business people pulling out of Saudi conferences and politicians preparing diplomatic responses knew Khashoggi personally. He was a fixture of the thinktank circuit and a habituĂ© of elite London and Washington parties. His former colleagues feel genuine empathy for Khashoggi over his apparently grisly end, because it requires little imagination for them to put themselves in his shoes. Yet these influencers appear to have a blind spot for the more routine victims of unchecked Saudi aggression. Unlike Khashoggi, the thousands of Yemeni civilians who have been blown up by the Saudi royal air force do not write for the Washington Post.  Reports of an airstrike claiming the lives of at least 20 members of a wedding party, or 40 children killed when a Saudi bomb hit their school bus, may prompt a story in a national newspaper and perhaps a handwringing statement expressing “concern” by a foreign minister.
But real political action does not follow.   More


H.Con.Res.138 – Invoking the War Powers Resolution to remove United States Armed Forces from hostilities in the Republic of Yemen that have not been authorized by Congress -- so far cosponsored by McGovern, Capuano, Kennedy(!)

Trump says his arms deal with Saudi Arabia willcreate a lot of jobs. That’s not true.
Overall, the private US defense industry does directly employ a lot of US workers — about 355,500 in 2016, according to the most the recent estimates from the Aerospace Industries Association. But private-sector defense workers make up less than 0.5 percent of the total US labor force, and that includes every person whose job depends directly on the sale or production of airplanes, tanks, bombs, and services for the entire US military. It’s unlikely that many of them, if any, depend directly on weapons sales to Saudi Arabia, and its also unlikely that those jobs would vanish if Saudi money disappeared…  So despite what the president says, there is no real threat of US job losses to justify continued American support for a repressive regime that is likely responsible for the gruesome murder of a journalist in Turkey — and that is also killing thousands of civilians with American-made weapons in Yemen.   More

Khashoggi case proves that when Saudi Arabia’s credibility is damaged so is America’s
The alleged murder of Mr Khashoggi is only the latest of a series of Saudi ventures since 2015 that have failed to turn out as planned. The list includes a stalemated war in Yemen that has almost provoked a famine; escalation in Syria that provoked Russian military intervention; the blockade of Qatar; and the detention of Lebanese prime minister Saad Hariri. For the first time, the US media is giving wall-to-wall coverage to negative stories about Saudi Arabia. One effect of this is to undermine Mr Trump’s effort to sell his confrontational policy towards Iran by demonising it as a uniquely criminal and terrorist regime. These denunciations are now being undercut by the drip-drip of allegations about the fate of Mr Khashoggi with even the case for the defence apparently resting on the claim that he was accidentally tortured to death by an overly enthusiastic security officer.   More

‘Outrage’ over Slaying of US Residents Depends on the Nation Responsible
But looking back, we see a totally different response — or more properly, a total lack of response in either government or media — to the equally brutal murder back in 2010 of not just a US legal resident, but a US-born citizen: 19-year-old Furkan Dogan.  Dogan, born and raised in the US to Turkish immigrant parents, was brutally beaten, kicked and then shot in the back and head by several members of the so-called Israeli Defense Force who on May 31, 2010 boarded a Turkish-flagged vessel, the Mavi Marmara in international waters in the Mediterranean Sea…  The Obama administration never raised the slightest protest over the killing of this young US citizen. Indeed, Secretary of State Clinton warned Americans not to participate in the flotilla, essentially saying they were asking for trouble if they did so…  In both of these extra-judicial murders by agents of the governments of US allies the US response has been shameful, though the non-response in the case of young Dogan is far worse given that he was not just a legal resident of the US but a citizen.    More

U.S. OPPOSED TO KOREAS' PLAN FOR NO-FLY ZONE OVER BORDER
Washington and Seoul both publicly insist they are on the same page about dealing with Pyongyang. But behind the scenes, there are growing signs of disagreement as South and North Korea forge ahead with plans to defuse military tensions and rebuild economic ties.
The military accord, sealed during last month’s summit in Pyongyang, is one of the most concrete agreements between the neighbors this year. But U.S. officials have raised concerns that it could undermine defense readiness and comes without substantial progress on denuclearization.  The pact includes a halt in “all hostile acts,” a no-fly zone around the border and a gradual removal of landmines and guard posts within the Demilitarised Zone.  U.S. Secretary of State Pompeo expressed “discontent” with the agreement during a phone call, South Korea’s Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha said last week in a rare disclosure of discord between the allies. The United States was not likely to openly protest against an inter-Korean initiative, Seoul officials said, but its deep involvement in sanctions enforcement and military operations give it leverage to delay or change the policy.   More



Come to the next monthly STANDOUT FOR BLACK LIVES Ashmont T Station Plaza​ Every fourth Thursday April-Oct. 5:30-6:30 pm October 25

Come to the next monthly 
STANDOUT FOR BLACK LIVES
Ashmont T Station Plaza​
Every fourth Thursday April-Oct.  5:30-6:30 pm
October 25
Please hold these dates!  Spread the Word!  All are welcome!
Hold our banner and Black Lives Matter signs * Hand out fliers. 

11/8 Boston Day of Reparations to African People

H<paper_waves@riseup.net>
Boston Day of Reparations to African People
Thursday, November 8th, 2018, 7-9pm
@ First Church in JP (Unitarian Universalist) 6 Eliot St, Jamaica Plain
REGISTER: BostonDayOfReparations2018.eventbrite.com
<http://BostonDayOfReparations2018.eventbrite.com/>
Suggested Donation $5 - No one turned away for lack of funds

The Days of Reparations to African People is an annual, international
speaking tour to raise white reparations to African (black) people and
discuss how we as white people can be in genuine solidarity with African
liberation. It is a campaign by the African Peoples Solidarity Committee
and its mass organization, the Uhuru Solidarity Movement, both founded
and led by the African People’s Socialist Party.

Keynote Speaker: Omali Yeshitela, Chairman of the African People’s
Socialist Party
Also speaking:
Penny Hess, Chairwoman of the African People's Solidarity Committee
Jesse Nevel, Chair of the Uhuru Solidarity Movement

A Call to Build the Days of Reparations to African People
https://uhurusolidarity.org/2018/08/03/a-call-to-build-the-days-of-reparations-to-african-people/

For more info on the Boston event: usmboston@riseup.net or call 781-214-8131

Follow the Boston branch of the Uhuru Solidarity Movement at
facebook.com/usmboston <https://facebook.com/usmboston>

For more info on the Days of Reparations to African People campaign,
visit uhurusolidarity.org
<https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Fuhurusolidarity.org%2F&h=AT0cMKL91oDzxXumUgx16OAKjLBnDTpr6uQUvT4USe3ix5Sz_GI9CxRndZumJ5CyBdaD1y-A8YI43WwezvrZl5krvxZRdY74LRNXCHBzU9fyRmz_0Tpkf5PyYotlTXOolxp1WWyXew>
_______________________________________________
Act-MA mailing list
Act-MA@act-ma.org
http://act-ma.org/mailman/listinfo/act-ma_act-ma.org
To set options or unsubscribe
http://act-ma.org/mailman/options/act-ma_act-ma.org

Saturday, Oct. 20: STAIN: weekend performance happening on the Boston Common -- (rain date Sunday Oct. 21)


Mary C. Curtin<mary.c.curtin@gmail.com>
Via  Act-MA <act-ma-bounces@act-ma.org>
STAIN on the Boston Common

(Boston, MA) Saturday, October 20, 2018 at 2:30 - 3 p.m., STAIN will be
performed on the Boston Common at the State House on the Free Speech Mall.

An "extraordinary work of performance art, " according to David Gullette in
ArtsFuse (March 25, 2018), STAIN was performed last March on the Common to
honor the victims of the Parkland, Florida shootings in February and the
children killed at Sandy Hook, Connecticut.

Created by Deborah Lake Fortson, Boston-based playwright and performance
artist, STAIN is a silent performance unfolding red stripes on the hill with
signs, drums and bells. Audiences are invited to think about these tragedies
and to feel what we feel at this moment in the country's history. STAIN
brings us together with these feelings, not to politicize, but to imagine
what we can become.

Fortson, a longtime resident of Brookline and Jamaica Plain, was trained at
the LeCoq International School of Theater and at the Boston University
Playwriting Program. She has had plays produced in Boston, New York, London,
Japan, and across the U.S.  She has created performances for First Night,
Boston and the Halloween Parade in NYC.  Her documentary play BODY& SOLD,
about teenagers kidnapped into the sex industry, has been produced in 40
states and counting with Tempest Productions, Inc.

This Saturday's performance of STAIN includes a collaboration with Alli
Ross, a dance theater artist and Faculty at Boston Conservatory at Berklee
who joined Tempest performers in the STAIN project last spring. This season,
six of Ross's students in her Theater and Community class are involved in
the training and planning for this event and will appear as performers on
Saturday.

STAIN is partially supported by a grant from Live Arts Boston.

Raindate is Sunday, October 21.  If you want to come, send us an email (
<mailto:tempest@rcn.com> tempest@rcn.com), and we'll confirm when and where,
following the weather.

STAIN contacts:
Kathleen Moye, 239-851-5284, kathleendmoye@gmail.com
<mailto:kathleendmoye@gmail.com>
Deborah Lake Fortson, 617-515-2683,  <mailto:tempest@rcn.com>
tempest@rcn.com

Info. links:
<https://conta.cc/2yz3z7O> https://conta.cc/2yz3z7O
<https://www.facebook.com/events/162026721387183/>
https://www.facebook.com/events/162026721387183/
<https://www.facebook.com/TempestProductionsDLFStain>
https://www.facebook.com/TempestProductionsDLFStain


About TEMPEST PRODUCTIONS Tempest Productions makes innovative theater to
illuminate contemporary lives and social issues.  A theater and its audience
can be a lever to shift cultural attitudes.  We are making plays at a moment
in history when people who have been silent are speaking aloud.  New truths
about power and society are erupting daily. A seismic shift in attitudes is
taking place.  We dedicate our creative energies and professional skills to
collaborate in this world-wide growth of vision and play.






- submitted by marycurtinproductions (on behalf of STAIN)
c/o Mary Curtin
PO Box 290703, Charlestown, MA 02129
617-470-5867 (cell),  <mailto:mary.c.curtin@gmail.com>
mary.c.curtin@gmail.com
"dedicated to staging insightful entertainment, particularly in
non-traditional venues"
<http://www.marycurtinproductions.com/> www.marycurtinproductions.com
<http://www.facebook.com/marycurtin> www.facebook.com/marycurtin
<http://twitter.com/marycurtin> http://twitter.com/marycurtin
<http://www.dirtywaterbrassband.com/> www.dirtywaterbrassband.com
<http://www.facebook.com/dirtywaterbrassband>
www.facebook.com/dirtywaterbrassband



_______________________________________________
Act-MA mailing list
Act-MA@act-ma.org
http://act-ma.org/mailman/listinfo/act-ma_act-ma.org
To set options or unsubscribe
http://act-ma.org/mailman/options/act-ma_act-ma.org