Wednesday, December 26, 2018

“The wall comes tumbling down.” Coalition of Immokalee Workers

Coalition of Immokalee Workers<workers@ciw-online.org>
To   
It was an unlikely place to hear Abraham Joshua Heschel quoted, and the rabbi’s words came from an unlikely messenger.

At a news conference on a farm outside of Immokalee in southwest Florida, Jon Esformes, operating partner of the fourth-generation, family-owned Pacific Tomato Growers—one of the five largest growers in the nation with more than 14,000 acres in the US and Mexico—declared, “In a free society, few are guilty, but all are responsible.”

And with that he announced an agreement with the 4000-member Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) to implement a penny per pound pay raise—which stands to increase workers’ annual earnings from about $10,000 to as much as $17,000—and establish a code of conduct that includes an external complaint resolution system, shade and protective equipment in the fields, and a worker-to-worker education process on their rights under the new agreement.
“For us, you wake up and you realize that maybe this is something we could have done yesterday, but I am certainly not going to wait until tomorrow,” said Esformes.

For those who have followed CIW’s decade-long fight to raise farmworkers’ sub-poverty wages and remedy oppressive working conditions—including slavery—this agreement marks the moment when a wall of denial maintained by the Florida agricultural industry came tumbling down.

To mark the CIW’s “Silver” Anniversary, help us celebrate the groundbreaking Fair Food Program by donating today! We are calling on all of our supporters – whether you recently joined the movement or you’ve been walking shoulder-to-shoulder with CIW for the past 25 years – to help us reach our goal of $50,000 by the end of 2018.
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Amazon Delivers Death by Algorithm RootsAction Education Fund

RootsAction Education Fund<info@rootsaction.org>
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Death, brought right to the door.

Amazon has other uses for drones than what you might have heard about.

Days ago, journalist Nick Mottern wrote that Amazon is likely to win a $10 billion contract “to build a global ‘brain’ for the Pentagon called JEDI, a weapon of unprecedented surveillance and killing power, a profoundly aggressive weapon that should not be allowed to be created.”

Mottern’s article for Truthout tells how Amazon Web Services is the frontrunner to win the huge contract for JEDI. While discussing the program, he reports, “Pentagon officials refer to the need for efficiencies in sharing data among its military branches, with the goal of increasing the ‘lethality’ of the U.S. war machine.”

If you don’t want Amazon’s data to increase “the lethality of the U.S. war machine,” click here to send a clear message to Amazon employees and management.

Working for a peaceful world is essential, not only during this holiday season but 24/7/365. You can support the ongoing work of the RootsAction Education Fund if youmake a tax-deductible donation.

Here are key excerpts from Mottern’s investigative reporting:

**  “Amazon has built a vast, globally distributed data storage capacity and sophisticated artificial intelligence programs to propel its retail business.” The Pentagon’s JEDI program that Amazon is positioned to serve in exchange for $10 billion is “very likely to be at the heart of managing the first generation of operational U.S. robotic land, sea, air and space weaponry.”

**  JEDI, which stands for Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure, “is intended to not only improve information sharing, but to dramatically increase the U.S. military’s ability to collect and sort through huge amounts of surveillance information from many, many sources on individuals and groups -- governmental and non-governmental -- around the world. This will be part of a process of using artificial intelligence and algorithms to identify probable targets for killing.”

**  “It appears very possible that if Amazon gets the Pentagon contract, the personal profiles of its customers around the world, developed to stimulate retail sales, will become, either individually or as aggregated, instruments of these customers’ intimidation and control.”

Such militarized madness has been steadily following a predictable path for years. That doesn't mean we can't stop it.

Click here to read and sign the petition to Amazon employees urging them to refuse military work.

We also urge you to read and share Nick Mottern's stunning article. A link to it is below, under “Background.”

Contributions to the RootsAction Education Fund now will enable us to do more work for peace and justice in the new year.



We can't win these public arguments or pay our bills without you. We appreciate everything you do.

-- The RootsAction Education Fund Team

Background:
>>  Nick Mottern, Truthout: “Alexa, Drop a Bomb”: Amazon Wants in on U.S. Warfare
>>  Ben Tarnoff, The Guardian: Weaponized AI is coming. Are algorithmic forever wars our future?
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Happy Birthday Keith Richards -The Limits of The Pacifist Message- John Lennon Tribute





DVD REVIEW

Come Together, John Lennon Tribute, Yoko Ono Productions, 2001


I am here to rain on this tribute to the work of John Lennon in New York City in early October 2001 on two counts- musically and politically. As to the music. I make no bones about the fact that, as a product of the Generation of ’68, I grew to adulthood with this music, however, in any choice between The Beatles and The Rolling Stones, in my book the Stones win hands down. The same applies to comparisons to Lennon as an individual artist. John Lennon could write lyrics with the best of them, no question, but here is the real question- which song, for example, better expresses the sense of working class alienation and, more importantly, what to do about it- Lennon’s Working Class Hero or The Stones’ Street Fighting Man?

That said, even taking comparisons between artists out of consideration John Lennon’s work, as witnessed here, has not aged well. This, despite the profuse trade puffing by host Kevin Stacey and other narrators to the contrary. Part of this is because his works are so personal that they are not easily covered. Recently listening to some covers of the The White Album leads me to believe that this is true, as well, for most Beatles songs. Thus, the tribute, as a whole came off rather muzak-like, with the partial exception of Sean Lennon’s work with Rufus Wainwright on That Boy and Nancy Marchant’s rendition of Nowhere Man.

Now to the politics. Yes, we know that John Lennon, sincerely I believe, stood for ‘giving peace a chance’ and for ‘power to the people, right on’ but frankly, those slogans today, as we are in another titanic struggle against the imperial monsters over Iraq and Afghanistan just seems like some much children’s talk. What the narrators held to be Lennon’s profound wisdom on the peace question are things that seemed embarrassingly childish to me back even when they were first uttered. No, it is not enough to just think good thoughts about peace or have peace in our hearts for that to occur as if by magic. We have to go out and struggle for it against some people who will see us in our graves before they give ‘peace a chance’.

And here my friends is the kicker. This tribute was performed in New York City on October 3, 2001 a few weeks after the criminal actions of a bunch of Islamic fanatics wrecked havoc on that city. Perhaps I would have been more impressed by the tribute if one person- host, performer or from the audience- in the whole one and one half hour program had mentioned peace and the desire for it, not in the great by and by, but by actually mentioning opposition to the war in Afghanistan that was being prepared even as they sang and was only a few days from starting. Maybe, in the light of circumstances that couldn’t be done in New York City during those weeks but I will be damned if I will listen to people spout forth about peace when they were not out in the streets with the few of us who were protesting the Afghan war then. Hell, I too was afraid to go out in the streets and face the redneck reaction that was stirred up then. But that is where ‘peaceniks’, if you will, had to be. What would Mr. Lennon have had to say about that? Mrs. Lennon didn’t have anything to say at all.

Presidio 27 "Mutiny" 50 years later Podcast with Keith Mather


Courage to Resist<refuse@couragetoresist.org>

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presidio 27
Presidio 27 "Mutiny" 50 years later
Podcast with Keith Mather
During the Vietnam War era, the Presidio Stockade was a military prison notorious for its poor conditions and overcrowding with many troops imprisoned for refusing to fight in the Vietnam War. When Richard Bunch, a mentally disturbed prisoner, was shot and killed on October 11th, 1968, Presidio inmates began organizing. Three days later, 27 Stockade prisoners broke formation and walked over to a corner of the lawn, where they read a list of grievances about their prison conditions and the larger war effort and sang “We Shall Overcome.” The prisoners were charged and tried for “mutiny,” and several got 14 to 16 years of confinement. Meanwhile, disillusionment about the Vietnam War continued to grow inside and outside of the military.
“This was for real. We laid it down, and the response by the commanding general changed our lives,” recalls Keith Mather, Presidio “mutineer” who escaped to Canada before his trial came up and lived there for 11 years, only to be arrested upon his return to the United States. Mather is currently a member of the San Francisco Bay Area Chapter of Veterans for Peace. Listen to the Courage to Resist podcast with Keith.
D O N A T E
towards a world without war

50th anniversary events at the former Presidio Army Base
October 13th & 14th, 2018
keith matherPANEL DISCUSSION
Saturday, October 13, 7 to 9 pm
Presidio Officers’ Club
50 Moraga Ave, San Francisco
Featuring panelists: David Cortright (peace scholar), Brendan Sullivan (attorney for mutineers), Randy Rowland (mutiny participant), Keith Mather (mutiny participant), and Jeff Paterson (Courage to Resist).
presidio 27ON SITE COMMEMORATION
Sunday, October 14, 1 to 3 pm
Fort Scott Stockade
1213 Ralston (near Storey), San Francisco
The events are sponsored by the Presidio Land Trust in collaboration with Veterans For Peace Chapter 69-San Francisco with support from Courage to Resist.
D O N A T E
to support resistance
COURAGE TO RESIST ~ SUPPORT THE TROOPS WHO REFUSE TO FIGHT!
484 Lake Park Ave #41, Oakland, California 94610 ~ 510-488-3559
www.couragetoresist.org ~ facebook.com/couragetoresist

Three keys to the future of the Fair Food Program: Expansion, expansion, and expansion… Coalition of Immokalee Workers

Coalition of Immokalee Workers<workers@ciw-online.org>
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Coalition of Immokalee Workers
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