Saturday, December 29, 2018

A View From The Local Left(Boston) Holiday Greetings to All Friends of Dorchester People for Peace! Best Wishes from DPP to those observing the holidays – or simply enjoying the spirit of the season. . .

Holiday Greetings to All Friends
of Dorchester People for Peace! Holiday Greetings to All Friends
of Dorchester People for Peace!
Best Wishes from DPP to those observing the holidays – or simply enjoying the spirit of the season. . .
Best Wishes from DPP to those observing the holidays – or simply enjoying the spirit of the season. . .

And a PEACEFUL NEW YEAR!
We have posted these videos many times before during the Holidays.  Watch them for the first time if you haven’t seen them before; watch them again and you won’t be disappointed.

CHRISTMAS IN THE TRENCHES -- 1914
In December, 1914, after months of slaughter during the First World War (it was supposed to be “The War to End all Wars”!), British and German soldiers declared an informal and spontaneous truce.  The story of their fraternization and holiday celebration is told in detail here and here.

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Christmas In The Trenches VIDEO: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s9coPzDx6tA  
The event has been immortalized in a song by folksinger John McCutcheon, which you can hear and watch along with contemporary illustrations and a moving introduction by the performer.

The song ends with this stanza:
My name is Francis Tolliver, in Liverpool I dwell
Each Christmas come since World War I, I've learned its lessons well
That the ones who call the shots won't be among the dead and lame
And on each end of the rifle we're the same.

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John Lennon
(killed on December 8, 1980)
VIDEO:   “All we are saying is give peace a chance” (1969)

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VIDEO: John Lennon – HAPPY CHRISTMAS (The War is Over)

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Yusuf Ibrahim (aka Cat Stevens)

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VIDEO: “Peace Train”


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TRUMP DOES SOMETHING RIGHT ON SYRIA
– Rep and Related imageDem Elites Freak Out
Amid all the horrors of Trump’ campaign and presidency, one of the few positive glimmers was his sometimes-expressed but rarely enacted reluctance to continue never-ending wars in the Middle East. Now that he has belatedly announced the withdrawal of  an estimated 4-5000 US military personnel from Syria there has been near unanimity among Republican Neocons and Liberal Democratic interventionists.  Yes, we don’t like Trump, but he is right here, even if the supposed wind-down of US intervention in Suria may in fact be far from over.  And should progressive actually wring their hands over the resignation of War Hawk Gen James Mattis as Defense Secretary be a cause for panic among Liberals?


Trump’s Syria troop withdrawal shows how hard it is to end US military intervention
To hear the outcry over President Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw all US troops from Syria, one would think he’d just made the greatest strategic blunder in American history…  Trump, who has been very vocal at times about his skepticism of American military intervention abroad, still found himself increasing America’s troop presence in Afghanistan and in September authorizing the indefinite deployment of US armed forces in Syria — a decision he just reversed…  But now even staunch Trump allies can’t stomach the withdrawal…  In other words, Trump — as Obama before him — will never please the Washington commentariat or any political party by withdrawing US troops from wars. In fact, it appears he could suffer politically for doing so.   More

Why Trump Is Right to Withdraw Troops
Donald Trump has announced that he is bringing home America’s troops from Syria just two years after he was elected president. His plan to end one of America’s many wars prompted a mob to gather outside the White House, pitchforks at the ready. The mob wasn’t made up of angry farmers or workers. Instead, the feverish crowd constituted Washington’s war party: ivory tower think-tankers, editorialists promoting perpetual war, wannabe commanders-in-chief eager to launch their next democracy crusade, and politicians who collected draft deferments when their lives were on the line—but who now see the need for the United States to “exercise leadership.”  The cacophonous criticism of the president’s decision within the Beltway may be the best evidence of his wisdom.   More

MATTIS RESIGNS: SKY WILL NOT FALL
There still are plenty of legitimate reasons to worry about Trump and foreign policy. But even a broken clock is correct twice a day. And the decision about military withdrawal from Syria was the right one, for the sorts of reasons that Doug Bandow has ably explained. The biggest clue that the U.S. military expedition in Syria has become misguided is the confusion over its purpose. It originally was supposed to be all about combating the so-called Islamic State or ISIS, but then the Trump administration started talking more about getting the Iranians out or standing up to the Russians, which are completely different objectives. And if we are concerned about the absence of a proper process, consider that U.S. troops in Syria are now in a foreign war for purposes for which there has been no Congressional authorization at all…  ISIS still poses a threat—as an ideology, an instigator of hate, and a perpetrator of political violence—but it is not a threat that will be managed through military combat over Syrian real estate.   More


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WARS ABROAD, WARS AT HOME

Related imageTrump proposes cutting food stamps for over 700,000 people just before Christmas
The United States Department of Agriculture is proposing that states should only be allowed to waive a current food stamps requirement — namely, that adults without dependents must work or participate in a job-training program for at least 20 hours each week if they wish to collect food stamps for more than three months in a three-year period — on the condition that those adults live in areas where unemployment is above 7 percent, according to The Washington Post. Currently the USDA regulations permit states to waive that requirement if an adult lives in an area where the unemployment rate is at least 20 percent greater than the national rate. In effect, this means that roughly 755,000 Americans would potentially lose their waivers that permit them to receive food stamps.   More

Bonuses are up $0.02 since the GOP tax cuts passed
The new data allows us to examine nonproduction bonuses in the first three quarters of 2018 to assess the trends in bonuses in absolute dollars and as a share of compensation. The bottom line is that there has been very little increase in private sector compensation or W-2 wages since the end of 2017. The $0.02 per hour (inflation-adjusted) bump in bonuses between December 2017 and September 2018 is very small. Nonproduction bonuses as a share of total compensation grew from 2.73 percent in December 2017 to 2.78 percent in September 2018, an imperceptible growth….  An examination of overall wage and compensation growth does not provide much in the way of bragging rights for tax cutters, especially given the expectation of rising wages and compensation amidst low unemployment.   More

Ring in the New Year by supporting Fair Food! Coalition of Immokalee Workers

Coalition of Immokalee Workers<workers@ciw-online.org>
To   
For 2019, we invite you to ring in the New Year by joining the fight to end generations of poverty and abuse in America's fields, and usher in a new era of respect and dignity in our food system.

Warmly,

Your friends in Immokalee
Coalition of Immokalee Workers
Connect with us

Working Towards A Better World Veterans For Peace

Veterans For Peace<vfp@veteransforpeace.org>
Via  vfp=veteransforpeace.org <vfp=veteransforpeace.org@mail.salsalabs.net>
To    
"My favorite thing about being a Veteran For Peace is that I actually get to serve my country.  A Veteran For Peace is someone who understands that real service comes from the heart and it comes from an intelligent mind set that embraces these challenges through organizing, through collectivism and through a shared interest in creating a more just world." -Kourtney Andar, Veterans For Peace Board member
P.S. Please consider sharing on Facebook!
Veterans For Peace apologizes if your donation and our email crossed paths!
We also encourage you to join our ranks.



Starting 2019 with our demands The Poor People’s Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival

To    
Dear Alfred,
On January 7th, we will return to the U.S. Capitol and deliver our campaign demands to the new Congress, focusing on voter suppression. In 2018, we saw attacks on the voting rights of poor people of color sweep our nation; from Georgia to Kansas, from North Carolina to North Dakota. We know that voting rights are central to every demand we have, and we will continue to call on Congress to take action to protect and expand voting rights, end racial gerrymandering, restore the right to vote to all formerly and currently incarcerated people, and more.
But like many of you, we’re taking time first to reflect on all that we accomplished in 2018.
We launched a movement committed to breaking the silence and telling the truth about the interlocking evils of systemic racism, poverty, ecological devastation, the war economy/militarism and our nation’s distorted moral narrative.
Together, we engaged in the largest wave of nonviolent civil disobedience in recent history and took action in over 40 states. Tens of thousands of people rallied on the National Mall to demand that we fight poverty, not the poor. Hundreds of poor and dispossessed people testified before the nation and made their demands heard. Leaders emerged in states around the country and we engaged in moral fusion organizing to build a broad and deep movement to sustain the fight for the long term.
GIVE TODAY
States that participated in the 40 Days of Moral Action in 2018
States that participated in the 40 Days of Moral Action in 2018
From California to the Carolinas, from Alabama to Alaska, from Michigan to Mississippi, from Southern Florida to Northern Maine, from the Mexican border to the Bronx, and many places in between, we have raised a moral cry about the 140 million poor and low income people fighting to survive. We are now in the second phase of the campaign and are organizing for the times ahead.
In the last few months, Poor People's Campaign leaders have won significant legal battles in places like Tennessee, where moral witnesses who engaged in nonviolent civil disobedience saw their cases dismissed, and Kentucky, where their legislature’s attempt to shut them out of the State Capitol was found unconstitutional; they have organized Poor People's Hearings from Gresham, OR to Little Rock, AR to Harrisburg, PA; and they have engaged in moral fusion organizing across lines of difference and historic division.
We are proud of what we’ve done together, but as we witness the recent attacks on SNAP recipients and families at the border, veterans being deported, people made homeless by the worst forest fires in this country's recent history, our communities struggling from lack of access to clean water, and 37 million people still without healthcare, we know our work is just getting started.
We learned this in 2018: There is a hunger for change and action in our nation. And there is nothing more powerful than when we stand united in common suffering and hope.
Over one million of you tuned in by livestream, followed us online and joined us in the streets. If just 5% of you donated $10, it would help keep this movement moving. Before the year closes, donate whatever you can to our movement so we can keep pushing forward and make 2019 the year in which the voices of 140 million poor folk in America were undeniably heard.
Thank you for your commitment to the Poor People's Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival and for continuing to build a moral movement to save the soul of America.
Forward together, not one step back,
Rev. Dr. William J. Barber, II & Rev. Dr. Liz Theoharis
The Poor People’s Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival
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