Thursday, October 18, 2012

Chilean Student Movement and City Life Vida Urbana, group fighting foreclosures, evictions, are recipients of prestigious Letelier-Moffitt Human Rights Award by Institute for Policy Studies

October 11, 2012
Washington DC awards ceremony will feature Danny Glover, Camila Vallejo. Event will include music, poetry, food, open bar.
What: 36th annual awards ceremony in Washington DC
When: Monday, Oct 17, 2012, 5:30 PM – 9 PM ET
Where: Carnegie Institution, 1530 P St NW, Washington DC
Who: Institute for Policy Studies; Danny Glover, actor;
Camila Vallejo, President, University of Chile Student Federation (FECH); Noam Titelman, President, Santiago Catholic University Student Federation; Curdina Hill, Executive Director, City Life Vida Urbana; Steve Meacham, Organizing Coordinator, City Life Vida Urbana.
Washington DC – The Institute for Policy Studies is holding its 36th annual Letelier-Moffitt Human Rights Awards on Wednesday, October 17. Winners of the prestigious award this year are: City Life Vida Urbana, a group working to halt foreclosures and evictions in Boston, Massachusetts; and the Chilean Student Movement (Confederación de Estudiantes Chilenos), a movement that has filled Chilean streets with protests and called for democracy in post-Pinochet Chile. Representatives of the Chilean Student Movement include Camila Vallejo, called “The World’s Most Glamorous Revolutionary” by The New York Times and a “Hard-Left Heartthrob” by Newsweek Magazine. Actor Danny Glover will be presenting awards via teleconference.
A press briefing with Chilean student leaders will occur, Wed, 10/17, 11:30 AM, in the conference room of the Institute for Policy Studies, 1112 16th St NW, Washington DC. A simultaneous livestream of the briefing and press conference call will also occur. To join the press conference call, dial (661) 673-8600 and enter the access code 570102. The briefing will proceed in English.
City Life Vida Urbana is a Boston-based bilingual community organization that has fought for racial, social, and economic justice and gender equality for 28 years. In response to the devastating impact of the foreclosure crisis on communities in Boston, they launched the Post-Foreclosure Eviction Defense campaign to help keep people facing foreclosure in their homes. Victories won by hundreds of organized families are building public and political pressure, which in turn is driving legislative reform and sparking similar campaigns across the region.
For over a year, the Chilean Student Movement has turned that country upside down, demanding the right to free universal education. They have rallied hundreds of thousands into the streets and breathed life into that democracy. Accepting the award on behalf of this movement are student leaders Camila Vallejo and Noam Titelman.
The Chilean student representatives will also participate in a speaking tour facilitated by the institute during their visit to the United States. From Monday, October 15, through Thursday, October 18, Vallejo and Titelman will meet with student groups at New York University and City University of New York in New York City, American University in Washington DC, and Harvard University in Boston.
The Letelier-Moffitt Human Rights Award is a celebrated award with a long history. On September 21, 1976, agents of Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet detonated a car bomb that killed IPS colleagues Orlando Letelier, a former Chilean diplomat and director of the Institute's Transnational Institute, and Ronni Karpen Moffitt, an IPS development associate, in Washington DC. Each year in October, the Institute for Policy Studies hosts the annual human rights award in the names of Letelier and Moffitt to honor these fallen colleagues while celebrating new heroes of the human rights movement from the United States and Chile.
The Letelier-Moffit Human Rights Award Ceremony is being hosted in Washington DC on Wednesday, October 17, at 5:30 PM, by the Institute for Policy Studies.
** For a press pass to attend the Letelier-Moffit Human Rights Award Ceremony, please contact Lacy MacAuley, lacy@ips-dc.org **
# # #
Institute for Policy Studies (IPS-DC.org) is a community of public scholars and organizers linking peace, justice, and the environment in the U.S. and globally. We work with social movements to promote true democracy and challenge concentrated wealth, corporate influence, and military power. Next year IPS will celebrate its 50th year of turning ideas into action.

TOMORROW! URGENT ACTION!
Immigrant Workers Continue
Their Fight for Justice

Say NO! to Labor Exploitation in MA!

Media Contact:
Patricia Montes, Centro Presente, 617-959 3108

What:
Latino immigrant workers continue their fight for justice! Former workers of One World Cuisine have been unable to reach an agreement with the owners of the restaurant group. Centro Presente supports the workers' decisions and will be joining the workers once again in staging a protest outside of Diva Indian Bistro to demand that the owners of One World Cuisine pay the workers. The workers calculate the wages they are owed to be over $129,000. They will also be filing a lawsuit for the wages.

Where:
Diva Indian Bistro, 246 Elm Street, Somerville, MA.

When:
Tomorrow, Friday, October 19th at 6:00 p.m.

For more info please contact:
Laura González at 617 629 4731. Ex. 229

COME DOWN TO DAVIS SQUARE TOMORROW AND SUPPORT IMMIGRANT WORKERS IN STANDING UP FOR THEIR LABOR RIGHTS!!
¡UNION! ¡PODER! ¡JUSTICIA!

# # #
Centro Presente is a state-wide, membership-based Latino immigrant organization that advocates for immigrant rights and for economic and social justice through the integration of community organizing, leadership development and basic services.


--
Patricia Montes
Executive Director
Centro Presente
617.629.4731 x211
pmontes@cpresente.org<mailto:pmontes@cpresente.org>
www.cpresente.org<http://www.cpresente.org>

Celebrating Centro Presente's 30 Years of Working with the Latin American Immigrant Community and Fighting for Social and Economic Justice.

Celebrando 30 Años trabajando con la Comunidad Immigrante Latinoamericana y Luchando por Justicia Social y Económica.

Jill Stein Arrested



The World Can't Wait
Stop the Crimes of Your Government
Donate | Local Chapters | Store | Previous Newsletters

October 22 is the National Day of Protest to STOP Police Brutality, Murder, and the Criminalization of a Generation.

Monday, people around the U.S. will be out against mass incarceration and police abuse.
Find out where in dozens of cities.


Stand up for Freedom Fighters!

Four defendants going on trial in Queens, NY next week, including our national office staffer Bob Parsons, are among dozens of people who were arrested over the past year in response to the call issued by Carl Dix and Cornel West to stop “Stop & Frisk.” Twenty of us, including Bob and myself, were convicted of disorderly conduct in Manhattan but were given no jail time.

Now, nineteen face trial in Queens and Brooklyn. Instead of being put on trial and possibly serving jail time, people who put their bodies on the line to fight injustice should be commended for serving public interest.

Yet the Queens District Attorney office is piling charges on these protesters. Months after the protest, the DA added another charge that carried another year of jail time, without citing anything additional the defendants had done. On October 9, the DA changed the charges, adding "acting in concert" to the charges without informing the defense. This DA was unable, or unwilling, to effectively prosecute the cops who murdered the unarmed Sean Bell in 2006 in a hail of 50 bullets, but it is vigorously trying to put people in jail for protesting injustice.

It is important that this travesty of justice not be allowed to go down without opposition. We intend to win these legal cases and to fight them in a way that builds the fight to stop “Stop & Frisk.” We need your help to do that. October 23 marks the start of the first of 5 upcoming trials. Here’s what you can do:


On Monday October 22, between the hours of 9am and 5:00 pm EST, call the office of District Attorney Richard A Brown: 718-286-6000. Ask that all charges for protesting stop-and-frisk be dropped on:

Carl Dix, Jamel Mims, Robert Parsons and Morgan Rhodewalt.

The next morning, we'll be demanding the same thing at a rally as the trial opens. Write me with the DA's response, please.
DONATE

Dear Northeast Impeachment Coalition,

Despite what you may have seen on the screen Tuesday night, there were little pockets of truth-telling at Hofstra University. World Can't Wait and the kNOw Drones tour were out with two drone replicas driving home the message "Stop the Drone War!" and "Humanity and the Planet Come First!" Act-Up and Queerocracy brought the real lives of people suffering with AIDS to the media. Access to abortion and birth control was a contended question, too.


And Green Party candidate Jill Stein called the debate commission, which kept all third party candidates out of the debates, "entirely illegitimate." Jill and her running mate Cheri Honkala were arrested trying to enter the Hofstra campus, and held for eight hours in a warehouse set up for protest detainees. They were chained to chairs until after the debate ended. Democracy Now reported this morning:

Like other third-party candidates, Stein was blocked from participating in the debate by the Commission on Presidential Debates, which is controlled by the Republican and Democratic parties. Stein and Honkala were held for eight hours, handcuffed to chairs. As she was being arrested, Stein condemned what she called "this mock debate, this mockery of democracy."

Stop the Drones
World Can't Wait activists reported, "There was a group of Obama supporters apparently organized by the campaign, some of whom took the palm cards we were passing out and some of whom tried to deny Obama was using drones and had a kill list. We challenged the teenagers among them to go home and do their research about those and the other things we say on the card the next president will continue to do."

Share
this video from a news show in Cincinnati with those you know who don't believe Obama has a kill list. Nick Mottern (kNOw Drones) was quoted by patch.com:

Not only are these drone strikes terrorizing and killing innocent Afghan civilians, says Know Drones' founder Nick Mottern, of Hastings on Hudson, but they are breeding more hatred among those in the Middle East toward America.

"It's a heavy weight to bear morally, but to think you can kill people in other countries with no consequences, no blow-back, is infantile ... It's adding gasoline to the fire," Mottern said. "The people in Afghanistan not only don't like that we're killing them with drones, but they are insulted that we would send this machine to kill them like bugs rather than sending someone to fight them."

View more photos here and here.
If I don't spend much time in these messages demolishing illusions that Mitt Romney would be fit to be run things, it's because we value the political astuteness of our audience. You came together to drive out the Bush regime. I appreciated the woman who asked Romney, within the confines of last night's debate, why he wouldn't be the same as Bush. The problem is that both Romney and Obama advance policies to the right of Bush on key questions.

For those who have written me heartfelt messages — I hope I've answered all you personally — asking whether to vote, or who to vote for in this election.

Be very engaged in the real issues affecting humanity and the planet. Join World Can't Wait in speaking and acting in defense of people's rights against domestic political repression and mass incarceration; for a real end to U.S. occupation of Afghanistan and threats to bomb Iran.
Debra Sweet, Director, The World Can't Wait
Click to tweet or share on Facebook:

World Can't Wait - info@worldcantwait.org - 866.973.4463 - 305 West Broadway #185, NY, NY 10013
Send checks or money orders, payable to "World Can't Wait":
World Can't Wait
305 W. Broadway #185
New York, NY 10013

For sponsorship level donations, or if you wish to make stock donations please contact Samantha Goldman samantha@worldcantwait.org, 866-973-4463.

To make a tax-deductible donation of $100 or more in support of WCW's educational activities, please make checks out to "World Can't Wait/Alliance for Global Justice," a 501(3)(c) organization.

Budget For All Referendum

Urgent: Volunteers and publicity needed for Budget for All Referendum!

Vote Yes on Budget for Allsee list of 5 volunteer tasks below
contact: Paul Shannon, pshannon@afsc.org or Duncan McFarland, mcfarland13@gmail.com
The Budget for All referendum for peace and justice is on the ballot in much of the greater Boston area and other parts of Massachusetts. Publicity is now the big challenge: numerous progressive political officials are supporting the initiative and many people like the referendum and will vote yes -- but lots of potential supporters still haven't heard about it. We need UJP groups to help get the word out. UJP community groups can play a crucial role in winning a big YES vote on Nov. 6 -- activity at the grassroots level is critical ! With only three weeks left until the Nov. 6 election, now is the time when voters are listening and we have the opportunity to send our message!
The referendum calls for protecting social security and other essential programs, ending the wars and reducing the military budget, and funding jobs and our communities. The full text, flyers, media support and other resources are at the Budget for All website:
For more information: www.justicewithpeace.org
Volunteers are needed for the following tasks:
  1. to bring our flyers to the many events coming up over the next few weeks, and where possible to inform people at these events about the referendum
  2. to help our coordinators in the different districts carry out outreach activities on the local level (holding our rally signs, handing out flyers, etc.)
  3. getting our press releases into local media outlets
  4. having a presence at as many polling places throughout the state as possible on election day itself
  5. “Thank you” leafleting on the Thursday after the election in towns where we win the vote
If you can volunteer for any of these tasks, please let us know.
To make sure Paul sees your email response, please write “HELP: Volunteers needed” in the subject line and email pshannon@afsc.org
Upcoming Events:

Peace Groups Spied Upon

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Veterans For Peace Spied Upon

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Promoted to Headline (H3) on 10/18/12

Veterans For Peace Illegally Spied on By Boston Police Fusion Center


By (about the author) Permalink

Veterans For Peace in Boston, the late VFP member Howard Zinn, and several other peace organizations in Boston have been routinely spied on for years, and records kept on their peaceful and lawful activities. The Boston Police Department and the Boston Regional Intelligence Center, BRIC, (the local "fusion center") have collected and kept so-called "intelligence reports" documenting constitutionally protected speech and political activity. While not a single report refers to any engagement in or plans for violence, peace rallies are called "Criminal Acts," and the reports are labeled as dealing with "Extremists," "Civil Disturbance," and "HomeSec-Domestic."
Fusion center employees working for the Boston Police, the FBI, and the Homeland Security Department have been a constant presence at peace events and have interrogated peace activists about purely legal activities. The ACLU and the National Lawyers Guild have obtained documents and videotapes after suing on behalf of five organizations and four individuals. One of the organizations is Veterans For Peace -- Chapter 9 Smedley D. Butler Brigade. The ACLU/NLG report and a related video are here: http://aclum.org/policing_dissent
The video includes commentary by Pat Scanlon, Coordinator of Veterans For Peace, Chapter 9. Pat is a decorated Vietnam Veteran, a graduate of the United States Army Intelligence School at Fort Holabird, Maryland. He was an Intelligence Analyst, held a top-secret clearance and worked in Intelligence at MACV headquarters in Saigon for the year of 1969.
"While in the Army," says Scanlon, "I was in Military Intelligence. I saw and handled numerous files of investigations conducted by the U.S. Army on U.S. citizens and students participating in local peace activities in their communities and on college campuses. This recent revelation of the Boston Police monitoring peace activists in Boston is proof of what I believe is a continuation of forty years of this kind of surveillance and monitoring of peace groups and individuals around the country by police and other government agencies."
Scanlon objects to being labeled an "extremist" for opposing war. "Who are the real extremists here, let me get this straight. Members of Veterans For Peace, veterans who have dutifully served our country, many in the line of fire, many with military decorations, who have personally experienced the horrors of war and now stand for peace are labeled as extremists and monitored by local police departments as a threat. While those who illegally took this country to war in Iraq resulting in over 4,700 deaths of our young men and women, 30,000 wounded, 30% suffering from PTSD, suicide rates increasing 15% each year, 1,000,000 Iraqis killed, 3,000,000 Iraqi refugees now scattered in countries around the world: These folks are not considered extremists, yet members of Veterans For Peace are? What is wrong with that picture?"
Michael T. McPhearson, National Coordinator of United for Peace and Justice, and a Veterans For Peace Board Member, added, "I am saddened that my nation which I have served as a soldier in the army has wandered so far off track that calling for peace, justice and respect for life and liberty is considered an extreme position. Is the next step to quiet my voice and take my right to free speech?"
Leah Bolger, national president of Veterans For Peace, was dismayed to learn of these practices. "To learn that Veterans For Peace has been labeled as an 'extremist' organization is absolutely shocking," said Bolger. "Veterans For Peace is an organization of military veterans who, from the day of our inception in 1985, have dedicated ourselves to using non-violent means to end war and militarism. Our experiences with combat and the military have taught us that war is immoral and counter productive; we now use our voices as veterans to denounce and resist the illegal and immoral military actions of our own country. It is quite disturbing to learn that our government is so threatened by our voice that they have resorted to spying on us, and characterizing us as 'extremists.' This is a very sad commentary."
Fusion centers that combine federal and local departments and militarize policing are all over the country, not just in Boston. The ACLU/NLG report provides some context:
"These revelations come on the heels of a report by a bipartisan US Senate subcommittee, which found that the federal government's work with state and local fusion centers -- among them the BRIC -- 'has not produced useful intelligence to support Federal counterterrorism efforts.' 'Fusion centers' were created in the aftermath of 9/11, ostensibly so the federal government could 'share terrorism-related information with states and localities.' One of two 'intelligence fusion centers' in Massachusetts, the BRIC was created in 2005 as 'a way to further integrate the intelligence capabilities of Boston, local, state and federal law enforcement partners.' Since then, it has received millions of dollars in federal funding and operated entirely absent independent public oversight or accountability. According to the Senate subcommittee report released earlier this month, the lack of accountability at fusion centers nationwide has translated into poor results: the report found that the millions of dollars poured into centers like the BRIC have failed to uncover a single terrorist plot. Instead, fusion centers have 'forwarded "intelligence" of uneven quality -- often times shoddy, rarely timely, sometimes endangering citizens' civil liberties and Privacy Act protections, occasionally taken from already-published public sources, and more often than not unrelated to terrorism.' When they were related to terrorism, intelligence reports produced by fusion centers 'duplicated a faster, more efficient information-sharing process already in place between local police and the FBI-led Terrorist Screening Center.' One Department of Homeland Security (DHS) official told investigators that fusion centers produce 'a lot of"predominately useless information,' and at times, said another, 'a bunch of crap.'"
Watch WHDH-Channel 7 news report: http://bit.ly/TfIhnf
Listen to WBUR-90.9 news report: http://bit.ly/WEoUnb
Veterans For Peace was founded in 1985 and has approximately 5,000 members in 150 chapters located in every U.S. state and several countries. It is a 501(c)3 non-profit educational organization recognized as a Non-Governmental Organization (NGO) by the United Nations, and is the only national veterans' organization calling for the abolishment of war.
http://davidswanson.org
David Swanson is the author of "When the World Outlawed War," "War Is A Lie" and "Daybreak: Undoing the Imperial Presidency and Forming a More Perfect Union." He blogs at http://davidswanson.org and http://warisacrime.org and works for the online (more...)

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The Latest From The Private Bradley Manning Support Network-Free Bradley Manning Now! President Obama Pardon Bradley Manning- Update

Click on the headline to link to the "Private Bradley Manning Support Network"for the latest information on his case and activities on his behalf .

*********

We of the international anti-war movement were not able to do much to affect the Bush- Obama Iraq war timetable or, as of now, the Afghanistan one, but we can save the one hero of that war, American soldier Private Bradley Manning. The Manning legal case, and Private Manning as an exceptionally brave individual, can and should serve to rally all those looking for a concrete way to express their anti-war outrage at the continuing atrocious American imperial war policies. The message below can serve as a continuing rationale for my (and your) support to this honorable whistleblower.
*********
The following are remarks that I have been focusing on of late to build support for Private Manning’s cause at stand-outs, marches and rallies.

Veterans for Peace proudly stands in solidarity with, and in defense of, Private Bradley Manning.

I stand in solidarity with the alleged actions of Private Bradley Manning in bringing to light, just a little light, some of the nefarious war-related doings of this government, under Bush and Obama. Those precious bits of information leaked to Wikileaks about American soldiers committing war atrocities in Iraq as chronicled in the tape known on YouTube as “Collateral Murder” and the Iraq and Afghan War Diaries. If he did such acts they are no crime. No crime at all in my eyes or in the eyes of the vast majority of people who know of the case and of its importance as an individual act of resistance to the unjust and barbaric American-led wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. I sleep just a shade bit easier these days knowing that Private Manning may have exposed what we all knew, or should have known- the Iraq war and the Afghan war justifications rested on a flim-flam house of cards. American imperialism’s gun-toting flim-flam house of cards, but cards nevertheless.

I am standing in solidarity with Private Bradley Manning because I am outraged by the treatment meted out to Private Manning, presumably an innocent man, by a government who alleges itself to be some “beacon” of the civilized world. Bradley Manning has been held in solidarity at Quantico, other locales, and now at Fort Leavenworth in Kansas for over two years, and has been held without trial for longer, as the government and its military try to glue a case together. The military, and its henchmen in the Justice Department, have gotten more devious although not smarter since I was a soldier in their crosshairs over forty years ago.

Many of us have become somewhat inured to the constant cases of jackboot torturous behavior on the part of the American military in places like Guantanamo, Bagram and other national security hellhole black box locations against foreign nationals. We have also become inured, or at least no longer surprised, when American civilian citizens are subject to such actions, and more likely death.

However, as recent allegations of pre-trial torturous conduct condoned by high military authority (see the allegations and motion to dismiss charged on the Bradley Manning Support Network website) by Private Manning’s civilian defense lawyer David Coombs make clear, those acts are not confined to foreign nationals and American civilian citizens. The torture of Private Manning, an American soldier, by the American government should give us all pause. And should have us shouting to the heavens for his release.

These are more than sufficient reasons to stand in solidarity with Private Manning and will be until the day this brave soldier is freed by his jailers. And I will continue to stand in proud solidarity with Private Manning until that great day.

I urge everyone to sign the petition calling on the American military to free Private Bradley Manning either here or on the Bradley Manning Support Network website. And if we cannot get Private Manning freed that way I urge everyone to begin a campaign in your area to call on President Barack Obama, or whoever is president while Private Manning is incarcerated, to pardon this brave soldier. The American president has the constitutional authority to grant pardons to the guilty and innocent, the convicted and those facing charges. I call on President Obama to pardon Private Manning now.
**********

Update 10/18/12: Hearing regarding motion witnesses begins, defense gains access to more evidence

Yesterday was the beginning of a two-day hearing in which the defense and prosecution will argue over which witnesses will testify about delays in court proceedings. Coombs wants to use witnesses to argue that Bradley Manning has been denied a speedy trial as guaranteed by law, and thus his charges should be dismissed. Read our notes from Day 1. You can also read about Day 1 and Day 2 of the court proceedings on Firedoglake’s website.
Judge Lind has ruled that the government must turn over an additional 600 e-mails to Bradley Manning’s defense. The emails discuss the military’s plans to respond to queries from reporters about Manning’s detention, preparing for protests, changes to Manning’s list of visitors and other details, according to the judge. This is a small victory in these court proceedings, and will give the defense a fuller picture into the motivations behind Bradley’s solitary isolation at Quantico. Read more here.

Bradley Manning supporter Peter Van Buren is known as the author for “We Meant Well: How I helped lose the battle for the hearts and minds of the Iraqi people.” He says “I am a former US State Department employee and I wore my Free Bradley Manning T-shirt to work on my last day to remind my former State colleagues what freedom of speech means.” Thank you, Peter.

The Latest From The Private Bradley Manning Support Network-Free Bradley Manning Now! President Obama Pardon Bradley Manning- Pre-Trial Hearings


Click on the headline to link to the "Private Bradley Manning Support Network"for the latest information on his case and activities on his behalf .

*********

We of the international anti-war movement were not able to do much to affect the Bush- Obama Iraq war timetable or, as of now, the Afghanistan one, but we can save the one hero of that war, American soldier Private Bradley Manning. The Manning legal case, and Private Manning as an exceptionally brave individual, can and should serve to rally all those looking for a concrete way to express their anti-war outrage at the continuing atrocious American imperial war policies. The message below can serve as a continuing rationale for my (and your) support to this honorable whistleblower.

*********

The following are remarks that I have been focusing on of late to build support for Private Manning’s cause at stand-outs, marches and rallies.

 Veterans for Peace proudly stands in solidarity with, and in defense of, Private Bradley Manning.

I stand in solidarity with the alleged actions of Private Bradley Manning in bringing to light, just a little light, some of the nefarious war-related doings of this government, under Bush and Obama. Those precious bits of information leaked to Wikileaks about American soldiers committing war atrocities in Iraq as chronicled in the tape known on YouTube as “Collateral Murder” and the Iraq and Afghan War Diaries. If he did such acts they are no crime. No crime at all in my eyes or in the eyes of the vast majority of people who know of the case and of its importance as an individual act of resistance to the unjust and barbaric American-led wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. I sleep just a shade bit easier these days knowing that Private Manning may have exposed what we all knew, or should have known- the Iraq war and the Afghan war justifications rested on a flim-flam house of cards. American imperialism’s gun-toting flim-flam house of cards, but cards nevertheless.

I am standing in solidarity with Private Bradley Manning because I am outraged by the treatment meted out to Private Manning, presumably an innocent man, by a government who alleges itself to be some “beacon” of the civilized world. Bradley Manning has been held in solidarity at Quantico, other locales, and now at Fort Leavenworth in Kansas for over two years, and has been held without trial for longer, as the government and its military try to glue a case together. The military, and its henchmen in the Justice Department, have gotten more devious although not smarter since I was a soldier in their crosshairs over forty years ago.

Many of us have become somewhat inured to the constant cases of jackboot torturous behavior on the part of the American military in places like Guantanamo, Bagram and other national security hellhole black box locations against foreign nationals. We have also become inured, or at least no longer surprised, when American civilian citizens are subject to such actions, and more likely death.

However, as recent allegations of pre-trial torturous conduct condoned by high military authority (see the allegations and motion to dismiss charged on the Bradley Manning Support Network website) by Private Manning’s civilian defense lawyer David Coombs make clear, those acts are not confined to foreign nationals and American civilian citizens. The torture of Private Manning, an American soldier, by the American government should give us all pause. And should have us shouting to the heavens for his release.

These are more than sufficient reasons to stand in solidarity with Private Manning and will be until the day this brave soldier is freed by his jailers. And I will continue to stand in proud solidarity with Private Manning until that great day.

I urge everyone to sign the petition calling on the American military to free Private Bradley Manning either here or on the Bradley Manning Support Network website. And if we cannot get Private Manning freed that way I urge everyone to begin a campaign in your area to call on President Barack Obama, or whoever is president while Private Manning is incarcerated, to pardon this brave soldier. The American president has the constitutional authority to grant pardons to the guilty and innocent, the convicted and those facing charges. I call on President Obama to pardon Private Manning now.
***********

“Why can’t you be reasonable?” judge asks military in case to limit secrecy in Bradley’s trial

The CCR argued its case at the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces today for transparency in Bradley Manning’s court-martial trial. Judges questioned why the government forced the issue to come to court at all.
By Nathan Fuller. October 10, 2012.
The CCR’s Shayana Kadidal
During oral arguments in the Center for Constitutional Rights’ lawsuit against the government seeking public access to basic court documents in Bradley Manning’s court-martial trial, judges for the Court of Appeals of the Armed Forces demanded the government explain why it wouldn’t simply provide these documents in the first place.

When Army lawyer Capt. Chad Fisher said that the court wasn’t constitutionally required to provide public access to documents like prosecution briefs, transcripts, and rulings, Judge Margaret Ryan interrupted him to ask what she called a “common sense” question.
“Why can’t you just give it to them? Instead of making this a constitutional case, why can’t you just be reasonable?”

Fisher was unable to directly answer the question. Instead, he gave an array of responses that circumvented the basic issue: he repeated his belief that the court wasn’t obliged to make these records public, he said the fact that the public could attend the hearings meant they were “open,” he complained that the defense wasn’t asking the proper authority, and he reiterated the government’s position that the availability of FOIA provided sufficient public and press access.

The five judges repeatedly questioned and challenged each of Fisher’s points, particularly the idea that FOIA requests, to which the government frequently takes weeks, months, or even years to respond, provided sufficient and contemporaneous access, especially considering the fact that FOIA requests in this case have already been denied. They also pushed back on Fisher’s claim that “Nothing has been withheld” from the public and the press, based on the idea that attending the hearings amounts to fully accessing the proceedings.

“How is oral argument sufficient if you can’t read the briefs?” one judge asked.

“It’s not as if they’re speaking a foreign language,” Fisher responded.

But as journalists from the 30 major media outlets who submitted a supportive brief in this case explained, the media (and therefore the public) needs these documents to adequately cover the case:
“Journalists rely heavily on court documents to gain and provide to readers the background of and context surrounding a legal controversy — awareness and understanding of which is often necessary to accurately report on the dispute. Prior access to the materials also allows reporters, the overwhelming majority of whom have no legal background or education, to process the oftentimes complex legal theories at their own pace, or to interview a legal expert who could explain the issues, so they are better equipped to understand what is transpiring in a proceeding they attend.”
Shayana Kadidal, the CCR lawyer arguing in court today, similarly contended earlier this year that providing openness-in-name-only effectively “choked off” coverage of Manning’s hearings.
But the judges, not seemingly satisfied with Fisher’s responses, kept returning to the more elemental point that the government could avoid this litigation and a potential ruling that would affect courts-martial to come by simply turning over the documents requested. The court already has a process in place to redact documents, the judges noted, and parties settle extrajudicial matters with a compromise out of court all the time, so it seems perfectly feasible for the government to comply with the CCR’s reasonable request for access to the documents.

In the midst of this questioning, Fisher did concede what the CCR has long observed: that Guantanamo tribunals – hardly beacons of transparency – were less secretive than Bradley Manning’s court-martial, because the public could access filed briefs and transcripts to those proceedings.
The CCR’s Kadidal fielded a similar though not quite as lengthy barrage of questioning from the appeals court judges. The first issue they raised was whether this court even has jurisdiction to make a ruling on this case, as their jurisdiction has been narrowly limited and it isn’t clear that they have standing to make a ruling that affects the press and public alike. Kadidal responded that the government hadn’t raised this issue in their replies, and so he would need an additional 10 days to file a supplement that addresses the court’s jurisdiction.

Judge Ryan also wanted to know whether there was precedent for this court to compel the production of documents that didn’t yet exist. She was referring to the CCR’s request for transcripts of RCM 802 conferences, the private telephonic meetings Judge Denise Lind holds between Ft. Meade hearings with both the defense and the prosecution. She also wanted Kadidal to account for how exactly the documents would hypothetically be produced: who would transcribe the hearings, or who would pay a stenographer?

Kadidal responded that an audio file would be acceptable, but on the issue more generally, he said he believes the court should make a First Amendment ruling granting the press the right to these documents and let lower courts adjudicate the logistics. Judges replied that it was unclear that the First Amendment affords contemporaneous access to these documents: in other words, it might be wholly constitutional for the court to provide these documents after the fact.

Kadidal will submit his jurisdictional supplement in 10 days, and the government will submit a reply less than a week later. It’s unclear when or if this court will issue a ruling, or when exactly the parties might return to court. We’ll update our coverage of this case as it unfolds.
 

The Latest From The Private Bradley Manning Support Network-Free Bradley Manning Now! President Obama Pardon Bradley Manning- Take action! Pressure the military to improve media access to the Bradley Manning trial

 
http://www.bradleymanning.org/
 
Click on the headline to link to the "Private Bradley Manning Support Network"for the latest information on his case and activities on his behalf .
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We of the international anti-war movement were not able to do much to affect the Bush- Obama Iraq war timetable or, as of now, the Afghanistan one, but we can save the one hero of that war, American soldier Private Bradley Manning. The Manning legal case, and Private Manning as an exceptionally brave individual, can and should serve to rally all those looking for a concrete way to express their anti-war outrage at the continuing atrocious American imperial war policies. The message below can serve as a continuing rationale for my (and your) support to this honorable whistleblower.
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The following are remarks that I have been focusing on of late to build support for Private Manning’s cause at stand-outs, marches and rallies.
 
Veterans for Peace proudly stands in solidarity with, and in defense of, Private Bradley Manning.
 
I stand in solidarity with the alleged actions of Private Bradley Manning in bringing to light, just a little light, some of the nefarious war-related doings of this government, under Bush and Obama. Those precious bits of information leaked to Wikileaks about American soldiers committing war atrocities in Iraq as chronicled in the tape known on YouTube as “Collateral Murder” and the Iraq and Afghan War Diaries. If he did such acts they are no crime. No crime at all in my eyes or in the eyes of the vast majority of people who know of the case and of its importance as an individual act of resistance to the unjust and barbaric American-led wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. I sleep just a shade bit easier these days knowing that Private Manning may have exposed what we all knew, or should have known- the Iraq war and the Afghan war justifications rested on a flim-flam house of cards. American imperialism’s gun-toting flim-flam house of cards, but cards nevertheless.
 
I am standing in solidarity with Private Bradley Manning because I am outraged by the treatment meted out to Private Manning, presumably an innocent man, by a government who alleges itself to be some “beacon” of the civilized world. Bradley Manning has been held in solidarity at Quantico, other locales, and now at Fort Leavenworth in Kansas for over two years, and has been held without trial for longer, as the government and its military try to glue a case together. The military, and its henchmen in the Justice Department, have gotten more devious although not smarter since I was a soldier in their crosshairs over forty years ago.
Many of us have become somewhat inured to the constant cases of jackboot torturous behavior on the part of the American military in places like Guantanamo, Bagram and other national security hellhole black box locations against foreign nationals. We have also become inured, or at least no longer surprised, when American civilian citizens are subject to such actions, and more likely death.
 
However, as recent allegations of pre-trial torturous conduct condoned by high military authority (see the allegations and motion to dismiss charged on the Bradley Manning Support Network website) by Private Manning’s civilian defense lawyer David Coombs make clear, those acts are not confined to foreign nationals and American civilian citizens. The torture of Private Manning, an American soldier, by the American government should give us all pause. And should have us shouting to the heavens for his release.
 
These are more than sufficient reasons to stand in solidarity with Private Manning and will be until the day this brave soldier is freed by his jailers. And I will continue to stand in proud solidarity with Private Manning until that great day. I urge everyone to sign the petition calling on the American military to free Private Bradley Manning either here or on the Bradley Manning Support Network website. And if we cannot get Private Manning freed that way I urge everyone to begin a campaign in your area to call on President Barack Obama, or whoever is president while Private Manning is incarcerated, to pardon this brave soldier. The American president has the constitutional authority to grant pardons to the guilty and innocent, the convicted and those facing charges. I call on President Obama to pardon Private Manning now.

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Take action! Pressure the military to improve media access to the Bradley Manning trial

Pressure the military to do the right thing. Call the military Public Affairs Office at Fort Meade and demand that transcripts, judge decisions, prosecution motions, and other basic documents must be made available to the press and public! Call 301-677-1361 then sign the letter below!
By the Bradley Manning Support Network. October 9, 2012.
Bradley Manning will have spent 983 days in prison before his trial begins in February.
This Wednesday, October 10th, lawyers for the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) will argue before the Court of Appeals of the Armed Forces to bring transparency to the secretive trial of accused WikiLeaks whistle-blower Army PFC Bradley Manning. This hearing is open to the media and public. CCR attorneys will argue that the military must make transcripts, judge decisions, prosecution motions, and other basic documents available to the press and the public.
“Public scrutiny plays a vital role in government accountability. Media access to the Manning trial proceedings and documents is critical for the transparency on which democratic government and faith in our justice system rests,” said CCR Legal Director Baher Azmy at the time of the initial filing. CCR has called Manning’s proceedings more secretive than tribunals at Guantanamo Bay in many aspects.
Let’s show our support by putting pressure on the military to do the right thing. Transcripts, judge decisions, prosecution motions, and other basic documents must be made available to the press and public!

Call the military Public Affairs Office at
301-677-1361.
Ask them what can be done to improve the situation.

Ask the Fort Meade Public Affairs Office to improve media access to the Bradley Manning trial

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