Sunday, October 29, 2017

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

WARS ABROAD, WARS AT HOME

A National Call for a Moral Revival and the New The Poor People's Campaign
The mass meeting at Boston’s historic Trinity Church on October 19…   signaled the kickoff of a modern civil rights movement and launch of a new Poor People’s Campaign. We were revitalizing what the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. had started before his assassination.  In the 1960’s, Dr. King had surprised many by adding opposition to the Vietnam War to the civil rights campaign he was leading. The same linkage of struggle on behalf of the poor, with opposition to militarism, is now a logical path.  Reverends Liz Theoharis and William J. Barber II, leaders of the Poor People’s Campaign, took the stage at Trinity Church and both spoke with a prophetic fire. We must challenge systemic racism, poverty, voter suppression, environmental destruction, and militarism, they argued. Wars increase social upheaval and hurt the poor. Instead, invest in schools, affordable housing, job training, and healthcare for all.   More

Inspired by Martin Luther King Jr, a new civil rights leader takes center stage
The 54-year-old pastor from North Carolina is not just here to preach – this is the start of what he hopes will be a nationwide movement to complete the work that King could not. It is the first organised campaign of civil disobedience in the Donald Trump era. It’s aim? To bring about a “moral revival across the US”…  Barber – who co-chairs the campaign with the Rev Dr Liz Theoharis, a pastor from New York City – hopes to sign up 1,000 people in 25 states and DC for a season of civil disobedience in the spring of next year. Protesters will stage sit-ins at state capitols and in the US Congress under a “moral agenda” encompassing a host of issues, from LGBTQ and voting rights to immigration reform and access to healthcare. The campaign will not say yet how many people have signed up, but it has partnered with dozens of local groups across the country to avoid what Barber describes as “helicopter leadership”. “Liz and I are almost like a travelling course of theology and public activism, and then we turn it over to the anchor groups in each of the states,” he says.  It is perhaps the most ambitious civil rights campaign since the 60s, and will be underpinned by Barber’s work inNorth Carolina, where he served as president of the NAACP state chapter for more than a decade before resigning earlier in the year to take on this national role.    More


(Image: Lauren Walker / Truthout; Adapted: The US Army / Damien Gadal)Republicans/Neocons Push for Massive Military Spending and Global Domination
Congress is working to spend more on bolstering military capabilities than it has in years, but that's not enough for neoconservative war hawks who see escalating global military might as central to protecting national interests, despite years of seemingly endless war.  The American Enterprise Institute (AEI), an influential neoconservative think tank with close ties to the architects of the invasion of Iraq and other Bush administration wartime policies, released a report last week calling for a sweeping expansion of the nation's global military footprint and budget increases at the Pentagon that would exceed congressional caps by $672 billion over the next five years.   More

Congress Just Voted to Destroy the Safety Net to Deliver Tax Cut to the Rich
The GOP-controlled House of Representatives on Thursday narrowly passed a Senate-approved budget resolution that moves Republicans one step closer to their ultimate goal of delivering massive tax breaks to the wealthiest Americans and imposing "grotesque" and "heartless" cuts to Medicare, Medicaid, and other life-saving safety net programs…  Despite insistence from President Donald Trump and the GOP that their budget is pro-working class, analysis after analysis has shown that their proposals would in fact raise taxes on many middle class families while sending an enormous windfall—$1.5 trillion over the next decade—to the top one percent.  Meanwhile, notes Vox's Dylan Matthews, "the federal welfare state would be rolled back in just about every dimension."  "All non-Medicare health programs would see a cut of $1.3 trillion, or nearly 30 percent, by 2027," Matthews adds. "Medicare would be cut too, to the tune of $473 billion. There is $1 trillion over 10 years in mystery cuts to mandatory programs, cuts that would in practice almost certainly hurt programs for the poor."    More

In case you missed it. . .
“TAX REFORM” LIES: A Scorecard
Modern conservatives have been lying about taxes pretty much from the beginning of their movement. Made-up sob stories about family farms broken up to pay inheritance taxes, magical claims about self-financing tax cuts, and so on go all the way back to the 1970s. But the selling of tax cuts under Trump has taken things to a whole new level, both in terms of the brazenness of the lies and their sheer number. Both the depth and the breadth of the dishonesty make it hard even for those of us who do this for a living to keep track.    More

AFL-CIO 2017 Convention Resolution:
WAR IS NOT THE ANSWER
[…]WHEREAS, it is vital that the workers and our unions promote a foreign policy independent of the political interests and foreign policy of Wall Street and corporate America;  THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, that the AFL-CIO promotes and advocates for a foreign policy based on international solidarity of all workers, mutual respect of all nations and national sovereignty, and calls upon the president and Congress to make war truly the last resort in our country’s foreign relations, and that we seek peace and reconciliation wherever possible; and 
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the AFL-CIO calls upon the president and Congress to bring the war dollars home and make our priority as a nation rebuilding this country’s crumbling infrastructure, creating millions of living wage jobs and addressing human needs such as education, health care, housing, retirement security and jobs. . .    More

Related imageDisaster Capitalists Take Big Step Toward Privatizing Puerto Rico’s Electric Grid
The federally appointed control board announced that it intends to put the Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, or Prepa — the island’s sole, beleaguered power utility — under the direction of an emergency manager.  Months before either hurricanes Maria or Irma struck, the board had been enthusiastic about the prospect of privatizing Prepa, which is $9 billion in debt. Oversight board chair José B. Carrión III was explicit about one of Zamot’s main goals shortly after he was brought on: to “privatize the Electric Power Authority as soon as possible,” as he told the Puerto Rican newspaper Metro at the end of August.   In June, four of his seven colleagues on that control board wrote a Wall Street Journal op-edcalling openly to privatize Prepa, and in July they contracted with the consultancy firm McKinsey to — among other things — draw up “detailed privatization/corporatization plans supported by financial models and market engagement.”    More

In Victory for Standing Rock Sioux, Court Finds That Dakota Access Pipeline Violated Law
The Standing Rock Sioux Tribe won a significant victory today in its fight to protect the Tribe’s drinking water and ancestral lands from the Dakota Access pipeline.  A federal judge ruled that the federal permits authorizing the pipeline to cross the Missouri River just upstream of the Standing Rock reservation, which were hastily issued by the Trump administration just days after the inauguration, violated the law in certain critical respects.  In a 91-page decision, Judge James Boasberg wrote, “the Court agrees that [the Corps] did not adequately consider the impacts of an oil spill on fishing rights, hunting rights, or environmental justice, or the degree to which the pipeline’s effects are likely to be highly controversial.”    More

Image result for Opioid Empire of PainTHE FAMILY THAT BUILT AN OPIOID EMPIRE OF PAIN
In the past, doctors had been reluctant to prescribe strong opioids—as synthetic drugs derived from opium are known—except for acute cancer pain and end-of-life palliative care, because of a long-standing, and well-founded, fear about the addictive properties of these drugs…  Purdue launched OxyContin with a marketing campaign that attempted to counter this attitude and change the prescribing habits of doctors. The company funded research and paid doctors to make the case that concerns about opioid addiction were overblown, and that OxyContin could safely treat an ever-wider range of maladies. Sales representatives marketed OxyContin as a product “to start with and to stay with.”  … Since 1999, two hundred thousand Americans have died from overdoses related to OxyContin and other prescription opioids. Many addicts, finding prescription painkillers too expensive or too difficult to obtain, have turned to heroin. According to the American Society of Addiction Medicine, four out of five people who try heroin today started with prescription painkillers.    More


http://org.salsalabs.com/o/161/c/3952/images/YemenDestruction.jpgSTEPHEN KINZER:
How to End the Endless War
The upcoming vote — if House leaders let it happen — will be about far more than Yemen. It is a test of whether Congress will continue allowing presidents to make decisions that push the United States into war, or whether it will awaken from its constitutional coma and assert its own right to do so. More than 200 years ago, when President Thomas Jefferson asked for authorization to send warships to fight pirates in North Africa, he said presidents are “unauthorized by the Constitution, without the sanction of Congress, to go beyond the line of defense.” Does that principle still apply, or does today’s rapidly changing “threat matrix” mean that Congress should stay out of the business of war? This question lies behind the upcoming congressional vote on Yemen.    More

H.Con.Res.81 – “Directing the President pursuant to section 5(c) of the War Powers Resolution to remove United States Armed Forces from unauthorized hostilities in the Republic of Yemen” with 38 cosponsors, including McGovernCapuano and Clarke from Massachusetts.

WHY WERE US SOLDIERS EVEN IN NIGER?
President Trump’s inexplicable fight with the widow of a Green Beret who was killed in Niger has sparked a political firestorm that shows no signs of dying down. It’s also brought new attention to a little-known aspect of Washington’s ongoing war on terror: The Pentagon is rapidly expanding its presence in Africa and is now engaged in military operations — including active combat — in more than half a dozen African countries…  The missions rely on a broad array of legal authorities but have one particularly important thing in common: They have never been specifically authorized by Congress, let alone discussed and debated by the American public.   More

Senators Stunned to Discover We Have 1,000 Troops in Niger
The death of four U.S. Special Operations Forces troops in Niger has generated a raucous conversation about how presidents should comfort bereft Gold Star families.  But, quietly, it’s fueling a more difficult debate than whether a phone call or a letter suffices in the aftermath of tragedy; mainly, why were U.S. troops in the country in the first place, and does Congress need to exert more authority when it comes such deployments?  Many lawmakers assiduously duck these questions. But on the Sunday shows, several were forced to address them in the aftermath of four soldiers dying under still-mysterious circumstances near the small town of Tongo Tongo. In the process, two powerful Senators tacitly admitted that they hadn’t even known the extent of U.S. involvement in Niger in the first place.    More

Ukraine Expects Trump to Approve Arms Deliveries
Multiple current and former officials and congressional aides tell FP that the president is deciding on the dispatch of lethal aid for Ukraine, which is mired in a three-year conflict with Russian-backed separatists in the eastern part of the country. Sources say the defensive arms could include sniper rifles, counter-artillery radar, air defense hardware, and possibly even Javelin antitank missiles.  If the United States were to finally send arms to Ukraine, it would mark a significant shift in U.S. policy — and a dramatic departure from Trump’s campaign rhetoric. Ahead of the Republican National Convention in July 2016, the Trump team worked to make sure the platform would not include a call to arm Ukraine.   M

Maine Peace Walk Activists renew call for Bath Iron Works switch

Group outlines many benefits of non-military work at Bath facility
 
BY NATHAN STROUT
Times Record Staff
BRUNSWICK
Activists converged locally last week to renew their call for Bath Iron Works to be converted to non-military use.
As part of the sixth annual Maine Peace Walk, activists in the Bath/Brunswick area distributed fliers, hosted a conversation and held vigils outside of the shipyard.
“We’ve done peace walk six out of the last seven years,” said Bruce Gagnon, coordinator of the Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space. “It’s always about peace and the environment.”
While the Maine Peace Walk usually has a bit more walking, this year the groups involved congregated locally to call for the conversion of BIW to non-military work and to address climate change.
“Climate change is severe right now, and if we don’t do something about it on a massive national scale, we’re sunk. We’re literally sunk, and our kids and grandkids have no future,” said Gagnon.
Part of that massive reaction to climate change needs to be a reorientation of the nation’s industrial vision toward building solar and tidal power and mass transit, said Gagnon.
“How can we create these technologies? Where are we going to do that? Well, you’ve got an industrial production plant right in our community, why not do it there?” said Gagnon.
For Gagnon and the other activists gathered in the Bath/Brunswick area for the week, BIW offers a perfect intersection of their interests — peace and the environment. As anti-military activists, they would like to see BIW turn away from the construction of destroyers for the Navy. Instead, they claim, the company should build things like equipment for solar and wind energy production.
Additionally, they argue, it would be better for the environment to shrink the military and the industrial base that supports it.
“The military is the biggest polluter on the planet,” said Gagnon.
Gagnon points to a University of Massachusetts study that says defense spending would create more jobs if spent elsewhere — which is to say, BIW could hire more people if it converted to the construction of non-military things.
“I call it a win-win-win. It’s a win for the environment. It’s a win for the peace movement, because we’d move away from endless war. And it’s a win for the humans, because you’d get more jobs,” Gagnon said.
On Tuesday, activists walked from Bath to Brunswick, where they held a supper and panel discussion at the Unitarian Universalist Church. Together, the panel discussed BIW’s impact on the region and the world through the construction of destroyers for the Navy.
“General Dynamics is the fourth largest war profiteering corporation in the world, and that’s something to speak out against,” said moderator Jason Rawn of Veterans for Peace.
“Maine is dependent on our politicians successfully bringing defense jobs and defense contracts into our state,” said Bath activist Leslie Manning. “Ten percent of our gross domestic product in the state of Maine is reliant on military contracts. We are very much caught up in this web.”
While the message may not be terribly popular in a community heavily dependent on work at BIW, Gagnon says that people are becoming more receptive to their arguments.
“People are noticing that the weather is changing. It’s not so cold here this time of year when it’s supposed to be much colder,” said Gagnon. “Even in Bath, there’s a much greater net positive response than any kind of negative response.”

From Veterans For Peace- You Can Make Peace Possible!

Thank you for supporting Veterans For Peace. Your generous gifts of time, energy and resources have ensured your voice as a veteran for peace is heard in the national debate about war and peace.

Veterans For Peace is continuing the momentum we have created together. Your financial support and volunteer activism is needed more than ever. We mu
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We are living in challenging times, but with your help we know that Veterans For Peace is ready to meet these challenges and build a more peaceful and just world. Can you help by donating $50 or more today?

Peace is Possible, but it will not happen by itself. You can help make it happen.
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From Socialist Alternative On The Minneapolis Election Campaign

  
Corporate lobbyist PACs are pouring money into the Minneapolis elections, issuing a call to action against Socialist Alternative candidate Ginger Jentzen. We need your help to beat back the PACs, and time is running out. The deadline to donate before the final campaign finance report is midnight tonight. Can you donate $5, $25, or $100 right now?
Donate now
Friends,

With only two weeks left until election day,
 the attacks against the Ginger Jentzen campaign have begun. Downtown Developer PAC “Minneapolis Works!” is joining forces with the “Minnesota Jobs Coalition,” a major statewide Republican Super PAC, to try to buy this election. The Minnesota Jobs Coalition received $725,000 last year alone from the Republican State Leadership Committee (RSLC), a Washington D.C. based GOP organization, in addition to many more thousands in corporate cash from organizations like Philip Morris’s parent company, the behemoth which spends millions lobbying against cigarette health warnings. And Minneapolis Works! is flooding the city - including Ward 3, where Ginger is running - with misleading mailers for establishment candidates.
Ginger Jentzen's campaign is about building a new kind of politics, independent of the political establishment and corporate cash. As a city council member, Ginger will accept only an average worker’s wage, and will donate the rest of her $80,000/year salary to the Trump resistance and social justice movements. With bold ideas like taxing big developers to build affordable housing and rent control being discussed in Minneapolis for the first time in decades, Team Ginger is demonstrating that it’s possible to run a powerful campaign that, like Bernie Sanders’ campaign, is not for sale.
Standing up against the billionaire class and winning gains for working people requires more than good intentions. Working people need elected representatives who will fight unambiguously for renters and working people, while building social movements.
As the Executive Director of 15 Now Minnesota, Ginger built a powerful coalition of social justice organizations, unions, faith groups, neighborhood organizations and supportive small businesses, based around grassroots organizing, protests, and strikes, to win a historic transfer of wealth from big business to 71,000 low-income workers in Minneapolis. This is a victory that overwhelmingly benefits women and people of color, at a time when Trump and the Republicans are hell-bent on carrying out hateful right-wing policies.
In these final two weeks, we can expect waves of attack mailers against Ginger's campaign, potentially radio and TV ads, and more, all designed to mislead voters. We can’t match Super PACs dollar for dollar, but we have a much more powerful weapon - the power of working people.
There are nearly 30,000 registered voters in Ward 3. The Ginger Jentzen campaign needs to raise $2,500 by midnight tonight - the deadline for their final campaign finance report - to print enough new literature and mobilize their hundreds of volunteers to reach voters with their calls to make Minneapolis affordable to all. That’s a lot, but if 100 people chip in our median donation of $25, we can do it.
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In Boston- HEAR: Trita Parsi: Future of the Iran Nuclear Deal

HEAR:

Trita Parsi: Future of the Iran Nuclear Deal
Suffolk University Law School, 120 Tremont St., Boston
Sargent Commons, 5th Floor

Wednesday, November 1 @ 5:30 pm - 7:00 pm

Join Massachusetts Peace Action to hear Trita Parsi speak on the future of the Iran Nuclear Deal 
Through the Iran Deal, the international community achieved a landmark victory for non-proliferation by establishing an agreement from Iran to allow intrusive inspection of its nuclear facilities to allay fears by the US and others that Iran was developing nuclear weapons in return for relief from damaging sanctions. This agreement has been praised across the globe.
Trita Parsi will speak about his new book Losing an Enemy – Obama, Iran, and the Triumph of Diplomacy regarding the success of the Iran Deal and how it is now at risk under the Trump Administration.  He will sign copies after the talk.
Dr. Parsi is the President of the largest Iranian-American grassroots organization in the US, the National Iranian American Council, and has taught at Johns Hopkins University and George Washington University. He currently teaches at the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University in Washington DC.
For the Suffolk event, a donation of $10 is requested to help cover costs, from those not part of the Suffolk community; no one will be turned away. Dr. Parsi will also speak at Tufts University at 2:30 pm the same day; check our website for room number.
The Iran nuclear deal – formally known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) – has been under attack by President Trump and his supporters. Trump has threatened to decertify it, even though on fully eight occasions the International Atomic Energy Association (IAEA) has confirmed Iran’s compliance with the terms of the JCPOA.
Following two years of negotiations, the JCPOA was signed in July 2015 by diplomats from the U.S., U.K., France, Germany, Russia, China, and Iran, and endorsed by a Security Council resolution. The European Union’s foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini declared that according to the agreement, "Under no circumstances will Iran ever seek, develop or acquire nuclear weapons."
More recently, Mogherini declared at a meeting at the United Nations secretariat in September and on a PBS New Hour segment on October 11 that decertifying the JCPOA would backfire on the U.S., as it would be isolated internationally and regarded as an unreliable partner that could not be trusted with agreements. She added that the European Union, Russia, China, and other international partners would abide by the JCPOA no matter what the Trump Administration decided, but that reneging on a Security Council resolution would seriously damage America’s reputation.
While this decertification does land a significant blow to the deal, it does not automatically bring it to an end. Congress will have 60 days to vote on legislation to re-impose sanctions waived under the nuclear agreement. If this passes, then the deal is very likely dead. Indications are that this vote could be very close.

For peace and diplomacy,
Prof. Valentine M. Moghadam
Massachusetts Peace Action
Middle East Working Group

Visit our website to learn more about joining the organization or donating to Massachusetts Peace Action!
We are 60 years old in 2017!  Support our 60th anniversary fund drive.
We thank you for the financial support that makes this work possible. 
Massachusetts Peace Action, 11 Garden St., Cambridge, MA 02138
617-354-2169  • 
info@masspeaceaction.org
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'Someone Else is Controlling Our Fate, We're Tired of It'

 




'Someone Else is Controlling Our Fate, We're Tired of It'

 
Video of Maine Peace Walk panel discussion at Unitarian Church in Brunswick on October 17.

Panelists include:

Joyakgol – South Korean peace activist from Jeju Island who has been working for the past 20 years to stop US base expansion in his country.  He also works to protect the endangered Indo-Pacific Bottlenose Dolphins who daily circle Jeju Island and are now threatened by the new Navy base.
Destroyers built at BIW have begun to port at the new base.

Leslie Manning – Quaker activist will speak about budgets as moral documents and the need to build political support for cutting the bloated Pentagon budget.

Ed Friedman – Local environmental activist will discuss BIW’s impact on the life in the Kennebec River.

Mary Beth Sullivan – Social worker from Bath will speak about how conversion of BIW is possible and could create more jobs by building rail, solar, wind and tidal power systems to help deal with climate change.


Video production by Peter Woodruff and Martha Spiess

Hingham (Ma) Public Library to host “The Vietnam War” film screening and lecture

Hingham Public Library to host “The Vietnam War” film screening and lecture

The Hingham Public Library has been selected by the American Library Association (ALA) and WETA Washington, DC, to receive a programming kit for “The Vietnam War,” a 10-part documentary film by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick that originally aired on PBS stations in September.
As part of the award, the Hingham Public Library will host Harvard historian Fredrik Logevall, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Embers of War and consultant on the Ken Burns/Lynn Novick film “The Vietnam War,” for a lecture entitled Making Sense of the Vietnam War, on Saturday, Nov. 4 at 3 p.m. Why did the Vietnam War happen and turn out as it did, and what does it mean for us today? Logevall considers anew one of the  most consequential and trying chapters in American history.
The Library will also screen part three of “The Vietnam War” (“The River Styx”) followed by a discussion with Hingham Vietnam Veterans, one of whom can be seen in the film, on Tuesday, Nov. 21 from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.
In “The Vietnam War,” filmmakers Burns and Novick tell the epic story of the conflict as it has never before been told on film.The film features testimony from nearly 80 witnesses, including many Americans who fought in the war and others who opposed it, as well as Vietnamese combatants and civilians from both the winning and losing sides. Learn more about the film.
The Hingham Public Library was one of 50 U.S. public libraries selected to receive the kit through a peer-reviewed competitive application process. More than 350 libraries applied, according to ALA. View the list of selected libraries.
The Hingham Public Library will receive a copy of the 18-hour documentary series on DVD, with public performance rights; the companion book, “The Vietnam War: An Intimate History” by Geoffrey C. Ward and Ken Burns (Alfred A. Knopf, a division of Penguin Random House, 2017); a programming guide, promotional resources, partnership opportunities and more.
The kit is designed to help libraries participate in a national conversation about one of the most consequential, divisive and controversial events in American history.
The project is offered by the ALA Public Programs Office in partnership with WETA Washington, DC.
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