tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-254134722009-02-20T21:29:21.466-05:00Grassroots to Green ShootsSocio-Political Commentary and AnalysisScotthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14049211925852798446noreply@blogger.comBlogger18125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25413472.post-83384064720912643012008-06-17T05:38:00.002-05:002008-06-17T18:42:02.051-05:00What Is UN Reform?Reforming the United Nations is an idea whose popularity has been waxing and waning for several years now, but what exactly does it mean? The Bush administration has said very little in the way of detailing what it wants to see changed and the corporate media does not seem interested in clueing the public in either. The Bush administration has been vocal in suggesting that the UN might become nothing more than a debate society when the body has not approved of that administration’s policies, particularly towards Iraq. The idea here is that when the UN supports US policy it is effective and relevant, but when it opposes US policy it becomes an organization in crisis, lacking a raison d’etre. I suppose it would be bad form to suggest that the United Nations’ success in securing peace, human rights, and development is sometimes best manifested when it successfully resists the power and influence of the global superpower.<br />The most in depth statement from Washington D.C. that I could find regarding UN reform comes from a speech by Assistant Secretary of State Kim Holmes at a luncheon hosted by the UN Foundation. Holmes lists many generic and vague goals for UN reform such as efficiency and effectiveness while noting that the “United Nations works best when its member states and the United States work together.” She goes on to say that “this requires US leadership.” So the message here is when we are the boss, the UN “works best.”<br />The Assistant Secretary of State vaguely addresses the draft resolution put to expand the Security Counsel to include Brazil, Germany, India and Japan. Holmes never mentions that a draft resolution exists, but does offer support for Japan’s inclusion in the UN Security Counsel. Presumably, the US is looking for a state that won’t leave the US vetoing resolutions all by itself, as is usually the case. It’s sensible for the US to oppose bringing Brazil, Germany, and India into the picture. Brazil and Germany were both vocal opponents to the war on Iraq and all three states represent serious economic and political challenges to US hegemony. Brazil and Germany have the two biggest economies in their respective continents. If India could halt the brain-drain to the United States, it conceivably could become the technology capitol of the world. Kim Holmes offers no reason for admitting Japan into the Security Counsel in the speech, but has some condemnation for the unnamed others. She states “many proposals have more to do with enlarging the voice of certain nations in the UN than in making the institution itself more effective, efficient, or capable of dealing with some the world’s largest problems.” How insidious, to want to have a larger voice. Apparently the idea here is only the victors of World War II which currently constitute the 5 permanent members of the security council plus Japan, deserve a large voice.<br />For Holmes, the US voice is not large enough though. One of the reforms proposed by the Assistant Secretary would give the US even more power in the UN by “weighted voting of UN members in deciding budgets.” The weighting would be determined by the size of the dues that states are required to contribute to the United Nations. The US being the wealthiest country is required to pay the most. Imagine if this proposal was adopted in the US. When you go to the polls, you would get to cast one vote while Bill Gates would get to cast 1,000. I guess that idea of one person, one vote is old fashioned. Every institution is in need of constant tweaking to adjust to changing circumstances. Large institutions being more prone to ossification are in particular need, because they will always lag behind the changing times. The US proposals to reform the UN however are nothing more than thinly veiled attempts of the global superpower to throw its weight around in an attempt to gain more weight to throw around.<br />There are other proposals for UN reform many of which are concerned with the UN Security Council. Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has revived a proposal to eliminate the veto power of the five permanent members of the UN Security Council. The US is in the lead in use of the veto among the five permanent members including a veto of Resolution 44/29, which in part “calls upon all States to fulfill their obligations under international law.” A comprehensive listing of US vetoes is available at <a href="http://www.krysstal.com/democracy_whyusa03.html">http://www.krysstal.com/democracy_whyusa03.html</a>. What is telling is that so many of the US vetoes are applied to resolutions which condemn the US for breaking the law. Perhaps this is precisely what the US and the other four victors of World War II (France, Britain, Russia, and China) had in mind when they conceived of the UN Security Council which elevated them alone above all others.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/25413472-8338406472091264301?l=grassrootstogreenshoots.blogspot.com'/></div>Scotthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14049211925852798446noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25413472.post-68240163589360199882008-05-01T18:32:00.000-05:002008-05-01T18:35:40.266-05:00What Is Being DoneFor those who suffer the short end of the stick or who are in solidarity who those who do, the troubles of the day are no mystery and scarcely need mentioning. On the small possibility that some other class of men or women are reading this column let me briefly mention a few; war, poverty, environmental destruction. The eternal question is ‘what is to be done.’ No doubt the men and women of letters follow behind the men and women of action in answering such a question. After all, science is much involved with observation of action and the a priori determinations of philosophy are just best guesses. So it is appropriate to mark May Day, the International Workers Day since the Industrial Revolution began, not by a lengthy exposition on what is to be done, but rather a useful notation on what is being done. <br /><br />The anti-war movement has coalesced through an umbrella coalition called United for Peace and Justice (UNPJ). Working with over 1,300 member organizations UNPJ has been organizing some of the biggest public demonstrations in decades focusing on seven campaigns; Iraq, counter-military recruitment, global justice, nuclear disarmament, Palestine/Israel, civil liberties/immigrant rights, and faith based organizing. These public demonstrations are critical in such an atomized society as ours where majority opinion appears to most individuals within that majority to be only the idiosyncrasy of their own mind.<br /><br />The International Longshore and Warehouse Union has called for the first industrial action in the US to oppose a US war in decades. The ILWA will be shutting down ports on the West Coast for May Day to temporarily block participation in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Similarly, for two weeks in November 2007, the Olympia Port Militarization Resistance interrupted the flow of military weapons and cargo at the Port of Olympia where US Naval ships dock. Over the two-week period intermittent Sit-ins and barricades stopped the flow of military equipment for as long as 17 hours in one instance. Professor Peter Bohmer from the nearby Evergreen State College noted that this stoppage was longer than the street closings at the 1999 WTO Conference protests (Battle in Seattle). <br /><br />In the last several years the most dynamic actor in the labor movement has been from the most challenged sector. In Florida the Coalition of Immolakee Workers has overcome difficulties such as workers lacking residency papers, limited English skills, and lack of National Labor Relations Board protection. Farmworkers were excluded from the National Labor Relations Act which created the NLRB, therefore the federal government does not recognize farmworkers rights to union representation and collective bargaining. None-the-less, the CIW has won major concessions from Yum! Brands which owns Taco Bell and McDonalds. Concessions won by the CIW include both wages and work place conditions. The Student/Farmworker Alliance’s role in the CIWs campaigns was surely crucial as 22 Taco Bells were either removed or prevented from locating on high school and college campuses in the Boot the Bell campaign. <br /><br />Again in Florida, decades of organizing and pressure from the environmental movement have created a situation where a conservative state has elected Green Elephants, Republicans committed to environmental protection. In Orange County, Major Richard Crotty is converting the counties fleet vehicles to hybrids, proposed to put solar energy panels on the county convention center, and endorsed a regional smart growth plan. In the governor’s office, Charlie Crist has blocked the de-listing of the manatee from the states endangered species list and directed state agencies to adopt energy practices to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in Florida to 80% of 1990 levels. Environmental activists in Florida have pushed Republicans in the state to more progressive environmental policy positions than most Democrats in the country.<br /><br />This is a small sampling of what is being done. Although the successes mentioned here are profound, the day-to-day struggle to achieve these victories is not. The day-to-day work is making phone calls, planning, sending emails, making websites, organizing events, talking to people and a host of other unspectacular activities. This is good news! It means that we need not wait for the politicians or scientists or men and women of any special class to rescue us from society’s troubles. It seems that we would be waiting for a long time! May Day or International Workers Day is an opportunity to remind ourselves and others of our own powers and capacities to make positive social change when we work together in solidarity.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/25413472-6824016358936019988?l=grassrootstogreenshoots.blogspot.com'/></div>Scotthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14049211925852798446noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25413472.post-82685336353269133582008-04-16T17:36:00.000-05:002008-04-16T17:37:49.965-05:00A Dangerous GameWith the farcical declaration of independence in Kosovo, US foreign policy may be embarking on a quite dangerous game with potentially serious consequences. If you are not familiar with this sham spanning two decades, Diana Johnstone’s article in Z Magazine and others provide good background. The short version of this history begins with conflict and tension between ethnic Albanians and Serbs. Usually ignored is the fact that before the bombing their were more Serb deaths than ethnic Albanians. Serb deaths were at the hands of the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA). Regardless of the legitimacy of their cause, the KLA qualifies as a terrorist organization by any standard. We now know that the KLA was receiving CIA assistance likely with the implication that if the stir up enough trouble, the US will intervene on their behalf. These two facts destroy the myth of a genocide and of a humanitarian war. How can there be genocide if the purported victims are doing most of the killing? That’s like the US claiming to be victims of genocide at the hands of Native Americans because they dared to shoot back. Before the bombing, NATO Commander Wesley Clark correctly predicting that the NATO bombing of Serbia/Kosovo would escalate the violence in the region, and so it did. The crimes that Serb forces have been prosecuted for all took place after the NATO bombing. As Johnstone’s article points out the “negotiations” were designed to fail and the US manufactured a war to give NATO a raison d’etre in the post-Soviet world. Their mission was no longer to counter the now non-existent Warsaw Pact, but rather humanitarian intervention. <br /><br />Fast-forward to the present and you have the most dependent and underdeveloped province of Serbia with a post-war economy and polity dominated by mafia, gambling, and prostitution interests declare independence. No one in the corporate media or government blushed at saying so despite this “independent” state hosting a large US military base, Camp Bondsteel, and being “UN-administered.” Practically speaking Kosovo will remain dependent on the US, UN, and/or NATO as it has always been dependent on Belgrade. Jane’s Intelligence Review states that “Albania has become the crime capital of Europe. The most powerful groups in the country are organized criminals who use Albania to grow, process, and store a large percentage of the illegal drugs destined for Western Europe... Albanian criminal gangs are actively supporting the war in Kosovo.”<br /><br />It seems that the US has successfully declared a portion of another country independent; A form of annexation with the trappings of independence and self-determination. This is similar to what empires have long practiced. Here-to-fore empires have usually invaded a country, overthrown their leadership, and set up a client government to manage the country in its entirety in the interest of the empire. Perhaps the more nuanced imperialists of the Clinton administration saw this as superfluous and decided they would manage just the small portions of states which served their needs. <br /><br />If this nuanced tactic continues to be successful, we can imagine where else it may be employed. It is already rumored that the CIA is working with disgruntled ethnic minorities in the oil rich provinces of Iran. Also, it is know that the US Agency for International Development (US AID) is conducting educational programs concerning regionalism, decentralization, and local autonomy in the hydrocarbon rich areas of Bolivia. Local autonomy is now US AID policy in Bolivia since the Movement Towards Socialism (MAS) party won the presidential election. This should not be seen as a principled position in the spirit of American Federalism. If that were the case, the US would be supporting the much more legitimate cause of local autonomy in the oil producing regions of Nigeria. Locals in Nigeria suffer severe damage to agricultural and fishery resources at the hands of corporate oil companies without receiving any of the benefits of the extraction. Rather than promote federalism in Nigeria, the US has long supported the corrupt central government that has used heavy-handed tactics to suppress both violent and non-violent opposition groups in the oil producing regions. <br /><br />This tactic of global control could prove to be quite dangerous for the interests of peace and justice because it is based on a principle hypocritically applied. Unlike controlling the biggest army or the best bombs, a principle can be adopted by anybody. Unpopular militants like ETA in the Basque region in Spain can claim independence and launch a new round of violence in the name of this noble principle of local self determination just as easily as more legitimate claims such as the Palestinians under Israeli occupation. In fact, the Hamas government has threatened to unilaterally declare independence following the Kosovo announcement. It is possible we could see a great number of small militant groups like the KLA and ETA declare independence and start bombing until some regional or global power finds a self-interested reason to support the claim. This would likely cause great suffering for the people caught up in the violence as small militant groups go bombing for dollars waiting for one or another power to move in to grant them “independence.” The ETA/Spain example is very pertinent, as Spain has worked hard for many years to peaceably negotiate autonomy deals with the Basque, Galician, and Catalonian regions. All that could be undercut by the Kosovo example.<br /><br />Again, because this tactic of partial annexations is based on a hypocritically applied principle rather than a physical weapon, it can be employed readily by others. Russia too has already threatened to support breakaway regions in Georgia. The Georgian government is now headed by a pro-western president who is seeking NATO and EU membership. If this tactic is vigorously pursued by the great powers, it may lead to a modified Cold War scenario. Rather than a bipolar conflict, there may be several poles; Russia, China, India, etc. Also, the pawns will not be whole countries, but rather strategic regions which coincide with racial, ethnic, or political minorities. And finally, the battle cry will not be ‘freedom’ or ‘anti-communism’ but rather self-determination and autonomy. <br /><br />Like the US Cold War escapades in Latin America, the first enemy to subdue in this dangerous game is domestic public opinion. The public must be made to believe not that we are annexing a part of another country in violation of the law, but rather that we are benevolently aiding some oppressed people in achieving self-determination and independence. It is at this point the social movements can intervene and work to subvert this imperial tactic. The first task for those who seek to organize the world on the basis of civilized behavior as opposed to force and violence is to lay bare the hypocrisy in the application of these abused principles.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/25413472-8268533635326913358?l=grassrootstogreenshoots.blogspot.com'/></div>Scotthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14049211925852798446noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25413472.post-92132970471048085232008-02-02T14:33:00.000-05:002008-02-02T14:39:00.645-05:00Free Trade vs. Fair TradeFree Trade and Fair trade are both market based economic systems. Both rely on a market place where producers may bring products for sale and consumers may choose just what they want when they want provided they can pay for it. The similarities end there though. Examining who organizes and benefits from each rubric goes a long way to explain the modes of each system.<br /><br />Free Trade is organized at trade conferences and negotiations, many of which are conducted in secret. That fact is suggestive for reasons that should be obvious. Where these proceedings are more or less open, they are attended by the political elite. Presidents and ambassadors who have varying degrees of accountability to the publics they represent. These proceedings are heavily influenced by the play of power, regardless of the intentions of the participants therein. States with great militaries or strategic resources have great influence over others. One might say diplomacy is practiced, but not democracy. Other loci of Free Trade organization and planning are the secret meetings and judicial proceedings of global organizations such as the World Trade Organization (WTO), International Monetary Fund (IMF), and World Bank. While these organizations have had a great degree of secrecy from their inception, secrecy has become even more important since their meetings attract protest crowds numbering in the thousands. The “Battle in Seattle” is the most significant US example. In these secret meetings corporate and political elites decide how to dismantle tariffs, price supports, social spending, subsidies, and other “barriers to trade.” What is usually unstated is how they decide NOT to dismantle these modes. While all preach the “neoliberal free trade” gospel, the most radical free trade ideology, those that sing the loudest are often the most hypocritical. For instance, the US and to a lesser degree Europe, still maintain many tariffs and subsidies on steel and agricultural products. This fact exposes these proceedings as little more than the imposition of power, not principles.<br /><br />The organization of the Fair Trade rubric is derived from completely different sources serving different interests. Fair Trade is organized by consumers and producers working through non-profit organizations. Non-profit and stakeholder organizations such as Transfair and Fair Trade Labeling Organizations International (FLO) establish environmental, labor, and democracy standards which producers may choose to meet to receive the Fair Trade Certified label. The certification provides the producers with minimum price guarantees and help with global marketing. It also allows consumers to choose products made under the conditions just stated and avoid supporting slave labor, child labor, sweatshop labor, and environmental harm. While consumers have a role in the labeling organizations, their most crucial role lye in the decentralized, networked advocacy groups who promote Fair Trade as a consumer option and work to establish Fair Trade purchasing policies in their popular institutions like governments, schools, churches, and social clubs. The multiplicity of networked voluntary associations working to organize Fair Trade demonstrates a far more democratic mode of economic activity.<br /><br />The resulting values of the Free Trade and Fair Trade rubrics are determined by the organization modes previously noted. Free Trade, organized by the Corporate and Political elite, values ever increasing profits. The profit seeking compulsion will suffer no borders and so must expand world wide, often with the assistance of state violence threatened or realized. Free Trade also values oligarchic political-economic decision-making. Recall that you don’t get a vote, a delegate, or even a representative at secret meetings. Free Trade values investor and corporate rights. NAFTA is mostly an investor’s rights agreement. Unless you are willing to consider GM moving a car from a GM factory in Mexico to a GM factory in the US trade, NAFTA has not and was not designed to increase trade. It simply allowed the previously mentioned action to be conducted with more ease to the detriment of workers in both the US and Mexico since, under the new rules, high paying union jobs in Michigan could be outsourced to union busting countries such as Mexico. Finally, Free Trade values commodification. Commodification is the process of turning something not previously considered in economic terms into another product to be bought and sold under free market conditions. Nothing is sacred. Everything from genes to workers are commodified and therefore subject to the demands of the most powerful players in the market. Traditions and rights have no place here unless they can be put on a t-shirt and sold.<br /><br />From Fair Trade flows a wholly different set of values. Traditional knowledge and creativity are given an opportunity to flourish in the world market. Human rights such as the right to organize labor unions are part of the Fair Trade rubric. While solidarity at the loci of production is valued, a new kind of solidarity is developed by Fair Trade. Solidarity between the producers and the consumers. Producers and Consumers in the global market under conditions of Free Trade are narrowly concerned only in one’s profit and the other’s price. The Fair Trade rubric develops mutual concern for the interests of both producer and consumer. While the international union movements have encouraged concern between union producers in one country and union consumers in another, the expansion of this global solidarity outside of union circles maybe a novel development in human affairs. Environmental protection and sustainable development as well as democratically organized workplaces are values specific required by Fair Trade Certification. Many Fair Trade producers also contribute to community development. Producers are encouraged to set aside some income for education, transportation, housing, and health care.<br /><br />The different values realized under Fair Trade conditions and the democratic organizational forms that give rise to these values and are desiderata themselves are the reason Fair Trade sales, like certified organic sales, continue to rise rapidly. The embrace of these values and the global solidarity built outside of the working class labor movments signifies a new era of civilizing tendencies that is both product and accelerant, a positive feedback loop.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/25413472-9213297047104808523?l=grassrootstogreenshoots.blogspot.com'/></div>Scotthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14049211925852798446noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25413472.post-13487898139807195882007-06-09T15:25:00.000-05:002007-06-13T18:10:35.069-05:00Compulsions to Urban SprawlWhile the public seems to be opposed to urban sprawl and strongly in favor of smart growth principles, municipalities have been uninterested in the problem. Urban sprawl is likely to cause severe problems for municipalities in terms of providing services for less dense, distant communities in terms of providing services such as transportation, fire, police, sewer, water. The burdens sprawling developments are likely to place on municipalities would logically precipitate grave concern for planners, but concern about urban sprawl seems to exist only in the social movements and in the unorganized population.<br /><br />The reason for this is certainly not stupidity <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_0">on</span> the part of elected officials. Even at the local level, political offices tend to be occupied by <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_1">career</span> politicians with degrees. If one considers the likely political ramifications of shifting away from urban sprawl policies to more homeostatic urban economic policies, the cause for the continuation of urban sprawl policies becomes evident.<br /><br />The US has been able to maintain continuing urban sprawl policies far longer than Europe simply because, after the majority of the prior inhabitants of this continent were exterminated or extirpated, there has been a ready supply of open space on which to build. Big green lawns have long been the epitome of housing in the US. Crowded <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_2">tenements</span> in a concrete jungle is for the Old World. It is important to know which is the horse and which is the carriage here. Surely, the capacity to create a housing infrastructure dominated by single family residences and big lawns came before the idea that this mode is the most desirable or most "American." The Europeans who came here certainly were either city dwellers or peasant farmers. They could not conceive of a sparse suburban subdivision. This is important when considering the main compulsions of of urban sprawl. Again, the public is opposed to more urban sprawl as polls such as the one conducted for Smart Growth America demonstrates (<a href="http://www.smartgrowthamerica.org/poll.pdf">http://www.smartgrowthamerica.org/poll.pdf</a>). People will certainly say they want big lawns if asked, but put the question in context of larger issues such as urban sprawl and smart growth and the answers start changing.<br /><br />The short term, localized impetus for urban sprawl is of course profits for businesses and tax revenues for politicians. Land at the periphery of urban centers can be acquired at a far cheaper price than land near the urban center. This increases the profits that can be gained by new construction. For politicians, an increase in the number of businesses and homes provides greater tax revenues with which to pursue pet projects for personal aggrandizement. The burden mentioned above in terms of providing sprawling communities with services is circumvented by simply resisting demands to provide services, and not just to the sprawling communities, but to the whole municipality. Public transportation, health care, homelessness services are all underfunded in the US.<br /><br />The more significant and deep seated compulsion for continuing unsustainable urban sprawl policies is class based. It is part of a larger program to quell the 'levelling tendencies' of the lower classes by 'making the pie larger,' or as George W. Bush put it, making "the pie higher." The idea is to keep the public satisfied and complacent by giving them an ever larger slice of pie by making the whole pie larger, but without changing the grossly <span class="blsp-spelling-corrected" id="SPELLING_ERROR_3">disproportionate</span> sizes of each slice of the pie.<br /><br />With respect to urban sprawl, just imagine if every municipality in the US drew a line around their jurisdiction and said 'thus far and no more.' With the supply of cheap homes at the urban periphery drying up, rental and purchase prices for homes would increase precipitously. The higher costs would demand significant wage increases if not a complete restructuring of the home market away from free market priciples. Probably both. The ramifications of this development should be immediately clear. Higher wages equal lower profits. Its an inverse relationship. Business is sacrificing our last green spaces to keep home prices and thereby wages low to keep profit margins high. Politicians are collaborators in this effort to increase their tax revenues for public expenditures that interest and benefit themselves. No doubt, they also seek to avoid a fundamental restructuring of society since the current distrubution of wealth and power is what has delivered them into public office with all of its privileges.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/25413472-1348789813980719588?l=grassrootstogreenshoots.blogspot.com'/></div>Scotthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14049211925852798446noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25413472.post-18765167008925716292007-04-16T17:55:00.001-05:002007-04-16T17:55:48.882-05:00Fair Trade for a Greater Orlando Coalition Announces World Fair TradeFair Trade for a Greater Orlando Coalition (FTGOC) will be presentingthe second annual World Fair Trade Day in Orlando on May 12, 2007.The theme of this year's celebration is "Take the Initiative". Theevent will feature fair trade and local vendors, local musicians, anda renewed advocacy campaign by FTGOC organizers. Music performancesand informational presentations will begin at noon on Saturday.FTGOC is working to build public support for fair trade purchasingpolicies for the cities and campuses in the greater Orlando area.The event will be hosted by Dandelion Communitea Café at 618 ThortonAve. from noon – to sunset in downtown's Thorton Park neighborhood.Take the Initiative: turn out to support Fair Trade at the SecondAnnual World Fair Trade Day in Orlando.FTGOC is a broad based community coalition united in support of FairTrade.For more information visit www.ftgoc.org.<br /><a href="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FairTradeOrlando/">http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FairTradeOrlando/</a><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/25413472-1876516700892571629?l=grassrootstogreenshoots.blogspot.com'/></div>Scotthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14049211925852798446noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25413472.post-75712068058700209692007-02-19T22:18:00.000-05:002007-03-07T17:16:09.182-05:00US-Iran Crisis Wrong Direction for UN and Non-ProliferationThe US is laying the groundwork for war with Iran (with ample assistance from The New York Times once again) by making two completely unsubstantiated claims. The first is ironic to the point of laughter and warrants little consideration. That claim is that Iran is supporting militants by supplying <span class="blsp-spelling-corrected" id="SPELLING_ERROR_0">weaponry</span>. The announcement was made in a press briefing where the reporters were only allowed in if they agreed to leave all recording devices outside the room and not to name any of the sources. I trust I don't need to explain the irony of criticizing Iran for <span class="blsp-spelling-corrected" id="SPELLING_ERROR_1">meddling</span> in Iraq's internal affairs. The claim is stupid since Iraq already has a <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_2"><span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_0">Shia</span></span> dominated government that Iran is close to. Why would Iran want to stir things up? <span class="blsp-spelling-corrected" id="SPELLING_ERROR_3">Coincidentally</span>, Iran has accused the US of supporting anti-government militants in Iran. The militants happen to live in the oil producing areas of Iran.<br /><br />The second claim the US is making while offering no evidence is that Iran is working to build nuclear <span class="blsp-spelling-corrected" id="SPELLING_ERROR_4">weapons</span>. The US is using this claim to compel the UN to impose economic sanctions on Iran and is using it to lay the groundwork for a new war. A few basic questions immediately come to mind when considering how to act with respect to the US claims. First; has Iran violated the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty? Signatories to the treaty such as Iran are obliged to refrain from developing nuclear <span class="blsp-spelling-corrected" id="SPELLING_ERROR_5">weapons</span>. The treaty specifically authorizes the development of nuclear energy technology. Iran has announced that it has enriched uranium to 3.5%, enough for nuclear energy but not the 90% needed for nuclear weapons. The <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_6"><span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_1">IAEA</span></span> states there is no evidence Iran has a nuclear weapons program. They are still looking. A second question that comes to mind, which is absolutely out of the bounds of what can be published in a corporate newspaper, is; has the US violated the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty? The treaty obliges states that already have nuclear weapons to do two things. The first, to refrain from disseminating technology which may lead to more nuclear weapons in other states. The US just signed a nuclear technology deal with India, a state that has not singed on to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. The second obligation, to reduce existing stockpiles of nuclear weapons. The Bush administration has made several <span class="blsp-spelling-corrected" id="SPELLING_ERROR_7">announcements</span> about intentions to fund the development of a new generation of "mini-nukes,"usable nukes," and "bunker busting nukes."<br /><br />The fact that the US would make false claims such as those that preceded the Iraq war and ignore its own treaty violations is not surprising. As the famous journalist I.F. Stone stated, "all governments lie." The disturbing part is that the US is being helped along by the United Nations. Both the UN Security Council and the Atomic Energy <span class="blsp-spelling-corrected" id="SPELLING_ERROR_8">Institute</span> are participating in the diplomatic campaign against Iran which even mainstream commentators are saying looks like a buildup to a war on Iran. The <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_2">IAEA</span> has set a deadline of February 21 for the cessation of all nuclear enrichment in Iran despite the fact that the only evidence of nuclear enrichment in Iran is quite within legal bounds for energy production. Given the fatwa issued by Iran Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_3">Khamenei</span>, it seems most likely that Iran seeks Japan's "<span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_4">paranuclear</span>" status. That is, they acquire the materials and technology to build nuclear weapons, but stop there. This would provide an elevated level of deterrence from US invasion.<br /><br />That the <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_5">IAEA</span> would be concerned with Iran's growing nuclear capabilities is worthy outside of context. In context, specifically in juxtaposition to the <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_6">US's</span> existing and proposed nuclear arsenals, the <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_7">IAEA's</span> concerns are silly. The US doesn't just have more nuclear weapons than anyone else, but they and Russia maintain their stockpiles ready to fire with only minutes notice. Worse than silly, the UN and <span class="blsp-spelling-error" id="SPELLING_ERROR_8">IAEA's</span> concerns place the UN in the role of servant to US ambitions. The most serious nuclear proliferation problem in the world isn't the US or Russian government's nuclear stockpiles. It's not the proliferation that the US has just signed a deal to participate in with India despite the tense relations with Pakistan. States operate fairly rationally. They have wealth, power, and territory at risk. The "loose nukes" of the former Soviet Union, however, could end up in the hands of state or non-state actors. Crazed terrorists, unlike states, have only their own lives to risk and do so readily. For the right price, the wrong people could acquire these loose nukes to disasterous effect.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/25413472-7571206805870020969?l=grassrootstogreenshoots.blogspot.com'/></div>Scotthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14049211925852798446noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25413472.post-1166241332827738442006-12-15T22:52:00.000-05:002006-12-15T22:56:35.356-05:00Consumer Choices Have Moral Consequences...Please consider these kinds of producers:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.northsouthmarketplace.com">http://www.northsouthmarketplace.com</a> (my friend's company)<br /><a href="javascript:ol(">http://www.market.theworkingworld.org/</a><br /><a href="javascript:ol(">http://www.traditionsfairtrade.com/pages/tradhome.html</a><br /><a href="javascript:ol(">http://www.americanapparel.net/</a><br /><a href="javascript:ol(">https://secure.democracyinaction.com/dia/organizations/Greens/shop/shop.jsp?storefront_KEY=4</a><br /><a href="http://www.nosweatapparel.com/">http://www.nosweatapparel.com/</a><br /><a href="http://www.carryabigsticker.com/">http://www.carryabigsticker.com/</a><br /><a href="javascript:ol(">http://www.northernsun.com/n/s/index.html</a><br /><a href="javascript:ol(">http://www.unionjeancompany.com/</a><br /><a href="javascript:ol(">http://www.justiceclothing.com/thereis/justice/</a><br /><a href="javascript:ol(">http://www.floridagreens.org/modules.php?op=modload&name=Web_Links&amp;file=index&req=viewlink&cid=54</a><br /><a href="javascript:ol(">http://store.gxonlinestore.org/</a><br /><a href="javascript:ol(">http://www.organicclothes.com/index.asp</a><br /><a href="javascript:ol(">http://www.unionlabel.org/</a><br /><a href="javascript:ol(">http://www.stalkmarket.net/</a><br /><a href="javascript:ol(">http://www.afscme.org/about/aa-cloth.htm</a><br /><a href="javascript:ol(">http://www.westernwindenergy.com/</a><br /><a href="javascript:ol(">http://www.shopunionmade.org/</a><br /><a href="javascript:ol(">http://www.solarpowergeneration.com/</a><br /><a href="javascript:ol(">http://www.bustedtees.com/male</a><br /><a href="javascript:ol(">http://www.kennethgordon.com/</a><br /><a href="javascript:ol(">http://www.protexallinc.com/store1/index.htm</a><br /><a href="javascript:ol(">http://www.unionmadeclothing.com/</a><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/25413472-116624133282773844?l=grassrootstogreenshoots.blogspot.com'/></div>Scotthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14049211925852798446noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25413472.post-1161545411034220532006-10-22T13:59:00.000-05:002006-10-22T14:30:11.046-05:00The New Labor MovementThere are strong signs that we are at the beginning of a new wave of successful union organizing. The AFL-CIO, often captive to the interests of party and capital, has seen a number of Unions split and form the Change to Win Coalition. The Change to Win Coalition is focusing on organizing on the shop floor instead of collecting dollars to give to the Democratic Party. A sensible strategy given that the last Democratic president not only refused to enforce existing labor law, but made existing law less usefull by enacting NAFTA. There are new loci of organizing as well. While California farmworkers have been organized for decades, the Coalition of Immokalee Workers has brought farmworker solidarity to a state that hasn't seen much of it, Florida. In a nation-wide campaign that saw affiliated student groups run Taco Bell off college campuses, the Coalition won major concessions for tomato pickers.<br />The new organizational forms are quite inspiring. Its hard to imagine two groups more different than Spanish speaking Latino tomato pickers and white middle class college students. This is the cross class interaction and solidarity that Jane Adams and John Dewey sought. Surely a sign of greater civilizing of our society. <br />In Orlando, the AFL-CIO may join in these new forms of solidarity as the central florida chapter is set to vote on membership in Fair Trade for a Greater Orlando Coalition. <br />The most interesting element of the new labor movement is the fact that most of the action is occuring outside traditionally union industries. Auto and airline unions are regularly being forced into concessions, with help from bankruptcy courts. Meanwhile hotel workers and baristas (coffee servers) are getting organized like never before. Hotel workers in California with UNITE HERE have resisted a two tiered health care plan and actually increased employer contribution to their plan. In addition to that, they also won pay increases. Starbucks across the country are resorting to illegal tactics in an attempt to stop a union campaign to organize baristas through the IWW. Yes, the Wobblies are making another go at it. <br />The new labor movement is quite different than what this country has seen before. It has finally adapted itself to a post-industrial state (perhaps de-industrialized state might be more accurate) light on industrial employees but heavy on service employees. It is also reaching across culture and class lines to expand and enrich the meaning of solidarity. I think the new labor movement's reach is being met by a society ready for a new era of social justice and solidarity.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/25413472-116154541103422053?l=grassrootstogreenshoots.blogspot.com'/></div>Scotthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14049211925852798446noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25413472.post-1159397066042646712006-09-27T17:37:00.000-05:002006-09-27T17:44:26.046-05:00Mr. Danger?<em>The op-ed here appeared in the Orlando Sentinel on September 24th by George Diaz. The following letter to the editor was published September 25th in response by Scott R. Tess. Enjoy.</em><br /><br />"Clear and present Mr. Danger"<br />The speech lasts three and a half minutes, and would pass for a Saturday Night Live skit if it weren't etched in reality television.With a herd of cattle in the background, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez bashes President Bush with searing contempt. He calls him a coward, a drunk, a donkey, an assassin, alcoholic, immoral, ignorant, mentally deranged, a liar, genocidal, and derides him as "Mr. Danger" 16 times in a video filmed last April.If only we could laugh it off and go on to the next comedic schtick.But sadly, the real deal is this:Chavez is truly Mr. Danger.It is tempting for the Bush administration to dismiss him as a whack job, if only Chavez didn't have worldly power, influence, and a precious commodity called oil.The ironic twist here is that the United States is one of Chavez's best buddies.The U.S. is the top buyer of Venezuelan oil, pumping billions of dollars into the economy that fuel Chavez's military buildup. But with Chavez's political leanings swaying ideologically opposite of President Bush, the relationship epitomizes dysfunctional, much like Ike and Tina Turner in their glory days.Chavez feeds off the power and glory of controlling a nation of 25 million. The economic boost from oil is tremendous, with the petroleum sector accounting for roughly a third of Venezuela's gross domestic product and around 80 percent of its export earnings. But with estimates ranging between 37 and 47 percent of Venezuelans struggling below the poverty line, Chavez exposes his domestic shortcomings by selling discounted heating oil to poor American families.Distributing 40 million gallons of oil last winter in the U.S. reflects a disingenuous agenda and his incessant push to undermine Bush's democratic agenda.<br />Chavez was back at his melodramatic glory in recent days, cuddling with actor Danny Glover for a photo op at a church in Harlem while pledging to increase discounted heating-oil shipments to 100 million gallons to needy Americans this winter. That followed a rant before the United Nations in which he called Bush "the devil." Noting that Bush spoke from the same podium earlier in the day, he said:"The devil came here. Right here. Right here. And it smells of sulfur still today, this table that I am now standing in front of."It stinks, all right.Mr. Danger, the one with the Spanish accent, leaves U.S. officials in a pickle. To simply ignore him would be precarious politics, given his powerful sway. To make nice with him is impossible, for the ideological divide is too extreme.<br />The most pragmatic agenda would be trying to strike a more amicable accord with Chavez's neighbors in Latin America, particularly Bolivia and Brazil. There is encouraging news that some Latin American countries are more open to democracy, rejecting left-wing candidates in Peru and Mexico backed by Chavez.But there should not be unrealistic hopes that Mr. Danger will simply fade away. Sorry, amigos. He is favored to win re-election in December.As Fidel Castro's health weakens, Chavez emerges as Bush's most adversarial antagonist among leaders in Latin American countries. The resources in Venezuela give him one distinct advantage over Castro's Cuba, which needed to be propped up economically by the Soviet Union for years and has struggled on its own since the USSR collapsed in 1991.<br />Castro is the president of the 118 Nonaligned Movement nations that met in Havana recently, bringing together some of the staunchest enemies of the U.S. But with Castro staying home in his pajamas on doctors' orders, Chavez and Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad have taken the lead on Bush bashing.Bush understandably has to focus on Ahmadinejad and his cronies in the Middle East. But Bush might want to take a peek at all those oil invoices from Venezuela and consider the consequences of doing business with Mr. Danger.George Diaz can be reached at 407-420-5533 and <a href="mailto:gdiaz@orlandosentinel.com">gdiaz@orlandosentinel.com</a>.<br /><br /><br />"Mr. Danger?"<br />George Diaz's Sunday column, "Clear and present Mr. Danger" amounts to a regurgitation of government press releases as he toes the government line on President Hugo Chavez and Venezuela. For example, Diaz says Chavez is "truly Mr. Danger." The only evidence offered? Diaz parrots "Chavez's military buildup."Venezuela buys 100,000 assault rifles, and it's a dangerous "military buildup," but the U.S. signs a contract for a next-generation fighter jet and begins research on what are called mini-nukes, and it's just referred to as "national defense." Keep in mind Chavez's government hasn't invaded and occupied another country as President Bush's government has -- an invasion and occupation that U.S. intelligence says has increased terrorism, as reported in the Orlando Sentinel.<br /><a href="http://ad.doubleclick.net/click%3Bh=v8/346d/3/0/%2a/v%3B47907374%3B0-0%3B0%3B12928214%3B4307-300/250%3B18340732/18358627/1%3B%3B%7Esscs%3D%3fhttp://clk.atdmt.com/DNR/go/ntgreups0220000002dnr/direct/01/335337" target="_blank"></a><a href="http://ad.doubleclick.net/click%3Bh=v8/346d/3/0/%2a/v%3B47907374%3B0-0%3B0%3B12928214%3B4307-300/250%3B18340732/18358627/1%3B%3B%7Esscs%3D%3fhttp://clk.atdmt.com/DNR/go/ntgreups0220000002dnr/direct/01/335337" target="_blank"></a><a href="http://ad.doubleclick.net/jump/trb.orlandosentinel/news/opinion/letter;ptype=s;rg=ur;ref=orlandosentinelcom;tile=2;sz=300x250;ord=451261" target="_blank"></a>Diaz continues the government line by describing what he calls Chavez's "domestic shortcomings" by offering discounted heating oil to poor Americans while 37 percent to 47 percent of Venezuelans live in poverty. What Diaz didn't make clear to his readers is that the percentage of Venezuelans living in poverty has declined since Chavez was elected. I suppose reducing the poverty level and increasing economic growth more than 17 percent in 2004 explain why Venezuelans don't notice Chavez's "domestic shortcomings." However, Diaz's should be.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/25413472-115939706604264671?l=grassrootstogreenshoots.blogspot.com'/></div>Scotthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14049211925852798446noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25413472.post-1159396629838792342006-09-27T17:35:00.000-05:002006-09-27T17:37:09.856-05:00Orlando Looks to Go From Free Trade to Fair TradeOn World Fair Trade Day, May 13th, Orlando saw its first ever Fair Trade event. The event featured local musicians, speakers, and of course many local fair trade vendors. The Fair Trade event was hosted by the recently opened Dandelion Communitea Café in Orlando’s Thornton Park neighborhood. Dandelion was a natural choice for the event since it offers organic food and fair trade products. Organized by the newly formed Fair Trade for a Greater Orlando Coalition (FTGOC), the event attracted a broad range of Orlando citizens. While many long time area activists turned out for the event, the majority of people there had only a passing familiarity with what fair trade means. Fortunately, visitors were greeted by organizers for FTGOC who provided much information. <br />Fair trade is a market-based alternative to the current free trade regime. Free trade seeks low production costs with no consideration of the human and environmental consequences. Fair trade allows consumers to purchase products certified as being produced in conditions that protect the environment and provide fair wages for the producers. Free trade agreements empower corporations and state planners to negotiate behind closed doors to serve their narrow interest, but fair trade empowers producers and consumers to reorient their economic relations to serve their common interests of fair wages and environmental protection.<br />While FTGOC organizers had much to offer at the event in terms of education and entertainment, they were also asking something of the public who attended the event. FTGOC organizers collected individual signatures on a letter to be sent to the Orlando mayor and city council stating the public’s demand for a fair trade policy for the city of Orlando. Organizers for local fair trade businesses and social movements also formally signed on to become the first coalition members in this effort. The organizations joining together to form Fair Trade for a Greater Orlando Coalition are a broad range of civic and business groups. FTGOC members include non-profits such as the Farmworkers Association of Florida and the Orlando Area Greens as well as local businesses like North-South Marketplace and Somnio Intermedia. FTGOC plans to gain endorsement of a city fair trade policy from as many local business and civic organization as possible to demonstrate to the mayor and city council the broad public support for this kind of policy.<br />While city fair trade policies are popular in European countries such as Britain, only a few communities in the US have established them. San Francisco and Mountain View, California as well as New York City are three communities that have established such policies. The activist community in Orlando is excited about the possibility of putting Orlando on the map as more than just the home of Disney World and Universal Studios. FTGOC’s fair trade resolution seeks to:<br /><br />? establish a policy to maximize purchase of Fair Trade Certified products in the process of procuring necessary goods for the city, whenever these products are available<br />? direct the appropriate city departments or a volunteer advisory committee to aid the city to immediately begin substituting fair trade certified coffee and tea where these products are competitively priced<br />? investigate current purchasing options for the range of Fair Trade Certified goods and issue recommendations within one year that identify how the city can maximize purchase of competitively priced Fair Trade products<br />? educate and encourage the public, local businesses and city contractors to purchase Fair Trade certified products.<br /><br />The speed with which Fair Trade for a Greater Orlando Coalition and its first event on World Fair Trade Day have come together has been very impressive and offers good evidence of the support for a movement from free trade to fair trade in Orlando. In fact the organization and event were put together in under three months. The successful launch of this fair trade campaign was do in large part to the cooperation of local fair trade businesses and social movement organizers working together in common cause. The focus of FTGOC now is to expand their alliance into what is likely to be the broadest civic coalition in the history of Orlando. If successful, this effort could initiate a new era of public participation in city policy. Most public policy in Orlando is under the influence of the construction and development industry with some participation by well healed national advocacy groups with local chapters in Orlando. The Fair Trade for a Greater Orlando campaign has been organizing from the grassroots drawing its energy from local businesses that don’t even have physical stores and social movement groups that have meetings in public libraries. The extent of the coalition building that FTGOC seeks will forge broad new ties for future cooperation within the social movements and other progressive elements of Orlando. The city outside of the theme parks that most tourists forget exists has had a myriad of progressive groups working on a large number of issues from the minimum wage to opposing war. The grassroots coalition building around the issue of fair trade may be uniting these movements into a real force for change in Orlando.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/25413472-115939662983879234?l=grassrootstogreenshoots.blogspot.com'/></div>Scotthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14049211925852798446noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25413472.post-1155076710198827662006-08-08T17:27:00.000-05:002006-08-13T08:24:26.626-05:00Whats in a DateThe government along with almost every media outlet I have read, running the gamut from liberal to conservative, has been depicting the current Israeli/Lebanon war as a conflict that began when Hezbollah kidnapped two Israeli soldiers. The word arbitrary doesn't do justice.<br />Since the Israeli withdrawal from southern Lebanon in 2000, there have been regular back and forth skirmishes of just the variety which is now described as the cause of the present war. In the Middle East, and elsewhere if you choose to look, you can always go back in time and point to some action of whichever side of the conflict you don't like as the original initiation of conflict. Two sides could go back in time, tit for tat, until your combing through the Bible looking for transgressions. Truly, it is impossible to blame Israel, Lebanon, or any neighbors in the region as the first initiates of violence. No wonder both sides have to rely on God for justification of terrorism, aggression, and violence.<br />If we can't conclusively blame the conflict on one side or the other, then we have two recourses to end the conflict. The two sides can fight it out until one side has exterminated the other. A.K.A genocide. Or we can rely on the law and negotiations. No, not "international law." International law becomes domestic law upon signature by the executive and ratification by the legislative. In the present case, the law does not recognize as legal Israeli bombings or Hezbollah missile attacks. They are both terrorism. Hezbollah has offered to cease hostilities if Israel does the same and returns the land know as Shebaa Farms. Shebaa Farms is a measley 10 acres annexed (that is, illegaly taken by force) by Israel in 1967. Hezbollah has also agreed to allow Lebanese soldiers to be deployed in the South. This has been a long term goal of the US and Israel as it empowers the more pliable Lebanese government and disempowers what an analyst for Jane's Defense Weekly calls guerillas who are "well-trained" and "intensely motivated." As for Israel, it has made a ceasefire conditional on keeping Israeli troops in Southern Lebanon which they have no right to. Israel has also demanded the disarmament of all groups except the Lebanese government in Lebanon. Hezbollah's ceasefire offer would surely lead to the partial demobilization of the organizations fighters which is probably all the Lebanonese government has power to perform at this point. Remember, Lebanon was essentially run by Syria for the last decade until recently. The US's role in the conflict includes being the only UN Security Council member out of 15 to oppose any council action at all. Given the Hezbollah offer, the US's and Israel's demonstrated rejection of it should be suggestive of Israel and the US's motives in the region.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/25413472-115507671019882766?l=grassrootstogreenshoots.blogspot.com'/></div>Scotthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14049211925852798446noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25413472.post-1151706616788671062006-06-30T17:13:00.000-05:002006-10-15T13:22:11.883-05:00A Bit MorbidThe killing of terrorist Abu Musab al-Zarqawi has been greeted with a tidal wave of euphoria from the corporate media and the government. Despite a few measured words from President Bush and others that "we can expect the terrorists and insurgents to carry on without him," the killing has been like an early Fourth of July. The measured words from Bush quoted in the previous sentence reflect what Juan Cole, head of the US Middle East Studies Assocation has been saying for some time, that al-Zarqawi's significance "was just a sort of branding that suited everyone, including the US... whose official spokesmen have all along overestimated his importance." It seems that the more the US attempted to incarnate al-Zarqawi as the symbol of the great Satan in Iraq, the more al-Zarqawi became the symbol of the great resistance in Iraq for insurgents. Bush speechwriters must have blushed as they heard the President recite their words only a month after the evildoer al-Zarqawi was shown on a video unable to operate a machine gun.<br /><br />However, when the confetti came out to celebrate another succussful US killing, all of this went down the memory hole. The Washington Post included the killing in a "Spate of good news [that] gives the White House a chance to regroup." The liberal The Nation magazine went even further saying "It's good news that Abu Musab al-Zarqawi is dead. Any member of the civilized world ought to cheer the demise of a terrorist who killed civilians with bombings and beheadings." The Nation apparently believes that civiliation is marked by cheering death. Whats more is that the bombing operation that killed al-Zarqawi also killed three others males and three females with two 500 pound bombs. The Nation didn't call for killing and celebrating the deaths of those responsible for killing these civilians. These civilian deaths did not hinder President Bush from describing the operation as a "remarkable achievement."<br /><br />I think it is right and proper to celebrate the demobilization of terrorists and criminals, however we should lament when this is done with an act of barbarism. Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's actions should not justify or give license for others to act in a similar manner if we truly want a "more peaceful world for our children and grandchildren" as President Bush says. Only in an Orwellian world can you bomb for peace.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/25413472-115170661678867106?l=grassrootstogreenshoots.blogspot.com'/></div>Scotthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14049211925852798446noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25413472.post-1146706749409378102006-05-03T20:27:00.000-05:002006-05-15T17:08:10.946-05:00Judicious CoverageThe corporate media has been covering the Moussaoui trial with great interest despite the relatively boring nature of the proceedings. Moussaoui admitted to plotting terrorist attacks from day one, the only issue left to decide is whether to give him the death penalty. This has provided adequate cover for journalist on the judicial beat to ignore a far more interesting case which has been very embarrassing for the government. The case of University of Central Florida professor Sami al Arian and co-defendant Sameeh Hammoudeh has been almost a complete failure for the government. The case has a strange beginning. al Arian, no doubt, attracted the attention of authorities as he has always been a vocal advocate for Palestinian rights. However over a decade of wire taps and surveillance seems out of line for a man who assisted the FBI and the military in understanding and being more sensitive to Arabs and Muslims. What's more, he even supported President Bush's first presidential election campaign on promises to end secret detentions in Israel/Palestine. Obviously, such promises remain unfulfilled. You can view a picture of al Arian and Bush here: <a href="http://www.sullivan-county.com/bush/al-arian3.htm">http://www.sullivan-county.com/bush/al-arian3.htm</a> The al Arian trial was billed as the government's first big criminal prosecution in the "War on Terror," so naturally, the stakes were high. The procedures in the trial where al Arian was charged with 50 different counts was reminiscent of the old Soviet trials. The government was allowed to take thousands of hours of wire taps and pull out excerpts. The defense, however, was not allowed to review the wire tap recordings in their entirety or even the context around the prosecutions excerpts. Even with this advantage, the best evidence the government could come up with was trying to convince jurors that every time the two defendants mentioned "the family" they were speaking of a terrorist organization in code. The jury apparently thought it was likely that people might call their family members and <em>actually</em> talk about their families. When Sami al Arian refused to plea bargain in the case, the government rounded up a friend, Sameeh Hammoudeh, and tried to force him to falsely testify against al Arian or face similar charges, an old trick. To Hammoudeh's credit, he refused and they both went on trial. If you think this thing started a little strange, check out this ending. As a credit to trial by jury and the wisdom of average people, al Arian and Hammoudeh was found not guilty on about half the counts and only a few jurors voted for a guilty conviction on the remaining charges. Usually when a defendant is found innocent, he walks out of court and goes on with his life. Not so with al Arian and Hammoudeh. The judge refused to release two men found not guilty on all charges! Demonstrating his contempt for our form of judicial process, the judge spoke to the media repeating the government's outrageous terrorism accusations. al Arian was forced to plead guilty to some very minimal conspiracy charges to gain his freedom and to help the feds save face. But then they give him a sentence that keeps him in jail for months more despite having already spent over a year in jail and found innocent by a jury. Whats more, if he is <em>ever </em>released he will be deported immediately. This trial just doesn't fit the normal corporate media's model of rally around the powerful. After a Soviet style trial, the government has still mostly lost their show trial meant to demonstrate the success of the USA Patriot Act. None-the-less, far better for servants of power like the corporate media to celebrate the government's condemnation of admitted terrorist Moussaoui.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/25413472-114670674940937810?l=grassrootstogreenshoots.blogspot.com'/></div>Scotthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14049211925852798446noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25413472.post-1145409489471017382006-04-18T20:09:00.000-05:002006-04-21T20:18:57.443-05:00A More Effective CriminalRecently a rash of former US Generals have been making waves in D.C. by calling for the resignation or sacking of Secretary of Defense, Donald Rumsfeld. So far, 6 former US military generals have publicly call for Rumsfeld's ouster including 2 generals who participated in the war on Iraq. For his part, Bush has reiterated his support for Rumsfeld. This is an excellent example of the limits of acceptable debate in the corporate media. Hundreds of thousands of average citizens go out into the streets to demonstrate their opposition to the war and continuing occupation receive short-lived and hostile media coverage, but 6 former generals mention that things aren't going so great and they become media darlings. The generals are deserving of media coverage because they aren't challenging power, in fact they are obedient servants of power. Their criticism of Rumsfeld is not that he has prosecuted an illegal war, what the US representative at the Nuremberg Trials, Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson, called the "supreme international crime." No the generals' criticism of the Secretary of Defense is that he is not prosecuting this crime with enough effectiveness. While there is some news coverage of moral opposition to the war, opposition on legal grounds seems to be completely absent. Keep in mind that the US Constitution says that treaties "shall be the supreme law of the land." Treaties such as the UN Charter which the US has signed and ratified. The charter allows international violence (war) under two circumstances only. The first is self defense. Iraq certainly hasn't attacked the US. 911 connections between Hussein's government and international terroism have been exhaustively investigated without producing any evidence. The second circumstance war is allowable under the UN Charter (and therefore US Constitution) is by authorization from the UN Security Council. The Council passed a resolution demanding Hussein's Iraq to give up weapons that they didn't have, a problem in itself, or face serious consequences. The consequences weren't stated as is the habit of security council resolutions. The norms of the security council has always required another specific authoriztion of the use of violence to enforce a resolution. The recent Iraq invasion does not meet either standard and is therfore illegal. This is what cannot be stated in the corporate press. See for yourself. Notice how many times the term international law, which is also US law if ratified by Congress, is mentioned in conjunction to the Iraq War. It isn't. International law will appear in the corporate press only when an official US enemy is being considered. Iran for example.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/25413472-114540948947101738?l=grassrootstogreenshoots.blogspot.com'/></div>Scotthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14049211925852798446noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25413472.post-1144286700279054192006-04-05T19:49:00.000-05:002006-04-09T11:34:31.280-05:00Immigration Reform debate ranges from Undesirable to IrrationalFor those of you who watch the corporate media, how has the coverage of some of the largest protests in the history of many US cities? No not anti-war demonstrations, protests opposing the proposals to make undocumented workers into federal felons. Many cities, including midwestern cities such as Chicago and Denver, saw demonstrations from the hundred thousands up to 1 million in Los Angeles. Thousands of high school students in California, New York, and elsewhere walked out of class. They think of the subjects of the proposed law as their parents, not criminals. The demonstrations had some effect, the Senate has introduced a bill which is not as harsh on undocumented workers as the House version.<br />The Senate version is being billed sometimes as amnesty sometimes as legalization. While it does provide a pathway to permanent residency and citizenship, the hurdles to attain these statuses make this possibility just another unfulfilled "American Dream." Undocumented workers for example would have to pay all back taxes. Thats tough to do on for a tomato picker who isn't covered under the Fair Labor Standards Act and therefore doesn't even make the minimum wage. The Senate and President Bush's version of immigration reform are rational unlike the House version. I say rational not to mean good, but rather in the interests of Washington DC's main costituency, Big Business. The undocumented workers act as strike breakers driving wages down for workers, obviously to the benefit of the extremely narrow segment of the population we call "the business community." They also allow business to skip work place protections because undocumented workers can't complain to OSHA lest they be deported. Upton Sinclair's "The Jungle" is still alive in the meat packing industry. The House version seeks to just deport millions of low wage workers very much against the interests of the Republican's main constituency. This is why it is irrational. The difference between the Senate and White House version of immigration reform is that the Senate version pretends to offer eventual legalization, the President's version is at least more honest in not even pretending. What all the Washington DC proposals have in common though is beefed up policing and no new rights or priveleges.<br />The big to-do about illegal immigrants costing us money is too silly to spend much time on. Undocumented workers pay taxes through the payroll tax. That means they pay into government coffers but can't access government services. That means they pay into Social Security but can never collect from it. Enough said.<br />The almost unspoken element in this debate is why there has been such a marked increase in south to north immigration in the last decade. The predicted result of NAFTA was to drive Mexican peasant farmers off their land into the cities. The influx of desperate workers into Mexican cities drove down the already low wages. The natural result is workers went north. All predictable and certainly intended. Remember NAFTA was pushed by the Clinton Administration which was quite rational in pursuing the goals of Big Business. Clinton was a Rhodes Scholar so certainly he could figure this out. Don't take my word for it though. Check the conservative Washington Post where Harlold Meyerson says "NAFTA, which took effect in 1994, could not have been more precisely crafted to increase immigration -- chiefly because of its devastating effect on Mexican agriculture. "<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/25413472-114428670027905419?l=grassrootstogreenshoots.blogspot.com'/></div>Scotthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14049211925852798446noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25413472.post-1144195973491062162006-04-04T19:01:00.000-05:002006-04-04T19:12:53.500-05:00Radical Environmentalism in Mainstream FilmI recently saw the movie The Shaggy Dog made by Disney. I was surprised to see a corporate movie which cast both the radical environmental movement and Buddhist meditation in a positive light. It was necessary to sandwich these ideas between scenes of slapstick comedy to get Disney to produce the movie, but it was there never-the-less. I think the fact that this kind of content has become acceptable is a testament to the success of the environmental movement.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/25413472-114419597349106216?l=grassrootstogreenshoots.blogspot.com'/></div>Scotthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14049211925852798446noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25413472.post-1144195241899074142006-04-04T18:57:00.000-05:002006-04-04T19:00:41.910-05:00Its Good to be GreenCara Jennings just won a seat on the city council of the Florida city of Lake Worth. She is a Green Party member who is described by a local newspaper as "a 29-year-old mentor of high school students who believes decision-making should come from a community of equals, not from 'top-down authoritative government.'" The Green Party is the alternative to the two corporate parties. "Don't waste any time in mourning. Organize!"<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/25413472-114419524189907414?l=grassrootstogreenshoots.blogspot.com'/></div>Scotthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14049211925852798446noreply@blogger.com1