*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
LABOR’S RESPONSE TO KATRINA
WHAT HAS BEEN DONE?
WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?
MALCOLM SUBER
PEOPLES HURRICANE RELIEF FUND
REGISTERED NURSE RESPONSE NETWORK
CALIFORNIA NURSES ASSOCIATION
MEMBERS OF OTHER UNIONS
A Member of the
NEW ORLEANS COMMUNITY Residing in the Bay Area
MIKE BISHOP
UC-BERKELEY VOLUNTEER COORDINATOR
TUESDAY MAY 22nd - 7pm
$5-10 sliding scale donation – 
no one turned away for lack of funds
CALIFORNIA NURSES ASSOCIATION
2200 FRANKLIN STREET, OAKLAND
(near 19th Street BART Station)
Sponsored By The Bay Area Labor 
Committee For Peace & Justice/USLAW
For more info: 510-540-0845
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
LAPD vs. Immigrants (Video)
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/qws/ff/qr?term=lapd&Submit=S&Go.x=0&Go.y=0&Go=Search&st=s
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
Dr. Julia Hare at the SOBA 2007
http://mysite.verizon.net/vzeo9ewi/proudtobeblack2/
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
"There comes a times when silence is betrayal."
--Martin Luther King
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
ARTICLES IN FULL:
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
1) The Right to Paid Sick Days
By BOB HERBERT
Op-Ed Columnist
May 15, 2007
http://select.nytimes.com/2007/05/15/opinion/15herbert.html?hp
2) In Divided New Orleans
Editorial
May 15, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/15/opinion/15tue1.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin
3) Che’s Fans in Iraq
By Mike Nizza
May 15, 2007,  9:28 am
http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/05/15/ches-fans-in-iraq/
4) After Ordnance Scare, Beachgoers Told to Dig With Care
By JILL P. CAPUZZO
May 15, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/15/nyregion/15sand.html
5) Red Cross Report Says Israel Disregards Humanitarian Law
By STEVEN ERLANGER
May 15, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/15/world/middleeast/15jerusalem.html?ref=worl
6) Guantánamo Detainees’ Suit Challenges Fairness 
of Military’s Repeat Hearings
By WILLIAM GLABERSON
May 15, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/15/washington/15gitmo.html?ref=us
7) In Deal, a Test for the U.A.W.
By MICHELINE MAYNARD
May 15, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/15/business/15Auto.html?ref=business
8) Satellites Show Harvest of Mud That Trawlers Leave Behind
By CORNELIA DEAN
May 15, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/15/science/15mud.html
9) LESSONS WE LEARNED FROM THE 6th 
HEMISPHERIC MEETING IN HAVANA
Fidel Castro Ruz
May 14, 2007
5: 12 pm
www.marxmail.org
10) Somewhere over the Rainbow:
A report from a Kansas Mutual Aid 
member from tornado devastated
Greensburg, Kansas
by Dave Strano
Kansas Mutual Aid member
Lawrence, Kansas
kansasmutualaid@hotmail.com
11) Court seeks Colombian lawmakers in growing scandal
Mon May 14, 2007 3:39PM EDT
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/N14314528.htm
12) More than 500 citizens of ECUADOR were victims 
of massacres in Colombia 
By AFP 5/14/2007 07:46 hours
VIA Email from: Greg McDonald 
sabocat59@mac.com
13) For blacks, the folly of the Iraq war hits home
Derrick Z. Jackson, THE BOSTON GLOBE
Monday, May 14, 2007
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2007/05/09/for_african_americans_folly_of_this_war_hits_home/
14) A Statement by William Singletary, 
a witness in the case of Mumia
Abu-Jamal (1995 PCRA hearing), is what 
follows below.  This statement was sent to the
Labor Action Committee To Free Mumia 
Abu-Jamal, in order that it be read at
rallies held in solidarity with death-
row journalist Mumia Abu-Jamal, on the
day of what likely is his last appeal 
hearing--before a panel of the Third
Circuit federal court in Philadelphia, 
PA, May 17th 2007.  
LACFreeMumia@aol.com
15) Deal Is Reached in Senate on Immigration
By ROBERT PEAR and DAVID STOUT
May 17, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/17/washington/17cnd-immig.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin
16) Clash of Hope and Fear as Venezuela Seizes Land
By SIMON ROMERO
May 17, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/17/world/americas/17venezuela.html
17) Venezuela Lets Councils Bloom;
Critics Say Chávez Backs Local Bodies to Boost Central Control
By Juan Forero
The Washington Post
May 17, 2007
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/05/16/AR2007051602547.html
18) Feds Crack Down on Immigrant Labor Organizers
A series of North Carolina immigration raids 
weren't just about deporting undocumented workers 
-- they were about busting unions. 
By David Bacon
http://www.prospect.org/cs/articles?article=feds_crack_down_on_immigrant_labor_organizers
19) The Department of Defense -- Bringing Historical 
Revisionism to a High School Near You
By Chris Rodda Sun May 13, 2007 at 11:25:30 AM EST
http://www.talk2action.org/printpage/2007/5/13/112530/361
20) Analysis Finds Large Antarctic Area Has Melted
By ANDREW C. REVKIN
May 16, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/16/science/earth/16melt.html?ref=science
21) Citing Racist Bias, Attorneys for Mumia Abu-Jamal 
Urge a Federal Appeals Court to Grant the Former Black 
Panther a New Trial
Friday, May 18th, 2007
VIA Email from: Mike Friedman 
mikedf@amnh.org
22) "Sicko" Is Completed and We're Off to Cannes!
By Michael Moore
May 17, 2007
http://www.michaelmoore.com
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
1) The Right to Paid Sick Days
By BOB HERBERT
Op-Ed Columnist
May 15, 2007
http://select.nytimes.com/2007/05/15/opinion/15herbert.html?hp
It sounds reasonable: seven paid sick days a year. Why 
should you have to lose a couple of days pay, or maybe 
even your job, because you had the misfortune to catch 
the flu?
And it certainly seems unreasonable to penalize an 
employee in good standing who misses a day or two 
of work to care for a child who is ill or has met 
with a serious accident.
After all, this is the 21st century.
The reality, for a surprising percentage of the U.S. 
population, is more like the 19th century. Nearly 
half of all full-time private sector workers in the U.S. 
get no paid sick days. None. If one of those workers 
woke up with excruciating pains in his or her chest 
and had to be rushed to a hospital — well, no pay 
for that day. For many of these workers, the cost 
of an illness could be the loss of their job.
The situation is ridiculous for those in the lowest 
quarter of U.S. wage earners. Nearly 80 percent of 
those workers — the very ones who can least afford 
to lose a day’s pay — get no paid sick days at all.
I recently spoke with Bertha Brown, a home health 
aide who lives in Philadelphia and has two young 
daughters. She makes $7 an hour caring for people 
who are ill or disabled. “I feed them and dress 
them,” she said. “And if they have to be changed, 
I do all that.”
She has worked for the better part of two decades 
without ever being paid for a sick day. And her 
wages are so low she can’t afford to lose even 
a day’s pay. “If I get sick, I work sick,” she said. 
“I cover my nose and my mouth with a mask to keep 
my clients from getting sick.”
Food service workers are among those least likely 
to get paid sick days. Eighty-six percent get no sick 
days at all. They show up in the restaurants coughing 
and sneezing and feverish, and they start preparing 
and serving meals. You won’t see many of them wearing 
masks.
There’s an effort under way to change this picture. 
A growing number of organizations and activists are 
lining up behind proposed federal legislation that would 
give most workers the right to seven paid sick days 
annually to take care of their medical needs or those 
of their families. The legislation, sponsored by Senator 
Edward Kennedy and Representative Rosa DeLauro, would 
require employers with 15 or more workers to provide 
the sick days.
Among the organizations pushing for paid sick days 
is the Public Welfare Foundation in Washington, which 
recently approved a $1 million “special initiative” 
on the issue. Deborah Leff, the foundation’s president, 
noted that it’s the poorest workers who most often are 
forced to choose between going to work sick or losing 
a day’s pay, and that a disproportionate number of 
those workers are women — many of them with children.
“At least 145 countries have paid sick days,” said 
Ms. Leff. “The United States is the only industrialized 
country lacking such a policy. Our goal is to change that.”
An overwhelming majority of Americans favor paid sick 
days for full-time workers. One poll showed that 95 percent 
of workers find it “unacceptable” for employers to deny 
sick days to workers. But the Kennedy-DeLauro legislation 
is facing a tough road.
As one might imagine, the industries that would be affected 
are ice-cold to the idea.
The response of Cracker Barrel Old Country Store to my 
inquiries on this issue is illustrative. A spokeswoman 
said in an e-mail message: “Because employees working 
in the restaurants have flexible schedules, they can 
schedule doctors’ appointments and other appointments 
that sick leave and personal time are generally used 
for at times when they are not working.
“If employees need to miss a shift due to illness, 
there are generally many opportunities to make up that 
lost shift later in the week, or the next week.”
That is the kind of workplace policy that prompts 
Debra Ness, the president of the National Partnership 
for Women and Families, to note that “for millions 
of workers, getting sick can mean the beginning 
of an economic disaster.”
Allowing a worker to recuperate from an illness, 
or take care of a sick child, without suffering undue 
economic hardship should be a matter of basic humanity 
and fundamental decency. It should not be politically 
controversial in a country that considers itself the 
most advanced on the face of the earth, and that babbles 
incessantly about the importance of family values. 
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
2) In Divided New Orleans
Editorial
May 15, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/15/opinion/15tue1.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin
When President Bush spoke to the nation soon after 
Hurricane Katrina, he was resolute that the city would 
be rebuilt. “We will do what it takes,” he said. We — 
the federal, state and city governments; elected officials 
and the citizens who hire them — have failed spectacularly. 
Homes and schools remain empty or imaginary; evacuees and 
survivors wait in cramped trailers, unable to return or 
rebuild. A huge silence still hangs over the Lower Ninth 
Ward, a place every American should see, to witness 
firsthand how truckloads of promises have filled New 
Orleans’s vast devastation with nothing.
That the Lower Ninth is overwhelmingly black is not 
irrelevant. African-Americans were the predominant 
and poorest members of this city before the storm, 
they bore the worst of it and have the farthest 
journey back to stability. A study issued last week 
by the Kaiser Family Foundation, based on interviews 
last fall with residents of Orleans, Jefferson, 
Plaquemines and St. Bernard parishes, maps the outlines 
of a sharp racial divide.
In Orleans Parish, twice as many African-Americans 
as whites said their lives were still “very” or “somewhat” 
disrupted. Seventy-two percent of blacks said they had 
problems getting health care, compared with 32 percent 
of whites. Blacks were more likely to say that their 
financial status, physical and mental health, and job 
security had worsened since the storm. And they expressed 
considerably more anxiety than whites about the sturdiness 
of the rebuilt levees, the danger from future Katrinas 
and the prospect of living without enough money or health 
care, or a decent, affordable home.
There was a consensus about broad categories of the 
recovery: solid majorities thought there had been at 
least some progress in restoring basic services, reopening 
schools and business and fixing levees. But in three 
vital areas — rebuilding neighborhoods, controlling 
crime and increasing the supply of affordable housing 
— most agreed that there had been no progress or 
“not too much.”
Even with the constant trickle of bad news, you can 
find minimal improvements. Thousands of building permits 
have been issued. A crisis was recently averted when 
the Bush administration extended temporary housing 
assistance for tens of thousands of displaced families. 
Some government housing subsidies that were to expire 
at the end of August will continue until March 2009.
It is also encouraging that administration of the 
housing program will shift from the Federal Emergency 
Management Agency to the Department of Housing and 
Urban Development, which has always been the logical 
choice, given its experience in housing needy families. 
Other positive signs include the halting progress toward 
a workable redevelopment plan, and a recent finding that 
the city’s population had grown to above half of its 
level before the storm.
The Kaiser survey even found signs of hope when it tested 
for resilience in a proud city. Sixty-nine percent of 
respondents said they were optimistic about New Orleans’s 
future. And only 11 percent said they planned to leave.
Their faith must not be betrayed. Residents in the survey 
were keenly aware that their city’s fitful recovery would 
be devastated if the levees failed again. They put strong 
levees above all other priorities, including fighting 
crime and even basic services like electricity and water. 
And yet National Geographic has reported that an engineer 
has found signs that levees were poorly rebuilt and are 
already eroding. There is no room for error here.
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
3) Che’s Fans in Iraq
By Mike Nizza
May 15, 2007,  9:28 am
http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/05/15/ches-fans-in-iraq/
Che Guevara may not live, as one of the latest installments 
in his T-shirt line claims, but he still has fans leading 
South American nations, and now, starting insurgent groups 
in Iraq.
A previously-unknown group is using Che’s image in leaflets 
announcing a “movement of Iraqi Communists and Marxists 
experienced in armed struggle, leftist Iraqi nationalists, 
and their supporters,” according to Iraq Slogger.
The Iraqi Armed Revolutionary Resistance, a hardly striking 
name to add to an already crowded list, called out a long 
list of enemies, including the “puppet government, the 
so-called Council of Representatives, terrorist Salafis, 
militias, the Interior Ministry, Iraqi traitors who came 
on American tanks, the American and British mercenaries, 
contractors, and their servants from the South Lebanese 
Army.”
The group seems unlikely to inspire Iraqis who would 
most strongly identify with their political beliefs.
Since 1934, the far left of the nation’s idealogical 
spectrum has been claimed by the Iraqi Communist Party.
Last month, a spokesmen said that the party’s nonviolent 
message was what attracted thousands of Iraqis to 73rd 
anniversary celebrations.
“The Communist Party appeals to people because it is not 
tainted with corruption and does not have blood on its 
hands from sectarian killings. People are seeing the 
party as hope, as a potential alternative, something 
different,” Salam Ali told Political Affairs, which 
specializes in Marxist news.
Also in stark contrast to today’s insurgent declaration, 
party faithful spent May Day marching peacefully in Baghdad. 
In these photographs, some were even smiling.
And if there’s one thing we’ve learned from insurgent 
photos, it’s that they never, ever smile. 
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
4) After Ordnance Scare, Beachgoers Told to Dig With Care
By JILL P. CAPUZZO
May 15, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/15/nyregion/15sand.html
SURF CITY, N.J., May 14 — Sun worshipers coming to this 
Jersey Shore town should be happy that the closed beaches 
will soon be reopening. But they might want to rethink 
what they bring.
Pail and small shovel: check. Sand spade and metal detector: 
skip. Beach umbrella: proceed with caution.
After removing 1,111 pieces of potentially explosive 
military ordnance from the sand and surf, the United 
States Army Corps of Engineers is ready to declare the 
beaches here and in neighboring Ship Bottom safe and 
recommend that they be reopened in time for Memorial Day.
So, once the State Department of Environmental Protection 
approves, the “Beach Closed” signs will come down. But in 
their place will be new signs prohibiting beachgoers from 
using metal detectors or digging deeper than a foot into 
the sand. These “land-use controls” will be posted at every 
entrance and on every lifeguard stand along the 1.4 miles 
of affected beach on Long Beach Island.
“We really don’t expect anybody to find anything, but you 
don’t know,” George Follett, an explosives safety specialist 
for the Army Corps who has been overseeing the removal 
of the devices, said on Monday. “If there’s a lot of wave 
action, something might be uncovered.” Keith Watson, the 
project manager, said he did not expect umbrellas to pose 
a problem, but children digging too deep might be warned 
to ease off.
The corps will be holding training sessions with all police, 
fire and beach personnel, and any interested citizens, 
about how to handle situations should they arise, 
Mr. Watson said.
“We’ll be training badge checkers and lifeguards what 
to look out for,” he said, “and when they see someone 
digging too far, they’ll politely tell them not to. 
It’s all part of the public relations.”
It is one public relations campaign that Joe Muzzillo, 
who owns a Surf City beach shop, could live without. 
Or maybe not. After hearing that sand castle building 
and hole digging would be restricted, Mr. Muzzillo 
decided to skip buying any sand toys and umbrellas 
for his shop, Exit 63 WearHouse. Instead of the beach 
paraphernalia, the store’s back wall is now lined with 
T-shirts that carry slogans like “Save a Tourist — Find 
a Bomb,” “Surf City’s Da Bomb” and “I Got Bombed 
on L.B.I.,” for Long Beach Island.
Aside from a couple of complaints, reactions to the shirts 
have been “98 percent positive,” Mr. Muzzillo said. Still, 
he’s predicting a weak summer. “Even if the beach is open, 
I think it’s going to suffer,” he said. “If kids can’t 
dig and do the normal things kids do, it could be kind 
of traumatic, especially when they hear the explanation 
for why. Is a kid ever going to want to dig in the sand 
again?”
Mary Madonna, the Surf City borough clerk, said the 
borough has had an ordinance that prohibits digging more 
than 12 inches at the beach since 2002, when a boy in 
nearby Loveladies died after digging a deep tunnel that 
collapsed on him. But she and others at Borough Hall 
could not say how strictly the law has been enforced.
In Ship Bottom, where about 10 percent of the beaches 
are affected by the new guidelines, a regulation against 
digging deep holes also exists, but Mayor William 
Huelsenbeck said that there was no set depth and that 
enforcement was left to the discretion of lifeguards.
“We’ve always discouraged deep holes; nothing will 
change,” Mayor Huelsenbeck said. “Kids can use their 
shovels and pails. As for metal detectors, certainly 
we would discourage people from trying to look for 
these things.”
The explosives problem arose on March 5 when a resident 
using a metal detector came upon a rusted military fuze, 
an ignition device incorporating mechanical or electric 
elements, buried in the sand. Believed to have been dumped 
off the sides of ships sometime during World War I, the 
discarded military munitions lay on the ocean floor for 
90 years or more, according to Mr. Follett. Last fall, 
the Army Corps dredged up 500,000 cubic yards of sand 
from the bottom of the Atlantic as part of a $9 million 
beach replenishment program for Surf City and part 
of Ship Bottom.
The joy of getting new, wider beaches was quickly diminished 
by the discovery of the ordnance, which corps officials said 
could cause injury or death if detonated.
For the past six weeks, contractors hired by the corps 
have been sweeping every inch of the replenished beach, 
using equipment that Mr. Watson and Mr. Follett said could 
detect devices as deep as three feet with 95 percent 
accuracy.
At the start of the cleanup effort, Mr. Follett said, the 
contractors were finding as many as 40 to 50 devices a day. 
On Monday, doing a second sweep of the areas stirred up 
by the recent northeaster, the crews found one device. The 
cleanup has cost $2.3 million to date, according to 
Mr. Watson, who added that the corps might have to undertake 
a similar effort next winter.
“Beaches are a dynamic thing,” he said. “We’re not leaving. 
We’ll follow it through to the end.”
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
5) Red Cross Report Says Israel Disregards Humanitarian Law
By STEVEN ERLANGER
May 15, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/15/world/middleeast/15jerusalem.html?ref=worl
JERUSALEM, May 14 — The International Committee of the Red 
Cross, in a confidential report about East Jerusalem and 
its surrounding areas, accuses Israel of a “general disregard” 
for “its obligations under international humanitarian law — 
and the law of occupation in particular.”
The committee, which does not accept Israel’s annexation 
of East Jerusalem, says Israel is using its rights as an 
occupying power under international law “in order to further 
its own interests or those of its own population to the 
detriment of the population of the occupied territory.”
With the construction of the separation barrier, the 
establishment of an outer ring of Jewish settlements beyond 
the expanded municipal boundaries and the creation of 
a dense road network linking the different Israeli 
neighborhoods and settlements in and outside Jerusalem, 
the report says, Israel is “reshaping the development 
of the Jerusalem metropolitan area” with “far-reaching 
humanitarian consequences.” Those include the increasing 
isolation of Palestinians living in Jerusalem from the 
rest of the West Bank and the increasing difficulty for 
some Palestinians to easily reach Jerusalem’s schools 
and hospitals.
The Red Cross committee, which is recognized as a guardian 
of humanitarian law under the Geneva Conventions of 1949, 
does not publish its reports but provides them in confidence 
to the parties involved and to a small number of countries. 
This report was provided to The New York Times by someone 
outside the organization who wanted the report’s conclusions 
publicized. The leak came just days before Israel’s celebration 
of Jerusalem Day this Wednesday, observing the 40th anniversary 
of the unification of the city.
The committee is better known for its role in visiting 
prisoners all over the world to try to ensure humanitarian 
conditions. It has been involved for decades with the Israeli-
Palestinian situation as part of its role in upholding the 
Geneva Conventions, which cover the responsibilities 
of occupying countries. But its reports rarely surface.
The report considers all land that Israel conquered in the 
1967 war to be occupied territory. It was the result of 
nine months of work by the committee and was delivered 
in late February “to Israel and to a small number of 
foreign governments we believe would be in the best 
position to help support our efforts for the implementation 
of humanitarian law,” said Bernard Barrett, a spokesman 
for the committee in Jerusalem.
Israeli officials said that they respected the committee 
and that they had cooperated with it gladly on issues 
ranging from the release of captured Israeli soldiers 
to asking its officials to give briefings on international 
law to Israeli diplomats and commanders serving in the 
occupied West Bank.
They confirmed having received the report, but disagreed 
with its premises and conclusions.
“We reject the premise of the report, that East Jerusalem 
is occupied territory,” said Mark Regev, spokesman for the 
Israeli Foreign Ministry. “It is not. Israel annexed 
Jerusalem in 1967 and offered full citizenship at the 
time to all of Jerusalem’s residents. These are facts 
that cannot be ignored.”
Israel, he said, “is committed to a diverse and pluralistic 
Jerusalem, to improving the conditions of all the city’s 
inhabitants and to protecting their interests as part 
of our sovereign responsibility.” He added, “If any 
population in Jerusalem is thriving and growing, it 
is the Arab population.”
He also noted that Israel made great efforts to ensure 
health care for Palestinians, pointing to 81,000 entry 
permits in 2006 for Palestinians needing care inside 
Israel.
Conditions have worsened for Palestinians in East 
Jerusalem, which has long had inferior services.
Security restrictions and the barrier that runs around 
and through parts of East Jerusalem were Israel’s response 
to suicide bombings after 2000, but they made it much 
more difficult for Palestinians to move into and out 
of Jerusalem.
It is virtually impossible for Palestinians from the 
West Bank or Gaza to move to Jerusalem if they were 
not born in the city; even visiting requires a permit 
that can be hard to get. Natural population growth 
and building restrictions in Arab parts of the city 
means that large families often share very small 
apartments.
Palestinians argue that the building restrictions are 
meant to suppress the growth of the their community; 
the Israelis counter that zoning restrictions are 
imposed throughout the city.
The Red Cross report notes that the separation barrier 
“was undertaken with an undeniable security aim,” but 
adds, “The route of the West Bank barrier is also 
following a demographic logic, enclosing the settlement 
blocs around the city while excluding built-up Palestinian 
areas (thus creating isolated Palestinian enclaves).”
Mustafa Barghouti, spokesman for the Palestinian unity 
government, welcomed the report, calling it consistent 
with the rulings of the International Court of Justice, 
which said in a nonbinding opinion in 2004 that Israel’s
security barrier was illegal where it crossed the 1967 
lines into occupied territory. “Israel violates 
international law with impunity, and couldn’t continue 
this blunt violation for 40 years if it did not feel 
impunity toward the international community,” 
Mr. Barghouti said.
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
6) Guantánamo Detainees’ Suit Challenges Fairness 
of Military’s Repeat Hearings
By WILLIAM GLABERSON
May 15, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/15/washington/15gitmo.html?ref=us
WASHINGTON, May 14 — The military system of determining 
whether detainees are properly held at Guantánamo Bay, 
Cuba, includes an unusual practice: If Pentagon officials 
disagree with the result of a hearing, they order a second 
one, or even a third, until they approve of the finding.
These “do-overs,” as some critics call them, are among the 
most controversial parts of the military’s system of 
determining whether detainees are enemy combatants, and 
the fairness of the repeat hearings is at the center of 
a pivotal federal appeals court case.
On Tuesday, the United States Court of Appeals for the 
District of Columbia Circuit begins consideration of the 
first of what are expected to be scores of challenges 
to the military panels’ decisions that detainees are 
enemy combatants and are properly held.
The case, involving eight detainees, is the first under 
a 2005 law that permits a limited review of the panels’ 
decisions. The repeat hearings have emerged as a major 
flashpoint, with lawyers for the government and the 
detainees offering the court sharply different 
interpretations of their significance, legal filings 
and interviews show.
For both sides, the dispute crystallizes the larger 
questions now facing the courts over how much leeway 
the appeals court judges have to review the decisions 
of the hearing panels.
The 2005 law said the court was largely limited to 
determining whether the military had followed its 
own procedures in determining a detainee’s status. But 
the lawyers for the detainees are pressing to get the 
court to consider the basic fairness of the procedure 
itself.
Detainees’ lawyers say the issue of the repeated hearings 
offers the starkest proof that the Pentagon set up a system 
of military tribunals not to find the truth about the 
detainees but to ratify its own conclusion that the 
military had seized the right people.
“When you have a proceeding that comes up with the ‘wrong 
answer,’ ” said P. Sabin Willett, one of the detainees’ 
lawyers, “in this country we don’t keep sending it back 
to a tribunal until they come up with the ‘right answer.’ 
And we don’t do it in secret, and that’s what happened here.”
Mr. Willett is to argue before the appeals court on Tuesday.
Government lawyers say critics are wrong to compare the 
wartime system in Guantánamo, known as combatant status 
review tribunals, or C.S.R.T.’s, to the civilian legal 
system, which gives defendants extensive rights.
“This is just one of many areas,” a government brief said, 
“where it is inappropriate to compare C.S.R.T. proceedings 
with background principles that stem from domestic criminal 
law.”
Another aspect to the case in the appeals court that has 
caused public debate involves the government’s request 
that the court tighten restrictions on lawyers for the 
detainees. One proposal would have limited the number 
of visits the lawyers could make to Guantánamo, a request 
that the Justice Department withdrew Friday.
The practice of repeating some of the hearings is shrouded 
in secrecy. It first came to public attention in November, 
when a report by Seton Hall University Law School documented 
that “at least three detainees were initially found not 
to be enemy combatants” but were then reclassified as enemy 
combatants after a new hearing.
Reviewing records of 102 hearings that were obtained from 
the government through lawsuits, the report’s authors found 
that “at least one detainee, after his first and second 
tribunals unanimously determined him not to be an enemy 
combatant, had yet a third tribunal” that then classified 
him as an enemy combatant. About 380 men are now detained 
at Guantánamo.
Military officials have not said in how many cases such 
hearings were repeated.
A Pentagon spokesman, Lt. Cmdr. Chito Peppler of the Navy, 
acknowledged that some decisions had reversed earlier 
findings that detainees were not enemy combatants.
At the same time, Commander Peppler said, after 
reconsideration in Washington, some detainees benefited 
from tribunal hearings that were repeated and that 
reclassified them from enemy combatant to “no longer 
enemy combatant,” making them eligible for release.
Commander Peppler disputed the way the detainees’ lawyers 
described the repeat hearings. He said multiple hearings 
for a single detainee were part of the process. Under 
Defense Department rules, he said, the hearing process 
is not finished until a Pentagon official “completes 
final review and approval of the decisions of the 
tribunals.”
The combatant status review process was initiated in 
a July 7, 2004, memorandum by Paul D. Wolfowitz, then 
the deputy secretary of defense. He acted after a Supreme 
Court decision that June suggested that detainees were 
entitled to a “fair opportunity to rebut the government’s 
factual assertions before a neutral decision maker.”
As set up by the Pentagon, the tribunals do not permit 
detainees to have lawyers at the hearings or to see much 
of the evidence against them.
When asked about the detainees’ lawyers’ assertion that 
the tribunal process was not fair, a Justice Department 
spokesman, Erik Ablin, said “more process has been afforded 
to the detainees than ever provided to enemy combatants 
in the history of armed conflict.”
Critics of the Bush administration’s detention policies 
argue that the unusual and indefinite detentions at 
Guantánamo raise new questions about the extent of the 
government’s war powers.
Eric M. Freedman, a law professor at Hofstra University 
who has consulted with lawyers for several detainees, 
said the repeated hearings were a symptom of the flaws 
in the military hearings. “The system is designed,” 
Mr. Freedman said, “to validate the holding of everyone 
they are now holding.”
Because much of the evidence in the combatant status 
hearings is classified and much of the process occurs 
behind closed doors, little is known about the repeat 
hearings.
One e-mail message from a Pentagon official, declassified 
last month in a court case, shows that the official, whose 
name remains classified, ordered a new hearing after 
a detainee had been determined not to be an enemy combatant. 
The e-mail message, apparently from early 2005, noted 
that other detainees whose circumstances were similar 
had been declared properly held.
The official wrote that “inconsistencies will not cast 
a favorable light” on the hearing process or the Pentagon 
office in charge of the combatant status review system, 
the Office for the Administrative Review of the Detention 
of Enemy Combatants. After a new hearing, according to 
a court document, the detainee was reclassified as an 
enemy combatant. He is still at Guantánamo.
Detainees’ lawyers say that in recent months they have 
learned of other cases, beyond the three identified in 
the Seton Hall report last year, that might have involved 
repeated hearings.
This month, Susan Baker Manning, a lawyer for seven detainees 
involved in the current appeals court case, received a package 
of information from the government about the combatant status 
hearing of one of the seven. At the bottom of a Pentagon 
memorandum dated Jan. 14, 2005, there was a note that said her 
client had first been determined not to be an enemy combatant. 
But later, the notation continued, it was “ultimately determined 
that the detainee is an enemy combatant.”
Ms. Manning’s client, Hammad Memet, now 29, has been at Guantánamo 
for more than five years. 
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
7) In Deal, a Test for the U.A.W.
By MICHELINE MAYNARD
May 15, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/15/business/15Auto.html?ref=business
AUBURN HILLS, Mich., May 14 — Can private equity investors 
fix Chrysler for good, and can they avoid a confrontation 
with the United Automobile Workers union?
These are the most pressing questions to arise from the deal 
announced Monday for Cerberus Capital Management, which 
specializes in restructuring troubled companies, to pay 
a total of $7.4 billion to take control of Chrysler, with
most of that money to be invested in the newly independent 
company.
By unwinding a nine-year-old merger between Chrysler and 
Daimler-Benz of Germany, Cerberus is also taking on 
Chrysler’s $18 billion obligation for health care and 
pensions for employees and retirees.
Any efforts to sharply reduce those perks — which Chrysler 
can afford but says represent a cost burden of $1,500 
a vehicle — will probably put it at odds with the U.A.W.
The issue will take on added importance in two months, 
when the union and Detroit automakers open talks on a new 
national contract. The union’s position on Chrysler may 
influence talks with General Motors and the Ford Motor 
Company, with the outcome representing the latest chapter 
in the wholesale restructuring of the American auto industry.
For now, the U.A.W. is supporting the deal. Its stance 
represents a reversal from only a month ago, when Ron 
Gettelfinger, the union president, warned that an equity 
player might “strip and flip” Chrysler, selling off its 
most valuable parts for a quick profit.
But based on what the union was told of Cerberus’s plans, 
Mr. Gettelfinger said Monday that the U.A.W. was “confident 
enough to say that we support this transaction.”
That support may dwindle as the company and the union start 
discussing specifics. The most obvious way for Cerberus 
to make money off its investment is to cut costs — especially 
by reducing the benefits that workers hold sacred, including 
medical benefits for workers and their immediate families 
for life, with only modest co-payments or deductibles.
“They’re going to want us to give something up,” Tim Preston, 
50, a tradesman at Chrysler’s Jefferson Avenue North assembly 
plant in Detroit, said Monday.
Chrysler, in fact, has already tried. Last year, the U.A.W. 
refused to give Chrysler the same concessions on medical 
costs that it granted G.M. and Ford, which it deemed 
in far worse shape.
The union also refused to grant deep wage and benefit cuts 
to the Delphi Corporation, G.M.’s former parts subsidiary, 
which had reached agreement to sell itself to Cerberus 
if a labor deal could be reached. Company and union leaders 
say those talks are not dead, however.
Except for the early 1980s, when the union granted concessions 
at all three car companies, labor talks have been fruitful 
for the U.A.W. in recent decades, as it has continued to make 
gains in wages and benefits even as tens of thousands of jobs 
have been eliminated.
That trend was broken in the last couple of years when the 
union agreed to buyouts and retirement incentives for workers 
and agreed to concessions at G.M. and Ford.
By showing their support Monday for the Cerberus deal, 
U.A.W. leaders may have been trying to set the tricky 
groundwork of making the prospect of concessions palatable 
to union members as a way to keep Chrysler competitive.
“It does promise some creative and maybe not-business-as-
usual solutions,” said John Paul MacDuffie, co-director of 
the International Motor Vehicle Program at the Massachusetts 
Institute of Technology.
No requests have been made of the union yet, but both 
Mr. Gettelfinger and senior Chrysler executives say 
there seems to be a meeting of minds.
“We have been led to believe that they are very concerned 
about the American automobile industry,” said Mr. Gettelfinger, 
who spent four hours with Chrysler executives this weekend 
being briefed.
His reaction was clearly a relief to the Cerberus chairman, 
John W. Snow, the former Treasury secretary, who joined 
DaimlerChrysler officials in Stuttgart, Germany, at 
a news conference on Monday.
“We’re going to work to make sure this company succeeds, 
and as the company succeeds, it will maximize opportunities 
for workers,” Mr. Snow said. “Our objective is a successful 
Chrysler and a successful Chrysler creates opportunities.”
Some workers, however, were skeptical. “It makes me real 
nervous,” said Anthony Watson, 36, a chassis assembly 
worker at Chrysler’s truck plant in Warren, Mich.
Richard Burns, 39, an assembly line worker at the Warren 
plant, just north of Detroit, said he and many of his 
colleagues did not know much about Cerberus. “We’re 
scared they’re going to break us up,” he said.
Cerberus officials insisted Monday that was not the case. 
Under the complicated deal, Cerberus will take an 
80.1 percent stake in the new company, to be known 
as Chrysler Holding. Of the $7.4 billion, Cerberus 
agreed to invest $5 billion in the new Chrysler and 
$1.05 billion in Chrysler’s financial arm. The remaining 
$1.35 billion will go to the former German parent company.
In turn, DaimlerChrysler has agreed to lend Chrysler 
Holding $400 million and will absorb $1.6 billion in 
costs related to a restructuring program under way at 
Chrysler, which said in February that it would cut 
13,000 jobs and close all or part of four factories. 
Investors in DaimlerChrysler showed their support for 
the deal Monday by bidding up the shares $2.12, to $84.12. 
The Cerberus deal will have little impact on shareholders 
of the German parent company, other than the financial 
impact of shedding Chrysler.
All told, DaimlerChrysler will spend $677 million in cash 
on the transaction. Daimler-Benz paid $36 billion for 
Chrysler in 1998 in what was portrayed as a merger of 
equals but ended up being a German takeover of the 
American company.
In hindsight, the merger’s early days were its best. At 
the time, Chrysler was rolling in profit, from the popularity 
of its big Jeeps and minivans, while Mercedes-Benz was 
enjoying a comeback for its cars, especially the E-class 
sedan and the M-class, its first S.U.V.
The architects of that earlier merger, Jürgen E. Schrempp, 
the former chief executive at Daimler-Benz, and Robert J. 
Eaton, who ran Chrysler, envisioned a company that married 
the mass-market success of Chrysler and the luxury appeal 
of Mercedes. But Chrysler did not consistently deliver 
on its promise.
Indeed, for the last 30 years, Chrysler has acted like 
what might be described as a split-personality car company, 
with wide and fast swings from highs to lows.
The same big vehicles, for example, that generated big 
profits in the late 1990s put Chrysler out of step with 
changing consumer tastes when gas prices soared.
Last summer, as many as 100,000 unsold Chryslers piled 
up on storage lots, a big factor in Chrysler’s $1.5 
billion loss for 2006. Last year, it fell to fourth 
place in the American market, behind Toyota.
In February, Mr. Schrempp’s successor, Dieter Zetsche, 
who ran Chrysler from 2000 to 2005, said the company 
would eliminate 13,000 jobs, or 16 percent of the total 
staff, and close all or part of four plants in its second 
restructuring in seven years.
Mr. Zetsche also put Chrysler up for sale, attracting 
a series of bidders, including Cerberus as well as two 
other equity players, the Blackstone Group and Centerbridge 
Partners.
The billionaire Kirk Kerkorian, who had often tangled 
with Chrysler management, also put in a bid, as did Magna 
International, the Canadian auto parts supplier.
The Cerberus deal represents a sea change in Detroit, 
where there has not been a major privately held company 
in over half a century (the Ford Motor Company, in which 
the Ford family still has a controlling stake, went 
public in 1956; G.M. has been public for nearly 
a century.)
As a private company, Chrysler may be able to better 
explore, with less public scrutiny, ways to lower health 
care costs with its workers.
One idea may come from the Goodyear Tire and Rubber 
Company, which is giving the United Steelworkers union 
$1 billion to take over a health care plan covering 
30,000 retired workers.
Executives from all of Detroit’s companies have studied 
the plan, which would probably cost the auto industry 
tens of billions of dollars to carry out in the United 
States. But if the U.A.W. did agree, it would mean removing 
the liability from the car companies.
Whatever the answer, many industry experts predict that 
Chrysler will find some way to resurrect itself.
“This history of coming back from near death over and 
over — the nine lives of Chrysler — does have a powerful 
hold within the company, and with their suppliers and 
with the union workers,” Professor MacDuffie said.
Nick Bunkley contributed reporting.
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
8) Satellites Show Harvest of Mud That Trawlers Leave Behind
By CORNELIA DEAN
May 15, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/15/science/15mud.html
Scientists have known for years that when fishing trawlers 
drag nets and gear across the ocean bottom they trap or kill 
almost all the fish, mollusks and other creatures they 
encounter. And the dragging destroys underwater features 
like reefs, turning the bottom to mud.
Now, scientists have used satellite images to show fleets 
of trawlers leaving plumes of mud behind them like contrails. 
They hope the images will focus wider attention on trawling 
damage, and on the possible uses of satellites to monitor 
fishing.
One of the researchers, Kyle Van Houtan, who earned his 
doctorate in environmental science in December at Duke, 
began the work when he was studying the nesting success 
of sea turtles and wanted to check the influence of 
shrimpers, who trawl the bottom for their catch. He turned 
for guidance to Daniel Pauly, director of the fisheries 
center at the University of British Columbia, which maintains 
an elaborate global database on fishing.
Looking at satellite photos of boats at work, "I kept 
seeing lines on the images," Dr. Van Houtan said in 
a telephone interview. "My first thought was they looked 
like contrails from aircraft." Instead, he and Dr. Pauly 
dubbed them "mudtrails."
Churning up mud does immense harm, Dr. Pauly said in a 
telephone interview. Fish cannot see in water that is murky 
with suspended sediment. The mud can also clog their gills 
and set off algae blooms, which, in turn, lead to vast 
increases in bacteria. Ultimately, the result is a dead 
zone.
Even if that worst case does not materialize, trawling 
can change a vibrant ocean bottom into, in effect, 
a shrimp farm. The mud of repeatedly trawled areas is 
congenial to shrimp, Dr. Van Houtan said, "but anything 
else you might like to eat, like tuna, is gone."
"It was one of those eureka moments," he said of his 
realization that mudtrails were visible from space. 
When he looked at images of prime fishing areas, "we 
saw an amazing density of boats," he said. "You can 
see the birds following the boats to get the discarded 
bycatch."
The good news, Dr. Pauly said, is that trawlers and their 
mudtrails can be seen so clearly that it would in theory 
be possible to monitor fishing by satellite. Even if 
captains of individual boats do not want to cooperate 
in such efforts, Dr. Pauly said, "we can see what they do."
Related:
Ocean Pollution: "OCEANS WITHOUT FISH"
By Roland Sheppard
http://web.mac.com/rolandgarret/iWeb/Site/Ocean%20Pollution%3A%20%27Oceans%20Without%20Fish%27.html
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
9) LESSONS WE LEARNED FROM THE 6th 
HEMISPHERIC MEETING IN HAVANA
Fidel Castro Ruz
May 14, 2007
5: 12 pm
www.marxmail.org
María Luisa Mendonça brought to the meeting in Havana, a powerful 
documentary film on the subject of manual sugarcane cutting in Brazil.
As I did in my previous reflection, I have written a summary using 
María Luisa's own paragraphs and phrases. It goes as follows:
We are aware that most of the wars in the last few decades have been 
waged over control of energy sources. Both in central and peripheral 
nations, energy consumption is guaranteed for the privileged sectors, 
while the majority of the world's population does not have access to 
basic services.  The per capita consumption of energy in the United 
States is 13,000 kilowatts, while the world average is 2,429 and in 
Latin America the average is 1,601.
The private monopoly of energy sources is ensured by clauses in the 
bilateral or multilateral Free Trade Agreements.
The role of the peripheral nations is to produce cheap energy for the 
central wealthy nations, which represents a new phase in the 
colonization process.
It's necessary to demystify all the propaganda about the alleged 
benefits of agrifuels. In the case of ethanol, the growing and 
processing of sugarcane pollutes the soil and the sources of drinking 
water because it uses large amounts of chemical products.
Ethanol distillation produces a residue called vinasse.  For every 
liter of ethanol produced, 10 to 13 liters of vinasse are 
generated.  Part of this residue can be used as fertilizer, but most 
of it pollutes rivers and the sources of underground water.  If 
Brazil were to produce 17 or 18 billion liters of ethanol per year, 
this means that at least 170 billion liters of vinasse would be 
deposited in the sugarcane field areas. Just imagine the environmental impact.
Burning sugarcane to facilitate the harvesting process, destroys many 
of the microorganisms in the soil, contaminates the air and causes 
many respiratory illnesses.
The Brazilian National Institute of Space Research issues a state of 
emergency almost every year in Sao Paulo -where 60% of Brazil's 
ethanol production takes place- because the burning-off has plunged 
the humidity levels in the air to extreme lows, between 13% and 15%; 
breathing is impossible during this period in the Sao Paulo area 
where the sugarcane harvest takes place.
The expansion of agrienergy production, as we know, is of great 
interest to the corporations dealing with genetically modified or 
transgenetic organisms, such as Monsanto, Syngenta, Dupont, Bass and Bayer.
In the case of Brazil, the Votorantim Corporation has developed 
technologies for the production of a non-edible transgenetic 
sugarcane, and we know of many corporations that are developing this 
same type of technology; since there are no measures in place to 
avoid transgenetic contamination in the native crop fields, this 
practice places food production at risk.
With regards to the denationalization of Brazilian territory, large 
companies have bought up sugar mills in Brazil: Bunge, Novo Group, 
ADM, Dreyfus as well as business magnates George Soros and Bill Gates.
As a result of all this, we are aware that the expansion of ethanol 
production has led to the expulsion of peasants from their lands and 
has created a situation of dependency on what we call the sugarcane 
economy, not because the sugarcane industry generates jobs, on the 
contrary, it generates unemployment because this industry controls 
the territory.  This means that there is no room for other productive sectors.
At the same time, we are faced with the propaganda about the 
efficiency of this industry. We know that it is based on the 
exploitation of cheap and slave labor. Workers are paid according to 
the amount of sugar cane they cut, not according to number of hours 
they have worked.
In Sao Paulo State where the industry is most modern -"modern" is 
relative of course- and it is the country's biggest producer, the 
goal for each worker is to cut between 10 to 15 tons of cane per day.
Pedro Ramos, a professor at Campinas University, made these 
calculations: in the 1980's, the workers cut around 4 tons a day and 
were paid the equivalent of more or less 5 dollars.  Today, they need 
to cut 15 tons of sugarcane to be paid 3 dollars a day.
Even the Ministry of Labor in Brazil made a study which shows that 
before, 100 square meters of sugarcane yielded 10 tons; today, with 
transgenetic cane one must cut 300 square meters to reach 10 
tons.  Thus, workers must work three times more to cut 10 tons. This 
pattern of exploitation has resulted in serious health problems and 
even death for the workers.
A researcher with the Ministry of Labor in Sao Paulo says that in 
Brazil, sugar and ethanol are soaked in blood, sweat and death.  In 
2005, the Ministry of Labor in Sao Paulo reported the death of 450 
worker for other causes such as murder and accidents -would this be 
because transportation to the refineries is very unsafe?- and also as 
a result of illnesses such as heart attack and cancer.
According to María Cristina Gonzaga, who carried out the survey, this 
Ministry of Labor research shows that in the last five years, 1,383 
sugarcane workers have died in Sao Paulo State alone.
Slave labor is also common in this sector. Workers are usually 
migrants from the northeast or from Minas Gerais, lured in by 
intermediaries. Normally the contract is not directly with the 
company, but through intermediaries -in Brazil we call them "gatos"- 
who chose the laborers for the sugar mills.
In 2006, the district attorney's office of the Public Ministry 
inspected 74 sugar mills, only in Sao Paulo, and all of them were 
taken to court.
In March 2007 alone, the district attorney's office of the Ministry 
of Labor rescued 288 workers from slavery in Sao Paulo.
That same month, in Mato Grosso State, 409 workers were pulled out of 
a sugar mill that produces ethanol; among them was a group of 150 
indigenous people. In Mato Grosso, the central area of the country, 
indigenous people are used as slave labor force in the sugar industry.
Every year, hundreds of workers suffer similar conditions in the 
fields.  What are these conditions?  They work without being legally 
reported, with no protective equipment, without adequate food or 
water, without access to washrooms and with very precarious housing; 
moreover, they have to pay for their housing and food, which is very 
expensive, and they also have to buy their implements such as boots 
and machetes and, of course, when work-related accidents occur, which 
is often, they do not receive adequate care.
For us, the central issue is the elimination of the latifundia 
because behind this modern façade we have a central issue, and that 
is the latifundia in Brazil and, of course, in other Latin American 
countries.  Likewise, a serious food production policy is called for.
Having said this, I would like to present a documentary that we 
filmed in Pernambuco State with sugarcane workers; this is one of the 
biggest sugarcane producing regions, and so you will be able to see 
what the conditions are really like.
This documentary was made with the Pastoral Land Commission of Brazil 
(CPT) and with the unions of forestry workers in the state of Pernambuco.
With this, the outstanding and much admired Brazilian leader 
concluded her speech.
And now I shall present the opinions of the sugarcane cutters as they 
appeared in the film shown to us by María Luisa.  In the documentary, 
when the people are not identified by name, they are identified as 
being a man, a woman or a young man. I am not including them all 
because there were so many.
Severino Francisco de Silva.- When I was 8 years old, my father moved 
to the Junco refinery.  When I got there, I was about to turn 9; my 
father began to work and I was tying up the cane with him.  I worked 
some 14 or 15 years in the Junco sugar mill.
A woman.- I've been living at the sugar mill for 36 years. Here I was 
married and I gave birth to 11 children.
A man.- I've been cutting cane for many years, I don't even know how to count.
A man.- I started working when I was 7 and my life is that: cutting 
cane and weeding.
A young man.- I was born here, I'm 23 years old, and I've been 
cutting cane since I was 9.
A woman.-  I worked for 13 years here in Salgado Plant.  I planted 
cane, spread fertilizer, cleaned sugarcane fields.
Severina Conceiçäo.- I know how to do all this field work: spread 
fertilizer, plant sugar cane.  I did it all with a belly this big 
(she refers to her pregnancy) and with the basket beside me, and I 
kept on working.
A man.- I work; every work is difficult, but sugarcane harvest is the 
worst work we have here in Brazil.
Edleuza.- I get home and I wash the dishes, clean the house, do the 
house chores, do everything.  I used to cut cane and sometimes I'd 
get home and I wasn't able to even wash the dishes, my hands were 
hurting with blisters.
Adriano Silva.- The problem is that the foreman wants too much of us 
at work.  There are days when we cut cane and get paid, but there are 
days when we don't get paid.  Sometimes it's enough, and sometimes it isn't.
Misael.- We have a perverse situation here; the foreman wants to take 
off from the weight of the cane. He says that what we cut here is all 
that we have and that's that. We are working like slaves, do you 
understand?  You can't do it like this!
Marco.- Harvesting sugar cane is slave work, it's really hard 
work.   We start out at 3 in the morning; we get back at 8 at night. 
It's only good for the boss, because he earns more every day that 
goes by and the worker loses, production decreases and everything is 
for the boss.
A man.- Sometimes we go to sleep without having washed, there's no 
water, we wash up in a stream down there.
A young man.- Here we have no wood for cooking, each one of us, if we 
want to eat, has to go out and find wood.
A man.- Lunch is whatever you can bring from home, we eat just like 
that, in the hot sun, carrying on as well as you can in this life.
A young man.- People who work a lot need to have enough food.  While 
the boss of the sugar plantation has an easy life, with all the best 
of everything, we suffer.
A woman.- I have gone hungry. I would often go to bed hungry, 
sometimes I had nothing to eat, nothing to feed my daughter with; 
sometimes I'd go looking for salt; that was the easiest thing to find.
Egidio Pereira.- You have two or three kids, and if you don't look 
after yourself, you starve; there isn't enough to live on.
Ivete Cavalcante.- There is no such thing as a salary here; you have 
to clean a ton of cane for eight reales; you earn according to 
whatever you can cut: if you cut a ton, you earn eight reales, there 
is no set wage.
A woman.- A salary?  I've never heard of that.
Reginaldo Souza.- Sometimes they pay us in money.  Nowadays they are 
paying in money; in the winter they pay with a voucher.
A woman.- The voucher, well, you work and he writes everything down 
on paper, he passes it on to another person who goes out to buy stuff 
at the market.  People don't see the money they earn.
José Luiz.- The foreman does whatever he wants with the 
people.  What's happening is that I called for him to "calculate the 
cane", and he didn't want to.  I mean: in this case he is forcing 
someone to work.  And so the person works for free for the company.
Clovis da Silva.- It's killing us!  We cut cane for half a day, we 
think we are going to get some money, and when he comes around to 
calculate we are told that the work was worth nothing.
Natanael.- The cattle trucks bring the workers here, it's worse than 
for the boss's horse; because when the boss puts his horse on the 
truck, he gives him water, he puts sawdust down to protect his hoofs, 
he gives him hay, and there is a person to go with him; as for the 
workers, let them do what they can: get in, shut the door and that's 
that.  They treat the workers as if they were animals. The 
"Pro-Alcohol" doesn't help the workers, it only helps the sugarcane 
suppliers, it helps the bosses and they constantly get richer; 
because if it would create jobs for the workers, that would be basic, 
but it doesn't create jobs.
José Loureno.- They have all this power because in the House, state 
or federal, they have a politician representing these sugarcane 
mills. Some of the owners are deputies, ministers or relatives of 
sugar mill owners, who facilitate this situation for the owners.
A man.- It seems that our work never ends.  We don't have holidays, 
or a Christmas bonus, everything is lost.  Also, we don't even get a 
fourth of our salary, which is compulsory; it's what we use to buy 
clothes at the end of the year, or clothing for our children. They 
don't supply us with any of that stuff, and we see how every day, it 
gets much more difficult.
A woman.- I am a registered worker and I've never had a right to 
anything, not even medical leaves. When we get pregnant, we have a 
right to a medical leave, but I didn't have that right, family 
guarantees; I also never got any Christmas bonus, I always got some 
little thing, and then nothing more.
A man.- For 12 years he's never paid the bonuses or vacations.
A man.- You can't get sick, you work day and night on top of the 
truck, cutting cane, at dawn.  I became sick, and I was a strong man.
Reinaldo.- One day I went to work wearing sneakers; when I swung the 
machete to cut cane, I cut my toe, I finished work and went home.
A young man.-  There are no boots, we work like this, many of us work 
barefoot, the conditions are bad.  They said that the sugar mill was 
going to donate boots. A week ago he cut his foot (he points) because 
there are no boots.
A young man.- I was sick, I was sick for three days, I didn't get 
paid, they didn't pay me a thing.  I saw the doctor to ask for a 
leave and they didn't give me one.
A young man.- There was a lad who came from "Macugi".  He was at work 
when he started to feel sick, and vomit. You need a lot of energy, 
the sun is very hot and people aren't made of steel, the human body 
just can't resist this.
Valdemar.- This poison we use (he refers to the herbicides) brings a 
lot of illness.  It causes different kinds of diseases: skin cancer, 
bone cancer, it enters the blood and destroys our health. You feel 
nauseous, you can even fall over.
A man.- In the period between harvests there is practically no work.
A man.- The work that the foreman tells you to do, must be done; 
because as you know, if we don't do it∑ We aren't the bosses; it's 
them that are the bosses. If they give you a job, you have to do it.
A man.- I'm here hoping someday to have a piece of land and end my 
days in the country, so that I can fill my belly and the bellies of 
my children and my grandchildren who live here with me.
Could it be that there is anything else?
End of the documentary.
There is nobody more grateful than I for this testimony and for María 
Luisa's presentation which I have just summarized.  They make me to 
remember the first years of my life, an age when human beings tend to 
be very active.
I was born on a privately owned sugarcane latifundium bordering on 
the north, east and west on large tracts of land belonging to three 
American transnational companies which, together, possessed more than 
600 thousand acres. Cane cutting was done by hand in green sugarcane 
fields; at that time we didn't use herbicides or even fertilizers. A 
plantation could last more than 15 years.  Labor was very cheap and 
the transnationals earned a lot of money.
The owner of the sugarcane plantation where I was born was a Galician 
immigrant, from a poor peasant family, practically an illiterate; at 
first, he had been sent here as a soldier, taking the place of a rich 
man who had paid to avoid military service and at the end of the war 
he was shipped back to Galicia.  He returned to Cuba on his own like 
countless other Galicians who migrated to other countries of Latin America.
He worked as a hand for an important trans-national company, the 
United Fruit Company. He had organizational skills and so he 
recruited a large number of day-workers like himself, became a 
contractor and ended up buying land with his accumulated profits in 
an area neighboring the southern part of the big American company. In 
the eastern end of the country, the traditionally independent-minded 
Cuban population had increased notably and lacked land; but the main 
burden of eastern agriculture, at the beginning of the last century, 
rested on the backs of slaves who had been freed a few years earlier 
or were the descendents of the old slaves and on the backs of Haitian 
immigrants.  The Haitians did not have any relatives. They lived 
alone in their miserable huts made of palm trees, clustered in 
hamlets, with only two or three women among all of them. During the 
short harvesting season, cockfights would take place.
The Haitians would bet their pitiful earnings and the rest they used 
to buy food which had gone through many intermediaries and was very expensive.
The Galician landowner lived there, on the sugarcane plantation. He 
would go out just to tour the plantations and he would talk to anyone 
who needed or wanted something from him. Often times he would help 
them out, for reasons that were more humanitarian than economic. He 
could make decisions.
The managers of the United Fruit Company plantations were Americans 
who had been carefully chosen and they were very well paid.  They 
lived with their families in stately mansions, in selected 
spots.  They were like some distant gods, mentioned in a respectful 
tone by the starving laborers.  They were never seen at the sugarcane 
fields where they sent their subordinates. The shareholders of the 
big transnationals lived in the United States or other parts of the 
world.  The expenses of the plantations were budgeted and nobody 
could increase one single cent.
I know very well the family that grew out of the second marriage of 
that Galician immigrant with a young, very poor Cuban peasant girl, 
who, like him, had not been able to go to school. She was very 
self-sacrificing and absolutely devoted to her family and to the 
plantation's financial activities.
Those of you abroad who are reading my reflections on the Internet 
will be surprised to learn that that landowner was my father.  I am 
the third of that couple's seven children; we were all born in a room 
in a country home, far away from any hospital, with the help of a 
peasant midwife, dedicated heart and soul to her job and calling upon 
years of practical experience. Those lands were all handed over to 
the people by the Revolution.
I should just like to add that we totally support the decree for 
nationalization of the patent from a transnational pharmaceutical 
company to produce and sell in Brazil an AIDS medication, Efavirenz, 
that is far too expensive, just like many others, as well as the 
recent mutually satisfactory solution to the dispute with Bolivia 
about the two oil refineries.
I would like to reiterate our deepest respect for the people of our 
sister nation of Brazil.
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
10) Somewhere over the Rainbow:
A report from a Kansas Mutual Aid 
member from tornado devastated
Greensburg, Kansas
by Dave Strano
Kansas Mutual Aid member
Lawrence, Kansas
kansasmutualaid@hotmail.com
On Saturday May 12, four members of Kansas Mutual Aid, a Lawrence based
class struggle anarchist collective traveled to the small South Central
Kansas town of Greensburg. Our intention was to go as a fact-finding
delegation, to report back to the social justice movement in Lawrence on
what exactly was happening in the city.
On Friday May 4, 2007 Greensburg was almost completely destroyed by a F5
tornado. 97% of the buildings in the town of 1500 were destroyed or
damaged beyond repair. Nearly every single resident was left homeless,
jobless, and devastated. At least eleven people died in the storm, and
hundreds of companion animals, livestock, and wild animals were killed
as well.
According to the 2000 census, 97% of the population of Greensburg was
white, and the median income of the population was a meager $28,000. The
city was and still is comprised of overwhelmingly poor, white working
people.
Shortly after the tornado, the Federal Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA) took control of the recovery efforts in Greensburg. The United
Way became the coordinating organization for relief volunteers but,
after orders came from FEMA, halted the flow of volunteers into
Greensburg. FEMA demanded that Greensburg needed to be "secured" before
the area could be opened to real recovery efforts.
So, as hundreds of recovery volunteers were told to not come to
Greensburg by the United Way, hundreds of police from dozens of Kansas
jurisdictions were mobilized to enter the city and establish "control."
Reports coming from the recovery effort in Greensburg had been woefully
short of information. We made multiple phone calls to the United Way and
other aid agencies, and were told repeatedly not to come, that "We don't
need volunteers at this time." We were told that if we wanted to help,
we should just make a financial donation to the Salvation Army or United
Way.
With the experiences of Katrina and other major disasters fresh in our
collective conscious, we decided to go anyway, to assess the situation
and be able to present a better picture to those people in Lawrence that
were rightfully concerned about the effectiveness of the relief efforts.
On the night of Friday May 11, in the spirit of offering solidarity to
the working class population of Greensburg, members of KMA traveled two
hours to Wichita and spent the night there. A mandatory curfew had been
imposed on Greensburg, with no one being able to be in the city between
8pm and 8am. So after a nearly sleepless night, we piled into our
vegetable oil burning car and made the final two hour drive to
Greensburg, careful to not arrive before 8.
Multiple news agencies had reported that because of FEMA, all volunteers
were being denied entry at the checkpoints set up outside the city. As
we approached the checkpoint, we became really nervous, and tried to
make sure we had our story straight.
We were stopped by an armed contingent of Kansas Highway Patrol
Officers. We explained that we had come to help with the relief efforts,
and after a quick stare and glance into our car, the officer in charge
directed us to a red and white tent about half a mile into the town.
It turned out that on Friday the 11th, a week after the tornado
destroyed Greensburg, the Americorps organization was finally given
permission to establish and coordinate volunteer recovery efforts.
Americorps members from St. Louis had set up their base of operations in
a large red and white canopy tent that was also being used a meeting
place for the residents of the city.
Americorps volunteers proved to be pretty reliable for information, and
good contacts to have made while we were down there. Despite the
hierarchical and contradictory aims of the national organization, the
Americorps people on the ground were the only people really offering any
physical recovery aid to the residents of Greensburg.
The four of us from KMA, signed in to the volunteer tent and were given
red wristbands that were supposed to identify us as aid workers. We
decided not to wait to be assigned a location to work, and instead to
travel around the city on foot and meet as many local people as we could.
Our primary goals were numerous. We intended to analyze the situation
and assess how our organization could help from Lawrence. If long term
physical aid was needed from us, we had to make contacts within the
local populace that could offer a place to set up a base camp. We also
intended to find out what happened to the prisoners in the county jail
during and after the storm, and what the current procedure for those
being arrested was. In a highly militarized city, the police and
military were the biggest threat to personal safety.
As we traveled further into the ravaged town, it became clear that the
photographs I had seen had not done justice to what truly had happened
here. All that could be seen was endless devastation in every direction.
There wasn't a single building in this area of the town that had been
left standing. The devastation was near complete. Every single house we
came across in the first moments we entered the town had completely
collapsed. Every single tree was mangled and branchless. Memories of
watching post-nuclear warfare movies filled my head as we walked around
the city.
This was a post-apocalyptic world. The city was eerily empty for the
most part. National Guard troops patrolled in Hummers and trucks.
Occasionally, a Red Cross or Salvation Army truck would drive by. Very
few residents were there working on their homes.
After a short while, we met with several people evacuating belongings
from their home. They told us that FEMA had been there for a week, and
that all FEMA could offer them was a packet of information. The packet,
however, had to be mailed to the recipients, and they had no mailing
address! Their entire house had been destroyed. Their mailbox was
probably in the next county. All they were left to do was evacuate what
few belongings could be saved from their house, and then pull the
non-salvageable belongings and scraps of their house to the curb for the
National Guard trash crews to haul away.
No agency in the city besides Americorps was offering to help with the
removal of this debris, or the recovery of people's homes. FEMA's
mission was to safeguard the property of businesses in the area and
offer "low interest" loans to property owners affected. The National
Guard was on hand along with the local police, to act as the enforcement
mechanism for FEMA, while occasionally hauling debris and garbage out of
the city.
The only building in the city that FEMA and others were working in or
around was the County Courthouse. When we approached this area, we
quickly took notice of the giant air-conditioned FEMA tour buses, along
with dozens of trailers that were now housing the City Hall, police
dispatch centers, and emergency crews.
The media had reported that residents of the city would be receiving
FEMA trailers similar to the ones in New Orleans. The only FEMA trailer
I saw was being occupied by police.
At this location, we tried to formulate some answers as to what had
happened to any prisoners being housed in the county jail during the
storm, as well as the fate of the at least seven people that had been
arrested since the storm.
Not a single person could offer us a real answer. As of the writing of
this article, we are still working to find the answer to that question.
We have ascertained that any prisoners that were in Greensburg during
the storm were sent to Pratt County Jail immediately after the storm had
subsided. However, we still don't know how many people that accounts
for, nor do we know the fate of any arrestees in the week since.
Several of the arrestees after the storm were soldiers from Fort Riley
that were sent in to secure the town. They have been accused of
"looting" alcohol and cigarettes from a grocery store. The residents I
talked to said that they had been told that the soldiers had just
returned from Iraq. Is it a wonder that they would want to get drunk the
first chance they could? The social reality of this situation was
beginning to really set in. The city was in chaos, not because of the
storm, but because of FEMA and the police.
In the immediate recovery after the storm, FEMA and local police not
only worked to find survivors and the dead, but also any firearms in the
city. As you pass by houses in Greensburg, you notice that some are
spraypainted with how many weapons were recovered from the home. This is
central Kansas, a region with extremely high legal gun ownership. Of the
over 350 firearms confiscated by police immediately after the storm,
only a third have been returned to their owners. FEMA and the police
have systematically disarmed the local population, leaving the firepower
squarely in control of the state.
Later in the day we traveled with an Americorps volunteer that turned
out to be the sister of one of the members of the Lawrence
anti-capitalist movement. She gave us a small driving tour of the rest
of the devastation that we hadn't seen yet, and then deposited us in
front of a house of a family that was busy trying to clear out their
flooded basement.
Two days of rain had followed the tornado, and with most houses without
roofs, anything left inside the house that may have survived the initial
storm, was destroyed or at risk of being destroyed. The casualties of
the storm weren't just structures and cars. they were memories and loved
ones, in the forms of photographs, highschool yearbooks, family
memorabilia and momentos. People's entire lives had been swept away by
the storm.
We joined in the effort to help clear the basement, and listened to the
stories of the storm that the family told us. They explained that they
had just spent their life savings remodeling the basement, and now it
was gone. It had survived just long enough to save them and some
neighbors from the storm.
We removed whatever belongings were left in the basement, and sorted the
belongings into five piles. The smallest of the piles by far, as the
pile of things that were salvageable and worth keeping. The other piles
included one for wood debris, one for metal, one for hazardous waste,
and another pile for anything else that needed to be removed. From under
one of the piles, a scent of rotting flesh wafted through the air. The
family was afraid to look and see what may be hidden under the metal.
As we were preparing to leave the work site after clearing the entire
basement, we were thanked heartily by the family and their friends.
"Next time," one of them said, "bring fifty more with you."
Next time we will. It should be obvious to most by now, that the
federal, state, and local governments that deal with disasters of this
magnitude are not interested in helping the poor or working people that
are really impacted. Only through class solidarity from other working
people and working together with neighbors and community members will
the people of Greensburg be able to survive and rebuild.
Kansas Mutual Aid is in the midst of organizing a more permanent and
structured relief effort. We are continuing to make contacts to secure a
base camp for our work. We hope to have things organized and solidified
by Memorial Day Weekend when we plan to travel back with as many people,
tools, and supplies we can take.
Our goals are three fold:
1) To provide direct physical relief support to the residents of
Greensburg by being on hand to help salvage their homes, and provide any
other physical support they ask of us.
2) To offer solidarity and aid in any future organizing or agitating
efforts that will be needed to retain possession of their homes, or to
acquire any other physical aid they demand from the government or other
agencies.
3) To provide support and protection of human rights during the police
and military occupation of the city. We will work to document arrests
and ensure that human rights of arrestees are protected.
If you live in Eastern Kansas, or are willing to travel, we need your
help and experience. We also need a laundry list of supplies including:
Money for fuel for our vehicles
Respirators and filtered face masks
Headlamps and flashlights (none of the city has power, and there are a
lot of basements that will need to be worked in)
Shovels, pickaxes, prybars, crowbars, sledgehammers, and heavy duty rakes
Gloves, boots, goggles, construction helmets and other protective clothing
First Aid supplies
Water and Food (non-perishable) for volunteers heading down
Chainsaws and Gasoline
Portable generators
You and your experience
Please, if you have anything you can offer, or want to help in the
relief, e-mail us at kansasmutualaid@hotmail.com
We will be hosting a presentation on Monday May 21st at the Solidarity
Center in downtown Lawrence (1109 Mass Street) at 7pm on our experiences
in Greensburg, and on our plans to offer relief in the form of
solidarity and mutual aid, and not as charity. Please join us if you can.
There seems like there is much more to say, but with the experience
fresh in my mind, it's hard to keep typing. Action and organization is
needed more than a longer essay at this moment.
In love and solidarity,
Dave Strano
Kansas Mutual Aid member
Lawrence, Kansas
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
11) Court seeks Colombian lawmakers in growing scandal
Mon May 14, 2007 3:39PM EDT
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/N14314528.htm
BOGOTA (Reuters) - Colombia's Supreme Court on Monday ordered five  
congressmen arrested on charges they colluded with paramilitary death  
squads in a widening political scandal entangling allies of President  
Alvaro Uribe.
Uribe is under fire from critics at home and Democrats in the U.S.  
Congress who are skeptical about approving a free trade deal and a  
military aid package for Colombia because of suspected ties between  
pro-Uribe lawmakers and militia commanders.
Eight congressmen have already been jailed on charges they cooperated  
with paramilitary bosses who carried out massacres, murders and  
kidnappings in the name of combating guerrillas until they reached a  
2003 peace deal with Uribe.
Authorities said the names of five lawmakers appeared on a document  
signed with paramilitary leaders in 2001 at the Santa Fe de Ralito  
militia stronghold when the commanders took over swathes of  
countryside in a counter-insurgency campaign.
"The court's penal chamber has issued warrants for the five lawmakers  
accused of signing the Ralito pact. The charge is conspiring to  
commit an aggravated crime," Magistrate president Alfredo Gomez told  
reporters.
Uribe's government has received millions in U.S. aid to help fight  
rebels who are still battling a four-decade-old conflict fueled by  
the cocaine trade. The rebels have been pushed back in the jungles  
and Uribe has negotiated the disarming of 30,000 paramilitaries.
Rights groups have long denounced collusion among the paramilitaries,  
political leaders and army officers, but the extent of the links is  
becoming clearer as militia commanders give testimony about their  
crimes as part of their peace deal.
Uribe says the arrests are proof that Colombia's institutions are  
working better than ever and demanded authorities support the  
investigation. But rights groups say the militia bosses have kept  
their criminal networks and influence alive.
Top paramilitary commander Salvatore Mancuso has promised this week  
to give evidence about politicians, army commanders, business leaders  
and foreign companies who collaborated with the warlords before their  
demobilization.
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
12) More than 500 citizens of ECUADOR were victims 
of massacres in Colombia 
By AFP 5/14/2007 07:46 hours
VIA Email from: Greg McDonald 
sabocat59@mac.com
Quito 5/13/2007 – More than 500 Ecuadorians were victims of massacres
by Colombian paramilitaries between 1998 and 2002; their relatives
kept quiet and did not make accusations because they were afraid of
reprisals, the press charged yesterday.
"Hundreds of Ecuadorians disappeared in Colombia," and "mass graves
give clues to relatives of those lost in the border region," headlined
the daily El Universal, in the port city Guayaquil, in southwestern
Ecuador.
The paper indicated that, between 1998 and 2002, "more than 500
Ecuadorian campesinos, doctors, professors, merchants working in La
Hormiga, La Dorada, El Tigre, El Placer, San Miguel and other
districts of (the department of) Putumayo in Colombia were victims of
massacres caused by paramilitary groups."
"Family members kept silent and did not make accusations, from fear;
human rights organizations and the Ecuadorian government ignored the
cases," the paper added.
The paper stressed that "hundreds of Ecuadorians (men, women, and
children) traveling or living temporarily in some ten villages in
southern Colombian Putumayo, disappeared as a result of armed action
by paramilitary groups from Colombia."
A week ago, the attorney general of Colombia, Mario Iguarán, revealed
that the remains of Ecuadorian citizens have been found among more
than 100 victims of the paramilitaries in mass graves in Putumayo.
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
13) For blacks, the folly of the Iraq war hits home
Derrick Z. Jackson, THE BOSTON GLOBE
Monday, May 14, 2007
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2007/05/09/for_african_americans_folly_of_this_war_hits_home/
Military sociologist David R. Segal recently was asked
over the telephone what he hears in his surveys of
soldiers. He quoted an African American veteran of the
Iraq invasion and occupation: "This is not a black
people's war. This is not a poor people's war. This is
an oilman's war."
Gregory Black, a retired Navy diver who last year
started the Web site BlackMilitaryWorld.com, said that
quote sums up what he, too, hears from African
American veterans of Iraq.
"African Americans detest this war," Black said in a
recent phone interview. "Everybody kind of knows the
truth behind this war. It's a cash cow for the
military defense industry, when you look at the money
these contractors are making. African Americans saw
this at the beginning of the war and now the rest of
the country has figured it out. It's not benefiting us
in the least."
Asked about the reference to an "oilman's war," Black
said, "It's basically about oil, basically about
money. It's an economic war." He said veterans say
they are tired and burned out. "Guys are saying we're
halfway around the world fighting people of color
under the guise of democracy and we can't see how it's
benefited anyone," Black said. "It's hard to fight
halfway around the world for people's freedom when
you're not sure you have it at home."
This war, launched under false pretenses, has so
little merit that the enrollment of African Americans
in the military may be at its lowest point since the
creation of the all-volunteer military in 1973. In
2000, 23.5 percent of Army recruits were African
American. By 2005, the percentage dropped to 13.9
percent. National Public Radio quoted a Pentagon
statistic that said that African American propensity
to join the military had dropped to 9 percent.
Technically, 13.9 percent is about the proportion of
African Americans in the general population. But the
military's meritocracy has long been a
disproportionate option for African Americans because
of a lack of career opportunities and decent schools
to prepare them for college.
The drop in African American enrollment in the
military may be as powerful a collective political
statement about Iraq as when Muhammad Ali refused to
be drafted during the Vietnam War. Before the 2003
invasion, polls showed that African American support
for the invasion was as low as 19 percent, according
to the Joint Center for Political and Economic
Studies, while white support ran between 58 percent
and 73 percent in major polls.
Even today African Americans by far lead the way in
calling the war a mistake. According to Gallup, 85
percent of African Americans say it was a mistake,
compared to 53 percent of white Americans. According
to Pew, a plurality of white Americans, 49 percent,
still say it was the right decision to invade Iraq,
compared with 21 percent of African Americans.
"African Americans are always more sensitive to
anything that smacks of neocolonialism, which this war
did smack of," said Joint Center political analyst
David Bositis.
Segal and Black said that sensitivity has nothing to
do with patriotism. "What we're getting is not an
opposition to war, but considerable opposition to this
war," said Segal, director of the University of
Maryland's Center for Research on Military
Organization. He has done soldier attitude surveys for
the Army. "What we're seeing is a growing resentment
that it feels to them that the military has gone to
war, but not the nation. The military has gone to war,
the nation has gone to Wal-Mart."
Black said he still believes "without a shadow of a
doubt" that the military provides one of the best
opportunities for African Americans to advance in a
nation where civilian opportunities remain checkered.
But he also said the military may underestimate how
young people are absorbing the horrific images in
Iraq's chaos. Pentagon officials largely attribute the
drop in African American interest in the armed forces
to "influencers," parents, coaches, ministers, and
school counselors who urge youth not to enlist.
"I think some of that is true," Black said. "But I
taught ROTC in high school, and the kids themselves
are a lot smarter about this stuff. They see the news
and they can't justify going into a fight for
something they have no faith in."
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
14) A Statement by William Singletary, 
a witness in the case of Mumia
Abu-Jamal (1995 PCRA hearing), is what 
follows below.  This statement was sent to the
Labor Action Committee To Free Mumia 
Abu-Jamal, in order that it be read at
rallies held in solidarity with death-
row journalist Mumia Abu-Jamal, on the
day of what likely is his last appeal 
hearing--before a panel of the Third
Circuit federal court in Philadelphia, 
PA, May 17th 2007.  
LACFreeMumia@aol.com
    Singletary says he is perhaps the 
only true witness to the events of the
early morning hours of December 9th, 1981, 
at 13th and Locust streets in
Philadelphia, at which radio journalist 
and former Black Panther Mumia Abu-Jamal
was beaten, and fingered by police 
for the murder of a police officer.  
Singletary was never called to testify 
at the rigged and racist charade, which is
sometimes referred to as Mumia's1982 trial.
    Singletary insists that Mumia Abu-
Jamal did not even arrive on the scene
until after the officer was shot, and 
did not in any way participate in the shooting.  
Mumia himself was a victim, having 
been shot and then viciously
attacked by white Philadelphia cops.
    The hearing on May 17th may be 
Mumia's last.  It concerns only a few
issues out of a great many outstanding 
questions in this case, most of which have
never been heard in court.  The evidence 
shows that Mumia is innocent, and the
statement below is just one of the many 
proofs of that fact.  Rallies in
solidarity with Mumia Abu-Jamal are 
being held in Philadelphia, New York, Chicago,
San Francsco and San Jose California, 
as well as London, Toronto, Amsterdam,
and others internationally.
    (for a photocopy of the original 
signed statement, send a request by
email to: LACFreeMumia@aol.com.)
Statement of William Singletary for 
Solidarity Rallies May 17, 2007
Good-morning/Afternoon;
 My name is William Singletary. I am an eye-witness to the murder or
assassination of Police Officer Daniel Faulkner on December 9, 1981, in
the early morning hours at 13th and Locust Street in Philadelphia, PA.
Mumia Abu-Jamal did not shoot Daniel Faulkner. I stood as close as 12 to
15 feet when Officer Faulkner was killed. When two bullets were viciously
pumped into Officer Faulkner, the shooter then looked into my direction.
We locked eyes for a few seconds. His stare was like a thousand ice picks
aiming for my heart. I slowly backed up; we never unlocked eyes until he
flung the 22 caliber pistol to the right rear wheel of the Volkswagen.
That's the type of weapon that killed the officer. I saw it and I told the
cops where to retrieve the weapon.
 This story has had many twists and turns, according to the police, D.A.,
and prosecutor's office. None of what they stated is true. As I said, I
saw the whole thing as it happened and it was not the way they said. They
concocted a story, and put it on paper and the whole world believed what
they said. I was told to keep quiet by the police, by Mr. Jamal's
attorneys, and people on the street that I had always confided in. No one
wanted to lose their business or their jobs. So I was left alone, by
myself with this burden of "who will listen to me?" In the city of Philly
I was a loner or the "Crazy Nigger" that won't shut up.  But when we would
be alone or with some brothers that truly believed that Mumia was
innocent, guided me through turbulent times.
 I came through by moving time after time and taking low-paying jobs to
support my family. My family even turned their backs. I lost everything I
owned just for telling the truth.
 I never knew people could be so mean; I am talking about professional
people. I watched those cops turn into pure animals when they did their
dance around Mr. Jamal. They beat him and kicked him, spit on him, called
him nigger and violated all of his civil rights. Every one of those cops
on the scene took part in the beating and the little dirty dance they did.
Mr. Jamal cried and begged them to stop because he had been shot, but they
continued to punch, kick, and beat him with their blackjacks until he was
unable to move on his own power. They then picked him up and tried to
split his body on a "No Parking" sign. At this point he was too weak to
say anything. The cops kept chanting, "Ramp, Ramp, Ramp" in reference to
an officer that was slain at an early Move confrontation. This was a
retribution for his reporting of that incident.
 I don't know about all the ins and outs of this case. But what I do know
is that Mumia Abu-Jamal did not shoot Police Officer Daniel Faulkner. Mr.
Jamal was savagely beaten by the Philadelphia police. The whooping of Mr.
Jamal makes Rodney King's beating look like a picnic. I mean I have
traveled the world, been in a war zone, and come home to witness this
barbaric, savage, animal-like beating of another human being. These are
sworn officers of the law, all white, not one black. They know what I saw
and I've been threatened ever since. Not to the point of bodily harm, but
to the point of the loss of my businesses and all my friends.
 When I speak of this I sometimes shiver to think of all the pain he
suffered at the hands of people who were sworn to serve and protect. I
would just like to say I am not crazy or fantasizing about anything. What
I said is the whole truth. I am glad to have you all listen and speak to
whomever to give this man a new trial. I was never called to the first
trial so maybe I will be called to the next one. I am a Vietnam Veteran; I
did receive a purple heart for wounds received in combat. I received an
honorable discharge. I successfully ran legit businesses in Philly before
I was "ran out of town."
 Hopefully there is someone within the sound of my voice that can reach out
and help these twenty-five years of hell to be brought to some kind of
closure. As I said and keep saying, "Mumia Abu-Jamal is an innocent man."
I was there and I said what I saw. So please continue to support him
however you may.
 Thank you. "Peace brothers and sisters"
Signed,
William Singletary  
 
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
15) Deal Is Reached in Senate on Immigration
By ROBERT PEAR and DAVID STOUT
May 17, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/17/washington/17cnd-immig.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin
WASHINGTON, May 17 — Senators from both parties announced 
an agreement this afternoon on immigration-reform legislation 
that would bring illegal immigrants and their families “out 
of the shadows and into the sunshine of American life,” 
as Senator Edward M. Kennedy put it.
The bill would provide an opportunity “right away” for 
millions of illegal aliens to correct their status, said 
Mr. Kennedy, Democrat of Massachusetts. It would emphasize 
family ties as well as employment skills in weighing how 
soon immigrants could become legal residents, he said.
But it would also emphasize improved border security and 
would call for “very strong sanctions” against employers 
who knowingly hire illegal immigrants, according to 
Senator Arlen Specter, Republican of Pennsylvania.
Both senators acknowledged that the bill, whose general 
terms are agreeable to the White House, is likely to 
come under fire both from the political right and the 
political left — decried either as “amnesty” or as “not 
humanitarian enough,” as Mr. Specter said.
Still, Mr. Kennedy said that the bill, however imperfect, 
was the best chance in years to secure America’s borders, 
help millions of people who have been living in fear and 
help to eliminate a sad and sorded “underground economy” 
in American life.
“Now it’s time for action,” Mr. Kennedy said. “I’ve been 
around here long enough to know that opportunities like 
this don’t come very often.” (The senator has been in 
office 45 years.)
The announcement does not mean that a finished bill is 
at hand, because differences between the Senate and House 
on the issue must still be worked out. But the accord 
in the Senate is nonetheless a giant step toward enactment 
of “comprehensive immigration reform,” as Mr. Specter 
described it. President Bush has used that term repeatedly 
to describe the kind of bill he would like to see.
The senators said the system they envision would give weight 
to immigrants’ education and to job skills deemed helpful 
to the economy in deciding whom to admit, using a point 
system to evaluate those qualifications. Family ties would 
remain an important factor.
The point system is one element of a comprehensive bill 
that calls for the biggest changes in immigration law 
and policy in more than 20 years. The full Senate plans 
to take up the legislation next week.
Although Democrats now control the Senate, the bill 
incorporates many ideas advanced in some form by 
President Bush. A draft of the legislation says that 
Congress intends to “increase American competitiveness 
through a merit-based evaluation system for immigrants.”
Moreover, it says, Congress will “reduce chain migration” 
by limiting the number of visas issued exclusively on 
account of kinship.
Democrats insisted, and Republicans agreed, that some points 
be awarded to people who had close relatives in the United 
States or could perform low-skill jobs for which there 
was a high demand.
Senator Lindsey Graham, the South Carolina Republican 
who has been one of the more optimistic negotiators, 
said on Wednesday that the legislation “would free up 
thousands of green cards in the future for people who 
meet our economic needs, while still allowing members 
of the nuclear family to come to this country.”
Stephen W. Yale-Loehr, who teaches immigration law at 
Cornell University, said: “The legislation taking shape 
in the Senate represents a major philosophical shift. 
It tells the world that we are emphasizing characteristics 
that will enhance our global competitiveness, like education 
and job skills. We would not rely as much on family 
background as we have in the past.”
Under the proposal, Mr. Yale-Loehr said, “foreign-born 
spouses and minor children of United States citizens could 
still get green cards, but foreign-born siblings and adult 
children of citizens would be hurt.”
The Senate majority leader, Harry Reid, Democrat of Nevada, 
had set a test vote on the proposal for Wednesday, but 
he put it off until Monday after learning that the 
negotiators were making progress.
Most of the estimated 12 million illegal immigrants now 
in the United States would be offered legal status under 
the bill, but they would not automatically qualify for 
citizenship. Rather, they would have to “touch back” in 
their home countries and apply for green cards, like 
other immigrants seeking permanent residence in the 
United States.
Some conservatives still dislike the idea of a large 
legalization program. But Mr. Graham said the bill 
struck a realistic balance.
“We are not going to put 12 million people in jail,” 
Mr. Graham said. “Nor should we give them an advantage 
over those who played by the rules to become citizens.”
Senator Jim DeMint, Republican of South Carolina, said 
he had doubts about this approach, but said Congress 
had to do something because his constituents were telling 
him that “they feel they are being overrun with uncontrolled 
immigration.”
The legislation also calls for major increases in the Border 
Patrol and tougher enforcement at the border and in the workplace.
Senator Ken Salazar, Democrat of Colorado, one of the 
negotiators, said he wanted the new point system to be 
equitable. “We do not want to create a system that is just 
for the wealthiest and most educated immigrants,” 
Mr. Salazar said.
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
16) Clash of Hope and Fear as Venezuela Seizes Land
By SIMON ROMERO
May 17, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/17/world/americas/17venezuela.html
URACHICHE, Venezuela — The squatters arrive before dawn 
with machetes and rifles, surround the well-ordered rows 
of sugar cane and threaten to kill anyone who interferes. 
Then they light a match to the crops and declare the 
land their own.
For centuries, much of Venezuela’s rich farmland has been 
in the hands of a small elite. After coming to power in 1998, 
and especially after his re-election in December, President 
Hugo Chávez vowed to end that inequality, and has been keeping 
his promise in a process that is both brutal and legal.
Mr. Chávez is carrying out what may become the largest 
forced land redistribution in Venezuela’s history, building 
utopian farming villages for squatters, lavishing money 
on new cooperatives and sending army commando units to 
supervise seized estates in six states.
The violence has gone both ways in the struggle, with more 
than 160 peasants killed by hired gunmen in Venezuela, 
including several here in northwestern Yaracuy State, 
an epicenter of the land reform project, in recent years. 
Eight landowners have also been killed here.
“The oligarchy is always on the attack and trying to say 
you are no good,” Mr. Chávez said to squatters in 
a televised visit here. “They think they’re the owners 
of the world.”
Mr. Chávez’s supporters have formed thousands of state-
financed cooperatives to wrest farms and cattle ranches 
from private owners. Landowners say compensation is hard 
to obtain. Local officials describe the land seizures 
s paving stones on “the road to socialism.”
“This is agrarian terrorism encouraged by the state,” 
said Fhandor Quiroga, a landowner and head of Yaracuy’s 
chamber of commerce, pointing to dozens of kidnappings 
of landowners by armed gangs in the last two years.
The government says the goal of the nationwide resettlement 
is to make better use of idle land and to make Venezuela 
less dependent on food imports. New laws allow squatters 
to manage and farm land that has now been placed in government 
hands.
Before the land reform started in 2002, an estimated 5 percent 
of the population owned 80 percent of the country’s private land. 
The government says it has now taken over about 3.4 million 
acres and resettled more than 15,000 families. 
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
17) Venezuela Lets Councils Bloom;
Critics Say Chávez Backs Local Bodies to Boost Central Control
By Juan Forero
The Washington Post
May 17, 2007
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/05/16/AR2007051602547.html
CARACAS, Venezuela -- Nelly Baric calls herself a Chavista, 
a die-hard follower of President Hugo Chávez. Roberto 
Naguanagua doesn't, saying he's an opponent of the populist, 
nationalist government.
But both Baric and Naguanagua are eagerly participating 
in one of Chávez's most far-reaching experiments -- 
community councils that, with money, government consent 
and popular support, could redraw the way government 
works in this country. Thousands of councils have been 
founded nationwide, and they have made decisions on almost 
everything from trash collection to school construction.
Though no one -- not even Chávez -- has said with certainty 
just how far community councils will go, many inside and 
outside government say the idea is to steer Venezuela away 
from municipal councils and mayors and hand funding and 
decision-making directly to the people. "If this works, 
community councils could bury city hall, but something 
better will be born," said Naguanagua, a teacher who, 
like Baric, belongs to the council of La Hacienda Maria, 
in Caracas, Venezuela's capital.
The councils have been buoyed by success stories in some 
neighborhoods and tarnished by cases of corruption and 
incompetence in others. But overall, the process of grass-
roots decision-making is providing a street-level view 
into how one of Latin America's more intriguing leaders 
is trying to bring what he calls "a revolution" to his 
country.
"Even with the mistakes, the people are emerging, the 
poorest people, occupying spaces that were occupied before 
by those blind, hardened classes," José Vicente Rangel, 
who was replaced as vice president in January, said in 
an interview. "That is the central point of what is happening 
in the country."
Some opposition leaders, though, are less certain, suggesting 
that the councils could be manipulated by a president who 
already has control of the National Assembly, the judiciary, 
the state oil company and the country's purse strings.
Leopoldo López, the mayor of the affluent Chacao district 
of Caracas, said he and others are concerned that the councils 
are designed to usurp funding and political power from the 
municipalities, the few remaining entities on the political 
map where the opposition remains active. He notes that as 
part of a constitutional reform the president is planning, 
government specialists have sought to eliminate as many 
as 200 of the country's 335 municipalities. The focus on 
community councils could speed that process, he said.
"They want to ensure one government, where the central 
government controls local government," López said. "They 
want to eliminate the middle ground, the governorships, 
the mayors."
Teodoro Petkoff, a left-leaning newspaper editor and 
a government minister before Chávez came to power, said 
giving power to the people through community councils 
could be a "magnificent idea."
But Petkoff, a steady critic of the government in the 
pages of his irreverent newspaper, Tal Cual, said he does 
not trust Chávez to permit the councils to function 
independently. He noted that the Soviets tried a similar 
experiment, ostensibly to let the people rule directly, 
but that it failed miserably as party bosses centralized 
power.
"For me, there's no doubt that a man with such hardened 
centralized concepts as Chávez will, in a constitutional 
reform, eliminate any kind of decentralized process," 
Petkoff said.
Even in the government, some of the more independent-
minded thinkers have concerns. Rigoberto Lanz, a sociologist 
and a top adviser in the Ministry of Science and Technology, 
said the councils seem to be operating in fits and starts, 
without a mechanism for making truly big decisions. And 
while the idea would in theory democratize Venezuela, 
he said, he wondered whether the councils would not 
counteract the administration's hold over government.
"It's a metaphor that may not mean a lot or, on the contrary, 
may mean the progressive empowerment of the people," Lanz 
said. "But there could be an immediate clash with a counter-
logic that is culturally and structurally in place, and 
that's the logic of the state. Meaning, all the people power 
is automatically in an anti-state orientation."
In the neighborhoods, it's hard to find anything but 
bubbling enthusiasm for the councils.
Council members are elected, and each oversees a committee 
that concerns itself with an issue such as education 
or health care or youth services. When big decisions are 
made, they must be put before a neighborhood assembly 
of residents, representing on average about 400 families. 
The state provides funding for a wide range of projects.
Organizers are often fervent, using the language of populist 
revolution when explaining the inner workings of the councils.
"Our job is to end poverty in all its forms, to contribute 
to the strengthening of the Bolivarian Revolution based 
in the thinking of El Comandante Chávez," said Rodrigo 
Tovar, one such council organizer. "Our job is to take the 
message to the most humble and needy people, and that message 
is to take happiness to the people."
For Venezuelans in poor barrios -- who felt excluded under 
the corrupt power-sharing system that ended with Chávez's 
election in 1998 -- the community councils are a means of 
empowerment. A December survey released by Latinobarometro, 
a Chilean polling firm, found that in all of Latin America, 
only Uruguayans had a more favorable view of their democratic 
institutions than Venezuelans.
Nancy Peralta, 44, is among those who have reveled in 
their new responsibilities in a community council. 
Her job is to assist sick or incapacitated residents 
of her neighborhood, ensuring that they know which 
hospitals or clinics offer certain services, for example.
"I move around!" she said with a broad smile. "I run 
and run. I'm even getting a little sick myself. I have 
bad knees. There's so much marching around in this 
revolution."
Peralta works in Sucre, a sprawling district of Caracas 
that claims to have more community councils than any 
other municipality in the country. One of the biggest 
council backers here is José Vicente Rangel Avalos, son 
of the former vice president and the mayor of Sucre. 
He said city governments will continue to provide services 
even as community councils expand. But he foresees change 
-- and welcomes it.
"That you have to reassess institutions -- of course you 
have to reassess," he said. "Why? Because they were created 
so many years ago in Venezuela. The city halls go all the 
way back to the colonial era."
The idea of change goes over well on the far eastern 
side of Caracas, in the neighborhood called La Hacienda 
Maria.
On a hill overlooking the city, a dozen residents who had 
just finished work sat around in plastic chairs recently, 
talking about governing. Baric, who once worked for a big 
U.S. company but now is heavily involved in community work, 
ran the meeting with precision.
The chatter was hardly revolutionary -- on this night 
it was about how to get neighbors to pick up after their 
dogs and how to ensure no one is hurt by monkeys that 
somehow got loose. But there was also talk about a sports 
complex the group wanted to build and about managing a bank 
that would provide loans for all manner of projects.
"Things are working," said Lusitania Borges, a council member. 
"The government gave power to the people so they can channel 
their concerns and resolve problems. These are problems that 
were never fixed by mayors, [municipal] council members and 
governors. What happened before was nothing but pure 
bureaucracy."
 
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
18) Feds Crack Down on Immigrant Labor Organizers
A series of North Carolina immigration raids 
weren't just about deporting undocumented workers 
-- they were about busting unions. 
By David Bacon
http://www.prospect.org/cs/articles?article=feds_crack_down_on_immigrant_labor_organizers
RED SPRINGS, North Carolina (5/10/07) -- To 
organizer Eduardo Peña, "the raid was like a 
nuclear bomb" - more precisely, a neutron bomb, 
that ingenious weapon of the cold war whose 
radiation was meant to kill a city's residents, 
but leave its buildings standing.  After the 
immigration raid of January 24 at the Smithfield 
pork slaughtering plant in Tar Heel, North 
Carolina, the factory was still intact.  The 
machinery of the production lines was fully 
functional, ready to clank and clatter into its 
normal motion.  But many workers were gone, and 
much of the plant lay still.
That day the migra [agents of Immigration and 
Customs Enforcement, part of the Homeland 
Security Department] picked up 21 people, while 
trying not to alert the rest of the plant's 
laborers.  One by one, supervisors went to 
Mexicans on the line.  You're needed in the front 
office, they'd say.  The workers would put down 
their knives, take off their gloves, and walk 
through the cavernous building to the human 
resources department.  There ICE agents took them 
into custody, put them in handcuffs, and locked 
them up in a temporary detention area.  Later, 
they were taken out in vans and sent to 
immigration jails as far away as Georgia.
"To keep people from guessing what was up," says 
Keith Ludlum, one of the few white workers on the 
production floor, "they also called up African 
Americans and whites, and told them they had to 
take drug tests.  If they'd only called Latinos, 
people would have known what was happening."  If 
word had gotten out, hundreds of workers would 
undoubtedly have run from the lines.  Valuable 
meat would have been left to spoil - a day's 
production lost.  In a plant where 5500 people 
slaughter and cut apart 32,000 hogs a day, that's 
a lot of money.  Keeping the raid secret meant 
workers worked to the end of their shift and 
Smithfield got its product out.
Eventually the truth came out, however.  Parents 
didn't show up to collect their kids.  "A friend 
called me at nine or ten that night, and told me 
someone from my town hadn't come home," recalls 
Pedro Mendez.  "That's when we knew what had 
happened.  I couldn't sleep that night, knowing 
my friends had been picked up.  I worried about 
my own family."
While Mendez laid awake, word spread to employees 
of QSI, the company Smithfield contracts to clean 
the blood and gore off the machinery after 
midnight.  Afraid the migra might still be in the 
plant, the cleaning crew didn't show up for their 
shift.  US Department of Agriculture inspectors 
won't allow the lines to start in the morning if 
they haven't been hosed down the night before, so 
the few production workers who came to work the 
next day saw the kill floor taped off with yellow 
plastic barriers.  With no freshly killed hogs on 
the hooks, the rest of the plant had nothing to 
do.
The raid's shockwaves swept outwards from the 
factory through the barrios of the small Southern 
towns around it, leaving behind children missing 
mothers or fathers.  Parents were afraid to go to 
work or send their kids to school.  The terror it 
inspired dealt a body blow to the plant's 
organizing drive as well, just when it was making 
real progress.  Overcoming ten years of lost 
elections and Smithfield's hardball anti-union 
campaigns, workers were just beginning to lose 
their fear.  Fired employees had been rehired 
after years of court appeals.  Union supporters 
were discovering that collective action on the 
line was not only possible, but could actually 
make conditions better.
That rising consciousness was the raid's biggest
casualty.
According to many workers, it was intended to 
halt those organizing efforts. Mark Lauritsen, 
packinghouse director for the United Food and 
Commercial Workers, says the Department of 
Homeland Security and the company "were worried 
about people organizing a union, and the 
government said, 'here are the tools to take care 
of them.'"
Congress today is poised to give the government 
and employers even more such tools for 
immigration enforcement.  They include not just 
the program that led to the Smithfield raid, but 
others that could be equally damaging to workers 
trying to organize unions, enforce labor 
standards or simply fight for their rights.  The 
STRIVE Act, for instance, introduced this 
February, contains provisions that would make 
workplace raids more common, and the penalties 
against undocumented workers more draconian.
Smithfield isn't alone.  Workplaces with union 
contracts or organizing drives have been hit by a 
wave of immigration enforcement over the last 
year.  At the CINTAS industrial laundry chain, 
400 workers were picked up for deportation from 
multiple plants during a national drive by the 
hotel union UNITE HERE.  In the Woodfin Suites 
hotel in Emeryville, California, managers 
terminated workers for allegedly being 
undocumented, after they tried to enforce the 
city's living wage ordinance.
Raids are also being used to pressure Congress to 
pass new enforcement and contract worker 
programs, like the STRIVE Act. In a Washington DC 
press conference following raids on the Swift and 
Co. meatpacking plants in November, Homeland 
Security Secretary Michael Chertoff told 
reporters they would show Congress the need for 
"stronger border security, effective interior 
enforcement and a temporary-worker program.'' 
Bush wants, he said, "a program that would allow 
businesses that need foreign workers, because 
they can't otherwise satisfy their labor needs, 
to be able to get those workers in a regulated 
program."
The events at Smithfield are a window into that
future.
* * *
January's raid was one more incident in a long 
history of company efforts to block union 
organizing in Tar Heel.  In 1994 and 1997 
Smithfield workers voted in two union 
representation elections, both lost by the United 
Food and Commercial Workers.  Management used 
such extensive intimidation tactics that the 
votes were thrown out by the National Labor 
Relations Board.  This year QSI settled NLRB 
charges with that it had threatened workers with 
arrest by immigration authorities to dampen union 
activity.
Smithfield workers are up against, not just a 
hostile management, but also a political system 
that backs the company up.  In 1997 the head of 
plant security, Danny Priest, told local sheriffs 
he expected violence on election day.  Police in 
riot gear then lined the walkway into the 
slaughterhouse, and workers had to walk past them 
to cast their ballots.  At the end of the vote 
count, union activist Ray Shawn was beaten up 
inside the plant.  Three years later Priest 
became an auxiliary deputy sheriff, and plant 
security officers were given the power to arrest 
and detain people at work.  The company 
maintained a holding area for detainees in a 
trailer on the property, which workers called the 
company jail.  (Smithfield gave up its deputized 
force and detention center in 2005.)
In 2003 QSI contract workers finally challenged 
this atmosphere of fear.  According to Julio 
Vargas, who worked for the company at the time, 
"the wages were very low and we had no medical 
insurance. When people got hurt, after being 
taken to the office they made them go back to 
work and wear pink helmets.  We were fed up." 
Led by Vargas, the cleaning crew refused to go in 
to work.  "We started talking to people as they 
arrived.  Those who were in agreement stopped the 
other workers on their line."
The company negotiated, and workers won 
concessions.  The next week, however, those 
identified as ringleaders lost their jobs.  "They 
fired me because they thought I was one of the 
organizers," Vargas recalls.  "And I was."
Despite the firings, UFCW organizers understood 
the importance of that work stoppage.  After the 
experiences of 1994 and 97, the UFCW knew the 
government couldn't and wouldn't guarantee an 
election without union busters, labor law 
violations, and a campaign of psychological 
warfare.  The NLRB did force Smithfield to rehire 
Keith Ludlum last year, and pay $1.1 million to 
workers fired for union activity. Ludlum had lost 
his job in 1994, however, over 12 years before. 
For his coworkers on the line, the lesson was 
that Smithfield lawyers kept a union supporter 
out of work for over a decade, in violation of 
federal law.
Today the UFCW supports the Employee Free Choice 
Act, which would increase penalties for companies 
who fire workers for union activity and make it 
easier to organize.  Until the law is changed, 
however, like most unions it seeks ways to 
organize workers without labor board elections. 
Justice for Janitors or the United Farm Workers' 
grape boycott have become models for this kind of 
non-NLRB strategy.
Three years ago the UFCW hired Peña, and other 
experienced organizers to develop a similar plan. 
The union set up a workers' center in nearby Red 
Springs, holding classes in English and labor 
rights. "This has not been a traditional 
campaign," explains Peña.  "We're not going to 
give the company a chance to use union busters. 
We're asking workers to take direct action on the 
plant floor to improve their own conditions." 
Vargas and other fired workers went to work for 
the union, helping organize discontent over high 
line speed, and its human cost in workplace
injuries.
Their non-NLRB strategy requires much more from 
supporters than just signing a union 
authorization card, voting on election day, or 
even going to a few meetings.  People have to 
lose enough of their fear to show open support, 
to circulate petitions demanding changes, and to 
form delegations confronting supervisors and 
managers.  At Smithfield, workers even stopped 
production lines to get the company to talk with 
them about health and safety problems.
Immigration status itself became an issue for 
collective action.  Last spring, as immigrant 
protests spread across the country, 300 
Smithfield workers stayed out of work on April 
10, the first day of national demonstrations. 
Instead they marched through the streets of 
Wilmington.
Then, on May 1, when immigrants from Los Angeles 
to New York boycotted their jobs on May Day, 
Smithfield workers paraded with thousands of 
Latinos In Lumberton, North Carolina.  Most of 
the plant's immigrant workers were used to the 
idea of demonstrating on May Day, a working-class 
holiday in their countries of origin.  According 
to Gene Bruskin, director of the UFCW's Justice 
at Smithfield campaign, "the company tried to 
convince them to come to work, saying it would 
provide a place to write letters to Congress 
urging immigration reform.  But when May Day 
arrived, only a skeleton crew showed up for 
work."  Smithfield took no action against those 
who were absent.
* * *
Company representatives declined to be 
interviewed for this article.  But it's not hard 
to imagine that managers might have looked at the 
marches and the rising wave of collective 
activity with trepidation.  In late spring or 
early summer Smithfield enrolled in the IMAGE 
program - the ICE Mutual Agreement between 
Government and Employers.
A July 26 press release from the Department of 
Homeland Security calls IMAGE a program "designed 
to build cooperative relationships between 
government and businesses to strengthen hiring 
practices and reduce the unlawful employment of 
illegal aliens."  Homeland Security Secretary 
Michael Chertoff says the government "must 
partner with employers, educate them and provide 
them with the tools they need to develop a 
stable, legal workforce."
The program requires employers to verify the 
immigration status of all employees, checking 
their documents against the ICE database. 
Employers must "establish protocols for 
responding to no-match letters from the Social 
Security Administration," and "establish a tip 
line for employees to report violations and 
mechanisms for companies to self-report 
violations to ICE."  Peña says bitterly, "they 
saw an opportunity.  With the organizing going 
on, they knew they could use it.  They may not 
have expected the loss [the day after the raid], 
but it was probably worth it.  They achieved 
their goal."
The IMAGE program, and other ICE workplace raids, 
are designed to enforce employer sanctions, a 
provision of the 1986 Immigration Reform and 
Control Act that prohibits employers from hiring 
undocumented workers.  In reality, the law makes 
it a federal crime for someone without 
immigration papers to work.  In the long record 
of enforcement actions over the last 20 years, 
few employers have ever paid fines, much less 
gone to jail for violations.  Thousands of 
workers, however, have lost their jobs.
Smithfield workers saw the first effects of 
cooperation between ICE and their employer on 
October 30, 2006.  The human resources department 
sent letters to hundreds, saying the Social 
Security numbers they'd provided when they were 
hired didn't match the Social Security 
Administration database.  The letters gave people 
15 days to supply valid numbers, and said they'd 
be terminated if they didn't.
"Human resources called me on November 8," says 
Pedro Mendez, "and said my Social Security number 
was bad.  I told them I'd been working for nine 
years with that number, and asked them why they'd 
never said anything about it before.  They knew I 
couldn't verify it, and they fired me the same 
day.  They called security to throw me out of the 
plant.  It was very humiliating."
Mendez asked to see a copy of the no-match letter 
from SSA listing his name, and says they refused 
to show it to him.  If the company did have such 
a letter, it would have contained a paragraph 
cautioning Smithfield not to construe a 
discrepancy in numbers as evidence of lack of 
immigration status.  Labor and immigrant-rights 
activists forced the SSA to include this crucial 
paragraph a decade ago.  Employers are required 
only to advise workers they've received the 
notice.
SSA writes to thousands of businesses every year, 
listing the names of hundreds of thousands of 
people whose numbers don't jibe.  A worker's 
Social Security number might not match government 
records for many reasons - the government's 
database is notoriously full of errors.  But 
millions of people in the United States without 
immigration documents have had to use a 
nonexistent number, or one that belongs to 
another person, to get a job.  So despite the 
letter's warning, the government uses no-match 
letters as a form of immigration law enforcement.
Last fall, the Bush administration proposed a new 
regulation to make termination mandatory for 
anyone listed in a no-match letter.  Today there 
is no such requirement.  Bush's proposed 
regulation is also contained in the recently 
introduced STRIVE Act.  Both Bush and the Act 
also call for criminal penalties for people using 
false Social Security numbers to get jobs, and 
would require employers to check job applicants 
against a new Federal database.  To implement 
these measures, all people in the U.S. would have 
to carry some form of national ID.
The STRIVE Act also links increased enforcement 
to proposals for guest workers - contract workers 
recruited to come to the U.S. by employers. 
About 400,000 workers each year would be given 
visas requiring them to remain employed in order 
to stay in the country.  Even current 
undocumented immigrants would have to sign up for 
temporary-visa schemes.  These guest worker 
programs have been pushed since the late 1990s by 
the Essential Worker Immigration Coalition, an 
association of the 40 largest manufacturing and 
trade groups in the US, which includes the 
American Meat Institute.  Smithfield belongs to 
the AMI.
Current guest worker programs, like the bracero 
program of the 1950s, have been widely condemned 
for abusing and exploiting immigrants.  The 
immigration reform proposals now in Congress, 
therefore, depend on sanctions, no-match letters 
and workplace raids to force guest workers to 
stay in them.  Without such increased 
enforcement, people unhappy with abuse might be 
tempted to walk away.
* * *
It's not as though current law is much protection 
for immigrant workers, however.  Employers aren't 
supposed to use no-match letters and document 
checks to punish workers for demanding their 
rights. Marielena Hincapie, staff attorney for 
the National Immigration Law Center, even says 
the practice violates section 274-B of the 
Immigration and Nationality Act.
That didn't save Pedro Mendez' job, however. 
What did, at least for a while, was the 
collective action organizers kept pushing.  "On 
November 13 [2006] the time given workers to come 
up with new numbers started to expire," recalls 
Peña.  "By that time, a couple of hundred people 
had received letters.  Over 30 were escorted out 
of the plant, and those still at work could see 
new workers hired to replace them.  Many felt 
they had nothing to lose.  On Thursday [November 
16] they walked out."
Taken by surprise, supervisors and even corporate 
Vice-president Larry Johnson tried to talk people 
into going back to work.  None did.  That evening 
a group of workers met at a local hotel, and came 
up with a list of demands.  "They decided to 
stick to the issue of immigration," Peña says. 
"Their idea was to go back in with something that 
would protect them, and show other workers the 
power of collective action."
At the request of the workers, representatives of 
the local Catholic diocese met with the company 
the following day, and Smithfield agreed to a 
60-day extension, to rehire those already 
terminated, and not to retaliate against anyone. 
Mendez, who went out to the plant when he heard 
about the work stoppage, was among those rehired. 
"Even the English-speaking workers were excited 
by what had happened," Peña remembers.  "It's 
hard to imagine how empowered people felt.  This 
wasn't some leaflet, it was the real thing."
In December, however, ICE carried out raids at 
five Swift and Co. plants, detaining over a 
thousand workers for deportation.  Meatpacking 
workers in companies like Smithfield began to 
fear the same fate.  Nevertheless, the feeling of 
collective strength in the plant was still high. 
African American union supporters asked the 
company to give employees the day off on the 
birthday of Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.  The Tar 
Heel workforce is about half Latino, 40% African 
American, and 10% white and Native American.
The week before the proposed holiday, a 
delegation of workers went to the human resources 
office, bearing petitions with the signatures of 
over 4000 people.  Peña says Larry Johnson 
refused to accept them, arguing the company 
couldn't cancel the lunch trucks contracted to 
sell food to workers.
Despite the refusal, about 400 workers from the 
first shift didn't come to work on King's 
birthday.  Bruskin says this slowed down the 
livestock-handling department, where the animals 
are first taken into the plant, an area where 
African Americans are concentrated.  The same 
thing happened on the second shift, he says, 
although the company disputes this in at article 
in an industry newsletter, Meatpacking.com.
Nine days after the January 15 action ICE agents
came out to the plant.
According to Meatingplace.com, ICE gave the 
company advance notice the day before.  Agents 
arrived with a list of workers, and company 
supervisors escorted them to the room where the 
migra was waiting.  "We didn't want to do 
anything to upset our employees," Smithfield 
spokesperson Dennis Pittman told Meatingplace.com 
reporter Tom Johnston.  Later the company 
announced it would run the plant the following 
Saturday, to make up for the production lost the 
day after the raid.  Keith Ludlum says he heard 
the company on the radio on Thursday, asking 
people to come back to work.
The no-match terminations and the immigration 
raid made workers feel insecure and fearful for 
their jobs, without any need for Smithfield to 
violate the National Labor Relations Act. 
"People are very scared now," says Julio Vargas. 
"They're afraid of more raids, and more checks of 
Social Security numbers.  People with ten years 
at work are thinking of quitting.  It's hard to 
get them to come to meetings now."
According to Vargas, people see immigration 
enforcement as a kind of reprisal.  "They think 
it's happening because people were getting 
organized," he says.  To Ludlum, "it totally set 
us back.  We spent a lot of time educating 
people, and now they're getting rid of lots of 
them."
According to Peña, "it takes years of convincing, 
of educating people, to develop this kind of 
trust and activity.  The union has become part of 
the community, and backs up what workers want to 
do.  People went from feeling they had no rights 
to looking their foremen in the eye.  Immigrants 
in particular were taking bolder actions even 
than citizens."
The raids and firings hit at the heart of this 
effort.  "Now people are concerned about basic 
survival," he says.  "The message they've gotten 
is that they're nothing.  They can be taken from 
their families, arrested and deported at any 
time.  They wonder who will take care of their 
kids if the government comes for them.  It's hard 
to think about workplace injuries if that's the 
big question on your mind."
The union, however, is turning the tables, and 
using the violation of workers' rights to 
mobilize customer pressure against the company. 
Bruskin and a crew of community organizers have 
focused on the Harris Teeter store chain, 
collecting thousands of signatures on petitions 
asking managers to find another pork supplier. 
At the end of March, religious and human rights 
leaders demonstrated outside 24 Harris Teeter 
stores across North and South Carolina, Virginia 
and Tennessee.
The union and the North Carolina Council of 
Churches has also asked the Food Network's Paula 
Deen, noted cook of Southern cuisine, to sever 
her relationship as a Smithfield spokesperson.
"We'll get there," Peña vows.  "We'll finish this."
Meanwhile, in the plant and the small communities 
around it, rebuilding will take time and 
patience.  Those who have lost their jobs have to 
find a way to survive.  In February Pedro Mendez 
was fired for the second and final time.  Since 
his termination, he and his three children, 
Hector, Adan and Eva, all depend on the income of 
his wife, who's still working.  "It's very hard 
now to support our family," he says, "and I worry 
about our future.  The law is very hard here."
For images of Smithfield workers:  
http://dbacon.igc.org/Unions/unions.htm
See also The Children of NAFTA (University of
California, 2004)
http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/9989.html
and the photodocumentary on indigenous migration 
to the US, Communities Without Borders (Cornell 
University/ILR Press, 2006)
http://www.cornellpress.cornell.edu/cup_detail.taf?ti_id=4575
David Bacon, Photographs and Stories
http://dbacon.igc.org
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
19) The Department of Defense -- Bringing Historical 
Revisionism to a High School Near You
By Chris Rodda Sun May 13, 2007 at 11:25:30 AM EST
http://www.talk2action.org/printpage/2007/5/13/112530/361
In his book What If America Were A Christian Nation Again?, 
D. James Kennedy presents the following inaccurate explanation 
of Thomas Jefferson's famous "wall of separation" letter -- 
an explanation concocted decades ago to make the reason for 
Jefferson's letter fit the notion that what he meant by this 
phrase was a one-way wall to keep the government out of the 
church, but not the church out of the government, and that 
the only thing the Establishment Clause was intended to prevent 
was the establishment a national religion.
    "...Late in 1801, while he was president, he received 
a letter from the Association of Baptists in Danbury, 
Connecticut, who were concerned about the threat of the 
newly formed federal government. This `leviathan,' they 
feared, could become a great danger to their Christian 
faith and to their churches."
    "...On the first day of the year 1802, Jefferson wrote 
back to the Danbury Baptists. In this letter, he said that 
he was greatly impressed that the American people, through 
the First Amendment had, in effect, erected a `wall of 
separation between the church and the state,' so the Baptists 
didn't need to fear that the federal government was going 
to intrude upon their religion or in any way disturb their 
faith."
This sort of historical revisionism might be expected in 
homeschools and at Christian high schools, such as D. James 
Kennedy's own Westminster Academy, and the spreading of it 
by these means is bad enough. But now, bit by bit, this 
same historical revisionism is making its way into our 
public schools. I've already written extensively about 
how this is being accomplished via the National Council 
On Bible Curriculum In Public Schools (NCBCPS) course. The 
NCBCPS, however, is not the only source of bad history in 
our public high schools. There is another, which, unlike 
the NCBCPS, is not produced by a private organization, but 
by the Department of Defense -- for the JROTC program.
 
Unit 6 of the JROTC core curriculum is entitled Citizenship 
and American History. The following appears in Chapter 3 
of this unit, "You the People -- The Citizen Action Group 
Process," a chapter designed to teach the cadets how to work 
as a group to make decisions and resolve issues by voting, 
reaching a consensus, deciding on a plan of action, etc., 
first in "small group meetings," and then as part of 
a larger "representative group session."
(I have not yet had an opportunity to view the video mentioned 
in this excerpt from the textbook, but will be doing 
so as soon as possible.)
    YTP VIDEO
    Before the first small group meeting, it is recommended 
that you view the You the People Video. It is a three part 
series on citizenship.
    The video also contains segments that refer to the 
separation between church and state. Please review the 
following for one perspective on that topic.
    (by Jim Rice as adapted from Separation of Church 
and State by David Barton)
    SEPARATION OF CHURCH AND STATE
    The "separation of church and state" phrase was taken 
from an exchange of private letters between President 
Thomas Jefferson and the Baptist Association of Danbury, 
Connecticut, shortly after Jefferson became President. 
It is not found in any governmental American document.
    The inclusion of protection for the "free exercise 
of religion" in the constitution suggested to the Danbury 
Baptists that the right of religious expression was 
government given and therefore the government might 
someday attempt to regulate religious expression. Jefferson 
shared their concern. He believed along with the other 
Founders, that the First Amendment had been enacted only 
to prevent the federal establishment of a national 
denomination. He assured them that they need not fear; 
that the federal government would never interfere with 
the free exercise of religion.
    In summary, the "separation" phrase so frequently 
invoked today was rarely mentioned by any of the Founders; 
and even Jefferson's explanation of his phrase is diametrically 
opposed to the manner in which courts apply it today. 
"Separation of church and state" currently means almost 
exactly the opposite of what it originally meant.
Before even getting to the historical inaccuracy of the 
Barton explanation of Jefferson's letter, and disregarding 
the disturbing fact that anything by Barton appears in an 
official Department of Defense history text being used 
in our high schools, I think an important question needs 
to be asked. Why is the issue of separation between church 
and state in this chapter in the first place? The lessons 
in this chapter teach the cadets to decide on a position 
on an issue by majority rule, and then form a plan to promote 
that position. This is appropriate for the other examples 
that follow in the textbook, such as whether or not the 
voting age should be lowered to sixteen, but to foster 
the notion that a fundamental principle like church/state 
separation is subject to majority rule is incredible. 
To present what is described as "one perspective" 
on this issue when that "perspective" is based on 
inaccurate history is beyond incredible.
My first post here at Talk To Action, which I wrote in 
February to mark the 60th anniversary of Everson v. Board 
of Education, the case that popularized the phrase 
"separation of church and state," explained the real 
reason the Danbury Baptists wrote to Jefferson, a reason 
that, as mentioned at the beginning of this post, is changed 
in the religious right version of American history in order 
to fit the one-way wall idea.
The following is essentially a repeat of what I posted back 
in February, copied here for those who want to read the real 
story behind Jefferson's letter and compare it to the version 
found in the JROTC text:
In order to understand Jefferson's letter to the Danbury 
Baptists, it is essential to understand the letter he was 
replying to, and, in order to understand that letter, 
a little knowledge about history of the government of 
Connecticut is necessary, so that's where I'm going 
to start.
Connecticut, nicknamed the Constitution State, was actually 
one of the last of the original thirteen states to adopt 
a state constitution - over forty years after declaring 
itself a state. What the nickname refers to is the Fundamental 
Orders of 1638-1639. Because this was the first document 
written in the colonies by a representative body to form 
a government, it is considered by many to be the first state 
constitution. The Fundamental Orders established a form 
of government for Connecticut that would continue with 
little change for the next 180 years.
In 1660, when news of the restoration of the monarchy 
in England reached the colonies, Connecticut's General 
Court, aware that the new king, Charles II, was not a big 
fan of Congregationalists, became concerned about the fact 
that their colony had never been granted an official charter. 
A charter was quickly drafted, and the colony's governor, 
John Winthrop, Jr., sailed to England to present it to 
the Privy Council. Winthrop's mission was successful, 
and the charter was officially adopted by the General 
Court on October 9, 1662. Although this charter had almost 
no effect on the existing government of Connecticut, it is 
considered by some to be the state's second constitution.
Around the time of the American Revolution, all of the 
states, with the exception of Connecticut and Rhode 
Island, adopted state constitutions. These constitutions, 
written at the suggestion of the Continental Congress, 
were necessary because these states would need new 
governments once they were independent from England. 
Connecticut and Rhode Island, however, both of which 
already had functioning governments that would not be 
affected when ties to England were severed, saw no need 
to write state constitutions at this time. In 1776, 
the Connecticut General Assembly (formerly the General 
Court) declared:
    That the ancient form of civil government contained 
in the Charter from Charles the II, King of England, and 
adopted by the people of this state, shall be and remain 
the civil constitution of this state, under the sole 
authority of the people hereof, independent of any 
king or prince whatever.
So, with the exception of deleting any references to 
England in the Charter, there was no change to the 
government of Connecticut.
By 1800, all of the other states had made significant 
progress towards religious freedom. Not every state 
had the liberal freedom enjoyed in states like Pennsylvania 
and Virginia, but none had the degree of religious 
discrimination practiced in Connecticut. The Congregationalist 
government of Connecticut, established by the Fundamental 
Orders in 1638-1639, legitimized by the Charter of 1662, 
and left unchanged at the time of the Revolution, was the 
government that still existed on October 7, 1801, when 
the Danbury Baptist Association wrote the following 
letter to President Thomas Jefferson.
    Sir, Among the many million in America and Europe who 
rejoice in your election to office; we embrace the first 
opportunity which we have enjoyed in our collective capacity, 
since your inauguration, to express our great satisfaction, 
in your appointment to the chief magistracy in the United 
States: And though our mode of expression may be less 
courtly and pompous than what many others clothe their 
addresses with, we beg you, sir, to believe that none 
are more sincere.
    Our sentiments are uniformly on the side of religious 
liberty-that religion is at all times and places a matter 
between God and individuals-that no man ought to suffer 
in name, person, or effects on account of his religious 
opinions-that the legitimate power of civil government 
extends no further than to punish the man who works ill 
to his neighbors; But, sir, our constitution of government 
is not specific. Our ancient charter together with the law 
made coincident therewith, were adopted as the basis 
of our government, at the time of our revolution; and 
such had been our laws and usages, and such still are; 
that religion is considered as the first object of 
legislation; and therefore what religious privileges 
we enjoy (as a minor part of the state) we enjoy as 
favors granted, and not as inalienable rights; and 
these favors we receive at the expense of such degrading 
acknowledgements as are inconsistent with the rights 
of freemen. It is not to be wondered at therefore; 
if those who seek after power and gain under the 
pretense of government and religion should reproach 
their fellow men-should reproach their order magistrate, 
as a enemy of religion, law, and good order, because 
he will not, dare not, assume the prerogatives of 
Jehovah and make laws to govern the kingdom of Christ.
    Sir, we are sensible that the president of the 
United States is not the national legislator, and also 
sensible that the national government cannot destroy 
the laws of each state; but our hopes are strong that 
the sentiments of our beloved president, which have 
had such genial effect already, like the radiant beams 
of the sun, will shine and prevail through all these 
states and all the world, till hierarchy and tyranny 
be destroyed from the earth. Sir, when we reflect on 
your past services, and see a glow of philanthropy 
and good will shining forth in a course of more than 
thirty years we have reason to believe that America's 
God has raised you up to fill the chair of state out 
of that goodwill which he bears to the millions which 
you preside over. May God strengthen you for your 
arduous task which providence and the voice of the 
people have called you to sustain and support you 
enjoy administration against all the predetermined 
opposition of those who wish to raise to wealth and 
importance on the poverty and subjection of the people.
    And may the Lord preserve you safe from every evil 
and bring you at last to his heavenly kingdom through 
Jesus Christ our Glorious Mediator.
    Signed in behalf of the association,
    Nehemiah Dodge Ephraim Robbins Stephen S. Nelson
The biggest myth about this letter, the myth promoted 
in the JROTC curriculum, is that the Baptists wrote it 
because they feared that the federal government planned 
to establish a national religion, a notion that is 
ridiculous for several reasons. The most obvious of these 
is that the letter refers only to the problem in Connecticut 
- that the state was still governed by it's "ancient charter" 
and the laws of their state's established religion. The 
"degrading acknowledgements" referred to in the second 
paragraph of the letter, for example, were the certificates 
required to exempt those of other religions from paying 
taxes to support the Congregationalist church. By this 
time, Connecticut law did allow non-Congregationalists 
of certain denominations to have their religious taxes 
go to their own churches, but the process of obtaining 
and filing the necessary exemption certificate was made 
as difficult and demeaning as possible. The Baptists 
mention nothing whatsoever about a fear of the federal 
government establishing a national religion. The myth 
that they were writing to Jefferson for a reassurance 
that this couldn't happen is clearly contradicted by 
the third paragraph of the letter. This paragraph clearly 
shows that the Baptists fully understood the First Amendment 
and the limitations of the federal government's power. When 
they wrote "our constitution of government is not specific," 
they were referring to their state's constitution of government, 
not the federal Constitution. While they knew that Jefferson 
would be sympathetic to their situation, they also knew that 
he was powerless to do anything about it.
So, if the Baptists knew Jefferson had no power to help them, 
why did they even bother to mention the problem with their 
state government and its religious establishment? Jefferson's 
election and the ousting of the Federalist administration 
on the national level had given the Baptists hope that 
change was also possible in their state. The Baptists 
as well as other minority denominations in Connecticut 
were growing in numbers. If all of these religious 
dissenters joined the Republicans in Connecticut, the 
combination might become a political force capable of 
overthrowing their state's Federalist, Congregationalist 
government. While the religious dissenters and the 
Republicans had somewhat different priorities, they both 
had the same goals -- a truly representative government 
and a real state constitution.
The following, dated January 1, 1802, was Jefferson's 
reply to the Baptist Association's letter:
    Gentlemen The affectionate sentiments of esteem 
and approbation which you are so good as to express 
towards me, on behalf of the Danbury Baptist association, 
give me the highest satisfaction. my duties dictate 
a faithful and zealous pursuit of the interests of my 
constituents, & in proportion as they are persuaded 
of my fidelity to those duties, the discharge of them 
becomes more and more pleasing.
    Believing with you that religion is a matter which 
lies solely between Man & his God, that he owes account 
to none other for his faith or his worship, that the 
legitimate powers of government reach actions only, 
& not opinions, I contemplate with sovereign reverence 
that act of the whole American people which declared 
that their legislature should "make no law respecting 
an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free 
exercise thereof," thus building a wall of separation 
between Church & State. Adhering to this expression 
of the supreme will of the nation in behalf of the 
rights of conscience, I shall see with sincere satisfaction 
the progress of those sentiments which tend to restore 
to man all his natural rights, convinced he has no natural 
right in opposition to his social duties.
    I reciprocate your kind prayers for the protection 
& blessing of the common father and creator of man, 
and tender you for yourselves & your religious association, 
assurances of my high respect & esteem.
One of the biggest misconceptions promoted in religious 
right American history books is that Jefferson's reply 
to the Baptists was a personal letter and/or a hastily 
scribbled note that he put little thought into. This is 
simply not true. The existing copy of the letter is 
actually Jefferson's first draft, not the final letter. 
Just the fact that he wrote a first draft proves that 
this was not a hastily scribbled note. Jefferson then 
submitted his draft to two different New Englanders 
in his administration, Postmaster General Gideon Granger 
of Connecticut and Attorney General Levi Lincoln of 
Massachusetts, requesting their opinions on how it would 
be received in their states. Obviously, Jefferson did 
not consider this a personal letter to the Baptist 
Association. He was well aware of the likelihood that 
such a letter would be made public, and did not want 
to offend any New England political allies. On the 
advice of Levi Lincoln, Jefferson deleted a paragraph 
explaining his refusal to proclaim days of thanksgiving, 
writing the following reason in the margin.
    paragraph was omitted on the suggestion that it might 
give uneasiness to some of our republican friends in the 
eastern states where the proclamation of thanksgivings 
etc. by their Executives is an antient habit & is 
respected.
A common question about Jefferson's letter has to do 
with what government he was referring to. Was it the 
federal government or the state governments? The correct 
answer would have to be both. In his letter, Jefferson 
described the First Amendment's establishment and free 
exercise clauses as an "expression of the supreme will 
of the nation," clearly referring to the federal government. 
His next sentence, however, doesn't make much sense unless 
he was referring to the "progress of those sentiments" in 
the individual states, especially given the fact that he 
was replying to a letter regarding the lack of religious 
freedom in one particular state. He couldn't have been 
referring to the "progress of those sentiments" in the 
federal government because no progress was necessary 
there -- the First Amendment had already taken care 
of that. While the federal government couldn't do anything 
to speed up this progress in the states, Jefferson wrote 
that he would "see with sincere satisfaction the progress" 
when it was made. In Connecticut, the kind of progress 
Jefferson was talking about would take another sixteen 
years.
Connecticut did eventually progress from almost complete 
intolerance to a degree of religious freedom on par with 
the other states. When the original commonwealth was 
formed in the 1630s, the law was simple - religions 
other than Congregationalism were just not allowed. 
In the early 1700s, it appeared that progress was 
being made. The law preventing Quakers from settling 
in Connecticut was repealed in 1702. In 1708, the 
General Assembly passed the Toleration Act, which 
allowed some privileges to certain government approved 
dissenting religions. These laws, however, were not 
were not a result of the Congregationalists becoming 
more tolerant, but the result of the Congregationalists' 
fear of royal disfavor. England's Parliament had passed 
an act of religious toleration in 1689, and, although 
the Charter of 1662 hadn't changed the laws of the 
state, it did include a condition that Connecticut's 
laws could not be in conflict with the laws of England. 
The General Assembly was aware that Queen Anne had 
received complaints of intolerance from the Quakers 
and, more importantly, the Connecticut Anglicans. 
Things started to change during the Great Awakening 
of the 1740s. Separatist Congregational churches 
began to split off from the established parish 
churches. This was seen as a such a tremendous threat 
that, in 1743, the General Assembly repealed the 
Toleration Act in an attempt to prevent these churches 
from organizing. This continued until the 1770s, when 
the separatists were granted a status similar to other 
government approved religions like the Baptists and 
the Quakers. This meant that worship in their churches 
was now considered to meet the legal requirement of 
attendance at a government recognized church. The 
separatists could no longer be fined for neglecting 
worship, but, like the Baptists, they had to pay taxes 
to the Congregational Church unless they filed an 
exemption certificate. Other denominations, such as 
the Anglicans and Episcopalians (the ones with money), 
had become somewhat more accepted, and had even gained 
a small representation in the government.
Prior to 1801, Federalist candidates in Connecticut 
were rarely contested. This was due, in large part, 
to the complete lack of secrecy in the voting process. 
Local elections, held at town meetings, pretty much 
forced the voters to vote for Federalist candidates 
or risk being branded troublemakers. Voters were given 
pieces of paper. One by one, the names of the candidates 
were read from a list. A voter would hand in one of 
their pieces of paper when the name of the candidate 
they wanted to vote for was called off. By always 
listing the Federalist candidates first, it was obvious 
that anyone still holding a piece of paper after all the 
Federalists' names had been called hadn't voted for 
a Federalist. In 1801, the first Republican candidates 
for Governor and Lieutenant Governor appeared on the ballot. 
The Republicans received only a small fraction of the vote, 
and only 33 of 200 seats in the Assembly, but the Federalists 
considered this enough of a threat to change the election 
process to further discourage Republican candidates. 
Up until this time, although the actual vote was far 
from secret, the nomination process had been done by 
secret ballot. In 1801 the law was changed to make 
nominations public as well.
The big campaign issue in the elections of the early 
1800s was that Connecticut still did not have a 
constitution. As already mentioned, both the Republicans 
and the religious dissenters wanted a constitution, 
albeit for different reasons.The Republican priorities 
were separation of powers and expanded suffrage; the 
religious dissenters' priority was disestablishment 
of the Congregational church. The Republicans gained 
even more support when the War of 1812 ended. Funds 
for the war had been raised through imposing internal 
taxes. When the conflict was over, the U.S. Treasury 
had a large surplus and returned this money to the 
states. By giving a disproportionately large amount 
of this money to the Congregationalists, and little 
or nothing to the other denominations, the General 
Assembly alienated the Episcopalians. The Republicans 
now had the support of this large minority, which 
then comprised about ten percent of the population. 
The potential of religious dissenters combining with 
Jefferson's Republican party, which the Baptists had 
seen 16 years earlier, had became a reality. In 1817, 
with Oliver Wolcott running for Governor and Jonathan 
Ingersoll, an Episcopalian, for Lieutenant Governor, 
the Republicans narrowly defeated the Federalists. 
In the next election, the Federalists lost their 
majority in the Assembly. In August and September 
of 1818, Connecticut held its constitutional 
convention.
Although he was powerless to help the Connecticut Baptists 
in 1801, Thomas Jefferson did eventually "see with sincere 
satisfaction" the disestablishment of the Congregationalist 
Church. Upon hearing of the Republican victory in the 
Connecticut election of 1817, Jefferson expressed this 
satisfaction in a letter to John Adams.
    I join you therefore in sincere congratulations that 
this den of the priesthood is at length broken up, and 
that a protestant popedom is no longer to disgrace the 
American history and character.
Full discussion: story/2007/5/13/112530/361
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
20) Analysis Finds Large Antarctic Area Has Melted
By ANDREW C. REVKIN
May 16, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/16/science/earth/16melt.html?ref=science
While much of the world has warmed in a pattern that scientists 
have linked with near certainty to human activities, the 
frigid interior of Antarctica has resisted the trend.
Now, a new satellite analysis shows that at least once in the 
last several years, masses of unusually warm air pushed 
to within 310 miles of the South Pole and remained long enough 
to melt surface snow across a California-size expanse.
The warm spell, which occurred over one week in 2005, 
was detected by scientists from the Jet Propulsion 
Laboratory of NASA and the University of Colorado, Boulder.
Balmy air, with a temperature of up to 41 degrees in some 
places, persisted across three broad swathes of West 
Antarctica long enough to leave a distinctive signature 
of melting, a layer of ice in the snow that cloaks the 
vast ice sheets of the frozen continent. The layer formed 
the same way a crust of ice can form in a yard in winter when 
a warm day and then a freezing night follow a snowfall, 
the scientists said.
The evidence of melting was detected by a National 
Aeronautics and Space Administration satellite, the 
QuickScat, that uses radar to distinguish between 
snow and ice as it scans the surfaces of Greenland 
and Antarctica.
There have been other areas in Antarctica where such melt 
zones have been seen, but they are not common so far inland, 
said Son Nghiem, a scientist at the NASA laboratory who 
directed the analysis with Konrad Steffen, a glaciologist 
at the University of Colorado, Boulder.
Some melting also occurred at an elevation of more than 
6,000 feet, in regions where temperatures usually remain 
far below freezing year-round.
It is too soon to know whether the warm spell was a fluke 
or a portent, Dr. Nghiem said.
“It is vital we continue monitoring this region to determine 
if a long-term trend may be developing,” he said.
Dr. Steffen said if such conditions intensified or persisted 
for a long time, the melting could conceivably produce 
streams of water that could, as has been measured in Greenland, 
percolate down to bedrock and allow the thick ice sheets 
coating the continent to slide a bit faster toward the sea. 
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
21) Citing Racist Bias, Attorneys for Mumia Abu-Jamal 
Urge a Federal Appeals Court to Grant the Former Black 
Panther a New Trial
Friday, May 18th, 2007
VIA Email from: Mike Friedman 
mikedf@amnh.org
Attorney Robert Bryan says a racist judge and racist jury practices
contributed to the sentencing of Abu-Jamal to death row. Bryan joins us in
New York one day after he argued before the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals in Philadelphia. [includes rush transcript] For our first segment,
we turn to Philadelphia and a pivotal court hearing for the imprisoned
journalist and former Black Panther, Mumia Abu-Jamal. Abu-Jamal has spent
a quarter-century on death row. He was convicted of killing a police
officer following a controversial trial before a predominantly white jury.
In 2001, a judge overturned Abu-Mumia's death sentence but upheld his
conviction. On Thursday, a three-judge panel heard oral arguments to
decide whether Mumia gets a new trial, life in prison without parole, or
execution. Hundreds of people packed the courtroom while an even larger
crowd rallied in support of Mumia outside. A decision may not come down
for months.
We are joined now by Mumia Abu-Jamal's lead attorney. Robert Bryan has
represented Mumia since 2003. He is a fellow of the American Board of
Criminal Lawyers and the former Chair of the National Coalition to Abolish
the Death Penalty.
JUAN GONZALEZ: For our first segment, we turn to Philadelphia and a
pivotal court hearing for the imprisoned journalist and the former Black
Panther, Mumia Abu-Jamal. Abu-Jamal has spent a quarter-century on death
row. He was convicted of killing a police officer following a
controversial trial before a predominantly white jury. In 2001, a judge
overturned Mumia Abu-Jamal‚s death sentence, but upheld his conviction. On
Thursday, a three-judge panel heard oral arguments to decide whether Mumia
gets a new trial, life in prison without patrol, or execution. Hundreds of
people packed the courtroom, while an even larger crowd rallied in support
of Mumia outside. A decision may not come down for months.
AMY GOODMAN: We're joined right now by Mumia Abu-Jamal‚s lead attorney.
Robert Bryan has represented Mumia since 2003. He's a fellow of the
American Board of Criminal Lawyers and the former chair of the National
Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty. Welcome to Democracy Now!
ROBERT BRYAN: It‚s a pleasure to be here, Amy
AMY GOODMAN: Why don't you lay out what happened in the courtroom for --
what was it? -- two hours yesterday?
ROBERT BRYAN: Well, it was over two hours. We argued before a three-judge
panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, which
is just below the US Supreme Court. The court seemed really interested.
There are a number of issues pending before this court. They involve the
death penalty, racism in jury selection, the racism and bias of the trial
judge, Sabo, who referred to my client during the trial, to use his words
-- I‚m quoting him -- „I‚m going to help them fry the nigger,‰ referring
to Mumia Abu-Jamal.
AMY GOODMAN: Who heard that?
ROBERT BRYAN: Pardon?
AMY GOODMAN: Who heard that?
ROBERT BRYAN: A court stenographer. It was just outside the courtroom. She
was going with her judge to another courtroom, and they passed Judge Sabo
in an antechamber adjacent to the courtroom where the trial occurred, and
Sabo started talking about the trial and made those comments, which are as
offense as -- I mean, as you may know, I specialize in death penalty
litigation. I‚ve handled hundreds of death penalty trials and cases in
post-conviction proceedings in the past three decades. I even went and
spent three days in jail in a murder case for contempt of court, in which
my client was acquitted -- African American. I‚ve seen a lot of racism,
but I‚ve never heard anything like that, except in this case in
Philadelphia. It's unprecedented.
JUAN GONZALEZ: And that court stenographer's statement, has it ever gone
before a judge on this case?
ROBERT BRYAN: Juan, it went before the court yesterday. I said -- from my
lips -- and I said, „Understand, these are the words of Judge Sabo, not
Robert R. Bryan.‰ But our focus yesterday is interesting, with all the
energy by the prosecution to kill my client. The focus yesterday was on
constitutional crimes committed by the prosecution. What the whole focus
was primarily was on the death penalty, I‚d say 20% and 80% on racism in
the District Attorney's office of Philadelphia. And in all of my years of
doing this kind of work, I find yesterday‚s hearing, as I think back on it
this morning, as unprecedented. These judges, how they'll rule, we do not
know, but they were very troubled -- that was very clear -- about the
racism in this case.
JUAN GONZALEZ: One of the main points that you were raising was the jury
selection process in the original trial, right?
ROBERT BRYAN: Yes.
AMY GOODMAN: The number of challenges of potential white jurors versus
black jurors. Could you talk about that?
ROBERT BRYAN: Yes. The US Supreme Court has been very clear in recent
years, beginning with a 1986 decision, that racism in jury selection
offends the US Constitution. And in this case, the prosecutor used over
two-thirds of his strikes to remove people of color, African Americans,
only 20% to 25% white people. I mean, you know, you have all of these
African American people removed and very few white people. And it's
well-documented that the District Attorney's office of Philadelphia during
that period in the early ‚80s, and certainly going back, were very active
in employing racism in jury selection discrimination. And the big question
yesterday, in my words, was -- an issue for the court was and is -- was
race, was discrimination at work in this case? And it seems like not only
the statistics, but a wealth of other evidence, certainly seems to
establish that. Let's just hope that the judges agree with us.
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
22) "Sicko" Is Completed and We're Off to Cannes!
By Michael Moore
May 17, 2007
http://www.michaelmoore.com
 
Friends,
It's a wrap! My new film, "Sicko," is all done and will have its world
premiere this Saturday night at the Cannes Film Festival. As with "Bowling
for Columbine" and "Fahrenheit 9/11," we are honored to have been chosen by
this prestigious festival to screen our work there.
My intention was to keep "Sicko" under wraps and show it to virtually no one
before its premiere in Cannes. That is what I have done and, as you may have
noticed if you are a recipient of my infrequent Internet letters, I have
been very silent about what I've been up to. In part, that's because I was
working very hard to complete the film. But my silence was also because I
knew that the health care industry -- an industry which makes up more than
15 percent of our GDP -- was not going to like much of what they were going
to see in this movie and I thought it best not to upset them any sooner than
need be.
Well, going quietly to Cannes, I guess, was not to be. For some strange
reason, on May 2nd the Bush administration initiated an action against me
over how I obtained some of the content they believe is in my film. As none
of them have actually seen the film (or so I hope!), they decided, unlike
with "Fahrenheit 9/11," not to wait until the film was out of the gate and
too far down the road to begin their attack.
Bush's Treasury Secretary, Henry Paulson, launched an investigation of a
trip I took to Cuba to film scenes for the movie. These scenes involve a
group of 9/11 rescue workers who are suffering from illnesses obtained from
working down at Ground Zero. They have received little or no help with their
health care from the government. I do not want to give away what actually
happens in the movie because I don't want to spoil it for you (although I'm
sure you'll hear much about it after it unspools Saturday). Plus, our
lawyers have advised me to say little at this point, as the film goes
somewhere far scarier than "Cuba." Rest assured of one thing: no laws were
broken. All I've done is violate the modern-day rule of journalism that
says, "ask no questions of those in power or your luncheon privileges will
be revoked."
This preemptive action taken by the Bush administration on the eve of the
"Sicko" premiere in Cannes led our attorneys to fear for the safety of our
film, noting that Secretary Paulson may try to claim that the content of the
movie was obtained through a violation of the trade embargo that our country
has against Cuba and the travel laws that prohibit average citizens of our
free country from traveling to Cuba. (The law does not prohibit anyone from
exercising their first amendment right of a free press and documentaries are
protected works of journalism.)
I was floored when our lawyers told me this. "Are you saying they might
actually confiscate our movie?" "Yes," was the answer. "These days, anything
is possible. Even if there is just a 20 percent chance the government would
seize our movie before Cannes, does anyone want to take that risk?"
Certainly not. So there we were last week, spiriting a duplicate master
negative out of the country just so no one from the government would take it
from us. (Seriously, I can't believe I just typed those words! Did I mention
that I'm an American, and this is America and NO ONE should ever have to say
they had to do such a thing?)
I mean, folks, I have just about had it. Investigating ME because I'm trying
to help some 9/11 rescue workers our government has abandoned? Once again,
up is down and black is white. There are only two people in need of an
investigation and a trial, and the desire for this across America is so
widespread you don't even need to see the one's smirk or hear the other's
sneer to know who I am talking about.
But no, I'm the one who now has to hire lawyers and sneak my documentary out
of the country just so people can see a friggin' movie. I mean, it's just a
movie! What on earth could I have placed on celluloid that would require
such a nonsensical action against me?
Ok. Scratch that.
Well, I'm on my way to Cannes right now, a copy of the movie in my bag.
Don't feel too bad for me, I'll be in the south of France for a week! But
then it's back to the U.S. for a number of premieres and benefits and then,
finally, a chance for all of you to see this film that I have made. Circle
June 29th on your calendar because that's when it opens in theaters
everywhere across the country and Canada (for the rest of the world, it
opens in the fall).
I can't wait for you to see it.
Yours,
Michael Moore
P.S. I will write more about what happens from Cannes. Stay tuned on my
website, http://www.michaelmoore.com .
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
LINKS AND VERY SHORT STORIES
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
More lies from Livermore nuclear weapons lab
by Bob Nichols   
Wednesday, 09 May 2007
http://www.sfbayview.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=106&Itemid=14 
Nutrition: A Cardiovascular Argument for Eating Whole Grains
By ERIC NAGOURNEY
It is hard to escape the message that whole grains are good 
for you. But few Americans put it into practice.
By some estimates, fewer than 1 in 10 adults eat three 
servings of whole grains a day. And about 4 out of 
10 eat none.
Now a new study adds strength to the argument that 
a better diet can lead directly to better health. 
Writing in the online edition of the journal Nutrition, 
Metabolism and Cardiovascular Diseases, researchers say 
they have confirmed a clear connection between whole-grain 
intake and the risk of cardiovascular disease.
“In light of this evidence,” write the authors, led by 
Dr. Philip B. Mellen of Wake Forest University, “policy 
makers, scientists and clinicians should redouble efforts 
to incorporate clear messages on the beneficial effects 
of whole grains into public health and clinical practice 
endeavors.”
The researchers based their findings on a review of seven 
earlier studies that followed people’s diets and health 
over time. In all, more than 285,000 people were involved.
The new study found that on average, people who ate two 
and a half servings of whole grains a day had a 21 percent 
lower risk of developing cardiovascular disease than those 
who ate a fifth of a serving.
Whole grains can come from numerous sources, including 
whole-wheat flour, oatmeal and popcorn.
May 15, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/15/health/nutrition/15nutr.html
Cuban Students Try Militant in Absentia
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
HAVANA, May 14 (AP) — Cuban university students symbolically 
tried Luis Posada Carriles on Monday, accusing the anti-Castro 
militant of teaming up with the United States to commit 
decades of terrorist attacks.
A four-judge panel of University of Havana law students was 
scheduled to hear 32 witnesses over two days before issuing 
a symbolic sentence against Mr. Posada, 79, a former C.I.A. 
operative born in Cuba.
Cuba accuses him of masterminding a Cubana Airlines plane 
bombing in 1976 that killed 73 people. Mr. Posada denies 
the charges, but in the past acknowledged — then recanted 
— organizing 1997 bombings at Havana hotels.
Cuba hopes the trial will keep pressure on the United 
States to act against Mr. Posada, who was released last 
week from house arrest in the United States after 
a judge dropped immigration charges.
May 15, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/15/world/americas/15cuba.html
Marine Refused Staff’s Advice on Iraq Deaths, Major Testifies
By PAUL von ZIELBAUER
May 15, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/15/world/middleeast/15haditha.html
SlideShow: Destruction and Rebuilding in Southern Lebanon
http://dahrjamailiraq.com/weblog/archives//000588.php#more
Ground Zero Illnesses Clouding Giuliani’s Legacy
By ANTHONY DePALMA
May 14, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/14/nyregion/14giuliani.html
Deforestation: The hidden cause of global warming
In the next 24 hours, deforestation will release as much 
CO2 into the atmosphere as 8 million people flying from 
London to New York. Stopping the loggers is the fastest 
and cheapest solution to climate change. So why are global 
leaders turning a blind eye to this crisis?
By Daniel Howden
Published: 14 May 2007
http://news.independent.co.uk/environment/climate_change/article2539349.ece
Last Big Piece of Russian Oil Giant Is Sold
By ANDREW E. KRAMER
May 12, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/12/business/worldbusiness/12yukos.html
Religious Groups Reap Federal Aid for Pet Projects
By DIANA B. HENRIQUES and ANDREW W. LEHREN
May 13, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/13/business/13lobby.html?ref=us
Fighting the Terror of Battles That Rage in Soldiers’ Heads
By DAN FROSCH
May 13, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/13/us/13carson.html
Civilian Deaths Undermine War on Taliban
By CARLOTTA GALL and DAVID E. SANGER
May 13, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/13/world/asia/13AFGHAN.html?ref=world
Critics say LAPD has 'warrior culture'
By ANDREW GLAZER, Associated Press Writer
Sat May 12, 6:51 PM ET
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070512/ap_on_re_us/immigration_rally_la_police
Venezuela to the rescue!
Staff   
Wednesday, 09 May 2007
http://www.sfbayview.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=116&Itemid=14
Thousands of Nuclear Arms Workers 
See Cancer Claims Denied or Delayed
By Michael Alison Chandler and Joby Warrick
Washington Post Staff Writers
Saturday, May 12, 2007; A01
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/05/11/AR2007051102277.html?hpid=topnews
FOCUS | Billions in Oil Missing in Iraq, US Study Finds
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/051207Z.shtml
Filmmaker Hits Back at Inquiry Over Cuba Trip
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The filmmaker Michael Moore has asked the Bush administration 
to call off an investigation of his trip to Cuba to get 
treatment for ailing Sept. 11 rescue workers for a segment 
in his film, “Sicko.” Mr. Moore, who made the documentary 
“Fahrenheit 9/11” attacking the president’s handling of the 
Sept. 11 attacks, said in a letter to Treasury Secretary 
Henry M. Paulson Jr. that the White House might have opened 
the investigation for political reasons. In the letter, 
which Mr. Moore posted on the liberal Web site the Daily Kos, 
he also said: “I understand why the Bush administration 
is coming after me — I have tried to help the very people 
they refuse to help, but until George W. Bush outlaws 
helping your fellow man, I have broken no laws and I have 
nothing to hide.”
May 12, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/12/us/12brfs-moore.html
Panel Seeks End of New Jersey’s Death Penalty
By RONALD SMOTHERS
May 11, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/11/nyregion/11death.html
Germany: Protests Over Raids
By MARK LANDLER
More than 5,000 people poured into the streets of several 
cities to protest a crackdown on leftist groups before 
a Group of 8 meeting in the city of Heiligendamm next 
month. The police in Hamburg clashed with demonstrators 
there, arresting eight people. Some opposition leaders 
criticized the raids, saying the police were trying to 
intimidate legitimate opponents of the meeting.
May 11, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/11/world/europe/11briefs-raids.html
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
GENERAL ANNOUNCEMENTS AND INFORMATION
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
DEMAND THE RELEASE OF SAMI AL-ARIAN
The National Council of Arab Americans (NCA) demands the immediate 
release of political prisoner, Dr. Sami Al-Arian.  Although 
Dr. Al-Arian is no longer on a hunger strike we must still demand
he be released by the US Department of Justice (DOJ).   After an earlier 
plea agreement that absolved Dr. Al-Arian from any further questioning, 
he was sentenced up to 18 months in jail for refusing to testify before 
a grand jury in Virginia. He has long sense served his time yet 
Dr. Al-Arian is still being held. Release him now!
See:
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=07/03/16/1410255
ACTION:
We ask all people of conscience to demand the immediate 
release and end to Dr. Al- Arian's suffering. 
Call, Email and Write:
1- Attorney General Alberto Gonzales
Department of Justice
U.S. Department of Justice
950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20530-0001
Fax Number: (202) 307-6777
Email: AskDOJ@usdoj.gov
2- The Honorable John Conyers, Jr
2426 Rayburn Building
Washington, DC 20515 
(202) 225-5126
(202) 225-0072 Fax
John.Conyers@mail.house.gov
3- Senator Patrick Leahy
433 Russell Senate Office Building
United States Senate 
Washington, DC 20510
(202)224-4242
senator_leahy@leahy.senate.gov
4- Honorable Judge Gerald Lee
U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia 
401 Courthouse Square, Alexandria, VA 22314
March 22, 2007
[No email given...bw]
National Council of Arab Americans (NCA)
http://www.arab-american.net/
Criminalizing Solidarity: Sami Al-Arian and the War of
Terror
By Charlotte Kates, The Electronic Intifada, 4 April 2007
http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article6767.shtml
Related: 
Robert Fisk: The true story of free speech in America
This systematic censorship of Middle East reality 
continues even in schools
Published: 07 April 2007 
http://news. independent. co.uk/world/ fisk/article2430 125.ece
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
[For some levity...Hans Groiner plays Monk
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=51bsCRv6kI0
 ...bw]
Excerpt of interview between Barbara Walters and Hugo Chavez
http://www.borev.net/2007/03/what_you_had_something_better.html
Which country should we invade next?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q3g_zqz3VjY
My Favorite Mutiny, The Coup
http://www.myspace.com/thecoupmusic
Michael Moore- The Awful Truth
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xeOaTpYl8mE
Morse v. Frederick Supreme Court arguments
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n_LsGoDWC0o
Free Speech 4 Students Rally - Media Montage
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RfCjfod8yuw
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
'My son lived a worthwhile life'
In April 2003, 21-year old Tom Hurndall was shot in the head 
in Gaza by an Israeli soldier as he tried to save the lives of three 
small children. Nine months later, he died, having never 
recovered consciousness. Emine Saner talks to his mother 
Jocelyn about her grief, her fight to make the Israeli army 
accountable for his death and the book she has written 
in his memory. 
Monday March 26, 2007
The Guardian 
http://www.guardian.co.uk/israel/Story/0,,2042968,00.html 
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
Introducing...................the Apple iRack
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o-KWYYIY4jQ
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
"A War Budget Leaves Every Child Behind."
[A T-shirt worn by  some teachers at Roosevelt High School
in L.A. as part of their campaign to rid the school of military
recruiters and JROTC--see Article in Full item number 4, below...bw]
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
THIS IS AN EXCELLENT VIDEO DESTRIBUTED BY U.S. LABOR AGAINST 
THE WAR (USLAW) FEATURING SPEAKERS AT THE JANUARY 27TH 
MARCH ON WASHINGTON FOCUSING ON THE DEMAND - BRING 
THE TROOPS HOME NOW.
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=6935451906479097836&hl=en
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
Defend the Los Angeles Eight!
http://www.committee4justice.com/
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
George Takai responds to Tim Hardaway's homophobic remarks
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kcJoJZIcQW4&eurl_
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
Iran
http://www.lucasgray.com/video/peacetrain.html
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
Another view of the war. A link from Amer Jubran
http://d3130.servadmin.com/~leeflash/
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
Petition: Halt the Blue Angels
http://action.globalexchange.org/petition.jsp?petition_KEY=458
http://www.care2.com/c2c/share/detail/289327
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
A Girl Like Me
7:08 min
Youth Documentary 
Kiri Davis, Director, Reel Works Teen Filmmaking, Producer 
Winner of the Diversity Award 
Sponsored by Third Millennium Foundation
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=1091431409617440489
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
Film/Song about Angola 
http://www.prisonactivist.org/angola/ 
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
"200 million children in the world sleep in the streets today. 
Not one of them is Cuban."
(A sign in Havana)
Venceremos
View sign at bottom of page at:
http://www.cubasolidarity.net/index.html
[Thanks to Norma Harrison for sending this...bw]
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
"Cheyenne and Arapaho oral histories hammer history's account of the  
Sand Creek Massacre"
CENTENNIAL, CO  -- A new documentary film based on an award-winning  
documentary short film, "The Sand Creek Massacre", and driven by  
Southern Cheyenne and Arapaho people who tell their version about  
what happened during the Sand Creek Massacre via their oral  
histories, has been released by Olympus Films+, LLC, a Centennial,  
Colorado film company.
"You have done an extraordinary job" said Margie Small, Tobient  
Entertainment, " on the Colorado PBS episode, the library videos for  
public schools and libraries, the trailer, etc...and getting the  
story told and giving honor to those ancestors who had to witness  
this tragic and brutal attack...film is one of the best ways."
"The images shown in the film were selected for native awareness  
value"  said Donald L. Vasicek, award-winning writer/filmmaker,  "we  
also focused on preserving American history on film because tribal  
elders are dying and taking their oral histories with them.  The film  
shows a non-violent solution to problem-solving and 19th century  
Colorado history, so it's multi-dimensional in that sense. "
Chief Eugene Blackbear, Sr., Cheyenne, who starred as Chief Black  
Kettle in "The Last of the Dogmen" also starring Tom Berenger and  
Barbara Hershey and "Dr. Colorado", Tom Noel, University of Colorado  
history professor, are featured.
The trailer can be viewed and the film can be ordered for $24.95 plus  
$4.95 for shipping and handling at http://www.fullduck.com/node/53.
Vasicek's web site, http://www.donvasicek.com, provides detailed  
information about the Sand Creek Massacre including various still  
images particularly on the Sand Creek Massacre home page and on the  
proposal page.
Olympus Films+, LLC is dedicated to writing and producing quality  
products that serve to educate others about the human condition.
Contact:
Donald L. Vasicek
Olympus Films+, LLC
7078 South Fairfax Street
Centennial, CO 80122
http://us.imdb.com/Name?Vasicek,+Don
http://www.donvasicek.com
dvasicek@earthlink.net
303-903-2103
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
A NEW LOOK AT U.S. RADIOACTIVE WEAPONS
Join us in a campaign to expose and stop the use 
of these illegal weapons
http://poisondust.org/
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
You may enjoy watching these.
In struggle
Che:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nqcezl9dD2c
Leon:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ukkFVV5X0p4
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
FIGHTBACK! A Collection of Socialist Essays
By Sylvia Weinstein
http://www.walterlippmann.com/sylvia-weinstein-fightback-intro.html
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
[The Scab
"After God had finished the rattlesnake, the toad, 
and the vampire, he had some awful substance left with 
which he made a scab."
"A scab is a two-legged animal with a corkscrew soul, 
a water brain, a combination backbone of jelly and glue. 
Where others have hearts, he carries a tumor of rotten 
principles." "When a scab comes down the street, 
men turn their backs and angels weep in heaven, and 
the devil shuts the gates of hell to keep him out."
"No man (or woman) has a right to scab so long as there 
is a pool of water to drown his carcass in, 
or a rope long enough to hang his body with. 
Judas was a gentleman compared with a scab. 
For betraying his master, he had character enough 
to hang himself." A scab has not.
"Esau sold his birthright for a mess of pottage. 
Judas sold his Savior for thirty pieces of silver. 
Benedict Arnold sold his country for a promise of 
a commision in the british army." 
The scab sells his birthright, country, his wife, 
his children and his fellowmen for an unfulfilled 
promise from his employer.
Esau was a traitor to himself; Judas was a traitor 
to his God; Benedict Arnold was a traitor to his country; 
a scab is a traitor to his God, his country, 
his family and his class."
Author --- Jack London (1876-1916)...Roland Sheppard 
http://web.mac.com/rolandgarret]
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
END ALL U.S. AID TO ISRAEL!
Stop funding Israel's war against Palestine
Complete the form at the website listed below with your information.
https://secure2.convio.net/pep/site/Advocacy?
JServSessionIdr003=cga2p2o6x1.app2a&cmd=display&page=UserAction&id=177
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
Sand Creek Massacre
"THE SAND CREEK MASSACRE" AWARD-WINNING DOCUMENTARY
SHORT FEATURED AT NATIVE AMERICAN FILM FESTIVAL:
http://www.aberdeennews.com/mld/aberdeennews/news/local/16035305.htm
(scroll down when you get there])
"THE SAND CREEK MASSACRE" AWARD-WINNING
WRITER/FILMMAKER DONALD L. VASICEK REPORT:
http://www.digitalcinemareport.com/sandcreekmassacre.html
"THE SAND CREEK MASSACRE" AWARD-WINNING DOCUMENTARY
SHORT FINALIST IN DOCUMENTARY CHANNEL COMPETITION (VIEW HERE):
http://www.docupyx.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=28&Itemid=41
VIEW "THE SAND CREEK MASSACRE" AWARD-WINNING DOCUMENTARY
SHORT FILM MOVIE OF THE WEEK FOR FREE HERE:
http://twymancreative.com/twymanc.html
On November 29, 1864, 700 Colorado troops savagely slaughtered
over 450 Cheyenne children, disabled, elders, and women in the
southeastern Colorado Territory under its protection. This act
became known as the Sand Creek Massacre. This film project
("The Sand Creek Massacre" documentary film project) is an
examination of an open wound in the souls of the Cheyenne
people as told from their perspective. This project chronicles
that horrific 19th century event and its affect on the 21st century
struggle for respectful coexistence between white and native
plains cultures in the United States of America.
Listed below are links on which you can click to get the latest news,
products, and view, free, "THE SAND CREEK MASSACRE" award-
winning documentary short. In order to create more native
awareness, particularly to save the roots of America's history,
please read the following:
Some people in America are trying to save the world. Bless
them. In the meantime, the roots of America are dying.
What happens to a plant when the roots die? The plant dies
according to my biology teacher in high school. American's
roots are its native people. Many of America's native people
are dying from drug and alcohol abuse, poverty, hunger,
and disease, which was introduced to them by the Caucasian
male. Tribal elders are dying. When they die, their oral
histories go with them. Our native's oral histories are the
essence of the roots of America, what took place before
our ancestors came over to America, what is taking place,
and what will be taking place. It is time we replenish
America's roots with native awareness, else America
continues its decaying, and ultimately, its death.
You can help. The 22-MINUTE SAND CREEK MASSACRE
DOCUMENTARY PRESENTATION/EDUCATIONAL DVD IS
READY FOR PURCHASE! (pass the word about this powerful
educational tool to friends, family, schools, parents, teachers,
and other related people and organizations to contact
me (dvasicek@earthlink.net, 303-903-2103) for information
about how they can purchase the DVD and have me come
to their children's school to show the film and to interact
in a questions and answers discussion about the Sand
Creek Massacre.
Happy Holidays!
Donald L. Vasicek
Olympus Films+, LLC
http://us.imdb.com/Name?Vasicek,+Don
http://www.donvasicek.com
dvasicek@earthlink.net
303-903-2103
"THE SAND CREEK MASSACRE" AWARD-WINNING DOCUMENTARY
SHORT FEATURED AT NATIVE AMERICAN FILM FESTIVAL:
http://www.aberdeennews.com/mld/aberdeennews/news/local/16035305.htm
(scroll down when you get there])
"THE SAND CREEK MASSACRE" AWARD-WINNING
WRITER/FILMMAKER DONALD L. VASICEK REPORT:
http://www.digitalcinemareport.com/sandcreekmassacre.html
"THE SAND CREEK MASSACRE" AWARD-WINNING DOCUMENTARY
SHORT FINALIST IN DOCUMENTARY CHANNEL COMPETITION (VIEW HERE):
http://www.docupyx.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=28&Itemid=41
VIEW "THE SAND CREEK MASSACRE" AWARD-WINNING DOCUMENTARY
SHORT FILM MOVIE OF THE WEEK FOR FREE HERE:
http://twymancreative.com/twymanc.html
SHOP:
http://www.manataka.org/page633.html
BuyIndies.com
donvasicek.com.
27 comments:
buy ambien much zolpidem ambien - generic ambien 10mg cost
can you buy xanax online legally xanax withdrawal neck pain - buy xanax online no prescription cheap
order ativan ativan overdose alcohol - ativan getting high
diazepam overdose common side effects diazepam - diazepam pregnancy category
ativan mg ativan dosage ems - interaction between ativan and alcohol
zolpidem high zolpidem tartrate 6.25 - zolpidem 10mg info
ambien order generic ambien 93 73 - ambien dosage guide
valium online valium 10 mg for sleep - drug interactions lyrica valium
buy diazepam online no prescription diazepam online usa no prescription - side effects reducing diazepam
order xanax online order cheap xanax online no prescription - generic xanax green
diazepam 5mg diazepam 5mg india - diazepam withdrawal back pain
buy diazepam online diazepam side effects aggression - online diazepam buy
ativan online ativan dosage per day - ativan 2 mg/ml
ativan cost ativan uses side effects - ativan liquid concentration
valium diazepam manufacturers diazepam show on drug test - diazepam 5mg how long
generic alprazolam xanax 1 mg mylan - buy xanax online legit
buy xanax bars online no prescription generic xanax green - xanax withdrawal visual disturbances
alprazolam drug xanax recreational use grasscity - para que sirve el alprazolam 0.5mg
buy soma online buy soma online paypal - somanabolic muscle maximizer program download
buy ambien online ambien 10mg overdose - ambien overdose statistics
soma online soma drug generic - buy soma online with paypal
where to buy ambien online cost ambien lunesta - generic ambien ndc
cheap valium online valium usage statistics - buy valium no prescription uk
buy soma where to order soma online - where to buy soma overnight
ambien pill ambien side effects muscle aches - can cut ambien cr 12.5 half
cheap soma online can you really buy soma online - buy soma without script
order soma generic soma dan - buy 120 soma online
Post a Comment