Monday, May 14, 2007

BAUAW NEWSLETTER - MONDAY, MAY 14, 2007

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Bill Moyers | The Cost of War
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/051407A.shtml

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Gore Vidal on Cuba
Posted May 14, 2007
http://www.truthdig.com/interview/item/20070514_gore_vidal_on_cuba/

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EMERGENCY DEMONSTRATION AGAINST THE OIL LAW
in solidarity with the oil workers of Iraq

DEMAND PELOSI & CONGRESS DROP THE OIL LAW BENCHMARK
MONDAY, MAY 14TH NOON
SAN FRANCISCO FEDERAL BUILDING
450 Golden Gate Ave.

The Iraqi Federation of Oil Unions has put the Iraqi
government on notice that it intends to strike on
Monday , May 14th to demonstrate the union's strong
opposition to the proposed oil (theft) law now
pending action by the Iraqi parliament.

The Bush administration and Congress have made adoption
of the oil law one of the "benchmarks" of "progress"
and Iraqi "cooperation." The law has been unanimously
and strongly condemned and rejected by all of Iraq's
major labor federations. If adopted, it would allow
foreign oil corporations to obtain contracts to exploit
up to 2/3 of Iraqi oil reserves for as long as 30 years
and to reap the lion's share of the profits earned
on that oil. It makes a mockery of Iraqi sovereignty
and would deprive the Iraqi people of the resources
they require to rebuild their shattered nation.

The leadership of the Democratic Party has embraced
this oil law and put it into the supplemental funding
bill as one of the benchmarks by which the Iraqi
government will be measured. In doing so, they have
become complicit in a backdoor effort to privatize
Iraq's publicly owned oil resources - second largest
in the world.

The Federation of Oil Unions in Iraq has given the
Oil Ministry a list of demands in addition to their
opposition to the oil law relating to wages and working
conditions. They delayed their strike from Friday
to Monday to give the Oil Ministry time to respond.

PLEASE JOIN THIS DEMONSTRATION TO SHOW OUR SOLIDARITY
WITH THE WORKING PEOPLE OF IRAQ -- DEFENDING THEIR
NATIONAL LEGACY AGAINST THE DESIGNS OF THE OIL CARTEL
TO SECURE CONTROL OVER THEIR OIL.

TELL SPEAKER NANCY PELOSI TO
ABANDON THIS SHAMEFUL RAID ON IRAQI OIL.

Demonstration called by U.S. Labor Against the War
and Bay Area Labor Committee for Peace & Justice
[For more info visit www.iraqoillaw.com
or www.uslaboragainstwar.org or call 510 847 8657]

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Hold the date and Spread the word:

EMERGENCY RALLY

STAND WITH MUMIA ABU-JAMAL!

Thursday, May 17th, 4 - 6 p.m.

U.S. Court of Appeal Building at
7th and Mission Streets
San Francisco

Mumia is Innocent--Free Mumia!

For Labor Action to Free Mumia!

End the Racist Death Penalty!

On May 17th, 2007, oral arguments
will be heard in federal court in
Philadelphia on what could be the
last appeal of death-row journalist
Mumia Abu-Jamal, known as the "Voice
of the Voiceless."

The evidence shows--Mumia Abu-Jamal
is an innocent man. He has been on
death row in Pennsylvania for 25 years,
victim of a police and prosecutorial
frame-up and a racist judge. He continues
to serve the movement for human rights
as a journalist writing and broadcasting
from prison.

Come out on May 17th in SF to support
Mumia at this critical time!

Demonstrate with the Labor Action Committee
To Free Mumia Abu-Jamal
PO Box 16222 Oakland CA 94610. 510 763-2347,

Sponsored by: The Mobilization to Free Mumia
Abu-Jamal (Northern California);
International Concerned Family and Friends
of Mumia Abu-Jamal; Free Mumia Abu-Jamal
Coalition (NYC); Chicago Committee to Free
Mumia Abu-Jamal; Educators for Mumia Abu-Jamal,
Bay Area United Against War, and many others!

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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

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Students to Pelosi: immediate withdrawal from Iraq
http://www.traprockpeace.org/traprock_blog/index.php/2007/05/09/students-to-pelosi-immediate-withdrawal-from-iraq/

*** Please forward widely ***

Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi:

We are students from Bay Area colleges and universities
and part of the Campus Antiwar Network. We are concerned
about the state of the war and occupation in Iraq as well
as the effect that this is having on our schools and our
communities. We are furthermore concerned that the debate
about the war has been hamstrung by political maneuvering
rather than principled commitments to peace and justice.
In that vein, we believe that any meaningful solution
in the Middle East requires the following:

1) Immediate withdrawal of all US forces, personnel,
and contractors from Iraq

2) Iraqi control over Iraq: no permanent military
bases, no control over Iraqi oil, no US intervention
in their political process

3) Full funding of veterans’ benefits and health care,
including mental health care

4) Reparations to the Iraqi people

5) Ban on the use of depleted uranium munitions in Iraq

6) Redistribution of the war budget towards jobs
and education

The current standoff between you and the President brings
us no closer to withdrawal. Your House Spending Bill
is not a good solution. It would have allowed tens
of thousands of troops to remain in Iraq, kept military
bases open nearby, and would have authorized the President
to intervene again on the pretext of combating al-Qaeda.
It appears to us that the Democratic controlled Congress
is putting its election hopes above the needs of US
citizens and Iraqis. It’s time that you implement
legislation calling for a full and unconditional
withdrawal of US forces from Iraq. Furthermore,
any lasting solution involves that all of our above
demands be met.

Speaker Pelosi, you are the representative of a city
that overwhelmingly has proven that it not only wants
the military out of Iraq, but wants a reduction in US
militarism overall. In 2004, over two-thirds of San
Francisco voters made it policy to demand that the
troops in Iraq be brought “safely home now” by voting
for Proposition N. In 2006 San Francisco proved that
it wants military recruiters out of our public schools
and funds diverted away from war and into education
by voting for Proposition i. Not only are your San
Francisco voters demanding that you meet the above
demands, the nation has turned against the war.
Whether you purport to represent your home district
or the nation as a whole in your role as Majority
Speaker, you can take meaningful action today.
We demand that you do so.

Finally, we would like a forum where you address the
concerns of students with respect to the war in Iraq
at the early part of the fall semester. We would like
to work with your office to make sure that such an
event can take place and help not only to voice the
concerns of students but also to make clear your
positions on the war in Iraq. We look forward to your
immediate and full response.

Sincerely,

Campus Antiwar Network chapters at UC Berkeley,
San Francisco State University,
and City College San Francisco
http://www.campusantiwar.net

Charles Jenks
Chair of Advisory Board
Traprock Peace Center
103 Keets Road
Deerfield, MA 01342
http://www.traprockpeace.org

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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

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Dr. Julia Hare at the SOBA 2007
http://mysite.verizon.net/vzeo9ewi/proudtobeblack2/

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"There comes a times when silence is betrayal."
--Martin Luther King

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ARTICLES IN FULL:

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1) Groups request LAPD records involving rally
By Patrick McGreevy
Times Staff Writer
May 10, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-lapd10may10,0,552959.story

2) In Guilty Plea, OxyContin Maker to Pay $600 Million
By BARRY MEIER
May 10, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/10/business/11drug-web.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin

3) Questions Raised on Afghan Death Toll
By REUTERS
Filed at 7:57 a.m. ET
May 10, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/world/international-afghan.html?ref=world

4) Marine Testifies to Urinating on Body
By PAUL von ZIELBAUER
May 10, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/10/world/middleeast/10haditha.html

5) Germany Conducts Raids Ahead of G-8 Summit
By MARK LANDLER
"FRANKFURT, May 9 — Four weeks before leaders of the world’s
big industrial nations are to gather at a Baltic Sea resort
in northern Germany, the police conducted sweeping raids
on Wednesday on the offices and homes of left-wing campaigners
whom they suspected of planning to disrupt the meeting."
May 10, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/10/world/europe/10germany.html

6) U.S. Report Cites Lightning and Old Cable in Mine Blast
By DANIEL HEYMAN and ANAHAD O’CONNOR
May 10, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/10/us/10sago.html

7) The Role of an F.B.I. Informer Draws Praise as Well
as Questions About Legitimacy
By DAVID KOCIENIEWSKI
May 10, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/10/nyregion/10informer.html

8) Michael Moore faces U.S. Treasury probe
Filmmaker under investigation for taking
people to Cuba for new movie
By DAVID GERMAIN
AP Movie Writer
May 10, 2007
http://www.baltimoresun.com/entertainment/news/bal-artslife-moore0510,0,3487565.story?coll=bal-entertainment-headlines

9) New York City Renters Cope With Squeeze
By CHRISTINE HAUGHNEY
May 10, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/10/nyregion/10rent.html

10) Guild Calls On US To Extradite Posada To Venezuela
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE, May 10, 2007
Posting to International Wire of Scoop
Press Release: US National Lawyers Guild
Date: Friday, 11 May 2007
Time: 10:27 am NZT

11) On Carrier in Gulf, Cheney Warns Iran
By GRAHAM BOWLEY
May 11, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/11/world/middleeast/11cnd-cheney.html

12) British Officers Won’t Be Disciplined Over Shooting
By ALAN COWELL
May 11, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/11/world/europe/11cnd-shooting.html

13) Haiti: Migrants Say Boat Was Rammed
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
May 11, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/11/world/americas/11briefs-boat.html

14) Free Ride for a Likely Killer
By Eugene Robinson
Friday, May 11, 2007; A19
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/05/10/AR2007051001807.html

15) The Millions Left Out
By BOB HERBERT
Op-Ed Columnist
May 12, 2007
http://select.nytimes.com/2007/05/12/opinion/12herbert.html?hp

16) Open Letter from Michael Moore to U.S. Treasury
Secretary Henry Paulson
May 11, 2007
http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/message/index.php?id=207

17) Armored vehicles' rising use by police
raises community concerns
By RAMIT PLUSHNICK-MASTI
The Associated Press
May 9, 2007
http://archives.seattletimes.nwsource.com/cgi-bin/texis.cgi/web/vortex/display?slug=police09&date=20070509

18) Held Without Charges: Two cases of journalists in U.S.
military custody raise questions by Clarence Page
Chicago Tribune
May 13, 2007
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/columnists/chi-0705120038may13,1,911684.column?coll=chi-news-col&ctrack=1&cset=true

19) Divided Over Trade
By PAUL KRUGMAN
Op-Ed Columnist
May 14, 2007
http://select.nytimes.com/2007/05/14/opinion/14krugman.html?hp

20) The Danger in Drug Kickbacks
Editorial
May 14, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/14/opinion/14mon1.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin

21) Chrysler Workers Surprised After Union Backs Sale
By NICK BUNKLEY
May 15, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/15/business/15workers.html?hp

22) Jose Padilla Trial Opens in Miami
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 1:26 p.m. ET
May 14, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/us/AP-Padilla-Terror-Charges.html?hp

23) In Native Alaskan Villages, a Culture of Sorrow
By WILLIAM YARDLEY
May 14, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/14/us/14alaska.html?_r=1&ref=us&oref=slogin

24) Cerberus’s Strategic Plan May Finally Be Paying Off
By CLAUDIA H. DEUTSCH
May 14, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/14/automobiles/14cerberus.html

25) Renewed Violence Limits Oil Production in Nigerian Region
By JAD MOUAWAD
May 14, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/14/business/14oil.html

26) New York Plan for DNA Data in Most Crimes
By PATRICK McGEEHAN
May 14, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/14/nyregion/14dna.html?ref=science

27) SF BAYVIEW: Venezuela to the rescue!
Staff
Wednesday, 09 May 2007
http://www.sfbayview.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=116&Itemid=14

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1) Groups request LAPD records involving rally
By Patrick McGreevy
Times Staff Writer
May 10, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-lapd10may10,0,552959.story

A coalition of 85 civic leaders and groups formally requested
Wednesday that the Los Angeles Police Department make public
all internal records involving the May Day immigrants' rally
in MacArthur Park — including communications between Mayor
Antonio Villaraigosa and Police Chief William J. Bratton.

The rally ended when police officers in riot gear moved
to clear the park after a small group of people began
throwing bottles and rocks at them. The scuffle resulted
in 24 civilians, including 10 media workers, being struck
by police-fired foam projectiles and hand-wielded batons.

The written demand, which cites the California Public
Records Act, was sent by groups, newspapers and individuals
including the Center for Human Rights and Constitutional
Law, the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational
Fund, La Opinion newspaper, the Mexican American Bar Assn.
and Maria Elena Durazo, secretary-treasurer of the Los
Angeles County Federation of Labor AFL-CIO.

The letter to Bratton and top leaders of the city's civilian
Police Commission requests copies of all videotapes of the
incident, policy documents, the names of all officers involved,
communications on the use of force at the event, and memos
between elected city officials including the mayor and
the LAPD brass.

"This will definitely help prevent any coverup," said Peter
A. Schey, president of the Center for Human Rights and
Constitutional Law. "What is quite likely is the LAPD
will not be eager to share with the public records that
did not reflect well on the department."

LAPD officials said Wednesday that they had not
reviewed the letter but were committed to being
as open as possible about the MacArthur Park incident.

"It will be transparent," Sgt. Lee Sands said of the
departmental review. "As the chief has said, transparency
is something we believe in."

Bratton has already removed the two top command officers
who oversaw the police response that day in the park.

However, the request is likely to force a legal
confrontation because it seeks records evaluating
the actions of individual officers involved. The
department has refused to make such documents public
in the last year, citing a court decision that it
believes designates such documents as confidential
personnel records.

Recognizing the conflict, the letter makes an appeal
for special handling of the records.

"This request does not seek purely confidential
information the disclosure of which would significantly
impair any ongoing criminal investigation," the letter
says. "On the other hand, in order to promote full
transparency and the public's understanding regarding
the events of May 1, 2007, we respectfully request
that you waive any legal exemptions that may otherwise
be available to block full disclosure of your records.
We believe that such full disclosure is critically
important to the safety and protection of the rights
to free speech and freedom of assembly of Los Angeles
residents."

Bob Baker, president of the police officers union,
said the notion that the department would hide information,
when the independent Police Commission and its inspector
general are on the case, was "preposterous."

"They are getting into personnel records, which state
law prohibits," he said.

Karin Wang, vice president of the Asian Pacific American
Legal Center of Southern California, said her group
joined in sending the letter as a precautionary measure.
She said she had faith in the Police Commission providing
oversight, but thought it would help for community groups
to get involved.

"We think it's important to hold the process accountable,"
she said.

Also Wednesday, a coalition of immigrant rights groups
filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against the LAPD
alleging that officers violated the constitutional rights
of demonstrators in MacArthur Park.

The lawsuit, brought by the Multi-Ethnic Immigrant
Workers Organizing Committee, other organizations and
individuals, seeks damages and a court order barring
the police department from "disrupting the exercise
of 1st Amendment rights in public assemblies and marches"
and unreasonably using baton strikes and less-lethal
munitions to disperse demonstrators.

It also alleges that an announcement made from a police
helicopter that the immigrant rights demonstration had
been declared an unlawful assembly was inaudible to
most people in the park. The order was given in English,
according to the lawsuit, "despite the fact that both
the neighborhood where the rally was held and most of
the rally participants are primarily Spanish-speaking."

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2) In Guilty Plea, OxyContin Maker to Pay $600 Million
By BARRY MEIER
May 10, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/10/business/11drug-web.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin

ABINGDON, Va., May 10 — The company that makes the narcotic
painkiller OxyContin and three current and former executives
pleaded guilty today in federal court here to criminal charges
that they misled regulators, doctors and patients about the
drug’s risk of addiction and its potential to be abused.

To resolve criminal and civil charges related to the drug’s
“misbranding,” the parent of Purdue Pharma, the company that
markets OxyContin, agreed to pay some $600 million in fines
and other payments, one of the largest amounts ever paid by
a drug company in such a case.

Also, in a rare move, three executives of Purdue Pharma,
including its president and its top lawyer, pleaded guilty
today as individuals to misbranding, a criminal violation.
They agreed to pay a total of $34.5 million in fines.

OxyContin is a powerful, long-acting narcotic that provides
relief of serious pain for up to 12 hours. Initially,
Purdue Pharma contended that OxyContin, because of its
time-release formulation, posed a lower threat of abuse
and addiction to patients than do traditional, shorter-
acting painkillers like Percocet or Vicodin.

That claim became the linchpin of the most aggressive
marketing campaign ever undertaken by a pharmaceutical
company for a narcotic painkiller. Just a few years
after the drug’s introduction in 1996, annual sales
reached $1 billion. Purdue Pharma heavily promoted
OxyContin to doctors like general practitioners, who
had often had little training in the treatment of
serious pain or in recognizing signs of drug abuse
in patients.

But both experienced drug abusers and novices, including
teenagers, soon discovered that chewing an OxyContin
tablet or crushing one and then snorting the powder
or injecting it with a needle produced a high as powerful
as heroin. By 2000, parts of the United States,
particularly rural areas, began to see skyrocketing
rates of addiction and crime related to use of the drug.

More details about the plea agreements were expected
to be announced at a news conference this afternoon
in Roanoke, Va., by John L. Brownlee, the United States
attorney for the Western District of Virginia. “Misbranding”
is a broad statute that makes it a crime to mislabel
a drug, fraudulently promote it or market it for
an unapproved use.

In a proceeding this morning in United States District
Court here, both Purdue Pharma and the three executives
acknowledged that the company fraudulently marketed
OxyContin for six years as a drug that was less prone
to abuse, as well as one that also had fewer narcotic
side effects.

In a statement, the company said: “Nearly six years
and longer ago, some employees made, or told other
employees to make, certain statements about OxyContin
to some health care professionals that were inconsistent
with the F.D.A.-approved prescribing information for
OxyContin and the express warnings it contained about
risks associated with the medicine. The statements also
violated written company policies requiring adherence
to the prescribing information.”

“We accept responsibility for those past misstatements
and regret that they were made,” the statement said.

The time period covered by the guilty pleas runs from
late 1995, when the Food and Drug Administration approved
OxyContin for sale, to mid-2001, when Purdue Pharma, faced
with both public criticism and regulatory scrutiny, dropped
its initial marketing claims for the drug.

Federal officials said that internal Purdue Pharma
documents show that company officials recognized even
before the drug was marketed that they would face stiff
resistance from doctors who were concerned about the
potential of a high-powered narcotic like OxyContin
to be abused by patients or cause addiction.

As a result, company officials developed a fraudulent
marketing campaign designed to promote OxyContin as
a time-released drug that was less prone to such problems.
The crucial ingredient in OxyContin is oxycodone, a narcotic
that has been used for many years. But unlike other
medications like Percocet that contain oxycodone along
with other ingredients, OxyContin is pure oxycodone,
with a large amount in each tablet because of the
time-release design.

The drug has proven to be valuable in treating serious,
long-lasting pain.

Purdue Pharma acknowledged in the court proceeding today
that “with the intent to defraud or mislead,” it marketed
and promoted OxyContin as a drug that was less addictive,
less subject to abuse and less likely to cause other narcotic
side effects than other pain medications.

For instance, when the painkiller was first approved,
F.D.A. officials allowed Purdue Pharma to state that
the time-release of a narcotic like OxyContin “is believed
to reduce” its potential to be abused.

But according to federal officials, Purdue sales
representatives falsely told doctors that the statement,
rather than simply being a theory, meant that OxyContin
had a lower potential for addiction or abuse than drugs
like Percocet. Among other things, company sales officials
were allowed to draw their own fake scientific charts, which
they then distributed to doctors, to support that misleading
abuse-related claim, federal officials said.

Between 1995 and 2001, OxyContin brought in $2.8 billion
in revenue for Purdue Pharma, a closely held company
based in Stamford, Conn. At one point, the drug accounted
for 90 percent of the company’s sales.

As part of the plea agreement, Purdue Frederick, a holding
company for Purdue Pharma that is also closely held, pleaded
guilty to a felony charge of misbranding OxyContin. Of the
$600 million the company agreed to pay in criminal and civil
penalties, some $470 million represents fines to federal
and state agencies. The remaining $130 million represents
payments to settle civil litigation brought by patients
and other private plaintiffs.

Purdue Pharma has also agreed, among other things, to subject
itself to independent monitoring of its practices. The three
top former and current Purdue Pharma executives pleaded
guilty to criminal misdemeanor charges of misbranding,
a charge that does not require prosecutors to show knowledge
or intent on the executives’ part. However, the three
individuals ran Purdue Pharma during the period in question.

Those executives are: Michael Friedman, the company’s
president, who agreed to pay $19 million in fines; Howard
R. Udell, its top lawyer, who agreed to pay $8 million;
and Dr. Paul D. Goldenheim, its former medical director,
who agreed to pay $7.5 million.

In a separate statement, Purdue said: “Mr. Friedman,
Dr. Goldenheim (while at Purdue) and Mr. Udell neither
engaged in nor tolerated the misconduct at issue in this
investigation. To the contrary, they took steps to prevent
any misstatements in the marketing or promotion of OxyContin
and to correct any such misstatements of which they
became aware.”

Related:

Psychiatrists, Children and Drug Industry’s Role
By GARDINER HARRIS, BENEDICT CAREY and JANET ROBERTS
May 10, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/10/health/10psyche.html?ref=us

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3) Questions Raised on Afghan Death Toll
By REUTERS
Filed at 7:57 a.m. ET
May 10, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/world/international-afghan.html?ref=world

SPIN BOLDAK, Afghanistan (Reuters) - At least 40 civilians
were killed in an air strike in Afghanistan by foreign forces,
witnesses said on Thursday, but the U.S.-led coalition said
only rebels were hit and it knew of no other casualties.

The deaths on Tuesday in the southern province of Helmand,
if confirmed, would raise the civilian toll at the hands
of foreign troops to 110 in the past two weeks.

``Foreign troops are killing Afghans every day, but our
government has closed its eyes and does not see our casualties,''
local resident Haji Ibrahim said.

Helmand governor, Assadullah Wafa, said earlier 21 civilians,
including women and children, were killed in Tuesday's air
strike in Sangin district -- a major opium-growing area
and the scene of a large anti-Taliban operation by
foreign troops.

The U.S.-led coalition said its troops and Afghan soldiers
on patrol in the area had come under fire on Tuesday
and there were no reported injuries to any civilians.

``During the 16-hour battle, Afghan National Army and
coalition forces fought through three separate enemy ambush
sites while dozens of Taliban fighters ... reinforced enemy
positions,'' the coalition said in a statement.

It estimated 200 Taliban fighters were involved in the clash,
in which one coalition soldier died, and said the air strikes
destroyed three rebel compounds and an underground tunnel
network.

Governor Wafa said the Taliban hid in civilian homes during
the air strike and that they must take responsibility
for the deaths.

Residents disputed that Taliban fighters were involved.
''There were no Taliban in our area,'' Mohammad Rahim,
a resident of Sangin, told Reuters by phone, adding he
had seen 24 bodies in three houses.

One resident said President Hamid Karzai should travel
to Sangin and see for himself the civilian casualties.

Civilian deaths are a growing issue for Karzai who is also
under pressure over the country's slow economic recovery
and rampant corruption since the Taliban's overthrow in 2001.

Karzai has repeatedly urged the troops to avoid civilian
casualties while hunting militants, to stop searching
people's houses and to coordinate attacks with his
government.

Last week, Karzai said the patience of Afghans was running
out over civilian killings by foreign troops.

Irate Afghans in the east and west, the scenes of last
month's operations by coalition forces, have protested
against civilian casualties reported by Afghan officials,
and demanded the withdrawal of foreign forces and Karzai's
resignation.

A U.S. military commander on Tuesday apologized for the
deaths of 19 civilians in the east. They were killed
by U.S. troops early last month.

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4) Marine Testifies to Urinating on Body
By PAUL von ZIELBAUER
May 10, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/10/world/middleeast/10haditha.html

CAMP PENDLETON, Calif., May 9 — A marine testified
on Wednesday that he urinated on the bloody remains
of one of five unarmed Iraqi men in Haditha whom his
squad leader fatally shot in late 2005 moments after
a roadside bomb had killed one of their comrades.

The marine, Sgt. Sanick Dela Cruz, said at a hearing
here that he had acted in anger over the death of Lance
Cpl. Miguel Terrazas, known as T.J., whose convoy was
hit by a bomb planted by Sunni Arab insurgents.

“I know it was a bad thing what I done, but I done
it because I was angry T.J. was dead,” Sergeant Dela
Cruz said in a monotone.

The Iraqis had driven up to the site of the bombing,
drawing suspicion from the squad leader, Staff Sgt.
Frank Wuterich, and his men, military investigators
have said.

Under a grant of immunity, Sergeant Dela Cruz testified
that Staff Sergeant Wuterich had ordered the five unarmed
Iraqis out of their car and fired six to eight rounds
into them as they stood with arms raised.

“I watched him shooting, sir, at the Iraqis,” Sergeant
Dela Cruz said. He walked around the car to inspect
the bodies, he said. “They were dead.”

From 10 feet away, the sergeant said, he sprayed the
bodies with automatic fire and then urinated on the
bullet-ripped head of one man.

Sergeant Dela Cruz said that Staff Sergeant Wuterich
had told the squad, “If anybody asks, they were running
away, and the Iraqi Army shot them.” Staff Sergeant
Wuterich’s lawyers have said he fired on the five
civilians after they ran from the car and defied
his order to stop.

Marine prosecutors charged Staff Sergeant Wuterich,
Sergeant Dela Cruz and two other marines in December
with murder in the killings of a total of 24 Iraqi
civilians in Haditha on Nov. 19, 2005. Last month,
in exchange for Sergeant Dela Cruz’s testimony,
prosecutors dropped all five counts of unpremeditated
urder that he faced.

Four Marine officers are also charged in the case,
accused of failing to investigate the civilian deaths
properly. Wednesday was the second day of a hearing
to determine if enough evidence exists to refer the
charges against one of those officers to a court-martial.

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5) Germany Conducts Raids Ahead of G-8 Summit
By MARK LANDLER
"FRANKFURT, May 9 — Four weeks before leaders of the world’s
big industrial nations are to gather at a Baltic Sea resort
in northern Germany, the police conducted sweeping raids
on Wednesday on the offices and homes of left-wing campaigners
whom they suspected of planning to disrupt the meeting."
May 10, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/10/world/europe/10germany.html

FRANKFURT, May 9 — Four weeks before leaders of the world’s
big industrial nations are to gather at a Baltic Sea resort
in northern Germany, the police conducted sweeping raids
on Wednesday on the offices and homes of left-wing campaigners
whom they suspected of planning to disrupt the meeting.

The raids, in which 900 police officers searched 40 sites
in half a dozen cities, amounted to a show of force against
potentially violent protesters at the meeting of the
Group of 8.

Like other countries that have been the host in recent
years for this gathering, Germany is nervous about
a repetition of the riots in Genoa, Italy, in 2001, when
the police killed a demonstrator.

Federal prosecutors said they were investigating 18 people
suspected of belonging to a group that they said was
planning fire-bombings and other attacks to disrupt
the meeting in Heiligendamm, an expensive, out-of-the-way
resort on a stretch of coast in the former East Germany.

Prosecutors did not announce any arrests, but they said
the people on their list were suspected of carrying out
fire-bombings and other, less severe attacks in Hamburg
and Berlin in the last two years.

The Interior Ministry said it would tighten controls
at border crossings to stop troublemakers from entering
Germany — a tactic it used successfully last summer
during the World Cup soccer tournament. Normally, Germany’s
borders with its European Union neighbors are wide open.

“We want to distinguish between those who come to demonstrate
peacefully and those who plan violence,” said Christian
Sachs, a ministry spokesman. He characterized the security
precautions as the most extensive for one event in Germany
since World War II.

Chancellor Angela Merkel plans to welcome the leaders
of Britain, Canada, Italy, France, Japan, Russia and the
United States to the three-day meeting on June 6. She
is setting an agenda that includes topics as varied
as climate change and Africa. But terrorism is also
likely to be on the minds of the leaders.

At the last Group of 8 meeting in Western Europe, held
in Gleneagles, Scotland, in July 2005, the leaders had
barely settled in when news came of deadly bombings
on the London transit system.

Germany has been on edge about new terrorist threats
since last month, when the Interior Ministry said it
had learned that a radical Islamic group was plotting
to strike an American installation here. The United
States tightened security at its embassy in Berlin
and other diplomatic buildings.

“That threat was absolutely serious,” said Rolf Tophoven,
a German counterterrorism expert.

Mr. Sachs said there was no evidence linking that threat
to the Group of 8 meeting. The authorities say they are
more worried about radical antiglobalization groups,
which have used the Internet to mobilize tens of thousands
of protesters at previous Group of 8 meetings, even
those held in similarly remote locations.

German authorities are leaving little to chance. They
have constructed a 7.5-mile, $17 million fence that will
cut off access to Heiligendamm. Local residents have
complained bitterly about the concrete-and-barbed-wire
barrier, which some have likened to a new Berlin Wall.

Nine naval ships will patrol the waters off the resort,
while 16,000 local police officers and 1,100 soldiers
will guard the perimeter, keeping protesters several
miles from the meeting. Protest organizers said the
security measures eclipsed those for President Bush’s
visit last July to the same part of Germany.

Monty Schädel, a local organizer of the demonstrations,
said antiglobalization forces in Germany had been
subjected to intense surveillance by the police in
recent weeks. “Whenever three or four people get
together for a meeting, the police are watching,”
he said.

The organizers have told the police to expect 100,000
demonstrators in Rostock and other towns near the
meeting. Mr. Schädel said the actual turnout could
range from 50,000 to 150,000 people.

Germany has had relatively little trouble with radical
leftist groups since the 1970s and 1980s, when the Red
Army Faction, also known as the Baader-Meinhof gang,
carried out more than 30 assassinations.

But as the meeting draws closer, tensions are rising.
Protesters recently splashed paint on a hotel
in Heiligendamm. In December, a car belonging
to a senior Finance Ministry official was set on fire.

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6) U.S. Report Cites Lightning and Old Cable in Mine Blast
By DANIEL HEYMAN and ANAHAD O’CONNOR
May 10, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/10/us/10sago.html

BUCKHANNON, W.Va., May 9 — A lightning bolt was the likely
cause of the Sago Mine explosion last year that killed
12 miners, a 16-month federal investigation has concluded.

The report, issued Wednesday by the Mine Safety and Health
Administration, is the fourth to say that lightning traveled
more than two miles on the ground before igniting methane
gas in an abandoned section of the mine. Two reports
by the State of West Virginia and one by the mine’s owner
drew the same conclusion.

There was, however, one new element in the federal report.
It said that a section of old pump cable left in the mine
allowed an electromagnetic pulse from the lightning
to create an arc, touching off the explosion.

Although he did not rule out other possible causes,
Richard Stickler, the assistant secretary of labor
for mine safety, called the lightning theory the
“most likely.”

While Mr. Stickler said at a news conference here that
“safety was not a top priority with this operation,”
he also said that none of the 149 safety violations
found by investigators “could be identified as the
cause of the accident.”

The federal report drew an angry response from
relatives of the victims.

“I can’t tell where the coal company ends and M.S.H.A.
begins,” Deborah Hamner, the widow of a miner, George
Hamner, said, referring to the mine agency.

Some of the relatives, who are suing the owners of the
mine, the International Coal Group, suggested that the
lightning explanation is intended to help the company
by supporting its argument that the blast resulted from
an “act of God.” It will also help regulators avoid
accountability, they said.

Geraldine Bruso, who was among a group of relatives
(and the sole survivor of the blast, Randal McCloy Jr.)
who met with the federal officials before the news
conference, called the report “a waste of time.”

“It could be lightning, but it’s all theories right now,”
said Ms. Bruso, whose brother Jerry Groves died in the
mine. “You can probably go through the whole report
and not get anything out of it.”

The United Mine Workers of America, which issued its
own report in March that attributed the blast to a roof
collapse or friction caused by falling rocks, also dismissed
the new findings. Cecil E. Roberts, the president of the
union, said in a statement that the federal agency’s
findings were “far-fetched” and “unsupported by physical
evidence found and examined in the mine.”

In its report, the agency said that a number of factors
contributed to the accident, including slow response time,
high levels of flammable methane gas inside a sealed-off
section of the mine, and inadequately built seals used
to close off the abandoned area. But the report added that
even if the seals had complied with federal requirements,
“the forces generated by the explosion would have completely
destroyed them.”

The accident, the nation’s deadliest mining disaster in
four decades, prompted state and federal officials to push
for new mine safety laws. Congress eventually enacted
measures requiring mining companies to provide extra
oxygen to workers, and more rescue teams in case of
accidents.

Federal officials also announced an “emergency temporary
standard” requiring that mine seals be built to withstand
at least twice as much explosive force as is now required.

The explosion occurred in January 2006 about 260 feet
underground in a section of the mine that had been sealed
off with foam blocks.

The report noted that although the owner of the mine had
apparently tried to remove all the cables from that section
of the mine, it left behind a 1,300-foot piece.

The report also raised the possibility that an unrecorded
lightning strike occurred just above the sealed section.

Daniel Heyman reported from Buckhannon, W.Va., and Anahad
O’Connor from New York.

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7) The Role of an F.B.I. Informer Draws Praise as Well
as Questions About Legitimacy
By DAVID KOCIENIEWSKI
May 10, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/10/nyregion/10informer.html

It was August 2006 when one of the young Muslim men accused
of plotting to kill soldiers at Fort Dix first broached
the idea, according to the authorities. Talking to an
informer who was secretly taping the exchange, the young
man said that he thought he could round up six or seven
other men willing to take part, and that a rocket-propelled
grenade might be the most effective weapon, the authorities
said.

And he had one more notion: He wanted the informer to
lead the attack, according to a federal complaint. “I am
at your services,” the young man is quoted as telling
the informer, who had presented himself as an Egyptian
with a military background.

That moment, recorded on tape and submitted in federal
court this week in Camden, N.J., as the authorities
charged six Muslim men in the plot, captures something
of the complexity of using informers in terror investigations.
The informer, sent to penetrate a loose group of men
who liked to talk about jihad and fire guns in the woods,
had come to be seen by the suspects as the person who
might actually show them how an act of terror could
be carried off.

Indeed, over the months that followed, as the targets
of the investigation spoke with a sometimes unfocused
zeal about waging holy war, the informer, one of two
used in the investigation, would tell them that he could
get them the sophisticated weapons they wanted. He would
accompany them on surveillance missions to military
installations, debating the risks, and when the men
looked ready to purchase the weapons, it was the
nformer who seemed to be pushing the idea of buying
the deadliest items, startling at least one of
the suspects.

Since 9/11, law enforcement officials have praised
the work of such informers, saying they have been
doing exactly what they should be doing — gaining
access to the world of a possible threat, playing
along to see just how far suspects were willing
to go, and allowing the authorities to act before
the potential terrorists did.

In the case of the men arrested this week, the
authorities have been emphatic: The men were prepared
to kill, and to die in the effort, and the informer
was vital to preventing any loss of life.

“Their intentions and motivation were obviously well
established before the investigation began,” said
Michael Drewniak, a spokesman for the United States
attorney in New Jersey, Christopher J. Christie,
who announced the arrests of the men on Tuesday.

The authorities made the arrests and ended the
operation, officials said, because the men were
at last ready to acquire the weapons they had sought.

As the case goes forward, the role of the main informer
will almost surely be contested. Over the years, informers
in terror cases have become the focus of efforts by
defense lawyers and others to call into question the
legitimacy of the investigations. They have often
sought to show that informers engaged in entrapment.

“The police are allowed to use some enticement in cases,”
said Troy Archie, a lawyer for one of the six men charged,
Dritan Duka. “But it depends how far they go.”

Certainly, the work of informers can sometimes seem
murky. In one instance, the informer who was the main
witness in a major terror financing case in Brooklyn
in 2005 almost did not make it to the witness stand
after he set himself on fire in front of the White
House to protest his compensation by his F.B.I. handlers.
The informer helped win a conviction, but wound up being
prosecuted himself for writing bad checks while working
for the F.B.I.

In the criminal complaint they filed against the six men
in New Jersey, federal prosecutors took the step
of including information about an earlier problem
involving their main informer. Prosecutors acknowledged
that the informer, two months before he became involved
in the Fort Dix case, had misled investigators in order
to protect a friend.

The prosecutors added that “the F.B.I. has been able
to independently corroborate the information provided”
by the informer in this case through recordings and
surveillance tapes.

The complaint captures only a small portion of the
interactions between the informer and the six suspects
during the 14 months they were associated. Defense
lawyers assigned yesterday to represent two of the
central figures in the case objected to what they
called the selective excerpts of conversations
submitted by the prosecutors.

“The prosecutors have put out only snippets of
conversations, rather than the entire context
of conversations,” said Rocco C. Cipparone, who
represents another of the six, Mohamad Ibrahim Shnewer.

However, a close reading of even the limited material
in the criminal complaint suggests a relationship in
which some of the suspects never fully trusted the
informer, but nonetheless shared secrets with him about
a wide assortment of illicit plans and illegal weapons.

Without doubt, in most of the instances described
in the complaint, the informer seems to be merely
facilitating the menacing plans of the suspects
or following along. But on some occasions, the
informer appears to have played a slightly more
provocative role.

He first struck up an acquaintance with Mr. Shnewer,
a cabdriver, in March 2006, two months after a store
clerk alerted the authorities that a man had asked
him to make a DVD copy of a videotape that appeared
to be a terrorist training exercise.

The complaint suggests that the informer quickly
began to establish a rapport with Mr. Shnewer,
apparently one of the group’s leaders. The informer
was shown terror training videotapes, included
in talks about obtaining weapons and invited
to be the group’s tactical leader in any assault.
He later went with Mr. Shnewer on trips to scout
a variety of military targets.

Months elapsed without significant developments.
The complaint indicates that in October 2006, seven
months after the informer first entered the ranks
of the men, it might have been the informer who
helped jump-start another suspect, Serdar Tatar,
who still had not followed through on his promise
to get a map of the base from his father’s pizzeria
near Fort Dix. The two men were discussing Fort Dix,
the complaint said, when the informer “expressed
anger at the United States.”

“You want to make them pay for something that they
did,” Mr. Tatar said to the informer, according
to the complaint. “O.K., you need maps?”

Soon, Mr. Tatar provided the map, the complaint says.

In November, it was the informer who volunteered
that he might have a source who could provide
the machine guns and heavier arms the men had
long been talking about.

“Shnewer expressed interest,” the complaint says.

By early this year, the complaint asserts, the informer
accompanied the men to a shooting range in the Poconos,
and later practiced assault maneuvers with them using
paintball guns. During those exercises, the suspects
mused about obtaining explosives and whether to attack
a warship when it was docked in Philadelphia.

Eljvir Duka, one of three brothers among the suspects,
offered a rationale for their planned attacks, saying,
according to the complaint, that when someone threatened
“your religion, your way of life, then you go jihad.”

But no specific dates were discussed or plans committed to.

And when efforts to finally get the more potent weapons
seemed close to producing results, the informer presented
a list of possible arms that could now be bought. The
list included fully automatic machine guns and rocket-
propelled grenades. But it was the men who scaled back
their ambitions.

In fact, one of the suspects, Dritan Duka, seemed taken
aback by the informer’s listing of the heavy artillery.
Mr. Duka appeared to ask the informer if there was
anything more he should know about the informer’s background
or intentions, including whether he was religious. Asked why
he seemed alarmed, Mr. Duka said to the informer, “There was
some stuff on the list that was heavy.” And he added
an expletive.

Related:

Religion Guided 3 Held in Fort Dix Plot
By KAREEM FAHIM and ANDREA ELLIOTT
May 10, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/10/nyregion/10plot.html?ref=nyregion

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8) Michael Moore faces U.S. Treasury probe
Filmmaker under investigation for taking
people to Cuba for new movie
By DAVID GERMAIN
AP Movie Writer
May 10, 2007
http://www.baltimoresun.com/entertainment/news/bal-artslife-moore0510,0,3487565.story?coll=bal-entertainment-headlines

LOS ANGELES -- Academy Award-winning filmmaker Michael Moore
is under investigation by the U.S. Treasury Department for
taking ailing Sept. 11 rescue workers to Cuba for a segment
in his upcoming health-care documentary "Sicko,"
The Associated Press has learned.

The investigation provides another contentious lead-in for
a provocative film by Moore, a fierce critic of President
Bush. In the past, Moore's adversaries have fanned publicity
that helped the filmmaker create a new brand of opinionated
blockbuster documentary.

"Sicko" promises to take the health-care industry to task
the way Moore confronted America's passion for guns in
"Bowling for Columbine" and skewered Bush over his
handling of Sept. 11 in "Fahrenheit 9/11."

The Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control
notified Moore in a letter dated May 2 that it was conducting
a civil investigation for possible violations of the U.S.
trade embargo restricting travel to Cuba. A copy of the
letter was obtained Tuesday by the AP.

"This office has no record that a specific license was
issued authorizing you to engage in travel-related transactions
involving Cuba," Dale Thompson, OFAC chief of general
investigations and field operations, wrote in the
letter to Moore.

In February, Moore took about 10 ailing workers from the
Ground Zero rescue effort in Manhattan for treatment in Cuba,
said a person working with the filmmaker on the release
of "Sicko." The person requested anonymity because Moore's
attorneys had not yet determined how to respond.

Moore, who scolded Bush over the Iraq war during the 2003
Oscar telecast, received the letter Monday, the person said.
"Sicko" premieres May 19 at the Cannes Film Festival and
debuts in U.S. theaters June 29.

Moore declined to comment, said spokeswoman Lisa Cohen.

After receiving the letter, Moore arranged to place a copy
of the film in a "safe house" outside the country to protect
it from government interference, said the person working
on the release of the film.

Treasury officials declined to answer questions about the
letter. "We don't comment on enforcement actions," said
department spokeswoman Molly Millerwise.

The letter noted that Moore applied Oct. 12, 2006, for
permission to go to Cuba "but no determination had been
made by OFAC." Moore sought permission to travel there
under a provision for full-time journalists, the letter
said.

According to the letter, Moore was given 20 business
days to provide OFAC with such information as the date
of travel and point of departure; the reason for the Cuba
trip and his itinerary there; and the names and addresses
of those who accompanied him, along with their reasons
for going.

Potential penalties for violating the embargo were not
indicated. In 2003, the New York Yankees paid the government
$75,000 to settle a dispute that it conducted business
in Cuba in violation of the embargo. No specifics were
released about that case.

"Sicko" is Moore's followup to 2004's "Fahrenheit 9/11,"
a $100 million hit criticizing the Bush administration
over Sept. 11. Moore's "Bowling for Columbine" won the
2002 Oscar for best documentary.

A dissection of the U.S. health-care system, "Sicko"
was inspired by a segment on Moore's TV show "The Awful
Truth," in which he staged a mock funeral outside a health-
maintenance organization that had declined a pancreas
transplant for a diabetic man. The HMO later relented.

At last September's Toronto International Film Festival,
Moore previewed footage shot for "Sicko," presenting
stories of personal health-care nightmares. One scene
showed a woman who was denied payment for an ambulance
ride after a head-on collision because it was not
preapproved.

Moore's opponents have accused him of distorting the
facts, and his Cuba trip provoked criticism from
conservatives including former Republican Sen. Fred
Thompson, who assailed the filmmaker in a blog
at National Review Online.

"I have no expectation that Moore is going to tell
the truth about Cuba or health care," wrote Thompson,
the subject of speculation about a possible presidential
run. "I defend his right to do what he does, but Moore's
talent for clever falsehoods has been too well documented."

The timing of the investigation is reminiscent of the
firestorm that preceded the Cannes debut of "Fahrenheit 9/11,"
which won the festival's top prize in 2004. The Walt
Disney Co. refused to let subsidiary Miramax release the
film because of its political content, prompting Miramax
bosses Harvey and Bob Weinstein to release "Fahrenheit 9/11"
on their own.

The Weinsteins later left Miramax to form the Weinstein Co.,
which is releasing "Sicko." They declined to comment
on the Treasury investigation, said company spokeswoman
Sarah Levinson Rothman.

Copyright © 2007, The Associated Press

Related:

Statement in Response to Bush Administration's
Investigation of 'SiCKO'
MichaelMoore.com
In The News
'SiCKO,' Michael Moore's new movie, will rip the band-aid
off America's health care industry. Premiering at the Cannes
Film Festival in just one week and opening across the U.S.
on June 29th, 'SiCKO' will expose the corporations that
place profit before care and the politicians who care only
about money. Our health care system is broken and, all too
often, deadly. The efforts of the Bush Administration
to conduct a politically motivated investigation of Michael
Moore and 'SiCKO' will not stop us from making sure the
American people see this film.
On September 11, 2001 this country was attacked. Thousands
of Americans responded with heroism and courage, toiling
for days, weeks and months in the ruins at Ground Zero.
These 9/11 first responders risked their lives searching
for survivors, recovering bodies, and clearing away toxic
rubble. Now, many of these heroes face serious health
issues -- and far too many of them are not receiving
the care they need and deserve. President Bush and the
Bush Administration should be spending their time trying
to help these heroes get health care instead of abusing
the legal process to advance a political agenda.
-- Meghan O'Hara, Producer, SiCKO
http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/mikeinthenews/index.php?id=9780

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9) New York City Renters Cope With Squeeze
By CHRISTINE HAUGHNEY
May 10, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/10/nyregion/10rent.html

Like the legions of aspiring poets, tap dancers and musicians who
came before her, Nina Rubin, a 29-year-old graduate of Wesleyan
University, has struggled to find halfway decent housing in New York.
Earlier this year, she ended up in her most unusual home yet:
an office.

After taking a job as an instructor at Outward Bound, Ms. Rubin,
along with some of her co-workers, settled into the top floor of the
organization's Long Island City headquarters. She camped out in a
bunk bed; others converted nearby office cubicles into sleeping
spaces, or pitched tents on the building's roof. To create some
privacy, they hung towels and sheets around their bunks.

While Outward Bound officials stress that they view these cubicles
and tents as temporary housing solutions, Ms. Rubin, who has since
moved to Vermont for a short while, was grateful for a free place.

As the apartment-hunting season begins, fueled by college graduates
and other new arrivals, real estate brokers say radical solutions
among young, well-educated newcomers to the city are becoming more
common, because New York's rental market is the tightest it has been
in seven years. High-paid bankers and corporate lawyers snap up the
few available apartments, often leading more modestly paid
professionals and students to resort to desperate measures
to find homes.

While young people in New York have always sought roommates to make
life more affordable, they are now crowding so tightly into doorman
buildings in prime neighborhoods like the Upper East Side that they
may violate city codes.

They are doing so in part because the vacancy rate for Manhattan
rentals is now estimated at 3.7 percent, according to data collected
by Property and Portfolio Research, an independent real estate
research and advisory firm in Boston. It is expected to shrink to 3.3
percent by the end of this year and to 2.9 percent by 2011.

"It's only going to get more difficult to rent an apartment in New
York City," said Andy Joynt, a real estate economist with the
research firm. "While rents continue to rise, it's not sending people
out of the city. There's still enough of a cachet," he said.

While New York City has always had a vacancy rate lower than most
other cities, rental prices jumped last year by a record 8.3 percent.
Some potential buyers, scared by the national slowdown in housing
sales, decided to rent instead of buy. The housing crunch has also
been exacerbated by the steady growth of newcomers.

The relocation division of the brokerage company Prudential Douglas
Elliman had found homes for 4,000 families moving to the New York,
New Jersey and Connecticut area in 2006, a 15 percent jump from the
year before, and many of them wanted to live in Manhattan.

Stephen Kotler, executive vice president of the division, said he
expected business to increase by 15 percent again this year, based on
the requests he has already received from banks, consumer-products
companies and media firms. Even though his clients can afford high
rents, he said, they do not have many choices.

"There's going to be limited inventory and a lot of demand," Mr.
Kotler said. "There just hasn't been enough rental product built," he
said, as, developers have said that the price of land and the costs
of construction in the last few years have made it impractical to
build rental buildings. They have instead focused on condominiums.

Renters without high salaries have not been shut out of the market.
They are squeezing in extra roommates or making alterations as never
before much to the frustration of landlords. The rents for
one-bedroom apartments in Manhattan average $2,567 a month, and
two-bedrooms average $3,854 a month, according to data from Citi
Habitats, a large rental brokerage company, but rents tend to be far
higher in coveted neighborhoods like the Upper West Side and TriBeCa.

Because landlords typically require renters to earn 40 times their
monthly rent in annual income, renters of those average apartments
would need to earn at least $102,680, individually or combined, to
qualify for a one-bedroom and $154,160 to afford a two-bedroom.

Young people making a fraction of those salaries are doubling up in
small spaces and creating housing code violations, said Jamie
Heiberger-Jacobsen, a real estate lawyer with her own practice. She
is representing landlords in 26 cases that claim overcrowding or
illegal alterations in elevator buildings in Murray Hill, the Upper
East and Upper West Sides and the Lower East Side. A year ago, she
handled a half-dozen such cases.

Ms. Heiberger-Jacobsen said she was seeing the overcrowding not only
in tenement-type buildings, but also in doorman buildings. "It really
does create fire hazards," she said. "You can't just have beds all
over the place."

But more renters are finding that they cannot afford to stay in the
city without resorting to less conventional living arrangements. For
the last five years, Mindy Abovitz, 27, a drummer and graphic
designer, has been living with four roommates in a 1,500-square-foot
loft with one bathroom in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, which has become a
haven for young people, that rents for $2,600 a month.

Her rent is a bargain, she said, because comparable spaces now cost
as much as $4,500 a month. To accommodate everyone, the roommates
created five bedrooms out of three by building walls from drywall and
lumber. Then they soundproofed the walls with carpet padding to limit
the noise.

Dividing the space has been an affordable solution, Ms. Abovitz said,
though the loft becomes crowded when she and her roommates get ready
for work or prepare meals. "The kitchen and the bathroom are where
you find the most traffic," she said.

Students on tight budgets find it especially tough to find housing.
Last fall, Kate Harvey, a part-time nanny and a junior at N.Y.U., and
eight friends saved on rent by camping out in vacant offices at
Michael Stapleton Associates, a downtown explosive-detection security
firm. For nearly three months, they told the guards at 47 West Street
that they were interns, even as they trudged in near midnight or
pattered through the lobby at 10 a.m. in pajamas and slippers.

Ms. Harvey's father, George Harvey, who is the chief executive of
Michael Stapleton Associates, had lent them the space, which included
two kitchens and two baths, after his company moved into a new office
before the lease on its old one expired.

They sneaked furniture into the 11th floor on the freight elevator,
squeezed three beds into the former chief executive's office and
turned filing cabinets into clothing drawers. One student pitched a
tent. They brought their cat, Sula, past the front desk. They knew
pets were allowed, they said, because the company had allowed
bomb-sniffing dogs.

While most of the students who were interviewed said that they came
from families that were fairly comfortable financially, they said
that area rents were so high that they could not afford both housing
and tuition.

"It was nine girls and a cat," Ms. Harvey said, sipping on steamed
milk in a Greenwich Village coffeehouse. "At least three of the nine
would have had a really hard time paying for school and staying there."

Mr. Harvey said his daughter told him that some friends had spent the
summer sleeping on friends' couches and even in the N.Y.U. library
because they could not afford rent.

"They were in some tough financial situations," Mr. Harvey said. "It
occurred to me that all this space was going to waste."

Now Ms. Harvey and two roommates from the office are looking for a
new place to live. Each can spend up to $800 a month. Ms. Harvey has
been searching the Craigslist Web site for apartments, but so far she
has had no luck.

She says she is hopeful that they will eventually find something in
Brooklyn, perhaps in the outer reaches of Park Slope. "We're
definitely going to have to expand our definition of Park Slope,"
she said.

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10) Guild Calls On US To Extradite Posada To Venezuela
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE, May 10, 2007
Posting to International Wire of Scoop
Press Release: US National Lawyers Guild
Date: Friday, 11 May 2007
Time: 10:27 am NZT

National Lawyers Guild Calls On U.S. To Extradite Posada To
Venezuela For Trial On Terrorism Charges Or Prosecute Him In
U.S. Or International Court

On Tuesday May 8, U.S. District Court Judge Kathleen Cardone
dismissed perjury charges against Luis Posada Carriles. Posada
is a Cuban-born terrorist and long-time CIA agent who boasted
of helping to detonate deadly bombs in Havana hotels 10 years
ago, and was the alleged mastermind of a 1976 bombing of a civilian
Cuban airplane that killed 73 people. He escaped from a Venezuelan
prison where he was being tried for his role in the first in-air
bombing of a civilian airliner. Posada entered the U.S. in March
2005 using false papers and was held in El Paso for lying to
Immigration and Customs officials. On April 19, 2007 he was released
on bail despite being a flight risk. On Tuesday, all outstanding
charges were dismissed, canceling his trial which was set to
begin May 11.

National Lawyers Guild President Marjorie Cohn said, "The release
of Posada and the mistreatment of the Cuban Five illustrate the
hypocrisy of the Bush administration, which incessantly touts
its 'war on terror.' Bush defines terrorism selectively, as its
suits his political purposes."

By releasing Posada, the U.S. government has violated Security
Council resolution 1373, passed in the wake of the September
11, 2001 attacks. That resolution mandates that all countries
deny safe haven to those who commit terrorist acts, and ensure
that they are brought to justice. These provisions of resolution
1373 are mandatory, as they were adopted under Chapter VII of
the UN Charter. The U.S. government has also violated three treaties
that require it to extradite Posada to Venezuela for trial or
try him in U.S. courts for offenses committed abroad.

Rep. William Delahunt has called for a congressional hearing
to examine the U.S. government's role in promoting impunity in
the Posada case. Delahunt sent a letter to Attorney General Alberto
Gonzales requesting an explanation as to why the Justice Department
did not invoke the USA Patriot Act to declare Posada a terrorist
and detain him, stating, "The release of Mr. Posada puts into
question our commitment to fight terrorism."

Five men, known as the Cuban Five, peacefully infiltrated criminal
exile groups in Miami to prevent terrorism against Cuba. The
Five turned over the results of their investigation to the FBI.
But instead of working with Cuba to fight terrorism, the U.S.
government arrested the five Cubans and tried and convicted them
of conspiracy-related offenses. A three-judge panel of the U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta reversed their convictions,
finding they could not receive a fair trial in Miami. In August
2006, a majority of the full circuit rejected the earlier ruling
and sent the matter back to the panel where further appeals are
pending. The U.S. media has been irresponsibly silent on the
case of the Cuban Five and the irregularities of the trial.

The National Lawyers Guild calls on the U.S. government to extradite
Luis Carriles Posada to Venezuela to stand trial for the deadly
terrorist bombing of the Cuban airliner, or prosecute him in
U.S. courts or a competent international tribunal.

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11) On Carrier in Gulf, Cheney Warns Iran
By GRAHAM BOWLEY
May 11, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/11/world/middleeast/11cnd-cheney.html

Vice President Dick Cheney used the setting of an aircraft
carrier in the Persian Gulf to deliver a stern message
to Iran today, warning that the United States would not
allow Iran to obtain nuclear weapons or gain the upper
hand in the Middle East.

“With two carrier strike groups in the Gulf, we’re sending
clear messages to friends and adversaries alike,” he said,
in a speech on board the U.S.S. John C. Stennis.

The United States “will stand with others to prevent Iran
from gaining nuclear weapons and dominating this region,”
he said.

The aircraft carrier was about 20 miles off the coast
of Abu Dhabi, one of the United Arab Emirates, according
to a pool report provided by journalists traveling with
Mr. Cheney. Mr. Cheney traveled to the Emirates following
a two-day visit to Iraq, and will be making other stops
in the Middle East on his week-long trip.

Mr. Cheney’s message seemed particularly pointed because,
according to the pool report and the Associated Press,
the president of Iran, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, is scheduled
to visit Abu Dhabi himself in the next few days.

Mr. Cheney said today that the United States was determined,
in the event of any crises in the region, to keep the sea
lanes of the Gulf open.

His speech to American service members on board the carrier
also seemed intended to reassure them that a strong
American presence would be maintained in the region
for some time.

“I want you to know that the American people will not
support a policy of retreat,” Mr. Cheney said. “We want
to complete the mission, we want to get it done right,
and then we want to return home with honor.”

On Thursday in Iraq, Mr. Cheney spoke to American troops
stationed near Saddam Hussein’s birthplace, Tikrit,
telling them in somber tones that they still had
a tough fight ahead of them.

His assessment stood in stark contrast to the one he made
two years ago, when he declared in an interview with CNN
that the insurgency in Iraq was in its “last throes.”

The United States remains at odds with Iran over its nuclear
program, which Iran says is peaceful, but which America
and its Western allies say is intended to build weapons.
The Bush administration has also expressed concerns about
Iranian involvement in Iraq; officials have said that
weapons are being smuggled into Iraq from Iran and that
the insurgents who assemble and placing bombs in Iraq
may be getting training in Iran. The Iranian government
denies sponsoring or encouraging terrorism.

Mr. Cheney visited the U.S.S. John C. Stennis before,
in March 2002, at a time when he was trying to build
support for the invasion of Iraq, the A.P. noted.

Today, standing in front of five F-18 Super Hornet
warplanes and a huge American flag on the hangar deck
of the carrier, Mr. Cheney spoke to some 3,500 service
members, according to the A.P. He sounded a hard line,
saying the United States must hold firm in Iraq and
confront Iran if necessary, the agency reported.

His tour of the Middle East will also include visits
to Saudi Arabia and Jordan.

Alissa J. Rubin contributed reporting for this
article from Baghdad.

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12) British Officers Won’t Be Disciplined Over Shooting
By ALAN COWELL
May 11, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/11/world/europe/11cnd-shooting.html

LONDON, May 11 — An official police oversight body ruled
on Friday that 11 officers involved in the fatal shooting
of a 27-year-old Brazilian electrician they allegedly
mistook for a terrorist would not face disciplinary
hearings.

Jean Charles de Menezes died at a subway station in
Stockwell, south London, when officers shot him seven
times in the head on July 22, 2005 — one day after an
alleged failed terror attack on the London transit system.

The city was in a state of high tension after an earlier
attack on July 7 when four suicide bombers killed
52 victims. At the time, the police gave the impression
that Mr. de Menezes had behaved suspiciously but
later revised their account of the killing.

In a statement, the Independent Police Complaints
Commission said 11 “frontline firearms and surveillance
officers involved in the shooting of Jean Charles de Menezes
at Stockwell Underground Station on 22 July 2005 will
not face a disciplinary tribunal.”

The ruling incensed the dead man’s family.

Patricia da Silva Armani, Mr. de Menezes’ cousin, said
the Complaint’s Commission’s ruling was “disgraceful”.

“They are letting the police get away with murder,” she
said in a statement. “First officials killed my cousin,
then they lied about it and now the officers are walking
away without any punishment. It is a travesty of justice
and another slap in the face for our family.”

“The police officers lives go on as normal while we
exist in turmoil, fighting to get the answers and justice
we deserve,” she said.

The Independent Police Complaints Commission is a government
-funded body set up in 2004 as an independent body
investigating police behavior.

Referring to Mr. de Menezes in a written statement, Nick
Hardwick, the head of the Complaints Commission, said:
“I cannot see anything he could or could not have
consciously done differently that would have allowed him
to escape. The grief and anger of his family is entirely
understandable and as I have been powerfully reminded -
remains unassuaged.”

The Commission said it would postpone a ruling on the
behavior of four more senior officers until after a trial,
scheduled for October, at which the office of London’s
Metropolitan Police Commissioner will face charges under
health and safety laws.

Mr. Hardwick said he had been struck by “the challenges
facing officers” at Stockwell subway station following
the July 7 attacks.

“Set along side this is the fate of Jean Charles and
the anguish of his family. He was shot in the head seven
times by Metropolitan Police Service officers on his
way to work. He was entirely innocent,” he said.

But Mr. Hardwick continued: “On the basis of the evidence
I have available to me now or any development that might
reasonably be foreseen, I have concluded that there
is no realistic prospect of disciplinary charges being
upheld against any of the firearms or surveillance
officers involved.”

The Justice4Jean Campaign, an organization of the
dead man’s family and friends, said the Complaints
Commission’s ruling “effectively says police officers
can act above the law, free to take human life without
facing a full legal investigation like anyone else.”

Shami Chakrabarti, director of a civil rights group
called Liberty, complained that the Complaints Commission
had been slow to act.

“The public is still none the wiser as to the adequacy
of police guidance on lethal force,” she said. “The
Menezes tragedy happened nearly two years ago. Have
the public, police or victim’s family been well-served
by such inordinate delay?”

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13) Haiti: Migrants Say Boat Was Rammed
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
May 11, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/11/world/americas/11briefs-boat.html

Survivors of a capsizing last week that killed at least
61 Haitian migrants say a patrol boat from Turks and Caicos,
a British territory in the West Indies, rammed them, towed
them into deeper water and abandoned their overturned
sailboat in the shark-infested waters. They said their
boat, loaded with an estimated 160 people, was minutes
away from the territory when the patrol boat rammed them
in the predawn darkness. The Turks and Caicos government
has said it will not comment until two investigations
are completed. Britain’s Foreign Office also declined
to comment. At the United Nations in New York, Michèle
Montas, a Haitian who is the spokeswoman for Secretary
General Ban Ki-moon, described the capsizing as “a tragedy”
and said “it could have been avoided.” She said the issue
was between the Turks and Caicos Islands and Haiti.

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14) Free Ride for a Likely Killer
By Eugene Robinson
Friday, May 11, 2007; A19
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/05/10/AR2007051001807.html

The Bush administration says that its zero-tolerance policy against
terrorism applies to all suspected evildoers, not just Muslim
evildoers, and that its zero-tolerance policy against Cuba is a
principled position, not just an exercise in pandering to the
implacable anti-Castro exiles in Miami. On both counts, evidence
suggests otherwise.

The fact is that Luis Posada Carriles, an accused terrorist who
entered the United States illegally and was taken into custody, is
not being kept in solitary confinement and dragged out for occasional
waterboarding. As of this writing, he is a free man.

Posada, 79, has long been suspected of opposing Fidel Castro's regime
with violence. He was accused of masterminding the 1976 midair
bombing of a civilian Cuban airliner, a terrorist act that killed 73
people. He is also suspected of involvement in a series of bombings
of Havana hotels and nightclubs in 1997; several people were injured
and one, an Italian tourist, was killed.

Terrorism, our government constantly reminds us, is the scourge of
our times. So why is a man described by our government as "an
unrepentant criminal and admitted mastermind of terrorist plots and
attacks on tourist sites" looking forward to a hero's welcome in
Miami from his old Bay of Pigs comrades?

Posada sneaked into the country in 2005 and had the temerity to
advertise his presence by giving a news conference. After some
dithering, Homeland Security officials took him into custody. He was
indicted in January on federal charges of immigration fraud, alleging
that he lied about how he entered the United States.

On Tuesday, in El Paso -- where Posada had been held -- U.S. District
Judge Kathleen Cardone dismissed the indictment against Posada,
saying the government had resorted to unconstitutional "trickery" in
gathering its evidence against him. It was Cardone's dismissal order
that set Posada free.

Cardone found that in Posada's formal immigration interview after the
feds whisked him away in 2005, the government failed to provide
adequate translation of the questions and answers. What the
government contended were lies about how Posada had made his way into
the United States looked more like misunderstandings, Cardone
concluded.

It's worth pointing out that this isn't the first time Posada has
used his allegedly poor command of English as an excuse: He claims he
didn't understand what he was saying years ago when he boasted to a
reporter of his role in the Havana bombings.

So was the judge snookered into letting a hardened terrorist walk on
a technicality? Not really. It's more the case that the judge refused
to play along.

Cardone's point was that if the government really wanted to keep
Posada behind bars because he was a career terrorist, prosecutors
should have prosecuted him as a terrorist. Then, faster than you can
say "Patriot Act," authorities could have made him disappear into the
netherworld of indefinite detention where terrorism suspects named
Muhammad are kept.

I'll wager that the evidence against Posada, which I find compelling,
is more solid than the secret evidence against most of the detainees
at Guantanamo. But Posada's alleged crimes were against the Castro
regime.

George W. Bush's stance toward Cuba has been even more hardheaded and
counterproductive than the policies of his predecessors. This
administration has tightened the travel ban, increased economic
pressure and made a show of planning for a post-Castro Cuba.

Meanwhile, Castro (apparently recovering slowly from intestinal
surgery) and his brother, Ra?l, are as firmly in power as ever. The
administration's hard-line tactics have accomplished less than
nothing -- in Cuba, at least. The zero-tolerance policy toward the
Castro government has been popular, however, among the most strident
exiles in Florida -- the old men who will greet Posada when he goes
home to Miami and a comfortable retirement.

A grand jury in New Jersey reportedly is investigating Posada's
alleged involvement in the Havana hotel bombings, and it's possible
that he will someday face a new indictment. Meanwhile, our government
has given Castro another cause celebre for billboards and
demonstrations.

The administration is about to increase funding for its broadcasts
into Cuba, even though they are seen and heard by few Cubans because
Castro's people have gotten so good at jamming them. The message is
that the United States opposes the Castro regime but offers a hand of
friendship to the Cuban people.

That's a tough idea to sell when our government won't call a
terrorist a terrorist -- and when a bitter old man who probably
killed scores of Cuban civilians is allowed to walk free.
eugenerobinson@washpost.com

© 2007 The Washington Post Company The Washington Post


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15) The Millions Left Out
By BOB HERBERT
Op-Ed Columnist
May 12, 2007
http://select.nytimes.com/2007/05/12/opinion/12herbert.html?hp

The United States may be the richest country in the world,
but there are many millions — tens of millions — who are
not sharing in that prosperity.

According to the most recent government figures, 37 million
Americans are living below the official poverty threshold,
which is $19,971 a year for a family of four. That’s one
out of every eight Americans, and many of them are children.

More than 90 million Americans, close to a third of the
entire population, are struggling to make ends meet
on incomes that are less than twice the official poverty
line. In my book, they’re poor.

We don’t see poor people on television or in the
advertising that surrounds us like a second atmosphere.
We don’t pay much attention to the millions of men and
women who are changing bedpans, or flipping burgers
for the minimum wage, or vacuuming the halls of office
buildings at all hours of the night. But they’re there,
working hard and getting very little in return.

The number of poor people in America has increased
by five million over the past six years, and the gap
between rich and poor has grown to historic proportions.
The richest one percent of Americans got nearly 20 percent
of the nation’s income in 2005, while the poorest
20 percent could collectively garner only a measly
3.4 percent.

A new report from a highly respected task force on poverty
put together by the Center for American Progress tells us,
“It does not have to be this way.” The task force has made
several policy recommendations, and said that if all were
adopted poverty in the U.S. could be cut in half over
the next decade.

The tremendous number of people in poverty is an enormous
drag on the U.S. economy. And one of the biggest problems
is the simple fact that so many jobs pay so little that
even fulltime, year-round employment is not enough to raise
a family out of poverty. One-fifth of the working men
in America and 29 percent of working women are in such
jobs.

Peter Edelman, a Georgetown law professor who was
a co-chairman of the task force, said, “An astonishing
number of people are working as hard as they possibly
can but are still in poverty or have incomes that are
not much above the poverty line.”

So the starting point for lifting people out of poverty
should be to see that men and women who are working are
adequately compensated for their labor. The task force
recommended that the federal minimum wage, now $5.15
an hour, be raised to half the average hourly wage in
the U.S., which would bring it to $8.40.

The earned-income tax credit, which has proved very
successful in supplementing the earnings of low-wage
working families, should be expanded to cover more workers,
the task force said. It also recommended expanded coverage
of the federal child care tax credit, which is currently
$1,000 per child for up to three children.

A crucial component to raising workers out of poverty
would be an all-out effort to ensure that workers are
allowed to form unions and bargain collectively. As the
task force noted, “Among workers in similar jobs, unionized
workers have higher pay, higher rates of health coverage,
and better benefits than do nonunionized workers.”

In a recent interview about poverty, former Senator John
Edwards told me: “Organizing is so important. We have
50 million service economy jobs and we’ll probably have
10 or 15 million more over the next decade. If those jobs
are union jobs, they’ll be middle-class families. If not,
they’re more likely to live in poverty. It’s that strong.”

The task force made several other recommendations, including
proposals to ease access to higher education for poor
youngsters, to help former prisoners find employment,
to develop a more equitable unemployment compensation
system, and to establish housing policies that would make
it easier for poor people to move from neighborhoods
of concentrated poverty to areas with better employment
opportunities and higher-quality public services.

Mr. Edelman, an adviser on social policy in the Clinton
administration, stressed that there is no one answer
to the problem of poverty, and that in addition to public
policy initiatives, it’s important to address the “things
people have to do within their own communities to take
responsibility for themselves and for each other.”

But he added, “It is unacceptable for this country, which
is so wealthy, to have this many people who are left out.”

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16) Open Letter from Michael Moore to U.S. Treasury
Secretary Henry Paulson
May 11, 2007
http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/message/index.php?id=207

Secretary Henry Paulson
Department of the Treasury
1500 Pennsylvania Ave.
Washington, DC 20220

May 11, 2007

Secretary Paulson,

I am contacting you in light of the document sent to me dated
May 2, 2007, which was received May 7, 2007 indicating that
an investigation has been opened up with regards to a trip
I took to Cuba with a group of Americans that included some
9/11 heroes in March 2007 related to the filming of my next
documentary, on the American Healthcare system. SiCKO, which
will be seen in theaters this summer, will expose the health
care industry’s greed and control over America’s political
processes.

I believe that the decision to conduct this investigation
represents the latest example of the Bush Administration
abusing the federal government for raw, crass, political
purposes. Over the last seven years of the Bush Presidency,
we have seen the abuse of government to promote a political
agenda designed to benefit the conservative base of the
Republican Party, special interests and major financial
contributors. From holding secret meetings for the energy
industry to re-writing science findings to cooking the
books on intelligence to the firing of U.S. Attorneys,
this Administration has shown time and time again that
it will abuse its power and authority.

There are a number of specific facts that have led me
to conclude that politics could very well be driving
this Bush Administration investigation of me and my film.

First, the Bush Administration has been aware of this
matter for months (since October 2006) and never took
any action until less than two weeks before SiCKO is
set to premiere at the Cannes Film Festival and a little
more than a month before it is scheduled to open in the
United States.

Second, the health care and insurance industry, which
is exposed in the movie and has expressed concerns about
the impact of the movie on their industries, is a major
corporate underwriter of President George W. Bush and
the Republican Party, having contributed over $13 million
to the Bush presidential campaign in 2004 and more than
$180 million to Republican candidates over the last two
campaign cycles. It is well documented that the industry
is very concerned about the impact of SiCKO. They have
threatened their employees if they talk to me. They
have set up special internal crises lines should I show
up at their headquarters. Employees have been warned
about the consequences of participating in SiCKO. Despite
this, some employees, at great risk to themselves, have
gone on camera to tell the American people the truth
about the health care industry. I can understand why
that industry's main recipient of its contributions --
President Bush -- would want to harass, intimidate and
potentially prevent this film from having its widest
possible audience.

And, third, this investigation is being opened in the
wake of misleading attacks on the purpose of the Cuba
trip from a possible leading Republican candidate for
president, Fred Thompson, a major conservative newspaper,
The New York Post, and various right wing blogs.

For five and a half years, the Bush administration has
ignored and neglected the heroes of the 9/11 community.
These heroic first responders have been left to fend
for themselves, without coverage and without care.
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.

I demand that the Bush Administration immediately end
this investigation and spend its time and resources
trying to support some of the real heroes of 9/11.

Sincerely,

Michael Moore

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17) Armored vehicles' rising use by police
raises community concerns
By RAMIT PLUSHNICK-MASTI
The Associated Press
May 9, 2007
http://archives.seattletimes.nwsource.com/cgi-bin/texis.cgi/web/vortex/display?slug=police09&date=20070509

PITTSBURGH — After six people were shot in the city's Homewood
neighborhood in less than 24 hours, Pittsburgh police rolled
in with a 20-ton armored truck with a blast-resistant body,
armored rotating roof hatch and gunports.

No guns or drugs were seized and no arrests made during the
sweep in the $250,000 armored vehicle, paid for with Homeland
Security money. But the show of force sent a message.

Whether it was the right message is a matter of debate.

With scores of police agencies large and small buying armored
vehicles at Homeland Security expense, some criminal-justice
experts warn that their use in fighting everyday crime could
do more harm than good and represents a post-Sept. 11
militaristic turn away from the more cooperative community-
policing approach promoted in the 1990s.

When the armored truck moved through the Homewood neighborhood
late last year, people came out of their homes to take a look.
Some were offended.

"This is really the containment of crime, not the elimination,
because to eliminate it you have to address some of the social
problems," said Rashad Byrdsong, a community activist.

Law-enforcement agencies say the growing use of the vehicles
helps ensure police have the tools they need to deal with
hostage situations, heavy gunfire and acts of terrorism.

But police are also putting the equipment to more routine
use, such as the delivering of warrants to suspects believed
to be armed.

"We live on being prepared for 'what if?' " said Pittsburgh
Sgt. Barry Budd, a member of the SWAT team.

Critics say the appearance of armored vehicles in high-crime
neighborhoods may only increase tensions by making residents
feel as if they are under siege.

Most departments do not have "a credible, justifiable reason
for buying these kinds of vehicles," but find them appealing
because they "tap into that subculture within policing that
finds the whole military special-operations model culturally
intoxicating," said Peter Kraska, a professor at Eastern
Kentucky University and an expert on police militarization.
The military-style approach "runs a high risk of being very
counterproductive."

Peter Moskos, a criminologist at the John Jay College
of Criminal Justice in New York, said police departments
would be better off hiring people with different language
skills if the goal is to root out terrorism.

"It does worry me when cops try to be more militarylike,
because an armored car is not going to stop a terrorist,"
he said.

In Pittsburgh, a city of about 370,000 with pockets of mostly
drug- or gang-related crime, the armored truck made by Lenco
Industries Inc. of Pittsfield, Mass., has been used about
four times a month, Budd said.

He said the vehicle was bought primarily to be used in hostage
situations and when officers are wounded. On Sunday, the truck
was deployed when Pittsburgh's SWAT team responded to a report
of an armed man holed up in a home. The standoff ended peacefully.

Since the Sept. 11 attacks, police in Lexington, Ky., a city
of about 280,000, have obtained two armored vehicles and two
military helicopters acquired from the Pentagon.

Police Chief Anthany Beatty said the equipment is used mostly
to fight daily crime but is also meant to protect the area's
"significant military assets" from terrorists.

Lexington's SWAT team takes its armored truck out on every
call, including the serving of warrants to armed suspects.

Police in Austin, Texas — home to about 720,000 — bought
Lenco's smaller armored vehicle, the BearCat, with a $250,000
Homeland Security grant. Lt. Vic White, who heads the
department's tactical operations, said it is deployed
every time the SWAT team is called out.

Robert Castelli, chairman of criminal justice at Iona
College in New Rochelle, N.Y., said if he were a police
chief of a force with an armored vehicle, he would order
it sent out on every SWAT call.

Castelli said armored vehicles can send a positive message
— that police are in control of the situation — and make
police better prepared to deal with more heavily armed
criminals, as well as terrorists.

Lenco Industries President Len Light said Homeland Security
grants have significantly boosted sales but would not provide
precise figures. He said the company has sold hundreds
of armored vehicles to police nationwide, and has annual
sales of about $40 million.

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18) Held Without Charges: Two cases of journalists in U.S.
military custody raise questions by Clarence Page
Chicago Tribune
May 13, 2007
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/columnists/chi-0705120038may13,1,911684.column?coll=chi-news-col&ctrack=1&cset=true

WASHINGTON -- Has journalism become a crime in the
Bush administration's "war on terror"? We Americans
are left to wonder. Our military is holding two
journalists without charges or any public evidence
that they broke any laws.

One of them, Iraqi photographer Bilal Hussein, was
part of The Associated Press' 2005 Pulitzer
Prize-winning coverage in Iraq. He has been held by
U.S. forces in Iraq since April 12, 2006, with no
indication as to whether he ever will be charged or
released.

The other journalist, Sami al-Hajj, is worse off. He's
a Sudanese national, a cameraman for Al Jazeera and
has been held for more than five years. Currently, he
is the only known journalist being held at Guantanamo
Bay, Cuba. As with Hussein, there are no publicly
known charges against al-Hajj.

Various allegations have been leveled by the military,
but the AP has rebutted each one. At one point, for
example, U.S. officials alleged that Hussein was
involved in the kidnapping of two other Arab
journalists by insurgents. This was refuted by none
other than the two journalists, who praised Hussein
for helping them to be released.

Of course, there have been many cases in this war and
others in which local reporters, photographers or
stringers hired by American news organizations have
turned out to be double agents. With its own
reputation and the lives of its reporters and
photographers at stake, the AP has thoroughly
investigated Hussein, his photos and the allegations
against him. The AP examined 900 photos for evidence
that he might have been on the scene when explosions
or other attacks took place, as the Pentagon has
speculated. Last week, at a forum held by the
Committee to Protect Journalists, of which I am a
board member, Kathleen Carroll, executive editor of
the AP, said he's come up clean.

"We're not new to this job," Carroll said. "The AP has
been covering wars since Little Big Horn."

Last month, at a New York forum sponsored by the
Museum of Television & Radio, Tom Curley, AP president
and chief executive officer, drew applause by
declaring, "We have reviewed everything about
[Hussein], we stand by him and his work speaks for
itself."

So why is the U.S. government still holding Hussein?
Curley suspected a government effort to chill coverage
of the unruly Anbar province, where Hussein was
arrested. "He is an innocent victim," said Curley.
"This ... is about The Associated Press. We are the
target. Freedom of the press is the target."

With that, Hussein's case holds ominous similarities
to that of al-Hajj. U.S. military authorities said at
first that he was being held as a suspected courier
for Al Qaeda and other extremists. But there's also
evidence he might be the victim of mistaken identity,
confused with another suspect with a similar name.

Mostly his lawyers say interrogations of al-Hajj have
focused on his employer, Al Jazeera, and the rest of
its staff. He has even been offered a chance to be
released if he agrees to inform U.S. intelligence
about the satellite network's activities, his lawyers
say. Journalism shouldn't be a crime, even for a
network this administration doesn't like.

"If there is any evidence of a crime, then let's see
it," Zachary Katznelson, al-Hajj's lawyer, said. That
sounds fair to me.

I don't know whether either man is guilty of any
crimes. Since they have not been charged, it appears
that the government doesn't know either. What's
outrageous is the lack of due process in both cases.
If the government has a case, it should press charges.
Otherwise let these men go. That's the American way.
Or, at least, it used to be.

But, of course, Hussein and al-Hajj are not Americans.
Americans are taking pains to hold them outside of
America under the legally vague status of "enemy
combatants." The Bush administration is hardly the
first or only regime to grab as much authority over
people's lives as it can. The next one probably will
too. That's why the framers wrote the Bill of Rights.
The life of democracy is in the protection of
individual freedoms.

If we Americans still believe in such niceties, our
alleged "combatants" should either be charged with a
crime in a court of law and given a fair trial or they
should be released. At once.

Clarence Page is a member of the Tribune's editorial
board. E-mail: cptime@aol.com
Copyright © 2007, Chicago Tribune

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19) Divided Over Trade
By PAUL KRUGMAN
Op-Ed Columnist
May 14, 2007
http://select.nytimes.com/2007/05/14/opinion/14krugman.html?hp

Nothing divides Democrats like international trade policy.
That became clear last week, when the announcement of a deal
on trade between Democratic leaders and the Bush administration
caused many party activists to accuse the leadership
of selling out.

The furor subsided a bit as details about the deal emerged:
the Democrats got significant concessions from the Bushies,
while effectively giving a go-ahead to only two minor free
trade agreements (Peru and Panama). But the Democrats remain
sharply divided between those who believe that globalization
is driving down the wages of many U.S. workers, and those
who believe that making and honoring international trade
agreements is an essential part of governing responsibly.

What makes this divide so agonizing is that both sides
are right.

Fears that low-wage competition is driving down U.S. wages
have a real basis in both theory and fact. When we import
labor-intensive manufactured goods from the third world
instead of making them here, the result is reduced demand
for less-educated American workers, which leads in turn
to lower wages for these workers. And no, cheap consumer
goods at Wal-Mart aren’t adequate compensation.

So imports from the third world, although they make the
United States as a whole richer, make tens of millions
of Americans poorer. How much poorer? In the mid-1990s
a number of economists, myself included, crunched the
numbers and concluded that the depressing effects of
imports on the wages of less-educated Americans were
modest, not more than a few percent.

But that may have changed. We’re buying a lot more from
third-world countries today than we did a dozen years
ago, and the largest increases have come in imports
from Mexico, where wages are only about 11 percent
of the U.S. level, and China, where wages are only
3 percent of the U.S. level. Trade still isn’t the main
source of rising economic inequality, but it’s a bigger
factor than it was.

So there is a dark side to globalization. The question,
however, is what to do about it.

Should we go back to old-fashioned protectionism? That
would have ugly consequences: if America started restricting
imports from the third world, other wealthy countries
would follow suit, closing off poor nations’ access
to world markets.

Where would that leave Bangladesh, which is able to
survive despite its desperate lack of resources only
because it can export clothing and other labor-intensive
products? Where would it leave India, where there is,
at last, hope of an economic takeoff thanks to surging
exports — exports that would be crippled if barriers
to trade that have been dismantled over the past half
century went back up?

And where would it leave Mexico? Whatever you think
of Nafta, undoing the agreement could all too easily
have disastrous economic and political consequences
south of the border.

Because of these concerns, even trade skeptics tend
to shy away from a return to outright protectionism,
and to look for softer measures, which mainly come
down to trying to push up foreign wages. The key
element of the new trade deal is its inclusion of
“labor standards”: countries that sign free trade
agreements with the United States will have to allow
union organizing, while abolishing child and slave labor.

The Bush administration, by the way, opposed labor
standards, not because it wanted to keep imports cheap,
but because it was afraid that America would end up being
forced to improve its own labor policies. So the inclusion
of these standards in the deal represents a real victory
for workers.

Realistically, however, labor standards won’t do all that
much for American workers. No matter how free third-world
workers are to organize, they’re still going to be paid
very little, and trade will continue to place pressure
on U.S. wages.

So what’s the answer? I don’t think there is one, as long
as the discussion is restricted to trade policy: all-out
protectionism isn’t acceptable, and labor standards
in trade agreements will help only a little.

By all means, let’s have strong labor standards in our
pending trade agreements, and let’s approach proposals
for new agreements with an appropriate degree of skepticism.
But if Democrats really want to help American workers,
they’ll have to do it with a pro-labor policy that relies
on better tools than trade policy. Universal health care,
paid for by taxing the economy’s winners, would be a good
place to start.

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20) The Danger in Drug Kickbacks
Editorial
May 14, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/14/opinion/14mon1.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin

The explosion in the use of three anti-anemia drugs to treat
cancer and kidney patients illustrates much that is wrong
in the American pharmaceutical marketplace. Thanks to big
payoffs to doctors, and reckless promotional ads permitted
by lax regulators, the drugs have reached blockbuster status.
Now we learn that the dosage levels routinely injected
or given intravenously in doctors’ offices and dialysis
centers may be harmful to patients.

As Alex Berenson and Andrew Pollack laid bare in The Times
on May 9, wide use of the medicines — Aranesp and Epogen,
from Amgen; and Procrit, from Johnson & Johnson — has been
propelled by the two companies paying out hundreds
of millions of dollars in so-called rebates. Doctors
typically buy the drugs from the companies, get reimbursed
for much of the cost by Medicare and private insurers,
and on top of that get these rebates based on the amount
they have purchased.

Although many doctors complain that they barely break even
or even lose money on the costly drugs, for high-volume
providers the profits can be substantial. One group of six
cancer doctors in the Pacific Northwest earned a profit
of about $1.8 million last year thanks to rebates from
Amgen, while a large chain of dialysis centers gets an
estimated 25 percent of its revenue, and a higher percentage
of its profits, from the anemia drugs. It seems likely
that these financial incentives have led to wider use
and the prescribing of higher doses than medically
desirable.

Although the drugs are deemed valuable in fighting severe
anemia, there is scant evidence they help much in moderate
cases and some evidence that high doses can be dangerous.
Half of the dialysis patients in this country are now
receiving enough of the drugs to raise their red blood
cell counts to levels deemed risky by the Food and Drug
Administration. And last week a panel of cancer experts
urged the F.D.A. to impose additional restrictions on use
of the drugs in patients receiving cancer chemotherapy,
based on studies that the drugs might make some cancers
worse or hasten the deaths of patients.

Use of Procrit has also been fueled by television ads
suggesting that it makes elderly cancer patients more
energetic and, pushing all the emotional buttons, allows
them to keep up with their grandchildren. That claim has
not been established to the F.D.A.’s satisfaction, and
a top official said last week that his agency owes the
public a good explanation for why it allowed the ads
to continue.

With any luck, the advisory panel’s concerns should cause
many oncologists to think twice before dispensing the
anti-anemia drugs. But the surest way to slow the
overprescribing is to stop the rebates. Federal laws
already bar drug companies from paying doctors to prescribe
medicines in pill form. That prohibition should be extended
to injected and intravenous medicines.

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21) Chrysler Workers Surprised After Union Backs Sale
By NICK BUNKLEY
May 15, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/15/business/15workers.html?hp

WARREN, Mich., May 14 — Chrysler workers were warned a few
weeks ago by union officials that a private equity owner
would be the worst thing that could happen to them. So many
were as surprised as anyone today to learn that the sale
of Chrysler to Cerberus Capital Management had their
leaders’ support.

“It makes me real nervous and a little confused,” said
Anthony Watson, 36, a chassis assembly worker arriving
for his shift at Chrysler’s Warren truck plant just north
of Detroit. “A lot of us believe we’re being misled.”

On April 18, Ron Gettelfinger, president of the United
Automobile Workers, vowed he would fight the sale,
declaring a private investor would “strip and flip”
the company to earn a quick profit.

But Mr. Gettelfinger unexpectedly changed his thinking
after the $7.4 billion sale of a controlling stake was
announced early today. In a statement, he said the
transaction “is in the best interest of our membership,
the Chrysler Group and Daimler.”

At a news conference in Stuttgart, Germany, DaimlerChrysler
and Cerberus officials maintained that Chrysler workers
are in good hands.

“Cerberus has a good record of working successfully
with companies that are organized,” said John Snow,
the former treasury secretary and chairman of Cerberus.
“We respect the role of organized labor. We appreciate
the support the U.A.W. has given.”

The statement from Mr. Gettelfinger “tells us a lot,”
Mr. Snow continued. “We’re going to work to make sure this
company succeeds and as the company succeeds it will maximize
opportunities for workers. Our objective is a successful
Chrysler and a successful Chrysler creates opportunities.”

While Mr. Gettelfinger has expressed his support for the
deal, his counterpart at the Canadian Automobile Workers
union, Basil E. Hargrove, remained skeptical.

“I’m not at all comfortable with this new ownership makeup,”
Mr. Hargrove, known as Buzz, said in an interview. “The
history of private equity has been to buy, then slash
and burn a lot of jobs, and then get out with a lot
of money for a handful of people.”

Mr. Hargrove said he is scheduled to meet with Chrysler
officials on Tuesday to discuss the sale.

He noted that Mr. Gettelfinger, who met privately over
the weekend with DaimlerChrysler’s chief executive,
Dieter Zetsche, and holds a seat on the company’s
supervisory board, knows more about the deal because
“he’s closer to it than I am.”

Although Cerberus and Chrysler said there were no plans
for job cuts beyond the 13,000 that have already been
announced, Mr. Hargrove said, “It’s not clear how long
that commitment is for.” Still, he went on, that assertion
“is better than no statement at all.”

At the Warren truck plant, many workers leaving after
the overnight shift said they were going home to research
Cerberus. Word of the sale had filtered through the
factory in the middle of the night, but most believed
it was simply another rumor until the morning newspapers
arrived and were passed around.

“It’s a company that most of us aren’t familiar with,”
said Richard Burns, 39, an assembly line worker who has
been with Chrysler for nine years. “We’re scared they’re
going to break us up.”

Cerberus because known to some in Detroit last year,
when it bought a majority stake in General Motors’ finance
arm. Soon afterward, it emerged as the leader of an
investment group that planned to bring the Delphi Corporation,
the parts supplier spun off by G.M., out of bankruptcy.

Cerberus recently said that it was pulling out of that
deal, however, after it failed to reach an agreement
with the U.A.W. on reduced wages and benefits after
long negotiations. Mr. Hargrove said that in particular
has stoked his concerns about Cerberus, calling the
cuts it demanded at Delphi “beyond imagination.”

Mr. Snow, when asked about tension with the U.A.W. from
the Delphi talks, replied, “I can say without any
hesitation that the characterization you gave is
clearly erroneous.”

Micheline Maynard contributed reporting from Detroit.

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22) Jose Padilla Trial Opens in Miami
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 1:26 p.m. ET
May 14, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/us/AP-Padilla-Terror-Charges.html?hp

MIAMI (AP) -- The trial of suspected al-Qaida operative Jose
Padilla opened Monday with federal prosecutors arguing the
U.S. citizen and two co-defendants were key players in
a terror support cell that provided equipment, money and
Islamist fighters to extremist groups around the world.

''The defendants were members of a secret organization,
a terrorism support cell, based right here in South Florida,''
Assistant U.S. Attorney Brian Frazier told jurors in his
opening statement. ''The defendants took concrete steps
to support and promote this violence.''

Attorney Jeanne Baker, representing co-defendant Adham
Amin Hassoun, called the prosecution's case ''a totally
false picture.''

While Hassoun, a 45-year-old Palestinian, had strong
political opinions and was ''a big talker,'' his sole
aim in providing support for groups overseas was to
assist oppressed, persecuted and needy Muslims,
Baker said.

''He was helping to protect and defend Muslims from
murder. That is not an intent to commit murder. That
is just the opposite,'' she said.

Lawyers for Padilla and his other co-defendant were
scheduled to deliver their opening statements later
Monday.

Prosecutors and defense attorneys have spent months
battling over issues ranging from torture allegations
to the meaning of ''jihad.'' They pored over classified
material and Arabic translations and traveled overseas
to interview witnesses and spent weeks picking a jury.

If convicted, the three defendants could face life
in prison. The trial is expected to last into August.

Padilla, a 36-year-old former Chicago gang member and
Muslim convert, has been in federal custody since his
2002 arrest at O'Hare International Airport. He was
initially accused of plotting to detonate a radioactive
''dirty bomb'' in the United States and held for 3 1/2
years as an enemy combatant at a Navy brig, but those
allegations are not part of the Miami indictment.

He was added to the Miami case in late 2005 amid
a legal battle over the president's wartime powers
of detention involving U.S. citizens. His lawyers had
fought for years to get him before a federal judge.

In court Monday, Frazier told the court that Padilla
agreed to be recruited by Hassoun as a prospective
mujahedeen fighter to be trained by al-Qaida
in Afghanistan.

''Jose Padilla was an al-Qaida terrorist trainee
providing the ultimate form of material support --
himself,'' Frazier said. ''Padilla was serious,
he was focused, he was secretive. Padilla had cut
himself off from most things in his life that did
not concern his radical view of the Islamic religion.''

Hassoun and the third defendant, Kifah Wael Jayyousi,
45, provided other Islamist fighter recruits, military
equipment and money for conflicts in Lebanon, Chechnya,
Somalia and other global hot spots, often using Islamic
charitable organizations as a conduit, Frazier said.

The defendants sought separate trials, but their motions
were denied by U.S. District Judge Marcia Cooke. She
ruled the government had ample evidence that the three
were connected in a conspiracy, with Hassoun and Jayyousi
as jihadist recruiters, fundraisers and suppliers
and Padilla as one of their recruits.

To prove a conspiracy, prosecutors will have to show
that each of the three was involved in at least one act
to provide material support to extremist groups.

In Padilla's case, a key piece of evidence is an
application to attend an al-Qaida training camp in
Afghanistan that prosecutors say he completed in July
2000. They also say it bears his fingerprints.

Defense lawyers will seek to raise questions in jurors'
minds about the authenticity of the form, whether Padilla
actually completed it himself and if there might be
an alternative explanation for the presence of the
fingerprints.

''The crimes he has been charged with pale in comparison
to the initial allegations,'' said University of Miami
law professor Stephen Vladeck. ''This is a far cry from
being a major front in the government's war on terrorism.''

For Hassoun and Jayyousi, who were under FBI surveillance
for much longer than Padilla, the keys may include the
jurors' interpretations of hundreds of phone calls
intercepted with wiretaps, the purpose of various money
transfers, and the meaning of items in Jayyousi's newsletter.

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23) In Native Alaskan Villages, a Culture of Sorrow
By WILLIAM YARDLEY
May 14, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/14/us/14alaska.html?_r=1&ref=us&oref=slogin

BETHEL, Alaska, May 10 — The older brother hanged himself.
The younger one used a gun. They died 38 days apart.

They had lived in this muddy town of 6,000 people, a hub
at the center of scores of much smaller and more remote
native villages in the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta of southwest
Alaska. Their parents taught them to hunt for geese and
seals and to fish for pike and herring and salmon. They
taught them to speak their native Yupik and to cut wood
for steam baths each night, even as one son played
electric guitar and the family surfed the Internet.

“Sit,” said Evon Waska, the father, directing two visitors
to a freshly finished wooden bench in his living room.
Mr. Waska had placed it like a pew before a makeshift
memorial of cards and photographs of the dead.
“Sit with us.”

“When I was heartbroken,” he said, “I put my sorrow into
making that bench.”

In grieving for the older son, William George Kinzy, 34,
who died on March 8, and his half-brother, Evon David Waska
Jr., 20, who shot himself on April 15, Mr. Waska and his
wife, Dora, are suffering a cruel concentration of the
kind of loss that so many others in communities like
theirs confront.

“Rural Alaska has some of the highest rates in the world
for suicide,” said Ron Perkins, who came to Alaska three
decades ago to work for the federal government’s health
program for Native Alaskans and now is executive director
of the Alaska Injury Prevention Center, a nonprofit
organization. “I remember talking once to an elder in
a village outside Kotzebue. He said, ‘I was 20 years old
before I first heard of a suicide, and then it was a white
man in Kotzebue.’ Now, if a native kid is 10 and hasn’t
heard of a suicide, it’s rare.”

The suicide rate among Native Alaskans was three times
that of nonnative Alaska residents and five times the
national rate from 2003 to 2006, according to a study
Mr. Perkins helped conduct.

Contrasts are also striking in the ages of those committing
suicide. Nationwide, people 80 and over and those in their
40s are most likely to kill themselves. Among Alaska natives,
the 20-to-29 age group had the most suicides, 39 percent
of the total, while that age group ranked seventh nationwide.

Natives ages 10 to 19 make up just 20 percent of the state
population in that age group, but accounted for 61 percent
of its suicides.

The suicide rates for natives declined somewhat in 2005
and 2006, but Mr. Perkins said it was too soon to know
whether that reflected a pattern. Roughly 80 percent
of all Alaska suicide victims are male.

Suicide among natives is commonly linked with depression
and mental illness, which often goes untreated in rural
areas, as well as with alcoholism and cultural and economic
stress. Many native families are reluctant to discuss
suicide, adding to the challenge, Mr. Perkins said.

Native death rates over all are about 50 percent higher
than for nonnatives, according to data compiled by the
Institute of Social and Economic Research at the University
of Alaska Anchorage. Natives are increasingly moving
to urban areas from rural villages and native families
are increasingly led by a single parent. Women are more
likely than men to move to cities to find work.

“They’ve lost their culture, they don’t have a way to
support their family, and then what we see is a lot
of alcohol and drug use, particularly alcohol,” said
Diane Casto, the section manager for prevention and
early intervention for the state’s division of behavioral
health. “There’s such a feeling of hopelessness,
particularly for young men.”

Christian missionaries, followed by government bureaucracy
and modern technology, have long since transformed villages
on the tundra into places where seal meat is hung out
to dry in the shadow of steeples, public schools and
satellite dishes. Many natives still hunt and fish for
staples even as the outside culture promotes materialism.
Experts say young people often have frayed connections
to the old ways but poor preparation for living in
a modern world.

“How do you move out, how do you move on?” said Yvonne
Kinegak, an intake supervisor for the Bethel branch of
the state’s Office of Children’s Services. “We see healthier
people when they’re more connected to their culture.”

Bonnie Bradbury, who teaches Sunday school at United
Pentecostal Church in Bethel, where her husband is the
pastor, said that deaths among natives, many of whom
in the delta are Russian Orthodox, are repeatedly
memorialized through feasts at various anniversaries.
Evon David Waska Jr. killed himself as his family was
preparing for a feast on the 40th day after his half-
brother died.

“They think, well, if they don’t think much of me now,
maybe they will when I’m dead,” Ms. Bradbury said,
echoing a common view.

Mr. Perkins, who conducted the suicide study,
acknowledged that perception but said he knew of no
way to confirm it. Misperceptions about native suicides
are common, he said, including the belief that more
people kill themselves during the dark Alaskan winters.

“We found that suicides occurred all during the year,”
he said, noting that December, one of the darkest
months, had one of the lowest suicide rates.

Alcohol or drugs were a factor in nearly three-fourths
of the suicides among natives, the same as for nonnatives.
And while about two-thirds of all suicides were from
gunshot wounds, natives were twice as likely to hang
themselves as were nonnatives, even though gun ownership
is high among natives.

Mr. Perkins said that efforts were being made to help
people maintain their connection to native culture and
language, but that some groups less likely to speak
their native language, like the Aleuts, had relatively
low suicide rates.

“They’re past that cultural transition,” he said.

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24) Cerberus’s Strategic Plan May Finally Be Paying Off
By CLAUDIA H. DEUTSCH
May 14, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/14/automobiles/14cerberus.html

If Cerberus Capital Management winds up owning the controlling
interest in Chrysler, it would be a first for Detroit’s three
automakers: Never before has one of them been outside the
control of another major automotive company.

But for Cerberus, buying Chrysler is just the logical
culmination of an automotive strategy it has pursued for
years. And for two of its top executives, the deal would be
a triumphal return to an industry that not so long ago forced
them out.

David W. Thursfield, 61, a senior member of the operations
team in Cerberus’s automotive and industrial practice, once
seemed to be headed to the top of the Ford Motor Company.
An Englishman who made a name for himself running Ford in
Europe, Mr. Thursfield came to Ford’s headquarters in
Dearborn, Mich., in 2002 with a clear mandate: cut costs
and whip operations into shape. He did so, but his hard-
charging style made him few friends among Ford’s suppliers
or, for that matter, among his colleagues in Ford’s
executive suite.

Many of Ford’s suppliers complained bitterly that
Mr. Thursfield was putting undue pressure on them to
reduce prices. And reports of tension between Mr. Thursfield
and Nicholas V. Scheele, then Ford’s president and chief
operating officer, were so persistent that Mr. Scheele
felt obligated to deny them in a letter to employees
in 2003. The denial notwithstanding, relations worsened.
Mr. Thursfield retired from Ford in May 2004. He joined
Cerberus the same month.

Wolfgang Bernhard, 46, a newcomer to Cerberus who was
actively involved in the firm’s negotiations with
DaimlerChrysler, has held high-level jobs at Chrysler
and Mercedes-Benz, a unit of DaimlerChrysler. At both
companies he wielded a cost-cutting ax, ruffling the
feathers of the labor unions and higher-ups.

He resigned from DaimlerChrysler three years ago and
joined Volkswagen. Mr. Bernhard had been widely considered
to be in line to run Volkswagen as Mr. Thursfield was
at Ford. Instead, Mr. Bernhard was forced out this year.
Now he is expected to play a major role in running
a Cerberus-controlled Chrysler.

Cerberus, which was founded in 1992 and is based in
New York, has specialized in investing in troubled
companies that it felt could benefit from rigorous
cost-cutting and operational controls. It has $25 billion
in assets under management and owns stakes in more than
50 companies, which have combined revenue of more than
$60 billion and more than 175,000 employees. Many of those
companies are in retailing, real estate or finance, and many
are household names. The Cerberus portfolio includes the
Formica Corporation, Air Canada and the Mervyns department
store chain.

But Cerberus also has ties to industrial companies. Its
chairman, John W. Snow, the former Treasury secretary,
spent many years running the CSX Corporation, the big railroad
company. Cerberus has large holdings — and in some cases,
total ownership — in North American Bus Industries, several
makers of automotive parts, a trailer rental business and
a gun manufacturer. It owned Vanguard Car Rental Holdings,
which owns Alamo and National Car Rental, but is in the
process of selling that to Enterprise Rent-A-Car.

Cerberus led the consortium that bought a controlling
interest in 2006 in GMAC, G.M.’s financing arm.

It has also been trying to take controlling interest
in Delphi, the big automotive parts maker. Those talks
have stalled, but may soon resume.

Related:

Chrysler Group to Be Sold for $7.4 Billion
By MARK LANDLER and MICHELINE MAYNARD
"STUTTGART, Germany, May 14 — DaimlerChrysler announced today
that it will sell a controlling interest in its struggling
Chrysler Group to Cerberus Capital Management, a private
equity firm that specializes in restructuring troubled
companies, for $7.4 billion, mostly in the form of capital
that Cerberus will put into Chrysler."
May 15, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/15/automobiles/15chrysler-web.html?ref=business

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25) Renewed Violence Limits Oil Production in Nigerian Region
By JAD MOUAWAD
May 14, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/14/business/14oil.html

The violence that has gripped Nigeria’s main oil region for
the last year is again on the rise after weeks of
an uneasy truce.

Tensions have flared up in the Niger Delta, the site of
much of the country’s oil production, after deeply flawed
presidential elections last month. Dozens of foreign oil
workers have since been kidnapped, at least three pipelines
blown up, several supply vessels attacked and oil production
curtailed.

Chevron, one of the biggest producers in Nigeria, has
begun evacuating hundreds of workers and suspending
nonessential offshore activities in the after four
workers were seized from a construction vessel last
week. The company called the evacuations “a precautionary
measure.”

Earlier in the week, Chevron shut down its Ebite flow
station, which produces 42,000 barrels a day in the
western part of the delta, and the Funiwa oil field, which
produces 15,000 barrels a day, after six workers were abducted.
Chevron pumps about 360,000 barrels a day in Nigeria, about
15 percent of the country’s capacity.

Chevron made its announcement as attacks on oil companies
picked up again in the delta. The region had been quiet
in recent weeks as Nigeria focused on presidential and
gubernatorial elections. But according to international
observers, the polls were marred by widespread irregularities,
vote rigging and fraud. Ballot boxes were stolen, political
activists killed and opposition leaders threatened.

Now, rebels are putting new pressure on the government,
two weeks before the transfer of power on May 29 from
President Olusegun Obasanjo to his handpicked successor,
President-elect Umaru Yar’Adua.

In a separate incident, the Italian energy giant Eni
declared a state of force majeure — an uncontrollable
event that releases one from fulfilling a contractual
obligation — for oil exports from its Brass terminal
last week. Simultaneous attacks on its pipelines had
forced the company to shut down 98,000 barrels a day
of production.

About a quarter of Nigeria’s oil output, which typically
totals about 2.5 million barrels a day, has been out since
January 2006. Local armed groups have demanded that a bigger
share of the country’s oil wealth be distributed to the
Nigerian states where the oil is in fact produced.

The attacks, along with kidnappings of a nonpolitical nature,
have helped force up world oil prices at a time when global
supplies are constrained. Nigeria, the leading producer
in Africa, is one of the largest suppliers of crude oil
to the United States.

On Friday, next-month crude oil futures settled on the
New York Mercantile Exchange at $62.37 a barrel,
up nearly 1 percent.

The increase in violence could jeopardize plans by Royal
Dutch Shell, the biggest oil producer in Nigeria, to
restart production from its fields in the western part
of the delta, which have been down for more than a year.

A leading rebel group, the Movement for the Emancipation
of the Niger Delta, has pledged that it would renew attacks
against pipelines, platforms and workers to halt oil exports.

“We promised to give the present Nigerian administration
a shameful sendoff,” the group said in a statement on May 1
after a series of coordinated attacks on oil installations.
“It is also a warning to the incoming government, which
we view as an extension of the present. We will continue
with our struggle for justice until we achieve all our
goals without exception.”

The Nigerian government was also criticized last week
for starting a new auction round for oil-exploration
licenses, granting preferential rights to Chinese and
Indian companies. The auctions have come under fire
from advocates of corporate transparency who are critical
of attempts to hand over politically favorable licenses
shortly before Mr. Obasanjo leaves office.

The violence forced oil companies to bolster security
and oil workers to hunker down in fortified compounds
in the delta. But the measures seem to have had little
effect.

So far this year, 93 foreigners have been kidnapped,
including nearly 30 since the elections on April 21.
The number of kidnapped workers already exceeds last
year’s, when 80 foreigners were seized in the region.
Most are released unharmed in exchange for ransom
payments.

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26) New York Plan for DNA Data in Most Crimes
By PATRICK McGEEHAN
May 14, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/14/nyregion/14dna.html?ref=science

Gov. Eliot Spitzer is proposing a major expansion of New
York’s database of DNA samples to include people convicted
of most crimes, while making it easier for prisoners to use
DNA to try to establish their innocence.

Currently, New York State collects DNA from those convicted
of about half of all crimes, typically the most serious.

The governor’s proposal would order DNA taken from those
found guilty of any misdemeanor, including minor drug
offenses, harassment or unauthorized use of a credit card,
according to a draft of his bill. It would not cover
offenses considered violations, like disorderly conduct.

In expanding its database to include all felonies and
misdemeanors, New York would be nearly alone, although
a handful of states collect DNA from some defendants upon
arrest, even before conviction.

Mr. Spitzer is also seeking mandatory sampling of all
prisoners in the state, as well as all of those on parole,
on probation or registered as sex offenders.

That expansion alone would add about 50,000 samples to
the database, at a cost of about $1.75 million, his office
said. It did not provide an estimate of the cost of taking
DNA samples in all future convictions.

“This legislation will help us bring the guilty to justice
and exonerate those who have been wrongly accused,”
Mr. Spitzer said in a statement. He plans to introduce
his bill this week.

The bill would make it easier for prisoners and defendants
to obtain court orders to have their DNA tested against
evidence collected in their cases and to have that
evidence tested against the entire database of DNA,
aides to the governor said.

It also would allow prisoners who have pleaded guilty
to seek DNA testing that might prove them innocent,
the aides said; some judges now decline such requests.

Police officials and prosecutors nationwide have trumpeted
DNA collection as one of the most effective tools in law
enforcement. New York’s database, for example, now contains
almost 250,000 samples and has produced matches in almost
4,000 cases, according to the state’s Division of Criminal
Justice Services.

At the same time, DNA has become a useful tool for defense
lawyers whose clients proclaim their innocence long after
their convictions.

According to the Innocence Project, a legal clinic affiliated
with the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law of Yeshiva University
in Manhattan, DNA testing has led to the exoneration of
23 people in New York who had been convicted of crimes,
and more than 200 nationwide.

By addressing concerns about access for the wrongly convicted,
Mr. Spitzer may have a better chance of gaining support among
state lawmakers for an expansion of DNA collection, said
Assemblyman Joseph R. Lentol, a Brooklyn Democrat who is
chairman of the Codes Committee, which deals with criminal
justice.

“I’ve always been in favor of the expansion of the database
to all crimes, but I want these protections to be put in
place so that there’s a balance between protecting the
innocent as well as prosecuting the guilty,” Mr. Lentol
said. “I think the governor is on the right track doing
it this way.”

Mr. Lentol acknowledged that his support for DNA testing
in all convictions was not in line with his colleagues
in the Democratic majority in the Assembly, who have
repeatedly blocked bills passed by the Republican-
controlled State Senate that would have expanded DNA
collection. The Senate passed such a bill again this
month.

Charles Carrier, a spokesman for Assembly Speaker Sheldon
Silver, said he could not yet comment on Mr. Spitzer’s
proposal.

He said that in the past, Assembly Democrats have been
reluctant to approve wider DNA testing because of concerns
about “the way evidence was cataloged and stored, handled
and controlled and processed.”

Some civil liberties groups oppose broader collection
of DNA samples, out of concerns about how they might
be used beyond the justice system.

“Because DNA, unlike fingerprints, provides an enormous
amount of personal information, burgeoning government
DNA databases pose a serious threat to privacy,” said
Christopher Dunn, associate legal director of the New
York Civil Liberties Union. “They must include strict
protections to assure that DNA is collected and used
only for legitimate law enforcement purposes, such
as exonerating the innocent or convicting the guilty.”

John McArdle, a spokesman for Senate Majority Leader
Joseph L. Bruno, said that Mr. Bruno had not seen the
governor’s bill and would not comment on it until he had.

But Mr. McArdle said that Mr. Bruno supported the expansion
of DNA collection to the perpetrators of all crimes, as
well as another proposal Mr. Spitzer has included in his
bill: giving prosecutors up to five more years to bring
charges in cases where DNA evidence has been collected
but not yet matched to a particular person.

New York has had a DNA database since 2000. Originally,
it included samples from people convicted of sex offenses
and only certain felonies.

But it has been expanded twice in the last three years
to include all felonies and some misdemeanors, aides
to the governor said.

Still, only about 46 percent of people convicted of crimes
in the state are required to submit to the collection
of a DNA sample, which now is usually done by swabbing
the inside of the mouth.

Mr. Spitzer, a Democrat in his first year as governor,
is not the first political leader in the state to call
for such an expansion. His predecessor, George E. Pataki,
a Republican, pushed for an “all crimes” bill.

Last year, Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, a Republican, also
campaigned for the testing of everyone who is convicted,
saying that murderers and rapists also commit petty crimes
and that mandatory DNA collection could lead to their
convictions for the more serious offenses.

But Mr. Spitzer is wrapping his proposal for expanding
the database together with ideas that are more likely
to appeal to those who believe many defendants are wrongly
convicted.

He is seeking to require that prosecutors notify the court
if they learn that there may be DNA evidence that could
exonerate a prisoner. Currently, state law does not
obligate prosecutors to volunteer that information,
a lawyer in the governor’s office said.

Mr. Spitzer’s proposal also calls for the creation
of a state office that would be responsible for studying
all cases that resulted in exonerations and looking
for flaws in the system that led to those wrongful
convictions. That office would not be an independent body,
often referred to as an “innocence commission,” but a part
of the Division of Criminal Justice Services.

Assemblyman Michael N. Gianaris, a Queens Democrat,
is sponsoring a bill to create an “innocence commission,”
which is part of a package of legislation relating to DNA
testing that was introduced this month. The package includes
a bill proposed by Mr. Lentol that would expand prisoners’
access to the DNA database.

Barry Scheck, the co-director of the Innocence Project,
said that many of the people his organization had helped
to exonerate would have been freed much sooner, or would
not have been convicted at all, if the changes sought
by Mr. Lentol and his colleagues had been in place.

Mr. Scheck and his co-director, Peter Neufeld, were not
prepared to comment on Mr. Spitzer’s bill.

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27) SF BAYVIEW: Venezuela to the rescue!
Staff
Wednesday, 09 May 2007
http://www.sfbayview.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=116&Itemid=14

Venezuelan Ambassador Bernardo Alvarez Herrera posed with Chairman
Fred Hampton Jr. of the Prisoners of Conscience Committee at a
breakfast Tuesday at the Women's Building in San Francisco's Mission
district. The Venezuelan ambassador gave people an update about what
is going on in the revolutionary country headed by Hugo Chávez and
entertained questions for about an hour. The POCC was in the building
asking questions relevant to the Black struggle for human rights and
self determination here in the United Snakes.

'From New Orleans to Caracas': Building solidarity between the
Bolivarian Revolution and the Katrina Self-Determination and
Reconstruction Movement, May 24-27, at Dillard University, New
Orleans

After Hurricane Katrina ripped through New Orleans and the
Mississippi Gulf Coast and uprooted the lives of more than a million
predominantly Black and working class people, Venezuela, under the
leadership of President Hugo Chávez , was one of the first nations to
offer humanitarian aid to the United States government and all those
displaced.

The U.S. government, under the leadership of George W. Bush, rejected
Venezuela's offer and closed a venue of life saving support sorely
needed by the Black and working class survivors of Hurricane Katrina.
Why? The answer lies with the racist and imperialist structure and
worldview of the U.S. government.

It is this structure and worldview that left Black people to die in
New Orleans after the great flood and deliberately attacked them,
scattered them and abandoned them without aid or humanitarian
protection. It is this same system and worldview that has repeatedly
sought to disrupt and undermine the democratic process in Venezuela
and threatened to assassinate its president.

Venezuela's offer of humanitarian aid to the peoples of New Orleans
and the Gulf Coast is an extension of its own humanitarian social
transformation. This social transformation is called the "Bolivarian
Revolution" and its fundamental premise is using grassroots
participatory democracy to attain human rights and equitable
development to challenge and eradicate the legacies of racism,
colonialism and imperialism that have stunted the growth of the
Venezuelan people.

Although national in its present scope, the Bolivarian Revolution is
a continental and international vision inspired by the American
revolution, activated by the Haitian revolution, articulated by Simon
Bolivar, reignited by the Cuban revolution, and advanced by Hugo
Chávez and Bolivarian Circles throughout Venezuela and the world.

Progressive elements within the Katrina Self-Determination and
Reconstruction Movement have, from the beginning, been inspired by
the solidarity of President Hugo Chávez and the Venezuelan people.
The Katrina Self-Determination movement has been emboldened by
President Chávez 's principled stance on the right of Katrina
survivors to return home with justice and human dignity and his
administration's consistent challenging of the U.S. government
internationally on the question of its human rights performance and
commitments to those internally displaced by Hurricane Katrina.

Most encouraging of all has been the Bolivarian movement's
recognition of the historic struggles of Black, Native and other
oppressed peoples within the U.S. and the acknowledgement that the
struggles of our respective peoples are one and the same.

Why New Orleans and the Gulf Coast? Why Venezuela? Why now?

More than a year and a half after Hurricane Katrina, the program of
ethnic cleansing in New Orleans and the Gulf Coast is in full effect.
Close to 500,000 displaced persons are still being systematically
denied their right of return throughout the Gulf Coast by the
programs and policies of the U.S. government. The strict adherence to
free market, neo-liberal polices to guide and dictate the pace and
scope of the region's recovery have been the most devastating and
exclusionary.

Grassroots forces of resistance, like the People's Hurricane Relief
Fund and Common Ground Relief, have been working tirelessly to
counter this assault through autonomous relief and recovery efforts,
including free house gutting and health clinics, social movement
initiatives like the Affordable Housing campaign, and human rights
initiatives like the International Tribunal on Hurricanes Katrina and
Rita. However, to beat back the ethnic cleansing assault and win the
right to return, these forces desperately need national and
international support and solidarity.

Venezuela, despite its social advances, is also in desperate need of
solidarity. To stop the advance of participatory and economic
democracy being developed in Venezuela, the U.S. government,
multinational corporations and ruling interests continue to threaten
President Hugo Chávez and the Bolivarian Revolution with political
and economic sabotage, disruption and worse.

Progressive forces within the U.S., particularly within the most
oppressed sectors, must stand up and stop this threat being committed
in their name. As Martin Luther King taught us, "Injustice anywhere
is a threat to justice everywhere."

Therefore, a call for a "Mutual Aid and International Solidarity
Conference" between these two movements couldn't come at a more
critical time.

The conference

Inspired by the achievements of the Bolivarian Revolution and moved
by the ongoing human rights crisis in the Mississippi Gulf Coast,
grassroots organizers in the Katrina Self-Determination and
Bolivarian Movements throughout the country have agreed to come
together to host the "Mutual Aid and International Solidarity
Conference" in New Orleans at Dillard University Thursday-Sunday, May
24-27, to share organizing experiences, explore opportunities for
mutual aid and assistance, and stand in solidarity with each other's
democratic struggles for human rights and self-determination.

We call on all progressive forces in the U.S. to join us at the
conference to build the Katrina Self-Determination and Bolivarian
Solidarity Movements and to build person to person, grassroots links
between the peoples of Venezuela and the United States.

What you can do

You can help this grassroots initiative by making a donation towards
its operating expenses, which include venue fees, international
travel and accommodation, printing, translation etc. Make all
donations out to: People's Hurricane Relief Fund (earmark Solidarity
Conference) and send them to: Vanguard Public Foundation, 383 Rhode
Island St., Suite 301, San Francisco, CA 94103. To make an online
donation, visit www.vanguardsf.org/index.php?s=40 and indicate
Peoples Hurricane Relief Fund.

If you or your organization would like to sponsor the conference,
contact Janvieve Williams at the U.S. Human Rights Network at (404)
588-9761 or jwilliams@ushrnetwork.orgThis e-mail address is being
protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it or
William Camacaro at (718) 510-5523 or cbalbertolovera@gmail.com.This
e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript
enabled to view it

Volunteers are also needed for logistics, outreach etc. If you are
interested in volunteering, contact the People's Hurricane Relief
Fund at (504) 301-0215 or phrfoc@gmail.com.This e-mail address is
being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view
it

Conveners of the conference are the African World Studies Program,
Dillard University, www.Dillard.edu; Alberto Lovera Bolivarian
Circle, New York, N.Y., http://nybolivarian.blogspot.com; People's
Hurricane Relief Fund, www.peopleshurricane.org; National Hip Hop
Political Convention, www.myspace.com/hiphopconvention_nyloc; Common
Ground Relief, www.commongroundrelief.org; U.S. Human Rights Network,
www.ushrnetwork.org; and Latin American and Caribbean Community
Center, Atlanta, Ga., www.LLCCCenter.org.

Venezuelan Ambassador Alvarez builds bridges in Bay Area tour by
Willie Thompson

Venezuelan Ambassador Alvarez told Bay Area media that he is the only
"Chavista" among nine siblings, yet his brothers and sisters are as
free as he is to express their opinions.

On a nationwide tour to win friends for Venezuela, Ambassador to the
U.S. Bernardo Alvarez, long a close colleague of the fiery President
Hugo Chávez , found many friends this week in the Bay Area, where he
met with people of color and other seekers of justice who are usually
excluded from meetings with ambassadors. Peter Cohn, attorney for the
San Francisco NAACP, social worker and member of the host committee
for the visit, had served as an election monitor when Chávez was
re-elected on Dec. 6, 2006. He invited progressives in many fields to
discuss with the ambassador a new vision and agenda to fight racism
while strengthening democracy, inclusion, solidarity, justice, equity
and environmental sustainability.

Ambassador Alvarez and his staff were accompanied by Roberto Vargas,
consultant for social programs for CITGO, the Venezuelan-owned
U.S.-based gasoline and heating oil distribution company with eight
refineries and 14,000 gas stations throughout the United States that
has been making discounted heating oil available to poor communities
in this country. (See www.citgo.com/CITGOLocator/StoreLocator.jsp for
the CITGO station nearest you.) In charge of arrangements for the
visit was the distinguished but down to earth Venezuelan Information
Office Executive Director Olivia Goumbri. Global Exchange and the Bay
View were also represented on the host committee.

Participation in tour events by a large number of African North
Americans - more than 40 percent of those attending on Monday evening
- reflect the Venezuelan ambassador's views that

1) "the race issue is huge throughout the hemisphere" and can be
successfully dealt with through increased solidarity with African
diasporan organizations,

2) members of the Congressional Black Caucus and other Black elected
officials - the Ambassador met for more than an hour with Mayor Ron
Dellums of Oakland on Tuesday afternoon - Danny Glover, Harry
Belafonte, Cornel West - West's book, "Democracy Matters," is being
translated into Spanish - TransAfrica and other African North
Americans have been very helpful to Venezuela in the United States,

3) the networking by people of African descent throughout the Western
Hemisphere during the last 20 years has brought the impact of race
and racism out of the shadows. Peter Cohn is bringing together a
diverse group of 30 to plan and implement a plan to continue to
change the neo-liberal, anti-democratic, militaristic, U.S. dictated
free-trade, environmentally destructive and racist agenda in the
Caribbean and the Americas.

Attorney Cohn put together the NAACP election monitoring team to
observe the December presidential election in Venezuela. This, I
believe, is a first for a Black U.S. civil rights organization. One
result is the recognition of Peter Cohn as a leader in United
States-Venezuela solidarity work.

Ambassador Alvarez seemed ready to begin immediately to refine and
put into action his own and others' proposals. He invited Liz Knox,
president of the 39-year-old Bay Area Association of Black Social
Workers to plan a comprehensive tour of Venezuela to focus on issues
of social justice and meeting basic human needs. He feels that
progressive citizens can support sending government observers to ALBA
and to sign on to ALBA values. ALBA is the Bolivarian alternative to
corporate globalization and free trade in the Americas and the
Caribbean.

Alvarez believes that art can be used to connect people throughout
the hemisphere. He cited a Black art exhibit in Caracas and the
upcoming Afro-Venezuelan female drummers' tour of the Bay Area. They
were hugely successful in Washington, D.C., he said.

And those progressive governments should connect with social
movements. The presence of the well-known CITGO consultant, Roberto
Vargas, an activist in the 1960s at San Francisco State University,
was a persuasive indication that Venezuela is continuing its outreach
to U.S. communities in times of disasters and crises. Local citizens
are asked to propose economic and cultural programs to strengthen
bonds between U.S. cities and Venezuela.

The Lawyers' Guild reported that it is already in "unwanted"
discussions with the AFL-CIO leadership about labor accepting funding
for its Solidarity Centers from USAID (the U.S. Agency for
International Development), which played a major role in
destabilizing the government of Haitian President Jean Bertrand
Aristide in 2004 and in the U.S.-supported coup against President
Hugo Chávez in 2002.

The Bay Area Association of Black Social Workers is preparing a
proposal for its national office to hold its 2008 international
conference in Venezuela. Global Exchange founder Medea Benjamin
reported Global Exchange took 15 groups to Venezuela last year and
the demand is increasing.

The Venezuelan consulate can be reached at (415) 955-1962 or
consulado@sanfrancisco.embavenez.us.org.This e-mail address is being
protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it The
Venezuela Information Office can be reached at (202) 347-8081 or
www.rethinkvenezuela.com.

Willie Thompson, president of the Organization of African North
Americans, is professor of sociology emeritus, City College of San
Francisco. Email him at willliemackthompson@msn.com.

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LINKS AND VERY SHORT STORIES

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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

Indictment in ’65 Killing That Inspired March
By ADAM NOSSITER
May 10, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/10/us/10alabama.html?ref=us

Escalating Military Spending - Income Redistribution
in Disguise
"How escalation of war and military spending are used
as disguised or roundabout ways to reverse the new
deal and redistribute national resources in favor
of the wealthy"
By Ismael Hossein-zadeh
http://ui.constantcontact.com/sa/fp.jsp?plat=i&p=f&m=iqnuv6bab

Profiteering at the Pump
The Great Oil Robbery
By DAVE LINDORFF
May 8, 2007
http://www.counterpunch.com/lindorff05082007.html

How the Inca Leapt Canyons
By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD
May 8, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/08/science/08bridg.html?ref=science

U.S. drug agents called 'new cartel'
From Times Wire Reports
Venezuela said it would not allow U.S. agents to carry out
counter-drug operations in the country, accusing the U.S.
Drug Enforcement Administration of being a "new cartel"
that aids traffickers.
Spokesman Brian Penn said the U.S. Embassy categorically
denies the accusation.
Washington has accused Venezuela of not cooperating in
counter-drug efforts and says cocaine shipments are
increasingly passing through the country from
neighboring Colombia.
Justice Minister Pedro Carreno said Venezuela suspended
cooperation with the DEA in 2005 after determining that
"they were moving a large amount of drugs."
May 8, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-briefs8.4may08,1,4971793.story?coll=la-headlines-world&ctrack=1&cset=true

Rebuilding Resistance
Inter Press Service
Dahr Jamail
"BEIRUT, May 7 (IPS) - As reconstruction resumes in the
heavily bombed southern Beirut district Dahiyeh, the signs
are evident of a rebuilding of resistance against Israel
and the U.S.-backed government, largely by way of increased
support for Hezbollah."
http://www.dahrjamailiraq.com/hard_news/archives/lebanon/000587.php

Beam It Down From the Web, Scotty
By SAUL HANSELL
"PASADENA, Calif. — Sometimes a particular piece of plastic
is just what you need. You have lost the battery cover
to your cellphone, perhaps. Or your daughter needs to have
the golden princess doll she saw on television. Now.
In a few years, it will be possible to make these items
yourself. You will be able to download three-dimensional
plans online, then push Print. Hours later, a solid object
will be ready to remove from your printer."
May 7, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/07/technology/07copy.html?ref=business

Albany Parental Access Increased
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A bill designed to give parents greater access to information
about their children who are in residential health facilities
was signed into law yesterday by Gov. Eliot Spitzer. The law,
spurred by the death of a 13-year-old autistic boy this year,
requires the facilities to notify parents and guardians within
24 hours of events affecting the children’s health and safety.
The boy, Jonathan Carey, died in February while under care
at the state’s Oswald D. Heck Developmental Center. The
authorities have said an aide was trying to restrain Jonathan
in a van when he stopped breathing. Two aides have been charged
with manslaughter and have pleaded not guilty.
May 7, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/07/nyregion/07mbrfs-law.html

Propaganda Fear Cited in Account of Iraqi Killings
By PAUL von ZIELBAUER
May 6, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/06/world/middleeast/06haditha.html

UN scientists warn time is running out to tackle global warming
-Scientists say eight years left to avoid worst effects
-Panel urges governments to act immediately
David Adam, environment correspondent
Saturday May 5, 2007
Guardian
http://environment.guardian.co.uk/climatechange/story/0,,2073006,00.html

Anti-U.S. Uproar Sweeps Italy
By David Swanson
The U.S. government has proposed to make Vicenza, Italy,
the largest US military site in Europe, but the people
of Vicenza, and all of Italy, have sworn it will never
happen.
http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/vicenza

As the Climate Changes, Bits of England’s Coast Crumble
By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/04/world/europe/04erode.html

Inspector of Projects in Iraq Under Investigation
By JAMES GLANZ
May 4, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/04/washington/04bowen.html?ref=world

Miami, activists in standoff after shantytown fire
BY ROBERT SAMUELS, ERIKA BERAS, LISA ARTHUR AND MICHAEL VASQUEZ
Apr. 26, 2007
http://www.miamiherald.com/459/story/87207.html

Gene Links Longevity and Diet, Scientists Say
By NICHOLAS WADE
May 3, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/03/health/03gene.html?ref=science

Feeling Warmth, Subtropical Plants Move North
By SHAILA DEWAN
May 3, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/03/science/03flowers.html?ref=science

Court Rejects Limit on Bids by Convicts for DNA Tests
By BOB DRIEHAUS
May 3, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/03/us/03ohio.html

California Mayor Demands Inquiry
Over Immigration Protest Clash
By REUTERS
The mayor of Los Angeles, Antonio R. Villaraigosa,
demanded an investigation into a clash Tuesday between
the police and pro-immigration protesters, saying he was
“deeply concerned” by televised images of the episode.
The chief, William J. Bratton, has already said he will
open an internal inquiry into the actions of officers
who used batons and rubber bullets to clear MacArthur
Park of protesters, apparently after a small group of
people began pelting them with rocks.
May 3, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/03/us/03brfs-protest.html

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GENERAL ANNOUNCEMENTS AND INFORMATION
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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

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[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

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'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

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Introducing...................the Apple iRack
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o-KWYYIY4jQ

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"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]

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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

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Defend the Los Angeles Eight!
http://www.committee4justice.com/

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George Takai responds to Tim Hardaway's homophobic remarks
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kcJoJZIcQW4&eurl_

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Iran
http://www.lucasgray.com/video/peacetrain.html

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Another view of the war. A link from Amer Jubran
http://d3130.servadmin.com/~leeflash/

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Petition: Halt the Blue Angels
http://action.globalexchange.org/petition.jsp?petition_KEY=458
http://www.care2.com/c2c/share/detail/289327

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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

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Film/Song about Angola
http://www.prisonactivist.org/angola/

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"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]

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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

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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/

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You may enjoy watching these.
In struggle
Che:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nqcezl9dD2c
Leon:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ukkFVV5X0p4

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FIGHTBACK! A Collection of Socialist Essays
By Sylvia Weinstein
http://www.walterlippmann.com/sylvia-weinstein-fightback-intro.html

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[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]

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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

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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.

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