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BAUAW NEWSLETTER Subscribe/Unsubscribe
Saturday, May 14, 2005
BAUAW NEWSLETTER UPDATE: SUNDAY, MAY 15, 2005
Opting for 'Opt-In'
By J. Douglas Allen-Taylor, AlterNet Posted on May 16, 2005, Printed on May 16, 2005 http://www.alternet.org/story/22006 Some school districts are challenging the federal recruitment guidelines for No Child Left Behind's military recruitment provision, facing withdrawal of funding over privacy infringement. In the heart of California's traditionally anti-war Bay Area, a stubborn resistance is growing to access to high school students by military recruiters. The rebellion comes at a time when the U.S. military is simultaneously under pressure to lift sagging enlistment numbers while coming under increasing criticism over its recruitment tactics. U.S. Army officials recently announced a one-day moratorium on recruitment, scheduled for May 20, in order to give recruiters a chance to "focus on how they can do a very tough mission without violating good order and discipline." But federal officials are warning that any open defiance by school districts to the military recruitment guidelines contained within the 2001 federal No Child Left Behind Act will carry severe consequences: the complete loss of federal education funds. In Alameda County, across the bay from San Francisco, school district officials are braving those consequences by promoting what at first seems like an obscure policy for military access to student records -- "opt-in." Section 9528 of No Child Left Behind provides that "a secondary school student or the parent of the student may request that the student's name, address, and telephone listing ... not be released [to military recruiters] without prior written parental consent ... ." When the Santa Cruz City High School District -- some 50 miles south of San Francisco -- was considering how to interpret that clause two years ago, staff attorney Ann Brick of the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California wrote to the school board urging them to adopt the "opt-in" policy that "requires a parent's affirmative consent before such information is released to the military. ... The assumption that parents do not object to the release of this information simply because they have not expressed their wishes is very problematic. ... " According to Dr. Robert Cervantes, the curriculum leadership manager in the California Department of Education, whose duties also include military liaison, the Santa Cruz City School District and 23 other California districts--including San Francisco Unified--adopted the "opt-in" policy around 2003. "Both the Department of Defense and the U.S. Department of Education have categorically deemed 'opt-in' to be inconsistent with NCLB," Cervantes said. "I've seen the federal government send down a lot of policies in my years working in state agencies, but I've talked with them, and this is the one that they've really dug their heels into. They're serious about this one. There is no ambiguity. Santa Cruz came close to losing their federal funding over this. And it's not partial funding. It's all federal funding. A couple of state legislators had to intervene to get them to change their policy and comply." That was a part of a U.S. Department of Education crackdown on "opt-in" in the summer of 2003, in which letters were sent to state superintendents of education around the country notifying them that "opt-in" was illegal. While the state education departments in neither Washington or Oregon have an official policy on the "opt-in/opt-out" military recruitment information issue, spokespersons in both departments said that districts in their states were complying with the U.S. Education Department's "opt-out" interpretation. Meanwhile, California's Cervantes said that the 23 other rebelling California school districts have followed suit with Santa Cruz, changing their policy to releasing student information to military recruiters unless the parents or students choose to "opt-out." But Berkeley did not change. Since a 2003 policy on military information policy was passed by the school board in Berkeley, parents of Berkeley High School students are provided with a form in the Student/Parent Handbook asking the parents to check a box and sign their names stating: "Please DO release my student's name, and address, and/or telephone number." The form goes on to inform parents that if they "do not check a box and sign above, [the high school] will NOT release your child's information to military recruiters." "Because we expected the numbers of 'opt-in' students to be so low in Berkeley, this is partly a measure to minimize paperwork," Berkeley Unified School District public information officer Mark Coplan said -- with a slight smile. "We knew there would be far more forms to be filled out and handled by the district if we had asked parents to opt out." He added that he thought Berkeley's system was "a better use of time for the military recruiters themselves. It means they don't have to waste their time with students who don't want to be contacted." Julia Harumi Mass, who has since taken over some of Brick's staff attorney duties at the ACLUNC, said in a recent telephone interview that while her organization doesn't "recommend to districts to risk federal funding, I think NCLB allows 'opt-in' on its face, if that's what districts want to do. And as a matter of principle, we believe that the issue of privacy is so important that the assumption should be don't release the information unless the parents or students say to do it." The results on the amount of student information available to military recruiters is not insubstantial. Under Berkeley's "opt-in" policy, only 27 parents out of approximately 1,800 students chose to have their children's information released to the military. Forty miles south of Berkeley, under Fremont Unified School District's "opt-out" policy, 730 of 4,320 junior and senior students in five high schools chose to have their information withheld. That meant that under Fremont's "opt-out" military recruiters were given information on 83 percent of the students, while under Berkeley's "opt-in" they only got 1.5 percent. Other systems around the country report similar results. In the Portland (Oregon) Public Schools, which also has its own anti-war tradition, military recruiters had access to 76 percent of the district's 6,200 high school students last year under "opt-out." Even accounting for Berkeley's legendary social activism, those differences are clearly significant. So far, Berkeley has not suffered any federal consequences from its NCLB interpretation. And it may soon have company. Last month, the governing board of the Alameda County Board of Education passed a resolution urging the 18 school districts under its jurisdiction to adopt the "opt-in" policy. "Students, parents and legal guardians should be informed that if a notice is not provided [by the student, parent, or legal guardian authorizing disclosure], the high school will assume that they do not authorize the school to release the requested information and their child's name and contact information will not be released." "I thought this was a no-brainer," Barbara Heringer-Swar told board members while they were considering the policy. Heringer-Swar, a military resistance organizer employed with the Oakland (California)-based Central Committee For Conscientious Objectors, brought the military recruitment information issue to the Alameda County School Board. "Parents ought to be able to choose who contacts their children. If we ask parents to give consent for their children's' pictures to go in a newspaper, we should be asking them to give consent about going to war." The Alameda County Board has budget oversight but no other authority over the county's independent school districts, so the resolution is only a suggestion. But given the county district's close working relationship with the local districts, that suggestion can be expected to have some weight. And the possible illegality of "opt-in" may change, too. Congressmember Mike Honda, a Democrat representing a Bay Area district just south of Alameda County, has authored federal legislation-H.R. 551, the "Student Privacy Protection Act of 2005" which would end the ambiguity, amending federal law so that student information could be released to military recruiters only "if the parent of the student involved has provided written consent." In other words, make "opt-in" the recognized law of the land. The proposed legislation is presently mired in the House Committee on Education and the Workforce, where Honda communications director Jay Staunton says it may languish. "The Republican leadership is not interested in pushing this legislation," Staunton said. "It's not their priority at any l evel. It's not on their agenda." But Staunton said that Honda is looking to try a favorite legislative tactic, attaching the language of H.R. 551 to a defense or appropriations bill, where the combination of needing to get the larger bill passed and appeals to the more privacy-oriented wing of conservative Republicans might give it a chance. J. Douglas Allen-Taylor writes for the Berkeley Daily Planet. © 2005 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved. View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/22006/ (Words of wisdom from our 15-year-old grandson...BW) I dare not watch it anymore. It sickens me. These people are horrible, these pursuers of pain, these instigators of paranoia, these preventers of peace. I turn on the tube and count the deaths. It's gotten to the point where I'll watch these evil informants tell me about the bombings, about the soldiers who've died, and I say, "How many times have I heard this from you?" I watch the news to see the mother of some kid who she will never see again. I watch her cry. My heart hurts for her. But I forget this pain when I see a man holding a mic to her face. I look at him, and I see no remorse. It's as if he's seen this so many times that he forgets he's trying to question this grieving mother. When she begins crying, he gives her a glance and an apology, yet he continues to hold the mic to her face, these consumers of grief, these stalkers of sadness. By Vincent Biancalana, 15 years old. May 2005, Daly City, California ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* NEWSLETTER UPDATE: Sunday, May 15, 2005 ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 1) Judge halts court-martial, orders new hearing For Kevin Benderman Associated Press Published on: 05/12/05 http://www.ajc.com/metro/content/metro/0505/05sergeant.html 2) SFPD WAR ON BLACK AND BROWN 3) Class in America: Shadowy Lines That Still Divide By JANNY SCOTT and DAVID LEONHARDT May 15, 2005 http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/15/national/class/OVERVIEW- FINAL.html?pagewanted=print 4) Senate Panel OKs Defense Spending Boost Editor's Note: When the Soviet Union fell and many called for a peace dividend, the defense budget was under 200 billion dollars.-smg The Associated Press Saturday 14 May 2005 "Washington -- A Senate committee approved a $441.6 billion defense bill for fiscal 2006 that envisions spending an additional $50 billion next year for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan." http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/051505A.shtml 5) A “Welcome Parade” of Blood and Seething Anger ** Dahr Jamail's Iraq Dispatches ** ** http://dahrjamailiraq.com ** May 15, 2005 ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 1) Judge halts court-martial, orders new hearing For Kevin Benderman Associated Press Published on: 05/12/05 http://www.ajc.com/metro/content/metro/0505/05sergeant.html ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 2) SFPD WAR ON BLACK AND BROWN Thursday, May 12, around 1 AM, Daniel Alvarenga Flores, classical guitarist and composer from El Salvador, 28 yr. Us resident, was slowly walking back home after giving a concert at Cafe Radio Havana on 22nd and Valencia St. in SF, when he observed 2 white PD officers detaining a Latino Brother crying out in Spanish: "I haven't done anything! What did I do?!". Daniel figured that the detained man was monolingual Spanish and approached the scene, offering to translate back to him what the charges were. The officers declined his offer, stating that they had a translator... nowhere in sight. As Daniel kept offering his help, he was told that he was interfering with an investigation, and one officer proceeded to twist his wrist. Daniel broke his hand lose, until the other officer held him. Daniel then surrendered "OK, then arrest me". The officers bent his arms backward so violently that Daniel feared his shoulders would dislocate, and until unbearable pain shot through his left arm. Daniel was crying out for help, but no one would approach the scene. He was at this point asked if he had any identification, "Sure ! My driver's licence!". "We won't take you to the station" said one of the officers who then called for an ambulance, while repeatedly pushing on Daniel's head on the pavement with his boot, and asked him to turn on his side. "I can't move ! You broke my arm!".The officers then got him on his feet. In the ambulance, a paramedic told Daniel: "You know, SF police is very good; they probably would treat you much worse in El Salvador!". (Actually Daniel had a negative prior experience with Salvadoran PD, but recounts that it was much less traumatic than this SFPD assault and battery....) While being treated at SFGH Emergency Room for a severe fracture of the humerus (upper arm), his arm rapidly swelling and increasingly painful, Daniel saw the 2 officers again, coming to serve him with a notice to appear in Criminal Division SF Superior Court on June 23, 2005, under 3 misdemeanor charges. The report is signed by Officer McKinney, Badge #4, issuing unit 3D13E. Not only Brother Alvarenga's human rights were violated, but he lost his livelihood : A professional musician loved by his community, recently accepted into the prestigious SF Conservatory of Music, Daniel will not be able to honor his upcoming 3 concerts engagements, including "Noche Bohemia" at Cafe Bella Vista on the 21 in the Mission, as his rehabilitation promises to be long and painful. Daniel does not know if he will be able to play professionally ever again... As we sat in his luminous Mission flat on Folsom St, Daniel, reserved young brother whose personality, delicate features and gentle demure exude spirituality, modesty and kindness, pushing his long hair away from his face, barely audible, said: "Senora Flor from La Raza gave me your number... I am victim of police racist stereotypes! We pay their salaries with our tax dollars, how can they have the power to treat us like animals, so intense and brutal, do they lose their sensitivity when they embrace the uniform, and see all of us as delinquents? The judicial system has to change, they cannot keep condemning us without proof... They demonstrate the state of mind you would expect from a violent drunk or less than an animal. My People has to know their rights ! The Police has to know that we know our rights. Police suffers from reality distortion! Democracy? Utopia ! I survived the war and 2 earthquakes in El Salvador to end up brutalized unjustly by San Francisco police. The officers were very racist, assuming I was an undocumented immigrant, therefore justified in breaking my arm... When they found out I had a Green Card, they decided not to arrest me??" Daniel gave me a CD of his music, we hugged by the front door. Later on that evening at the house of JulioAyala's parents (Julio Jr was slained by SSF PD at the SF Airport Hotel on 4-3-05), we listened quietly to Daniel's beautiful music and lyrics, while sharing Salvadoran soup and rice, as Julio's father bursted into tears, because his hijo Julito was not with us to share this moment... We sadly remember the lethal assault of Marcos Garcia, beaten to death by the Mission police on Cesar Chavez and South Van Ness Avenue 6 years ago, while current Assistant Chief Greg Surh was the Mission Precinct Captain... The brutalization of day laborer Jose Padua Damian in 2002 at the same street corner, covered up by former Captain Greg Corrales... Daniel is alive. But this brutal assault might change his life forever. Daniel is not afraid to speak out, because he knows that SILENCE KILL his RAZA ! Us Latinos and people of Hispanic origin are acculturated to unconditionally respect our elders, scholars, and authority. This liberal country of the US is teaching us the hard way to use discretion on who to respect ! Daniel does not want to see another casualty by PD in the news, and is filing with the SF Office of Citizen Complaints. Together, we will to the next SF Police Commission hearing to demand full exoneration of all charges, official apologies from the Police Department and disciplinary action of the 2 Mission Station offending officers. Justicia para Daniel Alvarenga Flores! Say NO to PD war on Black and Brown brothers and sisters in San Francisco ! mesha Monge-Irizarry Idriss Stelley Foundation ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 3) Class in America: Shadowy Lines That Still Divide By JANNY SCOTT and DAVID LEONHARDT May 15, 2005 http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/15/national/class/OVERVIEW- FINAL.html?pagewanted=print ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 4) Senate Panel OKs Defense Spending Boost Editor's Note: When the Soviet Union fell and many called for a peace dividend, the defense budget was under 200 billion dollars.-smg The Associated Press Saturday 14 May 2005 "Washington -- A Senate committee approved a $441.6 billion defense bill for fiscal 2006 that envisions spending an additional $50 billion next year for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan." http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/051505A.shtml ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 5) A “Welcome Parade” of Blood and Seething Anger ** Dahr Jamail's Iraq Dispatches ** ** http://dahrjamailiraq.com ** May 15, 2005 As if to add insult to injury, with over 400 Iraqis killed in violence during the first two weeks of the newly sworn in Iraqi “government,” US Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice made a surprise one day visit to the newest US colony. After visiting northern Iraq which has been spared the brunt of the ongoing violence, Rice traveled to the heavily entrenched “green zone” in central Baghdad where the U.S. “embassy” is located. She addressed a crowd in the former Republican Palace, the perfect setting for her symbolic visit to Iraq where more and more Iraqis are referring to the devastating occupation which has beset their country as their new “bloodocracy.” “We are so grateful that there are Americans willing to sacrifice so the Middle East will be whole, and free and democratic and at peace,” she announced before she returned to northern Iraq in her huge contingent of military helicopters to the mountain stronghold of Kurdish Democratic Party leader Massoud Barzani before exiting the war ravaged nation. Rather than a welcoming parade with ticker-tape and rose petals for the US Secretary of State who was one of the architects of the invasion, 34 corpses of men shot, beheaded or with their throats slit were discovered across Iraq today. Other aspects of her warm welcome included drive-by shootings in Baghdad which claimed the lives of a senior Industry Ministry official, his driver and a prominent Shia cleric as well as a dual-bomb attack in Baquba which narrowly missed taking the life of the governor of Diyala province (but took the lives of four others in his convoy). A second bomb was delivered five minutes after the first by a man running on foot towards the convoy who then detonated an explosives belt. When ambulances arrived medical workers found body parts strewn about in pools of blood and shattered glass as they attended to 37 wounded Iraqis. Not only are the vast majority of Iraqis in Iraq vehemently opposed to the ongoing occupation, but in Amman those I met at the ‘Between the Two Rivers Trucking Company’ today were just as angry about the occupation. Inside the large office of the general director of the company, drivers from Baghdad, Baquba, Sadr City, Fallujah, Ramadi and Basra, Sunni and Shia alike, crowd about glasses of hot tea to take turns venting their frustrations amidst my questions. Prior to the invasion they used to make 4-5 trips between Amman and Baghdad per month. Now they make one trip per month, primarily due to the fact that prior to crossing the border into Jordan they are forced to wait in a line several kilometers long…for 18 days. This is due to, what they believe, unnecessary harassment by Jordanian border authorities. They sleep in the cabs of their trucks as the line inches closer to the border, and when a driver from Basra tells me that if they leave their trucks at night they are shot at by American soldiers, I glace across the room to find all of the men nodding in agreement. None of them are content with the situation. “All of our problems are due to the Americans,” says Ahmed, a driver who has been trying to get supplies into Ramadi, “The soldiers have surrounded the city for so long, there is one entry way in and all of the people of the city are suffering. The Americans brought all of these problems with them.” The subject of civil war is broached, and Mohammed, a Shia driver from Sadr City blurts out, “The occupiers are creating these problems between the Shia and Sunni, but they will not divide us! All occupations only mean destruction and suffering!” Again I look around the room filled with seething Iraqis and find them nodding once again. Ahmed raises his voice over the others and with eyes seething with anger asks, “My cousin is in al-Qaim, and he just told me the Americans have destroyed so many houses in that area and killed women and children!” All of the attention in the room shifts to the large, mustached man wearing a brown dishdasha as he continues. “They are entering our houses where women and children are, and this is totally against our traditions and culture. They must leave our country immediately!” It isn’t only the Iraqis in Amman who are opposed to the brutal occupation of their country. Most Jordanians I’ve spoken with over the last week feel likewise. As an older Jordanian man from Palestine told me two days ago at my hotel, “The Iraqis must resist this occupation now, or they will end up like the Palestinians.” In the office of the trucking company, the mood is that of searing anger, frustration and urgency. Hamad, a Shia man from Basra enters the discussion and states, “I have seen them destroy three farms in Diyala! Why can’t they stay on their bases like the British do in the south? If they would just stay on their bases things would be so much better for us.” “With my own eyes I’ve seen the Americans, when their patrol was hit by a roadside bomb open fire on all the civilian cars around them,” exclaims Mohammed. At this everyone begins talking at once, the anger raising their voices. Over the din Rathman, a driver from Fallujah demands, “If Bush is a real man, he should walk down the street alone!” “Insh’Allah [God willing] Iraq will be the graveyard of the Americans,” adds Ahmed, “Qaim is three small villages and with all their planes and tanks they still fail to control it. If they were brave they should attack one or two villages without planes and helicopters and tanks and fight man to man!” A Shia driver from Hilla, a small city south of Baghdad, sternly says that the US is “the mother company of terrorism.” My interpreter Abu Talat, my friend Aisha and I decide it’s time to excuse ourselves. Several of the men follow us to the street as we wait for a taxi, continuing to make their statements as we wait. They are anxious to continue, seeing my pen as an outlet for their frustrations as I continue to take notes. “Why is the media not talking more about al-Qaim,” asks Ahmed, as a taxi approaches and begins to pull over to collect us. “We strongly advise the American people to pressure their government to leave Iraq,” says a man from al-Karma who asks to be called Ali. As I begin to step into the car he asks, “We are now free of Saddam Hussein, so did the Americans come as liberators or acquirers?” More writing, photos and commentary at http://dahrjamailiraq.com ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* BAUAW NEWSLETTER SATURDAY, MAY 14, 2005 ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 1) May 20, 2005 "Stand Up for Truth in Recruiting: One Day is Not Enough!" From: "Oskar Castro" Reply-To: iwillnotkill@yahoogroups.com 2) Mass March on Washington Saturday, September 24 in Washington D.C. With Nationally Coordinated Actions in San Francisco & Los Angeles Stop the War in Iraq End Colonial Occupation from Iraq to Palestine to Haiti Support the Palestinian People's Right of Return Stop the Threats Against Venezuela, Cuba, Iran & North Korea U.S. out of the Philippines Bring all the troops home now Stop the Racist, anti-Immigrant and anti-Labor Offensive at Home, Defend Civil Rights {Get the military out of our schools! Don't enlist! The increasing difficulty the military is having recruiting new cannon fodder is a profoundly democratic expression of the sentiments of the American people -especially it's young. It is mass, direct, action by those who refuse to enlist. A united, mass antiwar movement will increase these numbers. Together we can put an end to this war. ...BAUAW 3) Pablo Paredes Puts the War on Trial http://sandiego.indymedia.org/ 4) MAY 17,2005 is TAKE BACK OUR SCHOOLS DAY in honor of the historic Brown v. Board of Education verdict on May 17,1954. A growing tide of youth, educators, parents, union members, and community organizations are calling for an end to the destructive takeover of the Oakland schools. Schedule of Events (all events are within a few block radius of 12th Street BART in Downtown Oakland) Noon -1 p.m.:Rally at Frank Ogawa Plaza (at City Hall, 14th and Broadway) 1 p.m.-4 p.m.:Student-led teach-ins, First Unitarian Church,14th and Castro streets 4 p.m.-6:30 p.m.:Major rally, the State Building,1 5th and Clay streets 5) After the bombs, illness - and few to care By Paul McGeough, Chief Herald Correspondent April 29, 2005 http://www.smh.com.au/news/World/After-the-bombs-illness--and-few-to-care/ 2005/04/28/1114635692332.html?oneclick=true 6) Black and White and Full of Crap by Ted Rall Published on Wednesday, May 11, 2005 by UExpress.com http://www.commondreams.org/views05/0511-25.htm 7) Badlands picket continues... From: Mecca44@aol.com May 12, 2005 8) The Young and the Jobless By BOB HERBERT "A remark by Louis Brandeis comes to mind: "We can have democracy in this country, or we can have great wealth concentrated in the hands of a few. But we can't have both." May 12, 2005 "...For example, a recent report from the Center for Labor Market Studies at Northeastern University in Boston tells us that the employment rate for the nation's teenagers in the first 11 months of 2004 - just 36.3 percent - was the lowest it has ever been since the federal government began tracking teenage employment in 1948... 'Two-thirds of this generation are not living up to their parents' standard of living..." http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/12/opinion/12herbert.html?hp 9) Army to Spend Day Retraining Recruiters By DAMIEN CAVE May 12, 2005 "Responding to reports about widespread abuses of the rules for recruitment, Army officials said yesterday that they would suspend all recruiting on May 20 and use the day to retrain its personnel in military ethics and the laws that govern what can and cannot be done to enlist an applicant." http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/12/national/12recruit.html 10) Appeals Court Backs Cheney in Secrecy Case By DAVID STOUT Published: May 11, 2005 "WASHINGTON, May 10 - A federal appeals court said on Tuesday that Vice President Dick Cheney did not have to divulge details about how the White House's energy policies were shaped, ruling in a case that touched on the constitutional separation of powers." http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/11/politics/11cheney.html 11) 'Universal health care now!' By Diane Bukowski The Michigan Citizen "DETROIT - As the City of Detroit, the Detroit Public Schools, and even the Big Three automakers say the skyrocketing cost of health insurance has exacerbated their fiscal woes, organizers are stepping up a campaign for state-sponsored universal health care in Michigan." http://www.michigancitizen.com/ default.asp?sourceid=&smenu=1&twindow=&mad=&sdetail=1727&wpage=1&skeyw ord=&sidate=&ccat=&ccatm=&restate=&restatus=&reoption=&retype=&repmin=&re pmax=&rebed=&rebath=&subname 12) The Burden of a Violent History BY JIM MULLIN jim.mullin@miaminewtimes.com (Lists over 70 incidences of violence involving anti-Castro Cubans in U.S.) http://www.miaminewtimes.com/issues/2000-04-20/news/mullin.html 13) DROP THE PHONY CHARGES ON SHAREEF ALEEM! SAY NO TO RACIST POLICE BRUTALITY! 14) LA OPINION REAL ID: The list of "terrorists" has grown By: Jorge Delgado May 12, 2005 A CubaNews translation by Ana Portela Edited by Walter Lippmann (While the truly REAL terrorists like Luis Posada Carriles are allowed to run rampant in the United States of the Free World of America today.) http://www.walterlippmann.com/docs154.html 15) CALL TO ACTION: TORTURERS OUT OF SAN FRANCISCO! CAMPAIGN LAUNCH TO SHUT DOWN CACI, Inc.'s SF OFFICE! Monday, May 16th, 2 PM Rally outside Westin St. Francis Hotel (Union Square - 335 Powell St. at Geary) 16) Always Low Wages. Always. By PAUL KRUGMAN Op-Ed Columnist Published: May 13, 2005 http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/13/opinion/13krugman.html?hp 17) ARMY RECRUITING May 12, 2005 Amid recruiting shortfalls and accusations of unethical behavior by some recruiters, the U.S. Army is spending millions on new programs designed to convince more young Americans to join the ranks. http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/military/jan-june05/recruiting_5-12.html 18) Just a reminder: Monday May 16, 7 P.M., "DEATH ROW ON THE STREET: THE KILLING OF JULIO AYALA", presentation by Tania, Julio's sister. At Idriss Stelley Foundation and Dockta Cooper Networking Project office, 4921 3rd Street, SF, between Palou and Quesada. You can bring the ninos if you like ! 17) ARMY RECRUITING May 12, 2005 Amid recruiting shortfalls and accusations of unethical behavior by some recruiters, the U.S. Army is spending millions on new programs designed to convince more young Americans to join the ranks. http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/military/jan-june05/recruiting_5-12.html 19) Let's face it - the state has lost its mind The media coverage of this past election was a pastiche. Our right to know what our rulers are doing to people the world over is being lost in the new propaganda consensus. By John Pilger http://www.newstatesman.com/nscoverstory.htm 20) The family released a statement... by Michael Gillespie (Thursday 12 May 2005) "Mass round-ups and detentions of innocent civilians, torture and abuse of prisoners and detainees, America's honor and prestige at the lowest point ever, and investigations that whitewash the president's men and blame it all on the enlisted personnel. Thus the obscene spectacle of the grieving families at funerals forced by the president's dishonesty to defend the honor of their dead even as they mourn: "He was noble and always carried himself with honor." "[He was] a loving husband and father, a devoted son and brother." "He wanted to go where good people needed help." "He will be dearly missed." Small wonder that the president, desperately attempting to hide behind a façade of rigid religiosity that glorifies war and false patriotism that exalts the very evils it claims to despise, never attends the funerals of those who have died in the line of duty. How could he?" http://usa.mediamonitors.net/content/view/full/14869/ 21)Recall Urged for Illegal Biotech Corn FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE May 11, 2005 Contact: Craig Culp, Center for Food Safety, (202) 547-9359; Bill Freese, Friends of the Earth, (301) 985-3011 Government Must Come Clean on Secret Dealings with Crop Developer Several hundred tons of the unapproved Bt10 corn, enough to plant 37,000 acres, were mistakenly sold to U.S. farmers under the name of an approved variety from 2001 to 2004. The resultant harvest of an estimated 165,000 tons have been sold as food or feed in the U.S. and abroad. Syngenta first informed the U.S. government of the mix-up in December 2004, but federal regulatory officials did not inform the U.S. public that they were eating the untested corn until the story leaked four months later. U.S. trading partners were also kept in the dark about possible importation of the corn. "The potential for yet undetected contamination of other corn varieties via cross-pollination or seed mix-ups means the unapproved corn could persist in the food supply for years," said Doug Gurian-Sherman, senior scientist with Center for Food Safety and a former risk assessment scientist with EPA. "This happened because the U.S. regulatory agencies have not followed their own risk assessment procedures for allowing commercialization of genetically engineered foods." http://www.centerforfoodsafety.org/press_release5.11.2005.cfm 22) Amman, Iraq, and Al-Qaim ** Dahr Jamail's Iraq Dispatches ** ** http://dahrjamailiraq.com ** May 14, 2005 23) 'I Will Not Kill' campaign launches on Capitol Hill News from The Fellowship of Reconciliation 24) Bob Smith, Chair Depleted Uranium Awareness Committee P.O. Box 480 Franklinton, Louisiana 70438 (504) 581-1086 PRESS RELEASE: 25) CASTRO DEFENDS FUGITIVE SOUGHT BY U.S. http://playahata.com/hatablog/wp-trackback.php/505 26) Subject: second announcement about peace activities in Richmond memorial day week ----- Original Message ----- From: "J. Gab..... ....global.net> Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2005 9:02 PM 27) Recruiter-turned-peacenik hits nerve in N.C. By Rick Hampson, USA TODAY http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2005-03-20-recruiter-peacenik_x.htm ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 1) May 20, 2005 "Stand Up for Truth in Recruiting: One Day is Not Enough!" From: "Oskar Castro" Reply-To: iwillnotkill@yahoogroups.com In response to the recent exposure of serious recruiter improprieties including fraud and coercion the U.S. Army is issuing a "stand down" order to all Army recruiters for May 20th, 2005. The American Friends Service Committee is responding with a national call to action for May 20th, 2005 under the banner, "Stand Up for Truth in Recruiting: One Day is not Enough!" We are calling on activists, allies and those concerned with the militarization of youth to use the date of May 20th to: * conduct teach-ins and workshops, * plan peaceful demonstrations at heavily recruited schools and invite people negatively affected by military recruiters to speak, * peacefully picket recruitment stations. Themes for these events will include: * exposure of the unethical and illegal tactics used by recruiters, particularly in poor communities and communities of color * lack of parent & student awareness about the No Child Left Behind Act Military Recruiter Provision (Sec. 9528) and school violations of privacy clauses * the use of JROTC to create generations loyal to and unquestioning of the military * the need for viable alternatives to military s ervice-college, vocational training, living wage jobs The U.S. Army describes the stand down as a time to review its recruiting procedures and values and remind their nearly 8,000 recruiters of the need to stay within the boundaries of the law. . The impression given by Army recruitment leaders is that a few "bad apples" are violating standards due to the increased difficulty of meeting recruitment quotas during the extended war and occupation in Iraq We know different. For the last 20 years, the American Friends Service Committee has been working to expose and combat what we believe to be a systemic and widespread problem of abusive and unethical recruitment practices. One day of "re-training" will not reduce the pressure placed on military recruiters to meet their monthly quotas – by whatever means necessary. The military has clear regulations that are allegedly shared with its recruiters during their job training, yet an Army spokesperson recently revealed to the Associated Press that the Army has investigated 480 allegations of impropriety by recruiters since Oct. 1, 2005. Some of these cases are still open while 91 of the 480 allegations have thus far been considered founded. To date, eight recruiters have been relieved of duty and another 98 have been reprimanded by their commands. Other things that can be done to make an impact and let the military know that we oppose insidious practices and recruitment policies are: * Visit www.afsc.org/youthmil to learn more about the issues and find out how you, or your organization can host group trainings. * Visit www.LeaveMyChildAlone.org and join the campaign created by Working Assets, the MMOB and ACORN, to get 1,000,000 students "opted out". * Join or start a local movement to provide information on comprehensive job & career training, financial aid and travel alternatives for youth graduating from high school. * Learn how you can join the growing National Network Opposing the Militarization of Youth by visiting www.youthandthemilitary.org. * Join the Fellowship of Reconciliation's "I Will Not Kill" Campaign and encourage young people to sign the declaration at http:// iwillnotkill.org/ Also, If you have any local stories or case examples of recruitment improprieties, or over aggressive recruitment tactics in schools, or communities it would be great if you could forward us information on those cases. We are preparing a press kit for the national media we are in communication with and want to be able to show them that the problem the Army is alleging to address is not as isolated as they'd like the world to think. Certainly, names can be changed to protect the innocent. Contact the National Youth & Militarism Program of the American Friends Service Committee at 215-241-7176, or youthmil@afsc.org. Oskar Castro National Youth & Militarism Program American Friends Service Committee 215-241-7046 www.youth4peace.org Peace, Respect & Guidance - for we are not human beings having a spiritual experience, but spiritual beings having a human experience. I believe in God, but not as one thing, not as an old man in the sky. I believe that what people call God is something in all of us. I believe that what Jesus and Mohammed and Buddha and all the rest said was right. It's just that the translations have gone wrong. John Lennon ! Groups Links * To visit your group on the web, go to: * http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MOOS-BAY/ * ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 2) Mass March on Washington Saturday, September 24 in Washington D.C. With Nationally Coordinated Actions in San Francisco & Los Angeles Stop the War in Iraq End Colonial Occupation from Iraq to Palestine to Haiti Support the Palestinian People's Right of Return Stop the Threats Against Venezuela, Cuba, Iran & North Korea U.S. out of the Philippines Bring all the troops home now Stop the Racist, anti-Immigrant and anti-Labor Offensive at Home, Defend Civil Rights {Get the military out of our schools! Don't enlist! The increasing difficulty the military is having recruiting new cannon fodder is a profoundly democratic expression of the sentiments of the American people -especially it's young. It is mass, direct, action by those who refuse to enlist. A united, mass antiwar movement will increase these numbers. Together we can put an end to this war. ...BAUAW} Thousands will march on Saturday, September 24 in Washington DC. The A.N.S.W.E.R. Coalition urges the antiwar movement to come together for a united demonstration. September 24 Call to Action The anti-war movement must make a precise estimate of the direction of the White House, the Pentagon and Congress as it charts its next steps for mass mobilization. The people of the United States must mobilize against the global War for Empire that masks itself as the so-called "war on terrorism" and falsely promotes itself as the "march for democracy." The people of Iraq are insisting that the United States leave their country immediately. As in Vietnam, the people of the United States must demand the immediate end to this war of conquest. As we fight to end the war in Iraq, we recognize that it is not enough to focus on a single front in this War for Empire. We must unite on a principled basis that recognizes the reality of our epoch. How can this war drive come to an end? People in Iraq, in Palestine, in Haiti, in Venezuela, in Cuba are resisting but the people of the United States must become their allies. Their resistance is part of the universal aspiration to live free from foreign domination or threats of a military or economic character. The war and occupation of Iraq cannot be seen in isolation. The U.S. is actively attempting to destroy every government that resists the Empire. The Iraq war is not an aberration nor is it a "mistake" of conservative politicians. The war in Iraq is a necessary component in the political program and the institutions of global conquest and exploitation. This is what we must be fighting. We don't want the troops to be brought home from Iraq only so that they can be deployed in the next front of imperialism. The people of the United States have every interest in renouncing the War for Empire that is directed by the U.S. plutocracy. The plutocrats have the wealth but the plutocracy is in inherent conflict with genuine democracy and with the needs of the people. This is not just Bush's war. It is not only a Republican or a neo-conservative campaign. Congress again just rubber-stamped the next $82 billion appropriation to finance the criminal occupation of Iraq. The vote in the Senate was 99-0! The amount spent on the war in Iraq and Afghanistan is now over $350 billion. Likewise, it is the White House and Congress and both big business parties that wholeheartedly support the funding of the ongoing war against the people of Palestine. The occupation of Haiti, carried out by proxy forces, is nonetheless a project of U.S. and French imperialism. The U.S. establishment is preparing to overthrow the government of Venezuela, just as every successive administration has sought, unsuccessfully, to overthrow the Cuban revolution since 1959. While the Pentagon possesses the largest nuclear arsenal on the planet, the White House and Congress and both parties join together with the Corporate-owned media to paint Iran and North Korea as looming nuclear threats. For more than 100 years the people of the Philippines have struggled, and are struggling today, to reclaim authentic sovereign control over their own country, free from endless U.S. interference. It is time to take to the streets again today, as we have throughout the last few years, to demonstrate the growing opposition inside this country to the War for Empire. Every working person in the United States must know that the corporate, political and military establishment is using our tax dollars, and the lives of our sons and daughters, to wage their global war. It is a war for domination. It is a war for the benefit of U.S. banks, oil monopolies, and transnational corporations. These are the very same corporate entities that are slashing wages, health care coverage, pensions and outsourcing millions of jobs to make super-profits from the super -exploitation of low-wage labor. The Bush administration cries poverty when it comes to meeting Social Security's obligations as well as the funding for education, health care and housing. There is no poverty claim, however, for the Pentagon and its corporate contractors: the real military spending level for the next year will be over $600 billion. Instead of paying for endless war, we demand that the resources be used to meet human needs here and around the world. Instead of acting as shock troops for Empire, we demand that the soldiers and sailors in the U.S. military be provided decent paying jobs at union wages, the right to go to college, and an immediate increase in veterans benefits. On September 24 we will march and rally starting at the White House in Washington D.C. There will be coordinated actions that day in San Francisco and Los Angeles. The U.S. government says it is promoting the march for democracy and freedom abroad. What a sham. They pretend to promote freedom abroad but at the same time fan the flames of racism, anti-immigrant discrimination, sexism, homophobia and bigotry of all forms at home. There is nothing more urgent than to construct unity in the face of Empire. Real unity cannot be built by sacrificing the rights of some but rather it will be forged by embracing everyone's rights and just struggles for liberation. United we are the majority. United we can fight and win. Funds are urgently needed to help build the September 24 mass action. We can't do it without your help. You can make a contribution through a secure server by clicking here, where you can also find information on how to contribute by check. A.N.S.W.E.R. Coalition Act Now to Stop War & End Racism http://www.ANSWERcoalition.org http://www.actionsf.org National Office in Washington DC: 202-544-3389 New York City: 212-533-0417 Los Angeles: 323-464-1636 San Francisco: 415-821-6545 For media inquiries, call 415-821-6545 or 202-544-3389. ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 3) Pablo Paredes Puts the War on Trial http://sandiego.indymedia.org/ On May 11th, 2005, Pablo Paredes was found guilty of missing movement. The unauthorized absence charge was dismissed. Sentencing continues today, May 12th in the court martial. BUT, DURING THE PRE-SENTENCING PHASE...Marjorie Cohn made ABSOLUTE MINCEMEAT OUT OF THE PROSECUTION! So much so that the military judge in the court martial said, "I BELIEVE THE GOVERNMENT JUST PROVED THAT ANY SERVICEMEMBER HAS REASONABLE CAUSE TO BELIEVE THAT THE WARS IN YUGOSLAVIA, AFGHANISTAN AND IRAQ WERE ILLEGAL" Read more from the court martial attendees As his court martial took place, outside around 50 supporters performed act 1 of the 3 act play "Put the War on Trial", which Pablo wrote. Following that they marched through Logan Heights and received a warm reception. One person driving by said "Thank you for coming to our neighborhood! Gracias para venir a nuestra barrio!" The march ended at the gates of the 32nd naval base where supporters held banners over the bridge, rallied on the sidewalk and showed their support for Pablo and everyone with the courage to resist this illegal and immoral war all day, in the unrelentingly hot sun. Support events will continue today with act 2 of Put the War on Trial and a film night fundraiser . Story from Zengers |Audio from night forum 5/11 |Audio from night forum on 5/10 |Direct Action to shut down recruiting offices English ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 4) MAY 17,2005 is TAKE BACK OUR SCHOOLS DAY in honor of the historic Brown v. Board of Education verdict on May 17,1954. A growing tide of youth, educators, parents, union members, and community organizations are calling for an end to the destructive takeover of the Oakland schools. Schedule of Events (all events are within a few block radius of 12th Street BART in Downtown Oakland) Noon -1 p.m.:Rally at Frank Ogawa Plaza (at City Hall, 14th and Broadway) 1 p.m.-4 p.m.:Student-led teach-ins, First Unitarian Church,14th and Castro streets 4 p.m.-6:30 p.m.:Major rally, the State Building,1 5th and Clay streets For information on the May 17 events, including curriculum for your classroom visit www.ednotinc.org For articles on the destructive effects of the State Takeover: www.oaklandrising.com Jonah Zern Please forward widely!! May 17:Take Back Our Schools Day is a project of Organize Da BAY, Education Not Incarceration, Oakland Education Association, Oakland ACORN, AFSCME 257, Oakland AFT and many more organizations from the Coalition to Defend and Improve Public Education Media Contact: Micah, Organize Da Bay, 510.841.0690, enigmicah@gmail.com Education Contact: Jessica Vasquez: 510.847.2523, jessica_vasquez@hotmail.com Outreach Contact: Victor Duarte: 510.847.9521, duarte138@yahoo.com Oakland City Council Unanimously Passed the Following Resolution Supporting May 17th's Events on May 3, 2005. The Resolution was introduced by Councilwoman Jane Brunner: Resolution to Save Public Education WHEREAS, on May 17, 1954, the Supreme Court of the United States issued their historic opinion in the case of Brown v. Board of Education that called for an immediate end to segregated education; and WHEREAS, on May 17, 2004, Mayor of Oakland Jerry Brown issued a proclamation declaring May 17th "Equal Education Day" in the City of Oakland; and WHEREAS, the Oakland Unified School District has been under the complete fiscal and legislative authority of State Superintendent of Public Instruction Jack O'Connell and his appointed Administrator Dr. Randolph Ward since June 3, 2003; and WHEREAS, vested with the authority of the State of California, Dr. Ward in 2004 closed five Oakland public schools and has, in his recently issued "Multi-Year Fiscal Recovery Plan" and in public statements, announced plans to close up to 9 more Oakland public schools mainly in the flatlands, while simultaneously opening up to 25 new, undefined learning communities within the next two years; and WHEREAS, Oakland schools have experienced an alarming rate of student attrition with more than 6,900 students leaving the District since the state takeover began and thousands more expected to leave in coming years; and WHEREAS, according to a March 24, 2005 Oakland Tribune article, less than 50% of Oakland Unified School District students graduate high school on time, with closer to 30% of Latino and African-American students likely to earn a high school diploma within four years; and WHEREAS, the closure of neighborhood schools and such low graduation rates point to the prevalence of unequal educational conditions for many Oakland students and constitute an alarming crisis in the Oakland public schools that demands immediate attention; now THEREFORE BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Council of the City of Oakland encourages school administrators, educators, community organizations, and concerned citizens to participate in educational programs located on school sites during the school day or elsewhere after school, on May 17th, 2005, including 1. Study and discussion on the historic importance of Brown v. Board of Education and its relevance to public education today. 2. Development and presentation of workshops to students, parents, and community members on May 17, 2005 on a variety of issues related to equal access to public education. 3. Ongoing public dialogue among all sectors of the community on the state of the Oakland Unified School District and next steps to improve the quality of education provided to the children and youth of Oakland. 4. Study of the Oakland Unified School District's proposed Multi-Year Fiscal Recovery Plan, including the financial plan, a timeline for the State of California to return Oakland's schools to local control, and how we can support Proposition 98 and increasing resources for our schools. Yahoo! Groups Links <*> To visit your group on the web, go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/BayAreaOrganizing/ http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MOOS-BAY ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 5) After the bombs, illness - and few to care By Paul McGeough, Chief Herald Correspondent April 29, 2005 http://www.smh.com.au/news/World/After-the-bombs-illness--and-few-to-care/ 2005/04/28/1114635692332.html?oneclick=true ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 6) Black and White and Full of Crap by Ted Rall Published on Wednesday, May 11, 2005 by UExpress.com http://www.commondreams.org/views05/0511-25.htm ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 7) Badlands picket continues... From: Mecca44@aol.com May 12, 2005 Hi everyone The picketing and boycott of Badlands continues. As you know, the Castro bar was recently found guilty of discrimination against African Americans by the city's Human Rights Commission. We have been picketing on Saturday nights and so far it's going well. The owner is obviously very threatened since he hired cheerleaders to walk around the Castro giving out 1/2 price drink cards last Saturday...they also stood outside the bar and screamed at us as we marched and spoke with passersby. We are a peaceful presence and we have been informing people of what's going on... This Saturday, join us at 9pm at LYRIC, 127 Collingwood/18th for a special training. At 10pm we will walk over to the Badlands (just around the corner) to peacefully picket and hand out flyers... If you are available Friday night, we are thinking of flyering at 18th & Castro...please let me know if you can help with this. I will be there... SO let me know if Friday works for you... AND JOIN US SATURDAY FOR WEEK THREE of the picket!!!! Tommi ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 8) The Young and the Jobless By BOB HERBERT "A remark by Louis Brandeis comes to mind: "We can have democracy in this country, or we can have great wealth concentrated in the hands of a few. But we can't have both." May 12, 2005 "...For example, a recent report from the Center for Labor Market Studies at Northeastern University in Boston tells us that the employment rate for the nation's teenagers in the first 11 months of 2004 - just 36.3 percent - was the lowest it has ever been since the federal government began tracking teenage employment in 1948... 'Two-thirds of this generation are not living up to their parents' standard of living..." http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/12/opinion/12herbert.html?hp ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 9) Army to Spend Day Retraining Recruiters By DAMIEN CAVE May 12, 2005 "Responding to reports about widespread abuses of the rules for recruitment, Army officials said yesterday that they would suspend all recruiting on May 20 and use the day to retrain its personnel in military ethics and the laws that govern what can and cannot be done to enlist an applicant." http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/12/national/12recruit.html ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 10) Appeals Court Backs Cheney in Secrecy Case By DAVID STOUT Published: May 11, 2005 "WASHINGTON, May 10 - A federal appeals court said on Tuesday that Vice President Dick Cheney did not have to divulge details about how the White House's energy policies were shaped, ruling in a case that touched on the constitutional separation of powers." http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/11/politics/11cheney.html ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 11) 'Universal health care now!' By Diane Bukowski The Michigan Citizen "DETROIT - As the City of Detroit, the Detroit Public Schools, and even the Big Three automakers say the skyrocketing cost of health insurance has exacerbated their fiscal woes, organizers are stepping up a campaign for state-sponsored universal health care in Michigan." http://www.michigancitizen.com/ default.asp?sourceid=&smenu=1&twindow=&mad=&sdetail=1727&wpage=1&skeyw ord=&sidate=&ccat=&ccatm=&restate=&restatus=&reoption=&retype=&repmin=&re pmax=&rebed=&rebath=&subname ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 12) The Burden of a Violent History BY JIM MULLIN jim.mullin@miaminewtimes.com (Lists over 70 incidences of violence involving anti-Castro Cubans in U.S.) http://www.miaminewtimes.com/issues/2000-04-20/news/mullin.html ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 13) DROP THE PHONY CHARGES ON SHAREEF ALEEM! SAY NO TO RACIST POLICE BRUTALITY! On February 3rd, 2005, Denver activist, Shareef Aleem, was targeted and attacked by campus police at a Board of Regents meeting convened to discuss the University of Colorado's intended action against Ward Churchill. Shareef Aleem went to this meeting because it was advertised as an open meeting, and he wanted to film the event for Denver Community Television and show support for the students dissent against education cuts and fee hikes as well as their protest of attacks on Ward Churchill, a professor who blamed U.S. foreign policy for leading to the 9/11 attacks. Aleem stood up in the meeting after one activist had been asked to leave for openly addressing the Regents. He reiterated that the meeting was advertised as being public and stated, "Is this a free country or not? Do we live in a democracy or not? If not, let's stop calling it that." Campus cops then pushed aside an older Black woman and began grabbing Aleem, who told them to leave him alone and not touch him. He said he had a right to be there and that the students should be allowed to speak. Shareef was grabbed by cops, pulled down on top of one, had his hands bound and was shot in the neck with a taser. HE HAS SINCE BEEN CHARGED WITH SECOND-DEGREE ASSAULT ON AN OFFICER. We are asking for national, and even, international support for this anti-racist activist who has challenged the brutal police in Denver and the surrounding metropolitan areas. This case is a political one because of the fact that Shareef showed support for the students who were expressing their dissent to the right-wing attacks on campuses across the country trying to silence progressive voices, and because Shareef has been so active against police brutality. His case is an attempt to silence him and his activism and to threaten those who stand by him and his actions. Also, the possibility of Shareef facing up to 16 years in prison is a real threat to his and his family's well being. SHAREEF NEEDS THE SOLIDARITY OF JUSTICE-LOVING PEOPLE EVERYWHERE! BY ATTACKING SHAREEF'S RIGHT TO FREE SPEECH, THE POLICE ARE TRYING TO INTIMIDATE AND SILENCE THE ENTIRE SOCIAL JUSTICE MOVEMENT IN DENVER AND AROUND THE COUNTRY! AN INJURY TO ONE IS AN INJURY TO ALL! We are asking that people deluge the judge presiding his trial and the prosecuting District Attorney and let them know that we will not let Shareef be victimized and demand that the charges be dropped. In defense of Aleem, send emails to defendshareef@yahoo.com and cards or money to pay for his attorney or letters of support in care of Aleem to 4860 Chambers Road, P.O. Box 173. Denver, CO 80239. Letters of protest can also be sent to Judge Michael A. Cox, Adams County Justice Center, 1100 Judicial Center Dr., Brighton, CO 80601, or to Don Quick, 17th Judicial District Attorney, 1000 Judicial Center Dr., Suite 100, Brighton, CO 80601. Anyone can subscribe. Send an email request to Action.News-subscribe@organizerweb.com To unsubscribe Action.News-unsubscribe@organizerweb.com Subscribing and unsubscribing can also be done on the Web at http://www.organizerweb.com/mailman/listinfo/action.news ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 14) LA OPINION REAL ID: The list of "terrorists" has grown By: Jorge Delgado May 12, 2005 A CubaNews translation by Ana Portela Edited by Walter Lippmann (While the truly REAL terrorists like Luis Posada Carriles are allowed to run rampant in the United States of the Free World of America today.) http://www.walterlippmann.com/docs154.html The country can now sleep in peace; the Republican administration has just taken an "important step" in its fight against terrorism with the approval by the Lower House of the Senate of the Real ID measure including the Supplementary Law project of military expenditures. This measure will become law in the coming days once the full Senate gives its final vote and President Bush signs it and orders its enforcement. The measure demands that any person presenting themselves to the California Department of Vehicles (DMV) to request a driver's license should present proof of identity and citizenship or legal residence with at least four documents. This project also eliminates the possibility of using consular registrations as documents of identity; it establishes restrictions to request political asylum and sets down new measures to set up barriers around the border. With this measure illegal activities of more than 10 million "terrorists" will be blocked, terrorists who have entered national territory through the inefficiency or convenience of the system and border control authorities. The list of "terrorists" is all encompassing: Thousands of undocumented "terrorists, mostly Hispanics who, from sun up to sun down, pick tomatoes, lettuces and fruits, receiving low wages, that end up on the table of the U.S. citizens for the enjoyment of their pockets and palate. Hundreds of thousands of "terrorists" who build the houses we live in, some climbing up to the roofs of the houses with temperatures above 100 degrees Fahrenheit, such as the temperatures of Arizona. Hundreds of thousands of "terrorists" who prepare the food in the fast food restaurants of the nation and who courteously and diligently attend the clients. Hundreds of thousands of "terrorists" who clean the houses, offices, hotels and shops of the country. Hundreds of thousands of "terrorists" who help hospital staff in the care and attention of patients. Hundreds of thousands of "terrorists" who care for the gardens that allows us to enjoy the fragrance of flowers and the colorful patios. Hundreds of thousands of "terrorists" who care for the helpless old people, specially lacking affection due to the fast modern life. The list of "terrorists" is long and has almost the same profile: dark skin, strong for heavy work and long hours, willing to work for little, submissive and faithful. And their living conditions are, also, the same: low wages, few chances for the improvement of their children, without access to medical care. These are the terrible people who go to the emergency services "costing tax payers money"; and who go to the offices of social services when they have no choice but to ask for help or die. How terrible these "uncivilized terrorists" who live marginally so that the system can allow the enrichment of those who pay low wages and do not offer medical insurance. In addition, the measure decrees that those who have previously acquired a driver's license will lose them; sending millions of these "terrorists out into the streets" for whom this document is a means to earn a living: gardeners, food home deliveries, small business persons who, if they lose their means of a livelihood, must go to the charities or social care institutions to feed their children adding to the number of poor and to social dissatisfaction. Because what the politicians who prepared the project have not considered is that they are creating a sub-class among its own citizens who, sooner or later, will turn against the system. It is ironic that the system aims to prepare its children in the highest social and moral values; the society aims to have its citizens respect the laws and follow its measures. The government brags that no child should be left behind and, however, they make it hard for the parents to take them to school, take them to a park, to feed them. Why? For the crime of having crossed the border illegally although they now bend their backs working to make this a better nation. Poor "terrorists" they no longer suffer the hardships but the impenetrability. Jorge Delgado lives in Irvine, California. Marxism mailing list Marxism@lists.econ.utah.edu http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxism ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 15) CALL TO ACTION: TORTURERS OUT OF SAN FRANCISCO! CAMPAIGN LAUNCH TO SHUT DOWN CACI, Inc.'s SF OFFICE! Monday, May 16th, 2 PM Rally outside Westin St. Francis Hotel (Union Square - 335 Powell St. at Geary) CACI International, a private corporation, provided many of the interrogators at Abu Ghraib prison. Its employees were directly implicated in the torture scandal. But CACI has faced no consequences so far. Not one of its employees has been prosecuted, its contract for "intelligence services" in Iraq was renewed last August, and it earned over $1 billion in revenue last year - 95% of it from your tax dollars. Plus, CACI continues to do business undisturbed in San Francisco and dozens of other cities around the U.S. This Monday, May 16th, CACI's vice president and other top executives will be in town to present at an investors' conference at the Westin St. Francis Hotel. Come help us confront CACI's directors and clients about their involvement in torture and launch a campaign to shut down CACI's San Francisco office. Tell CACI: torturers are NOT WELCOME in our community! Come to an ART BUILD & PLANNING MEETING FOR THE CACI ACTION Saturday, May 14th at 1 PM St. Boniface Church (133 Golden Gate St. between Leavenworth and Jones, by Civic Center BART) FOR MORE INFORMATION and to get involved, email torturersoutofsf@yahoo.com, call Sarah at 510-472-8476, or come to the planning meeting/art build on Saturday (details above). ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 16) Always Low Wages. Always. By PAUL KRUGMAN Op-Ed Columnist Published: May 13, 2005 http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/13/opinion/13krugman.html?hp ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 17) ARMY RECRUITING May 12, 2005 Amid recruiting shortfalls and accusations of unethical behavior by some recruiters, the U.S. Army is spending millions on new programs designed to convince more young Americans to join the ranks. http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/military/jan-june05/recruiting_5-12.html RECRUITER: You want a dog tag? It's a custom made dog tag, man. TOM BEARDEN: On a recent night in Chicago, Army recruiters were scouring the bleachers before a Golden Gloves boxing tournament --looking for people to join the Army. They handed out forms to be filled out with personal information in exchange for free dog tags and a chance to win an iPod music player. Some found a receptive audience. Pitching to young people and trying to hit quotas RECRUITER: You can go to any state school, like UI, UIC for free if you go into Army. I got 70-grand for college, I'm going to get out and they're going to pay me to get a free education. TOM BEARDEN: But most were greeted with skepticism... YOUNG MAN: You all ain't going to draft in the Army or nothin', is y'all? RECRUITER: No! There's no draft in this country! TOM BEARDEN: The military is finding out how hard it can be to attract volunteers while soldiers and Marines are dying in Iraq -- more than 1600 so far. The Army alone has a yearly goal of recruiting 80,000 new people. Monthly quotas vary. In April, the number was 6,600. TOM BEARDEN: The Army missed that quota by 42 percent. For the year, they are down 16 percent. RECRUITER: You guys want a flag? TOM BEARDEN: The Army Reserve, National Guard, and the Marine Corps have also missed monthly quotas, while the Air Force and Navy have met their goals. RECRUITER: Anybody else want to fill one out? iPod raffle for Friday -- TOM BEARDEN: Col. Tom Nickerson is in charge of the Army's recruiting outreach program. COL. TOM NICKERSON: It's a very tough environment. It's the first time that we've recruited for the volunteer force during a protracted war, so there are some challenges. TOM BEARDEN: Is the war the issue or is the economy a factor as well? COL. TOM NICKERSON: I think there's a number of things. First of all, I think there are a lot more opportunities for young Americans today than there have been in the past, a tribute, if you will, to the improving economy. Sponsoring sporting events and other tactics ANNOUNCER IN BOXING RING: It is with great pleasure that I introduce you to the United States Army's Chicago recruiting battalion who will be presenting our colors -- TOM BEARDEN: So the Army has stepped up efforts to spread its message by going to sporting events... and by bringing sports celebrities into schools. Recently recruiters brought Army-sponsored bull rider Mike Lee to meet adoring fans in Calhan, Colorado. MIKE LEE: You can get something from the soldiers; you can learn something from these guys that come here to your school. They give you a new mindset on life that will make you a successful person. RECRUITER: The Army has more than what you see or hear on the news. My career in the United States Army started back in 1973. I did not have a job; I had no focus, no direction, so I joined the Army to get that. It instilled in me discipline that stays with me today. TOM BEARDEN: The Army is now spending nearly $100 million a year to sponsor outreach events like professional bull riding, rock concerts and NASCAR races. They are events that typically attract crowds of young men and women who are considered most likely to be receptive to the Army sales pitch. Sgt. Major Ozell Johnson is in charge of recruiting in the Chicago area. He says these days that initial contact is the easy part. SGT. MAJOR OZELL JOHNSON: For the most part, we found that most young men and women are really want to serve their country; however, when they get home and tell mom and dad, hey this is something I want to do, then that's where the resistance starts. AD SPONSORED BY U.S. ARMY (mother speaking to her son): Something good happen today? AD SPONSORED BY U.S. ARMY (son speaking): I found someone to pay for me to go to college -- TOM BEARDEN: So the Army just released a new series of television ads aimed at what the Army calls "influencers": parents, teachers and other adults who have influence in a young person's life. AD SPONSORED BY U.S. ARMY (son speaking): It's time for me to be the man. AD SPONSORED BY U.S. ARMY (mother speaking): Okay, tell me more. TOM BEARDEN: The Army is using a lot of different tactics to try to meet its personnel requirements. Some 1,500 additional recruiters have been assigned. Signing bonuses for new recruits have doubled; they're now as much as $20,000 and there's talk of raising them even further. RECRUITER: Have you ever thought about the Army as a viable option and as a career choice for you? TOM BEARDEN: The maximum age of recruits has been raised to forty. And the number of high school dropouts the Army has accepted has doubled. While that particular change can boost the number of recruits in the short term, military sociologist Charles Moskos says that they will hurt the Army in the long run. CHARLES MOSKOS: Down the road it's going to have very, very strong negative effects to recruit people who are not qualified. And it's a fact that the lower your education level, the more likely you are not to complete your term of enlistment, so dropping the standards is going to make the dropout rate even greater. That's why the real market has to be looked at college graduates -- something that the Defense Department has not yet paid attention to. TOM BEARDEN: The most significant drops in recruiting has been among African Americans. In 2000, blacks made up 23-percent of all recruits; five years later, it's 14-percent. Seventeen year old Keith Nellums, a junior at Englewood Tech Prep High School in Chicago, says he once considered military service. KEITH NELLUMS: I really saw it as a way to get an education and get a good background. But with the war in Iraq and I was seeing how people was dying, it just scared me basically. TOM BEARDEN: Polls indicate that African Americans overwhelmingly oppose the war. Among African American youth only 36 percent thought the war was justified, compared to 61 percent of white youths. 'Counter-recruiting' and alleged unethical conduct TOM BEARDEN: Army recruiters insist they aren't troubled by the decline in black recruits, saying that 14 percent more accurately represents the percentage of African Americans in society at large. Even so, Army outreach into minority neighborhoods and schools like Englewood has significantly increased. Students here say recruiters have escalated the pressure to sign on. Senior Letoya Kimbough is the battalion commander of her junior ROTC unit at Englewood. She's been heavily recruited by all branches of the military. She told recruiters she's going to college first -- and will then join the Navy. But the navy recruiter is still calling. TOM BEARDEN: How often do you hear from the recruiters? LETOYA KIMBOUGH: Almost every day he calls my house. TOM BEARDEN: What do the recruiters say when they call your house? LETOYA KIMBOUGH: He like tries to encourage me to change my decision, change my mind, like go into the military now instead of going to college first. TOM BEARDEN: Some believe pressure on recruiters to meet their quotas has led to violations of Army regulations. In Colorado, Arvada High School Senior David McSwane says he wanted to see just how desperate recruiters were so he put them to the test. DAVID McSWANE: I was just curious, how far would they go to get one more soldier? TOM BEARDEN: McSwane, an honors student and editorial page editor of his high school newspaper, presented himself at a local recruiting office. DAVID McSWANE: That's when I told him that I was a 17 year old dropout and that I have a drug addiction. TOM BEARDEN: And what did he say? DAVID McSWANE: He said the drug addiction wasn't a problem, that we would cross that bridge when we come to it. TOM BEARDEN: And what did that turn out to mean? DAVID McSWANE: That there was a way of beating a drug test, the way he knew with this stuff that he would give me, a detox drink to pass the urinalysis to get in the Army. TOM BEARDEN: McSwane says the recruiter took him in a government vehicle to buy the drug elimination kit and also told him how to get a fake high-school diploma. DAVID McSWANE: What my recruiter told me to do was go on the Internet, type in fake diploma and order one off the Internet, it would need to look real, have a foil seal on it, and I would need transcripts to go along with it. The high school name he gave me, which is imaginary, was Faith Hill Baptist School. So I did that and I brought it in and he said it was good and he gave it to his superiors and they cleared it. TOM BEARDEN: McSwane secretly taped his phone conversations with the recruiters. DAVID McSWANE ON TAPE: So they accepted my diploma and all that? RECRUITER ON TAPE: Yeah, that's what they told us, so? DAVID McSWANE ON TAPE: All right. So they don't know that it's fake or anything? I'm not going to get in trouble? RECRUITER: Right. They won't know. TOM BEARDEN: The Army has begun an investigation of the two soldiers involved. They have been removed from recruiting duties. Lt. Col. Jeffrey Brodeur heads Denver's Army recruiting battalion. TOM BEARDEN: Did these allegations come out of the blue? Were they a surprise to you? LT. COL. JEFFREY BRODEUR: They were; they were. I would not have suspected those two recruiters, I really would not have; they are good soldiers and they present themselves as good soldiers. TOM BEARDEN: Lt. Col Brodeur says the accused recruiters never submitted McSwane's paperwork, and no one else had seen the diploma. The U.S. Army recruiting command acknowledges there were 320 substantiated cases of wrongdoing by recruiters last year, a 14 percent increase from 2003. The violations ranged from threats and coercion to false promises that the recruit would not be sent to Iraq. WOMAN AT COUNTER-RECRUITING ALLY: I say that schools are for learning, not for recruiting -- TOM BEARDEN: Those critical of what they see as overly aggressive recruiting tactics have stepped up their opposition --demanding that recruiters not be given such broad access to the schools. And some school counselors and teachers like Jackson Potter at Englewood are inviting so-called counter-recruiters into their classrooms. JACKSON POTTER: Barry Romo here is a guest speaker. He's going to give you today a very different perspective than what you've heard from military recruiters, what it's like to serve in the Army. Well, there's a different view from people who have served and seen the death and carnage. TOM BEARDEN: Vietnam veteran Barry Romo bluntly described his experiences. BARRY ROMO: I blew the top of a Vietnamese man's head off. It went in his skull and totally blew off the top of his skull. His brain was sitting there -- TOM BEARDEN: Romo went on to join Vietnam Veterans Against the War, and has been an antiwar activist ever since. STUDENT: What advice would you give to a young man graduating out of high school, thinking about going in -- BARRY ROMO: Going into the service? Going to Iraq, I would say not to do it. You're better off working at McDonalds and going to a community college; you're gambling with your life and your future; you're gambling with your personal integrity. TOM BEARDEN: Romo told the students to be wary of recruiters making promises they wouldn't keep. BARRY ROMO: The Army recruiters promised us free medical care for life. But we didn't get it in writing. Before any of you enlist, make sure everything you're promised is there. RECRUITER TALKING TO HIGH SCHOOL KIDS: We're just trying to give you the information on what we can offer you to get where you want to go in life. TOM BEARDEN: Despite all of these "challenges," as the Army calls them, the demand for new recruits is relentless. The Army goal for May is even higher than last month. Recruiters all over the country are now out pounding the pavement, looking for 8,000 new recruits to make quota. JIM LEHRER: The Army for the first time in recent history has ordered a one-day suspension of all recruiting next Friday. The Army's 7,500 recruiters will be lectured on what is proper to encourage people to enlist. ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 18) Just a reminder: Monday May 16, 7 P.M., "DEATH ROW ON THE STREET: THE KILLING OF JULIO AYALA", presentation by Tania, Julio's sister. At Idriss Stelley Foundation and Dockta Cooper Networking Project office, 4921 3rd Street, SF, between Palou and Quesada. You can bring the ninos if you like ! The meeting is hosted every other Monday at 7 PM by the Campaign to End the Death Penalty, Bayview Chapter. The rest of the meeting will be spent on strategizing for summer CEDP actions, particularly on the case of Tookie Williams, 5 times honoree for the Nobel Prize, innocent Brother on death row in San Quentin after 20+ years, who might be scheduled for execution in 2005. When it comes to Justice4Julio Campaign, the Steeringring Committee (independently from CEDP) is planning to meet after the general meeting to divide tasks (press release, flyers for Press conference and Protest on Wed 18 at 5 P.M. on the steps of SSF City Hall on Grand Boulevard in South City, networking on carpool from SF for folks who have no wheels, how to talk to homies, friends, families and co-workers about the murder of Julio and upcoming actions. & if you ain't got the time to do any of this, maybe just show up to show some love to la familia on Monday ! * Paz * Valor * Solidaridad * mesha Monge-Irizarry Idriss Stelley Foundation 4921 3rd St SF 94124 Home office 900 Ingerson, a block away from the Ayala Family (415) 595-8251 24HR Bilingual Spa. Crisis Line http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Justice4Julio Please sign up on the group if you haven't already ! Also when you get a chance, please check out: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Justice4Gus/ about the murder of Gus Rugley By SFPD on 6-29-04 ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 19) Let's face it - the state has lost its mind The media coverage of this past election was a pastiche. Our right to know what our rulers are doing to people the world over is being lost in the new propaganda consensus. By John Pilger http://www.newstatesman.com/nscoverstory.htm ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 20) The family released a statement... by Michael Gillespie (Thursday 12 May 2005) "Mass round-ups and detentions of innocent civilians, torture and abuse of prisoners and detainees, America's honor and prestige at the lowest point ever, and investigations that whitewash the president's men and blame it all on the enlisted personnel. Thus the obscene spectacle of the grieving families at funerals forced by the president's dishonesty to defend the honor of their dead even as they mourn: "He was noble and always carried himself with honor." "[He was] a loving husband and father, a devoted son and brother." "He wanted to go where good people needed help." "He will be dearly missed." Small wonder that the president, desperately attempting to hide behind a façade of rigid religiosity that glorifies war and false patriotism that exalts the very evils it claims to despise, never attends the funerals of those who have died in the line of duty. How could he?" http://usa.mediamonitors.net/content/view/full/14869/ ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 21)Recall Urged for Illegal Biotech Corn FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE May 11, 2005 Contact: Craig Culp, Center for Food Safety, (202) 547-9359; Bill Freese, Friends of the Earth, (301) 985-3011 Government Must Come Clean on Secret Dealings with Crop Developer Several hundred tons of the unapproved Bt10 corn, enough to plant 37,000 acres, were mistakenly sold to U.S. farmers under the name of an approved variety from 2001 to 2004. The resultant harvest of an estimated 165,000 tons have been sold as food or feed in the U.S. and abroad. Syngenta first informed the U.S. government of the mix-up in December 2004, but federal regulatory officials did not inform the U.S. public that they were eating the untested corn until the story leaked four months later. U.S. trading partners were also kept in the dark about possible importation of the corn. "The potential for yet undetected contamination of other corn varieties via cross-pollination or seed mix-ups means the unapproved corn could persist in the food supply for years," said Doug Gurian-Sherman, senior scientist with Center for Food Safety and a former risk assessment scientist with EPA. "This happened because the U.S. regulatory agencies have not followed their own risk assessment procedures for allowing commercialization of genetically engineered foods." http://www.centerforfoodsafety.org/press_release5.11.2005.cfm ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 22) Amman, Iraq, and Al-Qaim ** Dahr Jamail's Iraq Dispatches ** ** http://dahrjamailiraq.com ** May 14, 2005 Amman, Iraq, and Al-Qaim It feels uncomfortable writing about Iraq from Amman...but my close friends, Abu Talat (my close friend and interpreter) and intuition have all provided the same message-do not go inside Iraq at this time. So I've been in Amman now for about a week, and will resume posting stories from here soon. We've been working on a couple of stories about Iraqis in Amman...those should be out soon. For now, I am using my Iraqi contacts in Baghdad (and other cities) as well as those who have joined me here, along with watching Al-Jazeera television, to pass on some news and photos about the situation. Abu Talat phoned his family today in Baghdad. They've had no electricity for four days. They told him (uncomfirmed) that all of Iraq has had no electricity for several days. As Abu Talat says, "Baghdad is running on the generator." Of course the gas crisis persists augmented by the lack of electricity, along with constantly increasing attacks. We were in a taxi earlier, driving across the orderly streets of Amman and talking about the situation in Iraq. "Now I feel ashamed to tell people I am Iraq," says Abu Talat after he told the taxi driver he is from Baghdad, "Because my country has been totally destroyed." I look out the window, not knowing what to say. I think to say, 'But it isn't your fault, habibi," but instead sit quietly, feeling that any words would be inadequate. The situation around Al-Qaim where "Operation Matador" is ongoing, appears to be a micro-version of Fallujah. The military and corporate media continue to portray the situation as if "foreign fighters" have taken control of Qaim and surrounding villages (as was said about Fallujah) when reports from the ground state that interviews with the fighters have them all saying they are Iraqi. Of course it behooves the military to claim they are battling "foreign fighters," because as in Fallujah and elsewhere, it doesn't look good in the press to admit that they are fighting Iraqis who are fighting for their independence from the occupiers of their country. Even the marines in Fallujah admitted they had killed a grand total of 35 foreign fighters there. That kind of debunks the myth of a foreign terrorist group taking over the city and terrorizing the citizens. Another similarity between Qaim and Fallujah is that now there is a humanitarian crisis in Qaim from the fighting. There are 1,300 displaced families (approximately 80,000 people) from Qaim and the hospital there was destroyed amidst fighting on 8 May between resistance fighters and locals. On the 9th there was no electricity or water in Qaim and the surrounding areas and schools were closed. On the 11th US warplanes continued to bomb Obeidy and other nearby locations. All of the aforementioned statistics were provided to me by a friend who is here working with the Italian Consortium of Solidarity, an Italian NGO based in Amman which provides humanitarian aid and has set up an emergency working group for al-Qaim and has contacts on the ground there. She also reports that people there need shelter, food, water and medical care. The loss of life continues unabated....in the last week at least 37 US soldiers have been killed, while at least 450 Iraqis have died amidst a huge surge of ongoing attacks since 28 April, when the Iraqi government was officially announced. Abdul-Khaliq al-Raqwi, the director of communications for the Iraqi Government in al-Qaim, confirmed to Al-Jazeera that 2 US helicopters were shot down in Qusaybah this past Wednesday. The military denied this, even though witnesses on the ground confirmed the report as well. Another interesting incident which occurred the beginning of the month was when two F-18 Hornet jets crashed in Iraq. The military claimed there was no indication of hostile fire, yet they crashed in different locations. On the day of their crash, Baghdad airport was closed to commercial air traffic for three days with no reason given by authorities. More writing, photos and commentary at http://dahrjamailiraq.com You are subscribed to the Dahr Jamail's email Iraq Dispatches because you requested a subscription at some point. You can visit http://dahrjamailiraq.com/email_list/ to subscribe or unsubscribe to the email list. Or, you can unsubscribe by sending an email to iraq_dispatches-request@dahrjamailiraq.com and write unsubscribe in the subject or the body of the email. (c)2004, 2005 Dahr Jamail. All images and text are protected by United States and international copyright law. If you would like to reprint Dahr's Dispatches on the web, you need to include this copyright notice and a prominent link to the DahrJamailIraq.com website. Any other use of images and text including, but not limited to, reproduction, use on another website, copying and printing requires the permission of Dahr Jamail. Of course, feel free to forward Dahr's dispatches via email. Iraq_Dispatches mailing list http://lists.dahrjamailiraq.com/mailman/listinfo/iraq_dispatches ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 23) 'I Will Not Kill' campaign launches on Capitol Hill News from The Fellowship of Reconciliation Fwd: [militaryfreeschools] Fwd: from: Rosalio Munoz This cam via Arlene Aginouye a leader of the counter recruitment movement in L.A. Coalition Against Militarization of the Schools. Rosalio --- aginouye@aol.com wrote: on Capitol Hill CAMS is supporting this national campaign. Please feel free to send a statement why you will not kill send a picture to the website, and spread the word if you can. Thanks. Arlene Date: Fri, 13 May 2005 23:44:40 GMT From: "The Fellowship of Reconciliation." To: "" Subject: 'I Will Not Kill' campaign launches on Capitol Hill Greetings, News from The Fellowship of Reconciliation 'I Will Not Kill' Campaign to be launched at Capitol New FOR initiative supports right to resist war As U.S. military recruiting numbers fall, the military is stepping up efforts to entice youth to join their ranks. The launching of the Fellowship of Reconciliation's 'I Will Not Kill' campaign is an to educate youth about the reality of war and their right to say 'no' to killing. I Will Not Kill (http://ga3.org/ct/Qd_SBOK10Xs9/)will hold a press conference on Monday, May 16th, at 3:30 p.m. at the U.S.Capitol Building (Room HC-9, basement level on the House side). FOR members and supporters in the DC area are welcome to attend as well! Co-sponsoring organizations include the Center on Conscience and War (http://www.centeronconscience.org http://www.centeronconscience.org/) and the office of Rep.Cynthia McKinney (D-GA). Rep. John Lewis (D-GA) will also attend. "The human right to say no to militarism and killing must be unconditionally supported for everyone," said Ibrahim Ramey, coordinator of FOR's disarmament program. "It is only when we refuse to kill that real peace and, in this nation and throughout the world, becomes living possibility". The mission of the I Will Not Kill campaign is to Raise awareness of resistance to war, educate youth about the impacts of war, oppose a future draft, dismantle the selective service system, promote a culture of life and promote conscientious objection to war as a positive alternative to violence and a way to strengthen and uplift communities and all of civil society. The campaign will target high school and college age youth of color and youth from rural and impoverished white communities. With this audience in mind, the coalition of organizations sponsoring this campaign stress the importance of participation by youth and people of color. For more information, go to http://ga3.org/ct/Q1_SBOK10Xsk/ To donate to the I Will Not Kill campaign, visit http://ga3.org/ct/Q7_SBOK10Xso/ Job openings at FOR for two Development Associates The Fellowship of Reconciliation is looking for two Development Associates. The deadline for applications is May 20th, so hurry! For more information, go to http://ga3.org/ct/Pp_SBOK10Xsi/ or call Anita at 845-358-4601 x32. ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 24) Bob Smith, Chair Depleted Uranium Awareness Committee P.O. Box 480 Franklinton, Louisiana 70438 (504) 581-1086 PRESS RELEASE: On May 12th, Peter Kovacs, the Managing News Editor of the New Orleans Times- Picayune, the region‚s major daily newspaper, in a telephone conversation with veterans advocate Bob Smith, and a Times-Picayune political analyst stated that a story concerning a bill giving the right for service women and men from Louisiana to a best practices health-screening test for exposure to depleted uranium would not be published. The reason Kovacs gave was because the bill was not costing the state any money. Kovacs went on to say that the Times Picayune criteria for newsworthiness was how much it would cost. The fact that the bill supports the troops‚ health concerns is not the criteria. Four other media outlets in the region have already covered the story expressing concerns for the troops. On Tuesday, May 3rd, The Louisiana State House of Representatives passed a bill to give the right to all Louisiana Servicemen and women returning from Operations Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom for testing for depleted uranium contamination. Louisiana is the first state in the nation to have their House pass this type of bill. The vote was 101 to 0 in favor. The Louisiana Brigade, with approximately 4,500 National Guardsmen, is expected to return home from Iraq between October and December 2005. DU is radioactive and can cause leukemia, DNA breakdown, various other cancers, and birth defects in offspring of soldiers who have come into contact with it. The VA and the DOD have been conducting testing that is not sensitive enough to detect whether a soldier has been contaminated. This bill would have helped alleviate that by pressuring the State‚s Adjutant General to insure that the test mandated by DOD orders and Army regulations would be executed. The „money‰ criteria used by the New Orleans Times-Picayune is shocking in light of the fact that the country is at war and legislation supporting the troops health concerns is of utmost importance. F O R I M M E D I A T E R E L E A S E Bob Smith Chair Depleted Uranium Awareness Committee Louisiana Activist Network ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 25) CASTRO DEFENDS FUGITIVE SOUGHT BY U.S. http://playahata.com/hatablog/wp-trackback.php/505 HAVANA- President Fidel Castro has rejected calls to hand over a black militant convicted in 1973 of killing a New Jersey state trooper, saying she's avictim of racial persecution and not a terrorist, as U.S. officials declared recently. "They wanted to portray her as a terrorist, something that was an injustice, a brutality, an infamous lie," Castro said in a television address Tuesday night. While Castro did not identify the woman by name, he was clearly alluding to ASSATA SHAKUR - the former JOANNE CHESIMARD - who was put on a U.S. government terrorist watch list May 2. On the same day, New Jersey officials announced a $1 million reward for her capture. Castro's remarks were his first comment on the new U.S. actions. A member of the Black Liberation Army, Shakur, 57, was convicted of killing New Jersey State Trooper Werner Foerster as he lay on the ground. She escaped from prison in 1979 and fled to Cuba. Castro referred to her as a victim of "the fierce repression against the black movement in the United States" and said she had been "a true political prisoner." "They have always been hunting her, searching for her because of the fact that there was an accident in which a policeman died," Castro said, reflecting Shakur's assertion that she did not shoot the officer. Castro said an appeal for her expulsion had been raised with him several years ago by a woman who was both "a friend of Cuba" and a friend of former President Clinton. "I transmitted my opinion to the president of the United States," he said, though he did not specify who raised the issue nor when she visited. He made clear the case involved New Jersey. Castro suggested that the action was meant to divert attention from Cuba's demand that U.S. officials arrest Luis Posada Carriles, who is wanted in Venezuela on charges of involvement in blowing up a civilian Cuban jetliner in 1976, killing 73 people. His attorney has said that Posada, a former CIA employee, slipped into the United States and is seeking asylum. Posada denies any role in the airplane attack. Castro, in a televised appearance Wednesday that lasted four hours, stepped up his denunciations of the U.S. government for failure to arrest Posada. Castro read summaries of newly released U.S. intelligence documents linking Posada and other anti-Castro militants to terrorist attacks beyond the 1976 bombing of a jetliner that killed 73 people. The Cuban leader previously has called for a massive rally on May 17 in front of the U.S. Interests Section, or diplomatic mission, to demand the arrest of Posada. He dedicated most of Tuesday's remarks to descriptions of numerous terrorist actions that Cuba alleges Posada and his anti-Castro associates have committed over the past 35 years. Castro referred to earlier published suggestions that Posada and Florida-based exile Orlando Bosch could have been involved in the 1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy. "There are strange things, very strange, mixed up here," Castro said. Marxism mailing list Marxism@lists.econ.utah.edu http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxism ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 26) Subject: second announcement about peace activities in Richmond memorial day week ----- Original Message ----- From: "J. Gab..... ....global.net> Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2005 9:02 PM dear friends please pass this along to anyone you think might be available to help us -- thanks and peace to us and people everywhere Gabriella PEACE ACTIVITIES IN RICHMOND , California, USA A coalition of West County groups will engage in a series of peace, anti-violence, and anti-war actions in recognition of Memorial Day. The public is encouraged to stand with us at the following actions. We will be exhibiting large images of the war dead using posterboards that have three- by five-inch pictures and the names of American soldiers and images of Iraqis who have died in Iraq in the last two years. This powerful visual presentation of the consequences of war is on loan from United For Peace and Justice Bay Area. The idea is to demonstrate the human cost of war to the people in Iraq, the US soldiers and the people in our community. We will have literature about the military and their recent recruitment efforts, information for kids about the reality of joining the military as well as some literature that connects the lack of services in West Contra Costa county, the huge military budget, and local violence. We plan to gather: Tuesday May 24th from 11 am to 1pm at Contra Costa College between the library and the student union. The college is at 2600 Mission Bell Drive in San Pablo. Wednesday May 25th at 1:50 (dismissal time) in front of Kennedy High School, at 4300 Cutting Blvd, Richmond Thursday May 26th at 3:05 (dismissal time) in front of Richmond High school at 1250 23rd St, Richmond Friday May 27th at the Richmond Farmer's market (Macdonald and 27th St) from 11 am - 1 pm Saturday May 28th at Nicholl Park ( 32nd and Macdonald ) from 12 - 1 pm. We hope to get at least 10 to 20 activists at each locale even though the events are during the work day. We hope that people can come on their lunch hour for any part of each event. If you want more information, please contact Gabriella Heinsheimer at gheinsheim@sbcglobal.net or 524-5297. If you know when you can come please contact Soula Culver at sc@lmi.net ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* 27) Recruiter-turned-peacenik hits nerve in N.C. By Rick Hampson, USA TODAY http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2005-03-20-recruiter-peacenik_x.htm WAYNESVILLE, N.C. - If you were young and tough and wanted a challenge, Jimmy Massey was the man to see. He was gung ho. He was Semper Fi . He was the strutting, cussing, tobacco- chewing Marine recruiter. The staff sergeant won scores of recruits in this and other patriotic mountain towns by talking courage, honor, commitment. Then, following his own adage - "you gotta walk the walk" – he went to Iraq. That was two years ago, before Massey left the Marines, returned to Waynesville, and began saying things about the war that make people wonder whether they really knew him in the first place. These days Massey carries a sign around town that says he killed Iraqi civilians. He confesses to having enticed some recruits with false promises, and encouraged others to lie on applications. He has gone to Canada to testify for an Army deserter seeking asylum, and he has spoken at peace rallies. He left a Marine recruiter and returned a peacenik. This is the story of a veteran and the town to which he returned - a town that no longer recognizes the man who once preached the leatherneck gospel and now has a whole different sermon. Carolyn Burkes, whose son served in Iraq, wants to kick his butt for recruiting him. Louise Goss, whose son will soon return to Iraq, wants to run him over for turning on the troops. Cpl. Lincoln Walburn, a reservist who could go to Iraq any time, wants to deck him. "I looked up to the staff sergeant," says Walburn, whom Massey recruited, "but he is dishonoring himself and the Marine Corps." Others want to shake Massey's hand. "It's unthinkably courageous to admit you're wrong and turn your life around," says Daniel Miller, whose Marine son was recruited by Massey. "Most people would slink away. He's trying to make amends." More than anything, people are puzzled by Massey's transformation. But they don't know the whole story: that for two years before he went to Iraq, Massey apparently suffered from depression, which he blamed on the stress of recruiting, and that before rejoining his unit, he stopped taking his medication. Does knowing the whole story make a difference? Did depression color what Massey saw in Iraq, or did what he saw there make him depressed? Soldiers talk about the "fog of war." Sometimes things aren't any clearer on the home front. When Massey came here as the recruiter in 1999 after eight years in the Corps, he seemed to embody its mystique, down to his tattoos. Kids dropped by the recruiting station just to hang out. "Sgt. Massey was someone I could talk to," Walburn says. But there was a side people didn't see, according to a military medical report furnished by Massey. It was written after he returned from Iraq. When he was a recruiter, Massey felt stressed by pressure to fill his quota and by guilt over the half-truths he told to fill it. He developed shingles and high blood pressure. In May 2001, halfway through his three-year tour, he was diagnosed with depression. But in April 2003, according to the medical report, Massey asked "to taper off his psychiatric medications. In anticipation of finishing recruiting duty, he expected that things would just magically improve. He reports that he would tell himself that everything would be great as soon as he was off recruiting and in a normal unit again." That fall, Massey says, he stopped taking antidepressants and prepared to rejoin his infantry weapons unit. Walburn heard worry in Massey's voice, "but he kept up a good front. If you're a staff sergeant, you don't want to look weak." A year later, Massey was back. He had left the Marines, gotten engaged to a local woman and was selling furniture. No one knew what happened in Iraq. When Mark Phillips, whom Massey recruited into the Marine Forces Reserve, ran into him on the street, "He just told me he had some issues and he had to get out." Then, in February 2004, the local newspaper published a story about Massey. Massey told The Mountaineer that he and his platoon were staffing a roadblock near Baghdad when a car inexplicably failed to slow as it approached, despite the Marines' warnings. The Marines opened fire, killing three occupants. Only the driver survived. Massey said that these and other civilian deaths depressed him, and that finally he told his superiors he thought that the Geneva Conventions were being violated. He was sent back to the USA, where a military doctor diagnosed him with major depression and post-traumatic stress disorder. He was honorably discharged with an 80% disability. Massey's friends were shocked by his charges about civilian deaths. Walburn says he asked himself, "That's the hard ass that recruited me?" Louise Goss, whose son was recruited by Massey, wrote a letter to the newspaper accusing him of turning his back on his recruits: "This is war, Mr. Massey. ... Innocent people die in war, always have and always will." The Marines say Massey's charges about civilian killings have been "found to be unsubstantiated," according to a Corps spokesman, Maj. Doug Powell. He declined to discuss in detail the incidents Massey described, but said, "You have to consider the rules of engagement and the current threat," which demanded heightened suspicion of civilians and civilian vehicles. Many Massey recruits feel his description of what he saw in Iraq doesn't support his conclusions. Soldiers, they argue, are obligated to fire on a vehicle that fails to stop at a war zone checkpoint. "In that situation, it's either kill or be killed," Walburn says. Phillips agrees: "He was doing his job, whether he knows it or not." Massey has his defenders. As a recruiter, "He was straight with me," Marine Sgt. Noah Miller says. "Some recruiters offer you the sky because if they told you the real deal, they wouldn't get nearly the number of people they get. ... That was not the case with Jimmy Massey." For others, Massey's claims raise difficult issues. Louise Owens sent a copy of her letter in The Mountaineer to her son Cody, who spent six months in Iraq last year. His reaction surprised her: "He said, Mom, I'm not saying he's right or wrong, but some of the things that happen in Iraq, the U.S. people don't know about. ... I don't like to hear anyone putting Massey down who's not been over there and done that.' " At 33, Massey is not what you might expect in a former Marine sergeant. He seems introspective. He says he is in therapy, and takes six different prescription medicines for maladies ranging from depression to high blood pressure. He lives on disability pay. Most local veterans regard Massey as "an outcast," according to Roy Pressley, an officer at the American Legion post here. He keeps to himself, and left his sales job because of tension over his comments on the war. He says that once, when he was out walking with his protest sign, a man driving a car swerved at him. Why the one-man picket line? Isn't he afraid of looking like a nut? "It's leadership by example. That's what the Marines teaches," he replies. "How can I ask another Marine to protest the war if I haven't done it myself? "That lifestyle never leaves you," he adds. "Honor, courage, commitment - that still works well for me. I still eat and sleep the Marines. I'm still a Marine." He pulls up his right sleeve to reveal, on his right arm, a big purple tattoo: the Marines' eagle, globe and anchor insignia. When Lincoln Walburn is told of his old recruiter's battle with depression, he's not sympathetic. He says Massey should never have tried to go to war. But he understands why Massey had wanted to get back to his combat unit after his stint as a recruiter: "That's the Marine mentality," he says. "He was a staff sergeant in the United States Marine Corps. If that doesn't say something about who you are, I don't know what does." ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------* ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
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