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  • BAUAW NEWSLETTER - SATURDAY, DECEMBER 30, 2006
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  • BAUAW NEWSLETTER - SATURDAY, DECEMBER 30, 2006
  • BAUAW NEWSLETTER - SATURDAY, DECEMBER 30, 2006

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  • BAUAW NEWSLETTER
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    Saturday, December 30, 2006
     

    BAUAW NEWSLETTER - SATURDAY, DECEMBER 30, 2006

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    BARRIO UNIDO FOR A GENERAL AND UNCONDITIONAL AMNESTY

    We make a call to the immigrant community and all those who are
    in solidarity with our struggle to join us in front of the Federal Building
    to protest the raids that we have been victims of and that are occurring
    in different parts of the country.

    They harass us as though we are animals of prey.
    They lock us up in prisons for working for a miserable salary.
    They steal our salaries that we earn with the sweat of our brow.
    They separate us from our children leaving them traumatized for life……

    We denounce the North American government for treating us like garbage
    to be thrown away and taking advantage of our search for our daily bread
    for their own political reasons.

    We denounce the Mexican and Latin American governments for being
    accomplices with the North American government for our misery and
    for this involuntary exodus that has been forced upon us because
    of the political, social, and economic conditions of our countries

    We demand…….
    To cease the immigration raids now!
    To free all detained workers!
    To return jobs to all those detained!
    The right to all undocumented immigrants to unionize!

    We demand a General and Unconditional Amnesty for all!

    Protest the United States government

    When: Friday, January 12, 2007
    Where: 450 Golden Gate (Federal Building)
    Time: 4pm to 7pm
    Join in the struggle!

    For more information call 415-431-9925

    In Spanish:

    BARRIÓ UNIDO POR UNA AMNISTÍA GENERAL E INCONDICIONAL
    Hace un llamado a la población emigrante y a todos las que se
    solidarizan con ella a un piquete enfrente del Edificio Federal
    en protesta a las redadas de que estamos siendo victimas
    en diferentes partes del país.
    DONDE:
    Se nos acosa como si fuéramos animales de caza.

    Se nos encierra en prisiones para trabajar por sueldos de miseria.

    Se nos roban los sueldos que hemos ganado con el sudor de
    nuestra frente…

    Se nos separa de nuestros hijos dejándolos traumados de por vida……

    Denunciamos al gobierno Norte Americano por tratarnos como
    basura desechable y utilizar nuestra búsqueda por el pan de cada
    día para sus propósitos políticos…

    Denunciamos a los gobiernos de México y América latina por ser
    cómplices con el gobierno de Estados Unidos de nuestra miseria
    y de este éxodo involuntario que las condiciones políticas,
    sociales, y económicas de nuestros países nos ha obligado
    a emprender.

    Demandamos.. .

    ¡Cese a las redadas de la migra ahora!
    ¡Libertad a todos los trabajadores detenidos!
    ¡Regreso a su puesto de trabajo a todos los detenidos!
    ¡Derecho de los indocumentados a sindicalizarse!
    ¡Demandamos una Amnistía General e Incondicional para todos!

    Piquete al Gobierno de Estados Unidos
    Cuando: Viernes, 12 de Enero 2007
    Dónde: 450 Golden Gate
    Hora: 4pm a 7pm
    Únete a la lucha
    Para mas información llame a 415-431-9925

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    ARTICLES IN FULL:
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    1) Military considers recruiting foreigners
    Expedited citizenship would be an incentive
    By Bryan Bender, Globe Staff
    December 26, 2006
    http://www.boston. com/news/ nation/washingto n/articles/ 2006/12/26/
    military_considers_ recruiting_ foreigners/

    2) A PALESTINIAN VIEW OF JIMMY CARTER'S BOOK
    Ali Abunimah
    The Wall Street Journal
    26 December 2006
    http://electronicin tifada.net/ v2/article6310. shtml

    3) Free Healthcare in Venezuela Regardless of Class
    Ronald Suarez Rivas
    and Alberto Borrego Avila (photos),
    special envoys
    GRANMA
    December 27, 2006
    Here for you in English. Not yet in English at:
    http://www.granma. cubaweb.cu/ 2006/12/27/ cubamundo/ artic02.html

    4) When Iraqis Gave Up on Government
    Inter Press Service
    Dahr Jamail and Ali Al-Fadhily
    http://dahrjamailir aq.com

    5) My Reflections On The Delphi Struggle In The Year Gone By
    by John Goschka/UAW Local 699
    December 27, 2006
    http://www.futureof theunion. com/

    6) Diamonds' Glitter Fades for a Brazilian Tribe
    By LARRY ROHTER
    December 29, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/29/world/ americas/ 29diamonds. html?ref= americas

    7) Police Officers Charged in Deaths in Hurricane's Aftermath
    By SHAILA DEWAN
    December 29, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/29/us/ 29bridge. html

    8) Pentagon to Request Billions More in War Money
    By DAVID S. CLOUD
    December 30, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/30/washington /30budget. html?_r=1& oref=slogin

    9) Arctic Ice Shelf Broke Off Canadian Island
    By ANDREW C. REVKIN
    December 30, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/30/science/ earth/30ice. html?ref= world

    10) Middle School Girls Gone Wild
    By LAWRENCE DOWNES
    December 29, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/29/opinion/ 29fri4.html?
    em&ex=1167627600& en=fd80f5afa9d5d 414&ei=5087% 0A

    11) Saddam at the End of a Rope
    By TARIQ ALI
    December 30, 2006
    http://groups. yahoo.com/ group/GreenLeft_ discussion/ message/37299

    12) Poll: More troops unhappy with Bush's course in Iraq
    By Robert Hodierne
    December 29, 2006
    http://www.armytime s.com/story. php?f=1-292925- 2449372.php

    13) Saddam Execution Set to Destabilise Iraq Further
    Inter Press Service
    Dahr Jamail and Ali al-Fadhily
    Dahr Jamail's MidEast Dispatches
    http://dahrjamailir aq.com

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    1) Military considers recruiting foreigners
    Expedited citizenship would be an incentive
    By Bryan Bender, Globe Staff
    December 26, 2006
    http://www.boston. com/news/ nation/washingto n/articles/ 2006/12/26/
    military_considers_ recruiting_ foreigners/

    WASHINGTON -- The armed forces, already struggling to meet recruiting
    goals, are considering expanding the number of noncitizens in the ranks
    -- including disputed proposals to open recruiting stations overseas and
    putting more immigrants on a faster track to US citizenship if they
    volunteer -- according to Pentagon officials.

    Foreign citizens serving in the US military is a highly charged issue,
    which could expose the Pentagon to criticism that it is essentially
    using mercenaries to defend the country. Other analysts voice concern
    that a large contingent of noncitizens under arms could jeopardize
    national security or reflect badly on Americans' willingness to serve
    in uniform.

    The idea of signing up foreigners who are seeking US citizenship
    is gaining traction as a way to address a critical need for the Pentagon,
    while fully absorbing some of the roughly one million immigrants that
    enter the United States legally each year.

    The proposal to induct more noncitizens, which is still largely on the
    drawing board, has to clear a number of hurdles. So far, the Pentagon
    has been quiet about specifics -- including who would be eligible
    to join, where the recruiting stations would be, and what the minimum
    standards might involve, including English proficiency. In the meantime,
    the Pentagon and immigration authorities have expanded a program
    that accelerates citizenship for legal residents who volunteer
    for the military.

    And since Sept. 11, 2001, the number of imm igrants in uniform
    who have become US citizens has increased from 750 in 2001
    to almost 4,600 last year, according to military statistics.

    With severe manpower strains because of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
    -- and a mandate to expand the overall size of the military --
    the Pentagon is under pressure to consider a variety of proposals
    involving foreign recruits, according to a military affairs analyst.

    "It works as a military idea and it works in the context of American
    immigration, " said Thomas Donnelly , a military scholar at the conservative
    American Enterprise Institute in Washington and a leading proponent
    of recruiting more foreigners to serve in the military.

    As the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan grind on, the Pentagon has warned
    Congress and the White House that the military is stretched "to the
    breaking point."

    Both President Bush and Robert M. Gates, his new defense secretary,
    have acknowledged that the total size of the military must be
    expanded to help alleviate the strain on ground troops, many
    of whom have been deployed repeatedly in combat theaters.

    Bush said last week that he has ordered Gates to come up with
    a plan for the first significant increase in ground forces since the
    end of the Cold War. Democrats who are preparing to take control
    of Congress, meanwhile, promise to make increasing the size
    of the military one of their top legislative priorities in 2007.

    "With today's demands placing such a high strain on our service
    members, it becomes more crucial than ever that we work
    to alleviate their burden," said Representative Ike Skelton ,
    a Missouri Democrat who is set to chair the House Armed
    Services Committee, and who has been calling for a larger
    Army for more than a decade.

    But it would take years and billions of dollars to recruit, train,
    and equip the 30,000 troops and 5,000 Marines the Pentagon
    says it needs. And military recruiters, fighting the perception that
    signing up means a ticket to Baghdad, have had to rely on financial
    incentives and lower standards to meet their quotas.

    That has led Pentagon officials to consider casting a wider net for
    noncitizens who are already here, said Lieutenant Colonel Bryan
    Hilferty , an Army spokesman.

    Already, the Army and the Immigration and Customs Enforcement
    division of the Department of Homeland Security have "made it
    easier for green-card holders who do enlist to get their citizenship, "
    Hilferty said.

    Other Army officials, who asked not to be identified, said personnel
    officials are working with Congress and other parts of the government
    to test the feasibility of going beyond US borders to recruit soldiers
    and Marines.

    Currently, Pentagon policy stipulates that only immigrants legally
    residing in the United States are eligible to enlist. There are currently
    about 30,000 noncitizens who serve in the US armed forces, making
    up about 2 percent of the active-duty force, according to statistics
    from the military and the Council on Foreign Relations. About
    100 noncitizens have died in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    A recent change in US law, however, gave the Pentagon authority
    to bring immigrants to the United States if it determines it is vital
    to national security. So far, the Pentagon has not taken advantage
    of it, but the calls are growing to take use the new authority.

    Indeed, some top military thinkers believe the United States should
    go as far as targeting foreigners in their native countries.

    "It's a little dramatic," said Michael O'Hanlon , a military specialist
    at the nonpartisan Brookings Institution and another supporter
    of the proposal. "But if you don't get some new idea how to do this,
    we will not be able to achieve an increase" in the size of the
    armed forces.

    "We have already done the standard things to recruit new soldiers,
    including using more recruiters and new advertising campaigns,"
    O'Hanlon added.

    O'Hanlon and others noted that the country has relied before on
    sizable numbers of noncitizens to serve in the military -- in the
    Revolutionary War, for example, German and French soldiers
    served alongside the colonists, and locals were recruited into
    US ranks to fight insurgents in the Philippines.

    Other nations have recruited foreign citizens: In France, the famed
    Foreign Legion relies on about 8,000 noncitizens; Nepalese soldiers
    called Gurkhas have fought and died with British Army forces
    for two centuries; and the Swiss Guard, which protects the Vatican,
    consists of troops who hail from many nations.

    "It is not without historical precedent," said Donnelly, author
    of a recent book titled "The Army We Need," which advocates
    for a larger military.

    Still, to some military officials and civil rights groups, relying on large
    number of foreigners to serve in the military is offensive.

    The Hispanic rights advocacy group National Council of La Raza has
    said the plan sends the wrong message that Americans themselves
    are not willing to sacrifice to defend their country. Officials have also
    raised concerns that immigrants would be disproportionately sent
    to the front lines as "cannon fodder" in any conflict.

    Some within the Army privately express concern that a big push to
    recruit noncitizens would smack of "the decline of the American
    empire," as one Army official who asked not to be identified put it.

    Officially, the military remains confident that it can meet recruiting
    goals -- no matter how large the military is increased -- without
    having to rely on foreigners.

    "The Army can grow to whatever size the nation wants us to grow
    to," Hilferty said. "National defense is a national challenge, not
    the Army's challenge."

    He pointed out that just 15 years ago, during the Gulf War, the Army
    had a total of about 730,000 active-duty soldiers, amounting to
    about one American in 350 who were serving in the active-duty Army.

    "Today, with 300 million Americans and about 500,000 active-duty
    soldiers, only about one American in 600 is an active-duty soldier,"
    he said. "America did then, and we do now, have an all-volunteer
    force, and I see no reason why America couldn't increase the number
    of Americans serving."

    But Max Boot, a national security specialist at the Council on Foreign
    Relations, said that the number of noncitizens the armed forces have
    now is relatively small by historical standards.

    "In the 19th century, when the foreign-born population of the United
    States was much higher, so was the percentage of foreigners serving
    in the military," Boot wrote in 2005.

    "During the Civil War, at least 20 percent of Union soldiers were
    immigrants, and many of them had just stepped off the boat before
    donning a blue uniform. There were even entire units, like the
    15th Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry [the Scandinavian Regiment]
    and General Louis Blenker's German Division, where English was
    hardly spoken."

    "The military would do well today to open its ranks not only to legal
    immigrants but also to illegal ones and, as important, to untold
    numbers of young men and women who are not here now but
    would like to come," Boot added.

    "No doubt many would be willing to serve for some set period,
    in return for one of the world's most precious commodities --
    US citizenship. Some might deride those who sign up as
    mercenaries, but these troops would have significantly different
    motives than the usual soldier of fortune."

    Bryan Bender can be reached at bender@globe. com

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    2) A PALESTINIAN VIEW OF JIMMY CARTER'S BOOK
    Ali Abunimah
    The Wall Street Journal
    26 December 2006
    http://electronicin tifada.net/ v2/article6310. shtml

    President Carter has done what few American politicians
    have dared to do: speak frankly about the Israel-Palestine
    conflict. He has done this nation, and the cause of peace,
    an enormous service by focusing attention on what he calls
    "the abominable oppression and persecution in the occupied
    Palestinian territories, with a rigid system of required
    passes and strict segregation between Palestine's citizens
    and Jewish settlers in the West Bank."

    The 39th president of the United States, the most
    successful Arab- Israeli peace negotiator to date, has
    braved a storm of criticism, including the insinuation
    from the pro-Israel Anti-Defamation League that his
    arguments are anti-Semitic.

    Mr. Carter has tried to mollify critics by suggesting that
    his is not a commentary on Israeli policy inside Israel's
    own borders, as compared with the West Bank, Gaza Strip
    and East Jerusalem -- territories Israel occupied in 1967.
    He told NPR, "I know that Israel is a wonderful democracy
    with equal treatment of all citizens whether Arab or Jew.
    And so I very carefully avoided talking about anything
    inside Israel."

    Given the pressure he has faced, it may be understandable
    that Mr. Carter says this, but he is wrong. In addition to
    nearly four million Palestinians living under Israeli rule
    in the occupied territories, another one million live
    inside Israel's pre-1967 borders. These Palestinians are
    descendants of those who were not forced out or did not
    flee when Israel was created in 1948.

    They have nominal Israeli citizenship, and unlike blacks
    in apartheid South Africa, they do vote for the country's
    parliament. Yet this is where any sense of equality ends.
    In Israel's history, no Arab-led party has ever been asked
    to join a coalition government. And, among scores of
    Jewish ministers, there has only ever been one Arab
    minister, of junior rank.

    Discrimination against non-Jewish citizens both informal
    and legalized is systematic. Non-Jewish children attend
    separate schools and live in areas that receive a fraction
    of the funding of their Jewish counterparts. The results
    can be seen in the much poorer educational attainment,
    economic, health and life outcomes of Palestinian citizens
    of Israel. Much of the land of the country, controlled by
    the quasi-governmental Jewish National Fund, cannot be
    leased or sold to non-Jews. This is similar in effect to
    the restrictive covenants that in many U.S. cities once
    kept nonwhites out of certain neighborhoods.

    A 2003 law stipulates that an Israeli citizen may bring a
    non- citizen spouse to live in Israel from anywhere in the
    world, excluding a Palestinian from the occupied
    territories. A civil rights leader in Israel likened it to
    the American anti-miscegenation measures from the 1950s,
    when mixed race couples had to leave the state of Virginia
    to marry legally.

    For Palestinians, the most blatant form of discrimination
    is Israel's "Law of Return," that allows a Jewish person
    from any country to settle in Israel. Meanwhile, family
    members of Palestinian citizens of Israel, living in
    exile, sometimes in refugee camps just a few miles outside
    Israel's borders, are not permitted to set foot in the
    country.

    The rise of Avigdor Lieberman, the new deputy prime
    minister, who openly advocates stripping Palestinians in
    Israel of citizenship and transferring them outside the
    state, reflects increasingly extremist politics. In
    response to growing discrimination, leaders of
    Palestinians inside Israel recently issued a report, "The
    Future Vision of the Palestinian Arabs in Israel." It
    calls for Israel to become a state where all citizens and
    communities have equal rights, regardless of religion.
    Many Israeli commentators reacted angrily, calling the
    initiative an attempt to dismantle Israel as a "Jewish
    state." However, even if Mr. Carter's recommendations are
    implemented, and Israel withdraws from the territories
    occupied in 1967, the struggle over the legitimacy of a
    state that privileges one ethno- religious group at the
    expense of another will not disappear.

    As other divided societies, like South Africa,
    Northern Ireland and indeed our own are painfully learning, only
    equal rights and esteem for all the people, in the
    diversity of their identities, can bring lasting peace.
    This is an even harder discussion than the one President
    Carter has courageously launched, but ultimately it is one
    we must confront if peace is to come to Israel-Palestine.

    Ali Abunimah is co-founder of The Electronic Intifada and
    author of "One Country: A Bold Proposal to End the
    Israeli-Palestinian Impasse" (Metropolitan Books, 2006).

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    3) Free Healthcare in Venezuela Regardless of Class
    Ronald Suarez Rivas
    and Alberto Borrego Avila (photos),
    special envoys
    GRANMA
    December 27, 2006
    Here for you in English. Not yet in English at:
    http://www.granma. cubaweb.cu/ 2006/12/27/ cubamundo/ artic02.html

    [(An exceptionally significant report with many implications for
    the political and medical situation in Venezuela, Bolivia and
    beyond. What a mistake it would be to simply limit medical care
    to certain sections of the city or the society. The idea that
    medical care is a right for all people is a solid principle to
    be understood widely and, hopefully, emulated elswhere as well.
    (It's a good thing that Venezuala isn't wasting any money on any
    foreign wars and occupations, and with the price of oil on the
    uprise, the country can afford to provide this care to everyone.
    It will, furthermore, help to undercut opposition to the Chavez
    government and the Bolivarian process generally. Keep in mind
    that the private fee-for-service model of medical care bitterly
    resents the competion from those who believe healthcare should
    be a right, not a privilege for the wealth and something which
    the rest can get if they are poor enough to quality for charity,
    and then only if those wo give to charity give enough.
    Strengthening the working class by providing free health care,
    since many don't get it through their jobs, and at the same
    time winning the support of as many in the middle classes as
    possible by also cutting the cost of medical care can help to
    undercut support for the Venezuelan opposition as well, which
    is certainly not about to go away. So not only does this give
    a practical demonstration of what a socialist government can
    do, but it shows an astute sense of political strategy, too.
    Compare the Venezuelan experience with the Honduran:
    http://www.walterli ppmann.com/ docs070.html
    (This is one readers should spread far and wide.)...Walter
    Lippmann, www.walterlippmann. com ]

    MIRANDA, Venezuela.- The doctor's office in the community of La
    California Norte was inaugurated amid the protest of people beating
    pots and pans and a shower of stones. In fact, the first patient that
    same morning was a woman whose head was split open by a piece of dry
    ice that somebody had thrown.

    caption:
    "THE SECRET TO BECOMING ACCEPTED
    IS TO EXCEL IN OUR WORK," DR. MARISOL SAYS.

    "They are communists, soldiers disguised as doctors who are coming to
    brainwash people," some of the locals said of the Cuban doctors who
    had come to serve at the new clinic as part of the Barrio Adentro
    initiative in Venezuela that provides free neighborhood healthcare.

    While among Venezuela's poor communities the program has been
    received with enthusiasm, in this middle class neighborhood of the
    state of Miranda it seemed that it would be impossible to establish.

    To begin with, the Barrio Adentro clinics had been set up in the
    poorest neighborhoods, but having a free and trusted healthcare
    program was a request of all Venezuela and the clinics are starting
    to spread to middle class neighborhoods.

    "The Cuban doctors? They are very good. Whenever my children are sick
    I bring them here for treatment," said Yolanda, a resident of La
    California Norte.

    Vitta, another local, suffers from high blood pressure and visits the
    clinic on a daily basis to monitor her condition. "Before I had to go
    to a drugstore, now I come here because I like it better, they take
    good care of me and don't charge."

    Despite the prevailing opposition to President Chavez in this
    community, becoming part of the Barrio Adentro program was an
    important step for several of the residents who came together to
    create a health committee and support the project.

    On May 12, 2004, when the health clinic opened, Dr. Marisol Pelaez
    had already been serving the people of La California Norte for eight
    months.

    "In the beginning we provided our services at a resident's home [.]
    and tried to become familiar with the community to become accepted.
    The first days were really hard. We barely received two or three
    patients, sometimes the same people came more than once so that we
    would not be sent elsewhere because of a lack of work."

    caption:
    YUDITH SILVERA COMES FREQUENTLY
    WITH ONE OF THE 20 CHILDREN OF THE
    DAY CARE CENTER WHERE SHE WORKS.

    But as time went by, the doctor's office turned into an essential
    element within the neighborhood.

    Carmen di Tercio owes her life to it. An aspirin she took caused an
    adverse reaction while she was shopping at the Petare Market, and she
    asked a taxi driver to take her to the Cuban doctors.

    "When she arrived she was unconscious. We immediately injected her,
    did an intravenous connection and she regained consciousness within a
    few minutes," said Dr. Pelaez.

    Yudith Silvera frequently brings some of the 20 children from the
    children's nursery where she works.

    Before she had to go through an insurance company, "The service was
    slow and very expensive, but here they provide care to us immediately
    and they are excellent."

    Fear? Dr. Pelaez says, "Our commitment with Fidel, the importance
    that the Venezuelan Revolution advance because of what it means to
    the world and the protection afforded by so many friends made it so
    we were never afraid.

    "We were always accompanied by members of the health committee, who
    came to protect the clinic. Many of the people that were banging the
    pots and pans were just misled and confused. They had been told that
    we were bringing weapons and were going to preach communism, but
    little by little they were able to see the reality. They have even
    apologized to us.

    "Our secret is to do the best work possible and demonstrate the human
    qualities of Cubans. People thank us on a daily basis for what we do
    for them, the courage to be here and for leaving behind our families
    to come and help them."

    Everyday in the waiting room there are both Chavez supporters and
    detractors, they sit together and talk while waiting for their turn.

    "Before, this type of thing was impossible, without a doubt this is
    part of the change that Venezuela is going through," Dr. Pelaez says.

    Recently, a rehab clinic opened next door. During its inauguration
    there were no pots and pans banged or stones thrown, instead there
    was lots of excitement.

    Fernando Roca, one of the regular patients, comments: "There are
    still people who want to make life impossible for the Revolution and
    even for us who live here. The mass media has poisoned them. But we
    will continue struggling to make the process advance and so that what
    has been built lasts."

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    4) When Iraqis Gave Up on Government
    Inter Press Service
    Dahr Jamail and Ali Al-Fadhily
    http://dahrjamailir aq.com

    *BAGHDAD, Dec 27 (IPS) - The Iraqi government headed by Prime Minister
    Noori al-Maliki, like earlier governments assigned by U.S. occupation
    authorities in Iraq, appears to have killed Iraqi dreams of a brighter
    future.*

    General elections Dec. 15, 2005 brought in a government that was
    supposed to listen to Iraqis all over the country. It was called a unity
    government because the cabinet was formed to include ministers from all
    ethnic and sectarian backgrounds after months of negotiations in the
    parliament.

    "This is a unity government that no one should object to," al-Maliki
    told reporters recently in Baghdad. "All of the powers in parliament
    should take part in improving security and services in order to achieve
    success."

    Maliki condemned groups such as Jabhat al-Tawafuq and The Iraqi Front
    for National Dialogue, along with other political groups who have been
    critical of the government.

    Jabhat al-Tawafuq comprises three leading Sunni groups: the Iraqi
    Islamic Party, the Iraqi People's Conference and the National Dialogue
    Council. Their platform is based on national unity and ending the
    occupation.

    The Iraqi Front for National Dialogue also stands for ending the
    occupation, rebuilding government institutions and improving the
    economic and security situation.

    But opposition leaders blame Maliki for denying them a role within
    government, undermining his claim that there is indeed a unity government.

    "We are not really in the government," Tariq al-Hashimi, leader of the
    Islamic Party, and one of Iraq's two vice-presidents told IPS earlier.
    "Maliki and his coalition never gave us any real role in the government,
    and our ministers' actions are therefore paralysed."

    Hashimi's group, like other Sunni groups and also some moderate Shia
    groups, are nearly voiceless in the feeble Iraqi government.

    The dominant Shia coalition was formed in accordance with advice from
    Iranian-born Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, the revered Shia cleric who
    lives in Najaf in the south. This coalition of Shia parties was formed
    to secure power against a list of secular parties led by former interim
    prime minister Iyad Allawi who formed 'The Iraqi List'.

    The power of the Shia coalition forced reluctant Sunnis to participate
    in the elections by banding together with their own list in order to win
    the votes of Sunnis. The entire political process was divided along
    religious and sectarian lines, and along ethnic lines because the
    Kurdish list included all of the Kurdish parties.

    Given this background, few Iraqis are surprised that their government is
    fractured and fragmented, and at odds with itself.

    "This government will definitely lead the country into disaster," Dr.
    Salih al-Mutlaq, leader of The Iraqi Front for National Dialogue told
    IPS earlier. "The country will slide into civil war if this sectarian
    attitude remains, and that is why we decided not to participate in this
    government."

    Former prime minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari, with the support of Shia
    cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, took over April 7, 2005. But Jaafari was
    rejected by all other groups, and also by some parties within the Shia
    coalition for his failure to lead the country.

    Maliki was then assigned the job of prime minister on condition of fair
    distribution of in the cabinet amongst winners, and fair treatment to
    all Iraqis regardless of their religious or ethnic identity.

    "Things only got worse, and this government and parliament won the title
    of the worst in the history of Iraq," Thafir al-Ani from al-Tawafuq told
    IPS. "The whole system needs to be changed, or else the country will be
    divided into small states, and the catastrophe will be too vast to be
    corrected."

    Al-Ani cited recent polls to say that more than 90 percent of Iraqis are
    angry with the government. People continue to blame the government for
    everything going wrong from the high level of violence to lack of
    employment and of water and electricity.

    One of the darkest clouds of illegitimacy over the Iraqi government is
    the alignment of top officials with the Sadr Movement, which has been
    accused of backing most of the sectarian death squads that are now the
    leading cause of death in Iraq.

    "This government failed on all the promises it made to Iraqis, and so
    all Iraqis want it changed," Muhammad Basher al-Faidhy, spokesman for
    the Sunni Association of Muslim Scholars told IPS. "They are sorry they
    ever took part in the elections. Our Association warned Iraqis that this
    government would be the worst ever. They simply cannot get rid of death
    squads because they are their major ally."

    Most Iraqis see no future for Maliki's struggling government, which
    barely controls the so-called Green Zone in Baghdad where its offices
    are located. The rest of the country is fragmented, and the economy and
    infrastructure are in ruins.

    "They are going down despite the huge support they are getting from the
    U.S. administration, " Iraqi analyst Maki al-Nazzal told IPS. "They are
    faced by an international denial after their resounding failure in
    facing the deteriorating security situation and the comprehensive
    collapse in services and reconstruction. "

    On the other hand, the Sadr movement finds itself in a strong enough
    situation to turn away from al-Maliki and his Dawa Party. Sadr leaders
    are now calling for early elections, and they are confident of winning
    without other support, says their spokesman Hassan al-Zarqani.

    "It seems that the United States have chosen the wrong ally once more,"
    Zarqani told IPS. "So they will have to reconsider yet again." Sadr had
    recently pulled his representatives from the government, but they came back.

    Meanwhile, another crisis has arisen. Grand Ayatollah Sistani announced
    last week that he will not support a U.S.-backed plan to build a
    coalition across sectarian lines. The plan would have sought to
    marginalise Muqtada al-Sadr by dividing the Shias.

    Resistance to the occupation is rising, on the streets and politically,
    as support for the government falls. Not a promising start to 2007.

    (c)2006 Dahr Jamail

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    5) My Reflections On The Delphi Struggle In The Year Gone By
    by John Goschka/UAW Local 699
    December 27, 2006
    http://www.futureof theunion. com/

    Good morning brothers and sisters, hero's of the workers and retirees
    in this great world that we live in.

    I would like too take the time to reflect on my thoughts on the labor
    struggles during this past year. Every day that passes is history when
    the new day arrives. Thus the years pass also. It's history and gone
    forever. We will never be able to relive any of those days, but we
    can and should learn from them.

    We at Delphi have experienced what happens when the Devil himself
    comes to town. The fears, emotional swings, the utter feelings of
    helplessness. The few did rise up against this corruption, and indeed
    they would be heard. But, what about the vast majority of the
    workers and retirees? They would set the sidelines and believe
    in our UAW IEB to defend us through concessions.

    Even as the storm clouds darkened and we saw our brothers and
    sisters in other industries losing their jobs and being thrown out
    too the wolves, we could not unite the workers and retirees too
    stop this great RAPE that we are experiencing. The CEO's are
    rolling and playing in their new found riches, and they are being
    given unconscionable bonuses and stock options.

    The rich can't take their money with them when their life is over
    here on earth. Yet, they can't seem to get enough of it. They will
    suck the lifeblood from the poor to enhance their own egos and
    bellies. They will steal billions of dollars from the workers and
    then donate pennies to worthwile causes and "SHOUT, SEE,
    WE CARE". Where there is no conscience, there is no mercy!!!

    The workers and retirees at Delphi seem to have been pacified
    for the most part through this great concessionary RAPE. Many
    are unhappy with the results of what has happened, but they
    are not mad enough to fight. They seem to look at the other
    industries who have closed their doors and moved their
    operations overseas with the attitude that "we have fared well".
    Where is SOLIDARITY with that kind of an attitude?

    Are we any better than the CEO's with this kind of an attitude?
    If we don't stand and fight for our brothers and sisters, do we
    not also suck the lifeblood from the poor? Yes, I make more
    money in retirement than the new two tier wage earners earn
    while working. I also have benefits, They have NONE. Do I want
    to give up any of the retirement or benefits that I recieve?
    HELL NO! Am I willing to SHOUT and FIGHT for my brothers
    and sisters? HELL YES. It's the LEAST that I can do.

    Yes, many are content too leave things as they are right now
    at Delphi. But, they just fool themselves. Concessions are just
    that, CONCESSIONS. The door has been opened WIDE and the
    concessionary flow is in a direction that will hurt us more than
    we can imagine. THEY WILL BE BACK FOR MORE!! I will write you
    a guarentee on that.

    Have the people who have stood and fought altered the original
    plans for the Devils advocates on their planned bankruptcy?
    I say, "yes they have". Miller and his henchmen weren't used
    to a fight. They always relied on the workers and union to just
    lay down and roll over. It just didn't happen this time. The
    union played dead while being RAPED, but a band of people
    who understood the true meaning of SOLIDARITY got together
    and became a pain in the ass to the bankruptcy conspiracy.

    I say that this band of dissidents, rogues, or whatever THEY
    choose to call them, understands the true meaning of SOLIDARITY.
    They squeaked like a mouse and the powers that be trembled.
    History was altered for the time being. Can we see the writing
    on the wall? Are we willing to read that writing? Do we understand
    that the battle hasn't even begun yet? The concessionary advotaces
    WILL be back. They never got what they wanted, you must know that.
    They will be back.

    Will we bury our heads in the sand and hope for the best? Their plans
    have changed, but their goals remain the same. If we can't see this
    writing on the wall and take the time to prepare for it, then they
    will eventually crush us. They will find a way to quiet the squeaking
    mouse and crush it also. If we would but unite and show the powers
    that be what true SOLIDARITY is all about, we can change history
    instead of just altering it. The mouse would become a lion.
    A lion ROARS and will FIGHT.

    Miller and his cronies tried to give Delphi away to their friends for
    around 3.2 billion dollars. The offer was well recieved by the
    henchmen and appeared to have been accepted. But, wait. A new
    offer for 4.7 billion dollars was put on the table. Another greedy
    interest in Delphi? The henchmen must be up in arms. That is an
    automatic 1.5 billion dollars that won't reach their bloated bank
    accounts. The Scrooge has struck.

    Miller is no longer the CEO of Delphi. What's up now? Stay tuned,
    I'm sure that more surprises will be in store for us. O'Neal will
    be a puppet to the bankruptcy charades and fill his pockets also.

    As I have previously stated, I believe that the brave few have
    altered the history of Delphi. But, my beliefs are that alterations
    are not good enough. We need to change history not only for Delphi,
    but for the workers of the world. We most continue the fight
    for decent wages and health care benefits. We can't rely on our
    politicans and unions too make this happen. If we want it,
    we will have to UNITE and FIGHT for it.

    The mouse will eventually be crushed. But the lion, that's a different
    story. If the lion will ROAR, I believe that history can and will be
    changed. Until that time, we will continue to squeak and hope
    to continue to alter history.

    These are my views and thoughts as we soon enter into another
    new year. I will not attempt to suck the lifeblood from the poor.
    I will strive to do my best to help them throughout my life.
    They are my brothers and sisters.

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    6) Diamonds' Glitter Fades for a Brazilian Tribe
    By LARRY ROHTER
    December 29, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/29/world/ americas/ 29diamonds. html?ref= americas

    ROOSEVELT INDIGENOUS AREA, Brazil — Some of the world's most
    abundant deposits of diamonds are embedded in the reddish soil
    of the Amazon jungle here. But for the Cinta-Larga Indians who live
    on this remote reservation, that discovery has brought more misfortune
    than riches.

    Outside miners began prospecting in earnest in 1999 and soon
    overran the Indians' lands, bringing with them drink, drugs, disease
    and prostitution. Dazzled by the promise of quick wealth from their
    dealings with the outsiders, tribal leaders have accumulated debts
    they cannot pay — especially now that the police have set up
    roadblocks on the reservation' s borders to prevent illegal diamond
    trafficking.

    Cinta-Larga means Broad Belt in Portuguese, a reference to the
    tribe's former habit of wearing bark sashes around the waist.
    For generations, the Cinta-Largas chose to live in isolation
    here along the banks of the Roosevelt River, named for
    Theodore Roosevelt, who led an expedition through this
    region of the southwestern Amazon some 90 years ago.

    "Back then, we had no idea what diamonds were worth," recalled
    Roberto Carlos Cinta-Larga, a tribal leader who, following tradition,
    uses the tribe's name as his surname. "We didn't have money
    in those days and didn't even really know what money was, because
    our nature was to stay apart from everyone else and not cultivate
    friendships. "

    But in the 1960s, a highway was built west of here, opening the
    jungle to exploitation by loggers. The discovery of gold, tin and
    finally diamonds increased the opportunities for the Cinta-Largas
    but also their resentment of white encroachments on land that
    the Brazilian government had set aside for them.

    Two years ago, the tensions finally boiled over. In an episode that
    is still under investigation, and for reasons that remain unclear,
    the Cinta-Largas killed 29 miners who were working without
    their permission at the mine on the reservation.

    Since then, the Cinta-Largas have become the most notorious
    of Brazil's hundreds of Indian tribes, reviled in the press as
    bloodthirsty savages who want the diamonds for themselves
    and insulted when they leave their reservation for nearby towns.
    In hopes of countering those negative portrayals, tribal leaders
    recently invited this reporter to visit.

    "We want it known that, despite what our enemies say, we are
    not mining diamonds," Ita Cinta-Larga, another tribal leader,
    said as he inspected the mining pit and its collection of abandoned
    hoses and sluices. "We still catch miners trying to sneak in now
    and then, but it's pretty calm here now, and that's the way
    we want to keep it."

    In return for an $810,000 grant for community development
    from the Brazilian government, the Cinta-Largas agreed in April
    to shut down the mine, allow the state environmental police
    to patrol the site and refrain from killing intruders. But the
    money is now running out, and Pio Cinta-Larga, a tribal leader,
    warned that unless more help is forthcoming, "when the year
    ends, the truce expires with it."

    Mauro Sposito, director of the Brazilian Federal Police's Amazon
    task force, said that in view of the tribe's history, such threats
    must be taken seriously. "We know that they are violent and
    that something could occur, which is why the main principles
    of our activities from the start have been to try to negotiate
    and avoid the use of brute force," he said.

    Ivaneide Bandeira Cardozo works with an environmental and
    indigenous rights group, Kaninde. She cites another factor that
    the tribe is reluctant to discuss out of shame and embarrassment.
    "From what the Cinta-Larga women told me, they were tired
    of seeing the miners raping girls as young as 14 and bringing
    in drugs," she said. "So they pressed their men to take a stand."

    Rômulo Siqueira de Sá, an official of the National Indian Foundation,
    the government agency that deals with indigenous affairs, said
    diamond money led many Cinta-Largas to buy cars, houses and
    other goods on credit through white intermediaries. With the mine
    shut and government funds running out, he said, they have fallen
    behind on payments and are facing repossession claims. As a
    result, the pressure to resume illicit diamond trading and reopen
    prospecting to outsiders is growing.

    "The chiefs want government money so that they can pay private
    debts derived from illegal activities, and there is no possibility
    whatsoever that the government is going to do that," Mr. Sposito
    said. "Brazilian law does not permit such a thing. What the
    government can do is support the development of the community
    and provide orientation, but not more than that."

    Most of the Cinta-Larga leaders are men in their late 50s and
    early 60s, from a generation that the Brazilian anthropologist
    Ines Hargreaves calls "the orphans of contact." They were born
    while the tribe lived in isolation, and so they can vaguely recollect
    both that idealized past and the suffering they experienced
    as children when Brazilian society erupted into their world
    with violence and disease.

    "I was already a teenager by the time miners had killed thousands
    of our people, gunning them down in their malocas," or lodge
    houses, said Ita Cinta-Larga, who gave his age as about 60.
    "My own father died that way, and I can still remember the
    bodies laid out and everyone crying."

    All told, 27 Cinta-Larga leaders have been named as suspects
    in the investigation into the killings of the miners. Though none
    of the leaders interviewed here would admit direct responsibility,
    they all acknowledged that members of the tribe were involved
    in the killings, which they said were the result of their frustration
    at seeing their complaints ignored by Brazilian authorities.

    "We had asked the Federal Police over and over again to make
    the miners leave, and when they didn't we took miners prisoner
    and delivered them to the police ourselves," said Pio Cinta-Larga,
    who often serves as the tribe's liaison to the outside world.
    "But the police would release them the same day, and the miners
    would immediately come back and threaten and make fun of us
    Indians. So we said, `Enough is enough, let's show these people
    who we are.' "

    Mr. Sposito acknowledged that the tribe had turned in miners
    but noted that those who illegally invaded Indian territory were
    entitled to be freed on bail under Brazilian law. That explanation
    does not satisfy the Cinta-Largas, who see the police checkpoints
    on roads leading in and out of the reservation as an infringement
    upon their sovereignty rather than as a measure meant to protect
    them.

    "These are our lands, and we're in charge here," said João Bravo
    Cinta-Larga, whom critics of the tribe have singled out as perhaps
    the most intransigent of the chiefs. "No one can come in here and
    tell us what to do. We have never allowed ourselves to be
    dominated by anyone, and we're not going to start now."

    Depending on how it is used, the word "bravo" can mean either
    courageous or irate in Portuguese. João Bravo Cinta-Larga seems
    to be both, complaining bitterly that the nickname "Lord of the
    Stones," given to him by the Brazilian press, and the accusations
    that he has used the diamond wealth to enrich himself at the
    expense of his own community are malicious lies.

    "I had a power plant built so that we can have electricity, and
    we also started a fish farming project," he said. "We are not
    just diamonds."

    Other Cinta-Larga leaders have used money from diamonds
    to buy large herds of cattle or to invest in orchards, hoping to
    sell fruit to the Brazilian market. But the police say that tribal
    leaders also have hundreds of diamonds hidden away and that
    they have concealed mining equipment in the jungle, ready to
    resume prospecting on short notice.

    Recently, the Cinta-Largas were persuaded to sell some of their
    stones through the government's savings banks rather than
    illegally to middle men, the argument being that they would
    get a fairer price. But the auction fetched much less than the
    Indians expected, adding to their distrust of the government.

    "They promised that representatives of our people would be
    flown to the auction to see how it was done, and then they didn't
    keep their word," Pio Cinta-Larga complained. "There were a lot
    of good stones, but instead of the millions they said we would
    see, we got almost nothing. They deceived us, just as the white
    man always does."

    Mr. Sposito responded that the Indians seemed to have forgotten
    that "taxes exist, and we can't create a law that eliminates that."
    He added: "The leaders are aware of this. They all have cars and
    drivers licenses and bank accounts and houses in town. So they
    know what their obligations are."

    Geologists say the diamond potential of the reservation here has
    barely been scratched. Tribal leaders, however, seem torn between
    contradictory desires: to keep outsiders away so that they can
    exploit the wealth themselves and to leave the diamonds in the
    ground untouched.

    "I used to think that money was good and that I wanted to be rich,
    but now I don't," Pio Cinta-Larga said. "A little bit might be good,
    but a lot is not. It only brings problems and suffering, when what
    we really want is tranquillity. "

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    7) Police Officers Charged in Deaths in Hurricane's Aftermath
    By SHAILA DEWAN
    December 29, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/29/us/ 29bridge. html

    ATLANTA, Dec. 28 — Seven New Orleans police officers were indicted
    Thursday on charges of first-degree murder or attempted murder
    in connection with the deaths of two men on a bridge six days after
    Hurricane Katrina struck.

    Four other civilians suffered gunshot wounds in the episode, which
    took place on Sept. 4, 2005. No officers were hurt.

    The shootings occurred while much of the New Orleans area was
    still under water, communication among officers was poor and the
    city was chaotic. The New Orleans Police Department's initial account
    — that officers were responding to reports of snipers firing on
    contractors — seemed to confirm fears of rampant lawlessness
    in the city.

    But that account was repeatedly revised. At one point, the police
    said they were responding to reports that two officers had been
    shot. The victims, for their part, said they had simply been seeking
    help after the storm left them stranded.

    Frank Zibilich, a lawyer for one of the police officers, said that
    although first-degree murder in Louisiana did not require proof
    of premeditation, the charges were harsh.

    "It's mind-boggling to me that officers, under the intense
    circumstances that were going on in New Orleans at this time,
    that seven officers decide simultaneously that they're going
    to go commit murder," Mr. Zibilich said.

    Two families were involved in the shootings. At the base of the
    bridge, the officers encountered the Bartholomew family: a couple
    and their teenage daughter and nephew, and the nephew's friend
    James Brissette, 19. The family, which filed a civil lawsuit against
    the officers and the police department, said in court papers that
    it was trying to reach a grocery store on the other side of the
    bridge when the police officers began firing at them. Mr. Brissette
    died, while the nephew, Jose Holmes Jr., 19, jumped behind
    a barricade. As he lay on the ground, according to the court
    papers, he was shot at from a distance and then approached
    by a man who shot him point blank in the abdomen.

    Mr. Holmes wound up partly paralyzed with a colostomy bag.
    Susan Bartholomew, the mother, lost her right arm.

    "The police in this case used the devastation of the storm to
    behave in a criminal manner," said Gary W. Bizal, a lawyer who
    is representing Mr. Holmes in the civil case. "They held themselves
    above the law, and now it's coming back to roost."

    Near the top of the bridge, according to a statement issued by
    the office of Eddie Jordan, the Orleans Parish district attorney,
    the police encountered Ronald Madison, a mentally retarded man,
    and his brother Lance, who had been employed by Federal Express
    for 25 years. The brothers had been forced to swim through
    floodwaters and had been trying to reach their mother's house
    across the bridge, their family said in its civil lawsuit. The family
    said the brothers were on the bridge with other people they did
    not know when a rental truck pulled up and a group of heavily
    armed officers jumped out and began firing.

    Ronald Madison, 40, died after being shot seven times in the back.
    His brother was arrested at the scene and charged with eight counts
    of attempted murder of a police officer, though no weapon was
    recovered. The grand jury that handed down Thursday's indictments
    declined to indict Lance Madison.

    A spokeswoman for Warren J. Riley, the superintendent of police,
    said he would not comment on the case.

    Brenda Goodman contributed reporting.

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    8) Pentagon to Request Billions More in War Money
    By DAVID S. CLOUD
    December 30, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/30/washington /30budget. html?_r=1& oref=slogin

    WASHINGTON, Dec. 29 — The Pentagon is seeking nearly $100 billion
    for operations in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere, a request that,
    if approved by Congress, would set an annual record for war-
    related spending.

    The $99.7 billion request, detailed in a 17-page internal Defense
    Department memorandum dated Dec. 7, would be in addition to
    $70 billion appropriated in September. The request would push
    the total for the 2007 fiscal year to nearly $170 billion, 45 percent
    more than Congress provided for 2006.

    The request is likely to receive more scrutiny from Congress next
    year than previous supplemental spending bills, in part because
    Democrats now control both the House and Senate. Another reason
    for the scrutiny is that Pentagon officials encouraged the services
    to ask for "costs related to the longer war against terror," not just
    continuing operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, according to
    a memorandum that became public earlier this year.

    About $50 billion — most of the money — would go to the Army,
    which is conducting the bulk of the operations in Iraq and
    Afghanistan. The request also includes $3.8 billion for the
    Air Force and $3 billion for the Navy to buy or upgrade aircraft.
    Both services have argued in recent months that they need
    to replace planes used in combat operations.

    But some experts questioned whether the services were exploiting
    the must-pass nature of the supplemental bill to seek money
    for other purposes like the modernization of aircraft rather than
    just wartime replacements. Loren Thompson, a defense analyst
    with the Lexington Institute, a policy analysis organization in Virginia,
    pointed to the Air Force request for $62 million for ballistic missiles,
    a weapon not being employed in Iraq or Afghanistan.

    Mr. Thompson said the request, which is not described further in
    the memorandum, may be part of a continuing Air Force project
    to arm ballistic missiles with conventional warheads to be able
    to strike terrorist targets quickly if other weapons cannot be used.

    Even so, he added, "there are a number of weapons systems in
    the supplemental request not normally associated with fighting
    terrorists but which the services say still should be covered
    as part of the global effort."

    Altogether, the four military services would receive $26.6 billion
    for "reconstitution, " a term that the memorandum said covered
    repair and replacement of equipment damaged in Iraq and Afghanistan.
    Along with the $50 billion already provided this year, that is more
    than double what Congress appropriated in 2006.

    "There is a real question about how much of this is really related
    to the war," said Steve Kosiak, a defense budget expert with the
    Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, a Washington
    policy analysis group.

    The Pentagon is also seeking $9.7 billion for training Iraqi and
    Afghan security forces, almost as much as has been spent in total
    since 2001, according to a study by the Congressional Research Service.
    In a reflection of the worsening security situation in Afghanistan, more
    than half of the requested money would go to training the country's
    army and police forces.

    The request also underscores the continuing strain that deployments
    in Iraq and Afghanistan are putting on ground forces. The request
    includes $3.7 billion to speed up its outfitting and training of two
    Army combat brigades and three Marine battalions.

    Since 2001, Congress has approved $507 billion for Afghanistan,
    Iraq and other operations deemed part of combating terrorism.
    Even with the Democrats in control, there is unlikely to be much
    appetite for cutting the war-related spending requests,
    Mr. Kosiak said.

    "No one seems to be saying we're going to make deep cuts in
    war-related expenditures, " he said. "I don't see evidence that the
    Democrats are interested in cutting this."

    But the incoming Democratic chairmen of the House and Senate
    Budget Committees have said they will push the Bush administration
    to finance war costs in regular appropriations bills, not in supplemental
    spending measures, to make the costs clearer.

    The request also includes $10 billion for protective equipment for
    troops and $2.5 billion for technology to defeat improvised bombs,
    the leading cause of American combat casualties in Iraq.

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    9) Arctic Ice Shelf Broke Off Canadian Island
    By ANDREW C. REVKIN
    December 30, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/30/science/ earth/30ice. html?ref= world

    A 25-square-mile shelf of floating ice that jutted into the Arctic
    Ocean for 3,000 years from Canada's northernmost shore broke
    away abruptly in the summer of 2005, apparently freed by sharply
    warming temperatures and jostling wind and waves, scientists
    said yesterday.

    The Ayles ice shelf, as the ancient 100-foot-thick slab was called,
    drifted out of a fjord along the north coast of Ellesmere Island when
    the jumbled sheath of floating sea ice that tended to press against
    the coast there even in summers was replaced by open waters
    because of the warming, the scientists said.

    The change was first noticed by Laurie Weir of the Canadian Ice
    Service as she examined satellite images taken of Ellesmere and
    surrounding ice on and after Aug. 13, 2005. In less than an hour,
    around midday that day, a broad crack opened and the ice shelf
    was on its way out to sea.

    The shelf is one of the few remnants of a broad expanse of floating
    shelves of ice that once protruded along much of the Ellesmere coast,
    somewhat like the brim on a hat.

    Such shelves are far thicker and older than the milling cloak of sea
    ice that drifts atop the Arctic Ocean. The sea ice consists of floes
    ranging from 3 to 9 feet thick or so that are built up over just
    a few years.

    The Arctic sea ice has experienced sharp summertime retreats for
    several decades, adding to evidence of significant warming near
    the North Pole. (Neither melting ice shelves nor sea ice contribute
    to rising sea levels because they sit in the sea already, like ice
    cubes in a drink.)

    Ninety percent of the 3,900 square miles of ice shelves that existed
    in 1906 when the Arctic explorer Robert Peary first surveyed the region
    are gone, said Luke Copland, the director of the University of Ottawa's
    Laboratory for Cryospheric Research.

    In a paper summarizing the event but not yet published, Dr. Copland
    and other researchers said that the transformation of the Ayles ice
    from a shorebound shelf to a drifting ice island appeared to be
    a result of unusual Arctic warmth in 2005 on top of a longer-term
    warming trend.

    He said that it was premature to attribute the breakaway to human-
    caused climate change, although he said that it was a clear sign the
    warming in the region was producing significant and abrupt changes,
    and more were likely in coming years. "The quick pace of these changes
    right now is what stands out," he said.

    The age of the Ayles ice shelf was estimated by using chemical means
    to date driftwood found behind it, said Derek Mueller, one of those
    who helped write the paper, from the University of Alaska in Fairbanks.

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    10) Middle School Girls Gone Wild
    By LAWRENCE DOWNES
    December 29, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/29/opinion/ 29fri4.html?
    em&ex=1167627600& en=fd80f5afa9d5d 414&ei=5087% 0A

    It's hard to write this without sounding like a prig. But it's just
    as hard to erase the images that planted the idea for this essay,
    so here goes. The scene is a middle school auditorium, where girls
    in teams of three or four are bopping to pop songs at a student
    talent show. Not bopping, actually, but doing elaborately
    choreographed re-creations of music videos, in tiny skirts
    or tight shorts, with bare bellies, rouged cheeks and glittery eyes.

    They writhe and strut, shake their bottoms, splay their legs,
    thrust their chests out and in and out again. Some straddle
    empty chairs, like lap dancers without laps. They don't smile
    much. Their faces are locked from grim exertion, from all that
    leaping up and lying down without poles to hold onto. "Don't
    stop don't stop," sings Janet Jackson, all whispery. "Jerk it like
    you're making it choke. ...Ohh. I'm so stimulated. Feel so X-rated."
    The girls spend a lot of time lying on the floor. They are
    in the sixth, seventh and eighth grades.

    As each routine ends, parents and siblings cheer, whistle and
    applaud. I just sit there, not fully comprehending. It's my first
    suburban Long Island middle school talent show. I'm with my
    daughter, who is 10 and hadn't warned me. I'm not sure what
    I had expected, but it wasn't this. It was something different.
    Something younger. Something that didn't make the girls
    look so ... one-dimensional.

    It would be easy to chalk it up to adolescent rebellion, an
    ancient and necessary phenomenon, except these girls were
    barely adolescents and they had nothing to rebel against.
    This was an official function at a public school, a milieu
    that in another time or universe might have seen children
    singing folk ballads, say, or reciting the Gettysburg Address.

    It is news to no one, not even me, that eroticism in popular
    culture is a 24-hour, all-you-can- eat buffet, and that many
    children in their early teens are filling up. The latest debate
    centers on whether simulated intercourse is an appropriate
    dance style for the high school gym.

    What surprised me, though, was how completely parents
    of even younger girls seem to have gotten in step with society's
    march toward eroticized adolescence — either willingly or
    through abject surrender. And if parents give up, what can
    a school do? A teacher at the middle school later told me
    she had stopped chaperoning dances because she was put
    off by the boy-girl pelvic thrusting and had no way to stop
    it — the children wouldn't listen to her and she had no
    authority to send anyone home. She guessed that if the
    school had tried to ban the sexy talent-show routines,
    parents would have been the first to complain, having
    shelled out for costumes and private dance lessons
    for their Little Miss Sunshines.

    I'm sure that many parents see these routines as healthy
    fun, an exercise in self-esteem harmlessly heightened
    by glitter makeup and teeny skirts. Our girls are bratz,
    not slutz, they would argue, comfortable in the existence
    of a distinction.

    But my parental brain rebels. Suburban parents dote
    on and hover over their children, micromanaging their
    appointments and shielding them in helmets, kneepads
    and thick layers of S.U.V. steel. But they allow the culture
    of boy-toy sexuality to bore unchecked into their little
    ones' ears and eyeballs, displacing their nimble and
    growing brains and impoverishing the sense of wider
    possibilities in life.

    There is no reason adulthood should be a low plateau
    we all clamber onto around age 10. And it's a cramped
    vision of girlhood that enshrines sexual allure as the
    best or only form of power and esteem. It's as if there
    were now Three Ages of Woman: first Mary-Kate, then
    Britney, then Courtney. Boys don't seem to have such
    constricted horizons. They wouldn't stand for it —
    much less waggle their butts and roll around for
    applause on the floor of a school auditorium.

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    11) Saddam at the End of a Rope
    By TARIQ ALI
    December 30, 2006
    http://groups. yahoo.com/ group/GreenLeft_ discussion/ message/37299

    It was symbolic that 2006 ended with a colonial hanging--- most of it
    (bar the last moments) shown on state television in occupied Iraq. It
    has been that sort of year in the Arab world. After a trial so
    blatantly rigged that even Human Rights Watch---the largest single
    unit of the US Human Rights industry--- had to condemn it as a total
    travesty. Judges were changed on Washington's orders; defense lawyers
    were killed and the whole procedure resembled a well-orchestrated
    lynch mob. Where Nuremberg was a more dignified application of
    victor's justice, Saddam's trial has, till now, been the crudest and
    most grotesque. The Great Thinker President's reference to it 'as a
    milestone on the road to Iraqi democracy' as clear an indication as
    any that Washington pressed the trigger.

    The contemptible leaders of the European Union, supposedly hostile to
    capital punishment, were silent, as usual. And while some Shia
    factions celebrated in Baghdad, the figures published by a fairly
    independent establishment outfit, the Iraq Centre for Research and
    Strategic Studies (its self-description: "which attempts to spread
    the conscious necessity of realizing basic freedoms, consolidating
    democratic values and foundations of civil society") reveal that just
    under 90 per cent of Iraqis feel the situation in the country was
    better before it was occupied.

    The ICRSC research is based on detailed house-to-house interviewing
    carried out during the third week of November 2006.

    Only five per cent of those questioned said Iraq is better today than
    in 2003; 89 per cent of the people said the political situation had
    deteriorated; 79 per cent saw a decline in the economic situation; 12
    per cent felt things had improved and 9 per cent said there was no
    change. Unsurprisingly, 95 per cent felt the security situation was
    worse than before. Interestingly, about 50 per cent of those
    questioned identified themselves only as "Muslims"; 34 per cent as
    Shiites and 14 per cent as Sunnis.

    Add to this the figures supplied by the UNHCR: 1.6 million Iraqis
    (7 per cent of the population) have fled the country since March 2003
    and 100,000 Iraqis leave every month, Christians, doctors, engineers,
    women, etc. There are one million in Syria, 750,000 in Jordan,
    150,000 in Cairo. These are refugees that do not excite the sympathy
    of Western public opinion, since the US (and EU backed) occupation is
    the cause. These are not compared (as was the case in Kosovo) to the
    atrocities of the Third Reich. Perhaps it was these statistics (and
    the estimates of a million Iraqi dead) that necessitated the
    execution of Saddam Hussein?

    That Saddam was a tyrant is beyond dispute, but what is conveniently
    forgotten is that most of his crimes were committed when he was a
    staunch ally of those who now occupy the country. It was, as he
    admitted in one of his trial outbursts, the approval of Washington
    (and the poison gas supplied by West Germany) that gave him the
    confidence to douse Halabja with chemicals in the midst of the
    Iran-Iraq war. He deserved a proper trial and punishment in an
    independent Iraq. Not this. The double standards applied by the West
    never cease to astonish. Indonesia's Suharto who presided over a
    mountain of corpses (At least a million to accept the lowest figure)
    was protected by Washington. He never annoyed them as much as Saddam.

    And what of those who have created the mess in Iraq today?
    The torturers of Abu Ghraib; the pitiless butchers of Fallujah; the
    ethnic cleansers of Baghdad, the Kurdish prison boss who boasts that
    his model is Guantanamo. Will Bush and Blair ever be tried for war
    crimes? Doubtful. And Aznar, currently employed as a lecturer at
    Georgetown University in Washington, DC , where the language of
    instruction is English of which he doesn't speak a word. His reward
    is a punishment for the students.

    Saddam's hanging might send a shiver through the collective, if
    artificial, spine of the Arab ruling elites. If Saddam can be hanged,
    so can Mubarak, or the Hashemite joker in Amman or the Saudi royals,
    as long as those who topple them are happy to play ball with
    Washington.

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    12) Poll: More troops unhappy with Bush's course in Iraq
    By Robert Hodierne
    December 29, 2006
    http://www.armytime s.com/story. php?f=1-292925- 2449372.php

    The American military — once a staunch supporter of President Bush
    and the Iraq war — has grown increasingly pessimistic about chances
    for victory, according to the 2006 Military Times Poll.

    For the first time, more troops disapprove of the president's handling
    of the war than approve of it. Barely one-third of service members
    approve of the way the president is handling the war.

    When the military was feeling most optimistic about the war —
    in 2004 — 83 percent of poll respondents thought success in
    Iraq was likely. This year, that number has shrunk to 50 percent.

    Only 35 percent of the military members polled this year said
    they approve of the way President Bush is handling the war, while
    42 percent said they disapproved. The president's approval rating
    among the military is only slightly higher than for the population
    as a whole. In 2004, when his popularity peaked, 63 percent of the
    military approved of Bush's handling of the war. While approval
    of the president's war leadership has slumped, his overall approval
    remains high among the military.

    Just as telling, in this year's poll only 41 percent of the military
    said the U.S. should have gone to war in Iraq in the first place,
    down from 65 percent in 2003. That closely reflects the beliefs
    of the general population today — 45 percent agreed
    in a recent USA Today/Gallup poll.

    Professor David Segal, director of the Center for Research
    on Military Organization at the University of Maryland,
    was not surprised by the changing attitude within the military.

    "They're seeing more casualties and fatalities and less
    progress," Segal said.

    He added, "Part of what we're seeing is a recognition that
    the intelligence that led to the war was wrong."

    Whatever war plan the president comes up with later this
    month, it likely will have the replacement of American troops
    with Iraqis as its ultimate goal. The military is not optimistic
    that will happen soon. Only about one in five service members
    said that large numbers of American troops can be replaced
    within the next two years. More than one-third think it will
    take more than five years. And more than half think the U.S.
    will have to stay in Iraq more than five years to achieve its goals.

    Almost half of those responding think we need more troops
    in Iraq than we have there now. A surprising 13 percent said
    we should have no troops there. As for Afghanistan force levels,
    39 percent think we need more troops there. But while they
    want more troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, nearly three-quarters
    of the respondents think today's military is stretched too
    thin to be effective.

    The mail survey, conducted Nov. 13 through Dec. 22, is the
    fourth annual gauge of active-duty military subscribers
    to the Military Times newspapers. The results should not
    be read as representative of the military as a whole; the
    survey's respondents are on average older, more experienced,
    more likely to be officers and more career-oriented than
    the overall military population.

    Among the respondents, 66 percent have deployed at least
    once to Iraq or Afghanistan. In the overall active-duty force,
    according to the Department of Defense, that number
    is 72 percent.

    The poll has come to be viewed by some as a barometer of the
    professional career military. It is the only independent poll done
    on an annual basis. The margin of error on this year's poll
    is plus or minus 3 percentage points.

    While approval of Bush's handling of the war has plunged,
    approval for his overall performance as president remains
    high at 52 percent. While that is down from his high of 71
    percent in 2004, it is still far above the approval ratings
    of the general population, where that number has fallen
    into the 30s.

    While Bush fared well overall, his political party didn't. In the
    three previous polls, nearly 60 percent of the respondents
    identified themselves as Republicans, which is about double
    the population as a whole. But in this year's poll, only 46 percent
    of the military respondents said they were Republicans. However,
    there was not a big gain in those identifying themselves as Democrats
    — a figure that consistently hovers around 16 percent. The big gain
    came among people who said they were independents.

    Similarly, when asked to describe their political views on a scale
    from very conservative to very liberal, there was a slight shift from
    the conservative end of the spectrum to the middle or moderate range.
    Liberals within the military are still a rare breed, with less than
    10 percent of respondents describing themselves that way.

    Seeing media bias

    Segal was not surprised that the military support for the war and
    the president's handling of it had slumped. He said he believes that
    military opinion often mirrors that of the civilian population, even
    though it might lag in time. He added, "[The military] will always
    be more pro-military and pro-war than the civilians. That's why
    they are in this line of work."

    The poll asked, "How do you think each of these groups view the
    military?" Respondents overwhelmingly said civilians have a favorable
    impression of the military (86 percent). They even thought politicians
    look favorably on the military (57 percent). But they are convinced
    the media hate them — only 39 percent of military respondents
    said they think the media have a favorable view of the troops.

    The poll also asked if the senior military leadership, President Bush,
    civilian military leadership and Congress have their best interests at heart.

    Almost two-thirds (63 percent) of those surveyed said the senior
    military leadership has the best interests of the troops at heart.
    And though they don't think much of the way he's handling the
    war, 48 percent said the same about President Bush. But they
    take a dim view of civilian military leadership — only 32 percent
    said they think it has their best interests at heart. And only 23
    percent think Congress is looking out for them.

    Despite concerns early in the war about equipment shortages,
    58 percent said they believe they are supplied with the best possible
    weapons and equipment.

    While President Bush always portrays the war in Iraq as part
    of the larger war on terrorism, many in the military are not
    convinced. The respondents were split evenly — 47 percent
    both ways — on whether the Iraq war is part of the war on
    terrorism. The rest had no opinion.

    On many questions in the poll, some respondents said they
    didn't have an opinion or declined to answer. That number was
    typically in the 10 percent range.

    But on questions about the president and on war strategy, that
    number reached 20 percent and higher. Segal said he was
    surprised the percentage refusing to offer an opinion wasn't larger.

    "There is a strong strain in military culture not to criticize
    the commander in chief," he said.

    One contentious area of military life in the past year has been
    the role religion should play. Some troops have complained
    that they feel pressure to attend religious services. Others have
    complained that chaplains and superior officers have tried to
    convert them. Half of the poll respondents said that at least
    once a month, they attend official military gatherings, other
    than meals and chapel services, that began with a prayer.
    But 80 percent said they feel free to practice and express
    their religion within the military.

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    13) Saddam Execution Set to Destabilise Iraq Further
    Inter Press Service
    Dahr Jamail and Ali al-Fadhily
    Dahr Jamail's MidEast Dispatches
    http://dahrjamailir aq.com

    BAGHDAD, Dec. 29 (IPS) - Former dictator Saddam Hussein is due to be
    executed next month in a move that could bring more instability in an
    increasingly violent and chaotic occupation.*

    The execution is to follow a decision by a court of appeal Dec. 26 to
    uphold the death sentence for Saddam. Under present Iraqi law, execution
    must be carried out within 30 days of confirmation of the order.

    Chief judge Aref Shahin said following confirmation of the death
    sentence: "From tomorrow, any day could be the day of implementation. "

    Saddam is also in the midst of another trial over charges of genocide
    and other crimes during a 1987-1988 military crackdown on Kurds in
    northern Iraq. An estimated 180,000 Kurds died during the operation.

    That trial has been adjourned until Jan. 8. Saddam's co-defendants in
    that case are likely to face trial if he is executed.

    Saddam was convicted last month for ordering the killing of 148 Shias in
    Dujail town in 1982 in revenge for an assassination attempt against him.
    He was sentenced to death by hanging.

    The completion of the nine-month trial that saw 39 court sessions,
    through which three defence lawyers and a witness were murdered, will
    most likely inflame Iraq's political divide further.

    Hashim al-Ubaydi's son was sentenced to death by a 'revolution court' of
    the Saddam regime. But he is not pleased to see that Saddam Hussein will
    be executed in the present circumstances.

    "I was an opponent of Saddam and his policies, but I support putting him
    through a real national court away from occupation influence. I cannot
    forgive or forget that my son was executed, but as an Iraqi nationalist
    I cannot accept to see the president of my country put to trial in such
    a ridiculous way by invaders and their tails."

    Many Iraqi leaders say the timing of the trial and execution will
    enlarge the cracks between already divided Iraqis.

    The Association of Muslim Scholars (AMS), the leading Sunni group, whose
    members were listed on Saddam's most wanted list prior to the U.S.-led
    invasion and occupation, has expressed deep concern about the
    consequences of an execution.

    AMS secretary-general Dr. Harith al-Dhari rejects suggestions that
    Saddam was a leader of Sunnis. He says 35 of the 55 most wanted persons
    by U.S. occupation authorities following the invasion were Shias.

    Confirmation of the verdict has given rise to celebrations as well.

    Some say the execution should be made a festive occasion. "Saddam must
    be executed at the first day of Eid (the Muslim Holiday)," a leader of
    the Shia Sadr Movement told reporters. "We demand live broadcast of the
    execution."

    Others will not be celebrating even within Kurdistan. "I hate Saddam and
    always wished him the death he deserved for his attitude against my
    Kurdish nation," Sardar Herki from Sulaymaniya in northern Iraq told IPS
    on phone. "I still wish him death -- but together with his successors
    who killed half the population of Iraq and arrested the other half."

    Compared with the present scenario, many Iraqis have begun to see the
    Saddam days as a "golden time", a political science teacher told IPS. A
    report in the medical journal Lancet says more than 655,000 Iraqis have
    died unnaturally as a result of the occupation.

    "Iraqis would have not objected so much if the situation had been
    improved by Saddam's executors," the teacher said. "His time was
    certainly not a golden time, but Iraqis felt proud of his policies
    against Iranian and American arrogance and greed. He managed to feed his
    people and provide them with security and basic services despite all the
    wars they fought, and the UN sanctions against Iraq."

    The defence team has objected to the verdict, and continues to campaign
    against it.

    "The whole court procedures were illegal right from the beginning,"
    Khalil al-Dulaimy, chief of Saddam's defence team told reporters in
    Baghdad. "Mr. President Saddam Hussein is a prisoner of war and he
    should not be handed over to his opponents by international law, and the
    international community must press the U.S. authorities not to do so."

    International human rights organisations are asking for suspension of
    the death sentence, while arguing that Saddam was denied a fair trial.
    Human Rights Watch has reported that the trail was marred by political
    interference.

    In a statement that seems to warn of impending violence and increasing
    political divide, the Ba'ath Party, formerly led by Saddam, has
    threatened it would target U.S. interests anywhere if he was executed.

    "Our party warns again of the consequences of executing Mr. President
    and his comrades," said a statement that appeared on a website known to
    represent the party. "The Ba'ath and the resistance are determined to
    retaliate, with all means and everywhere, to harm America and its
    interests if it commits this crime."

    (c)2006 Dahr Jamail.

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    LINKS AND VERY SHORT STORIES
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    All Power to Venezuela's Communal Councils!
    Marta Harnecker: Venezuela's experiment in popular power
    Coral Wynter & Jim McIlroy, Caracas
    30 November 2006
    http://www.greenlef t.org.au/ 2006/693/ 35989

    Regulators Give Corporations a Gift
    By MARK A. STEIN
    December 30, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/30/business/ 30five.html? ref=business

    Waiting List for AIDS Drugs Causes Dismay in South Carolina
    By SHAILA DEWAN
    December 29, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/29/us/ 29drugs.html? ref=us

    Maryland: Police Kill Reservist in Standoff
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    An Army Reservist despondent about being sent to Iraq was killed
    by the police during a 14-hour standoff that began Monday night.
    The man, James E. Dean, 28, had barricaded himself inside his father's
    house with several weapons, family members told the police. Around
    noon Tuesday, while the police were preparing to use tear gas to force
    Mr. Dean out of the home, he came to the front door and pointed
    his weapon at an officer, said Sheriff Tim Cameron of St. Mary's County.
    Another deputy shot Mr. Dean once, killing him. Mr. Dean had already
    served 18 months in Afghanistan and was despondent after learning
    recently that he would be deployed to Iraq, relatives told the police.
    Sheriff Cameron said he did not know in what reserve unit
    Mr. Dean had served.
    December 28, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/28/us/ 28brfs-standoff. html

    A New Idea in Security Would Put Vehicle Barriers
    on a Pavement-Level Turntable
    By DAVID W. DUNLAP
    December 28, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/28/nyregion/ 28blocks. html?ref= nyregion

    Texas: Cleanup After Oil Spill
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    A ruptured offshore pipeline that spilled 42,500 gallons of oil into
    the Gulf of Mexico is leaking at a rate of about 500 gallons a day
    as crews begin the cleanup, officials said. Crews began skimming
    operations after the weather calmed at the site about 30 miles
    southeast of Galveston, said Petty Officer Mario Romero of the
    Coast Guard. The spill occurred after a portion of the High Island
    Pipeline System ruptured early Sunday. Plains All American Pipeline,
    the pipeline's owner, shut down the line after detecting a pressure
    loss in the system, Petty Officer Romero said. The spill had spread
    to a light sheen 4.7 miles long and 80 yards at its widest spot, he said.
    December 28, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/28/us/ 28brfs-CLEANUP. html

    Pine Ridge Journal
    One Determined Heroine and Her Fall From Grace
    By EVELYN NIEVES
    December 28, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/28/us/ 28dakota. html?ref= us

    S.E.C. Changes Reporting Rule on Bosses' Pay
    By FLOYD NORRIS
    The Securities and Exchange Commission, in a move announced late
    on the last business day before Christmas, reversed a decision it had
    made in July and adopted a rule that would allow many companies
    to report significantly lower total compensation for top executives.
    December 27, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/27/business/ 27place.html? ref=business

    A Transit Union Vote So Close They Counted It Five Times
    By WILLIAM NEUMAN
    December 27, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/27/nyregion/ 27union.html

    Texas: Challenge to Ordinance on Immigrants
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Two civil rights groups filed a lawsuit challenging a Dallas suburb's
    new ordinance that outlaws renting homes to illegal immigrants,
    arguing that it violates federal law and forces landlords to act as
    immigration officers. The groups, the Mexican American Legal Defense
    and Educational Fund and the American Civil Liberties Union, filed the
    suit on behalf of residents and landlords in Farmers Branch. The
    ordinance, along with a measure that made English the official
    language of the city, was passed in November and is scheduled
    to go into effect Jan. 12.
    December 27, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/27/us/ 27brfs-CHALLENGE TOO_BRF.html

    Spanish Doctor Denies Castro Has Cancer
    By JAMES C. McKINLEY Jr.
    December 27, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/27/world/ americas/ 27castro. html?ref= world

    2 More Die as Bird Flu Continues Spreading to Humans in Egypt
    By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr.
    December 27, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/27/world/ africa/27flu. html

    First Settlement in 10 Years Fuels Mideast Tension
    By STEVEN ERLANGER
    December 27, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/27/world/ middleeast/ 27mideast. html?
    _r=1&ref=world& oref=slogin

    Iraq/Lebanon/ Gaza - Chaos By Design or Divide and Conquer
    Instigating Arab Civil War for US/Israel's Benefit
    http://counterpunch .org/shahid12232 006.html

    The First US Foreign Invasion - Seizing Florida in 1816
    http://counterpunch .org/katz1223200 6.html

    The El Mozote Massacre 25 Years later
    http://counterpunch .org/gould122320 06.html

    Heady Days for Makers of Weapons
    By LESLIE WAYNE
    December 26, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/26/business/ 26place.html? ref=business

    Diabetics Confront a Tangle of Workplace Laws
    By N. R. KLEINFIELD
    December 26, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/26/health/ 26workplace. html?ref= us

    Back in Style: The Fur Trade
    By KATE GALBRAITH
    December 24, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/24/business/ yourmoney/ 24fur.html? ref=business

    The Right Has a Jailhouse Conversion
    By CHRIS SUELLENTROP
    December 24, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/24/magazine/ 24GOP.t.html? ref=us

    Libya's travesty
    Nature Editorial
    Six medical workers in Libya face execution. It is not too late for
    scientists to speak up on their behalf.
    Published online 20 September 2006
    http://www.nature. com/nature/ journal/v443/ n7109/full/ 443245b.html

    FOCUS | The Race for Iraq's Resources
    http://www.truthout .org/docs_ 2006/122306Y. shtml

    FOCUS | Bush May Boost Iraq Troops by 20,000
    http://www.truthout .org/docs_ 2006/122406Z. shtml

    VIDEO | Army Targets Truthout for Subpoenas in Watada Case
    http://www.truthout .org/docs_ 2006/121306J. shtml

    Outsize Profits, and Questions, in Effort to Cut Warming Gases
    By KEITH BRADSHER
    December 21, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/21/business/ 21pollute. html?ref= science

    Gender Pay Gap, Once Narrowing, Is Stuck in Place
    By DAVID LEONHARDT
    December 24, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/24/business/ 24gap.html? ref=business

    U.S. Gives Grants to 4 Gulf Coast States to Upgrade Disaster Housing
    By ERIC LIPTON
    "WASHINGTON, Dec. 22 — FEMA trailers, the cramped, impersonal
    housing units that have come to define the federal response to major
    disasters, may be on the way out, thanks to $388 million in federal
    grants, announced Friday, that will test half a dozen cozier, more
    permanent models of postdisaster housing."
    December 23, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/23/washington /23fema.html? ref=us

    Kansas: Abortion Charges Dismissed
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Kansas' attorney general, a vocal opponent of abortion, charged
    a well-known abortion provider, Dr. George Tiller, left, with illegally
    performing late-term abortions, but a judge threw out the charges
    after less than a day. The judge, Paul W. Clark, dismissed the charges
    at the request of District Attorney Nola Foulston of Sedgwick County,
    who said her office had not been consulted by Attorney General
    Phill Kline. Dr. Tiller's clinic, one of the few in the country to
    perform late-term abortions, has been a target of anti-abortion
    protesters for decades.
    December 23, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/23/us/ 23brfs-ABORTIONC HAR_BRF.html

    West Virginia: More Testing in Mine Inquiry
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Federal scientists have found new evidence supporting the widely
    held theory that lightning sparked a huge methane gas explosion
    that killed 12 men in the Sago Mine last January. Sandia National
    Laboratories said its lightning experts spent 10 days testing
    at the mine and found that lightning can readily move through
    solid ground without a metal conductor.
    December 23, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/23/us/ 23brfs-MORETESTI NGI_BRF.html

    Seductively Easy, Payday Loans Often Snowball
    By ERIK ECKHOLM
    "In many states, including New Mexico, lenders also make no effort
    to see if customers have borrowed elsewhere, which is how Mr. Milford
    could take out so many loans at once. If they repay on time, borrowers
    pay fees ranging from $15 per $100 borrowed in some states to,
    in New Mexico, often $20 or more per $100, which translates into
    an annualized interest rate, for a two-week loan, of 520 percent
    or more."
    December 23, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/23/us/ 23payday. html?ref= us

    Italian Fashion Industry Pledges to Fight Anorexia
    By PETER KIEFER
    December 22, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/22/world/ europe/22cnd- italy.html

    Blood Diamond
    A Film Review
    By Dr. Barbara Ransby, PhD
    The Black Commentator Editorial Board
    December 21, 2006
    Issue 211
    http://www.blackcom mentator. com/211/211_ blood_diamond_ ransby_ed_ bd.html

    From DVDs to IEDs
    The teen and I are doing our seasonal, consumerist duty at Best Buy,
    when to our right, in the DVD section, stand two tall Marines over
    a smaller teen boy. Back and forth, a well-rehearsed duo, the
    queries fly -- How old are you? What are your plans after high
    school? What do you want out of life? Do you want to be
    successful and respected?
    http://redstateson. blogspot. com/2006/ 12/from-dvds- to-ieds.html

    Marines Charged in Killing of 24 Iraqi Civilians
    http://www.truthout .org/docs_ 2006/122106R. shtml

    Agency to Test Military Draft Machinery
    By KASIE HUNT
    The Associated Press
    Thursday, December 21, 2006; 9:45 PM
    http://www.washingt onpost.com/ wp-dyn/content/ article/2006/ 12/21/AR20061221
    01327.html

    "I'm Jealous of Cuba"
    An Interview with Gore Vidal
    By ROSA MARIAM ELIZALDE
    Havana
    December 21, 2006
    http://www.counterp unch.com/ mariam12212006. html

    Chavez Landslide Tops All In US History
    by Stephen Lendman
    Wednesday, 20 December 2006
    http://www.atlantic freepress. com/content/ view/490/ 81/

    URGENT Support is requested from Dine Elders and Youth!
    Sithe Global & DPA are proposing to build the Desert Rock
    power plant, a 1,500 MW Coal Fired plant in the Four Corners
    area on the Navajo Reservation. This is an area already polluted
    by 2 other major coal power plants. Local Navajo residence and
    community members oppose this project for many harmful
    reasons!! This Desert Rock power plant is still in the environmental
    review process and has NOT yet been permitted.
    http://www.blackmes awatercoalition. org/urgent_ Dine121406. html

    Bush "Developing Illegal Bioterror Weapons"
    http://www.truthout .org/docs_ 2006/122006R. shtml

    Climate Change vs Mother Nature: Scientists reveal that bears
    have stopped hibernating
    Bears have stopped hibernating in the mountains of northern Spain,
    scientists revealed yesterday, in what may be one of the strongest
    signals yet of how much climate change is affecting the natural world.
    December 21, 2006
    http://news. independent. co.uk/environmen t/article2091875 .ece

    Raising the Floor on Pay
    By LOUIS UCHITELLE
    December 20, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/20/business/ 20minwage. html?ref= business

    Goldman CEO's $53.4M Bonus Breaks Record
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    December 20, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/aponline/ business/ AP-Goldman- Sachs-Bonuses. html

    Goldman Chairman Gets a Bonus of $53.4 Million
    By JENNY ANDERSON
    December 20, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/20/business/ 20wall.html? ref=business

    Fear and Hope in Immigrant's Furtive Existence
    By LIZETTE ALVAREZ
    December 20, 2006
    http://www.nytimes. com/2006/ 12/20/us/ 20veronica. html?
    hp&ex=1166677200& en=e9be2f8580c85 b6c&ei=5094& partner=homepage

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    SCROLL DOWN TO READ:
    EVENT ANNOUNCEMENTS (IN FULL DETAIL)
    GENERAL ANNOUNCEMENTS

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    EVENT ANNOUNCEMENTS
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    BARRIO UNIDO FOR GENERAL AND UNCONDITIONAL
    AMNESTY FOR ALL!
    EMERGENCY PICKET LINE
    FRIDAY, JANUARY 12, 2007, 4:00 - 7:00 P.M.
    FEDERAL BUILDING
    450 GOLDEN GATE AVE.
    BETWEEN POLK AND LARKIN STREETS, S.F.

    STOP THE ICE RAIDS! FREE THE WORKERS!
    STOP THE DEPORTATIONS!
    THE WORKERS SHOULD GET THEIR JOBS BACK!
    WE DEMAND IMMEDIATE, GENERAL AND UNCONDITIONAL
    AMNESTY FOR ALL! DEFEND THE RIGHT OF
    ALL WORKERS TO ORGANIZE UNIONS IN THEIR OWN DEFENSE!

    All human beings have basic, inalienable human rights to life, liberty
    and the pursuit of happiness. If your family is starving and you
    can not find work, you have the right to find someplace where you can
    feed, clothe and house your family.

    If capital can go all over the world exploiting workers, then workers
    have the right to move to find work for their family's basic survival.

    IMMIGRANT WORKERS ARE GUILTY OF NOTHING
    BUT WORKING HARD TO SUPPORT THEMSELVES
    AND THEIR FAMILIES.

    From South America, Latin America, China, Africa, India--in countries
    all over the world, not to speak of the war in Iraq--a war of blood
    for oil--U.S. businesses are raking in huge profits off the backs of workers
    who earn slave wages and work under the most dangerous working conditions
    at best, and under a state of war at worse.

    Meanwhile, here at home, they are laying off workers, closing factories, doing
    away with benefits and working conditions won by worker's struggles
    in the past--installing two, three, many-tiered pay scales--driving down
    wages to below the scale parents are earning--leaving our children
    with the heritage of a guaranteed life of poverty without union
    representation.

    WORKERS HAVE THE RIGHT TO ORGANIZE UNIONS!

    And now they launch an all-out war against the most vulnerable workers
    --who are driven to work in these meatpacking plants. Whether
    documented or not, this is brutal, dangerous and difficult work.

    And not so coincidentally, these same workers just happen
    to be in the midst of a fight to win union recognition!

    THESE ARRESTS ARE A THREAT TO ALL WORKERS
    AND ALL UNIONS!

    These mass arrests are terrorist tactics designed as a warning
    to all workers that if they struggle for a better life and better
    working conditions, they will be persecuted in every way
    imaginable.

    This is an all-out assault on every worker and it is being
    executed by a terrorist government-- the U.S. Government--
    who uses pre-emptive war based upon outright lies to further
    their oil profits; who will stop at nothing to increase their
    rate of profit.

    The ultimate goal of the U.S. Government is for American big
    business to continue to accumulate unimaginable wealth
    at the expense of the hardworking majority all over the
    world--nothing is off-limits to them in this, their fundamental
    pursuit!

    STOP THE ICE RAIDS! FREE THE WORKERS!
    STOP THE DEPORTATIONS!
    THE WORKERS SHOULD GET THEIR JOBS BACK!
    WE DEMAND IMMEDIATE, GENERAL AND UNCONDITIONAL
    AMNESTY FOR ALL! DEFEND THE RIGHT OF
    ALL WORKERS TO ORGANIZE UNIONS IN THEIR OWN DEFENSE!

    An injury to one is an injury to all! We are only as strong as our
    weakest link. If we allow these terrorists from ICE to continue
    to carry out these assaults against the basic human rights
    of any of us--no matter what our immigration status--they
    will not hesitate one second to use these same tactics of mass
    firings, arrest, etc. against all of us who dare to struggle
    in our own defense and in our own, basic human interests and
    for our own basic rights as workers and human beings!

    It's up to us to organize and fight back! If we are united, we cannot loose!

    WE ENCOURAGE ALL WORKERS AND ALL LABOR AND COMMUNITY
    ORGANIZATIONS TO ENDORSE THIS ACTION AND COME OUT TO
    PICKET THE FEDERAL BUILDING TO PROTEST THESE RAIDS!
    BRING YOUR OWN BANNERS AND SIGNS!

    For more information contact:

    Barrio Unido por una Amnistia
    General e Incondicional
    Cristina Gutierrez,
    415-431-9925
    companeros98@ hotmail.com

    Bonnie Weinstein, www.bauaw.org
    415-824-8730
    bonnieweinstein@ yahoo.com

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    ACT NOW TO END THE WAR!
    SATURDAY JANUARY 27, 2007
    Washington, D.C.
    VOLUNTEER Live in NYC or DC? We need your help
    before and during the protest. Call 212-868-5545
    STAYINFORMED Visit www.unitedforpeace. org for
    updated information and to sign up for our action alerts
    DONATE Whether you can contribute $10, $100, or
    $1000, we need your support to help end the war!
    Call 212-866-5545 or visit www.unitedforpeace. org/donate
    Join us for a massive
    march on Washington
    to tell the new Congress:
    unitedforpeace& justice
    www.unitedforpeace. org (212)868-5545
    On Election Day the voters delivered a dramatic,
    unmistakable mandate for peace. Now it's time for action.
    On Jan. 27, 2007, help send a strong, clear message to
    Congress and the Bush Administration:
    Bring the troops home now!

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    MARCH ON THE PENTAGON
    SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 2007
    U.S. OUT OF IRAQ NOW
    From Iraq to New Orleans, Fund the People's Needs NOT THE
    WAR MACHINE! End Colonial Occupation: Iraq, Palestine, Haiti and
    everywhere! Shut Down Guantanamo
    AnswerCoalition. org

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    LYNNE STEWART AND MICHAEL RATNER IN BAY AREA
    FEBRUARY 23-25 (Lynne and her husband Ralph will
    stay on several more days. Stay tuned for complete
    schedule of events.)
    Dear Friends of Lynne Stewart,
    I am pleased to announce that Lynne Stewart and Michael Ratner have
    just accepted our invitation to tour the Bay Area. The confirmed
    dates are February 23-25, 2007. Lynne, accompanied by her husband
    Ralph Poynter, will stay on several more days for additional meetings.
    In solidarity,
    Jeff Mackler,
    West Coast Coordinator, Lynne Stewart Defense Committee
    Co-Coordinator, Mobilization to Free Mumia Abu-Jamal
    O: 415-255-1080
    Cell: 510-387-7714
    H: 510-268-9429

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    May Day 2007
    National Mobilization to Support Immigrant Workers!
    Web: http://www.MayDay20 07.net
    National Immigrant Solidarity Network
    No Immigrant Bashing! Support Immigrant Rights!
    webpage: http://www.Immigran tSolidarity. org
    e-mail: info@ImmigrantSolid arity.org
    New York: (212)330-8172
    Los Angeles: (213)403-0131
    Washington D.C.: (202)595-8990

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