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  • BAUAW NEWSLETTER
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    Thursday, December 14, 2006
     

    BAUAW NEWSLETTER - THURSDAY, DECEMBER 14, 2006

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    Immigration video:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tacK8MAfuAs

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    STOP THE ICE RAIDS! FREE THE WORKERS NOW!

    The profound reality of what these ICE raids means and how,
    concretely, it impacts human beings can be seen at the
    following links. The article printed is one of many at both
    these sites. As usual, the photo gallery says more than
    a thousand words.

    Other articles are printed below detailing other raids in
    other states.

    These raids are crimes against children and families.

    We must demand immediate and unconditional amnesty
    for all!

    In solidarity,

    Bonnie Weinstein, www.buaw.org

    For more information about community organizing
    to fight back contact:

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

    Mission to locate nursing mother fails
    RAID AFTERMATH: IMPACT ON FAMILIES
    A priest and nun looking for the woman at Camp Dodge say
    an immigration official ‘wouldn’t tell us anything about anybody.’
    BY LISA ROSSI
    REGISTER STAFF WRITER
    December 14, 2006
    http://www.desmoinesregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/section?Category=NEWS&theme=IMMIGRATION&template=theme
    Photo gallery of the raids:
    http://desmoinesregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/gallery?Site=D2&Date=20061212&Category=NEWS&ArtNo=612120803&Ref=PH&Profile=1001&Params=Itemnr=1

    Marshalltown, Ia. — A priest and nun said Wednesday that an
    immigration agent at Camp Dodge blocked their efforts to find
    a nursing mother who was among those arrested in the raid
    at the Swift & Co. plant.

    Sister Christine Feagan of St. Mary’s Hispanic Ministry and the
    Rev. Jim Miller, a priest from St. Mary’s Parish, said they drove
    to Camp Dodge in Johnston on Wednesday to try to find the
    woman. They also hoped to secure the freedom of a father
    with an asthmatic child.

    Miller said he knew detainees were located there, because they
    had been permitted phone calls from Camp Dodge and some had
    called the church seeking help. But he said an immigration
    official at the facility “wouldn’t tell us anything about anybody.”

    Feagan and Miller returned to Marshalltown later in the day
    to deal with the scores of families trying arrange care for
    children whose parents were detained Tuesday.

    At the church’s Hispanic ministry, staff members and a community
    activist agreed to help care for the baby whose mother was arrested.

    No one knew when the baby girl, whose father was absent,
    might be reunited with her mother.

    The child, whose name was not provided by ministry staff, cried
    a little and stared at the different faces visiting the ministry.

    The caregivers said the baby had been difficult to feed since
    her mother was arrested, Feagan said.

    “The mother was breastfeeding the baby,” Feagan said. “The
    baby doesn’t want to eat. Another tried to breastfeed, but
    (the baby) knew it wasn’t her.”

    Feagan said she and advocates for local Hispanic families were
    trying to determine exactly how many children were in limbo —
    and were organizing assistance.

    Carmen Montealegre was among those offering assistance.
    She was helping to take care of two children whose families
    were affected by the arrests.

    One of the children, a 7-year-old, asked frequently why her
    mother had been detained, Montealegre said.

    “She asked me three times, ‘Did she kill someone?’ I said,
    ‘She was working under another name,’ ” Montealegre said.
    ###

    The unknown disheartens family, friends
    RAID AFTERMATH: SEARCH FOR THE DETAINED
    By ABBY SIMONS
    REGISTER STAFF WRITER
    Published December 14, 2006
    http://www.desmoinesregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20061214/NEWS/61214003/1001

    David Dominguez lost his cool as the sun set in a subdivision
    east of Camp Dodge in Johnston.

    After a five-hour drive from Grand Island, Neb., followed
    by three more hours of waiting outside Camp Dodge with
    no word on whether his friend and co-worker Silvia Zamarripa
    would be released, he was beginning to worry about her
    sons, ages 12 and 4, who waited with him. Zamarripa was
    arrested following a Tuesday raid at the Swift plant
    in Grand Island.

    “It’s not human, you know? It’s not human,” said Dominguez, 27.
    “You think all humans got some rights, illegal or not. At least
    do something for the kids, but they do nothing! She’s got
    no parents ... she’s single. Who’s going to take care of her kids?”

    Dominguez swore under his breath and kicked the dirt. He was
    among about 20 concerned friends and family members who
    waited Wednesday afternoon outside Camp Dodge after they
    were told by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials
    that their friends and family members were at the National
    Guard base. Some were sons, others were husbands, wives,
    brothers or sisters. None knew any information at all,
    and they were angry and scared.

    Dominguez’s wife, Reyna, was also being held at the facility.

    The workers from Grand Island were joined by clergy, attorneys
    and advocates, who also experienced frustration when
    they were turned away from the gates.

    Clergy members, in the past, have been admitted, and it’s
    important for them to be there, said the Rev. Diane McClanahan,
    pastor at Trinity United Methodist Church in Des Moines.

    “They need to know they’re not alone, they need to know
    we care, they need to know their family members can be
    accounted for, and they need to know people are outraged
    by this,” she said.

    Bishop Gregory Palmer of the Iowa Annual Conference of the
    United Methodist Church also expressed bewilderment that
    clergy were turned away.

    “Pastoral support does not come aligned with any political
    side with regards to immigration,” he said. “We’re granted
    access to mass murderers and other criminals, and I don’t
    think there’s any reason why pastoral support can’t be
    provided by proper clergy with reasonable credentials.”

    After a day of frustration, a few of the Grand Island residents
    peeled away — several had to drive home so they could
    return to work at the Swift plant.

    Giovanni Mancinas, 12, comforted his little brother, Brayan
    Alvarado, 4. Much of the day, Alvarado had been crying
    for his mother, Zamarripa.

    “He was talking about going to get Mom and pick her up,”
    said family friend Johnny Contreras, 35. “When they turned
    us away, he started crying and said, ‘I want to take her back,
    I want to take her back.’ ”

    At only 12, Mancinas shook his head, already realizing
    the gravity of his mother’s situation.

    “She’s raising us alone,” he said. “It’s not fair.”

    Reporter Abby Simons can be reached at (515) 284-8088
    or asimons@dmreg.com

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    ARTICLES IN FULL:
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    1) Broken By War, And Ordered Back
    By LISA CHEDEKEL
    Courant Staff Writer
    December 10, 2006
    From courant.com
    http://www.courant.com/news/nationworld/hc-ptsdcallup1210.artdec10,0,1928399.story?track=mostemailedlink

    2) Mass. Troopers to Detain Illegal Aliens
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Filed at 11:15 a.m. ET
    December 13, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/us/AP-On-the-2008-Trail.html

    3) U.S. Raids 6 Meat Plants in ID Case
    By JULIA PRESTON
    December 13, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/13/us/13raid.html?ref=us

    4) CUNY Chief Orders Names Stripped From Student Center
    By KAREN W. ARENSON
    December 13, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/13/nyregion/13cuny.html

    5) Broader Inquiries Are Urged on Underpayment of Wages
    By STEVEN GREENHOUSE
    December 13, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/13/nyregion/13labor.html

    6) Gore Vidal, Prophet and Rebel
    Lisandro Otero - Prensa Latina
    A CubaNews Translation by Sue Ashdown
    ORIGINAL http://www.lajiribilla.co.cu/noticias/n0075.html

    7) Sunrise and Sunset
    By BOB HERBERT
    December 14, 2006
    Baton Rouge, La.
    http://select.nytimes.com/2006/12/14/opinion/14herbert.html?hp

    8) Army, Marine Corps To Ask for More Troops
    By Ann Scott Tyson
    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Wednesday, December 13, 2006; A01
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/12/12/AR2006121201697.html

    9) Cut Off Funding for the Iraq War
    San Francisco Labor Council Resolution -
    adopted December 11, 2006 by unanimous vote
    [story via email...be]

    10) Ships That Don’t Dare to Sail
    New York Times Editorial
    December 14, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/14/opinion/14thu1.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin

    11) Palestinian Leader Blocked From Entering Gaza
    By GREG MYRE and CHRISTINE HAUSER
    December 14, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/14/world/middleeast/15mideastcnd.html?hp&ex=1166158800&en=e298b131f7fb1c90&ei=5094&partner=homepage

    12) OPEC Calls for 2nd Cut in Oil Output
    By JAD MOUAWAD
    December 14, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/14/business/15opeccnd.html?hp&ex=1166158800&en=4ff7dc75eade4060&ei=5094&partner=homepage

    13) Political Drama Re-enacts Moments in a Death Chamber
    By JESSE McKINLEY
    December 14, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/14/us/14tookie.html?ref=us

    14) Illegal Immigrants at Center of New Identity Theft Crackdown
    By RACHEL L. SWARNS
    December 14, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/14/washington/14immig.html

    15) Navajo elders blockade power plant site, face arrest
    Support is requested from Dine Elders and Youth!
    Please send far and wide!!!!
    URGENT Support is requested from Dine Elders and Youth!
    Enei Begaye
    Executive Director
    Black Mesa Water Coalition
    408 E. Route 66, Suite #1
    Flagstaff, AZ 86001
    Office #: (928) 213-9760
    PRESS RELEASE
    Wednesday, December 13, 2006
    [via email...bw]

    16) Sand Creek Massacre
    For Immediate Release
    [via email...bw]

    17) U.S. Troops Raid Hospital Again
    Inter Press Service
    Dahr Jamail and Ali Al-Fadhily
    Dahr Jamail's MidEast Dispatches
    http://dahrjamailiraq.com

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    1) Broken By War, And Ordered Back
    By LISA CHEDEKEL
    Courant Staff Writer
    December 10, 2006
    From courant.com
    http://www.courant.com/news/nationworld/hc-ptsdcallup1210.artdec10,0,1928399.story?track=mostemailedlink

    Nothing was stranger for Mary Jane Fernandez than the events of last
    Christmas, which had her 24-year-old son, newly returned from the war in
    Iraq, downing sedatives, ranting about how rich people were allowed to
    sit in recliners in church, and summoning the Waterbury police to come
    arrest him.

    This Christmas may top that.

    Despite being diagnosed with severe post-traumatic stress disorder and
    rated 70 percent disabled by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs,
    Damian Fernandez has been called back to duty and told to prepare for
    another deployment to Iraq.

    Two weeks ago, Fernandez, who was discharged from active duty in the
    Army last year and was working to settle back into civilian life,
    abruptly received orders to report to Fort Benning, Ga., on Jan. 14.

    When the FedEx letter from the Army arrived Nov. 28, he calmly told his
    mother and girlfriend, "I got my orders," staring hard at them with
    vacant eyes.

    That night, he snapped. He told his girlfriend, Riella Darko, that he
    wanted to die and asked her to take him to the emergency room of St.
    Mary's Hospital, where he was placed on a suicide watch. He has since been
    transferred to a locked ward in the Northampton VA Medical Center in
    Massachusetts.

    His callback orders have not yet been rescinded. Even if they are, his
    mother said, simply being told he must go back into combat has set back
    his recovery.

    "I don't understand why the military would put him through this," Mary
    Jane Fernandez said. "He was just starting to come back to reality a
    little, and now he's lost again."

    Fernandez is one of 8,262 soldiers who have left active duty but have
    been ordered back under a policy that allows the military to recall
    troops who have completed their service but have time remaining on their
    contracts. About 5,700 of those called up have already been mobilized,
    with Fernandez among about 2,500 ordered to report in the coming weeks.

    The practice of recalling inactive soldiers involuntarily is itself
    controversial, with some members of Congress and veterans' advocates
    calling it a backdoor draft.

    All soldiers have an eight-year military service obligation, but
    typically are released from duty after two to six years. The Army, strained
    by the war, announced in mid-2004 that it would begin tapping a pool of
    about 100,000 soldiers who had time left on their service obligations,
    to fill vacancies in Reserve and National Guard units.

    The fact that some of those being summoned have been ruled disabled by
    the VA or the military, with service-connected PTSD and other medical
    problems, is raising alarm among veterans' advocates and families. In
    Fernandez's case, the 70 percent disability rating indicated the serious
    degree to which doctors had judged his mental state to be impaired.

    Steve Robinson, director of government relations for Veterans of
    America, said he knew of a number of other war veterans with PTSD who had
    been called back to Iraq.

    "If you have a war-related injury that you're being compensated for,"
    he said, "to be sent back into a situation that might exacerbate the
    problem just doesn't make sense."

    Going Back

    Paul Sinsigalli, 30, of Andover, was just starting the fall semester at
    Manchester Community College when he received a letter ordering him
    back to duty Nov. 5.

    Two years ago, he served a rough tour in Baghdad, where he conducted
    house-to-house raids and witnessed a group of women and children being
    blown up by a suicide bomb. He has since been diagnosed with PTSD and a
    degenerative disk problem in his back.

    After sending the Army his medical and college records, he was granted
    a two-month delay and now must report to Fort Jackson, S.C., by Jan. 7
    or risk criminal prosecution, as the call-up orders warn.

    "I've tried really hard to adjust to being out. I thought, `They won't
    call me back - I'm disabled,'" said Sinsigalli, who receives
    compensation for his PTSD, which the VA has deemed 10 percent disabling.

    "If I have to go back [to Iraq], obviously I'm going to do whatever it
    takes to get my head back into it. But it's hard - I'm pretty shook
    up," he said. "The thing that gets me is, if I tried to re-enlist, they
    wouldn't even take me unless I waived my disability."

    Lt. Col. Bryan Hilferty, an Army spokesman, acknowledged that recalling
    inactive soldiers - many of whom have settled into jobs or college and
    have had no association with the military in recent years - was a last
    resort.

    "We do look every other place" to fill combat slots, Hilferty said.
    "However, the nation's at war, and it's better for us, and the soldiers,
    to send fully manned units."

    Hilferty said veterans can seek exemptions from being recalled and
    receive medical screenings before being deployed. But he said a physical or
    mental disability, including PTSD, was not "an automatic exemption"
    from serving.

    "Clearly, many soldiers are disabled in some way after war," he said.
    "Many of them remain on active duty."

    Hilferty said the Army does not have a system for checking every
    veteran's disability status before sending out the call-up orders. Soldiers
    are picked at random, based on the job specialties that are needed. They
    have the responsibility to provide documentation of their medical
    conditions, he said.

    "You may request a delay or exemption only under circumstances of
    extreme hardship or physical inability," the recall notices say.

    To date, about 24 percent of the 10,917 soldiers who have received
    mobilization orders have been granted exemptions, Army figures show.

    Last summer, the Marines also began recalling some inactive reservists
    to fill critical jobs.

    Mary Jane Fernandez said she already has notified the Army about
    Damian's chronic PTSD, and is stunned that he has not been excused. She said
    a friend of Damian's, who also has severe PTSD, has opted to go back to
    Iraq because "he misses killing people," the friend told her. A
    veterans' counselor familiar with the case confirmed that account.

    Mary Jane said she cannot picture Damian, whose symptoms include
    paranoia and hallucinations, back in a war zone.

    "I don't trust him taking out the garbage, let alone watching someone's
    back on the battlefield," she said.

    Army and Defense Department officials acknowledged to The Courant
    earlier this year that they were redeploying soldiers with PTSD - even
    though medical standards for enlistment in the armed forces disqualify
    recruits who suffer from PTSD. The practice of recycling troops with PTSD
    into war has drawn criticism from some combat-stress experts, who say
    that re-exposure to trauma increases the risk of serious psychiatric
    problems.

    Last month, Assistant Secretary of Defense William Winkenwerder Jr.
    issued a new policy that steps up psychological screening of troops, after
    a Courant series detailing gaps in mental health care brought pressure
    from Congress for improvements. Among other things, the policy deems
    PTSD a "treatable" condition, but directs that troops with psychiatric
    disorders should be sent to war only if they are stable and "without
    significant symptoms" for at least three months prior to deployment.

    Because the policy is new and still allows military clinicians broad
    discretion in deciding which mental conditions should preclude
    deployment, its impact is uncertain.

    A Broken Son

    Before he received his recall orders, Damian Fernandez's PTSD symptoms
    had just begun to subside, his mother and girlfriend said.

    Riella Darko, 24, recently learned that she was pregnant, and Damian's
    outlook had brightened slightly at the prospect of becoming a father.
    At a baby shower last month, "He actually looked a little happy," Riella
    said.

    "Happy" hasn't been in Damian's emotional repertoire since he arrived
    home in June 2005 from a year in Iraq, Riella and Mary Jane said. The
    once-upbeat soldier who went club-hopping with friends, enjoyed writing
    and drawing and talked of becoming a state cop never made it back from
    Iraq. The man who returned in his place, they barely recognized.

    "I used to have to track him down on his cell all the time," said Mary
    Jane, who shares a two-family house with her son. "Now, I never have to
    call him because I know where he is - upstairs."

    Damian had spent most of the last 18 months upstairs, playing video
    games or drinking himself to sleep, Mary Jane and Riella said. He attended
    community college classes for a few weeks, but abruptly quit after an
    incident in which he mistook a noise outside for a gunshot and flew into
    a panic because he could not find his gun, they said.

    A simple "What do you want for dinner?" can ignite his temper.

    "He throws things a lot. We have holes in just about every wall,"
    Riella said.

    Mary Jane, who is widowed, said she worries that the war has "broken"
    her only child. When he first came home from Iraq, his car stereo - a
    prized possession - was stolen. He was despondent for weeks, she said.

    "He asked me, `These are the people I fought for?'" she recounted,
    choking up.

    Although Damian has not spoken much about his experiences in Iraq, he
    told Mary Jane and Riella about a day a school bus exploded on a bridge,
    and children's body parts fell from the sky.

    "He said he accidentally stepped on a kid's insides - the liver or
    something," Riella said.

    After Damian fell apart last Christmas, Mary Jane said she convinced
    him to go to the VA to get help. He was diagnosed with PTSD and placed on
    an antidepressant. This September, he was admitted to a three-week
    inpatient program at the Northampton VA. His discharge records say:
    "Suicidal ruminations resolved. Otherwise unchanged from admission."

    The recall orders drove him back to the same facility.

    Mary Jane and Riella said that while Damian had worried about being
    sent back to Iraq someday, he had begun to relax in recent months. That
    changed when the letter arrived.

    "He feels guilty that if doesn't go back, he'll be deserting his
    buddies," Mary Jane said of her son, who received commendations for prior
    tours in Korea and Africa. "But if he does go back, he's afraid he won't
    be able to do his part.

    "He's all torn up now."

    Non-Assurances

    Because the Army has no policy exempting soldiers with PTSD from
    returning to war, counselors at the New Haven Vet Center have been unable to
    offer Damian assurances he will be excused. Mary Jane said one
    counselor suggested that Damian's best bet might be to stay "locked up" in the
    hospital through January.

    Still, Donna Hryb, team leader at the Hartford Vet Center, said she
    would be surprised if the Army deploys a soldier as severely impaired as
    Damian.

    "It would be counterproductive for the unit and for him," she said.

    Hilferty, the Army spokesman, acknowledged that redeploying soldiers
    with "severe" psychological problems could jeopardize other troops'
    safety. He noted that the Army is not calling back soldiers who have served
    in combat within the last 12 months, to allow them time between
    deployments. Hilferty also said officials are working to better monitor
    soldiers' "readiness."

    Robinson and other veterans' advocates said the Defense Department and
    the VA should be sharing medical records, so that the call-ups are
    targeted to healthy soldiers, not those with psychiatric disorders. Because
    many veterans are not even aware that they can be summoned to active
    duty, the orders alone can cause panic, the advocates said.

    Paul Sinsigalli said he has had trouble sleeping and concentrating
    since his orders arrived. Only recently had he gotten comfortable driving
    again, without worrying that every stray object on the side of a road
    might be a bomb. Now, he wonders if he ever should have let down his
    guard.

    He has put off plans to apply to the University of Connecticut's
    nursing program and he has moved up his wedding date.

    "I'm going to go down there [to Fort Jackson] with all my medical
    records, but I know when I get there, they're going to try to get me to go
    over," he said. "It's pretty simple: They need bodies."

    Contact Lisa Chedekel at lchedekel@courant.com.
    Copyright 2006, Hartford Courant

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    2) Mass. Troopers to Detain Illegal Aliens
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Filed at 11:15 a.m. ET
    December 13, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/us/AP-On-the-2008-Trail.html

    BOSTON (AP) -- Gov. Mitt Romney, who is weighing a White House
    bid, signed an agreement Wednesday that allows Massachusetts
    State Police troopers to detain illegal aliens they encounter over
    the course of their normal duties.

    Under the terms of the agreement, made with the U.S. Immigration
    and Customs Enforcement agency, an initial group of 30 troopers
    will receive five weeks of specialized training next year, paid
    by the federal government.

    The troopers will be drawn from the Violent Fugitive Apprehension
    Squad, the Criminal Investigation Section, the Anti-Gang Unit,
    the Drug Enforcement Unit and the Community Action Team.

    ''The scope of our nation's illegal immigration problem requires
    us to pursue and implement new solutions wherever possible,''
    Romney said in a statement. ''State troopers are highly trained
    professionals who are prepared to assist the federal government
    in apprehending immigration violators without disrupting their
    normal law enforcement routines.''

    The governor, who has been burnishing his conservative
    credentials in anticipation of a campaign for the 2008 Republican
    presidential nomination, has advocated building a wall along
    the U.S.-Mexico border to check the flow of illegals into the
    country.

    Yet the duration of the new policy is in doubt, because
    Romney leaves office Jan. 4 and his successor, Democrat
    Deval Patrick, has said he opposes placing the additional
    burden on the troopers.

    ''I'm going to investigate what power I have,'' the governor-
    elect told reporters last week. ''You know that I think it's
    a bad idea for state troopers to be involved in immigration
    enforcement. They have enough to do as it is, and I said
    that consistently.''

    The agreement also comes at an embarrassing time for Romney,
    who has pledged to announce his decision about a presidential
    candidacy early next year.

    The Boston Globe reported recently that the landscaper
    who maintains the governor's 2.5-acre property in Belmont
    has been employing illegal aliens.

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    3) U.S. Raids 6 Meat Plants in ID Case
    By JULIA PRESTON
    December 13, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/13/us/13raid.html?ref=us

    In simultaneous dawn raids, federal immigration agents swept into
    six Swift & Company meatpacking plants in six states yesterday,
    rounding up hundreds of immigrant workers in what the agents
    described as a vast criminal investigation of identity theft.

    More than 1,000 agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement
    appeared at 6 a.m. at the Swift plants with warrants to search for
    illegal immigrants. Inside, agents separated American citizens from
    immigrants, interviewing all the foreign workers and taking hundreds
    away in buses to immigration detention centers.

    In a new enforcement tactic, federal officials said they planned
    to bring criminal charges against some of the immigrants accused
    of using stolen identities. They said the raids were tied to complaints
    from United States citizens who discovered that their names were
    being used by Swift plant workers.

    “There are several hundred Americans who were victimized,” said
    Marc Raimondi, a spokesman for the immigration agency,
    known as I.C.E.

    Other immigrants who are found to be living illegally in the United
    States will be deported, Mr. Raimondi said.

    The raids brought protests from Swift, the only business singled
    out, and from the United Food and Commercial Workers International
    Union, which organizes employees at five of the six plants.

    Sam Rovit, chief executive of Swift, said the company learned
    of the I.C.E. investigation in March, but had been “rebuffed
    repeatedly” when it offered to cooperate. Mr. Rovit said the
    company had participated since 1997 in a federal program
    known as Basic Pilot, which allows employers to use a federal
    database to verify documents presented by job-seekers.

    “We have complied with every law that is out there on the
    books,” Mr. Rovit said in an interview.

    The six plants employ more than 10,000 people, Swift
    executives said.

    Mr. Rovit said the company had been careful to avoid inquiring
    too deeply into backgrounds of job applicants. He said
    the Justice Department sued Swift in 2001 charging that
    it discriminated against immigrant workers. The case was
    settled for $200,000, a company statement said.

    Illegal immigrants frequently use false Social Security cards
    or residency documents known as green cards when they
    apply for jobs. I.C.E. officials said the operation focused
    on immigrants who had obtained documents with identity
    information corresponding to that of United States citizens,
    in some cases by buying them from underground organizations
    that traffic in false documents.

    Officials at the union called the operation a “wholesale roundup”
    and said they would seek injunctions on behalf
    of the detained workers.

    “Worksite raids are not an effective form of immigration reform,”
    said Jill Cashen, a spokeswoman for the union. “They terrorize
    workers and destroy families.”

    The immigration agency raided plants in Hyrum, Utah; Greeley, Colo.;
    Cactus, Tex.; Grand Island, Neb.; Marshalltown, Iowa;
    and Worthington, Minn.

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    4) CUNY Chief Orders Names Stripped From Student Center
    By KAREN W. ARENSON
    December 13, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/13/nyregion/13cuny.html

    The chancellor of the City University of New York yesterday directed
    the president of City College to remove the names of two fugitives
    linked to violent crimes from the entrance to a student clubroom.

    Matthew Goldstein, the chancellor, called the designation of the
    room as the Guillermo Morales/Assata Shakur Community and
    Student Center “unauthorized and inappropriate.”

    Ms. Shakur — once known as Joanne Chesimard — was a member
    of the Black Liberation Army convicted in the 1973 killing
    of a New Jersey state trooper. She is currently a federal fugitive
    living in Cuba. Mr. Morales, also in Cuba, was a leader of the
    Puerto Rican independence group known as the F.A.L.N.,
    which claimed responsibility for a tavern bombing in Lower
    Manhattan that killed four people and injured others.
    Both were students at City College.

    Students at the center yesterday said the names had been
    posted there for 17 years, since a student group won the right
    to use the lounge in the aftermath of a campus shutdown over
    proposed tuition increases in 1989.

    A number of City College students interviewed yesterday —
    as well as Gregory H. Williams, the college president — said the
    names on the door had meant nothing to them. But one student
    who recognized them, Sergey Kadinsky, said he wanted to “raise
    awareness and raise a debate.”

    The Daily News printed a letter from him on Monday complaining
    about the names, and followed up with an article and an editorial
    yesterday headlined “Celebrating killers at City College.”
    The News said the college had no intention of renaming
    the room.

    But yesterday the college was hit with complaints. City Council
    members James S. Oddo, Dennis P. Gallagher and Andrew J. Lanza,
    the council’s three Republicans, said in a letter to CUNY released
    publicly, “Unfortunately, this demonstrates that City College
    is woefully out of touch with the taxpayers who subsidize
    the university.”

    They added, “The fact that CUNY employees would attempt
    to defend this outrage begs the question: ‘What is going
    on over at CUNY?’ ”

    They also said, “A terrorist is a terrorist ... period.”

    David Jones, president of the New Jersey State Troopers
    Fraternal Association, said, “These are criminals, and there
    is no way they should be endorsed in a public institution
    with their names on the door.”

    After receiving Chancellor Goldstein’s directive that the names
    be removed, Dr. Williams said yesterday in an interview that
    he would do just that and was trying to talk to the students.
    “Hopefully they will see the error of their ways, and will take
    it down,” he said. “If not, we will take steps to take it down.”

    But the students were not ready to acquiesce.

    Rodolfo Leyton, a City College senior and the center’s director,
    said students planned to speak to a lawyer, Ronald B. McGuire,
    and possibly “seek legal remedies.” The center sued college
    and university officials in 1998 when it discovered a surveillance
    camera in a smoke detector across from it. That suit is still pending.

    Mr. Leyton also said that while others view Ms. Shakur as guilty,
    “we see her as a leader in her community who was framed and
    unlawfully convicted.” He said minutes of college proceedings
    in September 1989 dedicated the room to one of the groups still
    using the center, Students for Educational Rights. Others also
    use the space.

    College officials said that they had not been able to track down
    the agreement giving the room to the students. Even those
    involved at the time were hazy about the 1989 tuition protests
    and what followed.

    Bernard W. Harleston, City College’s president in 1989, said
    yesterday that while he had appointed a committee of student,
    faculty and staff after the protests, he did not recall
    any specifics about the room.

    And Mario M. Cuomo, New York’s governor at the time, whom
    the student protesters had demanded to meet to discuss tuition
    increases, said yesterday that he did not recall much about
    the situation, except that he had vetoed the increase. He
    dismissed the debate over the names. “Considering the
    problems we have in society,” he said, “I’m not sure this
    is one of the major upsets to our tranquillity and equilibrium.”

    Rebecca Cathcart contributed reporting.

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    5) Broader Inquiries Are Urged on Underpayment of Wages
    By STEVEN GREENHOUSE
    December 13, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/13/nyregion/13labor.html

    Troubled by what they call a proliferation of wage violations in New
    York, two dozen immigrant and worker advocacy groups want
    Governor-elect Eliot Spitzer to make the state’s Labor Department
    move more aggressively against industries with widespread violations.

    In a report to be issued today, the groups say that instead of
    responding mainly to individual worker complaints, the
    department should initiate broad investigations of industries
    with a history of violations.

    “The Department of Labor needs to shift to a more forceful strategy
    that uses investigations of a whole industry to stop unscrupulous
    companies so that they don’t drag down the rest of an industry,”
    said Annette Bernhardt, one of the report’s authors and the deputy
    director of poverty programs at the Brennan Center for Justice
    at New York University’s School of Law.

    The advocacy groups, including the New York Immigration Coalition
    and the Latin American Workers Project, complain that minimum
    wage and overtime violations are widespread in many industries,
    including restaurants, landscaping, laundries, agriculture and apparel.

    “Workplace violations are becoming standard practice in many
    of the state’s low-wage industries,” the report said. “Law-abiding
    employers are forced into a race to the bottom when unscrupulous
    competitors pay below the minimum wage.”

    The groups call for legislation that would increase penalties for wage
    violations. They also want the state to pursue criminal action against
    companies that fire employees for filing wage complaints.

    The report urges the Labor Department to speed up investigations
    and to insist that violators give workers six years of back pay,
    as the law allows.

    “Investigations often drag on for more than a year,” said Omar
    Henriquez, chairman of the Workplace Project, an immigrants’
    rights group based in Hempstead on Long Island. “When low-wage
    workers depend on their salaries to survive, it’s obvious they need
    their money as soon as possible. And if the employer owes
    $10,000, we don’t like it when the Labor Department negotiates
    so they only have to pay $5,000.”

    Many of the groups behind the report, which also include the
    Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund, MFY Legal
    Services and the Tompkins County Workers Center, have
    complained that Gov. George E. Pataki’s Labor Department
    has been understaffed and unassertive.

    Robert M. Lillpopp, a Labor Department spokesman, said his
    agency had long pursued violations in the apparel industry
    and had recently created a Fair Wages Task Force, focusing
    on other low-wage industries.

    “We continue to be as aggressive as possible when we pursue
    violations,” Mr. Lillpopp said. “When we get tips, we investigate.”

    In 2005, the Labor Department collected $10.4 million in back
    wages, a 36 percent increase from 2004 and the highest amount
    in state history.

    Denis Hughes, president of the New York State A.F.L.-C.I.O.,
    said organized labor would support the coalition’s recommendations.

    “We want a Labor Department that is an advocate for those workers
    who are most apt to be exploited,” he said. “We want an activist
    Labor Department that is reminiscent of Frances Perkins,” who
    was Franklin D. Roosevelt’s crusading labor secretary and
    before that was New York State’s industrial commissioner.

    The coalition urged the department to work closely with
    community and immigrant groups to educate low-wage workers
    about their rights. The coalition said the department could use
    those groups as their eyes and ears because low-wage workers
    often approach them first about workplace violations.

    The report said the department needed more bilingual investigators
    and recommended legislation to make it harder for employers
    to bypass minimum wage and overtime laws by classifying workers
    as independent contractors.

    Mr. Lillpopp said the Labor Department had increased its outreach
    efforts, conducting 304 labor law seminars last year for
    3,484 people at 309 businesses.

    The coalition also urged the Labor Department not to discourage
    workers who are illegal immigrants from filing complaints.
    Mr. Lillpopp said his department did not take immigration status
    into account when deciding whether to pursue a worker’s complaint.

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    6) Gore Vidal, Prophet and Rebel
    Lisandro Otero - Prensa Latina
    A CubaNews Translation by Sue Ashdown
    ORIGINAL http://www.lajiribilla.co.cu/noticias/n0075.html

    The United States was perhaps the only nation to emerge victorious
    from World War I. It entered late and its material costs were far
    below those of its allies. It emerged however, as an influential
    power on the world stage.

    A victorious Wilson took over from the isolationists Harding and
    Coolidge, who had assumed the new leadership almost as an
    embarrassing and undesirable commitment. Hoover's Republican
    government brought the country to the breaking point with its
    laissez-faire policies.

    Speculators enriched themselves on Wall Street with a spectacular
    rise in stock market values. In 1929 the bubble burst. The economic
    depression and unemployment cast a shadow over North American life
    until Franklin Delano Roosevelt launched the New Deal.

    This period produced a generation of intellectuals conscious enough
    to ask what kind of country they were living in, and so U.S.
    literature has not lacked for writers committed to social criticism
    and political analysis.

    Edmund Wilson, Susan Sontag, Lionel Trilling, Joan Didion, Arthur
    Miller, James Baldwin, Norman Mailer and Liilian Hellman have been
    among the most prominent. But perhaps the one who has practiced it
    most has been Gore Vidal.

    For many years he lived in the Neapolitan coast of Amalfi, in a
    beautiful cliffside villa named "La Rondinaia," Swallow's Nest, where
    he accumulated page after written page, consolidating his position as
    one of the most prestigious intellectuals in his country as well as
    the world.

    Gore came from a high-society family. His grandfather had been a
    Senator, and in her second marriage, his mother married a rich lawyer
    and landowner, Hugh D. Auchincloss, who was also Jacqueline Bouvier's
    stepfather, which made them step-siblings.

    When Jacqueline married John F. Kennedy, who came to be the country's
    president, Vidal was a frequent dinner guest at the White House.

    His first novel, "Williwaw" (1946) was based on his experiences in
    the Second World War, but in the third person. "The City and the
    Pillar" (1948) dealt with the taboo subject of homosexuality, in an
    era when it was difficult to discuss and the public didn't tolerate
    open airing of such thorny subjects.

    The rejection provoked by this work forced him to write television
    scripts for some time, at which he was quite successful.

    Undoubtedly, his historical novels about the evolution of the United
    States were what solidified his position: "Washington D.C." (1967);
    "Burr" (1974); "1876" (1976) and "Lincoln" (1984) allowed him to
    offer his readers a vision of the ins and outs of government of
    recent years through independent epic literature.

    In those pages there were affirmations such as: "For the average
    North American, freedom of expression is simply the freedom to repeat
    whatever everyone is going around saying, and that's all."

    And, "It's always seemed strange to me that a nation whose prosperity
    is based on the cheap labor of immigrants practices such relentless
    xenophobia." And more, "There isn't a single mainstream publication
    in the entire United States that merits the attention of an
    intelligent man."

    Gore Vidal wrote several books of essays in which he developed the
    thesis that the United States owed its prosperity to the Second World
    War, which followed twelve years of recession, after which the arms
    industry magnates came to govern the United States - multiplying
    their riches through the conflict and deciding that the best way to
    maintain their interests was to keep the country functioning as the
    world's policeman and whose finances should be written into a
    permanent war economy.

    John Foster Dulles figured that in a perpetual arms race, the
    Russians would bankrupt themselves first. Albert Einstein had already
    taken notice, as early as 1950, that the class leading the United
    States had no interest in ending the Cold War.

    Vidal attributed to Theodore Roosevelt the original thuggish plans to
    take over Cuba, the Philippines and Puerto Rico, following Alfred
    Thayer Manhan's theories - taken from British history - which
    postulate that a country can only be a great power if it has a great
    military fleet and acquires overseas possessions.

    Gore recalled that at that moment, Mark Twain proposed that a new
    banner be substituted for the flag with stars and stripes - that of a
    skull and crossbones.

    Vidal is one of the United States' most lucid thinkers and his
    strategic vision of his country as a shipwreck has granted him a
    reputation for fairness and immense influence in the minds of his
    fellow citizens.

    Lisandro Otero is a writer and journalist, and the Director of the
    Cuban Academy of Language.

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    7) Sunrise and Sunset
    By BOB HERBERT
    December 14, 2006
    Baton Rouge, La.
    http://select.nytimes.com/2006/12/14/opinion/14herbert.html?hp

    They look for all the world like internment camps. The long rows
    of identical white trailers sit on flat, grim, barren expanses of land
    that are enclosed by metal fences. Armed guards are stationed
    at the entrances around the clock.

    More than a year after the catastrophe of Hurricane Katrina,
    thousands of the poorest victims from New Orleans are still
    living in these trailer parks run by the Federal Emergency
    Management Agency. They have ironic names, like Mount Olive
    Gardens and Renaissance Village. A more accurate name would
    be Camp Depression, after the state of mind of most of the residents.

    The “parks” are nothing more than vast, dusty, gravel-strewn lots
    filled with trailers that were designed to be hitched to cars for brief
    vacations or weekend getaways. The trailers, about 200 square
    feet each, were never meant to serve as homes for entire families.
    But in these FEMA parks, it’s common for families of five or six,
    or even more, to be jammed into one trailer.

    I stood outside a trailer at the Mount Olive encampment on Monday
    afternoon, talking with Geraldine Craig and her 21-year-old daughter,
    Danielle Craig. The women, who have been unable to find jobs,
    seemed baffled and depleted by their long ordeal. As we talked,
    Danielle’s 2-year-old son, Javonta, scampered around in the dust
    and gravel.

    Danielle’s daughter, Miracle, was 5 months old when Katrina struck.
    The baby was ill and receiving oxygen when it became clear that the
    family had to evacuate. “The doctors were taking care of her and
    she couldn’t hardly breathe,” Danielle said. “After we left we ended
    up in a shelter, and I said that my baby needed oxygen but they
    told us we had to wait.

    “They finally sent us to a medical building and they put her on
    oxygen for about two hours, but the doctor said there was nothing
    wrong with her.”

    Like so many thousands of others left destitute and all but
    despondent by Katrina, the family moved on — to Texas, back
    to Louisiana, eventually to Baton Rouge. It was too much for Miracle,
    who never got the proper medical treatment. She died last March.
    Her heart disease wasn’t accurately diagnosed until an autopsy
    was performed.

    “I felt like it was my fault,” said Danielle. “I’m still depressed.”

    When I asked if she’d been treated for depression, she shook
    her head.

    “That baby was one of the many victims of the storm who were
    never officially counted as such,” said Dr. Irwin Redlener, president
    of the Children’s Health Fund, which has been providing medical
    and mental health services to children in the FEMA parks.

    Dr. Redlener, a professor at Columbia University and the author
    of “Americans at Risk: Why We Are Not Prepared for Megadisasters
    and What We Can Do,” said he was outraged that so many thousands
    of the poorest victims of Hurricane Katrina are still stuck in limbo —
    unable to find jobs or permanent housing, denied adequate medical
    and educational services and with no idea when, or if, they will
    be able to return to New Orleans.

    “The recovery of this catastrophe in the gulf has been as badly
    mangled by the government as the initial response,” he said.
    “Fifteen months have gone by and you still have these thousands
    of people who in essence are either American refugees living
    in other states who have no idea what’s going to happen to them,
    or they are living in these trailer camps, or in isolated trailers
    on their old property, which has been destroyed. They’re just
    waiting for something to happen. And the wait is interminable.”

    Geraldine Craig said: “We just recently went down to New Orleans
    and they got nothing going yet, not in our neighborhood. So we’re
    going to be here for a while.”

    The residents of Mount Olive Gardens and the even larger trailer
    camp at Renaissance Village in nearby Baker, La., face challenges
    that seem almost insurmountable. Even minimum-wage jobs are
    very difficult to find and difficult to get to because there is little
    public transportation. Many of the residents are elderly, or disabled,
    or illiterate. Some are mentally handicapped.

    These are encampments of profound stress and sadness.

    As I was telling Geraldine and Danielle Craig goodbye, and wishing
    them the best for the coming holidays, Danielle shyly handed me
    a photograph of her daughter. At the top was written, “Miracle
    Breyonne Craig.” At the bottom: “Sunrise: 3-19-05. Sunset: 3-10-06.”

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    8) Army, Marine Corps To Ask for More Troops
    By Ann Scott Tyson
    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Wednesday, December 13, 2006; A01
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/12/12/AR2006121201697.html

    The Army and Marine Corps are planning to ask incoming Defense
    Secretary Robert M. Gates and Congress to approve permanent
    increases in personnel, as senior officials in both services assert
    that the nation's global military strategy has outstripped their
    resources.

    In addition, the Army will press hard for "full access" to the 346,000-
    strong Army National Guard and the 196,000-strong Army Reserves
    by asking Gates to take the politically sensitive step of easing the
    Pentagon restrictions on the frequency and duration of involuntary
    call-ups for reservists, according to two senior Army officials.

    The push for more ground troops comes as the wars in Iraq and
    Afghanistan have sharply decreased the readiness of Army
    and Marine Corps units rotating back to the United States,
    compromising the ability of U.S. ground forces to respond
    to other potential conflicts around the world.

    "The Army has configured itself to sustain the effort in Iraq and,
    to a lesser degree, in Afghanistan. Beyond that, you've got
    some problems," said one of the senior Army officials. "Right
    now, the strategy exceeds the capability of the Army and
    Marines." This official and others interviewed for this report
    spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not
    authorized to talk publicly about the matter.

    The Army, which has 507,000 active-duty soldiers, wants
    Congress to fund a permanent "end strength," or manpower,
    of at least 512,000 soldiers, the Army officials said. The Army
    wants the additional soldiers to be paid for not through
    wartime supplemental spending bills but in the defense
    budget, which now covers only 482,000 soldiers.

    The Marine Corps, with 180,000 active-duty Marines, seeks
    to grow by several thousand, including the likely addition
    of three new infantry battalions. "We need to be bigger.
    The question is how big do we need to be and how do we
    get there," a senior Marine Corps official said.

    At least two-thirds of Army units in the United States today
    are rated as not ready to deploy -- lacking in manpower,
    training and, most critically, equipment -- according to senior
    U.S. officials and the Iraq Study Group report. The two ground
    services estimate that they will need $18 billion a year
    to repair, replace and upgrade destroyed and worn-out
    equipment.

    If another crisis were to erupt requiring a large number of
    U.S. ground troops, the Army's plan would be to freeze its
    forces in Iraq and Afghanistan, and divert to the new conflict
    the U.S.-based combat brigade that is first in line to deploy.

    Beyond that, however, the Army would have to cobble together
    war-depleted units to form complete ones to dispatch to the
    new conflict -- at the risk of lost time, unit cohesion and
    preparedness, senior Army officials said. Moreover, the
    number of Army and Marine combat units available for an
    emergency would be limited to about half that of four years
    ago, experts said, unless the difficult decision to pull forces
    out of Iraq were made.

    "We are concerned about gross readiness . . . and ending
    equipment and personnel shortfalls," said a senior Marine
    Corps official. The official added that Marine readiness has
    dropped and that the Corps is unable to fulfill many planned
    missions for the fight against terrorism.

    Senior Pentagon officials stress that the U.S. military has ample
    air and naval power that could respond immediately to possible
    contingencies in North Korea, Iran or the Taiwan Strait.

    "If you had to go fight another war someplace that somebody
    sprung upon us, you would keep the people who are currently
    employed doing what they're doing, and you would use the
    vast part of the U.S. armed forces that is at home station,
    to include the enormous strength of our Air Force and our
    Navy, against the new threat," Marine Gen. Peter Pace,
    chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said at a briefing
    last month.

    But if the conflict were to require a significant number of
    ground troops -- as in some scenarios such as the disintegration
    of Pakistan -- Army and Marine Corps officials made clear
    that they would have to scramble to provide them. "Is it the
    way we'd want to do it? No. Would it be ugly as hell? Yes,"
    said one of the senior Army officials. "But," he added, "we
    could get it done."

    According to Army Gen. John P. Abizaid, the top U.S. commander
    for the Middle East, the Army and Marine Corps today cannot
    sustain even a modest increase of 20,000 troops in Iraq. U.S.
    commanders for Afghanistan have asked for more troops but
    have not received them, noted the Iraq Study Group report,
    which called it "critical" for the United States to provide more
    military support for Afghanistan.

    "We are facing more operational risk than we have for many,
    many years," said Sen. Jack Reed (D-R.I.), a member of the Armed
    Services Committee. He called it "shocking and scandalous" that
    two-thirds of Army units are rated "non-deployable." He said
    the country has not faced such a readiness crisis since the
    aftermath of the Vietnam War.

    The U.S. military has more than 140,000 troops in Iraq and
    20,000 in Afghanistan, including 17 of the Army's 36 available
    active-duty combat brigades. When Army and Marine Corps
    combat units return from the war zone, they immediately lose
    large numbers of experienced troops and leaders who either
    leave the force, go to school or other assignments, or switch
    to different units.

    The depletion of returning units is so severe that the Marines
    refer to this phase as the "post-deployment death spiral." Army
    officials describe it as a process of breaking apart units and
    rebuilding them "just in time" to deploy again.

    Training time for active-duty Army and Marine combat units
    is only half what it should be because they are spending about
    the same amount of time in war zones as at home -- in
    contrast to the desired ratio of spending twice as much time
    at home as on deployment. And the training tends to focus
    on counterinsurgency skills for Iraq and Afghanistan, causing
    an erosion in conventional land-warfare capabilities, which
    could be required for North Korea or Iran, officials say.

    If a conflict with North Korea or Iran were to break out and
    demand a medium to large ground force, the Army would
    be forced to respond with whatever it had available.

    The U.S. military today could cobble together two or three
    divisions in an emergency -- compared with as many as six
    in 2001 -- not enough to carry out major operations such
    as overthrowing the Iranian government. "That's the kind
    of extreme scenario that could cripple us," said Michael
    E. O'Hanlon, a military expert at the Brookings Institution.

    Unable to count on a significant troop withdrawal from Iraq,
    the Army seeks to ease the manpower strain by accelerating
    plans to have 70 active-duty and National Guard combat
    brigades available for rotations by 2011. Next year, for
    example, the Army intends to bring two brigades on
    a training mission back into rotation. It is investing $36 billion
    in Guard equipment in anticipation of heavier use of the Guard.

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    9) Cut Off Funding for the Iraq War
    San Francisco Labor Council Resolution -
    adopted December 11, 2006 by unanimous vote

    Whereas the war in Iraq is continuing, and

    whereas the American people in the last election have clearly
    stated their opposition to this war, and

    whereas the war can't continue without war funding, and

    whereas a major factor in ending the Vietnam war was
    the cut-off of funding by Congress, and

    whereas the Bush administration will ask for further funding
    for war early next year - up to $160 billion on top of the $70 billion
    approved by Congress last October; therefore,

    Be it resolved that the SF Labor Council communicate its opposition
    to continued war funding directly with Representatives Nancy Pelosi
    and Tom Lantos and Senators Barbara Boxer and Diane Feinstein
    by setting up delegations to discuss the issue of ending war funding
    in order to bring the troops home now.

    Submitted by Allan Fisher, David Welsh, and Rodger Scott

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    10) Ships That Don’t Dare to Sail
    New York Times Editorial
    December 14, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/14/opinion/14thu1.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin

    The Coast Guard, supposedly our first line of defense against water-
    borne terrorists and drug smugglers, has been staggered by
    a shipbuilding scandal of enormous proportions. A long-term
    modernization program to replace nearly all of the Coast Guard’s
    ships, planes and helicopters — begun four years ago in the wake
    of 9/11 — is foundering while its projected costs are skyrocketing.
    In Iraq, lax government oversight and incompetence or profiteering
    by contractors have disabled reconstruction efforts. Now the same
    disease is undermining our coastal defenses.

    The Coast Guard fiasco was laid out in depressing detail by Eric
    Lipton in The Times last Saturday, and in a similar article in The
    Washington Post. The misjudgments and slipshod work would
    be grist for slapstick comedy if the consequences, in cost and
    weakened defenses, were not so serious.

    As described by Mr. Lipton, the estimated costs of the project,
    known as Deepwater, have ballooned from $17 billion when it
    started in 2002 to $24 billion today. The plans call for 91 new
    ships, 124 small boats, 195 new or rebuilt helicopters and
    49 unmanned aerial vehicles. But don’t count on any of the
    new vehicles working.

    The initial venture — converting the Coast Guard’s rusting patrol
    boats into bigger, more versatile cutters — has been canceled
    because hull cracks and engine failures made the first eight
    ships unseaworthy. Plans for a new class of ships with an innovative
    hull design were halted after the design was found to be flawed.
    And even the radios placed in small open boats proved faulty;
    they shorted out because they had not been made waterproof.

    In the latest chapter in this disgraceful performance, Mr. Lipton
    reports in today’s paper that the Coast Guard did not inform
    Congress that it was warned two years ago by its chief engineer
    that a proposed National Security Cutter, meant to be the flagship
    of its fleet, had “significant flaws” in its structural design and
    should not be started until the problems were addressed. The
    Coast Guard began construction anyway. It plans to reinforce
    the first two versions that are being built and change the design
    on the remaining six.

    How could this happen? Mostly because the Coast Guard, in an
    astonishing abdication of responsibility, gave two large military
    contractors, Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman, near total
    freedom to plan, supervise and deliver the new ships and
    helicopters. In some cases, the contractors made boneheaded
    decisions, as when their shipyard partner ignored warnings
    by Coast Guard engineers that the converted patrol boats
    might buckle under the extra weight. In other cases, they
    might have put their own interests ahead of the nation’s, as
    when they adopted a risky hull material that had never been
    tried on a large American military ship but was pushed by
    Northrop, which had just opened a new plant to manufacture
    the hulls.

    No wonder the contractors are ducking for cover as the scandal
    reverberates, and are leaving all comment to the hapless Coast
    Guard. The Coast Guard seems, belatedly, to be moving in the
    right direction by giving its own engineers more supervisory
    power over the work and creating a division to oversee
    procurement and maintenance of ships and planes. Even so,
    the new Congress and the Department of Homeland Security,
    which is responsible for the Coast Guard, will need to keep
    a sharp eye on the Coast Guard’s performance. The industrial
    contractors have proved they were not up to the job.

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    11) Palestinian Leader Blocked From Entering Gaza
    By GREG MYRE and CHRISTINE HAUSER
    December 14, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/14/world/middleeast/15mideastcnd.html?hp&ex=1166158800&en=e298b131f7fb1c90&ei=5094&partner=homepage

    JERUSALEM, Dec. 14 — Israel ordered a border crossing between
    the southern Gaza Strip and Egypt sealed off today, preventing the
    return to Palestinian territory of the Palestinian prime minister, because
    he was allegedly carrying tens of millions of dollars in cash, Israeli
    security officials said.

    The Israeli move immediately sparked a highly charged confrontation,
    as dozens of Hamas gunmen loyal to the prime minister, Ismail Haniya,
    descended on the Rafah border crossing at the southern end of the
    Gaza Strip. The Palestinian side of the border is operated by security
    forces loyal to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in conjunction
    with European Union monitors.

    Mr. Haniya was returning to Gaza after receiving promises of large
    sums of financial aid from Iran and other countries during a trip
    abroad. He is a leader of the Hamas group that dominates the
    government; Mr. Abbas is from the rival Fatah group.

    Israeli military forces are no longer in the Gaza Strip. But the Israeli
    defense minister, Amir Peretz, had ordered the European monitors
    at the crossing to close it down, the security officials said.

    Palestinians may legally carry unlimited sums of money into Gaza
    as long as they declare it. But a senior Israeli security official
    who spoke on the condition that his name not be used said
    that Israel was acting in this case because “we have reason
    to believe the money will be used to strengthen Hamas and
    will be used for terror.”

    The border crossing was expected to remain closed until Friday
    morning. The security officials said that Israel has no intention
    of stopping Mr. Haniya again, as long as he does not have large
    sums of money with him.

    Palestinian government employees have received only partial
    and sporadic salary payments since Hamas, the militant Islamic
    group, came to power in the spring after winning Palestinian
    legislative elections in January.

    Israel, the European Union and the United States all cut off flows
    of money to the Palestinian Authority after Hamas took over.
    They have demanded that the Palestinian Authority meet several
    conditions, including the recognition of Israel, before restoring
    the financial flows; Hamas leaders in the government have
    refused to do.

    So in order to meet expenses, Palestinian officials have carried
    hundreds of thousands, and sometimes millions, of dollars
    in cash across the border.

    In October, the Palestinian interior minister, Said Siam, took
    home $2 million in cash from Muslim countries when he returned
    to the Gaza Strip from a trip that included Syria and Iran.

    An aide at the time said the Interior Ministry, which is responsible
    for various security agencies, planned to spend half the money
    by making $50 payments to 20,000 members of the security
    forces, and then put the rest toward restoring the Interior
    Ministry building.

    In June, the foreign minister, Mahmoud Zahar, returned with
    $20 million stuffed in suitcases. And in May, a prominent
    spokesman for the ruling Hamas faction, Sami Abu Zuhri,
    was caught trying to smuggle some $815,000 into Gaza
    from Egypt to circumvent the economic blockade.

    The Palestinian Authority is desperately short of cash and
    has not been able to raise anywhere near the $150 million
    or more that it needs each month to pay salaries and cover
    basic operating expenses.

    Several Arab and Muslim countries have pledged to help.
    However, the United States has threatened to impose sanctions
    on banks that conduct transactions with Hamas. The banks,
    unwilling to risk their access to international financial markets,
    have refused to handle such transactions.

    Greg Myre reported from Jerusalem and Christine Hauser
    reported from New York.

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    12) OPEC Calls for 2nd Cut in Oil Output
    By JAD MOUAWAD
    December 14, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/14/business/15opeccnd.html?hp&ex=1166158800&en=4ff7dc75eade4060&ei=5094&partner=homepage

    [Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries ( OPEC)
    "OPEC’s mission is to coordinate and unify the petroleum policies
    of Member Countries and ensure the stabilization of oil prices
    in order to secure an efficient, economic and regular supply of
    petroleum to consumers, a steady income to producers and
    a fair return on capital to those investing in the petroleum
    industry."
    http://www.opec.org/home/
    ...FYI...bw]

    OPEC said today that it planned to reduce its oil production by
    nearly 2 percent in February, the group’s second output cut in
    two months and its strongest signal yet that it aims to keep oil
    prices above $60 a barrel next year.

    Representatives from OPEC nations agreed to pare their production
    to 25.8 million barrels a day, from 26.3 million barrels, starting
    on Feb. 1. The group had already agreed to cut its production
    by 4 percent in October to prop up prices.

    “I hope the market appreciates we are working so diligently
    to bring supply and demand in balance, to have inventories
    at a reasonable level so that we do not have gyrations,” Ali Al-Naimi,
    the Saudi oil minister, told reporters at the meeting, held
    in Abuja, Nigeria.

    The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, which
    already accounts for 40 percent of the world’s oil exports, also
    said Angola would join the group next year, becoming its first
    new member since 1975. The addition of a second African
    country after Nigeria is a powerful boost to the OPEC, which
    currently has 11 members. Foreign oil companies have invested
    heavily in Angola in recent years and expect its production
    to grow dramatically in the coming decade.

    OPEC have producers expressed concern that slowing demand
    next year might cause prices to fall if production was left
    unchecked. But with oil prices still firmly above $60 a barrel
    and commercial inventories sharply down over the past
    month, analysts were surprised by OPEC’s decision.

    “This makes an incredibly tight market even tighter,” said
    Edward Morse, the chief energy economist at Lehman
    Brothers in New York. “It’s a very aggressive, assertive
    move. Clearly, some OPEC members want to keep a $60 floor.”

    Oil futures jumped today on the New York Mercantile Exchange
    following OPEC’s announcement. This afternoon, crude
    oil for January delivery was trading up $1.12, or 1.8 percent,
    to $62.49 a barrel.

    Oil prices had lost more than $20 a barrel since hitting
    a record of $77.03 a barrel this summer. That fall prompted
    OPEC to abandon its two-year policy of keeping production
    flowing in order to keep markets well supplied.

    After hitting a low for the year of about $55 a barrel in November,
    prices have since rebounded as a result of OPEC’s policy.

    “They are jawboning the market and trying to show they are
    being aggressive,” said Roger Diwan, a managing director at
    PFC Energy, a consultant in Washington. “The question is,
    are they being too aggressive?”

    “They want to show they are willing to manage supplies tightly,”
    he said. “But are they under-estimating demand and over-estimating
    supplies from non-OPEC sources? Are they acting on a too
    pessimistic scenario?”

    In a statement released at the end of its one-day meeting
    in Abuja, OPEC said it expected global oil demand to grow
    by 1.3 million barrels a day in 2007. But the group said that
    would be more than offset by the growth in supplies from
    producers outside of OPEC, which it expects to grown by 1.8
    million barrels a day, the largest rise in non-OPEC supplies
    since 1984.

    In the lead-up to the meeting, Nigeria’s oil minister, Edmund
    Daukoru, suggested that there was a general support for
    a production cut. The representatives of Algeria, Venezuela,
    Iran and Indonesia all agreed about a need to trim
    production further.

    “We are committed to supplying the market but we want to
    establish a balance between supply and demand,” said
    Mr. Daukoru, OPEC’s president this year.

    According to the latest report from the International Energy
    Agency, OPEC production fell by 550,000 barrels a day
    in November to 28.9 million. That figure includes the
    production of Iraq, which does not have an OPEC quota.

    Analysts at the energy agency, which represents consumers,
    have warned OPEC not to cut its production more, as higher
    energy prices could erode economic growth. The agency
    cut its forecast for Chinese demand growth to 5.6 percent
    in 2006, from a previous estimate of 6.2 percent.

    The backdrop to the OPEC meeting was a sharp reduction
    in oil inventories held by consuming nations in recent weeks.
    In the United States, the world’s biggest market, oil product
    stocks have fallen by 54 million barrels since October,
    a drop of nearly 1 million barrels day.

    One oil industry analyst said that while OPEC was concerned
    about oversupplied oil stocks last September, such concerns
    were no longer legitimate. Despite relatively mild weather,
    oil markets have tightened considerably in recent weeks as
    the impact of OPEC’s production cuts reach consumers.

    Lawrence J. Goldstein, the president of the Petroleum Industry
    Research Foundation in New York, said OPEC ministers should
    be careful about how they manage the market in coming months.

    He suggested that high energy costs, which have already
    contributed to a slowing global economy, could end up
    backfiring on OPEC by reducing consumption.

    “That’s a trend OPEC and the Saudis should not be ignoring
    because at the end of the day they want to sell, and if you
    want to sell, you need a vibrant economy, particularly
    in the United States.”

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    13) Political Drama Re-enacts Moments in a Death Chamber
    By JESSE McKINLEY
    December 14, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/14/us/14tookie.html?ref=us

    BERKELEY, Calif., Dec. 13 — As drama, what happened on stage
    at the Black Repertory Theater of Berkeley early Wednesday morning
    was not classic theatrical fare. The actors were mostly motionless,
    the play had only one line, and everyone in the audience knew how
    the story was going to end.

    But creating a compelling narrative may not have been the authors’
    point. The play was a re-enactment of the execution of the convicted
    killer Stanley Tookie Williams, staged on the first anniversary
    of his death by lethal injection at San Quentin State Prison.

    The performance was written and produced by Barbara Becnel
    and Shirley Neal, two friends of Mr. Williams and death penalty
    opponents, who were unapologetic about their play’s being
    agitprop.

    “This is political theater in the extreme,” Ms. Becnel told a crowd
    of about 150 people who gathered to watch the performance.
    “But it’s political theater in the extreme because we need it.”

    The execution of Mr. Williams, 51, a founder of the Crips gang
    who was convicted of murdering four people in 1979, has
    continued to be a rallying point for death penalty opponents
    as well as a source of contention about the methods
    of lethal injection.

    In September, a representative of the state attorney general’s
    office acknowledged that prison guards and nurses had botched
    Mr. Williams’s lethal injection, failing to hook up a backup
    intravenous line to his arm. Ms. Becnel said Mr. Williams was
    in agony during his execution, which took 35 minutes to complete.

    “I was there, I saw what they did,” Ms. Becnel said. “And I can
    tell you it was a 35-minute torture-murder.”

    State officials deny that Mr. Williams suffered unnecessarily.
    “The execution went exactly as the protocol is designed
    to carry it out,” said Nathan Barankin, a spokesman for Attorney
    General Bill Lockyer. “The lack of the extra IV line was definitely
    a mistake, but it didn’t affect the execution.”

    Michael Rushford, president of the Criminal Justice Legal
    Foundation, an advocate for victims’ rights and law enforcement,
    said he believed Mr. Williams was a bad role model for a play.

    “I think it hurts the anti-death-penalty movement to hold up as
    dastardly a criminal as Tookie,” Mr. Rushford said, citing
    Mr. Williams’s work with the Crips, a violent gang based
    in Los Angeles.

    Mr. Rushford added that Wednesday morning’s performance
    was simply “preaching to the choir” of Mr. Williams’s supporters,
    many of whom rallied in front of San Quentin the night of his
    execution.

    “I don’t expect an accurate portrayal of what happened,” he said.
    “But when you’ve made such a big deal of it, you can’t just
    let it drop after a year.”

    Mr. Williams’s experiences in the death chamber were part of a
    Federal District Court hearing in September — stemming from
    a lawsuit by Michael Morales, a condemned rapist and killer —
    that may affect death penalty methodology in California. The judge
    overseeing the hearings, Jeremy Fogel, effectively halted executions
    in California until he could hear arguments on whether methods
    of lethal injection caused undue pain. Judge Fogel is expected
    to issue a ruling soon.

    For supporters of Mr. Williams, his execution, which drew
    international press attention and a cadre of celebrity protesters,
    was unjust, in part because of his post-incarceration work speaking
    about the dangers of gangs through a series of children’s books,
    lectures and memoirs, many of which were written with Ms. Becnel.
    Mr. Williams also claimed to be innocent.

    On Wednesday, the theatrical re-enactment began at 12:01 a.m.,
    the time Mr. Williams entered the death chamber. It was performed
    by six actors, including Darby Tillis, 64, an exonerated death
    row inmate from Chicago who played Mr. Williams and said he
    had little trouble connecting with the role.

    “When you’re on death row, you always have an imaginary scene
    that you live out many times: how you would feel if you went
    down for an execution,” Mr. Tillis said.

    With a simple set — folding chairs, a gurney and a platform —
    the play’s action was minimal: three witnesses stood, a guard
    strapped Mr. Tillis to a gurney, a nurse fumbled with an IV. Only
    once did anyone speak, when Mr. Tillis asked the actor playing
    the frustrated nurse whether she knew what she was doing.
    The entire performance took about 12 minutes — about a third
    of the actual execution time.

    And while the audience was silent throughout, some said the
    experience had left them shaken. Kirya Traber, 22, who wore
    a Save Tookie T-shirt, said she had been outside San Quentin
    the year before, but felt a lot closer to the drama on Wednesday.

    “Here tonight,” Ms. Traber said, “was a lot more solemn.”

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    14) Illegal Immigrants at Center of New Identity Theft Crackdown
    By RACHEL L. SWARNS
    December 14, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/14/washington/14immig.html

    WASHINGTON, Dec. 13 — Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff
    on Wednesday announced a broad new plan to crack down on illegal
    immigrants who steal the identities of American citizens to get jobs.
    The strategy, he warned, would likely have economic consequences
    for the industries that rely heavily on illegal workers.

    The announcement came one day after homeland security agents
    swept into Swift & Company meatpacking plants in six states and
    arrested nearly 1,300 workers, almost 10 percent of the company’s
    work force, in what Mr. Chertoff hailed as the largest workplace
    crackdown on illegal immigration.

    Of the 1,282 workers detained, 65 were charged with identity
    theft or other crimes, officials said. The rest face administrative
    charges for being in the United States illegally and will likely
    be deported. The company, which cooperated with the government,
    was not charged with any criminal or civil violations.

    Mr. Chertoff said illegal immigrants had assumed the stolen
    identities of hundreds of American citizens to get jobs at
    Swift & Company. And he warned that he intended to aggressively
    pursue document-theft rings and the illegal immigrant workers
    who use them, even though he acknowledged that “when we
    remove the illegal workers, there’s going to be some kind
    of a slowdown.”

    “Obviously, when — even unwittingly — a business is significantly
    built on illegal labor, once we enforce the law, that’s going to
    have a ripple effect,” Mr. Chertoff said at a news conference in
    response to questions about the impact of the new strategy
    on businesses and the economy.

    “It’s going to be a deterrent to illegal workers,” he said. “It’s
    going to cause them to say that, you know, this happened
    in Swift, it could easily happen somewhere else. In fact, I’m
    pretty much going to guarantee we’re going to keep bringing
    these cases.”

    The news sent shudders through the nation’s businesses because
    Swift & Company, the world’s second largest processor of fresh
    beef and pork, had tried to weed out illegal workers and had
    relied on a federal program designed to help employers detect
    fake identity documents. Mr. Chertoff acknowledged that the
    program, known as Basic Pilot, is unable to detect authentic
    identity documents that have been stolen.

    In a statement, Swift & Company executives said the raids had
    forced the company to temporarily suspend operations on
    Tuesday in its plants in Texas, Colorado, Nebraska, Minnesota,
    Iowa and Utah. They said work resumed on Wednesday, but
    warned that production was expected to fall “below normal
    levels in the short term.” Union officials said that employee
    attendance dipped slightly on Wednesday because some
    immigrants were afraid to return to work.

    Homeland security officials emphasized that only the company’s
    workers — not the company — had been charged with wrongdoing,
    though the investigation is continuing. They said Swift’s
    situation demonstrated the need for a temporary worker
    program, such as the one advocated by President Bush,
    to ensure that companies have access to foreign workers.

    Mr. Chertoff also urged Congress to pass legislation that would
    allow Social Security officials to pass along information about
    valid Social Security numbers being used in multiple workplaces,
    which then would allow the Basic Pilot program to capture such
    data and give it to employers.

    Homeland security officials also noted that Swift fired scores
    of workers it determined were illegal, without informing the
    government, which had notified the company of its
    investigation. Swift also unsuccessfully sought a court
    order to prevent federal officials from conducting raids.
    Both instances, officials suggested, raised questions about
    the company’s willingness to cooperate with the government.

    But that did little to reassure jittery executives.

    “This is any business’s nightmare, whether you are in the
    meat industry or outside the meat industry,” said Janet Riley,
    spokeswoman for the American Meat Institute.

    Randy Johnson, a vice president of the United States Chamber
    of Commerce, warned that the raids would lead companies
    to question the value of participating in the Basic Pilot program.
    And Laura Reiff of the Essential Worker Immigration Coalition,
    said she was deluged on Wednesday with calls from business
    owners upset by the Department of Homeland Security’s actions.

    “They’re frightened; they’re outraged,” said Ms. Reiff, whose
    coalition represents hotels, restaurants, construction
    companies and other service industries. “Companies have
    tried to work with them in good faith. For them to target
    a company that is using a program that they’re trying
    to sell is disingenuous.”

    This week’s sweep reflects the Bush administration’s continuing
    efforts to demonstrate that it is determined to enforce the
    nation’s long-neglected immigration laws, even as it works
    to revive legislation that would create a temporary worker
    program that would legalize most of the 12 million illegal
    immigrants believed to be in the United States.

    In 2002, immigration officials arrested or charged 25 people
    for criminal violation of immigration law. During fiscal year 2006,
    which ended on Sept. 30, that number surged to 716. Hundreds
    more were arrested and deported for living here illegally.

    Richard Siklos contributed reporting from New York.

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    15) Navajo elders blockade power plant site, face arrest
    Support is requested from Dine Elders and Youth!
    Please send far and wide!!!!
    URGENT Support is requested from Dine Elders and Youth!
    Enei Begaye
    Executive Director
    Black Mesa Water Coalition
    408 E. Route 66, Suite #1
    Flagstaff, AZ 86001
    Office #: (928) 213-9760
    PRESS RELEASE
    Wednesday, December 13, 2006

    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.

    However, Desert Rock company trucks have began moving onto the
    backyard of Alice Gilmore, an elderly navajo woman, and her family on
    wednesday to begin drilling efforts. Desert Rock officials and police
    have not shown any documents or permits to the local residents
    stating their purpose or permission to be there. Dine supporters and
    community members have joined Alice and her family to blockade the
    road. They are elderly women and youth, and they have been camped out
    on the road over night since Tuesday! Desert Rock trucks have
    repeatedly rushed them and have almost run-over people a number of
    times as they attempt to get by. Desert Rock power company is
    violating the lease rights of the local Navajo residences and is
    harassing elderly Navajo women and youth! This is an urgent time and
    support is needed!!!

    Please read on to find out how you can help! and Please pass this
    onto others!

    Lucy A. Willie, right, stands at the proposed Desert Rock Power Plant
    site outside of Burnham on Wednesday where she and
    several friends and family stayed overnight to stop a contractor for
    Desert Rock Energy Company from doing preliminary work.

    What they need:
    - More People Support
    - Fire wood
    - $$
    - Attention!

    how You can Help!

    - More People! More people are needed to sit in support! All are
    welcome!
    directions to the area are below:
    The site is between Gallup, NM and Shiprock, NM (northeastern, NM).
    Take the road between Gallup and Shiprock, the 491. at the Mustang
    Service Station (one of the only service stations between the two),
    turn East on road #5 towards Burnham Chapter. From Burnham Chapter
    turn North onto gravel road #5082. About 10-12 miles up the road turn
    West until you see the encampment. There will be markers (balloons)
    out on the roads. (if you begin to see a dragline, you've gone too far)

    - Fire wood! it is cold outside and many of the resisters are elderly
    women. if you can get firewood to the site it is very very much
    needed! the directions to the site are above.

    - $ Money! Resisters are in need of money for gas and food, and also
    for bail money if necessary. Please send donations to local resident
    and supporter:

    Elouise Brown
    1015 Glade Lane 34
    Farmington, NM 87401
    Elouise can also be reached at: thebrownmachine@hotmail.com

    - ATTENTION! the more media and observers are present the least
    likely Desert Rock is likely to run people over or harass them.
    contact the media, tell them what is going on. Contact Navajo
    Authorities, tell them you are extremely concerned. Be a legal
    observer. Spread this Alert!

    Media Contact: Lori Goodman, cell #: (970) 759-1908, e-mail address:
    kiyaani@frontier.net

    Contact the Following Authorities! Tell them you have heard about
    Desert Rock's harassment of Navajo elders and youth. Tell them you
    are extremely concerned! If enough people contact these offices they
    will know that the world is watching.

    Shiprock Police Department
    phone: (505) 368-1350
    fax: (505) 368-1293

    Navajo Nation President Joe Shirley's Office
    P.O. Box 9000 Window Rock, Arizona, 86515
    phone #: (928) 871- 6352

    also: George Hardeen, Navajo Nation Communications Director Office of
    the President
    Office #: 928-871-7000
    Cell #: 928-380-7688
    e-mail: georgehardeen@opvp.org

    Bureau of Indian Affairs (Gallup Office) they are conducting the
    Environmental Impact Statement.
    Harrilene Yazzi, NEPA Coordinator Bureau of Indian Affairs, Navajo
    Regional Office
    P.0. Box 1060 Gallup, New Mexico 87305
    Phone: 505-863-8314
    Fax: 505-863-8324

    Be a Legal Observer - get to the site and help record/witness what is
    happening

    Send this Action Alert Far and Wide!

    Thank you for your support!!!

    Enei Begaye
    Executive Director
    Black Mesa Water Coalition
    408 E. Route 66, Suite #1
    Flagstaff, AZ 86001
    Office #: (928) 213-9760
    PRESS RELEASE
    Wednesday, December 13, 2006

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    16) Sand Creek Massacre
    For Immediate Release

    Hello, Everyone,
    On November 29, 1864, 700 Colorado troops savagely slaughtered
    over 450 Cheyenne children, disabled, elders, and women in the
    southeastern Colorado Territory under its protection. This act
    became known as the Sand Creek Massacre. This film project
    ("The Sand Creek Massacre" documentary film project) is an
    examination of an open wound in the souls of the Cheyenne
    people as told from their perspective. This project chronicles
    that horrific 19th century event and its affect on the 21st century
    struggle for respectful coexistence between white and native
    plains cultures in the United States of America.

    Listed below are links on which you can click to get the latest news,
    products, and view, free, "THE SAND CREEK MASSACRE" award-
    winning documentary short. In order to create more native
    awareness, particularly to save the roots of America's history,
    please read the following:

    Some people in America are trying to save the world. Bless
    them. In the meantime, the roots of America are dying.
    What happens to a plant when the roots die? The plant dies
    according to my biology teacher in high school. American's
    roots are its native people. Many of America's native people
    are dying from drug and alcohol abuse, poverty, hunger,
    and disease, which was introduced to them by the Caucasian
    male. Tribal elders are dying. When they die, their oral
    histories go with them. Our native's oral histories are the
    essence of the roots of America, what took place before
    our ancestors came over to America, what is taking place,
    and what will be taking place. It is time we replenish
    America's roots with native awareness, else America
    continues its decaying, and ultimately, its death.

    You can help. The 22-MINUTE SAND CREEK MASSACRE
    DOCUMENTARY PRESENTATION/EDUCATIONAL DVD IS
    READY FOR PURCHASE! (pass the word about this powerful
    educational tool to friends, family, schools, parents, teachers,
    and other related people and organizations to contact
    me (dvasicek@earthlink.net, 303-903-2103) for information
    about how they can purchase the DVD and have me come
    to their children's school to show the film and to interact
    in a questions and answers discussion about the Sand
    Creek Massacre.

    Happy Holidays!

    Donald L. Vasicek
    Olympus Films+, LLC
    http://us.imdb.com/Name?Vasicek,+Don
    http://www.donvasicek.com
    dvasicek@earthlink.net
    303-903-2103

    "THE SAND CREEK MASSACRE" AWARD-WINNING DOCUMENTARY
    SHORT FEATURED AT NATIVE AMERICAN FILM FESTIVAL:
    http://www.aberdeennews.com/mld/aberdeennews/news/local/16035305.htm
    (scroll down when you get there])
    "THE SAND CREEK MASSACRE" AWARD-WINNING
    WRITER/FILMMAKER DONALD L. VASICEK REPORT:
    http://www.digitalcinemareport.com/sandcreekmassacre.html
    "THE SAND CREEK MASSACRE" AWARD-WINNING DOCUMENTARY
    SHORT FINALIST IN DOCUMENTARY CHANNEL COMPETITION (VIEW HERE):
    http://www.docupyx.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=28&Itemid=41
    VIEW "THE SAND CREEK MASSACRE" AWARD-WINNING DOCUMENTARY
    SHORT FILM MOVIE OF THE WEEK FOR FREE HERE:
    http://twymancreative.com/twymanc.html

    SHOP:
    http://www.manataka.org/page633.html
    BuyIndies.com
    donvasicek.com.

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    17) U.S. Troops Raid Hospital Again
    Inter Press Service
    Dahr Jamail and Ali Al-Fadhily
    Dahr Jamail's MidEast Dispatches
    http://dahrjamailiraq.com

    FALLUJAH, Dec. 14 (IPS) - Iraqi doctors and medical staff are outraged
    over yet another U.S. military raid at Fallujah General Hospital.*

    The raid followed a roadside bombing Dec. 7 where four Iraqi policemen
    were killed and two civilians injured. The injured were taken to
    Fallujah General Hospital.

    Shortly after this attack, a U.S. Marine who was on a patrol in the city
    was wounded by a gunshot.

    "U.S. soldiers replied to the source of fire then headed straight to the
    general hospital across the (Euphrates) river hoping that they had shot
    and injured the sniper," an eyewitness told IPS.

    "American soldiers seem to have some imagination to think wounded
    fighters might go to that so-called hospital," a retired surgeon told
    IPS. "We know that they do not trust that place because of the
    continuous raids by the U.S., and lack of everything in that hospital."
    The hospital is functioning at minimal capacity due to lack of medicines
    and equipment, the surgeon said.

    Eyewitnesses at Fallujah General Hospital said U.S. soldiers raided the
    hospital "as if it were a military target."

    "We panicked at the way they entered, kicking open doors and blasting
    locked ones," a nurse told IPS. "A doctor tried to tell them he had keys
    for the locked doors, but they pointed their guns to his face. Then they
    told us to go out of the building and they kept us under guard in the
    garden until the early hours of next morning."

    The nurse said the soldiers "would not even allow us to get some
    blankets to keep us warm; the temperature was below five degrees
    centigrade."

    Doctors and medical staff were arrested and insulted, and some were
    called terrorists, witnesses said. The hospital was then closed, and
    could no longer offer even minimal treatment.

    "We are used to that kind of behaviour from American soldiers," a
    hospital employee told IPS. "This was the third time I was in handcuffs
    with my face down. They have been more vicious with medical staff than
    others because they consider us the first supporters of those they call
    terrorists."

    The U.S. military said that Marines from Regimental Combat Team 5
    entered Fallujah General Hospital in order to search for fighters after
    two Marines were wounded the previous day in the city.

    Lt. Col. Bryan Salas, spokesperson for the Multi-National Forces in
    Iraq, told reporters: "Coalition forces searched the hospital to ensure
    that it continues to be a safe place for the citizens of Fallujah to
    receive the medical treatment they deserve."

    This hospital has been raided many times before, particularly in the
    U.S. military assault on the city April and November 2004.

    Two years back, on Dec 13, 2004, IPS reported that the U.S. military was
    impeding Iraqi health workers around and inside Fallujah, and was
    deliberately targeting ambulances. In November 2005 IPS reported that
    the U.S. military had raided two hospitals in Ramadi.

    Many Iraqi doctors have been arrested by U.S. forces for various periods
    of time on suspicion of "supporting terrorism" in Iraq. Many have fled
    the country for fear of repeated arrests or even killings by U.S.
    soldiers or sectarian militia death squads.

    The independent Iraq Medical Association announced last month that of
    the 34,000 Iraqi physicians registered prior to 2003, over half have
    fled the country, and that at least 2,000 have been killed.

    Article 12 of the first Geneva Convention states: "(Combatants) who are
    sick and wounded...shall be treated humanely and cared for by the Party
    to the conflict in whose power they may be..." The article goes on to
    state that "any attempts on their lives, or violence to their persons,
    shall be strictly prohibited..."

    Article 24 of the first Geneva Convention states: "Medical personnel
    exclusively engaged in...transport or treatment of the wounded or
    sick...(and) staff exclusively engaged in the administration of medical
    units and establishments...shall be respected and protected in all
    circumstances."

    Under the fourth Geneva Convention, Article 18 reads: "Civilian
    hospitals organised to care to the wounded and sick, infirm and
    maternity cases, may in no circumstances be the object of attack, but
    shall at all times be respected and protected by the Parties to the
    conflict."

    (c)2006 Dahr Jamail.

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    LINKS AND VERY SHORT STORIES
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    Racism in the US Farm Program
    The Plight of Black Farmers
    December 14, 2006
    http://www.counterpunch.com/pennick12142006.html

    By JERRY PENNICK and HEATHER GRAY
    Bankers Report More Mortgages Being Paid Late or Not at All
    By JEREMY W. PETERS
    December 14, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/14/business/14mortgage.html?ref=business

    For a Convicted Murderer Who Claims Innocence, Offer of Freedom
    Presents a Dilemma
    By JIM DWYER
    December 14, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/14/nyregion/14convict.html

    Illinois: Court Rejects Slave Reparation Claims
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    A federal appeals court rejected most claims by slave descendants
    that they deserve reparations from some of the nation’s biggest
    insurers, banks and transportation companies. The panel affirmed
    a lower-court ruling that the plaintiffs had no standing to sue for
    reparations based on injustices suffered by their ancestors and
    that the statute of limitations ran out more than a century ago.
    But the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit,
    in Chicago, kept alive a part of the suit that claims corporations
    may be guilty of consumer fraud if they hid past ties to slavery.
    December 14, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/14/us/14brfs-SLAVE.html

    Black History Trove, a Life’s Work, Seeks Museum
    By JENNIFER STEINHAUER
    December 14, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/14/arts/14clay.html?ref=us

    Assembly Adopts Treaty on Rights of Disabled
    By WARREN HOGE
    The 192-member General Assembly unanimously adopted an
    international treaty protecting the rights of the estimated 650 million
    disabled people in the world. The convention, which must be ratified
    by 20 nations to come into effect, covers civil and political rights,
    accessibility and the unrestricted right to education, health and
    employment. Ratifying nations must adopt laws prohibiting
    discrimination. “We have now reached a global consensus:
    The disabled are entitled to the full range of civil rights that
    those without disabilities enjoy,” said Haya Rashed al-Khalifa
    of Bahrain, the president of the Assembly.
    December 14, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/14/world/14briefs-unanddisabled.html

    Tears of Rage; Tears of Grief
    By Chris Floyd
    t r u t h o u t | UK Correspondent
    Mass death returns to Ishaqi.
    I. Rashomon in Iraq
    Mass death came again to the Iraqi town of Ishaqi last Friday. Nine
    months after an American raid that killed 11 civilians, including five
    children under the age of five, another ground and air assault on
    suspected insurgents in the area left behind a pile of corpses,
    including at least two children. As with the earlier incident, Friday's
    attack has produced conflicting stories of what really happened,
    but the end result is clear: a multitude of grieving, angry Iraqis
    further embittered against the American occupation.
    Thursday 14 December 2006
    http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/121406A.shtml

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

    Gunmen kill Hamas judge
    By Nidal al-Mughrabi
    Wed Dec 13, 2006 9:33 AM ET
    http://today.reuters.com/news/articlenews.aspx?type=&storyid=2006-12-13T143258Z_01_L09553221_RTRUKOC_0_US-PALESTINIANS.xml&src=nl_ustopnewsearly

    Union Reaches Deal at Philadelphia Papers
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 13 (AP) — The Philadelphia Inquirer and
    Philadelphia Daily News reached a tentative contract agreement
    Tuesday night with their largest union, the newspaper and union said.
    The Inquirer and Daily News, the city’s largest newspapers, and
    the Newspaper Guild of Greater Philadelphia reached an agreement
    at about 10:15 p.m., a union spokesman, Stu Bykofsky, said
    in a statement.
    “It’s a very difficult agreement,” the union president, Henry J. Holcomb,
    was quoted as saying.
    After a 14-hour session on Monday, the sides met for three hours
    Tuesday before a tentative deal was announced.
    Mr. Holcomb said the union would have to make some tough choices
    about medical coverage. He did not elaborate on the agreement, which
    will be presented to members on Wednesday. He said a ratification
    vote would not come before the weekend. The Guild represents
    more than 900 news, circulation, advertising and clerical workers
    at the newspapers.
    A major issue had been control of the pension fund’s investments.
    Executives of Philadelphia Media Holdings, which owns the two
    newspapers, wanted management to have sole control over pension
    fund investments, saying the company was legally responsible
    for funding it.
    The union wanted to continue the longstanding practice of having
    a committee of labor and management decide on investments,
    saying it had worked well for 40 years.
    Mr. Holcomb said the pension plan would probably be merged
    with another union plan with union input.
    December 13, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/13/business/media/13paper.html

    Wall Street Edges Up After Oil Report
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Filed at 12:17 p.m. ET
    December 13, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/business/AP-Wall-Street.html

    Jason Leopold | Army Targets Truthout for Subpoenas in Watada Case
    http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/121306J.shtml

    Iraq War Troops Rally Support for GI Rights and Resistance in SF
    2006/12/12/18337216.php>
    Jeff Paterson, Courage to Resist
    http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2006/12/12/18337216.php
    http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/
    Muses Don’t Bother Me,
    My Country’s Politicians Do,
    Says Gore Vidal
    PEDRO DE LA HOZ
    pedro.hg@granma.cip.cu
    http://www.walterlippmann.com/gore-vidal.html

    The cover-up
    At the height of the six-day war in 1967, Israel attacked a US spy
    ship, killing 34 men and injuring many more. The Israelis claimed
    it was an accident, the Americans backed them up. But, as James
    Bamford reveals in his new book, both governments concealed
    the horrific truth
    Special report: Israel and the Middle East
    The Guardian
    Wednesday August 8, 2001
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/g2/story/0,,533578,00.html

    Olmert's stray comment fuels the nuclear debate
    Martin Hodgson
    Guardian
    The Israeli prime minister, Ehud Olmert, stumbled into controversy
    last night after apparently admitting that his country possesses
    a nuclear arsenal. Although widely believed to be the only nuclear
    power in the Middle East, Israel has for decades refused to confirm
    or deny the existence of a nuclear weapons programme.
    But arriving in Berlin for talks with the German chancellor, Angela Merkel,
    Mr Olmert seemed yesterday to undercut the longstanding policy
    of "strategic ambiguity". He is on a three-day trip to Germany and
    Italy, to lobby for stronger action to stop Iran developing
    nuclear weapons.
    Asked by a television interviewer if Israel's alleged nuclear activities
    weakened his argument against Iran's atomic plans, Mr Olmert said:
    "Iran, openly, explicitly and publicly threatens to wipe Israel off the
    map. Can you say that this is the same level - when they are aspiring
    to have nuclear weapons - as America, France, Israel, Russia?".
    Israeli officials were qu