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    Monday, January 08, 2007
     

    BAUAW NEWSLETTER - MONDAY, JANUARY 8, 2007

    PRESS RELEASE
    Campaign to End the Death Penalty
    Contact: Cameron Sturdevant, 510.938.2033,
    camconnect101@yahoo.com
    http://us.f318.mail.yahoo.com/ym/Compose?To=camconnect101@yahoo.com
    www.nodeathpenalty.org
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    DEATH ROW INMATE KEVIN COOPER ARGUES CASE
    BEFORE NINTH CIRCUIT COURT
    January 8, 2007/San Francisco—The Campaign to End the Death
    Penalty and other supporters of Ca. death row prisoner Kevin Cooper
    will provide an update on Cooper's case on Tuesday, January 9th
    after the 1:30 p.m. hearing of U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals
    meeting at 95 Seventh Street in San Francisco.
    The hearing is scheduled to start at 1:30 and is expected to be one
    hour. The press conference will start directly after the hearing ends
    at around 2:30 and will be held on the courthouse steps
    Oral arguments from the prosecution and defense will focus on 10 key
    issues in Cooper's case, including actual innocence, prosecutorial
    misconduct and constitutional violations. Further information
    about Cooper's appeal is available at:
    www.savekevincooper.org

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    EMERGENCY PROTEST
    OF BUSH’S PLAN TO ESCALATE IRAQ WAR
    THURSDAY, JAN. 11, 5 P.M.
    POWELL & MARKET STS.
    SAN FRANCISCO
    FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL THE A.N.S.W.E.R. COALITION:
    415-821-6545

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    Witness Against Torture
    Thursday, January 11, 2007: The 5 year anniversary of the first
    prisoners being brought to Guantánamo. March, Press Conference
    and Nonviolent Direct Action in Washington, DC. Endorsed
    by Center for Constitional Rights, CodePink, Network of Spiritual
    Progressives, Pax Christi USA, School of Americas Watch, United
    for Peace and Justice and other groups.
    http://www.witnesstorture.org/jan11

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    BARRIO UNIDO FOR A GENERAL AND UNCONDITIONAL AMNESTY

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

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

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

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

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

    We demand a General and Unconditional Amnesty for all!

    Protest the United States government

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

    For more information call 415-431-9925

    In Spanish:

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

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

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

    Se nos separa de nuestros hijos dej*ndolos traumados de por vida......

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

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

    Demandamos...

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

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

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    ARTICLES IN FULL:
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    1) THE URGE TO SURGE
    [Col. Writ. 12/24/06] Copyright '06
    Mumia Abu-Jamal
    [VIA Email...bw]

    2) The Imperial Presidency 2.0
    New York Times Editorial
    January 7, 2007
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/07/opinion/07sun1.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin

    3) Working Harder for the Man
    By BOB HERBERT
    January 8, 2007
    http://select.nytimes.com/2007/01/08/opinion/08herbert.html?hp

    4) War Could Last Years, Commander Says
    By JOHN F. BURNS
    January 8, 2007
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/08/world/middleeast/08iraq.html?_r=1&oref=slogin

    5) Pelosi Hints at Denying Bush Iraq Funds
    "She said Democrats are not interesting in cutting off money for
    troops already in Iraq - 'We won't do that' - and that her party
    favors increased the overall size of the Army by 30,000 and Marines
    by 20,000 'to make sure we are able to protect the American people.'"
    The Associated Press
    Sunday 07 January 2007
    http://www.forbes.com/feeds/ap/2007/01/07/ap3306883.html

    6) Private Firms Lure Chief Executives With Top Pay
    By ANDREW ROSS SORKIN and ERIC DASH
    January 8, 2007
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/08/business/08private.html?hp&ex=1168318800&en=ff2bfe6afe1590ae&ei=5094&partner=homepage

    7) Tax Cuts Offer Most for Very Rich, Study Says
    By Edmund L. Andrews
    January 8, 2007
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/08/washington/08tax.html

    8) Queens Man Dies After Police Use Taser, Reports Say
    By John Holusha
    January 8, 2007
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/08/nyregion/08cnd-taser.html?ref=nyregion#

    9) NO SAFE AGE
    [Col. Writ. 12/3/06] Copyright 2006 Mumia Abu-Jamal
    [VIA Email...bw]

    10) WHEN WAR CRIMES AIN'T CRIMES
    [Col. Writ. 12/16/06] Copyright 2006 Mumia Abu-Jamal
    {VIA Email...bw}

    11) Norway, Cuba deplore U.S.-owned hotel ban
    REUTERS
    Fri Jan 5, 4:26 PM ET
    http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070105/wl_nm/cuba_norway_dc_1&printer=1

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    1) THE URGE TO SURGE
    [Col. Writ. 12/24/06] Copyright '06
    Mumia Abu-Jamal
    [VIA Email...bw]

    Within days the Bush regime is expected to announce its so-called "new
    strategy" in Iraq -- the most talked-about plan being a surge in U.S.
    forces in Iraq.

    By 'surge' is meant the significant increase in troop size in that
    beleaguered country, a plan meant to address the obvious failures in Iraq.

    In light of the rumored 'surge', one wonders, what does it take for the
    administration to listen to the voices of the People?

    In February and March, 2003, the U.S. and much of the world spoke, with
    millions marching in the streets of cities the globe over, against the
    scourge of war.

    The Bush regime ignored them. No -- "ignored" isn't right. President
    Bush belittled the protests as 'a focus group.' As journalism professor
    Robert Jensen notes in his book, *The Citizens of the Empire: The
    Struggle to Claim Our Humanity* (San Francisco: City Lights Publ., 2004)
    Bush's response to the "single largest public political demonstration in
    history", was unbelievable:

    "When asked a few days later about the size of the protest, he said:
    'First of all, you know, size of protest, it's like deciding, well, I'm
    going to decide policy based on a focus group. The role of a leader is
    to decide policy based upon the security -- in this case, the security
    of the people.'

    "A focus group? Perhaps the leader of the free world was not aware that
    a focus group is a small number of people who are brought together
    (and typically paid) to evaluate a concept or product. Focus groups are
    primarily a tool of businesses, which use them to figure out how to sell
    things more effectively. Politicians also occasionally use them, for
    the same purpose. That's a bit different from a coordinated gathering
    of millions of people who took to the streets because they felt
    passionately about an issue of life and death. As is so often the case,
    Bush's comment demonstrated his ignorance and condescension, the
    narrowness of his intellect and his lack of respect for the people he
    allegedly serves." [pp. xi-xii]

    Decades ago, during the height of the Vietnam War, presidents and their
    military advisors extended the hostilities long after it was abundantly
    clear that the conflict could not be won.

    President Lyndon B. Johnson escalated it, but could not bring himself to
    rein it in, for fear that history would judge him one who 'lost' Vietnam.

    His successor, Richard M. Nixon further escalated the conflict, by

    ordering bombing of neighboring countries. Some historians now say that
    the escalation and continuation of the Vietnam war cost some 20,000
    Americans lives; the numbers of Vietnamese, and other southeast Asians
    are unknown to us.

    The point is, the war and its needless carnage was extended for years,
    at a horrific cost: to save U.S. face.

    It seems that this not-so-distant history is repeating itself.

    In a few weeks, we shall hear what "the Decider" has decided. You can
    bet that it will conflict with the will of most Americans. What kind of
    democracy is this?

    Demonstrations don't matter. Elections don't matter. Study groups
    don't matter.

    No matter what most Americans think -- it doesn't matter.

    Nothing matters -- but what the decider decides.

    There's a word for that -- and it sure ain't democracy!

    Americans have seemingly settled for a dictatorship of one -- in fact, a
    dictatorship of disaster.

    Like good little sheep, they plan to silently acquiesce as more of their
    young people are slain on an altar slick with oil.

    This isn't patriotism. It's the very essence of subservience.

    There's another word for it.

    Madness.

    Copyright 2006 Mumia Abu-Jamal

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    2) The Imperial Presidency 2.0
    New York Times Editorial
    January 7, 2007
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/07/opinion/07sun1.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin

    Observing President Bush in action lately, we have to wonder if he
    actually watched the election returns in November, or if he was
    just rerunning the 2002 vote on his TiVo.

    That year, the White House used the fear of terrorism to scare
    American voters into cementing the Republican domination
    of Congress. Mr. Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney then
    embarked on an expansion of presidential power chilling
    both in its sweep and in the damage it did to the constitutional
    system of checks and balances.

    In 2006, the voters sent Mr. Bush a powerful message that
    it was time to rein in his imperial ambitions. But we have yet
    to see any sign that Mr. Bush understands that — or even
    realizes that the Democrats are now in control of the Congress.
    Indeed, he seems to have interpreted his party’s drubbing
    as a mandate to keep pursuing his fantasy of victory in Iraq
    and to press ahead undaunted with his assault on civil liberties
    and the judicial system. Just before the Christmas break, the
    Justice Department served notice to Senator Patrick Leahy —
    the new chairman of the Judiciary Committee — that it intended
    to keep stonewalling Congressional inquiries into Mr. Bush’s inhumane
    and unconstitutional treatment of prisoners taken in anti-terrorist
    campaigns. It refused to hand over two documents, including one
    in which Mr. Bush authorized the Central Intelligence Agency to
    establish secret prisons beyond the reach of American law or
    international treaties. The other set forth the interrogation
    methods authorized in these prisons — which we now know
    ranged from abuse to outright torture.

    Also last month, Mr. Bush issued another of his infamous
    “presidential signing statements,” which he has used scores of
    times to make clear he does not intend to respect the requirements
    of a particular law — in this case a little-noticed Postal Service bill.
    The statement suggested that Mr. Bush does not believe the government
    must obtain a court order before opening Americans’ first-class mail.
    It said the administration had the right to “conduct searches in exigent
    circumstances,” which include not only protecting lives, but also
    unspecified “foreign intelligence collection.”

    The law is clear on this. A warrant is required to open Americans’
    mail under a statute that was passed to stop just this sort of abuse
    using just this sort of pretext. But then again, the law is also clear on
    the need to obtain a warrant before intercepting Americans’ telephone
    calls and e-mail. Mr. Bush began openly defying that law after
    Sept. 11, 2001, authorizing the National Security Agency to
    eavesdrop without a court order on calls and e-mail between
    the United States and other countries.

    News accounts have also reminded us of the shameful state
    of American military prisons, where supposed terrorist suspects
    are kept without respect for civil or human rights, and on the basis
    of evidence so deeply tainted by abuse, hearsay or secrecy that
    it is essentially worthless.

    Deborah Sontag wrote in The Times last week about the sorry
    excuse for a criminal case that the administration whipped up
    against Jose Padilla, who was once — but no longer is — accused
    of plotting to explode a radioactive “dirty bomb” in the United States.
    Mr. Padilla was held for two years without charges or access to a lawyer.
    Then, to avoid having the Supreme Court review Mr. Bush’s power
    grab, the administration dropped those accusations and charged
    Mr. Padilla in a criminal court on hazy counts of lending financial
    support to terrorists.

    But just as the government abandoned the “dirty bomb” case against
    Mr. Padilla, it quietly charged an Ethiopian-born man, Binyam
    Mohamed, with conspiring with Mr. Padilla to commit that very
    crime. Unlike Mr. Padilla, Mr. Mohamed is not a United States citizen,
    so the administration threw him into Guantánamo. Now 28, he
    is still being held there as an “illegal enemy combatant” under
    the anti-constitutional military tribunals act that was rushed
    through the Republican-controlled Congress just before last
    November’s elections.

    Mr. Mohamed was a target of another favorite Bush administration
    practice: “extraordinary rendition,” in which foreign citizens are
    snatched off the streets of their hometowns and secretly shipped
    to countries where they can be abused and tortured on behalf
    of the American government. Mr. Mohamed — whose name
    appears nowhere in either of the cases against Mr. Padilla —
    has said he was tortured in Morocco until he signed a confession
    that he conspired with Mr. Padilla. The Bush administration
    clearly has no intention of answering that claim, and plans
    to keep Mr. Mohamed in extralegal detention indefinitely.

    The Democratic majority in Congress has a moral responsibility
    to address all these issues: fixing the profound flaws in the
    military tribunals act, restoring the rule of law over Mr. Bush’s
    rogue intelligence operations and restoring the balance
    of powers between Congress and the executive branch.
    So far, key Democrats, including Mr. Leahy and Senator
    Richard Durbin of Illinois, chairman of a new subcommittee
    on human rights, have said these issues are high priorities
    for them.

    We would lend such efforts our enthusiastic backing and hope
    Mr. Leahy, Mr. Durbin and other Democratic leaders are not
    swayed by the absurd notion circulating in Washington that the
    Democrats should now “look ahead” rather than use their new
    majority to right the dangerous wrongs of the last six years
    of Mr. Bush’s one-party rule.

    This is a false choice. Dealing with these issues is not about
    the past. The administration’s assault on some of the nation’s
    founding principles continues unabated. If the Democrats
    were to shirk their responsibility to stop it, that would make
    them no better than the Republicans who formed and enabled
    these policies in the first place.

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    3) Working Harder for the Man
    By BOB HERBERT
    January 8, 2007
    http://select.nytimes.com/2007/01/08/opinion/08herbert.html?hp

    Robert L. Nardelli, the chairman and chief executive of Home Depot,
    began the new year with a pink slip and a golden parachute.
    The company handed him a breathtaking $210 million to take
    a hike. What would he have been worth if he’d done a good job?

    Data recently compiled by the Center for Labor Market Studies
    at Northeastern University in Boston offers a startling look at
    just how out of whack executive compensation has become.
    Some of the Wall Street Christmas bonuses last month were
    fabulous enough to resurrect an adult’s belief in Santa Claus.
    Morgan Stanley’s John Mack got stock and options worth in
    excess of $40 million. Lloyd Blankfein at Goldman Sachs did
    even better — $53.4 million.

    According to the center’s director, Andrew Sum, the top five
    Wall Street firms (Bear Stearns, Goldman Sachs, Lehman
    Brothers, Merrill Lynch and Morgan Stanley) were expected
    to award an estimated $36 billion to $44 billion worth
    of bonuses to their 173,000 employees, an average of
    between $208,000 and $254,000, “with the bulk of the
    gains accruing to the top 1,000 or so highest-paid managers.”

    Now consider what’s been happening to the bulk of the
    American population, the ordinary men and women who
    have to work for a living somewhere below the stratosphere
    of the top corporate executives. Between 2000 and 2006,
    labor productivity in the nonfarm sector of the economy
    rose by an impressive 18 percent. But workers were not
    paid for that impressive effort. During that period, according
    to Mr. Sum, the inflation-adjusted weekly wages of workers
    increased by just 1 percent.

    That’s $3.20 a week. As Mr. Sum wryly observed, that won’t
    even buy you a six-pack of Bud Light. Joe Six-Pack has been
    downsized. Three bucks ain’t what it used to be.

    There are 93 million production and nonsupervisory workers
    (exclusive of farmworkers) in the U.S. Their combined real
    annual earnings from 2000 to 2006 rose by $15.4 billion,
    which is less than half of the combined bonuses awarded
    by the five Wall Street firms for just one year.

    “Just these bonuses — for one year — overwhelmingly exceed
    all the pay increases received by these workers over the entire
    six-year period,” said Mr. Sum.

    In a development described by Mr. Sum as “quite stark and
    rather bleak for the economic well-being of the average worker,”
    the once strong link between productivity gains and real wage
    increases has been severed. The mystery to me is why workers
    aren’t more scandalized. If your productivity increases by
    18 percent and your pay goes up by 1 percent, you’ve been
    dealt a hand full of jokers in a game in which jokers aren’t wild.

    Workers have received some modest increases in benefits
    over the past six years, but most of the money from their
    productivity gains — by far, it’s not even a close call —
    has gone into profits and the salaries of top executives.

    Fairness plays no role in this system. The corporate elite
    control it, and they have turned it to their ends.

    Mr. Sum, a longtime expert on the economic life of the
    American worker, said he is astonished at the degree to
    which ordinary workers have been shortchanged over the
    past several years. “Productivity has been exceptional,”
    he said. “And for most of my life, the way to get wages
    up was to be more productive. That’s how our economy
    was supposed to work.”

    The productivity gains in the go-go decades that followed
    World War II were broadly shared, and the result was
    a dramatic, sustained increase in the quality of life for
    most Americans. Nowadays workers have to be more
    productive just to maintain their economic status quo.
    Productivity gains are no longer broadly shared. They’re
    barely shared at all.

    The pervasive unfairness in the way the great wealth of
    the United States is distributed should be seen for what
    it is, an insidious disease eating away at the structure of
    the society and undermining its future. The middle class
    is hurting, propped up by the wobbly crutches of personal
    debt. The safety net, not just for the poor, but for the middle
    class as well, is disappearing. The savings rate has dropped
    to below zero, and more Americans are filing for bankruptcy
    than for divorce.

    Your pension? Don’t ask.

    There’s a reason why the power elite get bent out of shape
    at the merest mention of a class conflict in the U.S. The fear
    is that the cringing majority that has taken it on the chin for
    so long will wise up and begin to fight back.

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    4) War Could Last Years, Commander Says
    By JOHN F. BURNS
    January 8, 2007
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/08/world/middleeast/08iraq.html?_r=1&oref=slogin

    BAGHDAD, Jan. 7 — The new American operational commander in Iraq
    said Sunday that even with the additional American troops likely to
    be deployed in Baghdad under President Bush’s new war strategy
    it might take another “two or three years” for American and Iraqi
    forces to gain the upper hand in the war.

    The commander, Lt. Gen. Raymond T. Odierno, assumed day-to-day
    control of war operations last month in the first step of a makeover
    of the American military hierarchy here. In his first lengthy meeting
    with reporters, General Odierno, 52, struck a cautious note about
    American prospects, saying much will depend on whether commanders
    can show enough progress to stem eroding support in the United
    States for the war.

    “I believe the American people, if they feel we are making progress,
    they will have the patience,” he said. But right now, he added,
    “I think the frustration is that they think we are not making
    progress.”

    The general laid out a plan to make an impact in Baghdad with
    the additional troops. Several other military plans since the fall
    of Baghdad in 2003 have faltered. He said he wanted the new
    American units, working with three additional Iraqi combat
    brigades that Iraqi officials say will be deployed in the capital,
    to move back into the city’s toughest neighborhoods and
    show that they can “protect the people,” which he said
    coalition forces had previously failed to do.

    General Odierno contrasted his approach with the last effort
    to secure Baghdad, effectively abandoned for lack of enough
    Iraqi troops last fall.

    Then, American troops conducted house-to-house clearing
    operations before moving on to other neighborhoods, leaving
    the holding phase of the operation to Iraqi troops, who failed
    to control the areas and forced Americans to return. This time,
    the general said, American troops would remain in the cleared
    areas “24/7,” to stiffen Iraqi resolve and build confidence
    among residents that they would be treated evenhandedly.

    Equally important, he said, coalition troops would move into
    both Shiite and Sunni neighborhoods. That, too, would break
    with the pattern set last fall, when American troops concentrated
    on known Sunni insurgent strongholds, especially Dora, in
    southwest Baghdad. This time, the general said, it was crucial
    the security plan be evenhanded. “We have to have a believable
    approach, of going after Sunni and Shia extremists,” he said.

    Going into Shiite neighborhoods, particularly the sprawling
    working-class district of Sadr City, the base for the powerful
    Mahdi Army militia that has spawned Shiite death squads, will
    risk new strains in the relationship between American commanders
    and the Shiite-led government of Prime Minister Nuri Kamal
    al-Maliki. Sunni leaders and, increasingly, American commanders
    here have accused Mr. Maliki of a strong Shiite bias. The criticism
    has intensified since the sectarian taunting by Shiite guards at the
    hanging nine days ago of Iraq’s ousted dictator, Saddam Hussein,
    an event personally planned by Mr. Maliki.

    General Odierno said he envisaged making enough of a difference
    within three or four months of the new deployments to move to
    a second phase of the new plan, pulling American troops back
    to the periphery of Baghdad and leaving Iraqi forces to carry on
    the fight in the capital. He said he hoped to be able to do that
    by August or September, but with American troops prepared
    to move back into the capital rapidly if commanders conclude
    that the pullback was “a miscalculation.”

    Meeting American reporters over lunch at a villa in the grounds
    of one of Mr. Hussein’s former palaces, General Odierno was
    careful not to divulge details of Mr. Bush’s new war plan, which
    the president is expected to make public in coming days, perhaps
    on Wednesday.

    But much of the Bush plan has been leaked, including an influx
    of as many as 20,000 additional combat troops to Baghdad. Their
    arrival would be staged over coming months as American commanders
    watch to see whether the Iraqis, who made troop commitments
    before that they have not fulfilled, meet their part of the deal.

    Sending up to five additional combat brigades, as suggested by
    administration officials in Washington who have discussed the
    plan with reporters, would push the American force in Iraq to
    at least 160,000 troops, close to the levels involved in the
    invasion nearly four years ago.

    This so-called surge would constitute an abrupt about-face
    in American strategy, which has aimed in the past two years
    for a drawdown of American troops as Iraqi forces take on
    greater responsibility for the war.

    General Odierno, the second-ranking American commander
    here, will be joined in Baghdad in coming weeks by the new
    overall commander chosen by Mr. Bush, Lt. Gen. David H. Petraeus,
    who will be promoted to full general when he succeeds Gen.
    George W. Casey Jr., top commander in Iraq for the past two-
    and-a-half years. The recasting of the war command will also
    include a new top officer at the Central Command, with overall
    responsibility for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. That post will
    go to Adm. William J. Fallon, a Navy officer who is now the American
    commander in the Pacific. The appointments of Admiral Fallon
    and General Petraeus are expected to be approved by the Senate.

    Generals Petraeus and Odierno will assume control in Iraq at
    a critical juncture, with additional American troops — assuming
    Mr. Bush’s plan is not blocked by Democratic opponents in Congress
    — and the burden of showing they can find ways of turning the
    worsening situation around that escaped General Casey and
    Lt. Gen. Peter W. Chiarelli, the operational commander who
    preceded General Odierno. General Casey and General Chiarelli
    have been wary of American troop increases, saying the key
    to prevailing here is to have Iraqis take over, not to encourage
    them to shelter behind enhanced American combat power.

    The plans laid out by General Odierno appeared aimed at meeting
    several goals in what American commanders here say has become
    a highly complex interplay of American and Iraqi politics,
    in addition to stabilizing a situation that has threatened
    to spiral out of control as Iraqi Shiites and Sunnis move
    ever closer to all-out civil war.

    The commanders have acknowledged privately that the new
    Bush plan is almost certain to represent a last-chance option
    for persuading Americans that it is worth persisting with the
    heavy burdens of the war, with more than 3,000 American
    troops dead and overall costs that are nearing $450 billion.

    General Odierno said one American goal would be to satisfy
    Iraqi leaders’ insistence that American commanders transfer
    to them as quickly as possible overall responsibility for the war.

    One thorny issue for the Bush administration has been that
    Iraqi leaders, facing the highest levels of violence in the war
    and struggling with weaknesses in their forces, have been wary
    of increasing American troop levels because of the impediment
    that might pose to the Iraqis taking fuller control of events here.

    General Odierno spoke of the mood in the United States as
    another crucial factor. He served a year here in 2003 and 2004
    as commander of the Fourth Infantry Division, during which
    his troops took credit for capturing Mr. Hussein. But he spent
    the last two years in Washington, the most recent 12 months
    as military adviser to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.

    He said he understood the failing confidence among Americans,
    including some of those who had lost sons and daughters here,
    that the war was worthwhile. The general’s own son, Capt.
    Anthony Odierno, a 28-year-old West Point graduate, lost an
    arm when a bomb detonated during a patrol in Baghdad in 2004.

    As a father as well as a commander, the general said, he did not
    doubt the sacrifices had been justified. “I believe it’s worth it,” he said.

    *---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
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    5) Pelosi Hints at Denying Bush Iraq Funds
    "She said Democrats are not interesting in cutting off money for
    troops already in Iraq - 'We won't do that' - and that her party
    favors increased the overall size of the Army by 30,000 and Marines
    by 20,000 'to make sure we are able to protect the American people.'
    ...Since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Congress has approved
    about $500 billion for Iraq, Afghanistan and other terrorism-fighting
    efforts. The White House is working on its largest-ever appeal
    for more war funds - a record $100 billion, at least. It will be
    submitted along with Bush's Feb. 5 budget."
    The Associated Press
    Sunday 07 January 2007
    http://www.forbes.com/feeds/ap/2007/01/07/ap3306883.html

    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said newly empowered Democrats will
    not give President Bush a blank check to wage war in Iraq, hinting
    they could deny funding if he seeks additional troops.

    "If the president chooses to escalate the war, in his budget request,
    we want to see a distinction between what is there to support the
    troops who are there now," she said in an interview broadcast Sunday.

    "The American people and the Congress support those troops.
    We will not abandon them. But if the president wants to add to this
    mission, he is going to have to justify it and this is new for him
    because up until now the Republican Congress has given him
    a blank check with no oversight, no standards, no conditions,"
    said Pelosi, D-Calif.

    Her comments on CBS' "Face the Nation" came as Bush worked
    to finish his new war plan that could send as many as 20,000
    additional U.S. troops to Iraq and provide more money for jobs
    and reconstruction programs.

    Bush is expected to announce his plan as early as Wednesday.

    When asked about the possibility of cutting off funds, House
    Majority Leader Steny Hoyer declined to say whether Democrats
    might do so, saying only that the current strategy clearly is
    "not working."

    "I don't want to anticipate that," said Hoyer, D-Md., on
    "Fox News Sunday."

    Some military officials, familiar with the discussions, say Bush
    at first could send 8,000 to 10,000 new troops to Baghdad,
    and possibly Anbar Province, and leave himself the option
    of adding more later if security does not improve.

    "Based on the advice of current and former military leaders,
    we believe this tactic would be a serious mistake," Senate
    Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said Saturday in the
    Democratic radio address.

    Pelosi and Reid told Bush in a letter last week that Democrats
    oppose additional U.S. forces in Iraq and want him to begin
    withdrawing in four months to six months American troops
    already there.

    Pointing to the November elections that ousted Republicans
    from control of the House and Senate, Pelosi said on CBS the
    public is "watching to see what difference this election can
    make. The president ought to heed their message....
    We should not be obliged to an open-ended war."

    She said Democrats are not interesting in cutting off money
    for troops already in Iraq - "We won't do that" - and that her
    party favors increased the overall size of the Army by 30,000
    and Marines by 20,000 "to make sure we are able to protect
    the American people."

    "That's different though, than adding troops to Iraq,"
    Pelosi said.

    The speaker stopped short of stating categorically that
    Democrats would block money for additional troops in Iraq.
    But she did say, "The burden is on the president to justify any
    additional resources.... The president's going to have to engage
    with Congress in the justification for any additional troops."

    Sen. Joe Biden, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations
    Committee, said it would be a "tragic mistake" if Bush chooses
    to increase troops. But Biden, D-Del., said cutting off funds
    was not an option.

    "As a practical matter there is no way to say this is going
    to be stopped," Biden said regarding a troop increase, unless
    enough congressional Republicans join Democrats in convincing
    Bush the strategy is wrong.

    Biden added that it probably would be an unconstitutional
    violation of separation of powers if Democrats were to block
    Bush's efforts as commander in chief after Congress had voted
    to authorize going to war.

    "It's unconstitutional to say, you can go, but we're going
    to micromanage," Biden said.

    Although most of the discussion about Bush's anticipated
    plan has focused on troop strength, his strategy also is expected
    to address political and economic issues.

    Military analysts say Army Lt. Gen. Peter Chiarelli, who recently
    finished his tour as the No. 2 general in Iraq, has recommended
    a short-term jobs program.

    Bush is said to favor short-term jobs programs, making micro-
    loans to small business and increasing the amount of money that
    military commanders can spend quickly on local projects
    to improve the daily lives of Iraqis.

    Bush is expected to continue his briefings with lawmakers this
    week, culminating in a meeting with bipartisan leadership on

    Wednesday, according to lawmakers and aides.

    Since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Congress has approved
    about $500 billion for Iraq, Afghanistan and other terrorism-fighting
    efforts. The White House is working on its largest-ever appeal
    for more war funds - a record $100 billion, at least. It will be
    submitted along with Bush's Feb. 5 budget.

    "This war cost a trillion dollars if it ended now," Pelosi said.
    "But more important than that, the lives lost, the casualties
    sustained, the lost reputation in the world, and the damage
    to our military readiness. For these and other reasons we
    have to say to the president, in your speech ... we want to
    see a plan in a new direction because the direction you've
    been taking us in has not been successful.

    "So when the bill comes ... it will receive the harshest
    scrutiny. What do we really need to protect our troops?
    What is there for an escalation? What is the justification for that?"

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    6) Private Firms Lure Chief Executives With Top Pay
    By ANDREW ROSS SORKIN and ERIC DASH
    January 8, 2007
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/08/business/08private.html?hp&ex=1168318800&en=ff2bfe6afe1590ae&ei=5094&partner=homepage

    Robert L. Nardelli’s unceremonious departure from Home Depot may
    spell the end of the era of super-size pay packages for chief executives
    of public companies, but a new refuge for lavish compensation
    and private jets is emerging elsewhere.

    Flush with hundreds of billions of dollars, private equity firms are
    beginning to offer compensation on a previously unimaginable scale
    to the chief executives who run the once-public companies that
    the firms have bought out. At the privately held firms, the executives
    still get salaries and bonuses, but a crucial difference lies in the
    ownership positions they can secure, which can turn into particularly
    bountiful riches when these businesses are sold or go public again.

    While executives like Mr. Nardelli are being deposed, other public
    company chieftains are deciding that they no longer want to
    be judged by their shareholders and regulators, and are going
    to work for businesses owned by private equity. The imperial
    chief executive is still very much alive and well in the private realm.

    “Five or 10 years ago, it used to be that private company C.E.O.’s
    wanted to return to the public markets because they wanted
    to run their own ship, not have private equity managers second-
    guessing their decisions,” said Jeffrey A. Sonnenfeld, associate
    dean of the Yale University School of Management.

    Now, that pattern has reversed. “You regularly hear public
    company C.E.O.’s talk about how they can make two or three
    times the money in what they feel is half the effort because they
    don’t have the same degree of scrutiny,” Mr. Sonnenfeld said.

    David Calhoun, a 50-year-old vice chairman at General Electric
    who ran the company’s $47 billion aircraft unit, left G.E. last
    year to become chairman and chief executive of privately held
    VNU, a $4.3 billion media company whose holdings include
    Nielsen Media Research and The Hollywood Reporter.

    Mr. Calhoun, who was a contemporary of Mr. Nardelli’s at
    General Electric, was offered a compensation package worth
    more than $100 million, according to executives involved
    in negotiating the agreement. VNU, which up until last year
    was a public company, is controlled by a consortium
    of private equity firms led by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts
    & Company.

    Private equity investors “think about compensation differently.
    They will spend the money to get the right person,” said
    George B. Paulin, an executive pay consultant at Frederic
    W. Cook & Company. They are “not under pressure to reform
    the same way big public companies are,” he said.

    This willingness to pay big money may bolster the argument
    of defenders of corporate pay practices who have contended
    that companies have simply been paying the going rate
    in the market to attract top talent. At the same time,
    however, private equity may be quicker than a public
    company to fire an executive if he is not getting results.

    “There’s also huge risk,” said Mr. Paulin, whose firm advised
    on some of the richest pay packages for executives
    at a number of big public companies. “It’s the classic
    pay-for-performance model.”

    Of course, the great irony is that private equity executives
    usually get their biggest paydays when a private company
    is either sold or taken public again. Then they again find
    themselves in the public view.

    Mark P. Frissora is an example of the risk being worth it.
    Up until last year, Mr. Frissora was the chairman and chief
    executive of Tenneco, the auto parts manufacturer. He was
    making only a few million dollars a year at Tenneco when
    executive recruiters approached him last year with several
    job offers. Among them was one to lead a big public company.

    But then he was offered the chief executive’s job at Hertz,
    the rental car chain owned by a group of big private equity
    firms, including Carlyle Group, Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, and
    an investment arm of Merrill Lynch. The public company
    offers could not compete.

    Mr. Frissora left Tenneco for Hertz in July and was granted
    a $4 million “make-whole” cash award and a guaranteed bonus
    of almost $1 million for 2006. He also was given millions in stock
    options and the chance to buy company stock — both at a very
    steeply discounted prices — and a special dividend that would
    put another $1.2 million in his pocket.

    Less than six months and an initial public offering later,
    Mr. Frissora is more than $33 million richer on paper, according
    to an analysis by Brian Foley, an independent compensation
    consultant in White Plains. He stands to make even more money
    if Hertz’s share price goes up.

    “It’s nice work if you can get it,” Mr. Foley said. And Mr. Frissora
    is not the only one to reap such riches.

    Millard S. Drexler made hundreds of millions of dollars and his
    reputation as the merchant prince in his 16 years running the
    Gap retail chain. Now, four years after the Texas Pacific Group,
    a private equity firm, recruited him in to turn around J. Crew, he
    has made a princely sum of money: at least $300 million,
    and growing.

    Mr. Drexler took $200,000 in annual salary and received no bonus,
    but he was granted millions of stock options and shares of restricted
    stock. Those awards are now worth $190 million after J. Crew’s
    initial public offering last in June. Over the last three years, the company
    also reimbursed Mr. Drexler hundreds of thousands of dollars for moving
    expenses, a personal chauffeur and business use of a personal jet,
    according to public filings.

    Even more lucrative was the chance to invest $10 million of his own
    money. That investment is now worth at least $120 million today,
    and has helped him solidify a 12 percent ownership stake — a size
    virtually unheard of for a public company chieftain who is not the
    company’s founder.

    That kind of money is exacerbating the tension at public companies,
    where directors weigh the demands of top officers, who are aware
    of the riches elsewhere, against the demands of shareholders,
    who expect to see some gains in return.

    “You have conflicting pressures where people in the private
    markets are driving up the numbers of compensation at public
    companies,” said William W. George, the former Medtronic
    chairman who serves on the boards of Exxon Mobil and
    Goldman Sachs.

    It is probably not surprising that some of the best examples
    of imperial chief executives of the recent past — John F. Welch Jr.
    of General Electric, Louis V. Gerstner of I.B.M. and Lawrence A.
    Bossidy of Honeywell International — have all since ventured
    into private equity after their retirement as advisors. Even
    Mr. Nardelli, who departed abruptly on Wednesday and will exit
    with a $210 million pay package, has already received phone
    calls, e-mail messages and letters from the nation’s largest
    private equity firms all seeking his services and dangling the
    possibility of even more money, according to people in private
    equity who approached him.

    “He will wind up making a lot more money with a lot less grief
    in the private equity world,” Leon Cooperman, one of Home Depot’s
    largest shareholders, said on CNBC about an hour after news
    of Mr. Nardelli’s departure. “I think it will be long time before
    Bob Nardelli gets involved in a public company again.”

    Some worry that with executives all rushing to take their companies
    private, the United States is going to become less competitive.
    Last month, the Committee on Capital Markets Regulation published
    a report, which was endorsed by Henry M. Paulson Jr., the Treasury
    secretary, calling for a lightening of the regulatory burden on public
    companies.

    Henry Silverman, who spent the last decade building Cendant into
    an $18 billion conglomerate — it owned dozens of the nation’s most
    prominent businesses like Century 21, Avis, Days Inn and Orbitz —
    through a number of stock deals, says being public is no longer
    attractive. He broke up Cendant into four pieces and last month
    sold Realogy, its former real estate unit, to Apollo Management,
    a private equity firm.

    “There is no reason to be a public company anymore,” he said.

    “You don’t need access to the public market,” because, he said,
    of the enormous amount of money sloshing around private equity
    and hedge funds.

    Like Mr. Nardelli, Mr. Silverman of Cendant had been accused
    of being an imperial chief executive with an outsized pay package.
    He is estimated to have made $36.6 million in salary and bonus
    and reaped $223 million from exercising options between 1998
    and 2002. And he will make $135 million more as a result
    of selling Realogy.

    “Wherever I show up next, it will not be at a public company,”
    Mr. Silverman said.

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    7) Tax Cuts Offer Most for Very Rich, Study Says
    By Edmund L. Andrews
    January 8, 2007
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/08/washington/08tax.html

    WASHINGTON, Jan. 7 — Families earning more than $1 million a year
    saw their federal tax rates drop more sharply than any group in the
    country as a result of President Bush’s tax cuts, according to a new
    Congressional study.

    The study, by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, also
    shows that tax rates for middle-income earners edged up in 2004,
    the most recent year for which data was available, while rates
    for people at the very top continued to decline.

    Based on an exhaustive analysis of tax records and census data,
    the study reinforced the sense that while Mr. Bush’s tax cuts reduced
    rates for people at every income level, they offered the biggest benefits
    by far to people at the very top — especially the top 1 percent
    of income earners.

    Though tax cuts for the rich were bigger than those for other
    groups, the wealthiest families paid a bigger share of total taxes.
    That is because their incomes have climbed far more rapidly, and
    the gap between rich and poor has widened in the last several years.

    The study offers ammunition to supporters and opponents of
    Mr. Bush’s tax cuts, which are all but certain to touch off a battle
    between the president and the Democrats who just took control of
    Congress.

    Democratic leaders have taken pains to avoid an immediate fight
    over the tax cuts, most of which are scheduled to expire at the end
    of 2010. But Democrats are looking for ways to increase revenue
    well before then, in part because they want to spend more
    on education and energy without increasing the deficit.

    Economists and tax analysts have long known that the biggest dollar
    value of Mr. Bush’s tax cuts goes to people at the very top income
    levels. One reason is that two of his signature measures, tax cuts
    on investment income and a steady reduction of estate taxes,
    overwhelmingly benefit the wealthiest households.

    But the Congressional study offers additional insight because it
    incorporates information about what people paid in 2004, the
    first year in which taxpayers could take full advantage of the cuts
    on stock dividends and capital gains.

    The study estimates that the effective federal income tax rate,
    which excludes payroll taxes for Social Security and Medicare,
    declined modestly for people in the middle- and lower-income
    categories.

    Families in the middle fifth of annual earnings, who had average
    incomes of $56,200 in 2004, saw their average effective tax rate
    edge down to 2.9 percent in 2004 from 5 percent in 2000. That
    translated to an average tax cut of $1,180 per household, but the
    tax rate actually increased slightly from 2003.

    Tax cuts were much deeper, and affected far more money, for families
    in the highest income categories. Households in the top 1 percent of
    earnings, which had an average income of $1.25 million, saw their
    effective individual tax rates drop to 19.6 percent in 2004 from 24.2
    percent in 2000. The rate cut was twice as deep as for middle-income
    families, and it translated to an average tax cut of almost $58,000.

    In its report, the Congressional Budget Office estimated that the overall
    effective federal tax rate edged up to 20 percent in 2004, from 19.8
    percent the year before.

    But even with that increase, Americans faced lower tax rates than any
    time since 1979. If President Bush has his way, those rates could
    decline even more as the estate tax on inherited wealth is gradually
    phased out by the start of 2010.

    Mr. Bush and his Republican allies in Congress want to permanently
    extend that tax cut and almost all of the others that Congress passed
    in his first term. The cost of doing that would be more than $1 trillion
    over the next decade, a cost that would hit the Treasury at the same
    time that the spending on old-age benefits for retiring baby boomers
    begins to soar.

    The budget office offered little commentary on its new estimates, but
    many of its numbers spoke for themselves.

    The report shows that a comparatively small number of very wealthy
    households account for a very big share of total tax payments, and
    their share increased in the first four years after Mr. Bush’s tax cuts.

    The top 1 percent of income earners paid about 36.7 percent of federal
    income taxes and 25.3 percent of all federal taxes in 2004. The top
    20 percent of income earners paid 67.1 percent of all federal taxes,
    up from 66.1 percent in 2000, according to the budget office.

    By contrast, families in the bottom 40 percent of income earners, those
    with incomes below $36,300, typically paid no federal income tax and
    received money back from the government. That so-called negative
    income tax stemmed mainly from the earned-income tax credit,
    a program that benefits low-income parents who are employed.

    Put another way: rich families were the undisputed winners from
    President Bush’s tax cuts, but people in the bottom half of the
    earnings scale were not paying much in taxes anyway.

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    8) Queens Man Dies After Police Use Taser, Reports Say
    By John Holusha
    January 8, 2007
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/08/nyregion/08cnd-taser.html?ref=nyregion#

    A 38-year-old man went into cardiac arrest at his uncle’s home
    in Queens on Sunday afternoon after a struggle with police officers
    in which they tried to subdue him with a Taser gun, according
    to media reports.

    It was evidently the second death in two days involving Taser guns,
    which are supposedly a non-lethal way for the police to deal
    with uncooperative people. According to The Associated Press,
    a 45-year-old Tennessee man died Saturday in Fort Pierce, Fla.,
    after being struck twice by shocks from a Taser gun.

    In Queens, the police were summoned to a house in the Rosedale
    section where Blondel Lassegue was said to have stopped taking
    his medicine for mental disorders and was acting erratically.
    When the four police officers tried to arrest him, he reportedly
    became combative and resisted efforts to take him into custody.

    After trying a chemical spray, the police used a Taser gun.
    Mr. Lassegue went into cardiac arrest shortly afterward and
    was taken to Franklin Hospital, where he was pronounced dead..

    In the Florida case, Douglas John Ilten of Nashville, Tenn., was
    reported to have been acting erratically, hurling musical
    instruments out of a rental truck at a gas station, according
    to The Associated Press.

    The Fort Pierce police said that Mr. Ilten, who was handcuffed,
    struggled with officers as they tried to put leg restraints on him
    in the back of a patrol car. When he kept struggling, the police
    used two bursts from a Taser, The A.P. said. When the officers
    noticed a few minutes later that Mr. Ilten was not breathing,
    they were unable to revive him with cardio-pulmonary resuscitation.

    There have been multiple studies of the effect of using the Taser
    electric stun weapons, which can fire electrified barbs up to
    25 feet. An academic study released last year preliminarily
    concluded that the guns did not cause heart rhythm disturbances
    if used for short periods on healthy people.

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    9) NO SAFE AGE
    [Col. Writ. 12/3/06] Copyright 2006 Mumia Abu-Jamal
    [VIA Email...bw]

    It's boy's night out, and a group of brothers are having a bachelor's
    party at a neighborhood club. One of them is particularly thrilled,
    because his marriage to the woman he loves is just hours away.

    But he will never marry, because a pack of wild, undercover cops will
    execute him, and unleash a deadly rain of 50 bullets on he and his friends.

    The crime? Cruising While Black ... Sean Bell, unarmed, was 23.

    And the corporate media merely explains it may've been a case of
    "contagious" shooting -- one cop fires, two cops fire, three cops ...
    get the picture?

    It's a kind of social illness, like alcoholism.

    But neither Sean Bell, Trent Benefield, nor Joseph Guzman were armed.
    According to some reports, one of them *said* he was armed.

    Like the madmen who launched a preemptive war on the unsubstantiated
    suspicion of weapons of mass destruction, undercover cops launched an
    urban preemptive war on unarmed young Black men, reportedly based on
    unsubstantiated suspicions. *50 shots*. Death, and serious injury.

    No cellphones; no wallets; no threatening candy bars -- for such
    trifles are no longer deemed necessary.

    In America, blackness is sufficient.

    Even maleness isn't required, as shown by the recent shooting of an
    elderly woman who allegedly allowed a drug dealer to use her home.
    Katherine Johnston, having lived almost 9 decades, was shot to death
    while trying to defend her Atlanta home after it was attacked by
    undercover cops.

    According to a neighborhood snitch, he never claimed her house was a
    drug site, despite police pressure to do so.

    No significant quantities of drugs were found at the home.

    What was *her* crime? Trying-to-survive-to-90-while-Black?

    What's more dangerous -- drugs, or armed undercover cops kicking in
    doors allegedly on drug raids?

    Police suspicion, it seems, is a weapon of urban war. Several years
    ago, writer Kristian Williams noted a case where a whole community was
    held under siege, because of police suspicion. In his remarkable 2003
    book, *Enemies in Blue: Police and Power in America* (Brooklyn, NY: Soft
    Skull Press), Williams recounted an amazing story:

    "The racial politics of police suspicion are well illustrated by the
    North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation's 'Operation Ready-Rock.'
    In November 1990, forty-five state cops, including canine units and the
    paramilitary Special Response Team, lay siege to the 100 block of Graham
    Street, in a black neighborhood of Chapel Hill. Searching for crack
    cocaine, the cops sealed off the streets, patrolled with dogs, and
    ransacked a neighborhood pool hall. In terms of crime control, the
    mission was a flop. Although nearly 100 people were detained and
    searched, only 13 were arrested, and one of them convicted.
    Nevertheless, and despite a successful class action lawsuit, the cops
    defended their performance and no officers were disciplined.

    "When applying for a warrant to search every person and vehicle on the
    block, the police had assured the judge, 'there are no 'innocent' people
    at this place ... Only drug sellers and drug buyers are on the described
    premises.' But once the clamp-down was underway, they became more
    discriminating: Blacks were detained and searched, sometimes at
    gunpoint, while whites were permitted to leave the cordoned area." [p. 121]

    How many of the armed maniacs who shot Johnston, Bell, Guzman or
    Benefield will ever see the inside of a cell? How many will reach the
    confines of Death Row?

    We *know* the answer -- because we've seen this movie before ... Paid
    leave (which amounts to paid vacations), a whitewash of an
    investigation, and a 'they-were-doing-their-jobs' is all that ever happens.

    It's a damned shame.

    Copyright 2006 Mumia Abu-Jamal

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    10) WHEN WAR CRIMES AIN'T CRIMES
    [Col. Writ. 12/16/06] Copyright 2006 Mumia Abu-Jamal
    {VIA Email...bw}

    In the last few years, we've all seen nothing but mass violations of
    virtually every international human rights treaty.

    Torture, secret prisons, extraordinary rendition, violence against
    civilians, orders to ignore the Geneva Conventions .... The list goes on
    and on.

    How has the American government dealt with this state of affairs?

    It has virtually ignored it.

    There have been a handful of military prosecutions against relatively
    low level people, but there is a steel ceiling, above which the
    prosecutors dare not go.

    That's because the violations of international law go to the highest
    levels of the U.S. government.

    Writer Lila Rajiva argues, in her remarkable *The Language of Empire:
    Abu Ghraib and the American Media* (New York: Monthly Review Press,
    2005), that the tortures at Abu Ghraib prison on the outskirts of
    Baghdad shows something deep and ugly in the American state:

    "The Prometheans of today acknowledge no limits except of their own
    imagining, and at least for now the world that they find themselves in
    allows them the self-indulgence of that imagining. With such absolute
    power comes absolute corruption, only not the corruption that the law
    easily unmasks, the simple corruption of bribery and chicanery. The
    occupation of Iraq displays ample evidence of that as well, but the
    deeper corruption that rote the institutions of America today is one
    legitimated by law, whose presence is revealed not in the courthouse but
    in the solitary recesses of prison cells hidden from the light. Torture
    is the insignia of this corrupt power. Torture is the deadly proof of
    the metastasizing cancer of American empire." [p. 186]

    Rajiva tells us many of the stories from Iraq that have been largely
    whitewashed from the safe coverage that the corporate media airs. She
    tells us the many cases where Iraqi women were raped by Americans, and
    subjected to public humiliations.

    Perhaps if more Americans read, saw or heard such accounts, they would
    not be mystified by the steady growing of the insurgency in Iraq, which
    is surely fueled, in part, by how Americans treated Iraqi men and women
    in prisons there.

    The corporate US media has done more to misinform its public than to
    inform them. They keep Americans in the dark, while people all around
    the world know more about America than Americans.

    In this context, we can continue the illusion that the US is 'doing
    good' in this new kind of colonialism of Arab lands. It is this mass
    disinformation campaign that allows political figures to float the mad
    idea of more troops in Iraq.

    The somewhat tame Iraq Study Group report has come and gone, with
    supporters of the military-industrial-complex working their media assets
    to insure that their defense contractors keep getting paid.

    Discussions over Geneva Conventions might as well be about treaties with
    space aliens, as arcane as they are to most of us. But the Geneva
    Conventions aren't rocket science. There are 4 of them. The first
    governs wounded and sick soldiers; the second relates to the treatment
    of war prisoners captured at sea; the third deals with treatment of
    prisoners of war; and the fourth governs how citizens should be treated
    in times of war. Under the articles of these conventions, people had
    express rights to fair, humane treatment, family visitation, and the
    right to be processed by "competent tribunal"[s]. As the flicks from
    Abu Ghraib showed, in living color, folks were treated like dogs.
    Geneva, though, to be 'quaint', didn't apply.

    When it comes to the Empire, there is no higher law.

    The Emperor has spoken: that is all that is needed to launch wars,
    torture, terrorize, bomb, imprison, kill, obliterate.

    That kind of logic can only lead to more disaster.

    Copyright 2006 Mumia Abu-Jamal

    [Source: Rajiva, L., *The Language of Empire: Abu Ghraib and the
    American Media* (New York: Monthly Review Press, 2005).]

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    11) Norway, Cuba deplore U.S.-owned hotel ban
    REUTERS
    Fri Jan 5, 4:26 PM ET
    http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070105/wl_nm/cuba_norway_dc_1&printer=1

    Norway and Cuba on Friday deplored the decision of a U.S.-owned hotel
    in Oslo to deny lodging to a Cuban delegation in compliance with U.S.
    trade sanctions against Havana.

    Norway's main trade union LO threatened to boycott the Scandic hotel
    chain, owned by the U.S.-based Hilton Hotels Corp., if it did not
    reverse its policy.

    The Scandic Edderkoppen hotel in Oslo refused to book rooms for a
    14-member Cuban delegation planning to attend a travel fair in the
    Norwegian capital next week.

    "These actions from Scandic managers are totally unacceptable,"
    deputy Foreign Minister Raymond Johansen told Reuters by telephone.

    "In Norway we are based on Norwegian law and Norwegian practices, not
    those of any other country," he said.

    Cuba accused Europe of bowing to American pressure.

    "Helms-Burton rules in Europe," the ruling Communist Party newspaper
    Granma said in a front-page story that slammed the Norwegian hotel
    for what it said was kowtowing to Washington.

    The 1996 Helms-Burton law, which codified trade and financial
    sanctions enforced since 1962 against Fidel Castro's communist
    government, bans U.S. companies and subsidiaries from doing business
    with Cuba.

    Johansen said the Norwegian government would have to take up the
    issue with Washington.

    The LO union, which is allied to Norway's center-left government,
    said it was "deeply shocked" by the hotel's policy, saying it was a
    "clear breach of Norwegian law, which forbids discrimination based on
    nationality."

    "We find it to be a very serious matter that a Norwegian hotel chain
    maintains the United States' boycott of Cuba," the union said in a
    statement on its Web site.

    Last year the U.S.-owned Sheraton Maria Isabel Hotel in Mexico City
    expelled a delegation of 16 Cubans to comply with U.S. sanctions
    against Cuba.

    The decision sparked protests in Mexico and led authorities to slap
    the hotel with a $112,000 fine. (Additional reporting by Anthony
    Boadle in Havana)

    Copyright © 2007 Reuters Limited.

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    LINKS AND VERY SHORT STORIES
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    Gas-Like Odor Permeates Parts of New York City
    By CHRISTINE HAUSER and SEWELL CHAN
    January 8, 2007
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/08/nyregion/08cnd-odor.html?hp&ex=1168318800&en=b688635a7be2e78d&ei=5094&partner=homepage

    The Second Declaration of Havana
    Walter Lippmann, CubaNews Los Angeles, California
    This is one of the great political documents of all time. It was
    presented to the Cuban people on February 4, 1962, following Cuba's
    expulsion from the Organization of American States. It is printed
    here in its entirety. [editorial note from Fidel Castro Speaks,
    edited by James Petras and Martin Kenner, Grove Press, 1969.]
    It is now web-posted in English here:
    http://www.walterlippmann.com/fc-02-04-1962.html
    Original Spanish:
    http://www.cuba.cu/gobierno/discursos/1962/esp/f040262e.html


    The universe gives up its deepest secret
    It is the invisible material that makes up most of the cosmos.
    Now, scientists have created the first image of dark matter
    By Steve Connor, Science Editor
    Published: 08 January 2007
    http://news.independent.co.uk/world/science_technology/article2134891.ece

    Blood and oil: How the West will profit from Iraq's
    most precious commodity
    The Independent (UK)
    January 7, 2007
    http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/article2132574.ece

    In Obesity Fight, Many Fear a Note From School
    By JODI KANTOR
    January 8, 2007
    http://www.nytimes.com/pages/national/index.html

    America's Holy Warriors
    By Chris Hedges
    "The former New York Times Mideast Bureau chief warns that the
    radical Christian right is coming dangerously close to its goal
    of co-opting the country's military and law enforcement."
    Truthdig.com, 31 December 2006
    http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/010207H.shtml

    Mexico’s New President Sends Thousands of Federal Officers to Fight Drug Cartels
    By JAMES C. McKINLEY Jr.
    January 7, 2007
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/07/world/americas/07mexico.html

    In a Divided Israel, Angry Words or No Words at All
    By STEVEN ERLANGER
    January 7, 2007
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/07/world/middleeast/07israel.html?ref=world

    U.S. Selecting Hybrid Design for Warheads
    By WILLIAM J. BROAD, DAVID E. SANGER and THOM SHANKER
    January 7, 2007
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/07/washington/07nuke.html?hp&ex=1168232400&en=294a07cfe6016dc9&ei=5094&partner=homepage

    Future of Iraq: The spoils of war
    How the West will make a killing on Iraqi oil riches
    By Danny Fortson, Andrew Murray-Watson and Tim Webb
    Published: 07 January 2007
    http://news. independent. co.uk/world/ middle_east/ article2132569. ece

    FOCUS | Revealed: Israel Plans Nuclear Strike on Iran
    http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/010707Z.shtml

    The real Iraq Study Group
    Forget Jim Baker's crew. The neocon hawks who sold the war, joined by
    John McCain and Joe Lieberman, unveiled their new plan for "victory":
    At least 25,000 new troops in combat roles well into 2008.
    By Mark Benjamin
    http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2007/01/06/aei/index1.html

    With Each Fallen Soldier, a Field of Flags Grows
    By FERNANDA SANTOS
    January 6, 2007
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/06/nyregion/06flags.html

    Watada hearing tackles free speech
    for soldiers, relevancy of truth
    Jeff Paterson, Courage to Resist.
    January 5, 2007
    http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2007/01/05/18344326.php

    FOCUS | Images of Hanging Make Hussein a Martyr to Many
    http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/010607Y.shtml

    FOCUS | In Iraq New General, New Escalation
    http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/010607Z.shtml

    Fund banks on Cuba
    A Miami-based closed-end fund focusing on companies that may
    eventually benefit from trade ties with Cuba produced high returns,
    as investors bet change is coming soon to the communist island.
    By MARTHA BRANNIGAN
    mbrannigan@MiamiHerald.com
    Posted on Fri, Jan. 05, 2007
    http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/16387035.htm?template=contentModules/printstory.jsp

    Bill Moyers | For America's Sake
    In an adaptation of remarks made by Bill Moyers to a December 12
    gathering in New York sponsored by The Nation, Bill Moyers says, "Everywhere
    you turn you'll find people who believe they have been written out of
    the story. Everywhere you turn there's a sense of insecurity grounded in
    a gnawing fear that freedom in America has come to mean the freedom of
    the rich to get richer even as millions of Americans are dumped from
    the Dream. So let me say what I think up front: The leaders and thinkers
    and activists who honestly tell that story and speak passionately of
    the moral and religious values it puts in play will be the first
    political generation since the New Deal to win power back for the people."
    http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/010507J.shtml

    SOA Watch Activists Face Prison
    [Formerly School of the Americas - renamed the Western
    Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation in 2001 (SOA/WHINSEC),
    the controversial U.S. Army run school that trains
    Latin American military and security personnel....bw]
    http://www.soaw.org/new/

    Canada: Goodyear to Change Tire Plant
    By REUTERS
    The Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company will stop producing tires
    at its Valleyfield, Quebec, plant and turn it into a materials mixing
    center by the end of June, cutting 800 jobs, the company said. Goodyear
    expects to save about $40 million a year under the plan, which will cut
    the hourly and salaried work force at the unionized plant to 200 from
    about 1,000. Goodyear expects to take charges of $115 million to
    $120 million, or $165 million to $170 million after tax, for
    restructuring and accelerated depreciation at Valleyfield, with
    most of the charges in the fourth quarter.
    January 5, 2007
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/05/business/worldbusiness/05fobriefs-GOODYEARTOCH_BRF.html

    PALESTINE: DIARIES: LIVE FROM PALESTINE:
    Living the New Year's Raid on Ramallah
    By Dana Shalah, Live from Palestine,
    5 January 2007
    I never thought I would be so happy to come back home. I
    am still disoriented and traumatized, and though I had
    taken pain killers, and coffee after coffee, I just can't
    bring myself to sleep. Early this morning while walking in
    Ramallah, I took a road that brought awful memories into
    my head. Last year, I witnessed one of the Israeli forces'
    raids in Ramallah. Though it was from a distance, it was a
    chilling experience to be totally surrounded by bullets
    and blood. I have just come back from Ramallah where
    together with my sister I was locked inside a building at
    Al Manara, Ramallah's city center, for four hours.
    http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article6354.shtml

    PALESTINE: ROLE OF THE MEDIA:
    With the New Year, will Ha'aretz's op-ed page be any
    different?
    By Zachary Wales, The Electronic Intifada,
    3 January 2007
    On New Year's Day, notions of resolve, reform, or
    reflection come as no surprise on newspaper editorial
    pages. Similarly unsurprising are the op-eders that carry
    on with business as usual. Things were no different on
    Ha'aretz's opinion page, which kept an even keel of New
    Yearisms. Rather untypical, however, was the limited role
    that honesty played in the mix. The most curious example
    was the lead editorial, -- often viewed as any paper's
    mouthpiece -- entitled, "Our obligation to refugees, as
    refugees."
    http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article6345.shtml


    PALESTINE: ART, MUSIC & CULTURE:
    Why an academic boycott of Israel is necessary
    By Lawrence Davidson, The Electronic Intifada,
    3 January 2007
    Let me begin by stating that any successful academic
    boycott imposed upon Israeli institutions of higher
    education will assuredly have an impact on the academic
    freedom of Israeli scholars and teachers, at least in
    terms of its expression beyond their national borders. Is
    this acceptable? After all, other teachers and scholars
    who obviously have a stake in academic freedom, will have
    to cooperate with the boycott if it is to have an impact.
    As one of those academics, my answer to this question is
    that it is not only acceptable but absolutely necessary.
    http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article6348.shtml

    Boulevard in Newark Runs From Decline to Rebirth
    By ANDREW JACOBS
    January 5, 2007
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/05/nyregion/05econ.html?ref=nyregion

    Remain Silent? Some in Custody Spell It All Out
    By ANEMONA HARTOCOLLIS
    January 5, 2007
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/05/nyregion/05statement.html?ref=nyregion

    Bush Signing Statement Claims Power to Open Americans' Mail
    President Bush has quietly claimed sweeping new powers to open
    Americans' mail without a judge's warrant. The president asserted his new
    authority when he signed a postal reform bill into law on December 20,
    followed by a "signing statement."
    http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/010407R.shtml

    Israel’s use of biological weapons in 1948
    By Yossi Schwartz and Fred Weston
    Thursday, 04 January 2007
    http://www.marxist.com/israel-biological-weapons1948.htm

    Bush Issues Signing Statement, Declares Right to Open Mail
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines07/0104-01.htm

    Iraq Vets Left in Physical and Mental Agony
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines07/0104-07.htm

    2007 Predicted to Be World's Warmest Year
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines07/0104-08.htm

    Meatpacking Laborers Victimized
    By David Bacon, The American Prospect
    Posted on January 3, 2007, Printed on January 3, 2007
    http://www.alternet.org/story/45554/

    A Challenge to the Supreme Court
    Can the US Kill Iraqi Children Legally?
    By BERT SACKS
    January 4, 2007
    http://www.counterpunch.com/sacks01042007.html

    France: Bill to Redress Homelessness
    By CRAIG S. SMITH
    Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin introduced legislation that would
    give the homeless an enforceable right to housing. The move was
    in response to a yearlong campaign on behalf of the homeless that
    included the distribution of tents for people living on the street.
    A concentration of the tents in the 10th Arrondissement in Paris
    brought the issue to a head, and on New Year’s Eve, President Jacques
    Chirac promised to ask the government to work on legislation.
    The proposed law, Mr. de Villepin said, would “put the right to
    housing on the same level as the right to medical care or education.”
    January 4, 2007
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/04/world/europe/04briefs-frenchhomeless.html

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    WORKERS HAVE THE RIGHT TO ORGANIZE UNIONS!

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    For more information contact:

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

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

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    REPORT BACK ON VENEZUELA
    7:00 PM Saturday, January 13
    522 Valencia Street , 3rd Floor Auditorium
    Hear about:
    -Factories run by workers
    -The election turnout for Hugo Chavez
    -Occupied factories
    -Socialism of the 21st Century
    See: A short film on current developments
    in Venezuela .
    Speakers:
    -John Peterson, National Secretary
    of US Hands Off Venezuela (recently
    returned from Venezuela )
    -A speaker from Global Exchange
    -A speaker from Global Women’s
    Strike, San Francisco Bay Area
    -An opportunity for discussion will follow
    the presentations.
    Sponsored by Hands Off Venezuela
    Hands Off Venezuela is an international
    organization dedicated to the principle
    that the people of Venezuela have the
    right to determine their own destiny
    without interference from foreign
    countries.
    Contact info:
    phone (415) 786-1680
    email sfbay@ushov.org
    web www.ushov.org

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

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

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

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    May Day 2007
    National Mobilization to Support Immigrant Workers!
    Web: http://www.MayDay2007.net
    National Immigrant Solidarity Network
    No Immigrant Bashing! Support Immigrant Rights!
    webpage: http://www.ImmigrantSolidarity.org
    e-mail: info@ImmigrantSolidarity.org
    New York: (212)330-8172
    Los Angeles: (213)403-0131
    Washington D.C.: (202)595-8990

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    GENERAL ANNOUNCEMENTS
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    A NEW LOOK AT U.S. RADIOACTIVE WEAPONS
    Join us in a campaign to expose and stop the use of these illegal weapons
    http://poisondust.org/

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

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

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    URGENT APPEAL TO SAVE IRAQ'S ACADEMICS.
    Call for action to save Iraq's Academics
    A little known aspect of the tragedy engulfing Iraq is the systematic
    liquidation of the country's academics. Even according to conservative
    estimates, over 250 educators have been assassinated, and many
    hundreds more have disappeared. With thousands fleeing the country
    in fear for their lives, not only is Iraq undergoing a major brain drain,
    the secular middle class - which has refused to be co-opted by the
    US occupation - is being decimated, with far-reaching consequences
    for the future of Iraq.
    http://www.brussellstribunal.org/

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    END ALL U.S. AID TO ISRAEL!
    Stop funding Israel's war against Palestine
    Complete the form at the website listed below with your information.
    https://secure2.convio.net/pep/site/Advocacy?
    JServSessionIdr003=cga2p2o6x1.app2a&cmd=display&page=UserAction&id=177

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    ENDORSE THE A.N.S.W.E.R. CALL TO ACTION
    March 17-18, 2007
    GLOBAL DAYS OF ACTION ON THE
    4TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE WAR!
    http://answer.pephost.org/site/Survey?
    SURVEY_ID=3400&ACTION_REQUIRED=URI_ACTION_USER_REQUESTS&JServSessionIdr011=
    k7a3443r73.app8a

    http://answer.pephost.org/site/PageServer?pagename=ANS_homepage

    Please circulate widely
    www.answercoalition.org

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    Sand Creek Massacre
    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=4
    1
    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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    MUST SEE: PBS VIDEO NOTEBOOK: A DAY AT THE PLANT
    NOW's Senior Correspondent Maria Hinojosa takes us inside the
    world's largest pork processing plant, located in Tar Heel, North
    Carolina. As the first TV journalist ever allowed to film inside the
    plant, owned by The Smithfield Packing Company, Hinojosa gives
    us an insider's view of what conditions are like in a plant that
    slaughters over 33,000 hogs per day.
    http://www.pbs.org/now/shows/250/smithfield.html

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    Rights activist held in Oaxaca prison
    Three students arrested and held incommunicado in Oaxaca
    http://nyc.indymedia.org/en/2006/11/80142.html

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    TAX THE RICH! FEED THE POOR! MONEY FOR HUMAN NEEDS, NOT WAR!
    www.bauaw.org
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    The following quote is from the 1918 anti-war speech delivered
    in Canton, Ohio, by Eugene Debs. The address, protesting World War I,
    resulted in Debs being arrested and imprisoned on charges of espionage.
    The speech remains one of the great expressions of the militancy and
    internationalism of the US working class.

    His appeal, before sentencing, included one of his best-known quotes:
    "...while there is a lower class, I am in it, and while there is a criminal
    element I am of it, and while there is a soul in prison, I am not free."

    Read the complete speech at:
    http://douglassarchives.org/debs_a78.htm

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    !VIVA FIDEL! LONG LIVE FIDEL! LONG LIVE THE CUBAN REVOLUTION!
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    My Name is Roland Sheppard
    This Is My `Blog'
    I am is a retired Business Representative of Painters District
    Council #8 in San Francisco. I have been a life long social activist
    and socialist. Roland Sheppard is a retired Business Representative
    of Painters District Council #8 in San Francisco. I have been
    a life long social activist and socialist.
    Prior to my being elected as a union official, I had worked
    for 31 years as a house painter and have been a lifelong socialist.
    I have led a unique life. In my retire age, I am interested in writing
    about my experiences as a socialist, as a participant in the Black
    Liberation Movement, the Union Movement, and almost all social
    movements.
    I became especially interested in the environment when I was
    diagnosed with cancer due to my work environment. I learned
    how to write essays, when I first got a computer in order to put
    together all the medical legal arguments on my breakthrough
    workers' compensation case in California, proving that my work
    environment as a painter had caused my cancer. After a five-year
    struggle, I won a $300,000 settlement on his case.
    The following essays are based upon my involvement in the
    struggle for freedom for all humanity. I hope the history
    of my life's experiences will help future generations
    of Freedom Fighters.
    For this purpose, this website is dedicated.
    web.mac.com/rolandgarret/iWeb/Site/RolandSheppardsBlog.html

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    The Corporate Looting of the Gulf Coast
    Robin Hood in Reverse
    http://www.counterpunch.org/quigley11132006.html
    More Info:
    www.justiceforneworleans.org
    For a detailed report:
    Big, Easy Money: Disaster Profiteering on the American Gulf Coast
    by Rita J. King, Special to CorpWatch
    August 15th, 2006
    http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=14004

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    TAX FACT SHEET
    http://www.urban.org/UploadedPDF/901006_taxpolicy.pdf

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    Communist Manifesto illustrated by Disney [and other cartoons) with
    words by K. Marx and F. Engels--absolutely wonderful!...bw]
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j1oGIffyVVk&NR

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    Asylum Street Spankers-Magnetic Yellow Ribbon
    http://www.youtube. com/watch? v=bfMgRHRJ- tc

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    Homer Simpson Joins the Army
    Another morale-booster from Groening and company. [If you get
    a chance to see the whole thing, it's worth it...bw]
    http://hotair.com/archives/2006/11/12/video-the-simpsons-salute-the-lazy-and
    -uneducated/

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    A Look at the Numbers: How the Rich Get Richer
    Clara Jeffery (May/June 2006 Issue
    IN 1985, THE FORBES 400 were worth $221 billion combined.
    Today, they re worth $1.13 trillion more than the GDP of Canada.
    THERE'VE BEEN FEW new additions to the Forbes 400.
    The median household income
    has also stagnated at around $44,000.
    AMONG THE FORBES 400 who gave to a 2004 presidential
    campaign, 72% gave to Bush.
    IN 2005, there were 9 million American millionaires,
    a 62% increase since 2002.
    IN 2005, 25.7 million Americans received food stamps,
    a 49% increase since 2000.
    ONLY ESTATES worth more than $1.5 million are taxed.
    That's less than 1% of all estates
    http://www.motherjones.com/cgi-bin/print_article.pl?url=http://www.motherjon
    es.com/news/exhibit/2006/05/perks_of_privilege.html

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    Do You Want to Stop PREVENT War with Iran?

    Dear Friend,

    Every day, pundits and military experts debate on TV when, how and where
    war with Iran will occur. Can the nuclear program be destroyed? Will the
    Iranian government retaliate in Iraq or use the oil weapon? Will it take
    three or five days of bombing? Will the US bomb Iran with "tactical"
    nuclear weapons?

    Few discuss the human suffering that yet another war in the Middle East
    will bring about. Few discuss the thousands and thousands of innocent
    Iranian and American lives that will be lost. Few think ahead and ask
    themselves what war will do to the cause of democracy in Iran or to
    America's global standing.

    Some dismiss the entire discussion and choose to believe that war simply
    cannot happen. The US is overstretched, the task is too difficult, and
    the world is against it, they say.

    They are probably right, but these factors don't make war unlikely. They
    just make a successful war unlikely.

    At the National Iranian American Council (NIAC), we are not going to
    wait and see what happens.

    We are actively working to stop the war and we need your help!

    Working with a coalition of peace and security organizations in
    Washington DC, NIAC is adding a crucial dimension to this debate - the
    voice of the Iranian-American community.

    Through our US-Iran Media Resource Program
    http://niacouncil.c.topica.com/maafjioabumkFbIfQs8eafpLV5/
    http://niacouncil.c.topica.com/maafjioabumkFbIfQs8eafpLV5/ , we help
    the media ask the right questions and bring attention to the human side
    of this issue.

    Through the LegWatch program

    http://niacouncil.c.topica.com/maafjioabummRbIfQs8eafpLV5/
    http://niacouncil.c.topica.com/maafjioabummRbIfQs8eafpLV5/ ,

    we are building opposition to the war on Capitol Hill. We spell out the
    likely
    consequences of war and the concerns of the Iranian-American community
    on Hill panels

    http://niacouncil.c.topica.com/maafjioabumkGbIfQs8eafpLV5/
    http://niacouncil.c.topica.com/maafjioabumkGbIfQs8eafpLV5/

    and in direct meetings with lawmakers. We recently helped more than a dozen
    Members of Congress - both Republican and Democrats - send a strong
    message against war to the White House

    http://niacouncil.c.topica.com/maafjioabumkHbIfQs8eafpLV5/
    http://niacouncil.c.topica.com/maafjioabumkHbIfQs8eafpLV5/

    But more is needed, and we need your help!

    If you don't wish to see Iran turn into yet another Iraq, please make a
    contribution online or send in a check to:

    NIAC
    2801 M St NW
    Washington DC 20007

    Make the check out to NIAC and mark it "NO WAR."

    ALL donations are welcome, both big and small. And just so you know,
    your donations make a huge difference. Before you leave the office
    today, please make a contribution to stop the war.

    Sincerely,
    Trita Parsi
    President of NIAC

    U.S. Labor Against the War (USLAW)

    www.uslaboragainstwar.org
    http://www.uslaboragainstwar.org/
    Email: info@uslaboragainstwar.org

    PMB 153
    1718 "M" Street, NW
    Washington, D.C. 20036
    Voicemail: 202/521-5265

    Co-convenors: Gene Bruskin, Maria Guillen, Fred Mason,
    Bob Muehlenkamp, and Nancy Wohlforth
    Michael Eisenscher, National Organizer & Website Coordinator
    Virginia Rodino, Organizer
    Adrienne Nicosia, Administrative Staff

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

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    Enforce the Roadless Rule for National Forests
    Target: Michael Johanns, Secretary, USDA
    Sponsor: Earthjustice
    We, the Undersigned, endorse the following petition:
    This past September, Earthjustice scored a huge victory for our roadless
    national forests when a federal district court ordered the reinstatement
    of the Roadless Rule.
    The Roadless Rule protects roadless forest areas from road-building
    and most logging. This is bad news for the timber, mining, and oil
    & gas industries ... And so they're putting pressure on their friends
    in the Bush Administration to challenge the victory.
    Roadless area logging tends to target irreplaceable old growth forests.
    Many of these majestic trees have stood for hundreds of years.
    By targeting old-growth, the timber companies are destroying
    natural treasures that cannot be replaced in our lifetime.
    The future of nearly 50 million acres of wild, national forests
    and grasslands hangs in the balance. Tell the secretary of the
    USDA, Michael Johanns, to protect our roadless areas by enforcing
    the Roadless Rule. The minute a road is cut through a forest, that
    forest is precluded from being considered a "wilderness area," and
    thus will not be covered by any of the Wilderness Area protections
    afforded by Congress.
    http://www.thepetitionsite.com/takeaction/112283692?z00m=6687205&z00m=668720
    5<l=1162406255

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    Mumia Abu-Jamal - Reply brief, U.S. Court of Appeals (Please Circulate)

    Dear Friends:

    On October 23, 2006, the Fourth-Step Reply Brief of Appellee and
    Cross-Appellant, Mumia Abu-Jamal was submitted to the U.S. Court
    of Appeals for the Third Circuit, Philadelphia. (Abu-Jamal v. Horn,
    U.S. Ct. of Appeals Nos. 01-9014, 02-9001.)

    Oral argument will likely be scheduled during the coming months.
    I will advise when a hearing date is set.

    The attached brief is of enormous consequence since it goes
    to the essence of our client's right to a fair trial, due process
    of law, and equal protection of the law, guaranteed by the Fifth,
    Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution.
    The issues include:

    Whether Mr. Abu-Jamal was denied the right to due process
    of law and a fair trial because of the prosecutor's "appeal-after
    -appeal" argument which encouraged the jury to disregard the
    presumption of innocence and reasonable doubt, and err
    on the side of guilt.

    Whether the prosecution's exclusion of African Americans
    from sitting on the jury violated Mr. Abu-Jamal's right
    to due process and equal protection of the law,
    in contravention of Batson v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 79 (1986).

    Whether Mr. Abu-Jamal was denied due process and equal
    protection of the law during a post-conviction hearing
    because of the bias and racism of Judge Albert F. Sabo,
    who was overheard during the trial commenting that
    he was "going to help'em fry the nigger."

    That the federal court i