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  • BAUAW NEWSLETTER
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    Wednesday, June 08, 2005
     

    BAUAW NEWSLETTER UPDATE THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 2005

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    The Rich Get Richer - New York Times
    This message is available on the Internet at http://www.WantToKnow.info/
    050508richgetricher

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    AFTER LOWERING GOAL, ARMY FALLS SHORT ON MAY RECRUITS
    By Eric Schmitt
    New York Times
    Jun 8, 2005
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/08/politics/08recruit.html?th&emc=th

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    U.S. MILITARY RECRUITMENT CRISIS DEEPENS
    By James Cogan
    World Socialist Web Site
    June 1, 2005
    http://www.wsws.org/articles/2005/jun2005/mili-j01.shtml

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    The Value of Workers
    by Archie Kennedy Wednesday,
    May. 25, 2005 at 8:35 PM
    http://la.indymedia.org/news/2005/05/127140.php

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    A RAND Corperation study of relevance...
    Recruiting Youth in the College Market:
    Current Practices and Future Policy Options
    M. Rebecca Kilburn, Beth Asch, Editors
    http://www.rand.org/publications/MR/MR1093/

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    California Father and Son
    Face Charges in Terrorism Case
    By DEAN E. MURPHY and DAVID JOHNSTON
    Published: June 9, 2005
    "A lawyer for the two imams, Saad Ahmad, said the men were innocent
    of any wrongdoing, describing them as "law abiding" and "decent
    hard-working people." He said Mr. Khan and Mr. Ahmed were
    granted entry to the United States to work as imams but said law
    enforcement officials accused them of violating their visas because
    they "did not perform their duties as an imam."
    "I really believe they don't have anything on these guys,"
    said Mr. Ahmad, an immigration lawyer."
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/09/national/09terror.html?

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    Gay Rights Battlefields Spread
    to Public Schools
    By MICHAEL JANOFSKY
    Published: June 9, 2005
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/09/education/09clash.html

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    Award Limit in Tobacco Case
    Sets Off a Strenuous Protest
    By MICHAEL JANOFSKY
    and DAVID JOHNSTON
    Published: June 9, 2005
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/09/politics/
    09tobacco.html?hp&ex=1118376000&en=e23298ad3118dd4f&ei=5094&partner=ho
    mepage

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    Los Alamos Whistleblower Assaulted
    Los Alamos whistleblower "Tommy Hook is still hospitalized
    today after being brutally assaulted over the weekend," the
    Project on Government Oversight is saying. "A group of three
    to four assailants threatened Hook to keep silent, in apparent
    reference to his upcoming Congressional testimony on fraud
    at Los Alamos."
    Mr. Hook was slated to testify before the House Energy and
    Commerce Committee this month. Congressional staff from the
    Committee were already scheduled to arrive Tuesday, June 7th
    to investigate Tommy Hook's allegations. Also flying out
    tomorrow is the Project On Government Oversight's Senior
    Investigator Peter Stockton who investigated the 1974 murder
    of nuclear whistleblower Karen Silkwood in his previous
    position as a Congressional investigator.”
    http://www.defensetech.org/archives/001590.html

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    June 11:Founding Convention of San Francisco Peoples'
    Organization
    From: Chris Daly

    Dear Friends,

    I want to personally invite you to the founding convention of an exciting
    new endeavor, the San Francisco People's Organization (SFPO). This new
    organization brings labor, community based organizations, and the diversity
    of our progressive communities together to collectively develop a sustained
    alliance that can build a progressive vision for San Francisco. Please come
    out to support and make sure that YOUR voice is heard!

    WHAT: SAN FRANCISCO PEOPLES' ORGANIZATION FOUNDING CONVENTION
    WHEN: Saturday, June 11, 2005 - 8:30am - 5:00pm
    WHERE: St. Mary's Cathedral Conference Center - 1111 Gough St.
    at Geary

    KEYNOTE SPEAKERS: Mike Casey, President, HERE, Local 2
    Medea Benjamin, Founder, Global Exchange

    PERFORMANCE: MICHAEL FRANTI of SPEARHEAD

    Please join San Francisco progressive leaders such as Matt Gonzalez,
    Supervisor Ross Mirkarimi, Public Defender Jeff Adachi and myself in this
    momentous occasion to build and consolidate the diverse progressive voices
    of our city.

    To register and/or for more information, please visit
    www.sfpeople.org
    Registration: $10 (Breakfast and Lunch Included)

    SFPO members include:
    Local 2, United Health Care Workers (formerly SEIU Local 250), Bernal
    Heights Democratic Club, CLAER Project, Coalition for Transit Justice, Code
    Pink, Community Tenants Association, Gray Panthers, Health Care for All, La
    Raza Centro Legal, Living Wage Coalition, Mission Anti-Displacement
    Coalition, Pride at Work, Progressive Voter Project, San Francisco
    Childcare Provider Association, San Francisco Day Laborers Program, San
    Francisco Tenants Union, Senior Action Network, Sex Workers Outreach
    Project, SOMCAN (South of Market Community Action Network), Tenants Network
    and hundreds of individual activists.

    SFPO Mission Statement:
    San Francisco Peoples' Organization is a coalition of community-based
    organizations, labor, advocacy groups, and individuals committed to
    building a progressive vision for San Francisco. We are creating a
    long-term strategic alliance of people of color, women, LGBT, labor,
    working poor, seniors, persons with disabilities, faith-based communities,
    youth, and any group or individual that fights for economic and social
    justice. We believe that through grassroots, constituency-based,
    multi-issue organizing efforts we can transform San Francisco into a city
    that places human needs and the common good above everything else.

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    Gays and lesbians under siege
    as violence and harassment soar
    in Northern Ireland
    Campaigners say homophobia still seen as 'respectable
    prejudice' in province
    Angelique Chrisafis, Ireland correspondent
    Monday June 6, 2005
    The Guardian
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/Northern_Ireland/Story/0,2763,1499845,00.html

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    Please circulate widely....and let us know how you can help out...
    You are invited to a Community Dialogue

    The Criminalization of Survival - Poverty, Violence & Prostitution

    Come hear about the growing movement, spearheaded by sex workers,
    demanding protection and an end to criminalization and imprisonment
    for "crimes of poverty".

    Thursday, June 9 at 7pm

    St Boniface Church, 133 Golden Gate, San Francisco

    (between Jones & Leavenworth, near Civic Center BART)

    Donation $5, no one turned away. Call ahead if you need
    childcare or Spanish translation

    Speakers: _ Margaret Prescod, Host Pacifica Radio/KPFK "Sojourner
    Truth", Women of Color in the Global Women's Strike _ Sister
    Bernie Galvin, Religious Witness With Homeless People _ Anna Bolton,
    California Prison Focus _ Rachel West, US PROStitutes
    Collective _ Attorneys from the Public Defender's Office
    and more....

    Cuts in welfare, housing & other resources increased the numbers
    of women, especially single mothers, working as prostitutes to
    support their families. Laws like SOAP (Stay Out of Areas of
    Prostitution) orders, which fine or jail women and make it
    illegal to go to certain areas are fuelling hostility & dividing
    communities. Women face sexism & racism by police & courts when
    charged under the prostitution laws or reporting violence.
    Punitive, judgmental "rehabilitation" schemes compel women to
    attend under threat of imprisonment.

    The SF Task Force on Prostitution (TF) recommended decriminalization,
    protection from violence and for resources to help women get out
    of prostitution - recommendations that have the support of most
    San Franciscans. The SF Board of Supervisors then passed a resolution
    supporting the TF recommendations which calls for the $7.6 million
    currently spent on enforcing anti-prostitution laws be used instead
    for resources and services, and for the vigorous prosecution of
    rape and other violent crimes against sex workers.

    The Community Dialogue aims to bring together sex workers; church
    workers; residents; legal reps; organized labor; ex-cons; youth;
    LGBT; communities of color & immigrants; homeless people; anti-war,
    anti-poverty & anti-racist activists; prisoner rights groups and
    others working for justice and to protect the rights of anyone
    criminalized by poverty to discuss: _ How the criminalization
    of prostitution makes sex workers and all women more vulnerable
    to violence; _ Extending to sex workers, the amnesty granted to
    homeless people arrested for "nuisance crimes."

    While $billions are spent on war, occupation and prisons,
    why is there "no money" for women, the carers in every community?

    Coordinated by: In Defense of Prostitute Women's Safety,
    a project of US PROStitutes Collective & Legal Action for Women.
    Co sponsored by: Wages Due Lesbians; Women of Color in the
    Global Women's Strike, California Prison Focus, Ella Baker
    Center, Justice in Palestine Coalition. Endorsed by: Mission
    Neighborhood Resource Center. Call for more info (415) 626-4114
    or email sf@crossroadswomen.net .
    Funded in part by the Commission on the Status of Women

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
    BAUAW NEWSLETTER WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 2005
    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    1) After Lowering Goal, Army
    Falls Short on May Recruits
    By ERIC SCHMITT
    "WASHINGTON, June 7 - Even after reducing its recruiting
    target for May, the Army missed it by about 25 percent,
    Army officials said on Tuesday. The shortfall would have
    been even bigger had the Army stuck to its original goal
    for the month.

    On Friday, the Army is expected to announce that it met
    only 75 percent of its recruiting goal for May, the fourth
    consecutive monthly shortfall in the number of new recruits
    sent to basic training. Just over 5,000 new recruits
    entered boot camp in May.

    But the news could have appeared worse. Early last month,
    the Army, with no public notice, lowered its long-stated
    May goal to 6,700 recruits from 8,050. Compared with the
    original target, the Army achieved only 62.6 percent of
    its goal for the month."
    June 8, 2005
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/08/politics/08recruit.html?

    2) When Marine recruiters go way beyond the call
    Wednesday, June 8, 2005
    By SUSAN PAYNTER
    SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER COLUMNIST
    http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/paynter/227497_paynter08.html

    3) "BRAC could force some to drive further to drill"
    by Laura Bailey"
    From: Marti Hiken mlhiken@pacbell.net

    4) Sept. 24-26, 2005: End the War on Iraq!
    Massive Mobilization in Washington, D.C.
    Hold Bush & Congress Accountable for the Deaths, the Destruction,
    the Lies, and the Toll on Our Communities
    Three Days of Action for Peace and Justice in Washington, D.C.
    END THE WAR ON IRAQ
    BRING THE TROOPS HOME NOW!
    Leave no bases behind - End the corporate occupation of Iraq
    Stop bankrupting our communities –
    No military recruitment in our schools
    Sat., Sept. 24 - Massive March, Rally & Festival
    Sun., Sept. 25 - Interfaith Service, Grassroots Training
    Mon., Sept. 26 - Lobby Day and Mass Nonviolent Direct Action
    and Civil Disobedience
    http://www.unitedforpeace.org/article.php?list=type&type=91

    5) Drug's Users Say Ruling Won't End Their Efforts
    By DEAN E. MURPHY
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/07/national/07react.html?

    6) Justices Say U.S. May Prohibit the Use of Medical Marijuana
    By LINDA GREENHOUSE
    Published: June 7, 2005
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/07/politics/07marijuana.html

    7) The Court and Marijuana
    June 8, 2005
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/08/opinion/08wed2.html?pagewanted=print

    8) Prosecutions Unlikely of Medical Pot Users
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Filed at 1:53 p.m. ET
    June 7, 2005
    http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/national/AP-Scotus-Medical-Marijuana.html

    9) Good to Grow
    By SALLY SATEL
    Washington
    June 8, 2005
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/08/opinion/08Satel.html

    10) Medical Marijuana ProCon .org
    http://www.medicalmarijuanaprocon.org/

    11) Federal Prosecutors Slash
    Amount Sought in Tobacco Trial
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Published: June 8, 2005
    Filed at 11:48 a.m. ET
    "WASHINGTON (AP) -- Federal prosecutors, wrapping up
    a drawn-out lawsuit against the tobacco industry, are demanding
    only a fraction of the $130 billion that a government witness
    initially envisioned cigarette makers would have to spend on
    smoking cessation programs."
    http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/business/AP-Tobacco-
    Trial.html?hp&ex=1118289600&en=c0de4589ff4bd483&ei=5094&partner=homepag
    e

    12) Bush Aide Softened Greenhouse
    Gas Links to Global Warming
    By ANDREW C. REVKIN
    Published: June 8, 2005
    "A White House official who once led the oil industry's fight
    against limits on greenhouse gases has repeatedly edited government
    climate reports in ways that play down links between such emissions
    and global warming, according to internal documents."
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/08/politics/
    08climate.html?hp&ex=1118289600&en=54e7b911a5d025aa&ei=5094&partner=ho
    mepage

    13) Artist: Dead Prez
    Album: Turn Off the Radio
    Song: Know Your Enemy
    http://lyrics.duble.com/lyrics/D/dead-prez-lyrics/dead-prez-know-your-enemy-
    lyrics.htm

    14) Desperate for Work, Blind to Dangers
    Dahr Jamail's Iraq Dispatches
    http://dahrjamailiraq.com

    15) Who Cares?
    Dahr Jamail's Iraq Dispatches
    June 07, 2005
    http://dahrjamailiraq.com

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    1) After Lowering Goal, Army
    Falls Short on May Recruits
    By ERIC SCHMITT
    "WASHINGTON, June 7 - Even after reducing its recruiting
    target for May, the Army missed it by about 25 percent, Army
    officials said on Tuesday. The shortfall would have been
    even bigger had the Army stuck to its original goal for
    the month.

    On Friday, the Army is expected to announce that it met
    only 75 percent of its recruiting goal for May, the fourth
    consecutive monthly shortfall in the number of new recruits
    sent to basic training. Just over 5,000 new recruits entered
    boot camp in May.

    But the news could have appeared worse. Early last month,
    the Army, with no public notice, lowered its long-stated
    May goal to 6,700 recruits from 8,050. Compared with the
    original target, the Army achieved only 62.6 percent of
    its goal for the month."
    June 8, 2005
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/08/politics/08recruit.html?

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    2) When Marine recruiters go way beyond the call
    Wednesday, June 8, 2005
    By SUSAN PAYNTER
    SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER COLUMNIST
    http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/paynter/227497_paynter08.html

    For mom Marcia Cobb and her teenage son Axel, the white
    letters USMC on their caller ID soon spelled, "Don't answer
    the phone!"

    Marine recruiters began a relentless barrage of calls to
    Axel as soon as the mellow, compliant Sedro-Woolley High
    School grad had cut his 17th birthday cake. And soon it
    was nearly impossible to get the seekers of a few good
    men off the line.

    With early and late calls ringing in their ears, Marcia
    tried using call blocking. And that's when she learned her
    first hard lesson. You can't block calls from the government,
    her server said. So, after pleas to "Please stop calling"
    went unanswered, the family's "do not answer" order ensued.

    But warnings and liquid crystal lettering can fade. So,
    two weeks ago when Marcia was cooking dinner Axel goofed
    and answered the call. And, faster than you can say "semper fi,"
    an odyssey kicked into action that illustrates just how
    desperate some of the recruiters we've read about really
    are to fill severely sagging quotas.

    Let what we learned serve as a warning to other moms,
    dads and teens, the Cobbs now say. Even if your kids
    actually may want to join the military, if they hope to
    do it on their own terms, after a deep breath and due
    consideration, repeat these words after them: "No," "Not
    now" and "Back off!"

    "I've been trained to be pretty friendly. I guess you might
    even say I'm kind of passive," Axel told me last week, just
    after his mother and older sister had tracked him to
    a Seattle testing center and sprung him on a ruse.

    The next step of Axel's misadventure came when he heard
    about a cool "chin-ups" contest in Bellingham, where the
    prize was a free Xbox. The now 18-year-old Skagit Valley
    Community College student dragged his tail feathers home
    uncharacteristically late that night. And, in the morning,
    Marcia learned the Marines had hosted the event and "then
    had him out all night, drilling him to join."

    A single mom with a meager income, Marcia raised her kids
    on the farm where, until recently, she grew salad greens
    for restaurants.

    Axel's father, a Marine Corps vet who served in Vietnam,
    died when Axel was 4.

    Clearly the recruiters knew all that and more.

    "You don't want to be a burden to your mom," they told him.
    "Be a man." "Make your father proud." Never mind that,
    because of his own experience in the service, Marcia says
    enlistment for his son is the last thing Axel's dad would
    have wanted.

    The next weekend, when Marcia went to Seattle for the
    Folklife Festival and Axel was home alone, two recruiters
    showed up at the door.

    Axel repeated the family mantra, but he was feeling frazzled
    and worn down by then. The sergeant was friendly but, at the
    same time, aggressively insistent. This time, when Axel said,
    "Not interested," the sarge turned surly, snapping, "You're
    making a big (bleeping) mistake!"

    Next thing Axel knew, the same sergeant and another recruiter
    showed up at the LaConner Brewing Co., the restaurant where
    Axel works. And before Axel, an older cousin and other
    co-workers knew or understood what was happening, Axel was
    whisked away in a car.

    "They said we were going somewhere but I didn't know we were
    going all the way to Seattle," Axel said.


    Just a few tests. And so many free opportunities, the
    recruiters told him.

    He could pursue his love of chemistry. He could serve
    anywhere he chose and leave any time he wanted on an
    "apathy discharge" if he didn't like it. And he
    wouldn't have to go to Iraq if he didn't want to.

    At about 3:30 in the morning, Alex was awakened in the
    motel and fed a little something. Twelve hours later,
    without further sleep or food, he had taken a battery
    of tests and signed a lot of papers he hadn't gotten
    a chance to read. "Just formalities," he was told. "Sign
    here. And here. Nothing to worry about."

    By then Marcia had "freaked out."

    She went to the Burlington recruiting center where the
    door was open but no one was home. So she grabbed all
    the cards and numbers she could find, including the
    address of the Seattle-area testing center.

    Then, with her grown daughter in tow, she high-tailed
    it south, frantically phoning Axel whose cell phone
    had been confiscated "so he wouldn't be distracted
    during tests."

    Axel's grandfather was in the hospital dying, she told
    the people at the desk. He needed to come home right
    away. She would have said just about anything.

    But, even after being told her son would be brought
    right out, her daughter spied him being taken down
    a separate hall and into another room. So she dashed
    down the hall and grabbed him by the arm.

    "They were telling me I needed to 'be a man' and stand
    up to my family," Axel said.

    What he needed, it turned out, was a lawyer.

    Five minutes and $250 after an attorney called the
    recruiters, Axel's signed papers and his cell phone
    were in the mail.

    My request to speak with the sergeant who recruited
    Axel and with the Burlington office about recruitment
    procedures went unanswered.

    And so should your phone, Marcia Cobb advised. Take
    your own sweet time. Keep your own counsel. And, if
    you see USMC on caller ID, remember what answering
    the call could mean.

    Susan Paynter's column appears Mondays, Wednesdays
    and Fridays. Call her at 206-448-8392 or send e-mail
    to susanpaynter@seattlepi.com.

    (c) 1998-2005 Seattle Post-Intelligencer

    Marxism mailing list
    Marxism@lists.econ.utah.edu
    http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxism

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    3) "BRAC could force some to drive further to drill"
    by Laura Bailey"
    From: Marti Hiken mlhiken@pacbell.net

    Hi,

    Let's see if I can get this email out without the compu
    crashing. It will probably be a few days before I have all
    the computer problems worked out.

    This is important info: (These excerpts are from the Marine
    Times, p. 28, 7-6-05, "BRAC could force some to drive further
    to drill" by Laura Bailey)

    This information needs to be spread. It certainly will not
    help the military in terms of recruitment efforts.

    Marti

    Due to BRAC (Base Closings here in the U.S., the report
    was released on May 13th), almost 20 Reserve installations
    will be closed or realigned. This means that in coming years,
    soldiers will have to travel to new locations for drill
    weekends, creating longer or shorter commutes for thousands.
    For several hundred reservists, the proposed realignments
    could mean having to affiliate with different units altogether.

    While many of the consolidations would send reservists to
    nearby stations, others would move units hundreds of miles
    away across state lines, leaving the question of how affected
    reservists would get to drill stations every month.

    Reservists who would have to travel an unreasonable amount
    to drill would have the option of seeking transfers to units
    within reasonable commuting distances.

    IF YOU CAN BELIEVE THIS:

    If there is no unit available in the area, reservists will
    be able to request an interservice transfer or a return to
    active duty. For reservists not satisfied with the latter
    option, there is a possibility some would be allowed to go
    to the IRR. Such commuting problems should affect only
    a minority of reservists. "...Our analysis determined that
    the number of reservists driving over 100 miles, if all
    candidate recommendations closing Reserve centers were
    executed, would total roughtly 700, or less than
    2 percent of the total Reserve population."

    One squadron at Naval Air Station Atlanta... would move
    822 miles west to Ft. Worth, TX, affecting 131 Reservists
    and 78 active duty.

    "Reservists are not obligated to continue their Reserve
    service if they find that traveling to a drill site will
    place an excessive burden on them...Severance or relocation
    benefits will NOT be be offered to reservists who separate
    due to the closure of Reserve center.

    Reservists who must travel more than 50 miles to get to
    new drill sites are entitled to reimbursement for berthing
    costs associated with reaching the drill site.

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    4) Sept. 24-26, 2005: End the War on Iraq!
    Massive Mobilization in Washington, D.C.
    Hold Bush & Congress Accountable for the Deaths, the Destruction,
    the Lies, and the Toll on Our Communities
    Three Days of Action for Peace and Justice in Washington, D.C.
    END THE WAR ON IRAQ
    BRING THE TROOPS HOME NOW!
    Leave no bases behind - End the corporate occupation of Iraq
    Stop bankrupting our communities - No military recruitment in our schools
    Sat., Sept. 24 - Massive March, Rally & Festival
    Sun., Sept. 25 - Interfaith Service, Grassroots Training
    Mon., Sept. 26 - Lobby Day and Mass Nonviolent Direct Action
    and Civil Disobedience
    http://www.unitedforpeace.org/article.php?list=type&type=91

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    5) Drug's Users Say Ruling Won't End Their Efforts
    By DEAN E. MURPHY
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/07/national/07react.html?

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    6) Justices Say U.S. May Prohibit the Use of Medical Marijuana
    By LINDA GREENHOUSE
    Published: June 7, 2005
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/07/politics/07marijuana.html

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    7) The Court and Marijuana
    June 8, 2005
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/08/opinion/08wed2.html?pagewanted=print

    We read the Supreme Court's decision on the medicinal use
    of marijuana with mixed emotions. We certainly wish that
    the Justice Department could be weaned from the gross misuse
    of the federal Controlled Substances Act that led to its
    campaign against the use of marijuana by terminally ill
    people in the 11 states where it is legal for doctors to
    prescribe it. But we take very seriously the court's
    concern about protecting the Commerce Clause, the vital
    constitutional principle that has allowed the federal
    government to thwart evils like child labor and segregation.

    The dissenters in the 6-to-3 decision, Justices Sandra
    Day O'Connor and Clarence Thomas and Chief Justice William
    Rehnquist, opened the door for conservatives who want to
    sharply reduce Congress's use of its power to regulate and
    protect interstate commerce. These conservatives want
    to turn the clock back to before the New Deal, when
    workers were exploited, factories polluted at will and
    the elderly faced insecure retirements.

    The law the Bush administration used in attempting to
    crack down on medical marijuana in states where it is
    legal was intended to stop interstate trafficking in
    dangerous drugs. Most Americans would agree that using
    small amounts of marijuana in private under a doctor's
    supervision has nothing to do with narcotics trafficking.
    To stop the Justice Department from pursuing this
    ideological obsession, Congress should amend the law
    to specifically exempt prescribed marijuana. It should
    not be a partisan issue; both red and blue states have
    laws allowing the medicinal use of marijuana.

    We hope good sense prevails. And we hope that Justice
    Antonin Scalia, who seems to be campaigning for chief
    justice, remembers that he concurred with the majority
    this week the next time the court hears a federal-powers
    case on, say, air pollution.

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    8) Prosecutions Unlikely of Medical Pot Users
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Filed at 1:53 p.m. ET
    June 7, 2005
    http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/national/AP-Scotus-Medical-Marijuana.html

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    9) Good to Grow
    By SALLY SATEL
    Washington
    June 8, 2005
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/08/opinion/08Satel.html

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    10) Medical Marijuana ProCon .org
    http://www.medicalmarijuanaprocon.org/

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    11) Federal Prosecutors Slash
    Amount Sought in Tobacco Trial
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Published: June 8, 2005
    Filed at 11:48 a.m. ET
    "WASHINGTON (AP) -- Federal prosecutors, wrapping up
    a drawn-out lawsuit against the tobacco industry, are demanding
    only a fraction of the $130 billion that a government witness
    initially envisioned cigarette makers would have to spend on
    smoking cessation programs."
    http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/business/AP-Tobacco-
    Trial.html?hp&ex=1118289600&en=c0de4589ff4bd483&ei=5094&partner=homepag
    e

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    12) Bush Aide Softened Greenhouse
    Gas Links to Global Warming
    By ANDREW C. REVKIN
    Published: June 8, 2005
    "A White House official who once led the oil industry's fight
    against limits on greenhouse gases has repeatedly edited government
    climate reports in ways that play down links between such emissions
    and global warming, according to internal documents."
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/08/politics/
    08climate.html?hp&ex=1118289600&en=54e7b911a5d025aa&ei=5094&partner=ho
    mepage

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    13) Artist: Dead Prez
    Album: Turn Off the Radio
    Song: Know Your Enemy
    http://lyrics.duble.com/lyrics/D/dead-prez-lyrics/dead-prez-know-your-enemy-
    lyrics.htm

    chorus:

    [stic.man & m1]
    know your enemy, know yourself
    that's the politic
    george bush is way worse than bin laden is
    know your enemy, know yourself
    that's the politic
    f.b.i., c.i.a., the real terrorists
    know your enemy, know yourself
    that's the politic
    george bush is way worse than bin laden is
    know your enemy, know yourself
    that's the politic
    c.i.a., f.b.i. the real terrorists

    [stic.man]
    you got to watch what you say in these days and times
    It's a touchy situation, lotta fear and emotion
    september 11th
    televised world-wide
    suicide planes fallin like bombs from out the sky
    they wasn't aimin at us
    not at my house
    they hit the world trade, the pentagon, and almost got the white house
    now everybody walkin round patriotic
    how we gon' fight to keep freedom when we ain't got it?
    you wanna stop terrorists?
    start with the u.s. imperalists
    ain't no track record like america's, see
    bin laden was trained by the c.i.a
    but I guess if you a terrorist for the u.s
    then it's okay
    uh huh

    [m1]
    they try to make us think we crazy
    but I know what they doin, they tryna put us back in slavery
    check it, to get on welfare you gotta get your fingerprints
    soon ya gotta do eyescans to get your benefits
    now they got them cards to swipe, ain't no more foodstamps
    shoulda seen it comin, now it's too late to get amped
    and everything got a barcode
    so they know what you got, when you got it, and what you still owe
    you seen them projects, lately you better watch it
    why they got us surrounded if money is the object?
    why they use satellites to keep track of the criminals?
    why they puttin jails in schools, is it subliminal?
    cameras everywhere to protect us from one another
    or is it the undercover, disguised as big brother
    and even freedom of speech is limited
    mad leaders done spoke up, and look at what these crackas did

    (chorus)

    [m1]
    and you ain't got to believe me
    go 'head and listen to bush
    the dope pusher on the t.v
    what you think the war is for?
    cause the greedy wantin more and more
    we be hustlin the corridor
    I would never join the military
    one soldier to another, nigga holla if ya hear me
    goin out to the best sons and daughters
    don't be a lamb gettin led to the slaughter
    I'ma keep ridin when my momma released
    cause ain't no stoppin us now, dawg
    freedom before peace
    ugh
    they got a plan for us?
    we got a plan for them
    and this time we gon' win
    who in? you out? you in?
    no doubt, we men
    ain't no ridin the fence
    It's called self-defense
    It makes sense
    when they tell us we gotta shackles on our brains (say what?)
    I'll be damned if I sit here and let them put us back in chains

    (singing)
    at the bonfires of the city
    I've seen blood (stic.man - a'what?...)
    blood (stic.man - a'what?...)
    blood (stic.man - a'what?...)

    Marxism mailing list
    Marxism@lists.econ.utah.edu
    http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxism

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    14) Desperate for Work, Blind to Dangers
    Dahr Jamail's Iraq Dispatches
    http://dahrjamailiraq.com

    Inter Press Service
    Dahr Jamail

    AMMAN, Jun 7 (IPS) - Ahlam Najam just needed a job. At 25, she had a
    university degree in education but could not find work as teacher.

    When Kellogg Brown and Root (KBR), subsidiary of the U.S. firm
    Halliburton offered her a job as a security guard at a U.S. base in
    Iraq, she took it.

    On May 18 last year she was shot twice in the head as she waited for a
    taxi to take her to work. Her injuries left her blind, and she lost her
    sense of smell.

    "Many people were working with the Americans, so I felt it would be
    okay," Najam, now at a Saudi-funded organisation in Amman that assists
    blind Arab women told IPS.

    "My two bosses at KBR, Mr. Jeff and Mr. Mark used to be very good and
    gentle with me," she said. "They told me it wasn't dangerous to work for
    them."

    Najam worked for KBR three months before she was shot. She was taken to
    hospital in Hilla, about 100 km south of Baghdad, and kept there several
    days. But her good bosses never contacted her, she says.

    She was later moved to a hospital in Baghdad. Here she was told there
    had been a call from "Mr Jeff" (she was never given the last names of
    her bosses). She was too much in pain to be able to take the call. Her
    employers never called again. Attempts to find their last names, email
    addresses or phone numbers have been fruitless.

    "I sent two emails to the KBR public relations person last June. But
    they never replied. I don't know what to do now, I can't go back to Iraq
    because it is too dangerous."

    Najam feels hurt in many ways. "I was very good with them. Always on
    time, never left early, and they were happy with me. But when I needed
    them most, they were not there."

    KBR has an email address where questions about employees in Iraq are
    said to be answered within 12 hours. Emails to that address were not
    returned.

    Ahlam Najam went to work as a security guard in a country where
    unemployment is more than 50 percent and prices are rising. Like Najam,
    many have no choice but to work in situations of grave danger. And the
    security situation is getting no better.

    Car bombings and other attacks have killed at least 80 U.S. soldiers and
    more than 800 Iraqis in the last month alone.

    It does not help that U.S. President George W. Bush sees it differently.
    "I am pleased that in less than a year's time there's a democratically
    elected government in Iraq, there are thousands of Iraq soldiers trained
    and better equipped to fight for their own country (and) that our
    strategy is very clear," Bush told reporters in Washington.

    In the last two weeks at least 35 U.S. soldiers have been killed in
    Iraq, with 1,670 killed since the invasion of Iraq in March 2003.

    Vice-President Dick Cheney, who used to head Halliburton which has been
    awarded massive contracts in Iraq, has also offered an upbeat
    assessment. He said during an interview on CNN that insurgency in Iraq
    was in its "last throes".

    But after a meeting with U.S. military commanders in Iraq, Senator
    Joseph Biden from Delaware said, "The idea that the insurgents are on
    the run and we are about to turn the corner, I did not hear that from
    anybody."

    More writing, photos and commentary at http://dahrjamailiraq.com

    You can visit http://dahrjamailiraq.com/email_list/ to subscribe or unsubscribe to the
    email list.

    (c)2004, 2005 Dahr Jamail.
    http://lists.dahrjamailiraq.com/mailman/listinfo/iraq_dispatches

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    15) Who Cares?
    Dahr Jamail's Iraq Dispatches
    June 07, 2005
    http://dahrjamailiraq.com

    Suicide bombers unleashed another day of hell across Iraq today, killing
    at least 18 and wounding over 67.

    Four of them struck Iraqi Security forces, along with US military
    convoys around Baghdad. Despite the huge US-backed Iraqi security
    operation throughout the capital city, attacks there continue unabated.

    The small city of Rawa near Al-Qa'im was bombed again by the US military
    Sunday night. The military admitted to the bombing, but claimed that
    there were no civilian casualties. Today on Al-Jazeera the satellite
    channel flashed footage of flattened civilian homes, as well as people
    in the city claiming that seven civilians were killed in the bombings.

    In Hawija (near Kirkuk), three suicide car bombers struck Iraqi security
    checkpoints today, killing several Iraqis. Meanwhile in Tal-Afar (near
    Mosul), fierce clashes erupted between the Iraqi resistance and American
    soldiers. These are ongoing as I type this.

    It continues to be clear that the plans of the Bush Administration in
    Iraq either do not include the protection of Iraqis, they don't care, or
    both.

    I received an email from someone today along these lines which I found
    interesting:

    "I operated out of Camp Anaconda, near Balad. What almost everyone, both
    in uniform and those as contractors, agreed on (was) the objective of
    the Bush Administration's long term (plan) is focused primarily on oil.
    Hearts and minds are secondary, far behind the issue of petroleum
    products, as the US continues to compete for resources around the world.
    I hope more media conversation is forthcoming on this issue."

    Also along these lines, an Iraqi friend of mine who is a doctor in
    Baghdad told me that when he was in Ramadi yesterday, US soldiers
    attacked the Anbar Medical School while students were taking their
    exams. As he said, "They (US soldiers) smashed the front gates of the
    school in a barbaric way using Humvees...and terrorized the female
    students while arresting two students while they were working on their
    exams. They then lay siege to the homes of the dean of the university,
    along with homes of lecturers, even though their families were inside."

    My friend also reported that after he recently visited Haditha (remember
    "Operation Open Market") he found that a large number of civilians had
    been detained.

    "They even detained a friend of mine and his father because they found
    papers in their home about an upcoming demonstration," he told me.

    Recently, the US-backed Iraqi "government" announced it had detained
    nearly 900 "suspected militants." A "suspected militant" in Iraq looks
    more and more like anyone in the wrong place at the wrong time when
    Iraqi or US forces conduct an operation.

    Of course the looting of homes during raids continues along with the
    detentions of innocent Iraqis. So much so that as a result of the huge
    "security" operation in Baghdad, Laith Kuba, a spokesman for Iraqi Prime
    Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari found it necessary to make the following
    statement:

    "Some people complained there are cases where soldiers took advantage
    and helped themselves to cash and other items. One doesn't rule it out.
    The complaints I heard from people were the aggressiveness of some of
    these forces as they do things. Some people have half-hinted that they
    have copied some of the mannerisms of other foreign troops. I think that
    is a valid criticism in some cases."

    More writing, photos and commentary at http://dahrjamailiraq.com

    You can visit http://dahrjamailiraq.com/email_list/
    to subscribe or unsubscribe to the email list.
    (c)2004, 2005 Dahr Jamail.
    Iraq_Dispatches mailing list
    http://lists.dahrjamailiraq.com/mailman/listinfo/iraq_dispatches

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