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  • BAUAW NEWSLETTER
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    Saturday, July 23, 2005
     

    BAUAW NEWSLETTER-SATURDAY, JULY 23, 2005

    1) Pastors for Peace Friendshipment
    Caravan to Cuba being held up at
    US-Mexico Border!
    EMERGENCY NETWORKS AND PRESS CONTACTS:

    2) Order your advance tickets to Howard Zinn's Marx in Soho
    Send check for $10.00 for each advance ticket to:
    Bay Area United Against War
    P.O. Box 318021
    San Francisco, CA 94131-8021
    Please indicate which show:
    Thursday, August 4, 7:00 p.m.
    Friday, August 5, 7:00 p.m.
    Saturday, August 6, 2:00 p.m.
    Jon Sims Center for the Performing Arts
    1519 Mission Street between 11th Street
    and South Van Ness, S.F.

    3) Cut all Public School Ties to the Military!
    Speak up and Picket the S.F. Board of Education
    the Fourth Tuesday of Each Month.
    Next picket line: Tuesday, July 27, 6:30 P.M.-7:30 P.M.
    (The July Board of Ed. meetings have been cancelled. But we
    will still hold a picket July 27 at 6:30 p.m.-7:30 p.m.
    in front of the Board of Education building.)
    The next picket line after July 27 is August 23, 6:30 P.M.
    -7:30 P.M. (just before school starts back.)
    August 23, 6:30 p.m.-7:30 P.M.
    555 Franklin St., S.F,
    To get on the speakers list call:
    415-241-6427, 241-6493 or 241-6000
    (For more info call: 415-824-8730)

    4) Where the Arab and Muslim Community Will Stand on
    September 24
    From Al-Awda-DC list:

    5) Army Likely To Fall Short in Recruiting,
    General Says
    By ERIC SCHMITT
    July 24, 2005
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/24/politics/
    24recruit.html?hp&ex=1122177600&en=724df10ec5c825fc&ei=5094&partner=hom
    epage

    6) Government Defies an Order
    to Release Iraq Abuse Photos
    By KATE ZERNIKE
    Published: July 23, 2005
    Lawyers for the Defense Department are refusing to cooperate with a federal judge's
    order to release secret photographs and videotapes related to the Abu Ghraib prison
    abuse scandal.
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/23/politics/23abuse.html

    7) Uncle Sam wants you - even if you're 42 years old
    By Rick Maze
    Times staff writer
    July 19, 2005
    http://www.armytimes.com/story.php?f=1-292925-983408.php

    8) Bombs hit London two weeks after deadly blasts
    Thu Jul 21, 2005 10:08 AM ET
    http://go.reuters.com/
    newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=9136128&src=eDialog/GetContent

    9) Defend a Woman‚s Right to Choose!
    Stop the anti-abortion „Crusade for Life‰

    10) Antiwar Activists Reach U.S. Sailors In Australia
    The creativity that these antiwar activists used in reaching
    active-duty military personnel--and the friendly reception they
    received from the sailors--is inspiring. They provided a shining
    example of what's possible at a time when Bush's war for oil
    is growing increasingly unpopular--in the U.S., around the
    world and even within the ranks of the U.S. military.

    11) Recruiters Pursue Student Data
    Military recruiters are seeking to access to student
    lists before families have been given a chance to opt out.
    By Brian McNeill/The Connection
    July 21, 2005
    http://www.connectionnewspapers.com/printarticle.asp?article=53499

    12) Riot control ray gun worries scientists
    By Reuters
    http://www.news.com/
    http://news.com.com/Riot+control+ray+gun+worries+scientists/2100-7337_3-
    5796749.html

    13) Some Guantánamo Prisoners
    Have Gone on Hunger Strike
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Published: July 22, 2005
    WASHINGTON, July 21 (AP) - Some 50 prisoners at the
    American naval base at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, have
    been on a hunger strike for three days, a Pentagon
    spokesman said Thursday.
    Forum: National Security
    The spokesman, Bryan Whitman, said he did not
    know why the prisoners, detained as terrorism
    suspects, were refusing food, adding that their
    health was being monitored. Some have already
    begun eating again, Mr. Whitman said.
    The Pentagon's account of the protest contrasted
    somewhat with that of two Afghans released on
    Monday from Guantánamo. The two, Habir Russol and
    Moheb Ullah Borekzai, said on Wednesday that more
    than 180 Afghans were on a hunger strike to
    protest mistreatment.
    Mr. Russol and Mr. Borekzai estimated that the
    men were in the 14th or 15th day of their fast.
    Mr. Borekzai later said of the hunger strikers:
    "Some of these people say they were mistreated
    during interrogation. Some say they are innocent."
    "They are protesting that they have been in jail
    nearly four years, and they want to be released," he said.
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/22/politics/22gitmo.html?

    14) Pentagon Proposes Rise
    in Age Limit for Recruits
    By DAMIEN CAVE
    Published: July 22, 2005
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/22/politics/22recruit.html

    15) GI Special 3B97 ThomasFBarton@earthlink.net
    July 21, 2005 By DENNIS HUSPENI, THE GAZETTE

    16) House Votes to Keep Anti-Terror Law
    But Senate version puts more limits on federal agents
    by Edward Epstein
    Published on Friday, July 22, 2005 by the San Francisco Chronicle
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0722-07.htm

    17) 'Every Mother's Son' filmmaker
    Tami Gold in Bayview!
    by mesha Monge-Irizarry
    On June 7, Tami Gold, co-producer of the nationally
    acclaimed film "Every Mother's Son,"
    came to the Idriss Stelley Foundation on Third Street
    in Bayview to touch base and
    exchange ideas on how to impact police brutality nationwide.
    http://www.sfbayview.com/072005/everymothersson072005.shtml

    18) How a Trip to Film in Iraq
    Ended in a Military Jail Cell
    By TIM GOLDEN
    Published: July 24, 2005
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/24/national/nationalspecial3/24detainee.html

    19) House's NASA Bill Embraces
    Bush Plan
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Published: July 23, 2005
    WASHINGTON, July 22 (AP) - The House overwhelmingly
    endorsed President Bush's vision of sending people
    back to the Moon and eventually to Mars as it passed
    a bill on Friday to set NASA policy for the next two years.
    The bill was approved by a 383-to-15 vote after a collegial
    debate in which lawmakers emphasized their commitment not
    only to Mr. Bush's space exploration plans but also to
    traditional programs at the National Aeronautics and
    Space Administration, like science and aeronautics.
    Originally, the measure would have shifted $1.3 billion
    from exploration to other NASA programs. But after
    administration objections, lawmakers restored the
    money for exploration during floor debate by adding
    to the bill's bottom line, which is at $34.7 billion.
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/23/politics/23nasa.html

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

    1) Pastors for Peace Friendshipment
    Caravan to Cuba being held up at
    US-Mexico Border!
    EMERGENCY NETWORKS AND PRESS CONTACTS:

    SPREAD THE WORD FAR AND WIDE!

    http://www.commerce.gov

    202-482-2000

    Secretary of Commerce Carlos Gutierrez
    cgutierrez@doc.gov

    As of 1:30 pm EDT, The Pastors for Peace
    Friendshipment Caravan to Cuba is
    being held up at the US-Mexico border
    by US Commerce Department officials.
    They are threatening to search every
    vehicle and every item of humanitarian
    aid. They are telling us that "only
    licensable goods will be allowed to
    cross into Mexico."

    Pastors for Peace does not accept
    or apply for a license to deliver
    humanitarian aid to Cuba.

    There are 130 US citizens
    traveling with the caravan. They and the
    humanitarian aid are traveling
    in eight busses, a box truck and two small
    cars. It will take days to inspect
    the 140 tons of aid. We are prepared to
    do whatever we need to do to
    deliver our humanitarian aid to Cuba. Stay
    posted...

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

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

    2) In honor of Karl Marx, the BBC Radio 4's "In Our Time
    Greatest Philosopher Vote" winner, Bay Area United Against
    War is presenting a Benefit Presentation of Howard Zinn's
    one man play, MARX IN SOHO
    Starring Jerry Levy as Karl Marx
    Directed by Michael Fox Kennedy.
    Thursday, August 4, 7:00 p.m.
    Friday, August 5, 7:00 p.m.
    Saturday, August 6, 2:00 p.m.
    Jon Sims Center for the Performing Arts
    1519 Mission Street between 11th Street
    and South Van Ness*

    Advance tickets: $10
    Door: $20.00
    For advance tickets: Send a check to:
    Bay Area United Against War
    P.O. Box 318021
    San Francisco, CA 94131-8021
    Please indicate which performance.
    Call: 415-824-8730

    The premise of the play is that after Marx dies in 1883, he
    is able to see what's happening on earth for next 100 years
    and comes back to talk about it. Imagine all Karl Marx would
    have to say after one hundred years of just being able to watch...

    The single actor in this one-man play is Jerry Levy,
    who has been teaching sociology at Marlboro College
    and been acting with the Actors' Theater of Brattleboro
    since he moved there from Chicago in 1975. Originally
    directed by Michael Fox Kennedy of the Actors' Theater,
    Levy has been on the road with Zinn's version of Karl
    Marx for a year, performing at benefits, colleges, small
    theaters and other venues around the state. At Middle
    Earth he was sponsored by the Bradford-based Coos Peace
    and Justice Alliance and performed free of charge but
    charged with mighty talent and a bottomless love of the play.

    www.bauaw.org
    Contact person: Bonnie Weinstein 415-824-8730-office/home
    415-990-4237-cell
    *The Jon Sims Center is located at 1519 Mission Street
    (between 11th Street and South Van Ness), South of Market,
    San Francisco, CA 94103
    BY CAR:
    From the East Bay: Take 80 North then 101 North to the
    Mission Street exit. Stay on the right hand side of the exit.
    Turn right off the exit, and stay on Mission Street. The Jon
    Sims Center is two blocks past Van Ness, next to Firestone.

    From the South Bay: Take 101 North to the Mission Street
    Exit. Stay on the right hand side of the exit. Turn right off
    the exit, and stay on Mission Street. The Jon Sims Center
    is two blocks past Van Ness, next to Firestone.

    From the North Bay: Take 101 South to Lombard, make
    a right on Van Ness and then a left onto Mission. Jon Sims
    Center is two blocks past Van Ness, next to Firestone.

    Parking: Daytime parking is very difficult. We encourage
    day users to take public transportation. In the evening,
    street parking along Mission Street, Minna Street and
    11th Street is not horrible (in San Francisco terms) after
    6:00 PM, but the closer you are to 6:00 PM, the better
    your chances of finding parking. There is no parking
    along Mission between 4-6 PM, and you will be
    promptly towed.

    VIA BART/MUNI/SAMTRANS:
    Go to http://www.transitinfo.org for more information
    about Bay Area public transportation.

    BART: Take BART to the Civic Center station, then transfer
    to the outbound Muni J,K,L,M or N train. Exit at the next
    stop (Van Ness Station). Walk 1 block south, cross Mission,
    and the Jon Sims Center is next to Firestone.

    MUNI: The Jon Sims Center is 1 block south of the Van
    Ness Muni underground station, accessible from any Muni
    streetcar. Additionally, the 14 Mission, 42 Loop 49 and
    47 Van Ness bus stop at Mission and 11th Street, only
    1/2 block from the Jon Sims Center. Current Muni fare is $1.25.

    SamTrans: The SamTrans DX, KX, MX, NX, PX, RX and
    TX buses stops at Mission and 9th Streets. Walk three
    blocks west (towards Sutro tower) to reach the Jon Sims
    Center. Current SamTrans fare is $1.10. Please note that
    SamTrans buses to the City only run during rush hours.

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

    3) Cut all Public School Ties to the Military!
    Speak up and Picket the S.F. Board of Education
    the Fourth Tuesday of Each Month.
    Next picket line: Tuesday, July 27, 6:30 P.M.-7:30 P.M.
    (The July Board of Ed. meetings have been cancelled. But we
    will still hold a picket July 27 at 6:30 p.m.-7:30 p.m.
    in front of the Board of Education building.)
    The next picket line after July 27 is August 23, 6:30 P.M.
    -7:30 P.M. (just before school starts back.)
    August 23, 6:30 p.m.-7:30 P.M.
    555 Franklin St., S.F,
    To get on the speakers list call:
    415-241-6427, 241-6493 or 241-6000
    (For more info call: 415-824-8730)

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

    4) Where the Arab and Muslim Community Will Stand on
    September 24
    From Al-Awda-DC list:

    On September 24 in Washington, DC the Arab American
    and the Muslim community will stand united with all
    targeted communities against the onslaught of the
    National Security State at home and abroad, as we
    declare a clear opposition to the war on Iraq. We
    will assemble from far and wide in a unified
    mobilization at the White House under the banner of
    the "September 24 National Coalition for the March on
    Washington" with thousands of people from every
    community, region, sector and background to send a
    message to the Bush administration that its illegal
    war and occupation must come to an end. In addition
    to Washington, DC, we will also simultaneously
    mobilize in Los Angeles and San Francisco to send a
    powerful national message on a massive scale.

    Emphasizing the consensus of the movement worldwide
    that war is neither singular in nature nor narrow in
    goals, we will inextricably support the struggle of
    the Palestinian people for freedom and return. As
    people in Palestine march the streets in support of
    their Iraqi brothers and sisters and as the
    Palestinian flag is waved in Iraq, we fully understand
    that those struggles cannot be disconnected from each
    other.

    We are honored to insist on standing with our brothers
    and sisters in Haiti as they face off ongoing
    assaults, for their struggle is also ours. It should
    not be any other way. As such, we will stand in
    solidarity with all those targeted by Empire as we
    collectively share the wrath of its violence. We will
    defend civil rights and liberties, and reject any
    attempt to falsely position Muslims and Arab Americans
    as outsiders in this society.

    Indeed, forty-two years ago, the 1963 March on
    Washington carried the bitter struggle of generations
    as it announced that the violence and hatred of racism
    and segregation have no place in our midst. That
    march continues to this very day, as we in turn
    announce that war and occupation also have no place in
    our midst.

    As we march in the footsteps of those who have
    preceded us in the streets of Washington, DC, and
    despite repeated attempts by the leadership of United
    for Peace and Justice (UFPJ) to create political
    segregation under various false pretexts, we will not
    be shunned nor will we start from separate rallies or
    segregated points of departure. We are angered that
    UFPJ leadership would attempt to divert activists
    headed for Washington, DC on that day away from where
    our community will be standing. Those days of
    separation, we believed, are over. We are saddened
    that the leadership of the very organization to which
    we extended a sincere invitation of partnership, UFPJ,
    would instead respond 11 days later by calling for a
    rival and segregated protest on the same day and in
    the same place, simply to spite our community, oust
    Haiti and Palestine from the slogans of the anti-war
    movement, and remove Arabs and Muslims from positions
    of leadership.

    Under the pretext of reaching out to a wider
    population, it is we, the targeted communities, who
    are being squeezed out and shunned aside by those
    calling for a separate march. And under the guise of
    minimalist slogans, it is the political demands of
    those at the receiving end of war that are being muted
    and silenced.

    In its behavior, the leadership of UFPJ is fanning the
    flames of separation and is unnecessarily pitting
    trusting movement activists against our community and
    people. Last year, hundreds of organizations and
    thousands upon thousands of activists took a clear
    stand against the marginalization of the Arab and
    Muslim community, and in favor of a principled
    political position. Yet, here we are again, facing
    the same attempts of separation by the same leadership
    of UFPJ.

    It has become too common for some sectors in the US
    anti-war movement to be selective about opposition to
    Empire for their own political gains and demand that
    various targeted communities must "wait". But today's
    war on and occupation of Iraq, against which we all
    stand from the first day of sanctions until now, is a
    manifestation of an ongoing larger quest for dominance
    targeting all. Consider the Palestinian people's
    perspective - what more can they wait for? Their land
    has been colonized through a racist Zionist political
    program; the vast majority of the Palestinian people
    has been expelled and remains in exile for nearly six
    decades; more than 550 villages and towns have been
    erased and the destruction continues; at least 650,000
    have been jailed so far; massacres upon massacres have
    been committed; and the killing of Palestinian Arabs
    has been normalized. All with full US backing and
    total cover, as an integral component of that same
    overall strategy of Empire. And all while the same
    sectors of the movement still say, "wait." What else
    must we "wait" for?


    Because we are at the primary receiving end of war,
    and in spite of its systematic violence and
    persecution here and abroad, we will neither wait, be
    sidelined, tokenized or be spoken for. We will not
    re-live the past. As we in the US join a galvanized
    world against the occupation of Iraq, our inextricable
    demands for justice must be put forward.

    And as we march on to realize a dream long deferred,
    we are reminded of what Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
    wrote in his Letter from Birmingham Jail: "For years
    now I have heard the word 'Wait!'...This 'Wait' has
    almost always meant 'Never.' We must come to see...that
    'justice too long delayed is justice denied'...Perhaps
    it is easy for those who have never felt the stinging
    dark of segregation to say, 'Wait.'"

    The streets of Washington, DC for decades have
    witnessed the struggles for ending hegemony over our
    communities and against separation and isolation. To
    us, purposely assembling apart and marching away from
    our young and old can only have one meaning!!



    What does the leadership of UFPJ gain by continuing to
    pit activists and communities against each other?
    Unity with those facing Empire should not just be an
    option; it should be a must!

    We call on every community center and place of
    worship, on every student group and grassroots
    organization to join the thousands who will assemble
    at the White House on September 24.

    We call on all to leave behind the era of separation
    and to join in unity.

    All Out on September 24!

    Muslim American Society (MAS) Freedom Foundation
    National Council of Arab Americans
    Imam Johari Abdul-Malik, Chairman, Coordinating
    Council of Muslim Organizations
    Al-Awda: The Palestine Right to Return Coalition
    Arab Muslim American Federation
    The Palestine Right of Return Congress
    Free Palestine Alliance
    Palestinian American Women Association
    Middle East Cultural and Information Center


    UNITED FOR PEACE & JUSTICE | 212-868-5545

    To engage in online discussion of UFPJ matters, j
    oin our discussion list by sending a blank email to
    ufpj-disc-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
    Yahoo! Groups Links

    <*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ufpj-news/

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

    5) Army Likely To Fall Short in Recruiting,
    General Says
    By ERIC SCHMITT
    July 24, 2005
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/24/politics/
    24recruit.html?hp&ex=1122177600&en=724df10ec5c825fc&ei=5094&partner=hom
    epage

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

    6) Government Defies an Order
    to Release Iraq Abuse Photos
    By KATE ZERNIKE
    Published: July 23, 2005
    Lawyers for the Defense Department are refusing to cooperate with a federal judge's
    order to release secret photographs and videotapes related to the Abu Ghraib prison
    abuse scandal.
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/23/politics/23abuse.html

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

    7) Uncle Sam wants you - even if you're 42 years old
    By Rick Maze
    Times staff writer
    July 19, 2005
    http://www.armytimes.com/story.php?f=1-292925-983408.php


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

    8) Bombs hit London two weeks after deadly blasts
    Thu Jul 21, 2005 10:08 AM ET
    http://go.reuters.com/
    newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=9136128&src=eDialog/GetContent

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

    9) Defend a Woman‚s Right to Choose!
    Stop the anti-abortion „Crusade for Life‰

    The „Crusade for Life‰ is in the Bay Area disrupting
    our community by harassing women at health clinics
    from July 15-27. See below for a report about what
    happened when they hit town last Saturday and the
    successful defense of Planned Parenthood Golden Gate.
    We need your help to defend our clinics and to send
    the message that the Bay Area is pro-choice and stands
    up for reproductive rights!

     Call your local Bay Area clinic and let them know
    you are willing to help. Sign up for escort or clinic
    defense training. The anti-abortionists will be in
    San Francisco from July 15-24. They are planning to
    be in Oakland on July 22, Berkeley on July 26, and
    Richmond on July 27.

     Drive by local reproductive health centers on a
    regular basis (especially at night) to ensure the
    safety of the facility.

     Support the Abortion Rights and Reproductive Justice
    Network by sending tax-deductible donations payable to
    Women‚s Choice Clinic, 570 14th St. #3 Oakland, CA
    94612. Call 415-864-1278 for information on Network
    meetings. The next meeting is Monday, July 25,
    6:00-8:00pm at the Women‚s Building in San Francisco,
    on 18th Street between Valencia and Guerrero.

    · Anyone who wants to help coordinate this week‚s
    clinic defense activities, help organize a proposed
    press conference on Saturday morning, and get the word
    out, meet Radical Women and other activists at 6:30pm
    at City Blend Café, 3087 16th Street (near the corner
    of Valencia) in San Francisco‚s Mission District.
    *

    Here‚s an eyewitness report from the streets about the
    very successful clinic defense that happened when the
    anti-abortion rights „Crusade for Life‰ youth, on a
    tour to harass clinics and women from San Diego to
    Sacramento, hit San Francisco this past Saturday.

    As predicted, the „Crusade‰ showed up at Planned
    Parenthood on Eddy Street with their Vatican flag,
    vials of holy water, small plastic fetus figurines,
    rosaries and a bullhorn. There were about 25 of them,
    all college-aged. (Go to www.crusadeforlife2005.com to
    get more information about this group and their
    sponsors, the American Life League and the Catholic
    Church).

    Thanks to quick mobilizing, a vibrant, disciplined and
    militant group of reproductive rights activists were
    prepared to meet them. Planned Parenthood had lined
    up a number of escorts for the day, who did a great
    job. We also had about 40 other folks out at 8am,
    ready to surround and drown out the bigots' prayers
    and rightwing propaganda. There were only a few older
    local „'regulars‰ out with their rosaries and
    doctored-up posters, but then ''Crusaders'' arrived at
    10am, clearly not expecting to be greeted by such
    staunch opposition!

    Representatives of Radical Women, the Freedom
    Socialist Party, the International Socialist
    Organization, Code Pink, the Abortion Rights and
    Reproductive Justice Network, and a number of
    individuals of all races, ages, and genders who got
    news about the need for clinic defense came out to
    confront the „'Crusaders.‰ We were there from the
    moment the clinic opened until it closed for the day,
    making sure that these emboldened young bigots didn't
    have a moment of silence to hear themselves praying or
    spouting their anti-choice, anti-feminist hogwash. We
    had a lot of chants ready, such as „Your crusade is
    broken! We‚ll keep this clinic open!‰ and „Not the
    church, not the state! Women will decide our fate!‰

    We also held signs with slogans defending abortion as
    a healthcare issue, calling for an end to forced
    sterilization and forced maternity, and demanding
    every person‚s non-negotiable right to control their
    own body ˆ these got lots of honks and waves from Muni
    buses and cars passing by. Virtually everything the
    Crusaders did was met with effective counter
    protesting. When they sang, we chanted louder; when
    they held up „abortion is homicide‰ signs, we held our
    multi-issue ones higher, and when they started
    chalking the sidewalk with their sexist graffiti
    rhetoric, we poured water and wiped it out.

    Many of the Crusaders staged a „die-in‰ right in front
    of the doors of Planned Parenthood and started giving
    sermons over the bullhorn full of lies about the
    health effects of abortion and other misleading
    propaganda, meant to intimidate women and make them
    feel as guilty as possible. We corralled them and
    made it clear throughout the day that San Francisco is
    a pro-choice town.

    With this in mind, we need more groups and individuals
    to participate in clinic defense this Friday and
    Saturday. Since we expect the „Crusaders‰ to hit
    Oakland clinics on Friday, July 22 and San Francisco
    clinics again this Saturday, July 23, we want to try
    to keep them as far away from the clinic doors and the
    clients and as possible, so Radical Women and our
    allies will be right out there at 8am again. We need
    your help! Call 415-864-1278 for details.

    *
    Issued by Radical Women
    415.864.1278  rwbayarea@yahoo.com 
    www.radicalwomen.org

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

    10) Antiwar Activists Reach U.S. Sailors In Australia
    The creativity that these antiwar activists used in reaching
    active-duty military personnel--and the friendly reception they
    received from the sailors--is inspiring. They provided a shining
    example of what's possible at a time when Bush's war for oil
    is growing increasingly unpopular--in the U.S., around the
    world and even within the ranks of the U.S. military.

    July 22, 2005 By Eric Ruder, Socialist Worker

    ANTIWAR ACTIVISTS in Sydney, Australia, turned the harbor
    area surrounding three U.S. Navy ships into a huge, open-air
    theater--and found that U.S. sailors warmly received their
    leaflets and the antiwar documentary they projected.


    Using a projector and huge sound system, organizers used the
    side of a shipping container next to the Navy ships to
    project Sir, No Sir, a new documentary by David Zeiger
    about the revolt in the U.S. military during the Vietnam War.


    "We estimate that at least 700 personnel saw some of the
    movie," wrote James Courtney, a peace activist and member
    of Greenpeace, in a report he sent to the Internet
    newsletter GI Special.


    "Around 200 or so watched it for 10 to 15 minutes. The U.S. MPs
    and around 15 plainclothes U.S. military staff watched
    the whole movie (it was right in their face so they didn't
    have much choice). The sound system was very loud, so we
    expect that possibly thousands of personnel heard what
    was happening."

    U.S. Navy officers asked local police to stop the activists,
    but the police replied that they had a democratic right
    to protest.

    Activists also found other ways to reach out to the
    sailors. "At the main gates of the naval base through
    which all service personnel coming or going passed...we
    laid out candles in the shape of the peace symbol," wrote
    Courtney. "The response was moving and inspiring. We had
    naval personnel helping to light candles and taking photos.
    Many words of thanks from ships' crew--some with tears
    welling in their eyes.

    "We had nothing but positive feelings from the ships' crew
    that spoke with us. "We managed to hand out around 200
    copies of Traveling Soldier, but noticed that that this
    was mostly from crew going ashore, and that many were
    cautious about taking it..."

    "This was a very moving and inspirational experience for
    the small group of people that made it happen. We felt moved
    by the plight of the young men and women that we met. There
    was one line that we heard from many: 'Sometimes, I feel
    that we are fighting for the wrong reason.'"

    The creativity that these antiwar activists used in reaching
    active-duty military personnel--and the friendly reception
    they received from the sailors--is inspiring. They provided
    a shining example of what's possible at a time when Bush's
    war for oil is growing increasingly unpopular--in the U.S.,
    around the world and even within the ranks of the
    U.S. military.

    GI SPECIAL 3B96

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

    11) Recruiters Pursue Student Data
    Military recruiters are seeking to access to student
    lists before families have been given a chance to opt out.
    By Brian McNeill/The Connection
    July 21, 2005
    http://www.connectionnewspapers.com/printarticle.asp?article=53499

    The 'Do No Recruit' List
    Section 9528 of the federal "No Child Left Behind" law
    requires public high schools to provide military recruiters
    with a list of student names, addresses and phone numbers.
    To remove a teenager's information from the military recruitment
    list, the student or a parent must sign an opt-out form - which
    Fairfax County Public Schools mails to every high school
    student's home in August.

    The FCPS opt-out form is also available throughout the year at http://www.fcps.edu/
    mediapub/publicat/familygram/optout/hsmilitary.htm.

    Any high school student - even those under the age of 18 –
    are permitted to remove their name from the military
    recruiting list.
    During the 2004-2005 school year, approximately 14 percent
    of Fairfax County high school students requested that their
    names be excluded from the recruiting list.



    Photo by Brian McNeill/The Connection
    Sgt. Mike Watson, a National Guard recruiter, sought
    military volunteers last fall at South Lakes High
    School in Reston.


    Facing pressure to recruit young volunteers during
    wartime, U.S. military recruiters have been increasing
    their efforts to identify potential recruits in
    Fairfax County high schools.

    Over the past three months, recruiters have sought
    student names, addresses and phone numbers at the
    county's 25 high schools - before families have
    been given the opportunity to remove their student's
    name from the recruiting list.

    "Recruiters want to complete their mailings this
    summer, but it is important that families be able
    to choose whether or not to opt out," said
    a Fairfax County Public Schools e-mail alert
    sent Wednesday to principals and guidance directors.

    The No Child Left Behind law of 2002 requires
    schools to provide recruiters with student
    contact information.

    But the federal law also allows families to
    remove the teenager's name from the recruiting
    list. Fairfax County Public Schools mails out
    military recruitment opt-out forms to each
    student's home in August.

    It is not clear if military recruiters have
    been wrongly allowed to access information
    about next year's student population.
    In at least one recent case, however, a U.S.
    Marine Corps recruiter told a high school
    principal that she had already obtained student
    information from several other Fairfax County schools.

    "I have some serious concerns about this," said
    School Board Member Janet Oleszek (at large).
    "These recruiters are doing everything they can
    to get access to student information."

    SGT. JIMMIE PERKINS, a spokesman for the Marine
    Corps Recruiting Command in Quantico, said military
    recruiters have the right to ask high schools for
    the student contact information.

    "If parents are upset, they need to take that up with
    the school system," Perkins said.

    Lynn Terhar, president of the Fairfax County Council
    of PTAs, said she has heard several complaints about
    military recruiters contacting students that asked
    to be removed from the list.

    Recruiters will often purchase student telephone
    directories in Fairfax County high schools to
    acquire more contact information - including data
    on those students who opted out, Terhar said.

    "A lot of parents in this county feel its
    inappropriate and intrusive for recruiters to
    contact students who don't want to be contacted,"
    she said.

    Additionally, military recruiters have access to
    a nation-wide database of information on nearly
    12 million students between the ages of 16 and 18
    and all college students, according to a May 23
    notice in the Federal Register.

    The database - compiled from commercial and
    government documents - includes each student's
    date of birth, gender and address. If available,
    it also lists the student's ethnicity, e-mail
    address, grade point average and course of study.

    OLESZEK SAID federal law should require
    families to ask to be included on recruiting
    lists, rather than requiring families to be removed.

    "We should have to opt-in, not opt-out," she said.
    Some members of Congress agree. The Student Privacy
    Protection Act of 2005, sponsored by U.S. Rep.
    Michael Honda (D-Calif.), would amend No Child
    Left Behind by requiring families to specifically
    ask to be contacted by military recruiters.

    The bill has 53 co-sponsors in Congress, including
    U.S. Rep. Jim Moran (D-8).

    Not everyone believes the current law is problematic.
    School Board Member Stephen Hunt (at large) said the
    nation needs recruits to complete its military missions
    in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere.

    Hunt, a former U.S. Navy flight officer, said student
    contact information helps recruiters convey their
    message that the military is a valuable experience.

    "There are many young people out there who are willing
    to defend our nation's freedom, but who wouldn't
    otherwise know about the opportunity the military
    provides," he said.

    Hunt said he is disappointed that some families do
    not want to hear from military recruiters.
    "We're talking about the same annoyance as telemarketers,"
    he said. "To hear people say that they've got to protect
    their kid from the evil military recruiters just saddens me."

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

    12) Riot control ray gun worries scientists
    By Reuters
    http://www.news.com/
    http://news.com.com/Riot+control+ray+gun+worries+scientists/2100-7337_3-
    5796749.html

    Story last modified Wed Jul 20 12:22:00 PDT 2005


    Scientists are questioning the safety of a Star Wars-style
    riot control ray gun due to be deployed in Iraq next year.

    The Active Denial System weapon, classified as "less lethal"
    by the Pentagon, fires a 95GHz microwave beam at rioters to
    cause heating and intolerable pain in less than five seconds.

    The discomfort is designed to prompt people caught in the
    microwave beam to move away from it, thereby allowing riot
    -control personnel to break up and manage a crowd.

    But New Scientist magazine reported Wednesday that during
    tests carried out at Kirtland Air Force Base in New Mexico,
    participants playing the part of rioters were told to
    remove glasses and contact lenses to protect their eyes.

    In another test they were also told to remove metal objects
    such as coins from their clothing to prevent local hot
    spots from developing on their skin.

    "What happens if someone in a crowd is unable for whatever
    reason to move away from the beam?" asked Neil Davison,
    coordinator of the nonlethal weapons research project at
    Britain's Bradford University.

    "How do you ensure that the dose doesn't cross the
    threshold for permanent damage? Does the weapon cut
    out to prevent overexposure?"

    The magazine said a vehicle-mounted version of the
    weapon named Sheriff was scheduled for service in Iraq
    in 2006 and that U.S. Marines and police were both
    working on portable versions.
    Story Copyright (c) 2005 Reuters Limited .
    All rights reserved.

    Copyright (c)1995-2005 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved.

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

    13) Some Guantánamo Prisoners
    Have Gone on Hunger Strike
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Published: July 22, 2005
    WASHINGTON, July 21 (AP) - Some 50 prisoners at the
    American naval base at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, have
    been on a hunger strike for three days, a Pentagon
    spokesman said Thursday.
    Forum: National Security
    The spokesman, Bryan Whitman, said he did not
    know why the prisoners, detained as terrorism
    suspects, were refusing food, adding that their
    health was being monitored. Some have already
    begun eating again, Mr. Whitman said.
    The Pentagon's account of the protest contrasted
    somewhat with that of two Afghans released on
    Monday from Guantánamo. The two, Habir Russol and
    Moheb Ullah Borekzai, said on Wednesday that more
    than 180 Afghans were on a hunger strike to
    protest mistreatment.
    Mr. Russol and Mr. Borekzai estimated that the
    men were in the 14th or 15th day of their fast.
    Mr. Borekzai later said of the hunger strikers:
    "Some of these people say they were mistreated
    during interrogation. Some say they are innocent."
    "They are protesting that they have been in jail
    nearly four years, and they want to be released," he said.
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/22/politics/22gitmo.html?

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

    14) Pentagon Proposes Rise
    in Age Limit for Recruits
    By DAMIEN CAVE
    Published: July 22, 2005
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/22/politics/22recruit.html

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

    15) GI Special 3B97 ThomasFBarton@earthlink.net
    July 21, 2005 By DENNIS HUSPENI, THE GAZETTE

    A Fort Carson soldier has been convicted of intent to avoid hazardous
    duty ˜ what amounts to desertion ˜ and is serving time in a military
    prison after trying to declare himself a conscientious objector.

    Army officials also have filed a felony charge against his wife,
    alleging she was „enticing, abetting a deserter,‰ her attorney said.

    Spc. Dale Bartell, assigned to the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, didn‚t
    always oppose war.

    He enlisted almost three years ago and served a tour in Iraq.

    But Bartell and his wife, Amy Bartell, joined a Mennonite church, and
    their philosophies changed, she said Wednesday outside a U.S. District
    courtroom in Colorado Springs where she was scheduled for a hearing.

    „He‚s changed since joining. If he knew the teachings then that we know
    now, he never would have joined,‰ Amy Bartell said. „He knew there was
    going to be consequences for his stance.

    „I didn‚t know I‚d get into trouble for being a housewife.‰

    As his unit was preparing to go back to Iraq, Bartell‚s commanding
    officers would not help him ˜ and even hindered him ˜ in filing the
    paperwork to become a conscientious objector, said Amy Bartell‚s
    attorney, Bill Durland.

    „He knew that once they got him over there, they would have their way,‰
    Amy Bartell said, noting officers offered to let him use „non-lethal‰
    ammunition in Iraq. „He would have to ignore his religious convictions.
    What choice did he have? He went AWOL.‰

    Soldiers have filed about 150 conscientious-objector applications since
    2002, the Los Angeles Times reported recently using Pentagon figures.
    About 71 of those applications were approved. During the Vietnam War ˜
    where many soldiers were drafted ˜ there were some 17,000 applications
    from active-duty soldiers, according to the Times report.

    Bartell, who has been transferred to a military prison in Fort Sill,
    Okla., was unavailable for comment Wednesday.

    The first time Bartell went absent without leave was from March 7
    through April 8, according to Durland. During that time, Bartell never
    left Fort Carson, where the couple lived on base with their four
    children, ages 1 to 11.

    Amy Bartell received a letter saying all pay and benefits were being cut
    off.

    The second time Bartell went AWOL was on the day he thought his unit was
    to ship out, April 17. He met with a military defense attorney May 12
    and turned himself in.

    By that time, the couple had moved to the Cañon City area to be near
    their church, the Skyline Mennonite Church.

    Military police showed up in early May and served Amy Bartell with the
    felony charge of „enticing, abetting a deserter,‰ Durland said.

    That charge could result in punishment of up to three years in prison,
    Durland said.

    Prosecutors charged Spc. Bartell with „intent to avoid hazardous duty,‰
    which is basically the same as desertion, Durland said. On advice from
    his military attorney, Bartell pleaded guilty to the charge in hopes his
    conscientious objector position could mitigate a harsh prison sentence.

    „He pleaded guilty because he accepted responsibility for what he had
    done,‰ Bartell said. „It was his only option. He was not going to say
    Œno‚ to God.‰

    Bartell‚s military attorney told a Fort Carson public affairs officer
    Wednesday she would have to get permission from her client before
    answering any questions.

    The spokesman for the U.S. Attorney‚s Office in Denver declined comment
    on the case Wednesday.

    On July 12, Spc. Bartell was sentenced to four months in prison, after
    which he will be dishonorably discharged.

    Rev. Loren Miller, of Skyline Mennonite, said the church is for pacifist
    Christians. Church officials and volunteers have helped the Bartells,
    and were at the hearing Wednesday ˜ which was postponed until Aug. 17.

    „We are harmless, peaceloving people,‰ Miller said, noting Mennonites
    take the Scriptures literally.

    Amy Bartell is worried about the felony charge she faces. And she‚s
    worried about her husband.

    „He‚s going through a lot,‰ she said. „It does affect him. He‚s sitting
    in prison knowing I‚m getting into trouble for what we believe.‰

    [Thanks to CS and Tom Joad, who sent this in. CS writes: That wife out
    at Ft Carson is a first to my knowledge. They need support.]


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

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

    16) House Votes to Keep Anti-Terror Law
    But Senate version puts more limits on federal agents
    by Edward Epstein
    Published on Friday, July 22, 2005 by the San Francisco Chronicle
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0722-07.htm

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

    17) 'Every Mother's Son' filmmaker
    Tami Gold in Bayview!
    by mesha Monge-Irizarry
    On June 7, Tami Gold, co-producer of the nationally
    acclaimed film "Every Mother's Son,"
    came to the Idriss Stelley Foundation on Third Street
    in Bayview to touch base and
    exchange ideas on how to impact police brutality nationwide.
    http://www.sfbayview.com/072005/everymothersson072005.shtml

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

    18) How a Trip to Film in Iraq
    Ended in a Military Jail Cell
    By TIM GOLDEN
    Published: July 24, 2005
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/24/national/nationalspecial3/24detainee.html

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

    19) House's NASA Bill Embraces
    Bush Plan
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Published: July 23, 2005
    WASHINGTON, July 22 (AP) - The House overwhelmingly
    endorsed President Bush's vision of sending people
    back to the Moon and eventually to Mars as it passed
    a bill on Friday to set NASA policy for the next two years.
    The bill was approved by a 383-to-15 vote after a collegial
    debate in which lawmakers emphasized their commitment not
    only to Mr. Bush's space exploration plans but also to
    traditional programs at the National Aeronautics and
    Space Administration, like science and aeronautics.
    Originally, the measure would have shifted $1.3 billion
    from exploration to other NASA programs. But after
    administration objections, lawmakers restored the
    money for exploration during floor debate by adding
    to the bill's bottom line, which is at $34.7 billion.
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/23/politics/23nasa.html

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

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

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

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

    Wednesday, July 20, 2005
     

    BAUAW NEWSLETTER-WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 2005

    URGENT- PLEASE CONTACT

    THE COMMERCE DEPARTMENT

    YOUR CONGRESSIONAL REPRESENTATIVES,

    EMERGENCY NETWORKS AND PRESS CONTACTS:

    SPREAD THE WORD FAR AND WIDE!

    http://www.commerce.gov

    202-482-2000

    Secretary of Commerce Carlos Gutierrez
    cgutierrez@doc.gov

    As of 1:30 pm EDT, The Pastors for Peace
    Friendshipment Caravan to Cuba is
    being held up at the US-Mexico border
    by US Commerce Department officials.
    They are threatening to search every
    vehicle and every item of humanitarian
    aid. They are telling us that "only
    licensable goods will be allowed to
    cross into Mexico."

    Pastors for Peace does not accept
    or apply for a license to deliver
    humanitarian aid to Cuba.

    There are 130 US citizens
    traveling with the caravan. They and the
    humanitarian aid are traveling
    in eight busses, a box truck and two small
    cars. It will take days to inspect
    the 140 tons of aid. We are prepared to
    do whatever we need to do to
    deliver our humanitarian aid to Cuba. Stay
    posted...

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

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

    Order your advance tickets to Howard Zinn's Marx in Soho
    Send check for $10.00 for each advance ticket to:
    Bay Area United Against War
    P.O. Box 318021
    San Francisco, CA 94131-8021
    Please indicate which show:
    Thursday, August 4, 7:00 p.m.
    Friday, August 5, 7:00 p.m.
    Saturday, August 6, 2:00 p.m.
    Jon Sims Center for the Performing Arts
    1519 Mission Street between 11th Street
    and South Van Ness, S.F.

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

    1) In honor of Karl Marx, the BBC Radio 4's "In Our Time
    Greatest Philosopher Vote" winner, Bay Area United Against
    War is presenting a Benefit Presentation of Howard Zinn's
    one man play, MARX IN SOHO
    Starring Jerry Levy as Karl Marx
    Directed by Michael Fox Kennedy.
    Thursday, August 4, 7:00 p.m.
    Friday, August 5, 7:00 p.m.
    Saturday, August 6, 2:00 p.m.
    Jon Sims Center for the Performing Arts
    1519 Mission Street between 11th Street
    and South Van Ness

    Advance tickets: $10
    Door: $20.00
    For advance tickets: Send a check to:
    Bay Area United Against War
    P.O. Box 318021
    San Francisco, CA 94131-8021
    Please indicate which performance.
    Call: 415-824-8730

    The premise of the play is that after Marx dies in 1883, he
    is able to see what's happening on earth for next 100 years
    and comes back to talk about it. Imagine all Karl Marx would
    have to say after one hundred years of just being able to watch...

    The single actor in this one-man play is Jerry Levy,
    who has been teaching sociology at Marlboro College
    and been acting with the Actors' Theater of Brattleboro
    since he moved there from Chicago in 1975. Originally
    directed by Michael Fox Kennedy of the Actors' Theater,
    Levy has been on the road with Zinn's version of Karl
    Marx for a year, performing at benefits, colleges, small
    theaters and other venues around the state. At Middle
    Earth he was sponsored by the Bradford-based Coos Peace
    and Justice Alliance and performed free of charge but
    charged with mighty talent and a bottomless love of the play.

    www.bauaw.org
    Contact person: Bonnie Weinstein 415-824-8730-office/home
    415-990-4237-cell

    2) Cut all Public School Ties to the Military!
    Speak up and Picket the S.F. Board of Education
    the Fourth Tuesday of Each Month.
    Next picket line: Tuesday, July 27, 6:30 P.M.-7:30 P.M.
    (The July Board of Ed. meetings have been cancelled. But we
    will still hold a picket July 27 at 6:30 p.m.-7:30 p.m.
    in front of the Board of Education building.)
    The next picket line after July 27 is August 23, 6:30 P.M.
    -7:30 P.M. (just before school starts back.)
    August 23, 6:30 p.m.-7:30 P.M.
    555 Franklin St., S.F,
    To get on the speakers list call:
    415-241-6427, 241-6493 or 241-6000
    (For more info call: 415-824-8730)

    3) In this message:
    * Emergency Protest: Stop Massacres In Haiti!
    * ANSWER/Haiti Action Committee Forum: Eyewitness Haiti

    4) FROM PROTEST TO RESISTANCE: OUR GENERATION WON'T GO! National
    Student Counter-Recruitment Conference October 22-23 at
    UC-Berkeley Sponsored by the Campus Antiwar Network
    www.campusantiwar.net

    5) Join ADC-SF and Dr. Hatem Bazian to watch and discuss the
    documentary "Falluja -April 2004". In April 2004, the U.S.
    forces invaded Falluja with several thousands of soldiers.
    About 730 people were killed, and 2,800 were injured in the
    siege and subsequent attacks by U.S. forces over the next
    month. Falluja has become a symbol of the resistance movement
    against the occupation of Iraq by U.S. forces. Come see
    never before seen footage of this tragic event. This
    documentary investigates the causes of, conditions during,
    and damages of the US attack. Footage was recorded in
    August 2003 (four months after the invasion of Iraq )
    and in May 2004 shortly after the siege of Falluja.
    (DVD, 55 minutes). Discussion afterwards with Dr. Hatem Bazian.
    Monday, July 25 @ 7pm
    3rd floor Auditorium
    522 Valencia
    San Francisco
    Donations welcome.
    For more info contact:
    adcsf@adcsf.org

    6) What: Update Community Notification Plan
    Hunters Point Shipyard
    When :Wednesday, July 27, 2005
    Where: Anna E. Waden Library on Third street ,Community Room

    7) SUNDAY, JULY 31 citywide strike against
    Tenancies-In-Common(TIC) sales.
    Shut down TIC Open Houses all across the city!
    Meet at the SF Tenants Union, 558 Capp St/21st at 12 Noon .
    Food/coffee and transportation available to the targeted Open Houses.
    Volunteers needed to arrive by 11 to help out. Drivers also needed.
    For more info, call 282-6656 or see www.sftu.org

    8) "Operation Field of Thorn"
    From Shraga Elam

    9) Gen. Westmoreland, Who Led U.S. in Vietnam, Dies
    By ERIC PACE
    Published: July 19, 2005
    Gen. William C. Westmoreland, who commanded the United
    States forces in Vietnam from 1964 to 1968, overseeing
    the vast troop buildup and the height of the fighting,
    died last night in a retirement home in Charleston, S.C.,
    his son, James Ripley Westmoreland, announced.
    The general was 91. (The General was called, "General
    WasteMoreLand" during Vietnam War era...BW)
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/19/international/asia/
    19westmoreland.html?hp&ex=1121832000&en=5cd346e7b5088634&ei=5094&part
    ner=homepage

    10) How Long Can Workers Tread Water?
    By EDUARDO PORTER
    July 14, 2005
    "Profit has roughly doubled in the last year on revenue
    growth of about 40 percent," said Alex Mann, co-owner of
    Clicktime.com , a company in San Francisco that sells
    time-sheet applications over the Internet. "The top-line
    growth was very satisfying. There's been very strong
    growth in the amount left for compensation of the owners
    and for profits." ...Corporate profits jumped 35 percent
    from 2002 to 2004, as increases in revenue dropped
    unhindered to companies' bottom lines. Income from
    workers' compensation, including wages and benefits,
    grew 9.5 percent....In the first quarter of 2005 profits
    grew a further 15 percent, compared with the period
    last year, twice the pace of compensation for employees.
    And what growth there has been in compensation for workers
    has mostly concentrated at the top. At the bottom end,
    income growth has mainly come from an increase in
    employment - not better wages.
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/14/business/14income.html?

    11) Why Marx is Man of the Moment
    He had globalization sussed 150 years ago
    by Francis Wheen
    Published on Sunday, July 17, 2005 by the Observer/UK
    http://www.commondreams.org/views05/0717-28.htm

    12) OCCUPATION: DREAMLAND
    San Francisco - Begins July 29th, and runs for one week
    at the Roxie Theatre at 16th and Valencia

    13) Please forward widely Please forward widely
    JUSTICE FOR Sheila Detoy and Cammerin Boyd
    COMMUNITY RALLY
    5:00-6:00 PM
    WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 2005
    SAN FRANCISCO CITY PLAZA
    DR. GOODLETT DR. (ACROSS FROM S.F. CITY HALL)
    For ten years San Francisco Police Offices have killed with
    impunity.


    14) "How Peace Activists Saved the World from Nuclear War"
    You are cordially invited to.......
    A discussion with historian and author Lawrence Wittner:
    "How Peace Activists Saved the World from Nuclear War"
    This Thursday, July 21
    7 PM, UC-Berkeley campus
    141 McCone Hall
    (map: http://www.berkeley.edu/map/maps/AB45.html map/maps/AB45.html> )
    Please see attached flyer for more information on
    Lawrence Wittner, and to help us spread the
    word.
    Questions? Contact Josh Kearns with questions:
    jkearns@eps.berkleley.edu
    mailto:jkearns@eps.berkleley.edu

    15) Baghdad Hospital Doctors on Strike
    Against Soldiers
    By REUTERS
    July 19, 2005
    Filed at 9:28 a.m. ET
    http://nytimes.com/reuters/international/international-iraq-
    hospital.html?pagewanted=print

    16) Mayor Blames Middle East Policy
    Decades of British and American
    intervention in the oil-rich Middle East
    motivated the London bombers, Ken Livingstone has suggested.
    Published on Wednesday, July 20, 2005 by the BBC
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0720-07.htm

    17) Military resister Camilo Mejía:
    "I pledge my allegiance to the poor and oppressed"
    July 22, 2005
    FROM: http://www.socialistworker.org

    18) Call to Action: Keep up the pressure!
    Monday, August 29
    National Day of Action
    Extradite Luis Posada Carriles
    to Venezuela - No to Asylum!
    Free the Cuban Five!
    Regional demonstration in
    El Paso, TX
    outside of Posada's trial
    Locally coordinated protests
    in cities and towns across the country

    19) AFX News Limited
    Ex-US general says Iraq attacks
    to peak in 6 months; US troops out in a year
    07.19.2005, 04:55 AM
    http://www.forbes.com/home/feeds/afx/2005/07/19/afx2144536.html

    20) Nature Deficit
    Richard Louv
    Orion, July/August
    http://www.oriononline.org/pages/om/05-4om/Louv.html

    21) Karl Marx Voted Most Revered Philosopher On BBC Web Site
    July 14, 2005 By Fred Weston, Marxist.com
    Our readers will recall that
    The Economist called on its readers to vote
    Marx off the top of the list
    of the most revered philosophers. We appealed
    to our readers to vote for Marx
    and keep him at the top. In spite of The
    Economists best attempts Marx won!

    22) Two-Thirds Believe London Bombings are Linked to Iraq War
    by Julian Glover
    Published on Tuesday, July 19, 2005 by the Guardian/UK
    Two-thirds of Britons believe there is a link between Tony
    decision to invade Iraq and the London bombings despite
    government claims to the contrary, according to a
    Guardian/ICM poll published today.
    The poll makes it clear that voters believe further
    attacks in Britain by suicide bombers are also
    inevitable, with 75% of those responding saying
    there will be more attacks.
    The research suggests the government is losing the
    battle to persuade people that terrorist attacks
    on the UK have not been made more likely by the invasion of Iraq.
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0719-10.htm

    23) 25,000 Civilians Killed Since Iraq Invasion, Says Report
    by Simon Jeffery
    Published on Tuesday, July 19, 2005 by the Guardian/UK
    The number of Iraqi civilians who met violent deaths in the
    two years after the US-led invasion was today put at
    24,865 by an independent research team.
    The figures, compiled from Iraqi and international media
    reports, found US and coalition military forces were
    responsible for 37% of the deaths, with anti-occupation
    forces and insurgents responsible for 9%. A further
    36% were blamed on criminal violence.
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0719-12.htm

    24) PLEASE FORWARD ** PLEASE FORWARD WIDELY ** PLEASE FORWARD
    FREE HIP HOP SHOW AND RALLY
    TO CLOSE CYA YOUTH PRISONS!
    Join us as we bring the community together with amazing Bay
    Area talent to speak out against the California Youth
    Authority and the prison industrial complex!
    WHAT: 4th Annual "Not Down with the Lockdown"
    Hip Hop Show and Rally to Close the CYA Youth Prisons
    WHERE: Frank Ogawa Plaza, 14th St. and Broadway
    (Downtown Oakland)
    WHEN: Saturday, July 16, noon-2pm
    FREE! ALL AGES!
    Sponsored by Books Not Bars and
    Let's Get Free and The Beat Within.
    Contact Books Not Bars:
    bnb@ellabakercenter.org
    510.428.3939
    The Ella Baker Center can't survive
    without the support of people like you.
    Please take a moment to support us today.

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

    1) In honor of Karl Marx, the BBC Radio 4's "In Our Time
    Greatest Philosopher Vote" winner, Bay Area United Against
    War is presenting a Benefit Presentation of Howard Zinn's
    one man play, MARX IN SOHO
    Starring Jerry Levy as Karl Marx
    Directed by Michael Fox Kennedy.
    Thursday, August 4, 7:00 p.m.
    Friday, August 5, 7:00 p.m.
    Saturday, August 6, 2:00 p.m.
    Jon Sims Center for the Performing Arts
    1519 Mission Street between 11th Street
    and South Van Ness*

    Advance tickets: $10
    Door: $20.00
    For advance tickets: Send a check to:
    Bay Area United Against War
    P.O. Box 318021
    San Francisco, CA 94131-8021
    Please indicate which performance.
    Call: 415-824-8730

    The premise of the play is that after Marx dies in 1883, he
    is able to see what's happening on earth for next 100 years
    and comes back to talk about it. Imagine all Karl Marx would
    have to say after one hundred years of just being able to watch...

    The single actor in this one-man play is Jerry Levy,
    who has been teaching sociology at Marlboro College
    and been acting with the Actors' Theater of Brattleboro
    since he moved there from Chicago in 1975. Originally
    directed by Michael Fox Kennedy of the Actors' Theater,
    Levy has been on the road with Zinn's version of Karl
    Marx for a year, performing at benefits, colleges, small
    theaters and other venues around the state. At Middle
    Earth he was sponsored by the Bradford-based Coos Peace
    and Justice Alliance and performed free of charge but
    charged with mighty talent and a bottomless love of the play.

    www.bauaw.org
    Contact person: Bonnie Weinstein 415-824-8730-office/home
    415-990-4237-cell
    *The Jon Sims Center is located at 1519 Mission Street
    (between 11th Street and South Van Ness), South of Market,
    San Francisco, CA 94103
    BY CAR:
    From the East Bay: Take 80 North then 101 North to the
    Mission Street exit. Stay on the right hand side of the exit.
    Turn right off the exit, and stay on Mission Street. The Jon
    Sims Center is two blocks past Van Ness, next to Firestone.

    From the South Bay: Take 101 North to the Mission Street
    Exit. Stay on the right hand side of the exit. Turn right off
    the exit, and stay on Mission Street. The Jon Sims Center
    is two blocks past Van Ness, next to Firestone.

    From the North Bay: Take 101 South to Lombard, make
    a right on Van Ness and then a left onto Mission. Jon Sims
    Center is two blocks past Van Ness, next to Firestone.

    Parking: Daytime parking is very difficult. We encourage
    day users to take public transportation. In the evening,
    street parking along Mission Street, Minna Street and
    11th Street is not horrible (in San Francisco terms) after
    6:00 PM, but the closer you are to 6:00 PM, the better
    your chances of finding parking. There is no parking
    along Mission between 4-6 PM, and you will be
    promptly towed.

    VIA BART/MUNI/SAMTRANS:
    Go to http://www.transitinfo.org for more information
    about Bay Area public transportation.

    BART: Take BART to the Civic Center station, then transfer
    to the outbound Muni J,K,L,M or N train. Exit at the next
    stop (Van Ness Station). Walk 1 block south, cross Mission,
    and the Jon Sims Center is next to Firestone.

    MUNI: The Jon Sims Center is 1 block south of the Van
    Ness Muni underground station, accessible from any Muni
    streetcar. Additionally, the 14 Mission, 42 Loop 49 and
    47 Van Ness bus stop at Mission and 11th Street, only
    1/2 block from the Jon Sims Center. Current Muni fare is $1.25.

    SamTrans: The SamTrans DX, KX, MX, NX, PX, RX and
    TX buses stops at Mission and 9th Streets. Walk three
    blocks west (towards Sutro tower) to reach the Jon Sims
    Center. Current SamTrans fare is $1.10. Please note that
    SamTrans buses to the City only run during rush hours.

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

    2) Cut all Public School Ties to the Military!
    Speak up and Picket the S.F. Board of Education
    the Fourth Tuesday of Each Month.
    Next picket line: Tuesday, July 27, 6:30 P.M.-7:30 P.M.
    (The July Board of Ed. meetings have been cancelled. But we
    will still hold a picket July 27 at 6:30 p.m.-7:30 p.m.
    in front of the Board of Education building.)
    The next picket line after July 27 is August 23, 6:30 P.M.
    -7:30 P.M. (just before school starts back.)
    August 23, 6:30 p.m.-7:30 P.M.
    555 Franklin St., S.F,
    To get on the speakers list call:
    415-241-6427, 241-6493 or 241-6000
    (For more info call: 415-824-8730)

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

    3) In this message:
    * Emergency Protest: Stop Massacres In Haiti!
    * ANSWER/Haiti Action Committee Forum: Eyewitness Haiti

    Thursday, July 21
    EMERGENCY PROTEST!
    STOP U.N. "PEACEKEEPER" MASSACRES IN HAITI!

    Gather: 4 P.M. - Powell and Market, San Francisco
    March to Brazilian Consulate, 300 Montgomery: 4:30 P.M.
    Followed by Picket at the Brazilian Consulate.

    On the morning of July 6, 2005, more than 350 heavily armed
    United Nations "peacekeeping" forces killed at least 23 unarmed
    people in the densely populated Port-au-Prince neighborhood of
    Cite Soleil. Some estimates indicate that 50 or more may have
    died. The UN Force Commander, Brazilian Lt. General Augusto
    Heleno, claims there was a "firefight," yet there were no UN
    deaths or injuries.

    THIS WAS A MASSACRE. Photographic evidence and eyewitness
    testimony confirm that the U.N. murdered unarmed civilians,
    including a 4-year old child, shot through the head.

    Cite Soleil has been the focus of attacks by both UN forces
    and the Haitian police because it remains a powerful base of
    support for the democratically elected President Jean-Bertrand
    Aristide and the Lavalas movement. The U.N. operation targeted
    and killed Emmanuel "Dred" Wilme, a well-known community
    leader in Cite Soleil, who had been in the forefront of the
    neighborhood's resistance to the illegal coup regime. The
    attack came just a few days after U.S. Ambassador to Haiti
    James Foley labeled Haitian grassroots activists as
    "terrorists" and "gang members", sending a clear signal
    that it was now open season on civilians.

    Since a U.S.-orchestrated coup overthrew the democratic
    government in February 2004, a United Nations force of 7500
    troops has occupied Haiti. The U.N. has supported the coup
    regime, which has killed and imprisoned thousands of innocent
    people. As the U.N. mouths its concerns for human rights
    around the world, it attacks the poorest communities in
    Haiti and backs up the violent repression carried out by
    the Haitian police. Brazil continues to do the bidding
    of the United States by heading-up this brutal U.N. military
    operation in Haiti.

    On July 21, there will be coordinated protests in many U.S.
    and Canadian cities to condemn the U.N. massacre in Cite
    Soleil. Please join us!

    END THE U.S./U.N. OCCUPATION OF HAITI!
    RESTORE DEMOCRACY AND PRESIDENT ARISTIDE!

    Sponsored by the HAITI ACTION COMMITTEE. Endorsed by the
    ANSWER Coalition.
    For more information: visit www.haitiaction.net or
    contact haitiaction@yahoo.com or 510.483.7481.

    Tuesday, August 2, 7pm
    ANSWER/Haiti Action Committee Forum: EYEWITNESS HAITI
    San Francisco Women's Building, 3543 18th St.
    (btwn Valencia and Guerrero, near 16th St. BART)

    Join us for a special forum, co-sponsored by the ANSWER
    Coalition and the Haiti Action Committee, featuring
    a report back from a Bay Area delegation recently
    returned from Haiti. The delegation witnessed the
    aftermath of the massacre by UN forces in Cite Soleil.

    $3-10 donation (no one turned away for lack of funds)
    Wheelchair accessible. Call to reserve free childcare.

    For more info, call 415-821-6545.

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

    4) FROM PROTEST TO RESISTANCE: OUR GENERATION WON'T GO! National
    Student Counter-Recruitment Conference October 22-23 at
    UC-Berkeley Sponsored by the Campus Antiwar Network
    www.campusantiwar.net

    The last year has seen an amazing surge of counter-recruitment
    efforts on campuses across the country - with students
    kicking recruiters off campuses from Seattle Central
    Community College and UC-Santa Cruz on the West Coast,
    to Southern Connecticut State University and City College
    of New York on the East Coast, and a whole host of
    schools in between.

    Students have found myriad ways of taking the military to
    task for the lies it tells us, for the bigotry of its 'Don't
    Ask Don't Tell' policy, and most of all, for asking our
    generation to become cannon fodder in an occupation the
    majority of Americans oppose. As young people increasingly
    reject being recruited, according to Major General Michael
    Rochelle, the US Army's recruiting commander, "Today's
    conditions represent the most challenging conditions we
    have seen in recruiting in my 33 years in this uniform."

    It's time for students to figure out how to take this
    movement even further. This October, join hundreds of
    college and high school students from around the country
    as we discuss and debate the future of this movement -
    and plan to reclaim our schools from recruitment for an
    unjust war.

    For more information: http://www.campusantiwar.net

    This listserve acts as a common ground for national CAN
    organizational discussion; please reserve this list for
    important organizing annoucements, reports, or questions
    that are intended for a national audience. The CAN
    listserve is not a posting place for articles or
    announcements of local events that do not directly
    effect the network nationally... www.campusantiwar.net

    <*To visit your group on the web, go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/
    CampusAntiwarNetwork/

    Charles Jenks
    Web Manager and Past President
    Traprock Peace Center
    103A Keets Road
    Deerfield, MA 01342
    413-773-7427
    fax 413-773-7507 http://www.traprockpeace.org

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

    5) Join ADC-SF and Dr. Hatem Bazian to watch and discuss the
    documentary "Falluja -April 2004". In April 2004, the U.S.
    forces invaded Falluja with several thousands of soldiers.
    About 730 people were killed, and 2,800 were injured in the
    siege and subsequent attacks by U.S. forces over the next
    month. Falluja has become a symbol of the resistance movement
    against the occupation of Iraq by U.S. forces. Come see
    never before seen footage of this tragic event. This
    documentary investigates the causes of, conditions during,
    and damages of the US attack. Footage was recorded in
    August 2003 (four months after the invasion of Iraq )
    and in May 2004 shortly after the siege of Falluja.
    (DVD, 55 minutes). Discussion afterwards with Dr. Hatem Bazian.
    Monday, July 25 @ 7pm
    3rd floor Auditorium
    522 Valencia
    San Francisco
    Donations welcome.
    For more info contact:
    adcsf@adcsf.org

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

    6) What: Update Community Notification Plan
    Hunters Point Shipyard
    When :Wednesday, July 27, 2005
    Where: Anna E. Waden Library on Third street ,Community Room
    Who: Radiological and Risk Assessment subcommittee
    of the Hunters Point Shipyard Restoration Advisory Board
    to update the Community Notification Plan of the Shipyard
    Why: The original CNP for the shipyard was completed after
    a years work on August 17, 2005. The current plan is outdated
    and in need of expansion to include over 20 schools and daycare
    centers within a one mile radius of the shipyard. Additionally,
    protocols for dust control during excavation, demolition and
    deconstruction activities on the federal superfund site need
    to be incorporated. Of vital importance is the need to
    develop protocols for the sitting of human occupants in
    radiologically impacted buildings on the base that have not
    been released for unrestricted use by the California
    Department of Health Services. Additionally, there is
    a need to integrate the plan with the City and County
    of San Francisco's Disaster Management Plan and to
    incorporate post 9/11 bioterrorism considerations
    posed by the shipyard as a former naval base, radiation
    laboratory and its proximity to the San Francisco Bay.
    Who is invited: Representatives from the
    Bay Area Air Quality Management District
    and an expert in emergency management plan development
    have been invited to attend.
    Bayview Hunters Point residents are invited to attend,
    as is the broader community and representatives of the
    media and city government .

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

    7) SUNDAY, JULY 31 citywide strike against
    Tenancies-In-Common(TIC) sales.
    Shut down TIC Open Houses all across the city!
    Meet at the SF Tenants Union, 558 Capp St/21st at 12 Noon .
    Food/coffee and transportation available to the targeted Open Houses.
    Volunteers needed to arrive by 11 to help out. Drivers also needed.
    For more info, call 282-6656 or see www.sftu.org

    Dear Friends:

    I've been writing a lot about TICs (tenancies-in-common) over
    the past few years. While the real-estate industry touts them as
    "homes for the middle class," the terrible truth is that they
    displace working-class people (including large numbers of people
    color), seniors, people with AIDS and others who don't have the
    economic means to relocate in this expensive city. They are huge
    profit makers for real-estate speculators, and that is the real
    motive behind the TIC explosion: Flipping a building over in a
    few months nets a speculator anywhere from half a million to a
    million and a half dollars, money that can be used to buy another
    building and evict another group of tenants.

    In the Castro, TICs have meant people with AIDS and seniors being
    displaced...in the Mission, Latinos and artists, in Chinatown,
    immigrant Chinese folks... TICs are a form of economic cleansing,
    an assault on the working people of San Francisco.

    The latest twist in the TIC war: no building is now safe from
    a TIC attack. It used to be that only buildings of 6 units or
    under would be targeted. Now with a newly announced willingness
    by banks and lending agencies to finance larger buildings, TICs
    will happen in buildings with more than 6 units. And that means
    no renter is safe!

    The Tenants Union is striking back.

    The TU has been picketing TIC Open Houses with great success
    this Summer. When prospective buyers learns that tenants were
    evicted, they choose not to look at the TIC units. Over 90% of
    prospective buyers have been turned away. The pickets have
    forced realtors to shut down and cancel Open Houses. San
    Francisco buyers--when educated that units are empty because
    of evictions--are socially conscious buyers. If they won't buy,
    the real-estate speculators have no motivation to evict and
    sell. We need to step up the campaign!

    Please make a commitment to be there. We closed down San
    Francisco on the day the Iraq War began. We can close down
    every TIC sale on July 31. Si se puede! It can be done. All
    we need is about 100 people.

    Commit yourself now to the fight against displacement of
    the working class and the further gentrification of our city.

    See you on July 31!!
    Que siga la lucha! Let the struggle continue!
    tommi

    PS Remember, my new e-mail, as of July 27, is avimecca@yahoo.com.

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

    8) "Operation Field of Thorn"
    From Shraga Elam

    I want to draw your attention to what I consider to be the
    blue print of the Israeli army's strategy against the
    Palestinian, "Operation Field of Thorn" (FoT). As you can
    see from enclosed quotations, many of the recommended measures
    have been already implemented. The implementation has been
    always conditioned by the prevailing political and military
    circumstances and a next round is now imminent (see further
    down the intention of the Israeli army for a for massive
    sweep into Gaza).

    It is interesting to see that the plan developed in 1996
    talked about "temporary" withdrawal of Israeli settlers and,
    eliminating the PA and forced evacuations of Palestinian
    from "sensitive areas.", or in Israeli common terminology:
    "transfer".

    The enclosed quotations pertaining to FoT are out of
    a study from the renown US expert Anthony H. Cordesman,
    "Israel versus the Palestinians: The "Second Intifada" and
    Asymmetric Warfare"
    http://www.csis.org/burke/sa/israelvspale_intafada.pdf,
    2002, which was originally published already in October 2000.

    Shraga Elam

    Zurich/Switzerland

    Anthony H. Cordesman, "Israel versus the Palestinians: The
    "Second Intifada" and Asymmetric Warfare" http://www.csis.org/burke/sa/
    israelvspale_intafada.pdf, 2002:

    Page 183-184

    Israeli Tactics in a West Bank Conflict

    Since the beginning of the Second Intifada, the IDF has shown
    its very real military options and it is clear it prepared to
    exercise them long before the fighting began. The IDF spokesman
    provided some of the possible details of such Israeli contingency
    plans to reoccupy large parts of the West Bank in a statement
    June 1997. 456 Many of these details tracked closely with the
    plans tested in "Operation Field of Thorns," a plan the IDF
    spokesman had made public in September 1996, and Israel began
    to apply many of these measures in September 2000. They include:

    • Mobilization and deployment of armored and other land forces
    in the face of a massive Palestinian rising.

    • Massive reinforcement of IDF troops at points of friction.

    • Use of armor and artillery to isolate major Palestinian
    population areas, and to seal off Palestinian areas, including
    many areas of Zone A.

    • Use of other forces to secure settlements, key roads, and
    terrain points.

    • Use of helicopter gunships and snipers to provide mobility
    and suppressive fire.

    • Use of extensive small arms, artillery, and tank fire to
    suppress sniping, rock throwing and demonstrations.

    • Bombing, artillery strikes, and helicopter and combat
    aircraft strikes on high value Palestinian targets and
    infrastructure, to punish Palestinian elements for attacks.

    • Search and seizure interventions and raids into Palestinian
    areas in the Gaza and West Bank to break up organized
    resistance, capture, or kill key leaders.

    • Penetrations into Palestinian-controlled territory to
    destroy buildings and houses from which attacks have originated
    or to prevent future attacks, and to uproot trees from which
    mortar attacks have originated.

    • Selective assassinations of suspected leaders and
    instigators of conflict, including, through stand-off
    tactics such as drones and remote-controlled explosive
    devices.

    • Use of military forces trained in urban warfare to
    penetrate into cities if necessary - most probably in
    cases where there were Jewish enclaves like Hebron .

    • Arrest PA officials and imposition of a new military
    administration .

    • Isolation of key Palestinian cities and towns and use
    of surrounding IDF troops to turn them into military
    cantonments.

    • Introduction of a simultaneous economic blockade with
    selective cuts offs of financial transactions, labor
    movements, and food/fuel shipments.

    • Selective destruction of high value Palestinian
    facilities and clearly of strong points and fields of
    fire near Palestinian urban areas.

    • Use of Israeli control of water, power, communications,
    and road access to limit the size and endurance of
    Palestinian action.

    • Regulation and control of media access and conduct
    a major information campaign to influence local and
    world opinion.

    •Carrying out "temporary" withdrawal of Israeli
    settlers from exposed and strategically low value
    isolated settlements like Hebron [or Gush Katif - se] .

    • Creation of fences, security zones, bypasses,
    and other measures to separate Israelis and Palestinians.

    •Forced evacuations of Palestinian from "sensitive areas."

    http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/600721.html

    www. haaretz.com

    Last update - 02:32 17/07/2005

    IDF poised for massive sweep into Gaza
    By Haaretz Staff
    http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/600721.html

    The Israel Defense Forces late last night massed thousands
    of troops on the Gaza Strip border for two purposes -
    a possible operation in the Strip to halt the Qassam rocket
    fire and a move to block the right-wing activists' march
    to Gush Katif.

    Hundreds of settlers clashed last night with a large force
    of police and IDF troops at the Kissufim checkpoint. The
    settlers came to demonstrate against the decision to close
    Gush Katif and were planning to break through the barricade.
    Settlers blocked the crossing with vehicles and resisted
    the police's attempt to remove them. Several protesters
    were injured, and others were arrested. Demonstrators
    also tore up a number of fences that the IDF built in
    the area.

    U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said yesterday
    that she was arriving at the end of the week to try to
    defuse the tension between Israel and the Palestinians
    and to ensure the disengagement's implementation.

    Israel resumed its policy of targeted assassinations in
    the territories on Friday, killing seven Hamas activists
    in two air force operations in Gaza and in Salfit, in the
    West Bank. At the same time, large infantry and armored
    forces concentrated near the northern Gaza Strip. However,
    Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz ordered the IDF not to enter
    the Strip at present "to give the Palestinian Authority
    a last chance to take care of the terror organizations."

    A senior officer told Haaretz yesterday that in the last
    two days, the PA was taking real action against the terror
    groups and its policemen were clashing with Hamas activists.

    Prime Minister Ariel Sharon stated last week that the
    disengagement would be carried out as scheduled and
    would not be postponed due to the terror.

    "There is no connection between the evacuation of Gaza,
    which is vital to Israel, and terror. Terror will not
    stop the disengagement plan," Sharon told Channel 2.

    Israel has advised the Americans, Egyptians and
    Palestinians of its plans and said that it was increasing
    pressure on the PA. Mofaz told special U.S. envoy General
    William Ward that Israel sees the PA's action against
    the terrorists as the test of whether a coordinated
    disengagement is possible.

    "Start taking serious action and don't force us to enter
    [the Gaza Strip]," Mofaz told Palestinian Interior
    Minister General Nasser Yousef.

    Qassam rockets and mortar shells continued to fall in
    Sderot, in communities in the northern and western Negev
    and in Gush Katif. Since Thursday evening, some 40 Qassam
    rockets and some 70 mortar shells were fired, constituting
    the largest attack since the cease-fire started in February.

    A woman, 18, and a girl, 4, were lightly injured by mortar
    shrapnel in their home in Neveh Dekalim in Gush Katif.
    A Nisanit resident, 59, was lightly injured when his
    home was directly hit by a mortar shell.

    Ambulances evacuated 13 other people suffering from
    shock to hospitals.

    In another incident, a mortar shell caused serious
    damage to a house in Neveh Dekalim, minutes after the
    father had left the room. The settlement's residents
    were asked to remain in shelters for several hours
    on Friday night.

    Most of the Qassam rockets fired over the weekend
    fell in open areas, causing no casualties or damage.
    However, before dawn yesterday, one rocket struck
    the swimming pool at Sha'ar Hanegev, causing serious
    damage. Another rocket landed in the yard of a house
    in Sderot. Four family members suffering from shock
    received medical treatment, the family's dog was
    killed and the house was damaged. Yesterday afternoon
    another Sderot resident suffered shock after
    a rocket landed close to her, near the town's cemetery.

    On Friday afternoon, 22-year-old Dana Glakowitz
    of Netiv Ha'asara, who was killed a day earlier
    by a mortar shell in the moshav, was buried in
    Kibbutz Brur Hayil.

    Sharon gave the go-ahead to assassinate Hamas
    activists in the Gaza Strip and West Bank on
    Friday, a day after the fatal Qassam rocket
    attack in Netiv Ha'asara.

    A Jerusalem source said the action plans had
    been prepared in advance and Sharon only confirmed
    carrying them out on the telephone. After the
    suicide bombing in Netanya that killed five people
    on Tuesday, the decision was made to assassinate
    Islamic Jihad activists in Tul Karm, who were
    responsible for the attack. On Thursday the
    assignment expanded to include members of
    Hamas, which was responsible for the Qassam launching.

    Seven Hamas activists were killed and eight
    others were lightly wounded during two IDF
    targeted assassination operations in the Salfit
    area and in the Gaza Strip. These were the first
    assassinations since the cease-fire began.

    Palestinian sources said that close to 3 P.M. on
    Friday, IDF gunships fired several missiles and
    machine gun volleys toward a cave near Salfit,
    killing two Hamas activists. A third activist
    managed to escape, but was killed later by IDF
    troops. About an hour later, in another assassination
    in the Gaza Strip, four Hamas activists were killed
    while traveling in a Volkswagen van laden with
    explosives, probably Qassam rockets. Gunships
    fired missiles at the car west of Gaza City,
    blowing it up.

    Chief of Staff Dan Halutz said in Tel Aviv on Friday,
    "Hamas has excluded itself from the truce, at least
    for the time being." Noting that the truce in the
    territories was falling apart, he warned, "If the
    PA fails to take care of the [armed] organizations,
    we will first deal with terror and only then
    complete the disengagement."

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

    9) Gen. Westmoreland, Who Led U.S. in Vietnam, Dies
    By ERIC PACE
    Published: July 19, 2005
    Gen. William C. Westmoreland, who commanded the United
    States forces in Vietnam from 1964 to 1968, overseeing
    the vast troop buildup and the height of the fighting,
    died last night in a retirement home in Charleston, S.C.,
    his son, James Ripley Westmoreland, announced.
    The general was 91. (The General was called, "General
    WasteMoreLand" during Vietnam War era...BW)
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/19/international/asia/
    19westmoreland.html?hp&ex=1121832000&en=5cd346e7b5088634&ei=5094&part
    ner=homepage

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

    10) How Long Can Workers Tread Water?
    By EDUARDO PORTER
    July 14, 2005
    "Profit has roughly doubled in the last year on revenue
    growth of about 40 percent," said Alex Mann, co-owner of
    Clicktime.com , a company in San Francisco that sells
    time-sheet applications over the Internet. "The top-line
    growth was very satisfying. There's been very strong
    growth in the amount left for compensation of the owners
    and for profits." ...Corporate profits jumped 35 percent
    from 2002 to 2004, as increases in revenue dropped
    unhindered to companies' bottom lines. Income from
    workers' compensation, including wages and benefits,
    grew 9.5 percent....In the first quarter of 2005 profits
    grew a further 15 percent, compared with the period
    last year, twice the pace of compensation for employees.
    And what growth there has been in compensation for workers
    has mostly concentrated at the top. At the bottom end,
    income growth has mainly come from an increase in
    employment - not better wages.
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/14/business/14income.html?

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

    11) Why Marx is Man of the Moment
    He had globalization sussed 150 years ago
    by Francis Wheen
    Published on Sunday, July 17, 2005 by the Observer/UK
    http://www.commondreams.org/views05/0717-28.htm

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

    12) OCCUPATION: DREAMLAND
    San Francisco - Begins July 29th, and runs for one week
    at the Roxie Theatre at 16th and Valencia

    Hi,

    This film depicts the daily life of a group of soldiers in
    Fallujah before the heavy-duty, criminal bombing began
    in November of 2004.

    It's not a "fun" or "relaxing" film to watch. It is probably
    a very good film for National Guard, reserve soldiers, vets,
    teenagers, parents, and those interested in what the life
    is like for the ordinary soldier in a combat zone.
    Especially good for those thinking of enlisting,
    joining ROTC, etc.

    I think what amazed me most was that the soldiers seemed
    connected to a central command that didn't know what was
    going on, couldn't be relied upon, and yet, was making
    the decisions. Also, the soldiers seemed very disconnected
    from knowing where and what their targets were.

    It's an interesting film, but I'm not sure what idea the
    filmmakers were trying to get across or what its goals are.
    I'd really be interested in people's thoughts about.
    I also have a DVD of the film.

    Marti Hiken

    OCCUPATION: DREAMLAND
    San Francisco - Begins July 29th, and runs for one week
    at the Roxie Theatre at 16th and Valencia
    ********************
    RUMUR RELEASING, cordially invites you to the screening of
    its inaugural feature release, the documentary OCCUPATION:
    DREAMLAND.

    An unflinchingly candid portrait of a squad of American
    soldiers deployed in the doomed Iraqi city of Falluja
    during the winter of 2004, OCCUPATION: DREAMLAND chronicles
    the daily grind of young recruits as they patrol an environment
    of low-intensity conflict creeping steadily towards catastrophe.
    The film documents the city's waning stability before a final
    series of military assaults began in the spring of 2004 that
    effectively destroyed it.

    A real opportunity to see the war from a soldier's
    perspective, OCCUPATION: DREAMLAND provides an intimate
    examination of the escalating tension in the unstable
    region. The narrative follows a downward spiral of civil
    destabilization and personal frustration, borne by
    individuals trapped on both sides of the conflict, and
    unflinchingly addresses the soldiers' operational and
    moral ambivalence about the war effort itself.

    Filmmakers Garrett Scott and Ian Olds were given access
    to all operations of the Army's 82nd Airborne. They lived
    with the unit 24/7, giving voice to soldiers held under
    a strict code of authority as they cope with an ambiguous,
    often lethal environment. The result is a revealing,
    sometimes surprising look at Army life, operations and
    the complexity of American war in the 21st century.

    OCCUPATION: DREAMLAND is not yet rated and has a running
    time of 79 minutes.

    RUMUR RELEASING, a new paradigm in independent releasing,
    was formed by Michael Galinsky, Jeff Sanders, David
    Beilinson and Suki Hawley with a mission to efficiently
    build audiences for thought provoking films. In addition
    to OCCUPATION:DREAMLAND, upcoming releases include
    MARDI GRAS: MADE IN CHINA and CODE 33.

    National Lawyers Guild
    Military Law Task Force

    Marguerite Hiken, co-chair
    318 Ortega Street
    San Francisco, CA 94122
    415-566-3732
    mlhiken@pacbell.net
    www.nlg.org/mltf

    Kathleen Gilberd, co-chair
    1168 Union Street, Ste. 302
    San Diego, CA 92101
    619-233-1701
    KathleenGilberd@aol.com

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

    13) Please forward widely Please forward widely
    JUSTICE FOR Sheila Detoy and Cammerin Boyd
    COMMUNITY RALLY
    5:00-6:00 PM
    WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 2005
    SAN FRANCISCO CITY PLAZA
    DR. GOODLETT DR. (ACROSS FROM S.F. CITY HALL)
    For ten years San Francisco Police Offices have killed with
    impunity.

    We say no more

    We call on the San Francisco Police
    Commission to end this reign of terror.
    Sheila Detoy: On May 13, 1998 San
    Francisco Police Officers Shot Up
    a car full of Unarmed Teenagers and
    killed 17 year Old Sheila Detoy.
    SFPD then tried to blame her friends for her death.

    Cammerin Boyd: On Wednesday, May 5, 2004,
    San Francisco police officers shot and
    killed 29 year-old Cammerin Boyd in front
    of dozens of witnesses. Cammerin, who was
    disabled, was clearly and vocally surrendering.
    He had his hands above his head.
    But the police shot him anyway.

    In the coming weeks the San Francisco
    Police Commission will begin holding
    hearings on both of these cases, come
    out and let them know we will accept
    nothing less than justice.
    For more information call (510)428-3939 x, 242 or e-mail
    malaika@ellabakercenter.org

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

    14) "How Peace Activists Saved the World from Nuclear War"
    You are cordially invited to.......
    A discussion with historian and author Lawrence Wittner:
    "How Peace Activists Saved the World from Nuclear War"
    This Thursday, July 21
    7 PM, UC-Berkeley campus
    141 McCone Hall
    (map: http://www.berkeley.edu/map/maps/AB45.html map/maps/AB45.html> )
    Please see attached flyer for more information on
    Lawrence Wittner, and to help us spread the
    word.
    Questions? Contact Josh Kearns with questions:
    jkearns@eps.berkleley.edu mailto:jkearns@eps.berkleley.edu

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

    15) Baghdad Hospital Doctors on Strike
    Against Soldiers
    By REUTERS
    July 19, 2005
    Filed at 9:28 a.m. ET
    http://nytimes.com/reuters/international/international-iraq-
    hospital.html?pagewanted=print

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

    16) Mayor Blames Middle East Policy
    Decades of British and American
    intervention in the oil-rich Middle East
    motivated the London bombers, Ken Livingstone has suggested.
    Published on Wednesday, July 20, 2005 by the BBC
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0720-07.htm

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

    17) Military resister Camilo Mejía:
    "I pledge my allegiance to the poor and oppressed"
    July 22, 2005
    FROM: http://www.socialistworker.org

    CAMILO MEJIA was the first U.S. soldier who served in Iraq to go
    public with his refusal to continue fighting George Bush's war for oil
    and empire.

    Camilo refused to be redeployed to Iraq before the revelations about
    torture at the Abu Ghraib prison came to light, but these abuses
    didn't take him by surprise. One of his first assignments when he
    arrived in Iraq in 2003 was to detain--and abuse--Iraqi prisoners by
    depriving them of sleep and using mock executions to terrify them.

    A military court forced Camilo to serve seven months' confinement for
    his decision to abide by his conscience. Since his release, Camilo has
    thrown himself into building the antiwar movement and
    counter-recruitment efforts--and speaking about how his time in Iraq
    has changed his thinking about the world.

    On July 3, Camilo spoke at an evening rally against war and empire at
    the Socialism 2005 conference in Chicago. Here, Socialist Worker
    prints an extended version of his speech.

    THOSE OF us in the GI antiwar movement, whether we know it or not,
    face a powerful enemy. When I say antiwar movement, it is assumed that
    I mean the war in Iraq, but the war in Iraq should be seen as part of
    something far bigger and far more devastating.

    The powerful enemy is the corporations that finance congressional and
    presidential campaigns, the corporations in control of our privatized
    government. This is the same enemy that charges the American people a
    billion dollars per week to send their children to fight a criminal
    war against the children of Iraq.

    Our struggle is the struggle against those who say "support our
    troops" while turning their backs on returning veterans. It is rather
    comfortable to say support the troops while keeping their reality in
    Iraq a mystery.

    Support the troops by waving flags and slapping yellow ribbons on the
    bumpers of SUVs. Support the troops while they are killing their
    brothers and sisters in Iraq--meanwhile, hiding the flag-draped
    coffins some of them are coming home in, and keeping the horror of
    their wounds out of the public's view.

    We struggle against those who create terrorism through the spread of
    hunger and poverty, so they can spread war and reap the profits. We
    struggle against those who invade and occupy a land for its resources,
    and then call its people terrorists for refusing to be conquered.

    This "terrorism" in Iraq is in reality a fight for freedom and
    self-determination. It is by twisting the concept of this legitimate
    struggle into the concept of terrorism, with help from the corporate
    media, that our puppet government further creates resentment and
    racism against the oppressed to further its conquest. It is by means
    of this imperial conquest that a small terrorist network is turned
    into a global terrorist mentality.

    No longer able to rely on the rhetoric of the Cold War, the corporate
    warmongers need this global terrorism to justify the spread of its
    empire. So the war we oppose is the war waged by corporations on the
    billions of people around the world who live in utter misery.

    We fight an enemy that can only be made powerful through the
    systematic exploitation of natural resources and through the constant
    and systematic poisoning of the environment across the world. This
    enemy does not need war to spread death and destruction.

    We fight a system that feeds on poverty and lack of options to fill
    the ranks of its imperialist military.

    The United States of America is the only superpower on earth--a nation
    rich and powerful beyond anything ever seen or heard of in history.
    There is no reason why everyone in this nation should not live a
    comfortable and stable life. Yet more than 40 million people live
    without health insurance. The public school system is overcrowded and
    failing, but to get help from the government, public schools must open
    their doors to military recruiters.

    The so-called American Dream, to many poor people, is tied to the
    obligation to fight in a war for corporate domination.

    They call it an all-volunteer army. But to them, I say: Show me a
    society where everyone has access to health care. Show me a society
    where everyone has access to an education. Show me a society where
    everyone has access to decent wages, where everyone lives a dignified
    life, and then I will show you an all-volunteer army.

    Poverty and oppression around the world provide the building blocks
    for an empire. Poverty and oppression at home provide the building
    blocks to build an imperial army.

    In saying no to that imperial army--in refusing to fight an imperial
    war against our brothers and sisters of Iraq--I pledge my allegiance
    to the poor and oppressed of the world. In saying no to an imperial
    army and in refusing to fight an imperial war against our brothers and
    sisters of Iraq, I pledge my allegiance to the working class of the
    world.

    Their struggle--which is your struggle--is my struggle as well.

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

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


    18) Call to Action: Keep up the pressure!
    Monday, August 29
    National Day of Action
    Extradite Luis Posada Carriles
    to Venezuela - No to Asylum!
    Free the Cuban Five!
    Regional demonstration in
    El Paso, TX
    outside of Posada's trial
    Locally coordinated protests
    in cities and towns across the country

    Since the illegal arrival of the
    terrorist Luis Posada Carriles to the United
    States in late March, the Bush
    administration has been met with
    a torrent of opposition and demands
    for Posada's extradition to Venezuela.

    On August 29, Posada will appear
    for trial in El Paso and the A.N.S.W.E.R.
    Coalition is calling for demonstrations
    outside the immigration court in El Paso
    and in cities across the country demanding
    that Posada not be granted asylum and
    instead be extradited to Venezuela.

    Only Bush's government and the Miami
    terrorists are opposed to Posada's extradition.

    There is virtually universal agreement
    that Posada must be denied asylum in
    the U.S. and instead be tried in
    Venezuela. Posada is principally
    responsible, along with Orlando Bosch,
    for the 1976 bombing of the Cubana
    plane that killed 73 people. That
    crime was plotted in Venezuela. The
    hand of the CIA is also deeply implicated,
    and Posada was a paid CIA agent since 1961.

    It is more critical than ever to keep
    the pressure on the U.S. government to
    demand justice for the families of the
    victims of anti-Cuba terrorism, and for
    an end to U.S. sponsorship of the Miami
    terrorists.

    It is essential that the struggle of
    the Cuban 5 - five heroic men who
    actively opposed terrorism in Miami –
    be elevated to national prominence to
    help win their freedom from U.S. prison.
    There is no more relevant opportunity
    than now to demand: Extradite Posada!
    Free the Cuban Five!

    The more than twenty June 13 protests –
    from El Paso to New York City to San
    Francisco - helped generate a great deal
    of media attention on the terrorist
    history of Posada. June 13 was the
    first Immigration court date. We believe
    that the immigration proceedings, which
    will be continued to August 29 in
    El Paso, are a diversion from the
    real issue: the urgent need for Posada
    to be sent to Venezuela, where
    an extradition order has been issued.

    Since March, A.N.S.W.E.R. has organized
    several public actions, including:

    * An important April 21 press
    conference in Miami together with progressive
    Cuban groups under the banner of Alianza
    Martiana, which helped break the story
    into the national and international media.
    * A well-covered May 13 press conference
    in Washington DC, featuring Wayne Smith
    and family members of Raymond Persaud,
    who perished in the 1976 Cubana bombing.
    * 40,000 letters sent to Bush & Congress!
    A national A.N.S.W.E.R. letter-writing
    campaign that generated more than 30,000
    letters to members of Congress and more
    than 10,500 letters to Bush, demanding
    no asylum, and extraditi