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  • BAUAW NEWSLETTER
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    Friday, September 08, 2006
     

    BAUAW NEWSLETTER - SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2006

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    !VIVA FIDEL! LONG LIVE FIDEL!

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    SCROLL DOWN TO READ:
    EVENT ANNOUNCEMENTS
    GENERAL ANNOUNCEMENTS
    ARTICLES IN FULL
    LINKS ONLY

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    EVENT ANNOUNCEMENTS
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    Mumia Abu-Jamal Is In Danger
    Rally In Oakland To FREE MUMIA!
    4 PM Friday September 15th 2006,
    Alameda County Courthouse, 12th and Fallon Sts, south side
    Mumia Abu-Jamal Is Innocent!
    For Labor Action To Free Mumia! End the Racist Death Penalty!
    Rally initiated by the Labor Action Committee
    To Free Mumia Abu-Jamal (LAC),
    PO Box 16222, Oakland CA 94610.
    510 763-2347 or LACFreeMumia@aol.com.
    www.mumia.org,
    www.freemumia.org,
    www.chicagofreemumia.org,
    www.laboractionmumia.org.

    - Labor Action Committee To Free Mumia Abu-Jamal

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    PEOPLE UNITED FOR AN UNCONDITIONAL AND GENERAL AMNESTY
    Assembly: 24TH and Mission
    When: Saturday, September 16th 2006
    Time: 1 pm
    For more information call 415-431-9925

    We make a call to all the immigrant community to continue our
    struggle and celebrate the independence of our countries demanding
    a general and unconditional amnesty for all NOW!

    All of our liberators, Simon Bolivar, Benito Juarez, San Martin, etc.,
    struggled for a big, free American continent without borders. The rich
    are the ones who have created borders so they can exploit and deny
    us our right to education, health, housing, and jobs. Immigrant
    Brothers and Sisters let us unite and celebrate our independence
    demanding to be treated as human beings.

    AMNESTY FOR ALL NOW!

    ..................................Spanish.................................

    BARRIÓ UNIDO POR UNA
    AMNISTIA GENERAL e INCONDICIONAL
    ¡AMNISTÍA PARA TODOS AHORA!
    Asamblea: 24 y Misión
    Dia: Sábado, 16 de Septiembre 2006
    Hora: 1 PM
    Para más información 415-431-9925

    Hace un llamado a toda la población emigrante a continuar
    nuestra lucha y celebrar la independencia de nuestros países
    demandando una amnistía general e incondicional para
    todos AHORA.

    Todos nuestros libertadores, Simón Bolívar, Benito Juárez,
    San Martín, etc. lucharon por una patria americana grande y sin
    fronteras. Los ricos son los que han creado fronteras para así
    poder explotarnos y negarnos el derecho a la educación salud,
    vivienda, y trabajo.

    Hermanos emigrantes unámonos y celebremos nuestra
    independencia demandando ser tratados como seres humanos.

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    Free the Cuban Five!
    September 23, 2006
    Washington, DC
    Breaking News...
    On Aug. 9, the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals issued its en banc
    decision denying a new trial to the Cuban Five. On August 10,
    the National Committee to Free the Cuban Five, together with
    the National Lawyers Guild, sponsored an emergency press
    conference in Washington in response to the decision.
    A partial transcript to that press conference, in English
    and Spanish, is here.
    A March on the White House will be held on September 23
    to continue to press forward with efforts to free the Five.
    We urge all supporters to make every effort to join us on
    that march. A public demonstration of support for the Five,
    and outrage at their continued imprisonment, has never
    been more vital. Details of the march are found at the
    website below.
    Join us in Washington on Sept. 23! Free the Cuban Five!
    http://www.freethefive.org/

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    IRAN WAR PERIL — EX-CIA MAN’S SF TALK SEPT. 24

    The "threat" from Iran: Are mushroom clouds ahead?
    Ray McGovern, a CIA analyst for 27 years, addresses
    that issue at 12:45 p.m. Sunday, September 24, in the
    First Unitarian Universalist Church (Starr King Room),
    Franklin and Geary Streets, San Francisco.

    McGovern will touch on Iraq too: "How we got in and
    how we get out." Last May in Atlanta, national TV
    networks showed him accusing Defense Secretary
    Rumsfeld of prewar lying about supposed Iraqi weapons
    of mass destruction.

    McGovern founded Veteran Intelligence Professionals
    for Sanity. He served the Central Intelligence Agency
    from the Kennedy Administration to that of George H.
    W. Bush. Awarded an Intelligence Commendation Medal,
    he returned it following the revelations of torture.

    There will be a question period until about 2 p.m.
    Optional lunch (bring it or buy it) precedes the
    program at 12:15. Cosponsors are the church’s World
    Community Advocates and the War and Law League (WALL).

    Following the program, WALL conducts its biennial
    meeting. It is a nonpartisan, all-volunteer, San
    Francisco-based group that opposes presidential wars
    and aims at the rule of law in U.S. foreign affairs.

    Public transit to the Unitarian Church includes
    Muni's 47 and 49 bus lines on Van Ness Avenue, one
    block east of Franklin, and the 38-Geary bus(which
    connects with BART at the Montgomery Street Station).

    For further information: (415) 738-8298 or (415)
    564-2083; warandlaw@yahoo.com; http://warandlaw.org.

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    Urgent call from October 22 Coalition against Police Brutality, SF
    October 22 Coalition against Police Brutality, Repression
    and Criinalization of a generation
    National Day of Protest, March and Rally in SF, Planning
    NO MORE STOLEN LIVES ! NO MAS VIDAS ROBADAS !
    Contact:
    mesha Monge-Irizarry
    Idriss Stelley Foundation
    (415) 595-8251 24HR Bilingual Spa. Crisis line
    iolmisha@cs. com
    How: Already involved are : October 22 Bay Area, Idriss
    Stelley Foundation, SF CEDP (Campaign to End the Death
    Penalty, ISO (International Socialist Organization, Bay Area),
    Bay Area Families of Victims and Survivors of Police brutality,
    Code Pink
    http://www.october22.org/
    GET INVOLVED: To join our mailing list, please write to:
    sf1022-talk-subscribe@lists.riseup.net

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    U.S. Out of Iraq Now! We Are the Majority!
    End Colonial Occupation from Iraq,
    to Palestine, Haiti, and Everywhere!
    October 28 National Day of Action
    Locally Coordinated Anti-War Protests from Coast to Coast
    Vote With Your Feet … and Your Voices, and Banners, and Signs!
    Let Every Politician Feel the Power of the People!
    http://answer.pephost.org/site/News2?abbr=ANS_&page=NewsArticle&id=7836

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    October 28 National Day of Action
    Locally Coordinated Anti-War Protests from Coast to Coast
    Vote With Your Feet … and Your Voices, and Banners, and Signs!
    Let Every Politician Feel the Power of the People!
    http://answer.pephost.org/site/News2?abbr=ANS_&page=NewsArticle&id=7836
    http://www.actionsf.org/
    http://answer.pephost.org/site/News2?abbr=ANS_&page=NewsArticle&id=7869

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    End Canada's Occupation of Afghanistan!
    Call for action on October 28, 2006

    This call for a pan-Canadian day of action, co-signed by the
    Canadian Peace Alliance, the Canadian Islamic Congress, the
    Canadian Labour Congress and the Montreal coalition Echec
    a la Guerre, is being distributed and discussed at the World Peace
    Forum now taking place in Vancouver. -SV The Collectif Échec
    à la guerre, Canadian Peace Alliance, the Canadian Labour Congress,
    and the Canadian Islamic Congress are jointly calling for a pan-
    Canadian day of protest this October 28th, 2006, to bring Canadian
    troops home from Afghanistan.

    On that day, people all across the country will unite to tell
    Stephen Harper that we are opposed to
    his wholehearted support for Canadian and U.S. militarism.
    This October marks the fifth anniversary of the invasion and
    occupation of Afghanistan, and the people of that country are
    still suffering from the ravages of war. Reconstruction in the
    country is at a standstill and the needs of the Afghan people
    are not being met. The rule of the new Afghan State, made
    up largely of drug running warlords, will not realize the
    democratic aspirations of the people there. In fact, according
    to Human Rights Watch reports, the human rights record
    of those warlords in recent years has not been better than
    the Taliban.

    We are told that the purpose of this war is to root out terrorism
    and protect our societies, yet the heavy-handed approach of
    a military occupation trying to impose a US-friendly
    government on the Afghan people will force more Afghans
    to become part of the resistance movement. It will also
    make our societies more -- not less -- likely to see terrorist
    attacks.

    No discussion on military tactics in the House of Commons
    will change that reality. Indeed, violence is increasing with
    more attacks on both coalition troops and on Afghan civilians.
    While individual Canadian soldiers may have gone to Afghanistan
    with the best of intentions, they are operating under the
    auspices of a US-led state building project that cares little
    or the needs of the Afghan people. US and Canadian interests
    rest with the massive $3.2 billion Trans Afghan Pipeline (TAP)
    project, which will bring oil from the Caspian region through
    southern Afghanistan (where Canada is stationed) and onto the
    ports of Pakistan.

    It has been no secret that the TAP has dominated US foreign
    policy towards Afghanistan for the last decade. Now Canadian
    oil and gas corporations have their own interests in the TAP.
    Over the last decade, the role of the Canadian Armed Forces
    abroad has changed, and Canadian foreign policy has become
    a replica of the US empire-building rhetoric. The end result
    of this process is now plain to see with the role of our troops
    in Southern Afghanistan, with the enormous budget increases
    for war expenditures and "security," with the Bush-style speeches
    of Stephen Harper, and with the fear campaigns around
    "homegrown terrorism" to foster support for those nefarious
    changes.

    It is this very course that will get young Canadian soldiers killed,
    that will endanger our society and consume more and more
    of its resources for destruction and death in Afghanistan.
    We demand a freeze in defense and security budgets until
    an in-depth public discussion is held on those issues across
    Canada. The mission in Afghanistan has already cost Canadians
    more than $4 billion. That money could have been used to fund
    human needs in Canada or abroad. Instead it is being used
    to kill civilians in Afghanistan and advance the interests
    of corporations.

    On October 28th, stand up and be counted.
    Canadian Troops Out of Afghanistan Now!

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    San Francisco Board of Education Meeting
    Tuesday, November 14th, 7PM
    555 Franklin Street, 1st Floor
    San Francisco, CA 94102
    415/241-6427
    The Board will vote on a resolution to phase out JROTC.

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    Close the SOA and Change Oppressive U.S. Foreign Policy
    Nov. 17-19, 2006 - Converge on Fort Benning, Georgia

    People's Movements across the Americas are becoming increasingly more
    powerful. Military "solutions" to social problems as supported by
    institutions like the School of the Americas were unable to squash their
    voices, and the call for justice and accountability is getting louder each
    day.

    Add your voice to the chorus, demand justice for all the people of the
    Americas and engage in nonviolent direct action to close the SOA and
    change oppressive U.S. foreign policy.

    With former SOA graduates being unmasked in Chile, Argentina, Colombia,
    Paraguay, Honduras, and Peru for their crimes against humanity, and with
    the blatant similarities between the interrogation methods and torture
    methods used at Abu Ghraib and those described in human rights abuse cases
    in Latin America, the SOA/WHINSEC must be held accountable!

    Visit http://www.soaw.org to learn more about the November Vigil, hotel
    and travel information, the November Organizing Packet, and more.

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    GENERAL ANNOUNCEMENTS
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    "The Ground Truth" opens Friday, September 15

    Host a "Ground Truth Gathering"

    From October 4th - 11th, join 1000's as we gather across America
    in churches, universities, community centers, town halls, coffee
    houses and living rooms to screen THE GROUND TRUTH, engage
    in conversation, and listen to Iraq veterans.

    THE GROUND TRUTH depicts with ferocious honesty the terrible
    conflict in Iraq, a prelude to the even more challenging battles
    fought by soldiers when they return home to personal demons,
    an uncomprehending public, and an indifferent government.

    Theatrical opening Friday, September 15, 2006
    at Landmark Theaters in the following cities:
    Los Angeles, New York, Boston, Chicago, Seattle, Austin,
    Washington, D.C., San Francisco

    *Additional screening nationwide -
    For details, go to: www.thegroundtruth. net

    Purchase a DVD through this link and VFP recieves
    a portion of the proceeds. Price is $14.98
    http://groundtruthstore.seenon.com/?pa=vfp

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    Global Chalk4Peace
    Sept 16/17th
    OUR STREETS are OUR MEDIA
    WE have TOTAL access
    We CAN Make THE Difference
    ON THE WEEKEND OF SEPTEMBER 16 & 17th Chalk4Peace!
    On the pavements and sidewalks of our towns and cities
    You are invited to Take Action!
    To Participate in this GLOBAL outpouring of public art. Where we make
    our personal statements for peace on the pavements and sidewalks of
    our cities all over our world.
    http://www.infinitepossibility.org/chalk2006/

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    TWO AMICUS BRIEFS FILED FOR MUMIA ABU-JAMAL WITH
    THE 3RD CIRCUIT FEDERAL APPEALS COURT IN JULY 2006

    These pdf files can be found on Michael Schiffmann's web site at:

    http://againstthecrimeofsilence.de/english/copy_of_mumia/legalarchive/

    The first brief is from the National Lawyers Guild.
    The second brief is from the NAACP Legal Defense
    and Educational Fund, Inc.

    Howard Keylor
    For the Labor Action Committee to Free Mumia Abu-Jamal
    www.laboractionmumia.org.

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    My Only Son: United States Marine

    American Service Men and Women Dead - 2,656*

    "Intelligence gathered by this and other governments
    leaves no doubt that the Iraq regime continues to possess
    and conceal some of the most lethal weapons ever devised."

    George W. Bush
    President of the United States
    State of the Union Address
    January 28, 2003

    Six years old
    I wait for sound of car motor,
    for light beams splashing across my blue walls,
    for footsteps thumping across front porch,
    in a few moments for my bedroom lamp snapped on.
    My Dad fills the diameter of my door.
    "There's my good boy," he booms.
    I prop myself up for his offering,
    bowl heaped with strawberry ice cream

    I turn my car into driveway,
    see headlights splash across window
    of my six-year-old son's bedroom,
    wonder if he hears thumping of my footsteps.
    In a few moments
    I fill diameter of his door.
    "There's my good boy," I laugh.
    He props himself up,
    his hands reach for my offering,
    bowl heaped with strawberry ice cream

    I can't sleep tonight,
    flip on television for Jay Leno's wisdom,
    flick dials for rest of Ted Kopell's "Night Line,"
    find something engrossing on Public Broadcasting.
    Irritable from multitudes of sound, I turn it off,
    slip off, wake up, doze, sit up.
    I hear car coming slowly up the road
    I lie still. . .
    "Keep going. . . . . . . Keep Going!" It does
    I lie back. Toss, tangle myself in sheet, blankets

    A little after three
    I hear car coming slowly up the road.
    "Keep going. . . . . . . Keep going!"
    Car turns into driveway,
    lights splash across my blue walls,
    thumping of steps on front porch.
    I run down downstairs.
    In crisply pressed dress blues
    they fill diameter of my door.
    Three United States Marines

    *September 5, 2006

    Maxwell Corydon Wheat, Jr. ©
    Permission Given to Use Poem with Author Credit
    E-mail: Maxwell623@aol.com

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    When Your Soldier Comes Back Home
    by Martha Ann Brooks, wife of an OIF Veteran with PTSD
    Click here to listen
    http://www.broadjam.com/player/playerhosting.asp?play_file=19161_164607

    When your soldier comes back home
    You will be happy
    You want things to be like they were before
    But your soldier has been forged through trial by fire
    After all he lived through war
    Be patient when you see he’s not the same
    Your soldier’s changed
    When your soldier comes back home
    He will be different
    He’ll think about those that gave their lives
    He might be feelin guilty that he’s living
    He will keep that guilt inside
    It may show sometimes in things he’ll say and do
    Please help him through
    Chorus:
    War is never over
    For the ones who fought side by side
    They are bruised and battered
    The deepest wounds don’t show outside
    You may think that time will heal
    There is no healing
    The days are like sandbags around him
    But ghosts will not be held back by a wall
    Bad memories always win
    If you love him you must be the one who stays
    You must be strong
    When your soldier comes back home
    Chorus:
    War is never over
    For the ones who fought side by side
    They are bruised and battered
    The deepest wounds don’t show outside

    Story Behind the Song

    Veterans often come home from war to family members
    who expect them to pick up where they left off. For the
    combat vet, that is not always possible. I wrote this song
    in the hope that it will help families and friends of returning
    veterans embrace them with understanding.
    The song is currently #2 on Neil Young's website.
    http://www.neilyoung.com/lwwtoday/index.html

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    SIR! NO SIR!
    I urge everyone to get a copy of "Sir! No Sir!" at:
    http://www.sirnosir.com/
    It is an extremely informative and powerful film
    of utmost importance today. I was a participant
    in the anti-Vietnam war movement. What a
    powerful thing it was to see troops in uniform
    leading the march against the war! If you would
    like to read more here are two very good
    publications:

    Out Now!: A Participant's Account of the Movement
    in the United States Against the Vietnam War
    by Fred Halstead (Hardcover - Jun 1978)

    and:

    GIs speak out against the war;: The case of the
    Ft. Jackson 8; by Fred Halstead (Unknown Binding - 1970).

    Both available at:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/search/103-1123166-0136605?search-alias=books&rank=+availability,-proj-total-margin&field-author=Fred%20Halstead

    In solidarity,

    Bonnie Weinstein

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    Endorse the following petition:
    Don't Let Idaho Kill Endangered Wolves
    Target: Fish and Wildlife Service
    Sponsor: Defenders of Wildlife
    http://www.thepetitionsite.com/takeaction/664280276?z00m=99090&z00m=99090<l=1155834550

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

    SUPPORT "TAKING AIM":
    KPFA RADIO is considering airing the very informative program,
    "Taking Aim," produced by Ralph Schoenman and Mya Shone. We
    encourage everyone who has heard and appreciated this show
    to contact KPFA's Tracy Rosenberg and let her know you want the
    show to air:

    tracyrose@gmail.com

    Here's my letter:

    In solidarity,
    Bonnie Weinstein

    Dear Tracy,

    The program, "Taking Aim", with Ralph Schoenman and Mya Shone
    is a one-of-a-kind, powerfully informative program. Schoenman
    and Shone are leading experts in the history of the Middle East with
    years of experience living in the region. They are both important
    reporters for news that the mainstream media tries to hide or
    distort. "Taking Aim" would be a very valuable addition to the fine
    programing already on KPFA.

    More importantly, the information disseminating from this program
    and the serious work of Schoenman and Shone, provide invaluable facts
    that KPFA listeners need to hear--truth that is told nowhere else.

    The more in-depth information that is made available to the general
    public--your listeners--from "Taking Aim" will help to further
    educate your well-informed audience.

    I strongly urge you to add this program to your broadcasts.

    In my opinion, "Taking Aim" and the work of Schoenman and Shone
    compares well with Amy Goodman's "Democracy Now." I wish it could
    be on every day.

    Sincerely,

    Bonnie Weinstein, Bay Area United Against War
    www.bauaw.org

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

    END ALL U.S. AID TO ISRAEL!
    Stop funding Israel's war against Palestine
    Complete the form at the website listed below with your information.
    Personalize the message text on the right with
    your own words, if you wish.
    Click the Next Step button to send your letter
    to these decision makers:
    President George W. Bush
    Vice President Richard 'Dick' B. Cheney
    Your Senators
    Your Representative
    Go here to register your outrage:
    https://secure2.convio.net/pep/site/Advocacy?
    JServSessionIdr003=cga2p2o6x1.app2a&cmd=display&page=UserAction&id=177

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

    Idriss Stelley Foundation is in critical financial crisis, please help !
    ISF is in critical financial crisis, and might be forced to close
    its doors in a couple of months due to lack of funds to cover
    DSL, SBC and utilities, which is a disaster for our numerous
    clients, since the are the only CBO providing direct services
    to Victims (as well as extended failies) of police misconduct
    for the whole city of SF. Any donation, big or small will help
    us stay alive until we obtain our 501-c3 nonprofit Federal
    Status! Checks can me made out to
    ISF, ( 4921 3rd St , SF CA 94124 ). Please consider to volunteer
    or apply for internship to help covering our 24HR Crisis line,
    provide one on one couseling and co facilitate our support
    groups, M.C a show on SF Village Voice, insure a 2hr block
    of time at ISF, moderate one of our 26 websites for ISF clients !
    http://mysite.verizon.net/vzeo9ewi/idrissstelleyfoundation/
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/isf23/
    Report Police Brutality
    24HR Bilingual hotline
    (415) 595-8251
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Justice4Asa/

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

    Update on the petition to save Bayview Hunters Point:
    No more Fillmore!
    Editorial by Willie Ratcliff,
    http://www.sfbayview.com/060706/signthepetition060706.shtml

    In a message dated 9/2/06 11:25:12 AM, editor@sfbayview.com writes:
    Redevelopment referendum update: Claiming the victory: Mirroring
    New Orleans’ protests against ethnic cleansing, a second line-style
    funeral procession arrived at San Francisco City Hall Wednesday,
    the band playing “St. James Infirmary,” the hearse containing
    a coffin marked “Redevelopment RIP” to mark the death of the
    Bayview Hunters Point Redevelopment Plan. During a rally and
    press conference on the steps of City Hall, all the leading
    candidates for District 10 Supervisor opposing incumbent
    Sophie Maxwell – Marie Harrison, Espanola Jackson and Charlie
    Walker – spoke out strongly against the Plan.

    On Aug. 30, the deadline for the referendum petition drive
    against the Plan to turn in the required 20,972 signatures
    of San Francisco voters, petition drive supporters are turning
    in 32,820 signatures, demonstrating the overwhelming
    opposition to the Plan in Bayview Hunters Point and throughout
    the City. Within 30 days, City Hall will validate the signatures,
    then send the referendum to the Board of Supervisors
    for reconsideration, where the Plan will either be killed
    or placed on the ballot in November 2007. At that point,
    the Chronicle wrote in its lead editorial Wednesday, “San
    Francisco voters may well choose to side with them
    (the referendum organizers).” The mood at the rally was
    jubilant, with everyone dancing as the band played, “When
    the Saints Go Marching In” to City Hall for a new era
    of Black and Brown Power!

    Website update: What's happening with SFBayView?
    The Bay View’s website, www.sfbayview.com
    http://www.sfbayview.com/
    Give us a call at
    (415) 671-0789 or an email at editor@sfbayview.com.
    Now for what we’re up against: The Bay View newspaper
    has been too broke to help finance the petition campaign,
    very few contributions have come in and bills are overdue.
    So the petition drive needs financial help … and so does
    the Bay View newspaper, desperately.
    The Bay View has faced many crises in the over 14 years
    we’ve published it – eviction, death threats, never enough
    money – yet readers have always come through, enabling
    us to bounce back, tackle bigger issues and fight harder
    than ever. We hate to beg, but WE NEED YOU NOW.
    WITHOUT AN IMMEDIATE AND SUBSTANTIAL LOAN, THE
    BAY VIEW CANNOT CONTINUE. To discuss a loan, which
    we can amply collateralize, please call us at (415) 671-0789;
    we’re here 24/7. Tax-deductible contributions to our
    nonprofit arm, the Hurricane Relief Information Network,
    are also a big help to save the hopes and the lives
    of survivors who depend on the Bay View for news and resources.

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

    Appeal for funds:
    Dahr Jamail's Iraq Dispatches
    Visit the Dahr Jamail Iraq website http://dahrjamailiraq.com
    Request for Support
    Dahr Jamail will soon return to the Middle East to continue his
    independent reporting. As usual, reporting independently is a costly
    enterprise; for example, an average hotel room is $50, a fixer runs $50
    per day, and phone/food average $25 per day. Dahr will report from the
    Middle East for one month, and thus needs to raise $5,750 in order to
    cover his plane ticket and daily operating expenses.
    A rare opportunity has arisen for Dahr to cover several stories
    regarding the occupation of Iraq, as well as U.S. policy in the region,
    which have been entirely absent from mainstream media.
    With the need for independent, unfiltered information greater than ever,
    your financial support is deeply appreciated. Without donations from
    readers, ongoing independent reports from Dahr are simply not possible.
    All donations go directly towards covering Dahr's on the ground
    operating expenses.
    (c)2006 Dahr Jamail.

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

    New Flash Film
    From Young Ava Over At 'Peace Takes Courage'
    http://www.peacetakescourage.com/page-blog.htm
    http://letter.cf.huffingtonpost.com/

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

    Save the Lebanese Civilians Petition
    http://epetitions.net/julywar/index.php
    http://donations.tayyar.org/
    To The Concerned Citizen of The World:
    http://epetitions.net/julywar/index.php

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

    Legal update on Mumia Abu-Jamal’s case
    Excerpts from a letter written by Robert R. Bryan, the lead attorney
    for death row political prisoner, Mumia Abu-Jamal.
    ...On July 20, 2006, we filed the Brief of Appellee and Cross
    Appellant, Mumia Abu-Jamal, in the U.S. Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit, Philadelphia.
    http://www.workers.org/2006/us/mumia-0810/

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

    Today in Palestine!
    For up to date information on Israeli's brutal attack on
    human rights and freedom in Palestine and Lebanon go to:
    http://www.theheadlines.org

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

    For a great car magnet--a black ribbon with the words, "Bring
    the troops home now!" written in red, and it also comes in a
    lapel pin!--go to:
    (Put out by A.N.S.W.E.R.)
    https://secure2.convio.net/pep/site/Ecommerce?store_id=1621

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

    THE HIDDEN HISTORY OF ZIONISM
    BY RALPH SCHOENMAN
    Essential reading for understanding the development of Zionism
    and Israel in the service of British and USA imperialism.
    The full text of the book can be found for free at:
    http://www.marxists.de/middleast/schoenman/

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

    Note: Thanks to Dr. Mazin Qumsiyeh for sharing this information.
    qumsi001@hotmail.com writes:

    "My awareness of the essential nature of Judaism resists the idea of a
    Jewish state with borders, an army, and a measure of temporal power, no
    matter how modest. I am afraid of the inner damage Judaism will sustain -
    especially from the development of a narrow nationalism within our own
    ranks, against which we have already had to fight strongly, even without a
    Jewish state." Albert Einstein
    http://globalwebpost.com/farooqm/writings/other/einstein.htm

    "Among the most disturbing political phenomena of our time is the
    emergence in the newly created state of Israel of the "Freedom Party"
    (Tnuat Haherut, precursor to the Likud-MQ), a political party closely
    akin in its organization, methods, political philosophy and social
    appeal to the Nazi and Fascist parties. It was formed out of the
    membership and following of the former Irgun Zvai Leumi,
    a terrorist, right-wing, chauvinist organization in Palestine.
    The current visit of Menahem Begin, leader of
    this party to the United States is obviously calculated to give the
    impression of American support for his party in the coming Israeli
    elections, and to cement political ties with conservative Zionist elements
    in the United States." From a letter signed by prominent Jews including
    Einstein published in the NY Times Dec. 2, 1948
    (http://www.qumsiyeh.org/einsteinetalonbegin/)

    When approached to sign a petition to condemn the Arab revolt
    in Palestine and to support the settlement of Jews Sigmund
    Freud wrote in response: "I cannot do as you wish. I am unable
    to overcome my aversion to burdening the public with my name,
    and even the present critical time does not seem to me to warrant
    it. Whoever wants to influence the masses must give them
    something rousing and inflammatory and my sober judgment
    of Zionism does not permit this. I concede with sorrow that
    the baseless fanaticism of our people is in part to be blamed
    for the awakening of Arab distrust. I can raise no sympathy
    at all for the misdirected piety which transforms a piece
    of a Herodian wall into a national relic, thereby offending the feelings of
    the natives. Now judge for yourself whether I, with such
    a critical point of view, am the right person to come forward as the
    solace of a people deluded by unjustified hope."
    Freud's Letter to Dr. Chaim Koffler Keren HaYassod, Vienna: 26 February
    1930; posted at the Freud Institute in UK website:
    http://www.freud.org.uk./arab-israeli.html

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

    JOIN THE LYNNE STEWAR DEFENSE
    For those of you who don't know who Lynne Stewart is, go to
    www.lynnestewart.org and get acquainted with Lynne and her
    cause. Lynne is a criminal defense attorney who is being persecuted
    for representing people charged with heinous crimes. It is a bedrock
    of our legal system that every criminal defendant has a right to a
    lawyer. Persecuting Lynne is an attempt to terrorize and intimidate
    all criminal defense attorneys in this country so they will stop
    representing unpopular people. If this happens, the fascist takeover
    of this nation will be complete. We urge you all to go the website,
    familiarize yourselves with Lynne and her battle for justice
    www.lynnestewart.org

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

    NATIONAL COMMITTEE TO FREE THE CUBAN FIVE
    Comité Nacional por la Libertad de los Cinco Cubanos
    Who are the Cuban Five?
    The Cuban Five are five Cuban men who are in U.S. prison, serving
    four life sentences and 75 years collectively, after being wrongly
    convicted in U.S. federal court in Miami, on June 8, 2001.
    They are Gerardo Hernández, Ramón Labañino, Antonio Guerrero,
    Fernando González and René González.
    The Five were falsely accused by the U.S. government of committing
    espionage conspiracy against the United States, and other related
    charges.
    But the Five pointed out vigorously in their defense that they were
    involved in monitoring the actions of Miami-based terrorist groups,
    in order to prevent terrorist attacks on their country of Cuba.
    The Five’s actions were never directed at the U.S. government.
    They never harmed anyone nor ever possessed nor used any
    weapons while in the United States.
    The Cuban Five’s mission was to stop terrorism
    For more than 40 years, anti-Cuba terrorist organizations based
    in Miami have engaged in countless terrorist activities against
    Cuba, and against anyone who advocates a normalization
    of relations between the U.S. and Cuba. More than 3,000 Cubans
    have died as a result of these terrorists’ attacks.

    Gerardo
    Hernández
    2 Life Sentences

    Antonio
    Guerrero
    Life Sentence

    Ramon
    Labañino
    Life Sentence

    Fernando
    González
    19 Years

    René
    González
    15 Years

    Free The Cuban Five Held Unjustly In The U.S.!
    http://www.freethefive.org/

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

    Eyewitness Account from Oaxaca
    A website is now being circulated that has up-to-date info
    and video that can be downloaded of the police action and
    developments in Oaxaca. For those who have not seen it
    elsewhere, the website is:
    www.mexico.indymedia.org/oaxaca
    http://www.mexico.indymedia.org/oaxaca

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

    REMINDER TO ALL GROUPS: BE SURE AND POST ALL ACTIONS AND
    EVENTS TO WWW.INDYBAY.ORG TO REACH THE MOST PEOPLE
    AGAINST THE WAR IN THE BAY AREA!
    http://www.indybay.org

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

    Iraq Body Count
    For current totals, see our database page.
    http://www.iraqbodycount.net/press/pr13.php

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

    The Cost of War
    [Over three-hundred-billion so far...bw]
    http://nationalpriorities.org/index.php?option=com_wrapper&Itemid=182

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

    "The Democrats always promise to help workers, and the don't!
    The Republicans always promise to help business, and the do!"
    - Mort Sahl

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*--------
    "It's better to die on your feet than to live on your knees."
    - Emilano Zapata
    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*--------

    Join the Campaign to
    Shut Down the Guantanamo Torture Center
    Go to:
    http://www.shutitdown.org/
    to send a letter to Congress and the White House:
    Shut Down Guantanamo and all torture centers and prisons.
    A.N.S.W.E.R. Coalition
    Act Now to Stop War & End Racism
    http://www.ANSWERcoalition.org http://www.actionsf.org
    sf@internationalanswer.org
    2489 Mission St. Rm. 24
    San Francisco: 415-821-6545

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

    Great Counter-Recruitment Website
    http://notyoursoldier.org/article.php?list=type&type=14

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

    DEFEND IMMIGRANT RIGHTS AND
    CIVIL RIGHTS!

    Last summer the U.S. Border Patrol arrested Shanti Sellz and
    Daniel Strauss, both 23-year-old volunteers assisting immigrants
    on the border, for medically evacuating 3 people in critical
    condition from the Arizona desert.

    Criminalization for aiding undocumented immigrants already
    exists on the books in the state of Arizona. Daniel and Shanti
    are targeted to be its first victims. Their arrest and subsequent
    prosecution for providing humanitarian aid could result in
    a 15-year prison sentence. Any Congressional compromise
    with the Sensenbrenner bill (HR 4437) may include these
    harmful criminalization provisions. Fight back NOW!

    Help stop the criminalization of undocumented immigrants
    and those who support them!

    For more information call 415-821- 9683.
    For information on the Daniel and Shanti Defense Campaign,
    visit www.nomoredeaths.org.

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

    FYI
    According to "Minimum Wage History" at
    http://oregonstate.edu/instruct/anth484/minwage.html "

    "Calculated in real 2005 dollars, the 1968 minimum wage was the
    highest at $9.12. "The 8 dollar per hour Whole Foods employees
    are being paid $1.12 less than the 1968 minimum wage.

    "A federal minimum wage was first set in 1938. The graph shows
    both nominal (red) and real (blue) minimum wage values. Nominal
    values range from 25 cents per hour in 1938 to the current $5.15/hr.
    The greatest percentage jump in the minimum wage was in 1950,
    when it nearly doubled. The graph adjusts these wages to 2005
    dollars (blue line) to show the real value of the minimum wage.
    Calculated in real 2005 dollars, the 1968 minimum wage was the
    highest at $9.12. Note how the real dollar minimum wage rises and
    falls. This is because it gets periodically adjusted by Congress.
    The period 1997-2006, is the longest period during which the
    minimum wage has not been adjusted. States have departed from
    the federal minimum wage. Washington has the highest minimum
    wage in the country at $7.63 as of January 1, 2006. Oregon is next
    at $7.50. Cities, too, have set minimum wages. Santa Fe, New
    Mexico has a minimum wage of $9.50, which is more than double
    the state minimum wage at $4.35."

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

    NO BORDERS! NO WALLS! NO FENCES! GENERAL AMNESTY FOR ALL!
    OUR HOMELAND IS WHERE WE LIVE!

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

    REPEAL THE NO CHILD LEFT BEHIND ACT IN 2007!
    Check out: 10 EXCELLENT REASONS NOT TO JOIN THE MILITARY
    http://www.10reasonsbook.com/
    Public Law print of PL 107-110, the No Child Left Behind
    Act of 2001 [1.8 MB]
    http://www.ed.gov/policy/elsec/leg/esea02/index.html
    Also, the law is up before Congress again in 2007.
    See this article from USA Today:
    Bipartisan panel to study No Child Left Behind
    By Greg Toppo, USA TODAY
    February 13, 2006
    http://www.usatoday.com/news/education/2006-02-13-education-panel_x.htm

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

    The Declaration of Independence of the Thirteen Colonies
    http://www.law.indiana.edu/uslawdocs/declaration.html
    http://www.law.ou.edu/hist/decind.html
    http://www.usconstitution.net/declar.html
    http://www.indybay.org/news/2006/02/1805195.php

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

    Bill of Rights
    http://www.law.cornell.edu/constitution/constitution.billofrights.html
    http://www.indybay.org/news/2006/02/1805182.php

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*--------
    ARTICLES IN FULL:
    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*--------

    1) Many Entry-Level Workers Find a Rough Market
    By STEVEN GREENHOUSE
    September 4, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/04/us/04labor.html?_r=2&ref=us&oref=slogin&oref=slogin

    2) Fidel Castro Says He's Lost 41 Pounds
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Filed at 12:17 p.m. ET
    September 5, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/world/AP-Cuba-Castro.html

    3) A Lone Man’s Stunt Raises Broader Issues
    By KATIE ZEZIMA
    September 5, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/05/us/05maine.html?ref=us

    4) Rallies Sound the Drumbeat on Immigration
    By SHIA KAPOS and PAUL GIBLIN
    September 5, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/05/washington/05rally.html

    5) Rep. John Murtha
    To Surge or Not To Surge [Murtha suggests the Draft...bw]
    September 5, 2006
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rep-john-murtha/to-surge-or-not-to-surge_b_28742.html

    6) Lawyers Warn Against Evidence Limits
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Filed at 12:27 p.m. ET
    September 7, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/us/AP-Detainees-Legislation.html?hp&ex=1157688000&en=84f5cb98e3cfc807&ei=5094&partner=homepage

    7) U.S. Losing Control Fast
    Inter Press Service
    Dahr Jamail and Ali Al-Fadhily
    Dahr Jamail's Iraq Dispatches
    Visit the Dahr Jamail Iraq website
    http://dahrjamailiraq.com
    Website by http://jeffpflueger.com

    8) Immigration Overhaul Takes a Back Seat
    as Campaign Season Begins
    By RACHEL L. SWARNS
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/08/us/politics/08immig.html

    9) Migrant Workers to Get Overtime for Storm Cleanup, Ending Suit
    By LESLIE EATON
    September 8, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/08/us/08settle.html

    10) Wal-Mart Finds an Ally in Conservatives
    By MICHAEL BARBARO and STEPHANIE STROM
    September 8, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/08/business/08walmart.html?ref=business

    11) U.A.W. Head Rules Out Concessions
    By NICK BUNKLEY
    September 8, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/08/business/08auto.html?ref=business

    12) In the Defense of Basic Rights, an Official Led a City’s Defiance
    By WILLIAM YARDLEY
    September 8, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/08/us/08liberties.html?hp&ex=1157774400&en=64ff183179a513b9&ei=5094&partner=homepage

    13) The Cuban revolution and formal logic
    By Manuel Alberto Ramy
    maprogre@gmail.com
    http://www.progresoweekly.com/index.php?progreso=Ramy

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

    1) Many Entry-Level Workers Find a Rough Market
    By STEVEN GREENHOUSE
    September 4, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/04/us/04labor.html?_r=2&ref=us&oref=slogin&oref=slogin

    This Labor Day, the 45 million young people in the nation’s work
    force face a choppy job market in which entry-level wages have often
    trailed inflation, making it hard for many to cope with high housing
    costs and rising college debt loads.

    Entry-level wages for college and high school graduates fell by more
    than 4 percent from 2001 to 2005, after factoring in inflation,
    according to an analysis of Labor Department data by the Economic
    Policy Institute. In addition, the percentage of college graduates
    receiving health and pension benefits in their entry-level jobs has
    dropped sharply.

    Some labor experts say wage stagnation and the sharp increase
    in housing costs over the past decade have delayed workers ages
    20 to 35 from buying their first homes.

    “People are getting married later, they’re having children later,
    and they’re buying houses later,” said Cecilia E. Rouse, an economist
    at Princeton University and a co-editor of a forthcoming book
    on the economics of early adulthood. “There’s been a lengthening
    of the transition to adulthood, and it is very possible that what
    has happened in the economy is leading to some of these changes.”

    Census Bureau data released last week underlined the difficulties
    for young workers, showing that median income for families with
    at least one parent age 25 to 34 fell $3,009 from 2000 to 2005,
    sliding to $48,405, a 5.9 percent drop, after having jumped
    12 percent in the late 1990’s.

    Worsening the financial crunch, far more college graduates are
    borrowing to pay for their education, and the amount borrowed
    has jumped by more than 50 percent in recent years, largely
    because of soaring tuition.

    In 2004, 50 percent of graduating seniors borrowed some
    money for college, with their debt load averaging $19,000,
    Dr. Rouse said. That was a sharp increase from 1993, when
    35 percent of seniors borrowed for college and their debt
    averaged $12,500, in today’s dollars.

    Even though the economy has grown strongly in recent years,
    wages for young workers, especially college graduates, have
    been depressed by several factors, including the end of the
    high-tech boom and the trend of sending jobs overseas. From
    2001 to 2005, entry-level wages for male college graduates
    fell by 7.3 percent, to $19.72 an hour, while wages for female
    graduates declined 3.5 percent, to $17.08, according to the
    Economic Policy Institute, a liberal research group.

    “In a weak labor market, younger workers do the worst,” said
    Lawrence Mishel, the institute’s president. “Young workers are
    on the cutting edge of experiencing all the changes in the economy.”

    Lawrence F. Katz, a labor economist at Harvard, said plenty of
    slack remained in the job market for young workers.

    The percentage of young adults who are working has dropped
    since 2000 largely because many have grown discouraged and
    stopped looking for work. This has happened even though the
    unemployment rate, which counts only people looking for work,
    has fallen to 4.4 percent for those ages 25 to 34. It is 8.2 percent
    for workers ages 20 to 24.

    “Any way you slice the data, the labor market has been pretty
    weak the past five years,” Dr. Katz said. “But hotshot young
    people coming out of top universities have done fine, just like
    top-notch executives have.”

    In a steep drop over a short time, 64 percent of college graduates
    received health coverage in entry-level jobs in 2005, down from
    71 percent five years earlier. As employers grapple with fast-rising
    health costs, many companies have reduced health coverage,
    with those cutbacks sharpest among young workers.

    Partly because of the decline in manufacturing jobs that were
    a ticket to middle-class life, just one-third of workers with high
    school diplomas receive health coverage in entry-level jobs,
    down from two-thirds in 1979.

    After an extensive job search, Katey Rich, who graduated from
    Wesleyan University in June, landed a part-time, $14-an-hour
    job in Manhattan as an editorial assistant at Film Journal International.
    With one-bedroom apartments often renting for $2,000 a month,
    Ms. Rich is looking to share an apartment but is staying with
    a friend’s parents for now. And while she is excited about her
    new job, she said she was concerned that it did not come with
    health insurance.

    “I’ll have to fend for myself,” said Ms. Rich, who is from Aiken,
    S.C. “I have parents who will back me up if things get really rough.”

    Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Economy.com, said it was
    surprising how deeply young workers were going into debt
    to maintain the living standards they want.

    The nation’s personal savings sank below zero last year for the
    first time since the Depression, meaning Americans spent more
    than they earned. But for households under 35, the saving rate
    has plunged to minus 16 percent, which means they are spending
    16 percent more than they are earning.

    “The post-boomer generation feels very cavalier about saving,”
    Mr. Zandi said. “They’ve been very aggressively dis-saving and
    have borrowed significantly.”

    John Arnold, 28, a materials-handling specialist at a Caterpillar
    factory in Morton, Ill., said he was having a hard time making
    ends meet. At his factory, Caterpillar has pressured the union
    to accept a two-tier contract in which newer workers like him
    will earn a maximum of $13.26 an hour — $27,000 a year for
    a full-time worker — no matter how long they work. For longtime
    Caterpillar workers in the upper tier, the wage ceiling is often
    $20 or more an hour.

    “A few people I work with are living at home with their parents;
    some are even on food stamps,” said Mr. Arnold, a Caterpillar
    worker for seven years. “I was hoping to buy a house this year,
    but there’s just no way I can swing it.” With just a high school
    diploma, he said it was hard to find jobs that paid more.

    For men with high school diplomas, entry-level pay fell by
    3.3 percent, to $10.93, from 2001 to 2005, according to the
    Economic Policy Institute. For female high school graduates,
    entry-level pay fell by 4.9 percent, to $9.08 an hour.

    Labor Department officials voiced optimism for young workers,
    noting that the Bureau of Labor Statistics had projected that
    18.9 million net new jobs would be created by 2014.

    “The future is bright for young people because the opportunities
    are out there,” said Mason Bishop, deputy assistant labor secretary
    for employment and training. “We want to help them get access
    to the postsecondary education that enables them to take
    advantage of the opportunities.”

    The wage gap between college-educated and high-school-educated
    workers has widened greatly, with college graduates earning
    45 percent more than high school graduates, up from 23 percent
    in 1979.

    Professor Rouse of Princeton said a college degree added $402,000
    to a graduate’s lifetime earnings.

    Alex Shayevsky, who graduated from New York University last year,
    said majoring in business had paid off. Mr. Shayevsky got a job in
    the bond department of a major investment bank in New York. He
    earns $65,000, not including a bonus that could be at least half his salary.

    “Getting my degree was very valuable,” said Mr. Shayevsky, a 23-year-
    old from Buffalo Grove, Ill.

    Martin Regalia, chief economist for the United States Chamber of
    Commerce, said young workers would be helped greatly if strong
    economic growth continued and the labor market tightened further,
    as happened in the late 1990’s.

    Sheldon H. Danziger, a professor of public policy at the University
    of Michigan, sees a bifurcated labor market for young workers.

    “You’re much better off as a young worker today if you’re the child
    of the well-to-do and you get a good education,” Professor Danziger
    said, “and you’re much worse off if you’re a child of a blue-collar worker
    and you don’t go to college. There’s increasing inequality among young
    people just as there is increasing inequality among their parents.”

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

    2) Fidel Castro Says He's Lost 41 Pounds
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Filed at 12:17 p.m. ET
    September 5, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/world/AP-Cuba-Castro.html

    HAVANA (AP) -- Ailing Cuban leader Fidel Castro said in a statement
    released Tuesday that he's lost more than 41 pounds in more than
    a month since his intestinal surgery, but that the ''most critical
    moment'' is already behind him.

    ''Today I am recovering at a satisfactory rhythm,'' said the statement
    published in the Communist Party daily Granma, which was
    accompanied by new photographs of a gaunt-looking Castro.

    The 80-year-old Castro is easily over 6 feet tall and in recent
    years has been on the thin side. He looked especially thin
    at his last public appearance before he fell ill, at a July 26
    speech in eastern Cuba marking the start of his revolution.

    He said he just recently had the last stitches from his surgery
    removed, following 34 days of convalescence. ''I can affirm
    that the most critical moment has been left behind,'' his
    statement said.

    It was accompanied by seven different photographs of Castro
    during his convalescence, several of them repeated on Granma
    newspaper's Web site in larger versions. In all of them, Castro
    is seated and wearing either short-sleeved navy blue
    or light-blue pajamas. In several of the photos, he
    is reading or writing.

    Most of the pictures show him from the waist up, although
    one shows his whole body as he sits in a rocking chair,
    wearing slippers and reading.

    In another, Castro holds up a broadsheet proof of a book
    written from a series of interviews he gave to French journalist
    Ignacio Ramonet, which he said he was reviewing during
    his recovery.

    ''But because of that, I have not failed to strictly follow my
    duties as a disciplined patient,'' he added.

    ''In the coming days, I will be receiving distinguished visitors,''
    Castro said, apparently referring to some of the heads of state
    and government who will be traveling to the summit
    of nonaligned nations next week.

    The government has not announced whether Castro,
    or his younger brother Raul -- who is serving as Cuba's
    provisional president during the elder sibling's recovery
    -- will represent the country during the Sept. 11-16 gathering.

    ''This doesn't mean that every activity will be immediately
    accompanied by video or photographic images, although
    news will be provided of every one,'' the statement said.

    ''All of us must understand that it is not convenient to
    systematically offer information, nor give out images
    of my health situation,'' Castro added. ''All of us must
    also understand realistically that the complete recovery
    time, whether we like it or not, will be prolonged.

    ''At this moment I am not in a hurry, and no one should
    be in a hurry. The country is marching and moving
    ahead,'' he said.

    Castro said July 31 that he had undergone an emergency
    intestinal operation and was temporarily ceding his
    powers as head of the government and the Communist
    Party to his 75-year-old brother, Raul, the defense minister.

    The nature of his surgery and his specific ailment have
    been treated as a state secret. It is the first time
    in 47 years of rule that Castro has stepped aside, even
    temporarily.

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

    3) A Lone Man’s Stunt Raises Broader Issues
    By KATIE ZEZIMA
    September 5, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/05/us/05maine.html?ref=us

    LEWISTON, Me. — On a hot July night, a few dozen Somali men
    were kneeling shoulder to shoulder in prayer at a storefront mosque
    here when the door opened and the frozen head of a pig, an animal
    considered unclean in Islam, rolled across the floor.

    Men fled in fear. A child fainted. Some called the police and ran
    after the person who had rolled the head in. A suspect, Brent
    Matthews, was quickly apprehended and charged with desecrating
    a place of worship. Mr. Matthews, 33, said that the incident was
    a prank and that he did not know the significance of a pig’s head.

    Now, weeks later, Somali leaders say the incident has left a scar
    on their community of about 3,000 immigrants.

    While they admit the act was the work of one man, it has
    heightened simmering tensions in this overwhelmingly white,
    working-class city of 35,000, where Somali refugees started
    flocking about five years ago, after first settling in more urban
    areas of the United States. Many said they came here because
    housing was inexpensive and Lewiston seemed a safe place
    to raise their families.

    While much of Lewiston has been welcoming, some Somalis
    here believe the head incident reveals an undercurrent of
    suspicion and lack of understanding about their culture.
    According to the Census Bureau, Maine is 96 percent white.

    “We’re not saying all of Lewiston is part of this,” said Imam
    Nuh Iman, leader of the mosque, the Lewiston-Auburn Islamic
    Center. “But this is the biggest impact you can have on a mosque,
    in the time of praying, to put in a pig’s head. It could have been
    a goat’s head, or a cow’s head. But it was a pig’s head.”

    Phil Nadeau, the assistant city administrator, believes the
    incident was isolated but underscored the growing pains
    this city — whose mills and shoe factories, now closed,
    welcomed French-Canadian workers a century ago —
    is now going through.

    “I think it’s a reflection of where we are right now. There’s
    a small group of people that will never accept this type of
    change in their community, ever,” said Mr. Nadeau, whose
    French-Canadian grandmother spoke only five words of English.
    “The second wave of non-English speakers to Lewiston is now
    the Somali population.”

    Hussein Ahmed, 31, said the mosque incident came as Somalis
    here felt that they had finally started to move on from a 2002
    open letter written by Laurier Raymond, then the mayor,
    which asked them to stop other Somalis from coming to
    the city. Mr. Raymond contended in his letter that the city
    was “maxed-out financially, physically and emotionally.”

    Somali leaders quickly condemned Mr. Raymond after the
    letter, saying he was “bent toward bigotry.” Mr. Raymond
    met with Somali leaders but did not apologize. Three months
    later, a white supremacist group held a rally in Lewiston but
    was overshadowed by a counter-rally that drew 4,500 people.

    The incident with the pig’s head brought a similar response.
    About 150 people, including Gov. John Baldacci, a Democrat,
    and leaders of other faiths, gathered at a park shortly after
    the incident to condemn it and to support the Somali community.

    “After we heard about what happened at the mosque, many
    of us in the local interfaith clergy group felt that an attack on
    anybody’s house of worship is an attack on all houses of worship,”
    said Rabbi Hillel Katzir of Temple Shalom Synagogue Center
    in nearby Auburn. “This is not O.K. This is not approved of
    by the majority of the community. He might think it’s funny,
    but the rest of us don’t, and it’s not acceptable.”

    Mr. Ahmed, who spoke at the rally, said it affirmed his trust
    in residents of Lewiston. “The message was clear: they don’t
    tolerate hate,” he said.

    Mr. Nadeau said that Somalis continued to flock to Lewiston,
    about 30 miles north of Portland, and that the city was struggling
    to find jobs for them. The city is also trying to educate residents
    about the Somali culture and Islam.

    “There’s still a kind of unknown element relative to people’s
    familiarity with their culture and religion that is still being felt,
    even to this day,” Mr. Nadeau said.

    Mr. Matthews’s lawyer, James Howaniec, said his client had
    intended to play a prank. Mr. Howaniec said Mr. Matthews got
    the head from a pig roast in June and had originally planned to
    use it for target practice. Mr. Matthews then decided to plant
    it outside the center, thinking it was simply a gathering place,
    the lawyer said.

    “He did not know it was a place of worship,” Mr. Howaniec said.
    “There’s certainly nothing in the exterior of the dilapidated
    storefront that would lead anyone to believe it was a place
    of worship. He is insistent that he did not know the significance
    of a pig’s head to the Muslim community.”

    Mr. Howaniec said that Mr. Matthews was trying to create
    a disruption at the center, but that it was not a crime.

    “It’s our position that while it was an act of stupidity, it did
    not rise to the level of any sort of crime, let alone a hate crime,”
    Mr. Howaniec said. “It’s clearly not something he’s proud of, but
    as an attorney looking at criminal statutes, I don’t think it rises
    to the level of desecration of a place of worship.”

    Judge Ellen Gorman of Androscoggin County Superior Court on
    Aug. 31. granted the state’s request for a temporary injunction,
    ordering Mr. Matthews to stay 150 feet from the mosque.

    At the hearing Mr. Matthews said that he had planned to put the
    head outside “where the dark people congregate” as a joke, and
    that it had slipped from his hand and rolled inside. He said he
    felt bad about the incident and wished he “could turn back time.”

    Mr. Matthews will be indicted on criminal charges Sept. 6, and
    Mr. Howaniec said he was expecting a jury trial. If convicted,
    Mr. Matthews could face up to a year in jail on the desecration
    charge and up to $5,000 in fines.

    Imam Iman said he wanted his worshippers to feel comfortable
    where they lived.

    “Most people feel welcome,” the imam said, “but after these
    incidents, not at all. Mainers have to understand that this
    is the new Maine.”

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

    4) Rallies Sound the Drumbeat on Immigration
    By SHIA KAPOS and PAUL GIBLIN
    September 5, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/05/washington/05rally.html

    BATAVIA, Ill., Sept. 4 — Spirited groups of immigrant rights
    supporters rallied in Illinois and Arizona on Monday in marches
    intended to keep the drumbeat going for changes in immigration law.

    In both places, counterdemonstrators heckled from the sidelines
    and called on the federal government to enforce its border laws.

    Organizers of a rally in Phoenix, outside Arizona’s copper-domed
    Capitol, estimated their numbers at 4,000, though the police
    said the event drew about 1,000 people.

    In Batavia, a flag-waving crowd, estimated by the police at about
    2,500, chanted “Sí, se puede” — “Yes, we can” — and converged
    on the district office of Speaker J. Dennis Hastert. In a counterrally
    sponsored by the Chicago Minuteman Project, some 200 men,
    women and a few children jeered the larger crowd.

    Neither Mr. Hastert nor his staff was on hand, and he could not
    be reached for comment.

    Organizers hoped to pressure Mr. Hastert to push legislation
    favorable to immigrants through Congress.

    “We’re here because we need to keep this issue alive,” said
    Jorge Mujica, 50, a Mexican immigrant who helped organize
    the rally and who lives in Berwyn, Ill.

    “We want to show that we didn’t disappear after May 1,” Mr. Mujica
    said, referring to the hundreds of thousands who demonstrated
    nationwide that day on the issue. “We’re still marching.
    We’re not going away.”

    Alfredo Gutierrez, at the rally in Phoenix, said that he was
    disappointed it had not attracted more marchers but that he
    thought the debate had changed in recent months. Immigrant
    rights activists who were initially so optimistic have begun
    to lose hope, he said.

    “That feeling that something would be accomplished has
    diminished almost daily with every report of every negative
    thing that goes on with Congress,” Mr. Gutierrez said.

    The Arizona chapter of the Association of Community
    Organizations for Reform Now set up three tents, at which
    volunteers registered people to vote and distributed postcards
    urging members of Arizona’s Congressional delegation
    to support a path for citizenship for illegal immigrants.
    Counterprotesters gathered behind the main stage and
    shouted at the crowd, but security personnel and the police
    generally kept the sides apart.

    Fran Garrett, a volunteer with the anti-immigration group
    United for a Sovereign America, based in Phoenix, said she
    was fed up with the authorities who refused to arrest and
    deport illegal immigrants.

    “They try to get the message out that they’re here to do jobs
    and all that,” Ms. Garrett said. “That’s not true. They are here
    to take over eight states of the United States, and they are
    going to do it by sheer numbers alone, when they get
    enough people where they are the majority in a state.”

    In Batavia, 30 Chinese-Americans joined the mostly Latino
    crowd. One of them, Man Li Wu, said through an interpreter
    that she had a daughter in China who had tried for eight
    years to enter the United States.

    “I’m 70 and I don’t know how long I’ll be able to wait,” she
    said. “I want to see my grandchildren.” Members of the
    Chicago Minutemen say that living in the United States
    is a privilege and should not be an easy process.

    “Immigration laws aren’t broken,” said Evert Evertsen, 61,
    from Harvard, Ill. “The problem is they’re just not being enforced.”

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

    5) Rep. John Murtha
    To Surge or Not To Surge [Murtha suggests the Draft...bw]
    September 5, 2006
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rep-john-murtha/to-surge-or-not-to-surge_b_28742.html

    The President, Vice President, Secretaries of Defense and State
    have been blitzing the media lately in attempts to shore up
    support for the War in Iraq. They assert that today's wars must
    be fought with the same fervor and intensity as when we fought
    Nazism during WWII and then Communism until its celebrated fall.

    While an overwhelming majority of Americans believe that
    terrorism is a significant threat worth fighting against, the
    Bush Administration attempts to confuse the Iraq War with
    the larger war on terrorism and continues to fight a war
    of rhetoric and political slogans instead of one of action.

    When several military experts called for the addition of
    hundreds of thousands of troops early in the Iraq War, the
    Bush Administration rejected the call, and instead chose
    to fight with a minimal force. And now, when our troops have
    been deployed over and over again; when almost all of our
    combat units at our bases at home are at the lowest state
    of combat readiness; and with this Administration' s continued
    insistence to stay a failed course; it is now more obvious than
    ever that we can not sustain this war on its current course
    and we must change direction.

    The burden of the Iraq War has fallen squarely on our
    all-volunteer military and their families. They have performed
    remarkably well, particularly in light of the unclear and ever-
    changing mission dictated to them by Pentagon civilians
    of the Bush Administration. But they are overstretched and
    overextended. They deserve fresh reinforcements so that
    they can return home to rebuild their units, their psyche
    and their family and community relationships.

    While the Administration stresses that we are a country
    at war, they refuse to spread the burden proportionately.
    Instead, they pursue tax incentives for the rich, run up our
    federal deficit, and spend astronomical sums in Iraq with
    little or no control over wasteful and fraudulent spending.
    This is not the picture of a country at war. Consider the
    following:

    The current war in Iraq has lasted longer than the Korean
    War, World War I and World War II in Europe. This war is the
    first protracted conflict in modern times in which our nation
    has not utilized a draft for additional support. If the President
    is genuinely serious in his comparison with communism and
    fascism, perhaps he should reconsider a call to reinstate the
    draft.

    The selective service provided:
    2.8 million U.S. Servicemen in WWI,
    10 million U.S. Servicemen in WWII,
    1.5 million U.S. Servicemen in the Korean War, and
    1.8 million U.S. Servicemen during the Vietnam Conflict

    The facts are that in 1950, the United States had about 1.5
    million active duty personnel under arms and by 1952 they
    surged to 3.6 million. In Vietnam the U.S. had 2.7 million
    in 1964 and by 1968 we had over 3.5 million.

    In 2006, the overall active end-strength of our nation's
    military was 1,367,500. The President's 2007 budget
    request reduces that end-strength to 1,332,300. This
    means that there is projected to be 35,200 fewer troops
    on our nation's active duty rolls this year as compared
    to last year.

    We cannot sustain the President's open-ended, vague
    and bankrupting war policies indefinitely. He should
    try less rhetoric and more action.

    If we are to fight this war with the same sense of dedication
    and vigor as we did prior wars, we cannot do it without
    a surge in force.

    It is unlikely that the President will call for a draft. A draft
    is politically unpopular. But we cannot continue to allow
    the President to pursue open-ended and vague military
    missions without a change in direction.

    Two years ago, I was one of only two in the House of
    Representatives who voted for a draft, because I believe
    if we are a country truly at war, the burden should be
    shared proportionately and fairly. So Mr. President, you
    have two options, either change the course in Iraq and
    reduce the burden on our overstretched active force
    or reinstitute the draft. We cannot sustain the current course.

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

    6) Lawyers Warn Against Evidence Limits
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Filed at 12:27 p.m. ET
    September 7, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/us/AP-Detainees-Legislation.html?hp&ex=1157688000&en=84f5cb98e3cfc807&ei=5094&partner=homepage

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Pentagon's top uniformed lawyers took
    issue Thursday with a key part of a White House plan to prosecute
    terrorism detainees, telling Congress that limiting the suspects'
    access to evidence could violate treaty obligations.

    Their testimony to a House committee marked the latest time that
    military lawyers have publicly challenged Bush administration
    proposals to keep some evidence -- such as classified information
    -- from accused terrorists. In the past, some military officials have
    expressed concerns that if the U.S. adopts such standards, captured
    American troops might be treated the same way.

    The lawyers' testimony contrasted with the panel chairman's
    assertion that the United States must take a harder line when
    prosecuting terrorists.

    Rep. Duncan Hunter, who heads the House Armed Services Committee,
    said at the hearing that any military commission established
    to prosecute terrorists must allow the government to protect
    intelligence sources. In saying so, the California Republican
    aligned himself with the White House position.

    ''While we need to provide basic fairness in our prosecutions,
    we must preserve the ability of our war fighters to operate
    effectively on the battlefield,'' Hunter said.

    Hunter presented the military lawyers with various scenarios
    in which it might be necessary to withhold evidence from the
    accused if it would expose classified information. But the service's
    top lawyers said other alternatives must be explored -- or the
    case dropped.

    ''I believe the accused should see that evidence,'' said
    Maj. Gen. Scott Black, the Army's Judge Advocate General.

    Black and the other lawyers said such an allowance was
    a fundamental right in other court systems and would meet
    requirements under the Geneva Conventions.

    But Hunter suggested that such a requirement could hamper
    prosecutions.

    ''Some of these acts of complicity in terrorist acts are very
    small pieces . . . and you don't have a lot of evidence,'' he
    said. The chairman repeated a scenario where the only piece
    of evidence would expose the identity of a secret agent and
    asked whether it would make sense to drop the case entirely.

    ''You get to the end of the trail, then yes sir, you do,'' Black
    responded.

    The hearing came a day after Bush acknowledged for the
    first time that the CIA had secret prisons overseas and
    defended the practice of tough interrogations to force
    terrorists to reveal plots to attack the United States and
    its allies.

    He revealed that 14 suspects, including the alleged mastermind
    of the Sept. 11 attacks, had been turned over to the Defense
    Department and moved to the U.S. detention center
    at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, for trial.

    Separately, State Department legal adviser John Bellinger III told
    foreign reporters Thursday that if additional members of the
    al-Qaida terror network were captured, ''We reserve the right
    to have those people questioned by the CIA.''

    Bellinger said foreign governments were free to decide whether
    to look for the locations of any CIA prisons on their territory,
    but ''we are not going to talk about that.'' European lawmakers
    on Thursday demanded to know the exact location of the prisons.

    The president proposed legislation Wednesday that would aid
    the government in prosecuting terrorists using secret military
    tribunals. The proposal left Republicans again divided over
    how the nation should treat its most dangerous terror suspects,
    setting up a showdown in Congress just weeks away from
    elections when all members will try to sell themselves as
    tough on terror.

    Bush's announcement was immediately praised by those who
    said his policies were necessary to win the war on terror.

    Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., said he would like
    to take up the bill on the Senate floor as soon as possible,
    leaving open the door for a vote on the measure before
    lawmakers break at the end of the month for election
    campaigning.

    But some GOP moderates are challenging the proposal. They
    include three senators with hefty credentials: Sen. John McCain
    of Arizona, who spent more than five years as a prisoner
    of war in North Vietnam; Sen. Lindsey Graham of South
    Carolina, a former military lawyer who still serves in the
    Air Force Reserves as a reserve judge; and Sen. John Warner
    of Virginia, chairman of the Armed Services Committee.

    Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid said Bush's decision
    to prosecute the terrorists held by the CIA was long overdue.
    But, he added, the military commission system should
    be properly vetted through the Armed Services Committee.

    ''The last thing we need is a repeat of the arrogant,
    go-it-alone behavior that has jeopardized and delayed
    efforts to bring these terrorists to justice for five years,'' Reid said.

    Eds: AP Diplomatic Writer Barry Schweid contributed to this report.

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

    7) U.S. Losing Control Fast
    Inter Press Service
    Dahr Jamail and Ali Al-Fadhily
    Dahr Jamail's Iraq Dispatches
    Visit the Dahr Jamail Iraq website
    http://dahrjamailiraq.com
    Website by http://jeffpflueger.com

    *RAMADI, Sep 5 (IPS) - The U.S. military has lost control over the
    volatile al-Anbar province, Iraqi police and residents say.*

    The area to the west of Baghdad includes Fallujah, Ramadi and other
    towns that have seen the worst of military occupation, and the strongest
    resistance.

    Despite massive military operations which destroyed most of Fallujah and
    much of cities like Haditha and al-Qa'im in Ramadi, real control of the
    city now seems to be in the hands of local resistance.

    In losing control of this province, the U.S. would have lost control
    over much of Iraq.

    "We are talking about nearly a third of the area of Iraq," Ahmed Salman,
    a historian from Fallujah told IPS. "Al-Anbar borders Jordan, Syria and
    Saudi Arabia, and the resistance there will never stop as long as there
    are American soldiers on the ground."

    Salman said the U.S. military is working against itself. "Their actions
    ruin their goal because they use these huge, violent military operations
    which kill so many civilians, and make it impossible to calm down the
    people of al-Anbar."

    The resistance seems in control of the province now. "No government
    official can do anything without contacting the resistance first," Abu
    Ghalib, a government official in Ramadi told IPS.

    "Even the governor used to take their approval for everything. When he
    stopped doing so, they issued a death sentence against him, and now he
    cannot move without American protection."

    Recent weeks have brought countless attacks on U.S. troops in Haditha,
    Ramadi, Fallujah and on the Baghdad-Amman highway. Several armoured
    vehicles have been destroyed, and dozens of U.S. soldiers killed in the
    al-Anbar province, according to both Iraqi witnesses and the U.S.
    Department of Defence.

    Long stretches of the 550km Baghdad-Amman highway which crosses al-Anbar
    are now controlled by resistance groups. Other parts are targeted by
    highway looters.

    "If we import any supplies for the U.S. Army or Iraqi government, the
    fighters will take it from us and sell it in the local market," trader
    Hayder al-Mussawi said. "And if we import for the local market, the
    robbers will take it."

    Eyewitnesses in Ramadi say many of the attacks are taking place within
    their city. They say that the U.S. military recently asked citizens in
    al-Anbar to stop targeting them, and promised to withdraw to their bases
    in Haditha and Habaniyah (near Fallujah) soon, leaving the cities for
    Iraqi security forces to patrol.

    "I do not think that is possible," retired Iraqi police
    Brigadier-General Kahtan al-Dulaimi from Ramadi told IPS. "I believe no
    local unit could stand the severe resistance of al-Anbar, and it will be
    the last province to be handed over to Iraqi security forces."

    According to the group Iraq Coalition Casualty Count, 964 coalition
    soldiers have been killed in al-Anbar, more than in any other Iraqi
    province.. Baghdad is second, with 665 coalition deaths.

    Residents of Ramadi told IPS that the U.S. military has knocked down
    several buildings near the government centre in the city, the capital of
    the province.

    In an apparent move to secure their offices, U.S. Army and Marine
    engineers have started to level a half-kilometre stretch of low-rise
    buildings opposite the centre. Abandoned buildings in this area have
    been used repeatedly to launch attacks on the government complex.

    "They are trying to create a separation area between the offices of the
    puppet government and the buildings the resistance are using to attack
    them," a Ramadi resident said. "But now the Americans are making us all
    angry because they are destroying our city."

    U.S. troops have acknowledged their own difficulties in doing this.
    "We're used to taking down walls, doors and windows, but eight city
    blocks is something new to us," Marine 1st Lt. Ben Klay, 24, said in the
    U.S. Department of Defence newspaper Stars and Stripes.

    In nearby Fallujah, residents are reporting daily clashes between
    Iraqi-U.S. security forces and the resistance.

    "The local police force which used to be out of the conflict are now
    being attacked," said a resident who gave his name as Abu Mohammed.
    "Hundreds of local policemen have quit the force after seeing that they
    are considered a legitimate target by fighters.."

    The U.S. forces seem to have no clear policy in the face of the
    sustained resistance.

    "The U.S. Army seems so confused in handling the security situation in
    Anbar," said historian Salman. "Attacks are conducted from al-Qa'im on
    the Syrian border to Abu Ghraib west of Baghdad, all the way through
    Haditha, Hit, Ramadi and Fallujah on a daily basis."

    He added: "A contributing factor to the instability of the province is
    the endless misery of the civilians who live with no services, no
    infrastructure, random shootings and so many wrongful detentions."

    According to the new Pentagon quarterly report on Measuring Security and
    Stability in Iraq, Iraqi casualties rose 51 percent in recent months.
    The report says Sunni-based insurgency is "potent and viable."

    The report says that in a period since the establishment of the new
    Iraqi government, between May 20 and Aug. 11 this year, the average
    number of weekly attacks rose to nearly 800, almost double the number of
    the attacks in early 2004.

    Casualties among Iraqi civilians and security forces averaged nearly 120
    a day during the period, up from 80 a day reported in the previous
    quarterly report. Two years ago they were averaging roughly 30 a day.

    On Aug. 31 the Pentagon announced that it is increasing the number of
    U.S. troops in Iraq to 140,000, which is 13,000 more than the number
    five weeks ago.

    At least 65 U.S. soldiers were killed in August, with 36 of the deaths
    reported in al-Anbar. That brought the total number killed to at least
    2,642.

    (c)2006 Dahr Jamail.

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

    8) Immigration Overhaul Takes a Back Seat
    as Campaign Season Begins
    By RACHEL L. SWARNS
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/08/us/politics/08immig.html

    WASHINGTON, Sept. 7 — House Republicans vowed Thursday
    to move swiftly to pass a series of border security measures
    by the end of September. But they made it clear they would
    not heed President Bush’s call to create a guest worker plan
    or grant legal status to the nation’s illegal immigrants before
    the November midterm elections.

    The House speaker, Representative J. Dennis Hastert,
    Republican of Illinois, and others said House leaders would
    hold a hearing — scheduled for Tuesday — to discuss
    strategies to secure the border and then present a package
    of legislation, perhaps as early as Wednesday.

    Mr. Hastert said House Republicans would continue their
    discussions with the Senate in an effort to come to
    a consensus about overhauling immigration laws, but
    he emphasized that they would focus first on what could
    be accomplished this month before Congress recesses.
    He said the initiatives would emerge from hearings held
    around the country in August.

    “Before you have a guest worker program or any other
    program, you need to heal the wound or stop the bleeding,”
    Mr. Hastert said at a news conference. “We need to solve
    the first problems first.”

    “We’re at war,” he added. “Our borders are a sieve. We need
    to stop the bleeding.”

    After he spoke, hundreds of immigrants rallied outside
    the Capitol, waving American flags and warning lawmakers
    that they would be held accountable at the polls if they did
    not take steps to legalize the more than 11 million illegal
    immigrants in the United States.

    But the political potency of such marches, which drew
    hundreds of thousands of immigrants in the spring, seemed
    to be waning. Organizers here had predicted hundreds
    of thousands of demonstrators on Thursday, but it appeared
    that only several thousand showed up. Rallies in Phoenix
    and Batavia, Ill., this week also drew smaller crowds than
    had been predicted.

    Lily Najera, a 19-year-old community college student from
    El Salvador, said she was surprised by the low turnout.

    “I don’t know if people are losing hope because they don’t
    see any progress,” said Ms. Najera, who attended the
    rallies in the spring.

    The prospects for passage of the House border security
    package in the Senate remained uncertain. Senate leaders
    have acknowledged that their bill, which would put the
    majority of illegal immigrants on a path to citizenship
    in addition to tightening the border, will probably not
    become law before November.

    Senator Bill Frist, Republican of Tennessee, the majority
    leader, said this week that it would be “next to impossible”
    for Congress to pass such a bill in the next three weeks.
    Amy Call, a spokeswoman for Mr. Frist, said Senate
    Republicans would be willing to consider the border security
    initiatives proposed by the House.

    “Securing the border is a key responsibility,” Ms. Call said
    Thursday. “We’ll be interested to see what they bring forward.”

    Senator Mel Martinez of Florida, a Republican champion
    of the Senate legislation, argued, however, that border security
    by itself was not enough. He said a mechanism like a guest
    worker program to create a legal pathway into the country
    was an essential component of any plan intended to deter
    immigrants from illegally crossing from Mexico into the
    United States.

    “That may sound good politically speaking,” Mr. Martinez
    said of the House plan. “But I think we need a sincere,
    comprehensive approach to the problem. That’s what
    I would be insisting on, that we do provide for some legal
    pathway to enter the country.”

    Senator Edward M. Kennedy, Democrat of Massachusetts,
    assailed the House plan as little more than political posturing
    on the part of House Republicans.

    “Secretary Chertoff, White House officials responsible for
    homeland security and every expert agree that you can’t
    secure our borders without breaking the cycle of illegality
    for the millions who are already here,” said Mr. Kennedy,
    referring to Michael Chertoff, the secretary of homeland
    security.

    “The president understands this,” Mr. Kennedy said, “and
    should step in to help his colleagues see the shortsightedness
    of their actions.”

    Lakiesha R. Carr contributed reporting from Washington.

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

    9) Migrant Workers to Get Overtime for Storm Cleanup, Ending Suit
    By LESLIE EATON
    September 8, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/08/us/08settle.html

    In what appears to be the first resolution of a legal case involving
    charges of mistreatment of migrant workers cleaning up after
    Hurricane Katrina, the Belfor USA Group has agreed to pay more
    than $200,000 in overtime to workers hired by its subcontractors
    along the Gulf Coast.

    Belfor, one of the biggest disaster recovery companies in the
    country, settled a lawsuit brought by the Southern Poverty Law
    Center on behalf of 175 workers who lawyers said had worked
    as many as 80 hours a week on the cleanup of Tulane University
    and other projects. The settlement was announced yesterday,
    after it was approved by a federal judge in New Orleans.

    The company also set up a toll-free number so workers could
    call to complain about mistreatment by subcontractors, and
    it agreed to increase monitoring of their practices.

    “These new policies and practices, companywide, will make
    sure subs stay in line, which we expected them to do before,”
    said Steven F. Griffith Jr., a lawyer for Belfor.

    Migrant workers, many of them Hispanic and some in the
    United States illegally, flocked to the gulf after the storms
    to do cleanup work. Almost immediately, complaints surfaced
    that workers were not being paid what they had been promised,
    and in some cases were not paid at all. Multiple layers
    of subcontractors made it difficult to figure out who was
    responsible for the problems.

    Belfor decided to make sure that the workers were paid
    first and to work the financial questions out with subcontractors
    later, Mr. Griffith said.

    Jennifer J. Rosenbaum, a lawyer at the law center, in
    Montgomery, Ala., said the group hoped that the settlement
    would set a precedent. “We applaud Belfor,” Ms. Rosenbaum
    said, “and encourage other contractors to do the right thing.”

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

    10) Wal-Mart Finds an Ally in Conservatives
    By MICHAEL BARBARO and STEPHANIE STROM
    September 8, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/08/business/08walmart.html?ref=business

    As Wal-Mart Stores struggles to rebut criticism from unions and
    Democratic leaders, the company has discovered a reliable ally:
    prominent conservative research groups like the American Enterprise
    Institute, the Heritage Foundation and the Manhattan Institute.

    Top policy analysts at these groups have written newspaper opinion
    pieces around the country supporting Wal-Mart, defended the company
    in interviews with reporters and testified on its behalf before government
    committees in Washington.

    But the groups — and their employees — have consistently failed
    to disclose a tie to the giant discount retailer: financing from the
    Walton Family Foundation, which is run by the Wal-Mart founder
    Sam Walton’s three children, who have a controlling stake in the
    company.

    The groups said the donations from the foundation have no
    influence over their research, which is deliberately kept separate
    from their fund-raising activities. What’s more, the pro-business
    philosophies of these groups often dovetail with the interests
    of Wal-Mart.

    But the financing, which totaled more than $2.5 million over the
    last six years, according to data compiled by GuideStar, a research
    organization, raises questions about what the research groups
    should disclose to newspaper editors, reporters or government
    officials. The Walton Family Foundation must disclose its annual
    donations in forms filed with the Internal Revenue Service,
    but research groups are under no such obligation.

    Companies and such groups have long courted one another
    — one seeking influence, the other donations — and liberal
    policy groups receive significant financing from unions and
    left-leaning organizations without disclosing their financing.

    But the Walton donations could prove risky for Wal-Mart,
    given its escalating public relations campaign. The company’s
    quiet outreach to bloggers, beginning last year, touched off
    a debate about what online writers should disclose to readers,
    and its financing to policy groups could do the same.

    Asked about the donations yesterday, Mona Williams,
    a spokeswoman for Wal-Mart, said, “The fact is that editorial
    pages and prominent columnists of all stripes write favorably
    about our company because they recognize the value we provide
    to working families, the job opportunities we create and the
    contributions we make to the community we serve.”

    At least five research and advocacy groups that have received
    Walton Family Foundation donations are vocal advocates
    of the company.

    The American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research,
    for example, has received more than $100,000 from the
    foundation in the last three years, a fraction of the more
    than $24 million it raised in 2004 alone.

    Richard Vedder, a visiting scholar at the institute, wrote an
    opinion article for The Washington Times last month, extolling
    Wal-Mart’s benefits to the American economy. “There is
    enormous economic evidence that Wal-Mart has helped poor
    and middle-class consumers, in fact more than anyone else,”
    Mr. Vedder wrote in the article, which prominently identified
    his ties to institute.

    But neither Mr. Vedder nor the newspaper mentioned American
    Enterprise Institute’s financial links to the Waltons. Mr. Vedder,
    a professor at Ohio University, said he might have disclosed
    the relationship had the American Enterprise Institute told
    him of it. “I always assumed that A.E.I. had no relationship
    or a modest, distant relationship with the company,” said
    Mr. Vedder, who has written a forthcoming book about the
    company. The book, he said in an interview yesterday, would
    eventually contain a disclosure about the Walton donations
    to the institute.

    A spokesman for the Walton Family Foundation, Jay Allen,
    said there was no organized campaign to build support for
    Wal-Mart among research groups. All of the foundation’s
    giving, he said, is directed toward a handful of philanthropic
    issues, including school reform, the environment and the
    economy in Northwest Arkansas, where Wal-Mart is based.
    “That is the spirit and purpose of their giving,” Mr. Allen said.

    Mr. Allen said the foundation, which had assets of $608.7
    million in 2004, the last year for which data is available, has
    never asked the research groups to disclose the donations
    because “the family leaves it up to the individual organization
    to decide.”

    Those groups, for the most part, say they have decided not
    to share the information with their analysts or the public.

    For example, Sally C. Pipes, the president of the Pacific
    Research Institute, a free-market policy advocate, has written
    several opinion articles defending Wal-Mart in The Miami
    Herald and The San Francisco Examiner.

    A month after a federal judge in California certified a sex
    discrimination lawsuit against the company as a class action
    in 2004, Ms. Pipes wrote an article in The Examiner criticizing
    the lawyers and the women behind the suit. “The case against
    Wal-Mart,” she wrote, “follows the standard feminist stereotype
    of women as victims, men as villains and large corporations
    as inherently evil.”

    The article did not disclose that the Walton Family Foundation
    gave Pacific Research $175,000 from 1999 to 2004. Ms. Pipes
    was aware of the contributions, but said the money was earmarked
    for an education reform project and did not influence her thinking
    about the lawsuit. Asked why she typically did not disclose the
    donations to newspapers, she said: “It never occurs to me to
    put that out front unless I am asked. If newspapers ask, I am
    completely open about it.”

    The lack of disclosure highlights the absence of a consistent policy
    at the nation’s newspapers about whether contributors must tell
    editors of potential conflicts of interest.

    Juan M. Vasquez, the deputy editorial page editor of The Miami
    Herald, which ran an opinion article praising Wal-Mart by
    Ms. Pipes of Pacific Research, said his staff researches
    organizations that write opinion articles, including their
    financing. But that does not always require asking if the
    organization has received money from the subject of an
    article, he said.

    The New York Times has a policy of asking outside contributors
    to disclose any potential conflicts of interest, including
    the financing for research groups.

    Several of the research groups noted that their mission
    is to be an advocate for free market policies and less government
    intrusion in business. “Those aims are pro-business, so it’s not
    surprising that companies would be supporters of our work,”
    said Khristine Brookes, a spokeswoman for the Heritage Foundation.

    Last year, for instance, The Baltimore Sun published an op-ed
    article by Tim Kane, a research fellow at Heritage, in which he
    criticized Maryland’s efforts to require Wal-Mart to spend more
    on health care. He objected to the move on the grounds that it
    was undue government interference in the free market, a traditional
    concern of Heritage.

    “The existence of Wal-Mart dented the rise in overall inflation
    so much that Jerry Hausman, an economist from the Massachusetts
    Institute of Technology, is calling on the federal government
    to change the way it measures prices,” Mr. Kane wrote. “Translation:
    Wal-Mart is fighting poverty faster than government accountants
    can keep track.”

    Ms. Brookes pointed out that the $20,000 Heritage has received
    from the Walton Family Foundation since 2000 amounts to less
    than 1 percent of its $40 million budget.

    Ms. Brookes said it was unlikely that researchers and analysts
    at Heritage were even aware of the foundation’s contributions.
    “Nobody here would know that unless they walked upstairs and
    asked someone in development,” she said. “It’s just never discussed.”

    She said Heritage did not accept money for specific research.
    “The money from the Walton Family Foundation has always been
    earmarked for our general operations,” she said. “They’ve never
    given us any funds saying do this paper or that paper.”

    A spokeswoman for the American Enterprise Institute said
    the group did not comment on its donors. The group’s focus
    on Wal-Mart has been notable. In June, the editor in chief then
    of the group’s magazine, The American Enterprise, wrote a long
    essay defending Wal-Mart against critics. The editor, Karl Zinsmeister,
    now the chief domestic policy adviser at the White House, said
    the campaign against the company was “run by a clutch of political
    hacks.”

    Conservative groups are not the only ones weighing in on the
    Wal-Mart debate. Ms. Williams of Wal-Mart noted labor unions
    have financed organizations that have been critical of Wal-Mart,
    like the Economic Policy Institute, which received $2.5 million
    from unions in 2005.

    In response, Chris Kofinis, communications director for WakeUpWalmart.com,
    an arm of the United Food and Commercial Workers Union that gives
    money to liberal research groups, said: "While we openly support the
    mission of economic justice, Wal-Mart and the Waltons put on a smiley
    face, hide the truth, all while supporting right-wing causes who
    are paid to defend Wal-Mart’s exploitative practices.”

    The lack of a clear quid pro quo between research groups and
    corporations like Wal-Mart makes the issue murky, said Diana Aviv,
    chief executive of the Independent Sector, a trade organization
    representing nonprofits and foundations. “I don’t know how one
    proves what’s the chicken and what’s the egg,” she said.

    Last year, the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy,
    a research and watchdog group, published a report, “The Waltons
    and Wal-Mart: Self-Interested Philanthropy,” that warned of the
    potential influence their vast wealth gives them.

    But Rick Cohen, executive director of the group, said he was more
    concerned about the role the Walton foundation’s money might
    play in shaping public policy in areas like public education, where
    it has supported charter schools and voucher systems.

    “These are certainly not organizations created and controlled by
    the corporation or the family and promoted as somehow authentic
    when they aren’t,” Mr. Cohen said. “More important, I think, is the
    disclosure of the funding in whatever’s written, a sort of disclaimer.”

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

    11) U.A.W. Head Rules Out Concessions
    By NICK BUNKLEY
    September 8, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/08/business/08auto.html?ref=business

    DETROIT, Sept. 7 — The president of the United Automobile Workers,
    Ron Gettelfinger, said Thursday that the Chrysler Group was strong
    enough financially that its call for cuts in workers’ health care coverage,
    like those approved by union members at General Motors and Ford
    last year, was not warranted.

    Mr. Gettelfinger, speaking to reporters after a speech to the Detroit
    Economic Club, also said the union was not willing to do more
    to help the Delphi Corporation, the auto parts supplier, and could
    call a strike if a bankruptcy court judge agrees with Delphi’s
    request to void the union’s contracts.

    The U.A.W. and Delphi have been negotiating for months on
    wage and benefit concessions sought by Delphi, which sought
    bankruptcy protection nearly a year ago.

    “The membership really wants a leader in there who is willing
    to draw a line,” said Gary N. Chaison, a professor of industrial
    relations at Clark University in Worcester, Mass. “Right now
    they fear that there’s no quid pro quo. There have been job
    cuts despite the concessions. And at the same time it just
    continues and continues.”

    Workers at G.M. and Ford approved landmark deals last
    year that require them to pay for a portion of their health
    care coverage, which the auto companies had previously
    paid for. Both companies lost billions of dollars on their
    North American operations last year, and have continued
    to lose money in 2006, although G.M.’s losses have been
    significantly reduced.

    Chrysler, the division of DaimlerChrysler based in Auburn
    Hills, Mich., has been talking to the U.A.W. for months
    about a deal to reduce its health care costs. But an audit
    commissioned by the union indicated that such concessions
    were not needed, Mr. Gettelfinger said.

    “It’s a different situation at DaimlerChrysler than it’s been
    at Ford and G.M.,” he said.

    Chrysler, which expects to spend $2.3 billion this year
    on health care for employees and their families, was
    profitable in the first half of 2006 but is predicting a loss
    of more than $600 million during the current quarter.

    A Chrysler spokesman, David Elshoff, said the company
    remained optimistic it would reach an agreement with
    the union.

    He said that both sides were “still talking” and that the
    union’s refusal to deal would put Chrysler in an unfair
    position.

    “Failure to reach an agreement with the U.A.W. on health
    care, which is DaimlerChrysler’s biggest fixed cost, certainly
    puts us at an economic disadvantage compared to all of the
    other automakers in the U.S.,” Mr. Elshoff said.

    Last year, 61 percent of G.M.’s unionized workers and 51
    percent of Ford’s approved paying more of their health
    care costs.

    The deals are projected to save G.M. about $1 billion
    a year and Ford $850 million.

    In standing firm against Chrysler, the union is breaking
    from its tradition of pattern bargaining, in which it seeks
    nearly identical deals with all three Detroit automakers.

    With the union’s labor agreements set to expire next year,
    it is “sending a message not only to DaimlerChrysler but
    to Ford and General Motors, too,” Mr. Chaison said.
    “They’re saying if there’s going to be a turnaround, it’s
    going to have to be done by management.”

    Mr. Gettelfinger and a union vice president, Cal Rapson,
    said on Thursday that they had the same message for
    Delphi, criticizing the company’s approval of multimillion
    -dollar bonuses for top management as it cuts workers’
    pay to as low as $12 an hour from $27.

    “We’ve done enough, as far as we’re concerned,” Mr. Rapson
    said. “It’s now a matter of greed.”

    Asked whether the U.A.W. could strike the company,
    Mr. Gettelfinger replied, “If the judge voids the contract,
    you give me a call and I’ll have an answer for you real quick.”

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

    12) In the Defense of Basic Rights, an Official Led a City’s Defiance
    By WILLIAM YARDLEY
    September 8, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/08/us/08liberties.html?hp&ex=1157774400&en=64ff183179a513b9&ei=5094&partner=homepage

    Jeffrey L. Rogers remembers the letters, the e-mail messages and the taunts.

    “You’re a disgrace,” one said. “When the terrorists blow up the Rose
    Garden, you’ll be responsible,” said another, referring to the
    20,000-seat sports arena in Portland, Ore.

    Two months after the attacks of Sept. 11, Attorney General John
    Ashcroft asked local police forces across the country to help federal
    agents interview 5,000 young Middle Eastern men as part of
    a nationwide antiterrorism effort.

    Portland, which has long marched to a distinctive civic drummer,
    was the first city to refuse, citing an Oregon law that forbids such
    questioning if the subject is not a suspect in a crime.

    Mr. Rogers, a Vietnam veteran from a prominent Republican family,
    was the city attorney here, making him an instant face of Portland’s
    defiance.

    “It’s common sense in a less emotionally charged atmosphere,” he
    said. “Let’s say the same thing came up now. I think the reaction
    would be much more muted. I mean, the wounds were really fresh.
    It was really raw, and people were really scared.”

    Nearly five years later, nonetheless, the tension between protecting
    civil liberties and preventing another terrorist attack remains
    at the center of post-9/11 American life, with the disclosure that
    the federal Education Department shared personal information
    on hundreds of student loan applicants with the Federal Bureau
    of Investigation.

    In 2005, Portland formally withdrew its Police Department from
    the Joint Terrorism Task Force of the F.B.I. Mr. Rogers approves
    of that position, though not necessarily with how civil liberties
    are protected elsewhere.

    “We should be very worried that the way Bush and his handlers
    are going about ‘defending the country’ is eroding the essence
    of our country,” he said. “Fortunately, history has shown that
    sooner of later Americans catch on to those who exploit fear,
    and we return to our true values.”

    Mr. Rogers grew up in what he called a “progressive Republican”
    household. His father, William P. Rogers, was attorney general
    in President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s second term and the first
    secretary of state under President Richard M. Nixon.

    When Nixon, as a congressman in the late 1940’s, pursued
    espionage accusations against Alger Hiss, he did so based
    on advice from William Rogers, then a committee counsel
    on Capitol Hill.

    “J. Edgar Hoover and Dad were pretty close, and I used to
    go to the firing range at the F.B.I. and all that stuff,” Jeffrey
    Rogers said. “I had a lot of respect for the F.B.I.”

    He graduated from Yale Law School in the same class as
    Bill and Hillary Rodham Clinton. There are pictures of them
    all clowning around after moot court.

    He campaigned for Mr. Clinton and has jogged with him
    in Oregon. Mr. Rogers is a Democrat and calls himself
    “pretty liberal.”

    Yet neither his Republican upbringing nor his Democratic
    views affected his actions in Portland in 2001, he said.

    All that mattered was the law, which a deputy first pointed
    out conflicted with Mr. Ashcroft’s request.

    “And I believe with no question that we were right in our
    interpretation,” he said. After 19 years in the city attorney’s
    office, Mr. Rogers left in 2004 to pursue a second career.

    He soon completed a master’s in counseling psychology
    and now spends his days listening to the troubles of others.
    His specialty, according to his business card, is “lawyers,
    clients of lawyers and others affected by the legal system.”

    In some circles, Mr. Rogers is bitterly recalled as the city
    attorney who fought the American government rather than
    the terrorists. To many others, his stance was heroic.

    “My favorite,” he said as he recalled one note, “was that
    I was ‘the Gandhi of Portland.’ I kept that.”

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

    13) The Cuban revolution and formal logic
    By Manuel Alberto Ramy
    maprogre@gmail.com
    http://www.progresoweekly.com/index.php?progreso=Ramy

    Since July 31, when Fidel Castro transferred all powers to Army Gen.
    Raúl Castro, just as the Cuban Constitution of 1976 provides, numerous
    articles have been published in the main media worldwide. It is logical
    that such an important event should cause such proliferation, but,
    regrettably, most of the works published are viewed from a distance,
    from a point of view in the periphery. And when they try to explore
    Cuba's complex reality they crash loudly to the ground.

    Many of those approaches depart from formal logic, ignoring that
    the history of the Cuban Revolution is, to a great degree, the product
    of a combination of realities that made it possible, bold strokes,
    imperial clumsiness, and an incredible and determining presence
    of what is, in fact, illogical. Let's look closely at the facts.

    In 1953, a dozen men armed with shotguns and 22-caliber rifles
    attempted to seize the Moncada Barracks, the island's second-largest
    military fortress, situated in Santiago de Cuba, where they hoped
    to rally the people and overthrow dictator Fulgencio Batista. Was
    there any logic in the correlation of forces and means of combat?

    Later, in 1956, aboard a touring yacht, 82 expeditionists departed
    from Tuxpan, Mexico, planning to land in Cuba's eastern region
    and begin a guerrilla war. During the trip, they ran into a storm;
    they didn't land at the appointed spot or on the date arranged
    with the urban guerrillas of the then-capital of Oriente Province.
    After a surprise encounter with troops of the Batista dictatorship,
    several raiders died, others were captured and others fled.
    All that remained were 12 men with seven rifles.

    Fidel Castro said at the time that he would win the war with
    that contingent. His brother Raúl has confessed that, when he
    heard that, he thought Fidel had gone mad.

    What could 12 men do with half a rifle each, while Batista had
    about 60,000 soldiers, plus an air force, a war navy and the
    logistics and advice of the United States armed forces and
    government? In which direction would formal logic tilt? Would
    a movement defined at the time as nationalist and with
    a minimal program of social demands defeat Batista's
    government on the military front? Did that fit in formal logic?
    Unthinkable.

    Two years later, Fidel Castro and the guerrillas entered Havana
    atop tanks. Illogicality -- or a different kind of logic --
    had prevailed. But it didn't stop there.

    The invalidity of formal logic reached incredible heights in the
    decisive years from 1959 to 1961. In its first stage, the
    revolutionary project decreed the lowering of 50 percent of
    all home rentals, a similar decrease in telephone and electrical
    rates, and signed the First Agrarian Reform Law, which had
    been included in the Constitution of 1940 but had never been
    put into effect in 19 years. It had been a dead language.

    Thus began the first volley of pressures from the U.S. government
    and the return fire from the revolutionary government. You take
    away the sugar quota -- until a few years earlier Cuba's principal
    economic resource -- and forbid the U.S. refineries to process
    crude oil on the island, and I nationalize your industries, sugar
    mills and the oil refineries themselves.

    According to formal logic, in this dynamics of push-me-pull-you
    the winner should be the one with the greatest strength. Who
    could withstand the Yankee blows when they were accompanied
    by bombs, sabotage in the cities and guerrillas on the mountains?

    In April 1961, an expeditionary force of 1,400 men trained and
    supplied by the Central Intelligence Agency and protected
    by ships of the U.S. Navy landed on Girón Beach (Bay of Pigs).
    Castro and his regime were finished, formal logic stated. But
    the government declared itself socialist and defeated the invaders
    in less than 72 hours. Could a government bearing the name of
    "socialist" survive only 90 miles from the United States?

    Then came an economic siege, international political isolation,
    campaigns of terrorism inside and outside Cuba. The worst
    occurrence: in 1991, the Soviet Union and the socialist bloc
    in Europe collapsed noisily, plunging Cubans into their worst
    economic crisis of the 20th Century.

    Faced with this appalling picture, formal logic made two bets.
    First, that Cuba -- like the domino pieces that, if stood in line,
    topple at the slightest breeze -- would inexorably topple. Could
    a little island in the Caribbean be stronger than the Eastern European
    communists? Second, society would explode like a pressure cooker
    over the heat stoked by the Miami ultrarightists and the Washington
    government with pressures and laws. None of that happened.
    Formal logic lost both bets.

    In the face of so much evidence, the only possible conclusion
    is this: formal logic -- as a magnifying glass or microscope to
    study and analyze Cuba's reality -- does not work. It failed. Cuba
    is the result of dialectical logic, of a dynamics between leadership/
    people; rationality/ emotionality; disagreements/reencounters;
    pressures/adhesions; benefits and failures and the will to overcome
    them. The other essential component in this dynamics has been the
    relentless aggressiveness and exclusion maintained by almost
    10 U.S. administrations.

    Now there is a provisional president, Raúl Castro, who in recent
    statements to the daily Granma challenged the U.S. administration
    when he reiterated Cuba's willingness to dialogue under equal
    conditions. (Fidel Castro did it before, in 1986.) Sensible voices --
    which include former U.S. military officers and former high-ranking
    officials of tough administrations, such as former Under Secretary
    of State William Rogers -- urge the current administration to consider
    steps toward rapprochement. But the White House spokesman calls
    Raúl Castro "a Fidel lite," dismissing him unless he opens a process
    of political pluralism and democracy in the style of the U.S.A.

    Notwithstanding ideological differences and historical context, that
    description -- "Fidel lite" -- reminds me of past history.

    During the period 1960-1965, the groups that confronted the
    revolutionary government exceeded 200, but no more than three
    or four were capable of bringing together a decent number of
    Cubans and acting with some efficacy in cities and mountains.
    One of these movements, formed mostly by former combatants
    who opposed the Batista dictatorship, was called "Fidelism Without
    Fidel," because its differences with the revolutionary government
    were not over changes in themselves but over the direction and
    depth of those changes.

    It was a reformist alternative that had no place in the political project
    or in the war strategy planned, directed and controlled by the
    Eisenhower administration and later inherited by John F. Kennedy.
    Washington then decided to exclude the reformists and, in the
    event the Bay of Pigs invasion worked, to neutralize them (an
    aseptic word with terrorist meaning) and the Cuban government
    leaders, both in the outlying regions and in the central government.
    In charge of this would be Operation 40, an elite and secret
    organization inside the invasion force.

    In other words, both reformists and revolutionaries would
    share the same grave.

    Between Fidelism Without Fidel, the reformist group within the
    initial process of the Revolution, and Fidelism Lite, the hypothetical
    reformist process within the already established process, there are
    essential differences but they both have a common meaning to the
    enemy: zero reforms. Washington persists in its policy of punishment
    and refuses to accept any variant that prevents its control over the island.

    To the Washingtonians and their allies in Miami -- who are a very
    important factor in U.S. domestic policy -- Cuba must remain frozen
    in time. Not a day beyond Dec. 31, 1958. Everything the U.S.
    functionaries and the Cuban-American acolytes say is just
    political show; as in the fashion industry, the past, although
    retouched, remains the past.

    But in the Raúl Castro scenario, now labeled as "reformist," there
    is an underlying current of doubt and fear that the acting president
    -- a communist, a magnificent and pragmatic organizer -- may
    be capable of tackling the challenge of solving the problems that
    weigh upon the Cuban society (food, transportation, housing
    are the most urgent), and further consolidating the Revolution's
    political and social base to continue to resist Washington's hostility.

    Many friends have written to me, and others have asked me in
    person: "Is this a likely outcome?" I don't know, but an economic
    response must definitely be given to the population, to a society
    composed mostly of people born after 1959, generations many
    of whom use as their motto a song by Habana Abierta that says:
    "All I want is a little something to live on."

    Will the regime follow the Chinese model or the Vietnamese model?
    they insist on asking me. Among other important factors, such as
    levels of economic and industrial development, those countries
    are thousands of miles away from the empire, so in the Cuban
    case any reform must take into account the geographical factor
    and the political context. Above all, I think that the measures --
    if they are taken -- will be Cuban-style.

    To replace the charismatic Fidel Castro is impossible. A long
    time ago, a president said that Castro had the ability to travel
    to the future, come back and talk about it. Perhaps when, with
    only 12 men, he said he would win the war, he had returned
    from the accurate vision of Jan. 1, 1959. Indisputably, he is
    a great leader and an example of the role of man in history.

    For the time being, Raúl Castro, who made it clear that Fidel's
    heir was the party, must deal with the task of leading the
    government, distributing tasks, delegating responsibilities
    and demanding their execution, because he's dealing with
    a machinery that Fidel Castro's indisputable leadership and
    extraordinary talent set up to cover every eventuality. I think
    this is Raúl's first task -- and it's not at all simple.

    His other task is to be a bridge between several generations
    of leaders, some of whom stand at the bottom rungs of
    government and party. He can open the way for them "to
    defend these and other ideas and measures that may be
    necessary to safeguard this historical process," as Fidel
    Castro wrote in his proclamation to the people on July 31.

    Above all, whatever happens in Cuba will be the product of
    dialectical logic, of creative imagination, and the unexpected
    or illogical nature of the native-born Cuban, a nature that
    imperial arrogance feeds and nurtures with its eagerness
    to absorb us as a nation.

    Manuel Alberto Ramy is chief correspondent of Radio
    Progreso Alternativa in Havana and editor of Progreso
    Semanal, the Spanish-language version of Progreso Weekly.

    Copyright 2006© Progreso Weekly, Inc.

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*--------
    LINKS ONLY
    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*--------

    SOS WON’T FADE AWAY
    www.soldiersofsolidarity.com/files/relatednewsandreports/reportonSOSmeeting72306.html

    Venezuelan Steelworkers' Protest Wins Freedom
    of 5 Arrested Co-workers
    By: Steven Mather - Venezuelanalysis.com
    Thursday, Sep 07, 2006
    www.venezuelanalysis.com/news.php?newsno=2067

    UAW Local 292 Suspends Democratic Union Elections
    http://futureoftheunion.com/?p=3094

    Russian Autoworkers Fight For Recognition
    http://futureoftheunion.com/?p=3159

    Vote No At Ford Rouge
    http://futureoftheunion.com/?p=3151

    UAW Ends Health Talks With DCX
    http://futureoftheunion.com/?p=3164

    Meatpacking & Delphi
    http://futureoftheunion.com/?p=2967

    Lou Dobbs On Delphi
    http://www.forthecause.us/ftc-video-CNN-Delphi_060531.wmv

    Snakes In Our Halls
    http://futureoftheunion.com/?p=3114

    Bereavement
    http://futureoftheunion.com/?p=3107

    IEB Decision In Appeal Of Ford Contract
    http://futureoftheunion.com/?p=3097

    The Legal Debate
    Interrogation Methods Rejected by Military Win Bush’s Support
    By ADAM LIPTAK
    September 8, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/08/washington/08legal.html?_r=1&ref=us&oref=slogin

    Political Crime and Incompetence
    The Fraud in Mexico
    By RENÉ DRUCKER COLÍN
    September 7, 2006
    http://www.counterpunch.org/colin09072006.html

    Army Tries Private Pitch For Recruits
    By Renae Merle
    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Wednesday, September 6, 2006; A01
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/09/05/AR2006090501508.html

    US police chief says sorry after officers joked about shot woman
    by Richard Luscombe in Miami
    Aug 11, 2006
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/usguns/Story/0,,1842163,00.html

    U.S. Threatens to Revoke Trade Preferences from Left-Leaning
    South American Countries
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0906-04.htm

    NYC Children Struggle with Hunger, Obesity
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0906-02.htm

    Afghanistan: Campaign against Taliban 'Causes Misery and Hunger'
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0906-05.htm

    A Top Cuban Leader Thinks Out Loud
    Posted on Aug 29, 2006
    By Tom Hayden
    Veteran social activist Tom Hayden interviews Cuban National
    Assembly President Ricardo Alarcon.
    http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/20060829_tom_hayden_alarcon/

    Tireless on the Left,
    The Great I.F. Stone
    By Geoffrey Wheatcroft
    http://www.observer.com/20060911/20060911_Geoffrey_Wheatcroft__culture_books.asp

    All Governments Lie! The Life and Times of Rebel Journalist I.F. Stone, by
    Myra MacPherson. Scribner, 564 pages, $35.

    The New York Times | A Sudden Sense of Urgency
    http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/090706J.shtml

    Shares Retreat as Labor Costs Rekindle Inflation Fears
    By BLOOMBERG NEWS
    September 7, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/07/business/07stox.html?adxnnl=1&adxnnlx=1157652036-vsp/avo26qpWSPtbTDadIw

    Labor Costs Shake a Pillar of Fed Policy
    By JEREMY W. PETERS
    September 7, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/07/business/07econs.html?ref=business

    Gene Called Link Between Life Span and Cancers
    By NICHOLAS WADE
    September 7, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/07/science/07stem.html?ref=us

    British Leader Announces Plans to Resign in Next Year
    By ALAN COWELL
    September 7, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/07/world/europe/08blaircnd.html?ref=world

    Bush confirms use of CIA secret prisons
    By Mark Silva, Washington Bureau. Stephen J. Hedges, Cam Simpson
    and Andrew Zajac of the Tribune's Washington Bureau
    contributed to this report
    September 7, 2006
    http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-0609070159sep07,1,5717693.story?coll=chi-news-hed

    Bush says CIA has prisons overseas
    He says program foiled attacks, urges Congress to create military panels
    By Julie Hirschfeld Davis
    From the Baltimore Sun reporter
    September 7, 2006
    http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/custom/attack/bal-te.bush07sep07001522,0,2512314.story?coll=bal-home-headlines

    G.O.P. Sets Aside Work on Immigration
    By CARL HULSE and RACHEL L. SWARNS
    [Hmm! Ain't it harvest time?...bw)
    September 5, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/05/us/05cong.html?hp&ex=1157515200&en=2c8b722db77e3b65&ei=5094&partner=homepage

    U.S. Strategy Shifts Focus From Al Qaeda
    By DAVID SANGER and JOHN O’NEIL
    September 5, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/05/washington/05cnd-bush.html?hp&ex=1157515200&en=c4b0366df461941c&ei=5094&partner=homepage

    New Oil Field in Gulf May Yield Billions of Barrels
    By JOHN HOLUSHA
    September 5, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/05/business/05cnd-oil.html?hp&ex=1157515200&en=90639220416107fb&ei=5094&partner=homepage

    Officials Slow to Hear Claims of 9/11 Illnesses
    By ANTHONY DePALMA
    September 5, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/05/nyregion/05cnd-health.html?hp&ex=1157515200&en=8d2171aa38effb04&ei=5094&partner=homepage

    Unconstitutional Orders Must Be Disobeyed
    By Bill Mcginnis
    02 September, 2006
    Countercurrents.org
    http://www.countercurrents.org/us-mcginnes020906.htm

    FOCUS | Frank Rich: Donald Rumsfeld's Dance With the Nazis
    http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/090306Z.shtml

    FOCUS | Death Penalty Sought for US Soldiers Accused of Iraqi Murders
    http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/090306Y.shtml

    VIDEO | Camp Casey Supports Brave War Resister
    A Report by Scott Galindez and Geoffrey Millard
    http://www.truthout.org/multimedia.htm

    VIDEO | The Courage to Say No to War
    A Report by Geoffrey Millard and Scott Galindez
    http://www.truthout.org/multimedia.htm

    Sarah Olson | Bush Pushes Nuclear Weapons Development in US
    http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/090106J.shtml

    'Why did Blair send my teenage son to fight an illegal and dishonest war?'
    By Terri Judd
    Published: 02 September 2006
    http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/politics/article1269497.ece

    Compensation Heightens Unease of 9/11 Relatives in U.S. Illegally
    By CARA BUCKLEY
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/03/nyregion/03families.html?ei=5094&en=0086df9e5e972211&hp=&ex=1157256000&adxnnl=1&partner=homepage&adxnnlx=1157220941-GwkXWThYMF9W4wbPWEBjcw

    Education Dept. Shared Student Data With F.B.I.
    By JONATHAN D. GLATER
    September 1, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/01/washington/01educ.html?_r=1&oref=slogin

    "Walking, We Ask Questions"
    The Other Campaign in Spanish Harlem
    By RJ Maccani
    The Other Journalism with the Other Campaign on the Other Side
    August 31, 2006
    http://www.narconews.com/Issue42/article2037.html

    Winning Arab hearts and minds
    by Dima Khatib, Latin America Correspondent
    Aljazeera.Net
    Friday 18 August 2006 8:18 AM GMT
    http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/0393C044-9D53-43FB-9B2F-3F15DF88AF91.htm

    Israeli Police Capture Palestinian at British Embassy
    By STEVEN ERLANGER
    JERUSALEM, Aug. 31 — Israeli police armed with assault rifles
    ended a bizarre six-hour standoff tonight at the British Embassy
    in Tel Aviv, arresting a Palestinian who had scaled a wall into
    the embassy parking lot. The man, identified as Nadim Injaz,
    threatened to commit suicide and demanded political asylum
    in Britain, saying he was afraid that Palestinian militants would
    kill him if he returned to the West Bank city of Ramallah.
    Israeli television said Mr. Injaz had once been an informer
    for the Israeli domestic security service, Shin Beth, but that he
    had been denied permission to live in Israel. He apparently has
    been living illegally in Israel anyway, rather than return to the
    Palestinian territories and, he feared, risk being murdered
    as a collaborator.
    August 31, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/31/world/middleeast/31cnd-mideast.html?hp&ex=1157083200&en=1e9e65b0a8ceba6f&ei=5094&partner=homepage

    Bush Says Iraq War Is Part of a Larger Fight
    By DAVID STOUT
    President Bush began a new drive today to rally the American
    people behind him on the Iraq war and national security, declaring
    that the United States must stay the course in Iraq because it is
    a battleground in an epic struggle between democracy and tyranny.
    August 31, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/31/washington/31cnd-bush.html?hp&ex=1157083200&en=c78660b7dd5ce413&ei=5094&partner=homepage

    Mexico: mass protest against electoral fraud acquires
    insurrectionary proportions
    By Erik Demeester   
    Wednesday, 30 August 2006
    http://www.marxist.com/mexico-protest-electoral-fraud-revolution.htm

    Caracas golf clubs in a hole as city bids to build homes on greens
    Mayor seeks compulsory purchase of elite courses
    Capital needs 1m houses but opposition cries foul
    Duncan Campbell
    Guardian
    Thursday August 31, 2006
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/print/0,,329565045-111259,00.html

    Resisting Racism, Opportunism and Profiteering
    Detroit Teachers Strike Again
    By RICH GIBSON
    August 29, 2006
    http://www.counterpunch.org/gibson08292006.html

    HURRICANE EXPERT THREATENED FOR PRE-KATRINA WARNINGS
    A Greg Palast special investigation for Democracy Now!
    Monday, August 28. From New Orleans.
    http://www.gregpalast.com/mailing/link.php?URL=aHR0cDovL3d3dy5kZW1vY3JhY3lub3cub3JnLw%3D%3D&Name=&EncryptedMemberID=NTAyNjQ%3D&CampaignID=29&CampaignStatisticsID=21&Demo=0&Email=kwald@california.com

    `HUD' Sham Acts Out Katrina Housing Anger
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0829-03.htm

    U.S. States Widen Scope for Executions
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0829-04.htm

    An Interview with Larry Bradshaw and Lorrie Slonsky
    The Crimes Katrina Exposed
    By ALAN MAASS
    August 30, 2006
    http://www.counterpunch.org/maass08302006.html

    The Worst Kind of Terror
    Murder on Rucarb Street
    By ELIZA ERNSHIRE
    Ramallah.
    August 29, Pre-dawn.
    http://www.counterpunch.org/ernshire08302006.html

    Rumsfeld Says War Critics Haven’t Learned Lessons of History
    By DAVID S. CLOUD
    SALT LAKE CITY, Aug. 29 — Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld
    said Tuesday that critics of the war in Iraq and the campaign against
    terror groups “seem not to have learned history’s lessons,” and
    he alluded to those in the 1930’s who advocated appeasing
    Nazi Germany. [UN-BE-LIEV-ABLE!...BW]
    August 30, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/30/washington/30rumsfeld.html

    Britain Charges 3 More Suspects With Plotting to Bomb Airplanes
    By ALAN COWELL
    August 30, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/30/world/europe/30britain.html

    US accused of bid to oust Chávez with secret funds
    Millions of dollars given to opposition, claim critics
    Venezuelan groups' details hidden from list
    Duncan Campbell
    Wednesday August 30, 2006
    The Guardian
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/venezuela/story/0,,1860867,00.html

    Pat Rasmussen | Cascades' Reddened Forests Signal Threat to Humans
    http://www.truthout.org/issues_06/082906EA.shtml

    Engineers Race to Steal Nature's Secrets
    http://www.truthout.org/issues_06/082906EB.shtml

    Counties Eye Nuke Plants, Utilities Eye Government Handouts
    http://www.truthout.org/issues_06/082906EC.shtml

    California Assembly Approves Universal Health Care
    http://www.truthout.org/issues_06/082906HA.shtml

    Americans Without Health Benefits May Have Set Record in 2005
    http://www.truthout.org/issues_06/082906HB.shtml

    FOCUS | Gonzales Goes to Baghdad Selling "Rule of Law"
    http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/083006Z.shtml

    VIDEO | Katrina Survivors Visit Camp Casey
    A Film by Geoffrey Millard and Scott Galindez
    http://www.truthout.org/multimedia.htm

    Blistering Drought Ravages Farmland on Plains
    By MONICA DAVEY
    MITCHELL, S.D. — With parts of South Dakota at its epicenter,
    a severe drought has slowly sizzled a large swath of the Plains States,
    leaving farmers and ranchers with conditions that they compare
    to those of the Dust Bowl of the 1930’s.
    August 29, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/29/us/29drought.html?ref=us

    Details Emerge in British Terror Case
    By DON VAN NATTA Jr., ELAINE SCIOLINO and STEPHEN GREY
    [This article should be called, "UN-Details Emerge in British Terror
    Case." Read it for yourself...bw]
    August 28, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/28/world/europe/28plot.html

    Iraqi Soldiers Refuse to Go to Baghdad, Defying Order
    By MICHAEL R. GORDON
    WASHINGTON, Aug. 28 — A group of Iraqi soldiers recently refused
    to go to Baghdad, Iraq’s capital, to help restore order there, a senior
    American military officer said Monday.
    August 29, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/29/world/middleeast/29military.html

    Stocks Lower on Consumer Confidence Data
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    NEW YORK (AP) -- Wall Street pulled back Tuesday after disappointing
    consumer confidence numbers erased investors' optimism as oil
    prices hovered at their lowest levels since April.
    Filed at 1:13 p.m. ET
    August 29, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/business/AP-Wall-Street.html

    Sleek? Well, No. Complex? Yes, Indeed.
    By ERICA GOODE
    It is a good thing the manatee has thick skin.
    August 29, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/29/science/29mana.html?_r=1&8dpc&oref=slogin

    Lockheed Says F-35 Could Fly Pilotless
    Pentagon Demand for Drones Grows
    By Renae Merle, Washington Post Staff Writer
    Wednesday, August 16, 2006; Page D01
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/08/15/AR2006081501288.html?referrer=emailarticle

    Environmental Disaster Emerges in the Mediterranean
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0828-01.htm

    California Senate Approves Hemp Farming
    Hemp "bears no more resemblance to marijuana than a poodle bears to a
    wolf," said Sen. Tom McClintock, a Republican. "You would die from smoke
    inhalation before you would get high."
    http://sf.indymedia.org/news/2006/08/1732174.php

    Soldiers' Families Question Rumsfeld on Deployment
    http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/082706A.shtml

    You wouldn’t catch me dead in Iraq
    Scores of American troops are deserting — even from the front
    line in Iraq. But where have they gone? And why isn’t the US Army
    after them? Peter Laufer tracked down four of the deserters
    http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2099-2318643,00.html

    Freedom in a Cage Consider the Uighurs
    He compensates for lack of brain with compassion.
    Consider Mr. Bush's treatment of the Uighurs.
    By CHRISTOPHER BRAUCHLI
    August 24, 2006
    http://www.counterpunch.org/brauchli08242006.html

    Sunni Arab Lawmaker, Freed by Captors in Iraq, Describes Her Ordeal
    By DAMIEN CAVE and QAIS MIZHER
    August 27, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/27/world/middleeast/27iraq.html?ref=world

    Kidnapped Journalists Freed in Gaza Strip
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Filed at 11:44 a.m. ET
    August 27, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/world/AP-Gaza-Journalists.html?hp&ex=1156737600&en=cc5d91ca4d840a97&ei=5094&partner=homepage

    Whispers of Mergers Set Off Suspicious Trading
    By GRETCHEN MORGENSON
    August 27, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/27/business/27deals.html?hp&ex=1156737600&en=9c5156d4bce3dcb9&ei=5094&partner=homepage

    FOCUS | NATO Pilots Accused of Killing Afghan Children
    http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/082606X.shtml

    Norman Solomon | The Mythical End to the Politics of Fear
    http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/082406A.shtml

    CIA Veteran Offers Grim Assessment of "War on Terror"
    http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/082406B.shtml

    Veteran Protests against Iraq War
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0822-01.htm

    VIDEO | Dahr Jamail on Iraq and Lebanon
    A Film by Geoffrey Millard and Sari Gelzer
    http://www.truthout.org/multimedia.htm

    VIDEO | Keith Olbermann: Terror and Politics in America
    http://www.truthout.org/multimedia.htm

    No Diplomacy: Bush Ensured Iran Offer Would Be Rejected
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0823-03.htm

    Lebanon's Month-Old Oil Slick Blankets Mediterranean Floor
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0823-06.htm

    Dirty Water Deals Cheat the Poor
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0823-02.htm

    Number of U.S. Troops in Iraq Climbs
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0823-01.htm

    Amnesty Urges UN to Probe Israel Strategy
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0823-04.htm

    Environmental, Consumer Groups in U.S. Asks Judge
    for Nationwide Suspension of Drug Crop Permits
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0823-09.htm

    INTERVIEW: Chomsky on Lebanon and Iran (August 2006)
    Written by Jim O. Madison
    Thursday, 24 August 2006
    In an interview posted Aug. 16 on the CounterPunch web site,
    Noam Chomsky spoke extensively about Lebanon, but also
    about Iran.[1] -- "[T]o the outside world," Chomky noted,
    "it sounds a bit odd, to put it mildly, for the U.S. and Israel
    to be warning of the 'Iranian threat' when they and they alone
    are issuing threats to launch an attack, threats that are
    immediate and credible, and in serious violation of
    international law, and are preparing very openly for such
    an attack. Whatever one thinks of Iran, no such charge
    can be made in their case. It is also apparent to the world,
    if not to the U.S. and Israel, that Iran has not invaded any
    other countries, something that the U.S. and Israel have
    done regularly." -- Asked about what will come next
    in the Middle East, Chomsky replies: "I do not know
    of anyone foolhardy enough to predict."
    http://www.counterpunch.org/chomsky08162006.html

    Africa Adds to Miserable Ranks of Child Workers
    By MICHAEL WINES
    August 24, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/24/world/africa/24zambia.html?ref=world

    Afghanistan Descends Into Chaos Once Again
    http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/082206A.shtml

    Bush Fulfills Few Promises to Gulf Coast
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0821-06.htm

    CIA's Secret UK Bank Trawl May Be Illegal
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0821-01.htm

    Unexploded Cluster Bombs Prompt Fear and Fury in Returning Refugees
    http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0821-02.htm

    New Orleans Summer 2006
    http://www.peoplesorganizing.org/summer_volunteer.html

    Behind Bush's Rhetoric on Iraq: · Democracy · Oil
    August 21, 2006
    http://www.accuracy.org/newsrelease.php?articleId=1339

    Radioactive Leak Reaches Nuclear Plant's Groundwater
    At San Onofre, the cancer-causing tritium isn't known to infect
    drinking water, but experts are checking.
    By Seema Mehta and Dave McKibben
    Times Staff Writer
    August 18, 2006
    www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-radioactive18aug18,0,3580491.story?track=mostviewed-sectionfront

    Iraq war first hard look at women's level of combat post-traumatic
    stress disorder
    - Donna St. George, Washington Post
    Sunday, August 20, 2006
    http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2006/08/20/MNGK9KLV8L1.DTL&feed=rss.news

    Cannabis Cafes Get Nudge to Fringes of a Dutch City
    By MARLISE SIMONS
    August 20, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/20/world/europe/20dutch.html

    Top Police Spar in London Over Muslims as ‘Victims’
    Roughly 90 percent of the 30,000-plus Metropolitan Police force
    is made up of white officers, but the number of nonwhite officers
    in training is about 17 percent.
    By ALAN COWELL
    August 20, 2006
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/20/world/europe/20britain.html

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