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17.11.03
One Computer, One Vote
Like in days of yore, political battles will now be decided by champions.
One computer, one vote. No more worries about counting the paper ballots... 10.11.03
Ashcroft and Rove Subpoened by ActivistBursey told police he had been under the impression that the whole of Americawas a free speech zone Long-time anti-war activist Brent Bursey, 55, sent subpoenas to Attorney General Ashcroft and Karl Rove to appear at his trial next week... Bursey was arrested in South Carolina last year for holding a sign that read "No More War For Oil." while awaiting George Bush's arrival at Columbian Metropolitan Airport. He was charged with trespassing, although he was on public property, because he had not been standing in the "free-speech zone" specially designated for protesters. Indymedia coverageposted by david roknich at 2:30 PM 10.11.03
Steel Tariffs Violate International Trade Laws
retaliatory sanctions are understood
to have been... posted by david roknich at 1:25 PM 31.10.03
Privatization Draws Protest in Panama(10-30) 13:44 PST PANAMA CITY, Panama (AP) -- Thousands of teachers and other workers staged a strike and closed streets in protest. more on the wireposted by david roknich at 2:21 PM 28.10.03
Newspaper editor fatally shot in Mosul(10-28) 09:10 PST MOSUL, Iraq (AP) --Two men followed Ahmed Shawkat, editor of the independent "Without Direction," to the roof -- where he went to make a phone call -- and one of them shot him, police said. On April 2 of this year, the San Francisco Chronicle provided a brief history of his clashes with the Baathist party: "His uneasy relations with authority took a fateful turn after the 1968 revolution that brought the Baath Party to power. Ahmed, a freshman at the university in his hometown, Mosul, joined an underground opposition network." But as of now, we don't know exactly what precipitated his demise. According to his daughter: "He used to write against the resistance, against the Americans, against the local government and the former government. He had integrity," the daughter said. "Obviously some people didn't like the fact that he ... had a view and a principle." posted by david roknich at 3:21 PM How can this be?
Bush says economy shows 'strength' as Wall Street awaits Fed decision posted by david roknich at 2:33 PM 27.10.03
Why The US Public Has No ClueIf local libraries took their mission statements a bit more seriously, perhaps we'd have less of a problem. The Economist which has recently been so valuable to
(excerpt) Cooperate with other organizations including other member libraries of the Chemeketa Cooperative Regional Library Service for more effective utilization of resources. posted by david roknich at 2:39 PM 23.10.03
An Overview of the Latin American Economy
Rawle Farley
"...agricultural labor productivity should increase with the transfer of excess labor from agriculture to industry." posted by david roknich at 1:42 PM 21.10.03
$5 Trillion American Dollars Can't Be WrongPrivacy World says: To help keep your assets away from the sharks, we are offering an offshore bank account, in a privacy friendly country with Internet banking and an ATM card for just US$500.posted by Steven Realo at 12:36 PM 17.10.03
Small US military team sent to BoliviaWASHINGTON (AFP) Oct 17, 2003The US military has sent a small team to Bolivia to advise the US Embassy amid spiraling unrest against the government of President Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada, a US defense official said Friday. background and detailsposted by david roknich at 1:38 PM 14.10.03
"... more than $800 billion of American money is on deposit in just one tax haven, the Cayman Islands."
Global Policy Forum Archives
posted by Steven Realo at 4:58 PM Food for Thought"what's in the newspapers worth worrying about? I glance at the headlines just to kind of (get) a flavor of what's moving," Bush said. "I rarely read the stories," "...Instead, Bush is spoon-fed the relevant news from his staff. Top aides usually know the buttons not to push when it comes to bad news. ", writes Helen Thomas: "...Jefferson is remembered for saying he "would rather have newspapers without government than government without newspapers."posted by Steven Realo at 3:58 PM 4.10.03
ARCHIVE PUBLISHES PERU HUMAN RIGHTS DOCUMENTSon August 28, 2003"...the National Security Archive posted on the Web 33 of the most important declassified U.S. documents used by the Commission in its work" posted by david roknich at 5:03 PM
in a letter to secretary of state Colin Powell on Dec. 19, 2002, representatives of the national security archive wrote: "...Now, three months past the promised delivery date, the State Department has yet to release the material to the Peruvian Truth Commission, whose strict deadline is rapidly approaching.... (The Commission’s collection of information stage will be over at the end of January, while their final report is due by July 2003.)" posted by david roknich at 5:02 PM 2.10.03
Cheney enjoys "a slice of the pie" at the Pentagon with fellow ideologue Donald Rumsfeld
posted by david roknich at 2:13 PM 1.10.03
Haliburton Awarded Massive Iraqi Oil Reconstruction Deal
"Cheney's friends at Haliburton were awarded a massive contract to help rebuild Iraq after the war was done. Bush requested 16 Billion to pay for the reconstruction...."
posted by Steven Realo at 3:16 PM 26.9.03
GREGG PALAST STRIKES GOLD Greg palst, famed for his daring coverage of the theft of Florida in the 2000 selection seems to have the full story of the Bush-Mulroney Gold connection in the can. Here's a short excert from his new book The Best Democracy Money Can Buy (Penguin/Plume, 2003) "Some of the loot for the Republican effort in the 1997-2000 election cycles came from an outfit called Barrick Corporation. The sum, while over $100,000, is comparatively small change for the GOP, yet it seemed quite a gesture for a corporation based in Canada. Technically, the funds came from those associated with the Canadian’s U.S. unit, Barrick Gold Strike.
They could well afford it. In the final days of the Bush (Senior) administration, the Interior Department made an extraordinary but little noticed change in procedures under the 1872 Mining Law, the gold rush-era act that permitted those whiskered small-time prospectors with their tin pans and mules to stake claims on their tiny plots. The department initiated an expedited procedure for mining companies that allowed Barrick to swiftly lay claim to the largest gold find in America. In the terminology of the law, Barrick could “perfect its patent” on the estimated $10 billion in ore—for which Barrick paid the U.S. Treasury a little under $ 10,000. Eureka!FULL STORY posted by Steven Realo at 3:18 PM 25.9.03
Two years later, the bombing in Afganistan continues. posted by Steven Realo at 11:32 AM 15.9.03
... and the Oil War (WW 4, as the neo-conservatives call it) marches on. Here's another brief review of unresolved issues: "It would be a mistake to assume that the only motivation for the war in Afghanistan is oil. The whole agenda of military and business interests in the region and the continuing necessity to prop-up an arcane military Keynesianism, especially through the expenditure of funds for weapons, however immoral and in violation of international law, is of paramount importance to the military-industrial complex running this country." Dr. Fran Shor, Michigan Coalition on Human Rights Published on Sunday, November 25, 2001 The War for Oil Subtext in Afghanistan by Fran Shor A recent article in the "Washington Post" provided a brief but revealing portrait of the role of US Special Forces in Afghanistan. The story was not about searching out Bin Laden and his followers in the caves of Afghanistan. Instead, the "Post" reported on a US Special Forces operation aimed at interdicting and destroying Iranian oil shipments to Afghan cities. According to the report, the trucks carrying the oil were destroyed by the camouflaged and goggled-eyed soldiers. Shouting "terrorists" at the frightened Iranian truck-drivers, the Special Forces handcuffed the drivers and led them away from where the trucks were then blown to bits. Although not harmed physically, the Iranians were completely baffled by why they were targets of such an attack, especially given the alleged civilian customers. The reader of the story might also be baffled as to why US Special Forces would conduct such an operation. Certainly, one could argue from the Pentagon's perspective that delivering precious fuel to potential Taliban supporters would constitute an important target. Of course, acknowledging that military targets encompass fuel supplies raises questions about how precise and restricted these military targets are. In fact, the Pentagon has conducted its military campaign in Afghanistan with weapons (e.g., cluster bombs) and targets (e.g. power stations) that put civilians, in particular, at risk. But, then, the larger question remains: "Why Iranian oil trucks?" What does Iranian oil, or indeed, any oil have to do with the war in Afghanistan? Simply put, the answer is that one of the primary subtexts for the Bush Administration's war in Afghanistan has been to guarantee control over the oil flow and reserves in Central Asia. Such intervention in this region is not new. In fact, when the popularly elected Dr. Mohammed Mossadeq threatened to nationalize Iranian oil in 1953, US and British secret services conspired in overthrowing him and restoring the Shah to power. Then, the political rationale for this intervention was the "communist" threat. So, Cold War ideology became a convenient cover for what would become an oil bonanza for Standard and Gulf. It's also not surprising that one of the key CIA operatives at the time in Iran, Kermit Roosevelt, later became an executive with Gulf Oil. Protection of US oil interests became a consuming matter to a host of Administrations. The so-called Carter doctrine, based on President Carter's State of the Union address in 1980 in the aftermath of the Iranian revolution made clear that an "attempt by any outside force to gain control of the Persian Gulf will be regarded by an assault on the vital interests of the United States of America, and such an assault will be repelled by any means necessary, including military force." The presence and build-up by the Carter, Reagan, and Bush Administrations of the US military in the region was, of course, not viewed as an "outside force," at least not by the client Gulf states whose corrupt and undemocratic regimes were willing partners in the oil business and even more willing clients for Pentagon products and forces. As long as Iraq was a willing junior partner in its war with Iran, the US willingly fed Saddam Hussein all the heinous weapons that he turned against the Kurds and other inhabitants of Iraq. Only when Iraq threatened Kuwait and Saudi Arabia and talked about taking its petrodollars elsewhere did the Bush Administration raise its concern about stability in the region and US vital interests. Obviously, other geopolitical matters and internal politics in the US were part of the subtext for the Gulf War. But it's no surprise that the Gulf War was quickly labeled a war for oil by opponents of Bush's policies in the region and gained some resonance with the general population in the US. Unfortunately, the corporate media, submitting rather pliantly to government censorship, had little interest in probing the connections between the politics of oil and the Bush Administration. Now with another Bush Administration in Washington, but with many of the same players, including those with obvious oil connections like VP Dick Cheney, and another war in the region, there needs to be some analysis of the politics of oil. The "Post" article gives no inkling of the oil connections. Nor should one expect to find those linkages in the corporate media. However, when one turns to alternative media sources and the internet, an interesting history comes to light - a history focused in particular around the role of the Unocal Oil company. Unocal has been actively engaged in doing business with repressive regimes throughout the world in their search for oil and natural gas reserves. From connections to military dictatorships in Burma and Indonesia, Unocal spread its oily tentacles throughout the third world. Having been part of a consortium of US oil firms exploring potential gas and oil reserves in Central Asia, Unocal turned its attention to Afghanistan in the late 1990's. Not averse to doing business with the Taliban, Unocal unsuccessfully tried to induce the Taliban as late as last summer into making a deal for a major oil pipeline across the country. When the talks broke off, there were rumblings in Washington that the Taliban would have to make way for a more pliable government. It's important to stress that Unocal, like many Washington policymakers, was willing to do business with the Taliban and turn a blind eye to their outrageous human rights abuses. More importantly, Unocal was fishing around for Washington to assert its power in the region to get a more pliable government in Afghanistan. Appearing before the House International Relations Subcommittee on Asia and the Pacific in February of 1998, John J. Maresca, Unocal's VP for International Relations asserted: "From the outset, we have made it clear that the construction of our proposed pipeline cannot begin until a recognized government is in place that has the confidence of our government, lenders, and our company." Maresca went on to urge "the Administration and Congress to give strong support to the UN-Led peace process in Afghanistan." Now that the Bush Administration through its military campaign has devastated an already brutalized country, the touting on a new non-Taliban government has become a key political objective and the UN is offering its services to help broker a new government in Afghanistan. Of course, neither the UN nor any other international agency was utilized by the Bush Administration to seek an alternative to the war in Afghanistan. Working through the World Court on the newly developed International Criminal Court (which the US has spurned) would have been impossible given the track record of Washington in these matters. Even when the Taliban offered to give up Bin Laden to a third country, Washington rejected this and pursued its nearly unilateral military campaign. With this larger context in mind, the US Special Forces operation against Iranian oil shipments to Afghanistan becomes less murky. Furthermore, Bush's executive orders to prevent release of the presidential papers of his father's Administration and the Reagan Administration and the use of secret military tribunals against terrorist networks also takes on a new perspective. A cover-up of connections to the politics of oil, including the financial involvement of the Bin Laden family interests in Saudi Arabia, is an obvious subtext in all of this. It would be a mistake to assume that the only motivation for the war in Afghanistan is oil. The whole agenda of military and business interests in the region and the continuing necessity to prop-up an arcane military Keynesianism, especially through the expenditure of funds for weapons, however immoral and in violation of international law, is of paramount importance to the military-industrial complex running this country. Until the people wake up to the message contained in Eisenhower's farewell address, we will face unending wars made by Washington policymakers. Warning against the "unwarranted influence" of the "military-industrial complex," Eisenhower prophesied about the "potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power." In this two front war at home and abroad, we are witnesses to the misplaced power of the Bush Administration. Before there are more victims of such megalomanical Washington policymakers, we need to recall another Eisenhower prophecy, albeit paraphrased: Some day the people of this country will get so tired of the warmakers that they will rise up and get rid of them. With so many lives in the balance, can we afford to wait any longer? Fran Shor is a Professor at Wayne State University and a member of the Michigan Coalition on Human Rights. He can be reached at f.shor@wayne.edu. posted by david roknich at 1:15 PM 12.9.03
for the sake of historical reference, an brief tutorial on the WEF
published shortly before their 2001 meeting
The World Economic Forum is, in a way, a big cocktail party for the global corporate elite. In their own words, "they are fully engaged in the process of defining and advancing the global agenda." More specifically, it's our globe, but it's their agenda. From Jan. 31-Feb. 4, the World Economic Forum (WEF) will be meeting at the Waldorf-Astoria in Manhattan for it's annual summit. Alexander Downer, who attended the 1998 Summit, describes the Summit as the world's 'Business Olympics'. The yearly meeting, usually held at WEF headquarters in Davos, Switzerland, was rescheduled to meet in New York as a token of support for the injuries our city sustained on September 11th. The WEF is, in a way, a big cocktail party for the global corporate elite. As an organization, it has no power to actually set policy, but it creates a space in which international "leaders" can hash out their vision for the rest of us. In their own words, "they are fully engaged in the process of defining and advancing the global agenda." More specifically, it's our globe, but it's their agenda. The Forum was born in 1971 as a yearly 'European Management Forum' of Euro-corporates. It was funded by the European Commission until 1987, when it became the WEF and started to claim global reach. Its membership reflects its class orientation, and includes the most prominent transnational corporations, 1000 of which make up the WEF 'Foundation Members'. In addition, there is a club of 'Global Growth Companies'; 300 'Industry Governors'; 300 Global Leaders of Tomorrow'; 'World Economic Leaders' from both politics and business; 'World Media Leaders' from 100 media groups; 100 'World Cultural Leaders'; and 'Forum Fellows' from academia and the heads of national economic research organizations. The WEF aspires to be an agenda-setting Forum. It is, in its own modest opinion, 'the foremost global partnership of business, political, intellectual and other leaders of society committed to improving the state of the world'. With the diffusion of neo-liberalism, and consequent advances in corporate globalization from the 1980s, the WEF has taken on an unprecedented role as a rallying point for global elites, and as a vehicle for class power. Clearly the WEF can't set the agenda and certainly can't determine the outcomes - it is not a conspiratorial cabal standing over society. Rather, it is a class grouping, fully embedded in social relations, that self-consciously takes on the role of planning for collective class interests. It seeks to influence the political agendas and respond to the prevailing challenges - and in this respect, as Kees van der Pijl argues, it is the first 'true International of capital'. The Forum has been remarkably successful - since 1971 the 'state of the world' has dramatically improved for many of the participating corporations. WEF strategizing drove the neo-liberal agenda in the 1980's, bringing together politicians from the 'pretender' states of the newly industrializing world, as well as from the OECD states, to map out an agenda with transnational business executives. It offered a proactive forum, removed from the public gaze, and played a central role in diffusing neo-liberalism. The model was presented as the solution to the crises of accumulation experienced in the 1970s and early 1980s, and was highly effective in extending the reign of the market. This success has come at the price of built-in uncertainty and instability. Globalized neo-liberalism had led to a dramatic redrawing of the boundaries of capitalism (or rather, an unbounding of capitalism altogether). Temporal boundaries have melted away with the speeding up of circulation; spatial boundaries have been superceded with the growing transnational reach of corporations; even socio-psychological boundaries have lifted, with the increased commodification of life. A newly empowered transnational capitalist class has emerged triumphant, presiding over the new landscapes of accumulation. But class hegemony is by no means assured - uncharted territory imposes incalculable risk. Speeding circulation compresses business cycles; confidence rests on ephemera; ideological symbols are presented as so-called 'fundamentals'; frenzied speculation rules. Corporate transnationalism exhausts social and physical environments; deeper commodification disassembles social solidarity and generates powerful imperatives for cultural survival, often carried through the new modes of social communication. As a result, since at least the mid 1990s, neo-liberal prescriptions have been widely discredited (just look at the present crisis in Argentina). Exponential rises in executive salaries, and in corporate accumulation, along with a dramatic concentration of economic power across all sectors, offer clear evidence of the success of neo-liberalism as a class strategy. But neo-liberal globalization has also brought unprecedented levels of global inequality, and undreamed-of degrees of financial instability, environmental exhaustion and social dislocation. The neo-liberal triumph has created new sources of opposition, the impacts and responses have been unrelenting, and advocates have been forced to go on the defensive. The high water mark was 1995, when the OECD declared it was marking out a 'global vision for the year 2020, a New Global Age'. But already a political revival, inspired by social democratic ideas, and expressed in a new form of social liberalism sometimes described as the 'Third Way', was sweeping the OECD. As neo-liberal prescriptions have unraveled, there has been an urgent revision of the WEF's neo-liberal project. The WEF has left behind its market fundamentalism, and now is charting a new agenda for corporate globalism, one that embraces rather than rejects 'the social'. The massed ranks of analysts, consultants and advisers, from credit ratings agencies, management consultancies, inter-governmental institutions and non-government organizations, have entered the fray, battling to define the new accumulation paradigm. There are continuing efforts to enhance 'market discipline', to suppress the advancing crises, to institutionalize transnational class power, and render neo-liberal globalism irreversible. Yet there is also deepening dissent amongst policy-making groups. There is a rethinking of neo-liberalism even amongst the most elite institutions: as Hans-Peter Martin and Herald Schuman demonstrate, many of the most powerful players in global capitalism are questioning the 'dictatorship of the market'. Primary advocates and beneficiaries of neo-liberal globalism, such as George Soros and Ted Turner, both of whom had embarked on paternalist interventions - the imaginatively branded 'Soros Foundation' and 'Turner Foundation' - began expressing sincere regrets at the social costs of neo-liberalism. Other elements, as van der Pijl highlights, went further and increasingly have been rethinking and explicitly 'mobilizing against yesterday's prescriptions'. These have much wider ramifications, potentially enabling 'a deepening of democracy, a reappropriation of the public sphere by the population, and eventually a more fundamental transformation away from class society'. Recent developments have only strengthened the leverage of this dissenting segment. Institutional crises of legitimacy have accumulated, with the OECD shelving its 'Multilateral Agreement on Investment' in 1998, the temporary ditching of the World Trade Organization's 'Millenium Round' in 1999, and the advancing crisis in the International Monetary Fund's global regime of 'structural adjustment'. Add into the equation the continuing crisis in 'transitional' post-communist societies, especially Russia, and the severe jolt delivered to the 'Newly Industrializing countries' of East Asia by financial 'contagion' in 1997-8, and the impending bursting of the infotainment bubble, then the challenges to neo-liberalism begin to seem irresistible. Expressing this, there have been the dramatic public explosions against neo-liberal globalization: Geneva 1996, Cologne 1998, Seattle 1999, Washington 2000, Montreal and Genoa 2001. For the first time in many years, 'anti-capitalist' protest has returned to the capitalist heartland, and to the global stage. These protests open up the ideological space for the articulation of alternative guiding principles, putting on the agenda the possibility of transformation away from the current malaise. As the promotion of capitalist discipline is questioned, protest targeted at the agents of neo-liberal globalization gains remarkable political leverage. In this political climate WEF meetings start to take on a special significance. Since 1996 the WEF has attracted increasingly militant opposition, and it has responded by attempting to re-chart the neo-liberal project. The WEF response is to deliberately avoid the appearance of backroom strategizing, and instead to seek a higher public profile, attempting to reground its legitimacy by being seen to engage with prominent advocates of the emerging alternatives. The WEF is thus placing itself at the center of debates about the revision of neo-liberalism, asserting that it can play 'important role in forging the new geometry'. Reflecting this, the WEF has reached out to those 'excluded' by neo-liberal globalization - notably non-OECD governments, such as Mexico and South Africa, and critical Non-Government Organizations, such as the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU). At Davos in 1998 Hillary Clinton argued the role of NGOs and other representatives of 'civil society' had to be enhanced, while John Sweeney, from the AFL-CIO, focused on issues of distribution, arguing markets had to 'work for the majority and not simply for the few'. In 1999 Vice-President Al Gore appeared with Kofi Annan, who appealed for a 'global compact' between business and the UN founded on 'core values in the areas of human rights, labor standards, and environmental practices'. In 2000 President Clinton shared the Millennial limelight - somewhat blurred by Seattle - with Tony Blair. Davos policy debates are now couched in terms of 'institutional accommodation', 'corporate responsibility' and 'global dialogue', with sessions in 2000 on 'responsible globality', 'inclusive prosperity' and 'sustainable development'. Perhaps most cynically, the WEF's 'World Competitiveness Scorecard' - a yearly league-table of 'how national environments are conducive or detrimental to the domestic and global competitiveness of enterprises' - was supplemented by an 'Environmental Sustainability Index' at Davos 2000. At the same time, as Jane Kelsey highlights, a new 'World Economic Community' internet link-up between 10,000 key economic decision-makers -an internet 'hotline' for concertizing corporate responses - is being constructed. The contest is on to establish a revised normative and institutional framework for the global economy. The WEF is claiming a central role in shaping the agenda, and some, such as the ICFTU, are participants in the process, taking heart in the WEF's apparent willingness to become an advocate of 'globalization with a human face'. But the key question is whether the WEF should be permitted to drive this agenda. Should a forum that is dominated by corporate interests be encouraged to take on the role of mapping out future frameworks for global governance? Should it be granted recognition and legitimacy in this agenda-setting process? Or, rather, should its role be challenged, and alternative sources of legitimacy be asserted? There was a telling moment at Davos 2000 when the assembled executives refused to vacate the conference chamber to enable a security check before Clinton's speech. The US President's Security Service was forced to back down after a corporate 'sit-in'. Clinton's speech went ahead: even the President of the US has to respect the wishes of the corporate club. Perhaps he should have joined the 1000 protestors outside the conference venue, and joined the democratic movement against corporate power. There will be similar protests outside New York summit of the WEF later this month. In 1999 the summit lobbied for regional governments to back the coming WTO 'Millennium Round', arguing that trade liberalization was inevitable and needed to be extended into 'free and fair competition, protecting intellectual property and foreign investment'. In 2002 we can expect much rhetoric about inclusiveness and sustainability. There will be plenty of ironic moments and opportunities to politicize globalized neo-liberalism. Sources: Kelsey, Jane, 2000, Reclaiming the Future, Bridget Williams Books, Wellington; Martin, Hans-Peter and Schumann, Harald, 1997, The Global Trap, Pluto, Sydney; Kees van der Pijl, 1998, Transnational classes and international relations, Routledge, London. The website of the World Economic Forum: http://www.weforum.org James Goodman, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Technology Sydney (UTS), PO Box 123, Broadway, NSW 2007, Australia, Tel: 9514 2714, Fax: 9514 2332, Email: james.goodman@uts.edu.au posted by david roknich at 3:50 PM
Lori Berenson is still in prison. A sad reminder of a lesson we haven't learned well enough from the days of Huey Newton: in order to remain effective as a challenge to the established order, you must not allow the Centurions to lay hold of your body. In the early years of Lori's imprisonment, she wouldn't be able to write to us.
Here's the latest from her website as of Aug 23 (previous post, below) posted by david roknich at 2:51 PM
Assorted Thoughts on Truth, Lies, and Paradoxes
However absurd this may sound, recently it is very common that we hear the truth labeled as lies and lies claimed to be the truth.
According to Peru's Ministry of Economy, Peru has the greatest economic growth in the region. What is not said is that there is also an increased growth of poverty and misery.
It is interesting that those leaders who always refer to "democracy" and "defense of human rights" when referring to their own countries are the same who vengefully and cruelly carry out and then justify the most objectionable violations of fundamental rights elsewhere.
Here in the Peruvian media, so-called "experts" are quoted repeatedly to exhaustion that prisoners are leading subversive actions outside of the prisons. This is simply not true. Even the Minister of the Interior has said this is not true. But this has not stopped the media from continuing to promote and sensationalize these falsehoods. And these falsehoods are burying political prisoners.
This is a world in which the dead, instead of being buried, are mistreated, humiliated, and exhibited as war trophies on CNN. Favorite photos are close-ups of heaps of motionless bodies stacked like wood and condemned to humiliating anonymity. However, the living are indeed buried, some in immaculate tombs of cement and iron, tombs with bars that close more and more each day over their bodies that still breathe, that still feel, that still think. Others are buried under the weight of poverty, hunger, and injustice.
As if their impunity wasn't enough, there are Latin-American ex-presidents who are organizing political parties, standing on the top of a stage constructed with bricks of abuse, death, and impunity and built with the mortar of their violations of human rights.
These are just a few examples of daily news stories in this paradoxical world in which corporate globalization means economic growth that only a very few experience, while the majority suffer the globalization of misery. Watching the campaign against Peru's Commission of Truth and Reconciliation, the impudence of those who committed crimes against humanity, like Rioss Montt in Guatemala and Fujimori in Per?, while the dead are denied a decent burial and those alive are being buried deeper, one finds a common denominator in lies, arrogance, impossible and inhuman contradictions in detriment to humanity.
Lori Berenson
Huacariz Prison
Cajamarca, Peru
August 23, 2003
posted by david roknich at 2:41 PM 27.4.02
Once again, Naomi Klein attempts to make sense of our fragmented global realities: "...in Washington D.C. last weekend... a demonstration against the World Bank and International Monetary Fund was joined by an anti-war march, as well as a demonstration against the Israeli occupation of Palestinian territory. In the end, all the marches joined together in what organizers described as the largest Palestinian solidarity demonstration in U.S. history, 75,000 people by police estimates... On Sunday night, I turned on my television in the hopes of catching a glimpse of this historic protest. I saw something else instead: triumphant Jean-Marie Le Pen celebrating his new found status as the second most popular political leader in France. There is no connection whatsoever between French fascism and the "free Palestine" marchers... ...it is possible to criticize Israel while forcefully condemning the rise of anti-Semitism." read more related materials, organized by date post your comments posted by david roknich at 3:38 PM 15.4.02
"The face of homelessness has changed over the years. More and more families are finding themselves without housing or enough money left for food..." Sonja Sorensen watched me visit the "Union Gospel Mission" after my successful interview.. posted by david roknich at 2:44 PM 11.4.02
The Wall Street Journal provides yet another insight into the scams being played by large industries in the aftermath of 911: "higher premiums... ...businesses hundreds of miles away from New York City now face the legacy of a decade of imprudence among insurers". And all of them are trying to mislead the public into believing it's die to 911. Yeah, right. posted by david roknich at 2:28 PM 5.4.02
How Gannett Manipulates the Labor PoolI spoke with Sonja Sorenson today about the abrupt withdrawal of my job offer at the Statesman Journal in Salem, Oregon. They called me later, while my urine was flying to Minneappolis, to state that they decided to give the job to someone else instead. posted by david roknich at 7:50 AM
"...We go to Ramallah hospital, ...where the Israelis attempted numerous times to go in and take who they wanted, but hospital staff and foreigners refused to let them in. Anyway, we went there to pick up our reporter and cameraman who were there to tape the burial of numerous martyrs. The reason they were being buried on hospital grounds was because there was no more room in the morgue. Anyway, we are right in front of the hospital and it is packed with demonstrators and doctors and nurses and the ...Israelis start shooting at everyone. Firstly, the curfew had been lifted so we had every right to be out and secondly it was just media, peacekeepers and hospital staff. What the hell were they firing at???" More first-hand accounts of Israeli terrorism sponsored by US tax dollars posted by david roknich at 7:49 AM 4.4.02
It's time to put Salem's Statesman Journal on the map, along with the name of their new publisher, Sonja Sorenson for their blatantly unfair manipulation of labor.
The story is unraveling as I type this, and I'll be sure to keep you posted. posted by david roknich at 3:54 PM 3.4.02
1545: An ambulance has just come under fire in Ramallah trying to get around IDF tanks and internationals and medical staff were told over a loudspeaker to stay inside the hospital and then the IDF proceeded to open live fire on the hospital. A CBS news television crew was forcibly escorted out of Ramallah by the IDF. As a result, the remaining news crews in the area are concerned that they too may be expelled from the area, a concern which is affecting their ability to cover breaking news to the best of their ability. From IMC Jerusalem, until they disappear. posted by david roknich at 10:25 AM 29.3.02
What have we heard of Bush's trip to Peru?
Last news was that he would once again broach the subject of Lori Berenson's continued imprisonment with the new "democratic" government in Peru. What has actually happened thus far is typical of his administration. He knows very well how to wave a friendly hello with his right hand while slashing with the switchblade in his left. Last week that dagger was wielded for him by an old "asset" known by the name of Dennis Jett, now ensconced, like so many former intelligence operatives, in the robes of academia. First, a little background about Dennis's reaction to a humanitarian delegation that went to Peru to visit Lori in 1999. Amy Goodman was with that group, from Office of The Americas, and they have a record of what transpired on their website at:
(be sure you past this entire, very long URL into your browser, include everything within the quotes below)
"http://www.officeoftheamericas.org/newsletter/9906_focus.html#OFFICE OF THE AMERICAS DELEGATION VISITS LORI"
Here's an interesting excerpt:
"After our visit we met with U.S. Ambassador Dennis Jett in Lima. He was very disturbed that we were admitted to the prison. He was worried that the prison director might lose her job for admitting us. His main
concern was that the visit might upset Mr. Fujimori. The Ambassador was most grateful to Fujimori for allowing the United States to establish a military base on the Peru/Colombia border and for repaying Peru's debts to the World Bank. His concern for Lori seemed non-existent. Rather than be upset by the visit of six U.S. citizens to an unjustly imprisoned fellow citizen, would it not be proper for a U.S. Ambassador to demand her release, to question why such visits are not accepted, to ask why the press cannot talk to her, to ask why she cannot make a statement to anyone, to ask why her mail, both incoming and outgoing, is censored for any word that might be considered political? We are extremely disturbed by the lack of advocacy for Lori on the part of our government. The State Department and its representatives continue to speak of her in relationship to the activity of the MRTA rebels. She is not a member and has never been a member of this organization. She spoke to members of this organization, however, while preparing articles for two U.S. magazines."
The military base mentioned above has a dubious history worthy of further discussion: of immediate interest is that fact that the Dennis Jett has "has timed an intensely poisonous article against Lori in the widely read Washington Post to coincide with President Bush's trip to Perú". This is the same Dennis Jett who managed the distribution of hundreds of millions of dollars to SOA graduate Vladimero Montessinos, the virtual dictator of Peru during the Fujimori years. Lori's parents rebut his article at http://freelori.org. Jett's current employer, the University of Florida, trumpets the fact of his responsibility for the management of the vast resources I've mentioned above. Worthy of further exploration is the mysterious increase in extrajudicial killing and torture in Peru with the "restoration of democracy under Toledo". This is typical of the paradoxes we continue to witness under the thumb of fascism today.
Approximately one year ago, baptist missionary Veronica Bowers and her infant daughter died in a plane shot down by Peruvian pilots under the guidance of US "advisors". Their mission originated at the military base mentioned in the quote above. When GWB was informed of this at the Summit of The Americas, he declared a moratorium on our air interdiction efforts in Peru. Even while he was making that pronouncement, his administration was sending the Andean Regional Initiative proposal to congress, asking for an additional billion dollars in funding for programs similar to the one that had resulted in deaths and injuries to US citizens. At least we can count on consistent behavior from our leaders, and I might add that the role of Dennis Jett as Dean of the International Center at UF is not atypical in our sadly subverted academic community today.
Yours in Solidarity,
David Roknich
Visit our new Peace Festival Blog
http://oregonpeacefestival.org/blog/forum.php
Everyone can participate! posted by david roknich at 2:34 AM 27.3.02
Peace Festival Forum is beginning to get interesting, with some posts from local activists: "My PATRIOT FOR PEACE sign disturbed a gentleman Wednesday... posted by david roknich at 11:12 PM
better blogs: I like Blogger, and thnak them for the free hosting but the best blogs now allow visitor comments. I especially like the script Jeremy Ashcraft has been working on for the past year, which why I'm using it at the Peace Festival Site. Unlike blogger, you do have to mail your request to human beings..
posted by david roknich at 3:19 PM
in addition to the new comment-capable blogs, check out the naomi klein interview in a quicktime video made during a speaking tour in norway last year. Fortunately, the interview is in english. But it does require thte newest version of (free) quicktime. posted by david roknich at 1:48 PM 17.1.02
Over 1,000 of the world's corporate leaders, along with top political and media representatives, will meet behind closed doors in New York City from January 31 to February 4 at the World Economic Forum's annual meeting. Meanwhile thousands of students, union members and activists plan to protest in what is expected to be the largest American anti-corporate globalization demonstration post-9/11.
posted by david roknich at 6:47 AM 23.12.01
"The US and British governments say they are "reconciled to civilian deaths" in their war. They cold-bloodedly admit they will be killing people who had nothing to do with the attacks in New York and Washington. There is no sense of "humanity", of "mercy" or of "justice" in that - just the plainest hypocrisy."
The best text I have read about why we need to mobilize to STOP BUSH'S WAR posted by david roknich at 7:48 PM
I'm beginning to practice the art of website defacement by starting on my own sites. My preference is bold red type right under the banner ad. Next thing you know, those brainwashed "war corespondents" on pubic radio will be calling this sort of thing "Terrism". Whoever brainwashed them obviously couldn't pronounce the word properly. Time to shake this country loose from the mass hypnosis that is recognized throughout the world a foaming-at-the-mouth war hysteria. I'm doing what I can, with a theatrical flair (or is that flare?). hehe....
posted by david roknich at 7:12 PM
More opinion in the particular article than news, but soon we'll have some freshly translated reports from the revolution in Argentina: a revolution with profiund economic implications. Until then, from Indymedia we have:
"The new provisionary president of Argentina, Adolfo Rodríguez Saá (Peronist) has been nominated by the Congress Assembly. The most important thing that Rodríguez Saá anounced in his speech was that Argentina will temporarily cease paying its foreign debt..."
posted by david roknich at 2:49 PM 22.12.01
From the Bush Terrorist Archive Department
"the CIA officially acknowledged...
that the mastermind of the terrorist attack, Chilean intelligence chief Manuel Contreras, was a paid asset of the CIA.
The new report was issued almost 24 years to the day after the murders of former Chilean diplomat Orlando Letelier and American co-worker Ronni Moffitt, who died on Sept. 21, 1976, when a remote-controlled bomb ripped apart Letelier's car as they drove down Massachusetts Avenue, a stately section of Washington known as Embassy Row." posted by david roknich at 10:59 PM
Who is running the War Machine with your tax dollars?
Is this not taxation without representation?
Oral Majority Online
News from Florida...
"...I want to put out a perception that
exists. And simply: One, Gore won the
state; and secondly, this state was stolen
by Bush; and thirdly, we've become a
scapegoat for the rest of the country that
doesn't want to act on it. As if we're all a
bunch of looney-toons, all a bunch of rip-offs.
As if nobody here knows how to vote, and
we're just an insane group of people.
Quite honestly, of the 63 demonstrations,
including one we've had right out in front of
this building this morning. We get a
completely different feedback from the
grassroots community that is totally angry,
and not letting go of this issue.
... and you are just looking at
the tip of the iceberg...."Oral Majority Online
posted by david roknich at 7:26 PM 29.11.01
The December issue of The Oregon Peaceworker is still at the printers, but you can read the entire paper online. In keeping with the needs of our time, the focus this month is on "What Pacifists Believe", featuring an interesting profile of "Anarchist Pacifist" Ammon Hennacy by our editor, Peter Bergel. If you have limited bandwidth, download page 2 for the index, and on page 22-23 you'll find our most recent announcements of events and actions. posted by david roknich at 9:32 AM 28.11.01
Word Up From Naomi Klein NoLogo" In recent weeks, there has been a severe crackdown on activists (reclassified as "terrorists") in Bolivia a
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