May 14, 2008

Native Hawaiian Resistance

Indigenous people in what is now the United States of America are fighting back.  Here's what is happening in Hawaii.  From Axis of Logic:

Hawaiians sit in at palace, reject U.S. occupation
By LeiLani Dowell
May 13, 2008, 08:40
Rejecting the continued U.S. occupation of the sovereign nation of Hawaii, a group of Native Hawaiians has re-established its own government, named the Hawaiian Kingdom Government. On April 30, that government reclaimed the Iolani Palace, home of the last Hawaiian monarchs before they were overthrown by U.S. interests in 1893. The palace is now run as a museum.

Mahealani Kahau, Head of State
of Hawaiian Kingdom Government

Mahealani_kahau250 About 70 members of this Hawaiian government arrived at the palace at 5:30 a.m. on April 30 and posted “No Trespassing” signs on the gates. Guards with the government, posted at the entrances, explained the action to visitors. They held the palace for six hours, while employees of the palace museum were sent home.

The Hawaiian Kingdom Government’s Web site states:

“Since the Spanish-American War, 1898, our Nation has been under prolonged occupation by the United States of America. ... The primary objective of the Hawaiian Kingdom Government is to expose the occupation of our nation ... and to provide a foundation for transition and the ultimate end of the occupation of the Hawaiian Kingdom.”

The government is part of a broad sovereignty movement in Hawaii and has registered thousands of Native Hawaiians and non-Hawaiians as citizens.

U.S. theft of Hawaiian lands

In 1893, Queen Lili’uokalani of the Kingdom of Hawaii was overthrown by a small group of U.S. citizens and other non-Hawaiians who pretended they were challenging constitutional changes she was trying to make. That constitution, which had been forced six years prior—by threat of arms—on the previous ruler, Lili’uokalani’s brother King David Kalalaua, had shifted power from the Hawaiian monarchy to the non-Hawaiian elite.

Hawaii was illegally annexed by the U.S. in 1898 and claimed as a state in 1959.

In 1993, a formal “apology” to the Hawaiian people was approved by the U.S. Congress and signed by President Bill Clinton. It acknowledges that the overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawaii was plotted by the U.S. minister to Hawaii. “Without the active support and intervention by the United States diplomatic and military representatives, the insurrection against the Government of Queen Liliuokalani would have failed for lack of popular support and insufficient arms,” it states.

The “apology” further acknowledges that, “The indigenous Hawaiian people never directly relinquished their claims to their inherent sovereignty as a people or over their national lands to the United States, either through their monarchy or through a plebiscite or referendum.”

The illegal occupation of the Hawaiian nation has created untold hardship on the Hawaiian people, including a depleted population as well as the disappearance of their language—which children were not allowed to speak in public schools—and other aspects of their culture.

However, despite the apology the U.S. is loath to give any land back to its rightful owners, especially given the island nation’s geographical location. Hawaii now serves as the headquarters of the U.S. Pacific Command, the largest U.S. armed forces military command in the world (www.hawaiiankingdom.org) and is the home to large Army, Air Force, Navy and Marine bases.

Resistance of Native Hawaiians to the political, military and cultural occupation of their land continues. A growing movement teaches the language to students so that it is not lost to history.

In 1976 Hawaiian activists occupied the Hawaiian island of Kaho’olawe, which had been used by the Navy for bombing target practice since the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. That struggle eventually led to cessation of bombing on the island in 1990 and the return of the island to the State of Hawai’i in 1994.

The Hawaiian Kingdom Government plans on returning to the Iolani Palace every day except the weekends, and conducting its business from the palace grounds. Mahealani Kahau, the government’s elected head of state, said: “The Hawaiian Kingdom Government is here and it doesn’t plan to leave. This is a continuity of the Hawaiian Kingdom of 1892 to today.” (Associated Press, May 1

May 08, 2008

The Shoah and the Nakba - The Tragedies of Two Peoples Linked

The following is from Jewish Voice for Peace:

Remembering the Nakba during Israel's 60th anniversary

Today, Jews around the world are celebrating the 60th anniversary of the founding of the state of Israel. These celebrations reflect the understandable joy of Jews who view Israel as the symbol of 60 years of freedom from centuries of persecution, culminating in the Holocaust. Nevertheless, not all Jews will be celebrating.

The Shoah (Jewish Holocaust)
Shoah_1_2

While Israel provided a safe haven for countless Jewish refugees who had nowhere else to go, many of them members of our own families, the terrible fact is that over 700,000 Palestinians were made into refugees to make room for the future state of Israel. Sixty years and several generations later, that number has swelled to an estimated 7 million. Many live in 58 registered refugee camps dispersed throughout the Middle East, and some 4 million Palestinians in the Occupied Territories continue to endure reprehensible collective punishment to this day.

That is why the creation of the state of Israel, an occasion marking great celebrations for many Jews throughout the world, is known as the Nakba, or the Catastrophe, to Palestinians.

And that is why many of us will not be celebrating, for as long as Palestinians are still fighting for their fundamental human rights, we can not rejoice.

Any peaceful future depends on recognizing both the Palestinian and the Israeli narrative. And yet, just as the names of over 400 pre-1948 Palestinian towns and cities have been deliberately erased from maps, the history of the Palestinian Nakba itself has been all but erased from consciousness.

      The Nakba (Palestinian
              Catastrophe)

Nakba_3_2
At Jewish Voice for Peace, we cannot participate in celebrations that erase both the history and modern-day injustices experienced by Palestinians. It is precisely this rendering invisible of Palestinian experience and claims for justice that makes reconciliation between Israelis and Palestinians impossible. We choose instead to remember, to know, and to work towards justice and self-determination for both peoples. As Jews and Palestinians, our pasts are intertwined, and so too are our futures. 

Today, because much of the world has forgotten, we remember that:

  • In April, 1948, the same month as the infamous massacre at Deir Yassin, Plan Dalet was put into operation. It authorized the destruction of Palestinian villages and the expulsion of the indigenous population outside the borders of the state.
  • On May 22, 1948, Jewish soldiers from the Alexandroni Brigade entered the house of Tantura residents killing between 110-230 Palestinian men. 
  • On October 28, 1948, in the village of Dawayameh, near Hebron, Battalion 89 of the 8th Brigade occupied the village. Israeli soldiers said of the massacre that babies... skulls were cracked open, women raped or burned alive in houses, men stabbed to death. 145 men, women and children were killed. Over 450 went missing, of which 170 were women.

Under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, every person "has the right to leave any country, including his own, and to return to his country."  Israel has never accepted the legitimacy of this basic human right as a basis for peace negotiations, whether by return, compensation, or resettlement.  Surely it is now time to acknowledge the narrative of the other, the price paid by another people for European anti-Semitism and Hitler's genocide.  As the late Palestinian intellectual Edward Said emphasized, "Like it or not, this is the historical reality. We must better understand them, and they must better understand us. We must make clear the link between the Shoah (the European Jewish Holocaust) and the Nakba (the Palestinian catastrophe of 1948). Neither experience is equal to the other, and neither should be minimized."

Many of us will not celebrate as long as Israel continues to violate international law, inflicts a monstrous collective punishment on the civilian population of Gaza, and continues to deny to Palestinians their human rights and national aspirations.

We will celebrate when Arab and Jew live as equals in a peaceful Middle East.

May 07, 2008

"Gusanos" Celebrate Terrorist in Miami

Luis Posada Carriles, A Terror Suspect Abroad, Enjoys A ‘Coming-Out’ in Miami

by Carol J. Williams

MIAMI - The dapper octogenarian in a crisp blue suit, his face smoothed by plastic surgery, swanned from table to table in the candlelit banquet hall, bestowing kisses and collecting accolades.An aging movie star being feted by fans? A veteran politico taking his bows?

                                                  Luis Posada Carriles
Carriles_2

No, the man being honored by 500 fellow Cuban Americans at a sold-out gala was Luis Posada Carriles, the former CIA operative wanted in Venezuela on terrorism charges and under a deportation order for illegally entering the United States three years ago.

Posada, 80, has mostly kept a low profile since his release from a Texas prison a year ago and a federal judge’s dismissal of the only U.S. charges against him — making false statements to immigration officials.

But recent events like the Friday dinner and an exhibition and sale of his paintings last fall show that the man who spent his life trying to topple the communist government of Fidel Castro has returned to the social forefront of this city’s exile community.

“We are coming to the end of a terrible stage. The end of our struggle is near,” Posada told the crowd of supporters in evening dress, referring to Castro’s failing health.

Venezuela’s ambassador in Washington, Bernardo Alvarez Herrera, condemned the celebration of Posada as a mockery of justice and evidence of a Bush administration double standard in fighting terrorism.

“This is outrageous, particularly because he kept talking about violence,” Alvarez said of Posada. “He said that the whole thing now is ‘to sharpen our machetes’ ” for a confrontation with leftist regimes in Latin America.

The U.S. government has never given Venezuela a formal answer to its 3-year-old request for extradition of Posada, despite a treaty providing for such cooperation that has been in effect since 1922, the ambassador said.

Posada, a naturalized Venezuelan citizen, is alleged to have masterminded the bombing of a Cuban airliner in 1976 on which all 73 on board were killed, including a youth fencing team returning from a tournament in the Venezuelan capital, Caracas. He is also suspected of plotting a series of hotel bombings in Havana in the late 1990s, one of which killed an Italian tourist.

He has boasted of his many attempts to kill Castro and has allegedly been involved in, according to court documents, “some of the most infamous events of 20th century Central American politics.”

Posada was serving time in a Panama prison for a 2000 assassination attempt on Castro when outgoing Panamanian President Mireya Moscoso pardoned him and three accomplices in August 2004 in what some observers saw as a favor to President Bush to rally the Cuban-dominated Florida vote for his reelection.

The three other Cuban Americans returned to Miami as heroes; Posada arrived six months later, reportedly fetched from Mexico by a shrimp boat owned by an anti-Castro benefactor.

As Venezuela, Cuba and human rights groups clamored for Posada’s extradition for trial on the plane-bombing charges, federal authorities here arrested him in May 2005 for illegal entry. A federal judge in Texas ordered him deported, but another judge prohibited his being sent to Venezuela, heeding claims by Posada’s lawyers that he could face torture or execution there.

None of a half-dozen friendly countries contacted by the State Department would agree to take Posada.

An immigration fraud case was brought by federal prosecutors later that year but dismissed in May 2007. U.S. District Judge Kathleen Cardone accused federal authorities of using trickery, fraud and deceit in pursuing a criminal case against him.

Federal prosecutors appealed and are waiting for a ruling from the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, said Dean Boyd, spokesman for the Justice Department.

Analysts speculate that the U.S. government has dodged calls for prosecution of Posada for fear he would disclose details of CIA involvement in coups, assassination plots and scandals, including the Iran-Contra Affair.

Peter Kornbluh, head of the Cuba Documentation Project at George Washington University’s National Security Archive, has compiled declassified CIA and FBI documents on Posada that show he remained in close touch with Washington handlers throughout his covert service.

“The spectacle of a wanted international terrorist being publicly feted as a hero in Miami makes a mockery of the Bush administration’s commitment to wage a war on terrorism,” he said of Posada’s coming-out party.

Rep. William Delahunt (D-Mass.) convened a congressional hearing in November on the administration’s handling of the Posada case, arguing that there was “compelling evidence” implicating Posada in the plane bombing.

Delahunt said Tuesday that “there doesn’t seem to be much enthusiasm” under the current administration for prosecuting Posada, but that he would push again for legal action against Posada after the fall election. “To have Posada honored in such a way sends a terrible statement to the rest of the world,” the congressman said of the tribute.

Posada, still under a supervision order with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, entered the banquet to a standing ovation, his face beaming and minus the scar from a 1990 attack by gunmen in Guatemala.

“He’s a real hero for Cuba. He’s been fighting for the freedom of Cuba since the day he arrived in the United States,” said Hector Morales-George, a retired surgeon who attended the dinner.

© 2008 The Los Angeles Times

April 24, 2008

Conservative Evangelical Physician Advocates for Single Payer Health System

It looks like the tide is turning in favor of a single payer system for health care in the U.S.  The following article by Amy Goodman of Democarcy Now comes from TruthDig.comRichard Griego

The Single-Payer Solution

By Amy Goodman

As the media coverage of the Democratic presidential race continues to focus on lapel pins and pastors, America is ailing. As I travel around the country, I find people are angry and motivated. Like Dr. Rocky White, a physician from a conservative, evangelical background who practices in rural Alamosa, Colo. A tall, gray-haired Westerner in black jeans, a crisp white shirt and a bolo tie, Dr. White is a leading advocate for single-payer health care. He wasn’t always.

    Dr. Rocky White on "Democracy Now"
Rocky_white He told me in a recent interview: “Here I am, a Republican, thinking about nationalizing health care. It just went against the grain of everything that I stood for. But you have to remember: I didn’t come to those conclusions with lofty ideals of social justice.”

In the early 1990s, his medical group started falling apart. White, a keen student of economics and the business of medicine, determined that it wasn’t just his practice but the system that was broken.

“You’re seeing an ever-increasing number of people starting to support a national health program. In fact, 59 percent of practicing physicians today believe that we need to have a national health program. I mean, that’s unheard of, even 10 years ago. It’s amazing to see a new generation of physicians coming up who are disgusted with our current health-care system. You know, we’re trained to be advocates of patients, we’re trained to save lives, we’re trained to practice medicine. And instead, what we’re doing is we’re practicing Wall Street economics.”

Single-payer is not to be confused with universal coverage, which Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama both support. In fact, in a recent debate, when Clinton raised the issue of single-payer, the audience interrupted with applause. She immediately countered, “I know a lot of people favor [it], but for many reasons [it] is difficult to achieve.”

Why? One of the most powerful industries in the country opposes it—the insurance industry. Under universal coverage, insurance profits are preserved. Under single-payer, they are not. Dr. Rocky White, who now sits on the board of the nonprofit Health Care for All Colorado, has switched his political affiliation. He also has updated and reissued Dr. Robert LeBow’s book on single-payer called “Health Care Meltdown: Confronting the Myths and Fixing Our Failing System.”

He described possible solutions: “There are a lot of different types of single-payer systems—you could have purely socialized medicine. That’s kind of like what England has. The government owns the hospitals, the government owns the clinics, the government finances all the health care, and all the doctors work for the government. That is truly socialized medicine, as opposed to the Canadian system, where the financing comes through their Medicare program, but all the doctors are in private practice.”

The economics are complex, but this plain-spoken country doctor explains it clearly:

“You know, this industry is a $2-trillion industry, and the profits in the for-profit insurance industry are so huge and it’s so deeply entrenched into Wall Street ... but until we move to a single-payer system and get rid of the profit motive in financing of health care, we will not be able to fix the problems that we have.”

What would it take? Dr. White has spent his life dealing with the high winds on the high plains, from Nebraska to Colorado, and describes the challenge the country faces in familiar terms:

“I think that our current presidential candidates understand that ideally single-payer would be the best, but they don’t have the political will to move that forward. Their job is to feel which way the wind is blowing. Our job is to turn that wind.”

Amy Goodman is the host of “Democracy Now!,” a daily international TV/radio news hour airing on 650 stations in North America.

April 22, 2008

Oda a la primavera

Tomorrow, April 23 at 7;00 pm at the Salón Ortega at the National Hispanic Cultural Center, a recital of Pablo Neruda's work will be held.  The public is invited to read favorite selections of Neruda to share with the assembly.  RSVP to 246-2261, Ext. 148 to reserve your spot.

             Chilean Poet Pablo Neruda
Neruda






















Here is a favorite Neruda work:

Oda a la primavera                Ode to spring

Primavera                                        Fearsome
terrible,                                             spring,
rosa                                                     zany
loca,                                                    rose,

llegarás                                              you will arrive
llegas                                                  unnoticed -
imperceptible                                 here you come now
apenas                                                the merest
un temblor de ala, un beso        flit of a wing, a kiss
de niebla con jazmines,              of jasmine-scented mist
el sombrero                                     Hats
lo sabe,                                              can feel it,

los caballos,                                    and horses.
el viento                                           The wind
trae una carta verde                    delivers a green letter
que los árboles leen                     for all the trees to read
y comienzan                                    and the leaves
las hojas                                            take

a mirar con un ojo                        a first peek,
a ver de nuevo el mundo,          a fresh look at things.
se convencen,                                 They're sure:
todo está preparado,                   everything is ready -
el viejo sol supremo,                    the ancient, uncontestable sun,
el agua que habla,                          and talking water,
todo.                                                    everything.

April 17, 2008

Día del Libro

My thanks to Dr. Carlos Vásquez, Director of Research and Literary Arts of the National Hispanic Cultural Center, for this information. Richard Griego

Diadellibro_3

Día del Libro in Alburquerque - April 23, 24, 25, 2008

Día del Libro/World Book Day is celebrated around the world on April 23, St. George's Day. It is a celebration that came about through the efforts of an international writers union and is meant to promote the reading and the selling of books in print.

In some European and Latin American cities, World Book Day is celebrated by book sellers bringing their inventory out on the public square to sell and/or trade. Everyone who buys a book receives a free red rose in commemoration of the dragon St. george is said to have slain.

For the second year, the City of Alburquerque Cultural Services Department, Mayor Martin J. Chávez, the National Hispanic Cultural Center, the Instituto Cervantes, the Spanish Resource Center, the Old Town Merchants Association, the treasure House Book Store and the UNM Center for Latin American Resources and Outreach will sponsor activities to celebrate Día del Libro and bring books and reading back into the lives of children and adults alike.

APRIL 22 - at the National Hispanic Cultural Center - Voces Poéticas, a poetry competition for middle school students from throughout the city of Alburquerque will have its closing event in the Bank of America Theatre from 9:00 am to 11:30 am.

APRIL 22 - at the National Hispanic Cultural Center - Cuéntame un Cuento, a writing composition for high school students from throughout the state of New Mexico will have its closing event in the Salón Ortega from 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm.

APRIL 23 - at the National Hispanic Cultural Center - La Obra de Neruda, a reading session of Chilean poet Pablo Neruda's work by anyone who has been moved by his work and wants to read short segments publicly either in Spanish or English. Music and refreshments will accompany book sales. The event begins at 700 pm in the Salón Ortega.

APRIL 25 - at Alburquerque's Old Town Plaza - An evening of music, poetry, literature, food, family and what is being billed as "New Fun in Old Town" begins at 5:00 pm. Local authors will be on hand to sign their works and books will be sold by the Treasure House Book Store.

These events are the result of collaboration between the following:

City of Alburquerque; National Hispanic Cultural Center and Foundation; Old Town Merchants Association; The Treasure House Book Store; Instituto Cervantes; Spanish Resource Center; UNM Center for Latin American Resources and Outreach; New Mexico Office of Cultural Affairs

April 16, 2008

The Four Models of Health Care

Last night PBS broadcast a very good program on the health care systems of other countries such as England, Germany, Switzerland, Taiwan and Japan. The program entitled "Sick Around the World" and produced by John Palfreman and T.R. Reid illustrates how sick the U.S. Health care system is.  The selected countries spend much less than the U.S., yet are able to cover all their citizens, while America has 47 million uninsured people.  Also, the quality of medical care is quite good and compares well with the best of U.S. care.

                            On-Camera Correspondent T.R. Reid
Tr_reid

Americans are woefully uniformed about the health care system in our country, much less those of other countries.  I am a volunteer for AARP and at one of our events at the New Mexico State Fair I helped hand out material on the AARP's "Divided We Fail" campaign that urges U.S. politicians to stop fighting each other and instead work together to help our citizens regarding such issues as financial security (Social Security) and health care.  All the people walking by our booth were very concerned about both issues, especially health care.  Yet, I found some people who were of the opinion that the American health care system was the best in the world and that we did not need to establish "socialized medicine".   Yes, our health care system is very good for those who can afford it and it is not necessary to go to a full-fledged socialized medical system to cover everyone in a responsible manner.  In the best examples given in "Sick Around the World", the government allowed privatization, but did not rely on the market to determine all things about the health care system 

The following excerpt from the PBS.org website presents the four basic models of health care available around the world.  The center-right President of Switzerland Pascal Couchepin said on the program that it would be a national scandal if anyone went bankrupt because they were unable to pay their medical bills.  It is imperative that our politicians do something about our medical care scandal.  I urge all readers to visit the PBS website and inform yourselves about this vitally important issue.  Posted by Richard Griego

There are about 200 countries on our planet, and each country devises its own set of arrangements for meeting the three basic goals of a health care system: keeping people healthy, treating the sick, and protecting families against financial ruin from medical bills.

But we don't have to study 200 different systems to get a picture of how other countries manage health care. For all the local variations, health care systems tend to follow general patterns. There are four basic systems:

The Beveridge Model

Named after William Beveridge, the daring social reformer who designed Britain's National Health Service. In this system, health care is provided and financed by the government through tax payments, just like the police force or the public library.

Many, but not all, hospitals and clinics are owned by the government; some doctors are government employees, but there are also private doctors who collect their fees from the government. In Britain, you never get a doctor bill. These systems tend to have low costs per capita, because the government, as the sole payer, controls what doctors can do and what they can charge.

Countries using the Beveridge plan or variations on it include its birthplace Great Britain, Spain, most of Scandinavia and New Zealand. Hong Kong still has its own Beveridge-style health care, because the populace simply refused to give it up when the Chinese took over that former British colony in 1997. Cuba represents the extreme application of the Beveridge approach; it is probably the world's purest example of total government control.

The Bismarck Model

Named for the Prussian Chancellor Otto von Bismarck, who invented the welfare state as part of the unification of Germany in the 19th century. Despite its European heritage, this system of providing health care would look fairly familiar to Americans. It uses an insurance system -- the insurers are called "sickness funds" -- usually financed jointly by employers and employees through payroll deduction.

Unlike the U.S. insurance industry, though, Bismarck-type health insurance plans have to cover everybody, and they don't make a profit. Doctors and hospitals tend to be private in Bismarck countries; Japan has more private hospitals than the U.S. Although this is a multi-payer model -- Germany has about 240 different funds -- tight regulation gives government much of the cost-control clout that the single-payer Beveridge Model provides.

The Bismarck model is found in Germany, of course, and France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Japan, Switzerland, and, to a degree, in Latin America.

The National Health Insurance Model

This system has elements of both Beveridge and Bismarck. It uses private-sector providers, but payment comes from a government-run insurance program that every citizen pays into. Since there's no need for marketing, no financial motive to deny claims and no profit, these universal insurance programs tend to be cheaper and much simpler administratively than American-style for-profit insurance.

The single payer tends to have considerable market power to negotiate for lower prices; Canada's system, for example, has negotiated such low prices from pharmaceutical companies that Americans have spurned their own drug stores to buy pills north of the border. National Health Insurance plans also control costs by limiting the medical services they will pay for, or by making patients wait to be treated.

The classic NHI system is found in Canada, but some newly industrialized countries -- Taiwan and South Korea, for example -- have also adopted the NHI model.

The Out-of-Pocket Model

Only the developed, industrialized countries -- perhaps 40 of the world's 200 countries -- have established health care systems. Most of the nations on the planet are too poor and too disorganized to provide any kind of mass medical care. The basic rule in such countries is that the rich get medical care; the poor stay sick or die.

In rural regions of Africa, India, China and South America, hundreds of millions of people go their whole lives without ever seeing a doctor. They may have access, though, to a village healer using home-brewed remedies that may or not be effective against disease.

In the poor world, patients can sometimes scratch together enough money to pay a doctor bill; otherwise, they pay in potatoes or goat's milk or child care or whatever else they may have to give. If they have nothing, they don't get medical care.

These four models should be fairly easy for Americans to understand because we have elements of all of them in our fragmented national health care apparatus. When it comes to treating veterans, we're Britain or Cuba. For Americans over the age of 65 on Medicare, we're Canada. For working Americans who get insurance on the job, we're Germany.

For the 15 percent of the population who have no health insurance, the United States is Cambodia or Burkina Faso or rural India, with access to a doctor available if you can pay the bill out-of-pocket at the time of treatment or if you're sick enough to be admitted to the emergency ward at the public hospital.

The United States is unlike every other country because it maintains so many separate systems for separate classes of people. All the other countries have settled on one model for everybody. This is much simpler than the U.S. system; it's fairer and cheaper, too.

April 15, 2008

Reagan Screwed American Workers, Only They Didn't Get It

BUZZFLASH EDITOR'S BLOG

by Mark Karlin

Editor and Publisher

April 15, 2008

07_reagan_library_statue

Statue of Ronald Reagan in Full Cowboy Gear at the Entrance to the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library. It is entitled "After the Ride."

Dateline: Ronald Reagan Presidential Library, Simi Valley, California

Before you open a door and enter into the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library, a large bronze sculpture of a strapping cowboy greets you, with the wide-eyed optimisim of the mythic west, a handkerchief dangling from the back pocket of a pair of jeans, and cowboy hat in hand.

It's called "After the Ride" and it is a tribute to Ronald Reagan.

Or make that the myth of Ronald Reagan. Reagan, as the fawning exhibition area that paints a flattering, blemish free portrait of his life unintentionally reveals, went from a childhood and small college upbringing in Illinois to a Hollywood "B" film career, to spokesperson for the GE corporation, to Death Valley Days, to the political life that led him to the White House.

The key transition, not noted as such by the library narrative, is when Reagan became the hired front man for GE, hosting a program for them but also going around the country selling the concept that the corporation is a benevolent and positive force in our lives, without any downsides.

Reagan went from a "B" movie career to an "A" career as a political salesman for corporate wealth and control of the government. In the turbulent social climate of the '60s, his wealthy backers (who regarded him as a prize race horse for a right-wing coup for the super rich and corporate welfare) watched as Reagan won the governorship and masterfully was guided in the use of wedge issues such as "Guns and God" to lure the emerging displaced middle class into voting Republican.

Aside from the "October Surprise," when Reagan negotiators allegedly convinced the Iranian mullahs to hold onto our hostages until Reagan's inauguration day (they were literally released after he was sworn in), the GOP had perfected the selling of a myth about America -- and they had the hale and hearty actor to sell the product.

The myth of "morning in America" obscured the emerging theft of jobs from the middle class by creating emotional hot buttons for rural and working class voters to gravitate toward: Their values were under attack by liberal extremists, they were repeatedly told. Only the Republicans could save the nation from further moral degradation, the myth went -- and only the GOP could guarantee victory in foreign conflicts (even if the conflicts were often unnecessary and the GOP failed to achieve "victory," however it might be defined).

Because our perceptions today are so dependent upon television as a source, how one acts as president or senator has superseded, in large part, what one does.

Ronald Reagan made many working class and rural voters proud to be Americans again, but meanwhile, behind the scenes, corporate lobbyists and Reagan's aides (who were really running the show) went about dismantling factories in places like central Pennsylvania and moving them overseas, sometimes -- literally -- in the dark of night.

It was the Republican version of "Let them eat cake." Only, in this case, it was: "Let them eat God, Guns, and Patriotism."

This process that began with Reagan's election continued through Bush I -- and to a degree in the Bill Clinton Administration, as he aggressively pursued NAFTA and followed the neo-liberal economic agenda of opening up the gates of exporting jobs in return for larger corporate profits -- and it rocketed ahead in the administration of Bush II into a juggernaut of betrayal of the middle class.

Hunting and faith are important to many people in rural America and small towns -- as faith is throughout America -- but there has and will be no threat to those core "values." There is no gun control measure with any remote possibility of passing in any state that would affect hunters -- and Democrats and civil libertarians are ardent supporters of the right to follow one's religious beliefs without government interference.

So, Barack Obama's remarks in San Francisco, as borne out by a true understanding of the Ronald Reagan myth, are ultimately true. His mistake was that he said what he said in a way that allowed the twin corporate D.C. insiders -- McCain and Clinton -- to once again demagogue the issue into one of emotion, rather than fact.

And that is what the attack on Obama is about: demagoguery.

I can't save workers from voting against their own economic interests when they vote to defend values that no one is going to take away from them. And I understand that Clinton and McCain are playing on the pride of such displaced members of the middle class. No one wants to be told that they have been duped for nearly 30 years by the wealthy backers of the Republicrats. Rural and small town Pennsylvanians want to feel proud about America and themselves -- and the uproar from the McCain and Clinton camps once again presses the hot button of dignity, while privately believing in (whatever Clinton is saying on the campaign trail today) policies that will continue to erode the earnings and standard of living of the very people that they claim to be championing.

The media owned by corporate elites has a role in this, too. Last month, the conventional wisdom of the media, for the most part, was that the deteriorating rust belt of Western Pennsylvania had left many former decently paid workers angry and bitter. But, on a dime, the new conventional wisdom, after Obama's remarks, was that it was insulting to say that these same people are angry and bitter. Nothing says more about the non-factual based reporting of the mainstream press than that sudden conversion, because the mainstream media represents the global corporate interests of its multinational parent companies who reap the profits of moving jobs overseas.

What Obama said was shorthand for this grim reality: no one is really threatening the traditions of hunting, or anyone's faith, or heterosexual marriage. But there are plenty of politicians among the Republicrats -- usually the Republicans, but Hillary Clinton has joined with them on this one -- who exploit the fear that conspiratorial "leftist" forces are conspiring to end hunting and religious belief in America. This is the heart of being a demagogue, because it is an appeal to emotion that has no basis in fact. It is how Republicans have won many an election, and how Senator Clinton is now trying, in a last gasp, to obtain the office she has compromised so much of her life pursuing.

As someone who was born and raised in Illinois, and having lived here my adult life, I was always surprised by how little connection Reagan appeared as an adult to have with home state. During his presidency, he rarely returned here, and his persona was tied to the myth of the cowboy, the triumphant rugged conqueror of the West. Illinois was just part of his early biography. He seemed to have no strong emotional attachment to the very Midwest roots that he so championed. It just didn't fit in with the mythic figure that came out of his films, Western ranch (which was the inspiration for Rove getting Bush to buy his Crawford spread and do a Reagan "cut the brush" imitation), and heroic GI movie roles during WW II (which he never actually fought in.)

So we understand that some of the working class who buy clothes at Wal-Mart that they used to make -- because the price is right -- only the blouses and shirts are made in China now -- we understand that they feel insulted by some politician telling them that they've been taken for a ride, that no one is going to stop them from hunting or going to their church, but that the people who peddle that nonsense to them are allowing corporations to steal their jobs and wallets from right in front of their noses. That's a tough pill to swallow, that you've been swindled for 30 years.

But McCain and Clinton are once again pulling the same Republicrat tricks of playing on emotional vulnerabilities while ignoring the truth surrounding the job heist that is occurring in places like Pennsylvania.

Yes, it is bad political practice to ever say anything that makes a group of potential voters feel that they are being insulted because you're making the claim that they've been had.

But if you want to help those same people out to create a positive future for employment and their standard of living, you can't keep hiding the truth under a rock.

Obama's statement could have been said more fully, and not so elliptically, and that would have explained the difference between respect for traditions and beliefs, and exploitation of those very same characteristics for political gain by those who are exploiting the working class.

But, in the end, as he did with race, Obama is touching upon a third rail of truth that neither party wants to discuss much. The "K Street Lobbyists" are very pleased with the masquerade and demagoguery that achieved, and now accelerates, the slide of the middle class towards a lower class fate.

The working class will have its faith, hunting, and small town "values," but it can't have them if they don't have jobs.

And after Obama's remarks, they can't say that they weren't warned by an honest politician.

April 10, 2008

Town Hall Meeting on South Valley Incorporation

I am a member of the South Valley Incorporation Group, which has as its motto "Preserving the South Valley's Agrarian and Historical Character Through Self-Governance" and which seeks to form a new city out of the unincorporated areas of the South Valley.

My particular interest in this issue is as a member of the Board of Trustees of the Town of Atrisco.  Although the common lands of the Atrisco Land Grant have been sold to SunCal Companies, there is a group of us diehards who want to maintain some kind of profile for the Land Grant. As such, the future of the South Valley is of vital interest to us, and, in particular, we want to keep an eye on SunCal, which got our land grant for a fire sale price and now SunCal wants the public to help finance their development via Tax Increment Development District (TIDD) arrangements.

Below is a flyer announcing a town hall meeting on the issue of incorporation.  If a new city is formed, it would comprise 50,000 inhabitants.

Posted by Richard Griego

South Valley Town Hall Meeting
Basics of Incorporation - What Does It Take to Form Our Own City?

                                        April 23, 7:00 PM
                 Rio Grande High School Performing Arts Building
                           

Presenters:

*Randy Van Vleck - Chief Counsel for the New Mexico Municipal League: The Basics of Incorporation

*Mike Ciesielski - Pajarito Resident: Summary of Meetings With Albuquerque City Councilors

*Representative Miguel P. García- South Valley Legislator: Funding for Census and Incorporation Election

*Lee Reynis - UNM Bureau of Business Research: Feasibility Study on Incorporation

                      
Sponsored by South Valley Incorporation Group
For more information call 877-8131 or 873-5317

The following is a map of the proposed area (in yellow) for incorporation (click on the map to get a larger image):
South_valley_map_2

April 07, 2008

Aztlan Will Rise Again?

Thanks to Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz and my brother for sending me this information. Richard Griego

Absolut-ly sorry about ad's map of Mexico, firm says.

Mark Stevenson, Associated Press
Sunday, April 6, 2008, Mexico City --

The Absolut vodka company apologized Saturday for an ad campaign 
depicting the southwestern United States as part of Mexico amid angry 
calls for a boycott by U.S. consumers.

The campaign, which promotes ideal scenarios under the slogan "In an 
Absolut World," showed a 1830s-era map when Mexico included 
California, Texas and other southwestern states. Mexico still resents 
losing that territory in the 1848 Mexican-American War and the fight 
for Texas independence.

Absolut20map

But the ads, which ran only in Mexico and have since ended, were less 
than ideal for Americans undergoing a border buildup and embroiled in 
an emotional debate over illegal immigration from their southern 
neighbor.

More than a dozen calls to boycott Absolut were posted on 
michellemalkin.com, a Web site operated by conservative columnist 
Michelle Malkin. The ads sparked heated comment on a half-dozen other 
Internet sites and blogs.

"In no way was it meant to offend or disparage, nor does it advocate 
an altering of borders, nor does it lend support to any anti-American 
sentiment, nor does it reflect immigration issues," Absolut said in a 
statement left on its consumer inquiry phone line.

Some fringe U.S. groups also claim the land is rightfully part of 
Mexico, while extreme immigration foes argue parts of the United 
States already are being overtaken by Mexico.

"In an Absolut world, a company that produces vodka fires its entire 
marketing department in a desperate attempt to win back enraged North 
American customers after a disastrous ad campaign backfires," a 
person using the moniker "SalsaNChips" wrote on Malkin's Web site.

A plan for comprehensive immigration reform designed to deal with an 
estimated 12 million undocumented immigrants in the United States - 
the vast majority from Mexico - collapsed last summer under the 
emotional weight of the debate.

Absolut said the ad was designed for a Mexican audience and intended 
to recall "a time which the population of Mexico might feel was more 
ideal."

March 28, 2008

Navajos Wary About Uranium Mining at Ambrosia Lake

From the Washington Post:

As Uranium Firms Eye N.M., Navajos Are Wary

By Kari Lydersen
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, March 28, 2008; A02Ambrosia_lake

AMBROSIA LAKE, N.M. -- Twenty years after uranium mining ceased in New Mexico amid plummeting prices for the ore, global warming and the soaring cost of oil are renewing interest in nuclear power -- and in the state's uranium belt.

At least five companies are seeking state permits to mine the uranium reserves, estimated at 500 million pounds or more, and Uranium Resources Inc. (URI), a Texas-based company, wants to reopen a uranium mill in Ambrosia Lake.

Industry officials say a uranium boom could mean thousands of jobs and billions in mineral royalties and taxes for the state.

But the deposits are largely in and around Navajo land, and the industry’s poor record on health and safety as it extracted tons of the ore in past decades has soured many Navajos on uranium mining. In 2005, the Navajo Nation banned uranium mining and milling on its land, and thousands of tribe members are receiving or seeking federal compensation for the health effects of past uranium exposure.

Like many Navajos who worked in the mines, Larry J. King didn’t know then that there was anything dangerous about it. “We had no respirators; you’d have sweat running down your face with the uranium dust getting in your ears, nose and mouth,” said King, who surveyed mine tunnels from 1975 to 1982. “You couldn’t help but swallow it.”

During mining’s peak, from the early 1950s to the early 1980s, about 400 million pounds of uranium were extracted from the region. At the end of the boom, around 1984, the price of uranium languished below $10 a pound. Mines shut down, and the United States began importing nearly all of its uranium, with the bulk coming now from Canada, Russia and Australia. But by last summer, the price had rebounded to a record high of $136 a pound.

Though the mines created numerous jobs and substantial royalties for the Navajo and Laguna tribes, the decades of extraction took a heavy toll: lung cancer, kidney disease, birth defects and other ailments at notably high levels among miners and families who lived among piles of uranium tailings — the ground-up waste from milling — and even used the material to build their homes.

All but one of the major companies now seeking to mine in New Mexico are newcomers to the state and have promised to do a better job than their predecessors. In addition, pending state legislation would require them to deposit a small percentage of their profits in a “legacy fund” to clean up existing uranium contamination.

But King said, “I don’t believe them one bit.”

He blames his recent health problems on uranium. He remembers July 16, 1979, when more than 90 million gallons of uranium-contaminated water burst through the dam of a tailings holding pond and into the Puerco River running by his land. And he remembers seeing his cattle drop dead from, he thinks, drinking polluted mine runoff.

Another former uranium miner, Milton Head, 69, describes similar effects on people and livestock. “Stubby Simpson was a picture of health, didn’t smoke or drink, then he got lung cancer and lasted six months,” Head said of another former miner. “Steers would turn yellow, their horns and hooves would slough off, like they were just drying up.”

Head, who is not Navajo, is all for uranium as a fuel source but does not trust the federal government to regulate the industry. He lives a few blocks from a former uranium mill that is now a Superfund site.

Teddy Nez, a Navajo, lives near a 40-foot-tall pile of uranium tailings. Little ground vegetation grows in the parched climate.

“You’re breathing uranium right now,” Nez said as dust swirled through the air.

There are more than 1,000 abandoned uranium mines and several mill sites in the region, according to the Southwest Research and Information Center, a nonprofit public interest group that focuses on energy development and natural resources. Chris Shuey, director of the group’s Uranium Impact Assessment Program, says three-quarters of the sites have not been cleaned up.

None of URI’s holdings are on the Navajo reservation, though there is some intersection with Navajo private allotted lands. Jurisdiction in the area is a complicated web of mineral and water rights underlying a checkerboard of tribal and nontribal holdings.

URI Chief Operating Officer Richard Van Horn said the Navajo tribe’s uranium mining ban could limit the company’s plans but would not stop mining in the region.

Along with conventional mining, in which uranium-laden ore is taken out of the ground and milled, URI plans to use a process called in situ recovery mining. The ore is left in the ground, and oxygenated water is injected into uranium-laden aquifers to essentially bond to the mineral and pump it to the surface.

While the process causes much less waste and surface disruption, opponents worry that it will contaminate the water supply since it involves mobilizing uranium within the aquifer.

URI’s New Mexico operations director, Randy Foote, counters that the area’s water is already not potable and that the company would be required to return the aquifer to its baseline state before ending operations.

“Uranium is actually relatively benign,” Foote said. “All the wells out here have small amounts of uranium in them.”

Hillary Sinks with the Kitchen Sink

Ever since George H.W. Bush went into “campaign mode” in 1988 and exploited black convict Willie Horton to dirty up Michael Dukakis, it’s been a staple of modern politics that you can negate your own high negatives by driving up those of your opponent.

Except in 1992, when the “Passportgate” scheme for demeaning Bill Clinton’s patriotism blew up in Poppy Bush’s face, some effective smear has been associated with every Bush national campaign. Think of John McCain’s “black child,” Al Gore’s “delusions” and the Swift Boat lies about John Kerry’s heroism.

Indeed, dirty politics has been a hallmark of the Bush Family Dynasty – and Bill and Hillary Clinton clearly were taking notes. [For details on the Bush schemes, see Secrecy & Privilege and Neck Deep.]

So, perhaps it should have been expected that Hillary Clinton would borrow the Bush family’s playbook when her presidential campaign prepared to throw “the kitchen sink” at Barack Obama. Sen. Clinton, who has long suffered from high negatives, needed to boost up those numbers for the Illinois senator.

Hillaryclintonssink5_3


















Sadly for the Clinton campaign, however, the strategy appears to be backfiring. Though the coordinated attacks against Obama’s character and judgment may have damaged him some, a new poll shows that Sen. Clinton may have hurt herself more.

“Both Democrats, and especially New York's Sen. Clinton, are showing wounds from their prolonged and increasingly bitter nomination contest, which could weaken the ultimate nominee for the general-election showdown against Sen. McCain of Arizona,” the Wall Street Journal reported.

“Even among women, who are the base of Sen. Clinton's support, she now is viewed negatively by more voters than positively for the first time in a Journal/NBC poll.” [WSJ, March 27, 2008]

In a Journal/NBC poll just two weeks ago, Clinton was in positive numbers with voters overall, 45 percent to 43 percent. However, in the new poll, Clinton’s overall negatives rose to 48 percent and her positives sank to 37 percent.

Even more stunning, Clinton is now drawing a net-negative rating among women, with 44 percent of women having a negative impression of Clinton versus 42 percent with a positive view. Two weeks ago, 51 percent of women had a positive opinion of Clinton.

Clinton also is sinking among white voters, who view her negatively by 51 to 34 percent. Obama has slipped, too, with white voters, down five points, but he still gets a net positive rating of 42 to 37 percent.

Among all voters, Obama is rated positively by 49 to 32 percent, roughly parallel to Republican John McCain, who registered a 45 to 25 percent positive rating.

The bottom line for Sen. Clinton may be that in throwing the “kitchen sink” at Obama, she didn’t realize that it was tied to her ankle.

Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories in the 1980s for the Associated Press and Newsweek. His latest book, Neck Deep: The Disastrous Presidency of George W. Bush, was written with two of his sons, Sam and Nat, and can be ordered at neckdeepbook.com. His two previous books, Secrecy & Privilege: The Rise of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq and Lost History: Contras, Cocaine, the Press & 'Project Truth' are also available there.

March 26, 2008

"Bush's War" on PBS's Frontline is Timid Stuff

I invested 4 1/2 hours over a two-night period to watch the PBS Frontline program "Bush's War".  I expected that we would get the straight scoop on the lies that led to the Iraq War and I hoped that we would learn some of the reasons as to why the Bush administration was so keen on this preemptive war.  At the end, I was left with an empty feeling.  It was kind of like the Peggy Lee song: "Is That All There Is?".  I thought of writing a posting on my disappointment; then I ran across this article by Ray McGovern, the maverick ex-CIA analyst.  He says things much better than I could, so here is his article as published in Consortiumnews.com:  Richard Griego

Ray_mcgovern_2
Frontline's Timid Iraq Retrospective
By Ray McGovern
March 26, 2008

Except for an inside-the-beltway tidbit here and there – for example, about how the pitiable Secretary of State Colin Powell had to suffer so many indignities at the hands of other type-A hard chargers – Frontline added little to the discussion.

Notably missing was any allusion to the unconscionable role of the Fourth Estate as indiscriminate cheerleader for the home team, nor any mention that the invasion was a serious violation of international law. But those omissions, I suppose, should have come as no surprise.

Nor was it a surprise that any viewer hoping for insight into why Cheney and Bush were so eager to attack Iraq was left with very thin gruel.

It was more infotainment, bereft of substantive discussion of the whys and wherefores of what in my view is the most disastrous foreign policy move in our nation’s history.

Despite recent acknowledgements from the likes of Alan Greenspan, Gen. John Abizaid and others that oil and permanent (or, if you prefer, “enduring”) military bases were among the main objectives, Frontline avoided any real discussion of such delicate factors.

Someone not already aware of how our media has become a tool of the Bush administration might have been shocked at how Frontline could have missed one of President George W. Bush’s most telling “signing statements.”

Underneath the recent Defense Authorization Act, he wrote that he did not feel bound by the law’s specific prohibitions:

“(1) To establish any military installation or base for the purpose of providing for the permanent stationing of United States Armed Forces in Iraq,” or

“(2) To exercise United States control of the oil resources of Iraq.”

So the Frontline show was largely pap.

At one point, however, the garrulous former Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage did allude to one of the largest elephants in the living room – Israel’s far-right Likudniks – and their close alliance with the so-called neo-conservatives running our policy toward the Middle East.

But Armitage did so only tangentially, referring to the welcome (if totally unrealistic) promise by Ahmed Chalabi that, upon being put in power in Baghdad, he would recognize Israel.

Not surprisingly, the interviewer did not pick up on that comment; indeed, I’m surprised the remark avoided the cutting room floor.

Courage No Longer a Frontline Hallmark

Frontline has done no timely reportage that might be looked upon as disparaging the Bush administration – I mean, for example, the real aims behind the war, not simply the gross incompetence characterizing its conduct.

Like so many others, Frontline has been, let’s just say it, cowardly in real time — no doubt intimidated partly by attacks on its funding that were inspired by the White House.

And now? Well the retrospective criticism of incompetence comes as polling shows two-thirds of the country against the Iraq occupation (and the number is surely higher among PBS viewers).

So, Frontline is repositioning itself as a mild ex-post-facto critic of the war, but still unwilling to go very far out on a limb. Explaining the aims behind war crimes can, of course, be risky. It is as though an invisible Joseph Goebbels holds sway.

On Monday evening I found myself initially applauding Frontline’s matter-of-fact, who-shot-John chronology of how our country got lied into attacking and occupying Iraq. Then I got to thinking – have I not seen this picture before? Many times?

It took a Hollywood producer to recognize and act on the con games that sober observers could not miss as the war progressed: Where were the celebrated “weapons of mass destruction” (WMD)?

Robert Greenwald simply could not abide the president’s switch to “weapons of mass destruction programs,” which presumably might be easier to find than the much-ballyhooed WMD so heavily advertised before the attack on Iraq.

You remember – those remarkable WMD about which UN chief inspector Hans Blix quipped that the U.S. had 100 percent certainty of their existence in Iraq, but zero percent certainty as to where they were.

Robert Greenwald called me in May 2003. He had read a few of the memoranda published by Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS) exposing the various charades being acted out by the administration and wanted to know what we thought of the president’s new circumlocution on WMD.

I complimented him on smelling a rat and gave him names of my VIPS colleagues and other experienced folks who could fill him in on the details.

Wasting no time, he arrived here in Washington in June, armed simply with copious notes and a cameraman. Greenwald conducted the interviews, flew back to his eager young crew in Hollywood and, poof, the DVD “Uncovered: The War on Iraq” was released at the beginning of November 2003.

So Frontline is four and a half years behind a Hollywood producer with appropriate interest and skepticism. (Full disclosure: I appear in “Uncovered,” as do many of the interviewees appearing in Frontline’s “Bush’s War.”)

Actually, the interviewing by Frontline occurred just a few months later. I know because I was among those interviewed for that as well, as was my good friend and former colleague at the CIA, Mel Goodman.

I was struck that Mel looked four years younger on this week’s Frontline. It only then dawned on me that he was four years younger when interviewed.

Have a look at “Uncovered,” [http://www.truthuncovered.com/index.php ] and see how you think it compares to Frontline’s “Bush’s War.”

Safety in Retrospectives

It also struck me that producing a Frontline-style retrospective going back several years is a much less risky genre to work with. Chalk it up to my perspective as an intelligence analyst, but ducking the incredibly important issues at stake over the next several months is, in my opinion, unconscionable. The troop “surge” in Iraq, for example.

Only toward the very end of the program does Frontline allow a bit of relevant candor on a point that has been self-evident since Cheney and Bush, against strong opposition from Generals Abizaid and Casey (and apparently even Rumsfeld), decided to double down by sending 30,000 more troops into Iraq.

A malleable new Secretary of Defense [Robert Gates] would deal with the recalcitrant generals and pick a Petreaus ex Machina of equal malleability and political astuteness to implement this stop-gap plan.

One of the last Frontline interviewees concedes that the purpose of the “surge” was to stave off definitive defeat in Iraq, so that Bush’s war could be handed off to his successor somewhat intact. (Even that seems doubtful at this point.)

“That decision [to order the ‘surge’] at a minimum guaranteed that his [Bush’s] presidency would not end with a defeat in history’s eyes, that by committing to the ‘surge’ he was certain to at least achieve a stalemate,” said journalist and author Steve Coll.

Okay, a small kudo to Frontline for including that bit of truth – however obvious.

Rather Not, Thank You

Intimidation of the media is what has happened all around, including with Frontline, which not so many years ago was able to do some gutsy reporting. Let me give you another example about which few are aware.

Do you remember when Dan Rather made his Apologia Pro Vita Sua, admitting that the American media, including him, was failing to reveal the truth about things like Iraq?

Speaking to the BBC on May 16, 2002, Rather compared the situation to the fear of “necklacing” in South Africa.

"It's an obscene comparison," Rather said, "but there was a time in South Africa when people would put flaming tires around peoples' necks if they dissented. In some ways, the fear is that you will be necklaced here, you will have a flaming tire of lack of patriotism put around your neck."

Talking to another reporter, Dan told it straight about the careerism that keeps U.S. journalists in line: "It's that fear that keeps [American] journalists from asking the toughest of the tough questions and to continue to bore-in on the tough questions so often."

The comparison to “necklacing” may be “obscene” but, sadly, it is not far off the mark.

So what happened to the newly outspoken Dan Rather with the newly found courage, when he ran afoul of Vice President Dick Cheney and the immense pressure he exerts on the corporate media?

We know about the lies and the cheerleading for attacking Iraq. But there is much more most of us do not know and remain unable to learn if Rather and other journalists keep acting the part of the lion in the Wizard of Oz, before he gets his courage.

For Dan Rather, the fear would simply not go away – even after leaving CBS for HDNet and promising that, on his new “Dan Rather Reports” show, viewers would see hard-hitting and courageous reporting that he said he couldn’t do at CBS.

Will it surprise you that Dan Rather cannot shake the necklace?

I refer specifically to a program for “Dan Rather Reports,” meticulously prepared by award-winning producer, Kristina Borjesson. The special included interviews with an impressive string of first-hand witnesses to neocon machinations prior to the U.S. attack on Iraq, and provides real insights into motivations – the kind of insights Frontline did not even attempt.

Nipped in the Bud

Last year Borjesson’s taping was finished and the editing had begun.

Borjesson’s requests to interview people working for the vice president had been denied. But, following standard journalistic practice (not to mention common courtesy), she sent an e-mail to John Hannah in Cheney’s office in order to give Hannah a chance to react to what others – including several of the same senior folks on Frontline last evening – had said about him for her forthcoming report.

At that point all hell broke loose. Borjesson was abruptly told by Rather’s executive producer that by sending the e-mail, Borjesson could have “brought down the whole (‘Dan Rather Reports’) operation.”

The show was killed and Borjesson sacked. For good measure, she was also accused of “coaching” interview subjects and taking their words out of context.

Since neither Rather nor his executive producer would provide proof to substantiate that allegation, Borjesson took the unprecedented step of sending her script and transcripts to all her interview subjects and asking them to confirm or deny that she had coached them or taken their words out of context.

Not one of them found her script inaccurate or said they were coached. She has the e-mails to prove this.

This sorry episode and Frontline’s careful avoidance of basic issues like the strategic aims of the Bush administration in invading and occupying Iraq are proof, if further proof were needed, that the White House, and especially Cheney’s swollen office, exert enormous pressure over what we are allowed to see and hear.

The fear they instill in the corporate press, and in what once was serious investigative reporting of programs like Frontline, translates into programs getting neutered or killed outright – and massive public ignorance.

Some consolation is to be found in the good news that, in this particular case, Kristina Borjesson is made of stronger stuff; she has not given up, and was greatly encouraged by how many of the very senior officials and former officials she had already interviewed consented to be re-interviewed  (since the tapes belonged to the “Rather Not” folks).

Now who looks forward to being re-interviewed?

Borjesson’s original interviewees took into account her problems with the cowards and the censors – and her atypical, gutsy refusal to self-censor – and went the extra mile. A tribute to them as well, and their interest in getting the truth out.

Borjesson is now completing the program on her own. Look for an announcement in the coming months, if you’re interested in real sustenance rather than the pabulum served up, no doubt under duress, by Frontline.

Ray McGovern works with Tell the Word, the publishing arm of the ecumenical Church of the Saviour in inner-city Washington, DC.  He was an Army infantry/intelligence officer in the early sixties, then a CIA analyst for 27 years.  He now serves on the Steering Group of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS).

March 25, 2008

Learn How to Bird-dog the Opposition

All Eyes are on New Mexico in 2008!

Make sure your issue is
Front and Center on Election Day

New Mexico has four out of five Congressional seats up for election. We are a Presidential swing state. We are currently being flooded by special interest groups, personnel and money.  We need to prepare and be trained and ready so that we, the people of New Mexico, will be the ones to determine the outcome of our local and Congressional races.

                                                                      Learn to "Bird Dog" ** like the pros!

Seasoned “bird-dogger” Arnie Alpert with the American Friends Service Committee joins us from New Hampshire to offer an all-encompassing training on the techniques to raise the issues that matter with candidates.

***Bird-dogging” means following candidates and tracking their positions in order to make sure that the issues important to you are part of the campaign agenda and in the forefront of media coverage.

Photo: Arnie Alpert questions Mitt Romney on the war in Iraq.

SANTA FE: Saturday April 5th

2:00 to 5:00 PM

Santa Fe Unitarian Universalist Church on Barcelona

TAOS: Friday, April 4th

Kit Carson Electric Cooperative Board Room

1118 Cruz Alta Road

Registration at 5:30 and closes at 8:00 PM

ALBUQUERQUE: Sunday, April 6th

Albuquerque Peace and Justice Center

202 Harvard Southeast

Registration at 5:00 and closes at 7:30 PM

$10 suggested donation


Event Cosponsors Include:

Concerned Citizens for Nuclear Safety - Faithful Security - NM Conference of Churches

Network of Spiritual Progressives of Northern New Mexico

Peace and Social Concerns Committee of the Santa Fe Friends Meeting

Santa Fe Veterans for Peace - Santa Fe Unitarian Forum - Voting Matters

Info: Joni Arends - 986-1973 jarends@nuclearactive.org

Holly Beaumont - 471-2962 habeaumont@aol.com

March 22, 2008

The Mystery of World Trade Center Tower 7

On May 19 my wife Genara and I went to join the demonstrators in Rio Rancho expressing their opposition to the Iraq War on its fifth anniversary.  I took my digital camera and took some pictures, but there is something awry with my camera and the pictures did not come out.   

As far as the demonstration is concerned, it was organized by MoveOn and there were about 30 of us standing on the four corners of Highway 528 and Southern Boulevard waving our signs.  A guy driving a red sports car rolled his window down and shouted angrily that I was a communist and that I should go to China.  Other than a few similar negative expressions, the vast majority of the people driving by showed their support for our cause by honking their horns (one banner said "Honk if You Want to Impeach Bush/Cheney") and giving us thumbs up.  It is clear that public sentiment against Bush and his wars are very high.  At the end of the vigil we stood in a circle and gave our personal messages as to why we were there.  In all, it was an inspirational and hopeful event.

At the demonstration I met Dennis Holloway, a licensed architect who is a member of  a group called Architects and Engineers for 911 Truth with some 30o members.  As a general rule, I am very leery of conspiracy theorists.  But Holloway disarmed me with his intelligence and cheerful demeanor.  He gave me the web address for his group and suggested I look at it, which I did.

The important thing about AE911Truth is that the members of the group look at the scientific and engineering aspects of the collapses of the Twin Towers (WTC1 and WTC2) at the World Trade Center.  Instead of speculating about political plots, these architects and engineers look at the hard physical evidence.  There was another building that collapsed that day - Tower Number 7  (WTC7), which was 110 yards from WTC1, and it is the collapse of Tower 7 on which I wish to concentrate in this posting.

There is a wealth of information on the AE911Truth website: videos, radio and television interviews, articles and links.  After perusing the site and a variety of its features, I am persuaded that WTC7 could very well have been brought down by a controlled demolition.  If it can be proved without a shadow of a doubt that this is indeed the case, the implications are enormous, alarming and monstrous.  I urge you to visit the site and other related sites and make up your own mind. 

It is clear that a more thorough investigation of the collapses of WTC7 (and of WTC1 and WTC2) is in order.  Let us see how the system responds to the increasing number of voices asking for more official information and explanations.

Posted by Richard Griego

For your ease of information, I have copied a synopsis of the facts about the collapse of Tower 7 taken from ae911truth.org:

1.

Rapid onset of “collapse”

2.

Sounds of explosions at ground floor - a full second prior to collapse (heard by hundreds of firemen and media reporters)

3.

Symmetrical “collapse” – through the path of greatest resistance – at nearly free-fall speed — the columns gave no resistance

4.

“Collapses” into its own footprint – with the steel skeleton broken up for shipment

5.

Massive volume of expanding pyroclastic dust clouds

6.

Tons of molten Metal found by CDI (Demolition Contractor) in basement (What could have produced all of that molten metal?)

7.

Chemical signature of Thermate (high tech incendiary) found in slag, solidified molten metal, and dust samples by Physics professor Steven Jones, PhD.

8.

FEMA finds rapid oxidation and intergranular melting on structural steel samples

9.

Expert corroboration from the top European Controlled Demolition professional

10.

Fore-knowledge of “collapse” by media, NYPD, FDNY

And exhibited none of the characteristics of destruction by fire, i.e.

1.

Slow onset with large visible deformations

2.

Asymmetrical collapse which follows the path of least resistance (laws of conservation of momentum would cause a falling, to the side most damaged by the fires)

3.