September 26, 2009

We Can’t Afford Health Care? You Lie!

by Tom H. Hastings

We see the spectacle of the US Congress unable to manage decent health care reform that will actually enable the American citizenry to join the rest of the industrialized world in having health care for all. The problems, it is clear, come from those who are lying.

why spend $16.5 billion just on the Department of Energy nuclear weapons budget for FY 2010 with 50 million uninsured citizens?

Death panels? That’s true—we already have them. Insurance companies deny care to Americans who then die as a result. It happens every day, Sarah Palin—but ascribing that to the Obama plan is untrue. In fact, those corporate death panels would be outlawed.

Find the language in Obama’s bill that says that illegal aliens are covered or admit it’s a canard—God forbid we should help some migrant worker who is stricken by illness or accident while laboring in service to Americans. South Carolina’s Joe Wilson is just the Tourette tip of a dissembling iceberg.

We can’t afford the plan? That is a whopper. It’s all choice.

If every child in America doesn’t have health care but we own more than 6,000 nuclear weapons, more than half of them on board a fleet of 18 extremely expensive Trident submarines ready to fight the Soviets (hey! Where’d they go?), isn’t it time to ask some fundamental questions? One is: why spend $16.5 billion just on the Department of Energy nuclear weapons budget for FY 2010 with 50 million uninsured citizens? Does US Senator Jim DeMint (R-SC) speak for us all when he calls health care a privilege (and presumably threatening life on Earth is a human right for the US military)?

When our working poor are so often without either the money to pay for health insurance or the high costs of health care for ailing family members and yet we somehow manage to justify spending in excess of $915 billion on the so-called War on Terror, shouldn’t we engage in some national discussion about priorities?

$1 trillion for war while unemployment pushes 10 percent in more and more states is unconscionable. Unemployment means a loss of health care for a high percentage of those who lose jobs and more foreclosures on the American dream of home ownership every month. Historically, it naturally correlates with increases in crime. The US is the last of the so-called developed countries to fail to insure the unemployed and underemployed, and we have the highest crime rates. So many thousands of us are shot each year that we more than qualify to be considered at war inside our own borders. Much of that carnage relates to social problems like unemployment, lack of health care and simple hopelessness.

Does it not seem that when the US can afford and not question nearly 1,000 military bases on other people’s sovereign soil—287 of them in Germany alone—that we can afford to create jobs? Rather than have our young people learning how to hurt others in the military, we could end economic conscription, lower the crime rate, drastically reduce the numbers of uninsured, reverse the home foreclosure numbers and enhance our nation’s productivity by offering minimum wage jobs to anyone willing to work. Those jobs would include housing in some cases, health care benefits in all cases, and on-the-job training and supplementary education for those needing it. Closing foreign military bases until these programs were paid for would be a giant leap for the US back toward the health of our workforce, our economy, our educational system and our very citizenry.

No one is talking about this? True. So it’s time to start.

Tom H. Hastings used to live in the north country of Wisconsin and coordinate the Peace, Conflict and Global Studies program at Northland College. He's currently a core faculty in the Portland State University Conflict Resolution graduate program. This essay was originally published in the Huffington Post on September 12, 2009

September 25, 2009

Where has all the money gone?


national priorities project

This is on top of the more than half trillion doled out to the Pentagon each and every year! Check out the National Priorities Project to see just how much of our national wealth is spent on war.

September 22, 2009

SOA-trained Honduran military fires on democracy activists

By Twin Ports SOA Watch


photo: Honduras Indymedia

Yesterday, President Manuel Zelaya returned to Honduras, defying threats of arrest by the coup government that abducted him at gunpoint and forced him into exile in June. He is currently enjoying the protection of the Brazilian embassy. Upon hearing of Zelaya's return yesterday afternoon, thousands of democracy activists began gathering around the embassy to celebrate, defying a 4pm curfew imposed by the coup government.

Honduran media reports that the military and police have begun to violently disrupt the protests, firing tear gas and rubber bullets into the crowd and making arbitrary arrests. This contempt for democracy should come as no surprise, as much of the Honduran military leadership was trained to make war on their own people at the US Army School of the Americas.

The Honduran resistance movement has called for a national strike, but worry that the coup government, knowing that its time is coming to an end, may lash out with brutal violence. The coup government has already threatened to cancel the immunity of the Brazilian embassy, a move that could turn the Honduran crisis into a regional conflict. Read more to take action.

SOA Watch recommends that we call the State Department at 202-647-4000 and the White House comment line at 202-456-1111 to deliver the following message: "Work for the unconditional immediate reinstatement of President Zelaya, demand that the Honduran military doesn't move against the people and their democratically elected president, Mel Zelaya and ensure that the coup plotters will be held responsible for their actions. Any bloodshed will be on the hands of the coup government and security forces."

Stay posted to NarcoNews for English-language updates from the resistance.

And please consider traveling with Twin Ports SOA Watch to Georgia this November 20-22 for a mass mobilization against the SOA/WHINSEC. Contact us at soawtwinports[at]riseup[dot]net or call Joel at 218-340-4356 for details.

Obama wants more troops in Colombia, Oberstar and Feingold speak out

By Twin Ports SOA Watch

Ignoring objections from Latin American governments and Colombian civil society, the Obama administration is moving ahead with plans to station more US military personnel inside Colombia. In an agreement with the Uribe administration, the US military will soon be able to operate out of 7 Colombian military bases.

This is a troubling shift from the rhetoric of candidate Obama, who once sharply criticized the Colombian regime's appalling human rights record. Now President Obama appears to be solidifying Washington's partnership with Uribe's right-wing government, and at the same time alarming a continent that is no stranger to brutal US military interventions.

Human rights organizations have documented Colombia's military involvement with illegal paramilitary groups that on many occasions carried out extra judicial murders, disappearances, and displacement of Colombian peasants, Afro-Colombians and indigenous peoples.
From a September 15 letter to President Obama
by James Oberstar, Russ Feingold and 14 other members of Congress

In exchange for military access to Colombia, Obama has dropped his objections to the bilateral "Free Trade Agreement" with Colombia that past president Bush tried but failed to implement. The proposed Colombian FTA has been widely condemned by social movements in the US and Colombia for failing to protect Colombian worders and the environment, and for paving the way to greater exploitation of the country by transnational corporations.

While many Democrats have joined Obama in switching gears on Colombia, 16 members of Congress recently wrote to the president to declare US policy in Colombia a failure and raise questions about the new security pact. Congressman James Oberstar of Minnesota's 8th District and Senator Russ Feingold of Wisconsin were among the signers. Here's the letter:

Congress of the United States
Washington, DC 20515

September 15,2009
President Barack Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20500

Dear President Obama:

It is our understanding that the U.S. and Colombia are in negotiations to increase U.S. access to an expanded network of Colombian military bases to support counter-narcotics efforts. We write to urge caution regarding any increase in U.S. military aid to and presence in Colombia due to concerns that increased U.S. military involvement will exacerbate the failures of Plan Colombia.

Between fiscal years 2000 and 2008, the United States provided over $6 billion in military and nonmilitary assistance to Colombia as part of Plan Colombia. This funding supported the eradication of coca and opium poppy crops, the interdiction of narcotics shipments, and the training and material support for Colombia's security forces. U.S. assistance also supported alternative crop development to give coca and opium poppy farmers alternative sources of income.

Despite the billions of dollars spent by the U.S., Plan Colombia has not succeeded. According to a GAO report released in October 2008 (GAO-09-71), "Plan Colombia's goal of reducing the cultivation, processing, and distribution of illegal narcotics by targeting coca cultivation has not been achieved." In fact, according to the report, coca cultivation and cocaine production have increased in Colombia.

In addition to serious questions about the value of eradication efforts, we have strong concerns about human rights violations perpetrated by the Colombian military. Human rights organizations have documented Colombia's military involvement with illegal paramilitary groups that on many occasions carried out extra judicial murders, disappearances, and displacement of Colombian peasants, Afro-Colombians and indigenous peoples. For example, Amnesty International found that, between June 2006 and June 2007, at least 280 civilians were extra-judicially killed by Colombian security forces and that many of them were subsequently presented by those forces as guerrillas killed in conflict.' The Colombia Support Network has documented literally hundreds of incidents of abuse by the Colombian Army over the past three years', and according to Human Rights Watch, the Colombian Armed Forces engaged in "'systematic' killings of civilians" and the Colombian Attorney General's Office (La Fiscalia) is investigating cases involving more than 1,700 alleged victims.'

In the recent summit of the Union of South American Nations, called expressly to address Colombia's military agreement with the United States, every other nation in the region except for Peru expressed serious concern about the terms of the agreement and the manner in which it was negotiated. This pact threatens to make your efforts to re-engage with our neighbors in the hemisphere on terms of mutual respect much more difficult.

These failures of Plan Colombia underscore our concern that increased U.S. military presence in Colombia will continue to overemphasize funding to Colombia's armed forces rather than needed development and rule of law efforts. We hope you will exercise caution in negotiating any increase in U.S. military aid to and presence in Colombia.

Sincerely,

Signed by the following U.S. Representatives

Tammy Baldwin
James P. McGovern
Jan Schakowsky
Raul Grijalva
Barbara Lee
George Miller
Jose E. Sorrano
Lynn Woolsey
Rush Holt
Chaka Fattah
Pete Stark
James L. Oberstar
Keith Ellison
Bob Filner
Dennis Kucinich

and Sen. Russ Feingold

The Afghanistan-Pakistan War

By Veterans for Peace Chapter 80

The Afghanistan-Pakistan War: The Coming Disaster
with Adam Shesch, PhD

Wednesday, September 23, 7pm
Peace United Church of Christ
1111 N 11th St, Duluth

The presentation is free and open to the public. Sponsored by VfP Chapter 80 and the Northland Anti-War Coalition.

September 13, 2009

All Out for the Oct. 17 Antiwar Protest!

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17 - National Antiwar Day of Action
FUND HUMAN NEEDS - MAKE JOBS NOT WAR!

We'll be assembling at noon at the Clayton, Jackson & McGhie Memorial (corner of Second Ave. E. & Fist St.) for a march to the Duluth Federal Building, where we'll have several speakers addressing the need to switch war funding to social needs here at home.

To date this protest has been endorsed by the Northland Anti-War Coalition, the Duluth Central Labor Body, Veterans for Peace, Women in Black, Peace North, the Duluth Area Green Party, Grandmothers for Peace, Socialist Action, Lake Superior Greens, Duluth Unitarian-Universalist Peace & Social Justice Committee, UMD Students for Peace, CSS Center for Just Living, Twin Ports Action Coalition, Workers United Local 99, Michigan Emergency Committee Against War & Injustice, Rice Lake Peace for Peace, the Nortland Center for Art & Ecopsychology and others to be announced!

Fliers are being run as we speak! Email me at wainosunrise@yahoo.com if you would like a stack of fliers to distribute.


September 1, 2009

One year ago today...



Thousands of people took to the streets of St Paul during the Republican National Convention to protest the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, among other issues. The police responded by suspending civil rights and attacking activists, journalists and passersby. More than 800 people were arrested.

Today, the National Lawyers' Guild announced a class-action lawsuit against the City of St Paul over the mass arrest of 200 people on the first day of the convention. Civil liberties groups, journalists and activists promise more to come.

Call Ramsey County Attorney Susan Gaertner
-- 651-266-3222 --
ask her to drop charges against the RNC 8!

Most of the RNC-related arrests were baseless, and have been dismissed by prosecutors or the courts. But some activists are still facing felony charges, most notably the RNC 8. The RNC 8 are a group of anarchist organizers who were involved in coordinating food, housing, and communications for the protests. They were arrested before the convention, during violent police raids of private homes and activist centers. The most inflammatory terrorism charges brought against the RNC 8 by Ramsey County were dropped this summer under tremendous public pressure, but the 8 are still facing years in prison under equally unjust charges of conspiracy to riot. Please take a moment to call Susan Gaertner and ask her to stop the assault on community organizers and drop all charges against the RNC 8!

While most of Minnesota's DFL establishment has remained silent or complicit in these abuses, the Duluth DFL - with the support of the Duluth Central Labor Body - has taken a strong stand in support of the RNC 8 and against the police violence and civil rights abuses that happened in St Paul. Three key players in the RNC-related repression - Ramsey County Attorney Susan Gaertner, St Paul Mayor Chris Coleman, and Minneapolis Mayor RT Rybak, have either declared their candidacy or are widely expected to seek DFL endorsement for governor in 2010.