Saturday, September 03, 2005

BAUAW NEWSLETTER-MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2005

*************************************************************

CODE PINK WOMEN FOR PEACE
Action Alert: Rally for Relief
Tuesday, September 6, 2005 4:30pm-6pm
San Francisco & Oakland

San Francisco Federal Building 4:30-6pm
450 Golden Gate Avenue (@ Larkin Street)
San Francisco, CA 94102

Oakland Federal Building 4:30-6pm
1301 Clay Street (@ 14th Street)
Oakland, CA 94612

------------------------------------------------------------------------

National Day of Emergency Action
Support the People of New Orleans!
Jobs/Income & Housing for All Displaced Families
Real Relief - Yes! Racism - No!
Wednesday, September 7
San Francisco Protest - 5 PM at
Powell & Market St.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

A.N.S.W.E.R. Coalition
Act Now to Stop War & End Racism
http://www.ANSWERcoalition.org
sf@internationalanswer.org
National Office in Washington DC: 202-544-3389
New York City: 212-533-0417
Los Angeles: 323-464-1636
San Francisco: 415-821-6545

Subscribe to the email alert list!




------------------------------------------------------------------------

STOP THE WAR AND OCCUPATION!
IRAQ, PALESTINE, HAITI....
MARCH AND RALLY SEPTEMBER 24
11:00 A.M. DOLORES PARK, S.F.
COLLEGE NOT COMBAT CONTINGENT
10:00 A.M. 16TH AND MISSION BART PLAZA, S.F.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ANSWER Organizing Meetings:
Tuesdays, 7:00 p.m.
2489 Mission St., suite 24 (at 21st St., S.F.)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
COLLEGE NOT COMBAT Planning Meeting:
Saturday,
September 17th,
2:00 P.M.
110 Capp Street (Buzz #202)
San Francisco
For more information:
college_not_combat@yahoo.com
(415) 248-1701
http://www.collegenotcombat.org/
------------------------------------------------------------------------
NEXT BAUAW MEETING:
TUESDAY EVENING,
SEPTEMBER 20, 7:00 P.M.
474 VALENCIA STREET, S.F.
NEAR 16TH STREET

---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*--------
Dangerous Incompetence
By Cindy Sheehan
t r u t h o u t | Perspective

Saturday 03 September 2005

George Bush has been an incompetent failure his entire life.
Fortunately for humanity, he was just partying his way through
school, running companies into the ground, and being an alcoholic
and cocaine abuser for most of that time - and his incompetence
was limited to hurting the people who worked for him and his own
family. The people in his life who were hurt by his incompetence
probably have been able to "get on" with their lives. Now, though,
his incompetence affects the world and is responsible for so
many deaths and so much destruction. How many of us did
not foresee the mess he would make of the world when he was
selected the first time? We saw what he had done to Texas.
How many of us marveled and were so discouraged and amazed
when he was "re-elected" the second time? We saw what he had
done to the world. Dangerous incompetence should never be
rewarded, let alone be rewarded so handsomely as in George's case.

The Camp Casey movement has been struggling with how
best we can help the government-ravaged people of New
Orleans and the surrounding areas. We sent a busload of
supplies into Covington, La., which is a poor, African-American
town across Lake Ponchartrain from New Orleans. I had the
privilege of visiting Covington with my friends, Buddy and
Annie Spell last July. It was a community filled with love
and laughter.

The Bring Them Home Now Tour bus that went into Covington
is the Veterans For Peace Impeachment Tour bus that I rode in
and out of Crawford on. They took about 10,000 pounds of
leftover Camp Casey supplies and we had 2 trucks filled to
the brim with leftover water from the camp to Covington.
The tour bus also has satellite, so it is the only
communications that Covington has with the outside world now.

This is an email that our tour received from Gordon,
who is one of the bus drivers who bravely drove to
Covington. I left it intact without editing:

I can't recommend coming here but, if you must, we do
need help! During the day we are going out into the
community with water and baby supplies and lunch foods.
But, there has been an attack on the Armory and the cops
are scared. We have move into Covington middle school,
and we are giving the red cross our assistance with medical
supplies and food services. Until we arrived, they only had
MRE's. They just brought in 5 new born babies from the
hospital as they are expecting more casualties. We brought
in a generator and solar powered lights, no power, no phone
service here, our satellite link is the only connection to the
outside. The Marshal Law enforcement that will be coming
to New Orleans with the Army, could create mass panic.
That will lead to more refugees, we have twenty right
now and room for 100. Don't come here unless you're
prepared to work!.

I should say, stay out on the road and raise money for
the relief effort. But make up your own minds.

We need to keep the public aware of what is going
on here and all over SOLA.

If you want to help go an established refugee camp
and provide your internet access to document who
is there and what they plan to do to the website.
Use your satellites access to maximize the story
of the relief effort!

Gordon

There it is.

I think we should finish the tour so we can talk
about what an abject failure this administration is.
The unnecessary tragedy in New Orleans is directly
related to the unnecessary tragedy in Iraq:
Unnecessary being the operative word.

Innocent people are dying daily in this world.
In the crush of the hurricane story, the fact that
950 people (mostly women and children) were
trampled to death in Iraq was buried in the back
sections. Those are 950 people who would still
be alive if George Bush were not president.
950 people in Iraq and how many thousands in the
Gulf States died while the emperor strummed
a guitar and knocked a golf ball around? Additionally,
eight of our brave and wonderful soldiers have
been needlessly killed in Iraq since Monday.

I really believe that George and his band of
incompetent and dangerous thugs need to resign.
It would be the only honorable and competent
thing to do. But wait....

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

The Perfect Storm
Thursday, 01 September 2005
"The river rose all day,
The river rose all night.
Some people got lost in the flood,
Some people got away all right.
The river have busted through clear down to Plaquemine:
Six feet of water in the streets of Evangeline.
"Louisiana, Louisiana,
They're trying to wash us away,
They're trying to wash us away."
-- Randy Newman, Louisiana 1927
http://www.counterpunch.org/floyd09012005.html

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

New Orleans Mayor, in Tears, Blasts Washington's Response
By JOSEPH B. TREASTER and TERENCE NEILAN
Published: September 2, 2005
"We understand the recovery is not going to be an overnight
recovery," General Blum said. "This is a catastrophe of
enormous magnitude."
The additional troops will be getting into areas that were
previously inaccessible. Asked why the civil unrest
continues, General Blum said that "there are not enough
police and soldiers to be everywhere all the time."
He said that there should be a dramatic change in the
coming days, and as soon as "positive control" is
instituted more people will be allowed to leave pockets
of New Orleans to go to the Superdome and other shelters.
"We understand the recovery is not going to be an overnight
recovery," General Blum said. "This is a catastrophe of
enormous magnitude."
The additional troops will be getting into areas that
were previously inaccessible. Asked why the civil unrest
continues, General Blum said that "there are not enough
police and soldiers to be everywhere all the time."
He said that there should be a dramatic change in the
coming days, and as soon as "positive control" is
instituted more people will be allowed to leave pockets
of New Orleans to go to the Superdome and other shelters.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/02/national/nationalspecial/02cnd-storm.html?hp&ex=1125720000&en=c39cf45e7f030e63&ei=5094&partner=homepage

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

The Victims
From Margins of Society to Center of the Tragedy
By DAVID GONZALEZ
Published: September 2, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/02/national/nationalspecial/02discrim.html

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

CUBA: Hurricane Dennis causes severe damage
Marce Cameron
Cuba was hit hard by Hurricane Dennis, the most ferocious
storm to lash the Caribbean island nation in four decades.
It caused the deaths of 16 Cubans and left a swathe of
wreckage in its wake. The death toll would have been far
higher had it not been for the timely evacuation of more
than 1.5 million people.
http://www.greenleft.org.au/back/2005/634/634p12c.htm

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

Editorial
The Man-Made Disaster
Published: September 2, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/02/opinion/02fri1.html

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

World stunned as U.S. struggles with Katrina
Fri Sep 2, 2005 09:39 AM ET
http://go.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=9546626&src=eDialog/GetContent

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

Shoot to kill, troops told
September 2, 2005 - 4:20PM
Rotting bodies littered the flooded streets of New Orleans
today and mounting violence threatened to turn into all-out
anarchy as thousands of survivors of Hurricane Katrina
pleaded to be evacuated, or even just fed.
http://smh.com.au/news/world/shoot-to-kill-troops-told/2005/09/02/1125302714538.html

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

Leave My Child Alone Video
Cindy Sheehan (mother of a soldier slain in Iraq),
Jim Massey (ex-Marine recruiter) and others reveal the
true impact of No Child Left Behind's military recruitment
in our high schools. With no end in sight to the
increasingly lethal American occupation in Iraq, this
is the single-most important film for concerned parents
and citizens to see. Watch the 11-minute film and then
take action to "opt our kids out" at LeaveMyChildAlone.org.
Created by Mainstreet Moms and Working Assets
http://www.leavemychildalone.org/index.cfm?event=showContent&contentid=26
http://63.251.167.36/emotionstudios/progressive/qthigh.html
http://www.leavemychildalone.org/index.cfm

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

UK's Chief Scientific Advisor:
Global Warming May Be to Blame
By Andrew Buncombe
Published on Wednesday, August 31, 2005 by The Independent
Sir David King, the British Government's chief scientific
adviser, has warned that global warming may be responsible
for the devastation reaped by Hurricane Katrina.
"The increased intensity of hurricanes is associated with
global warming," Professor King told Channel 4 News yesterday.
"We have known since 1987 the intensity of hurricanes
is related to surface sea temperature and we know that,
over the last 15 to 20 years, surface sea temperatures
in these regions have increased by half a degree centigrade.
"So it is easy to conclude that the increased intensity
of hurricanes is associated with global warming."
Professor Kerry Emanuel of the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology also claimed, less than a month ago, that
ocean surfaces had become warmer, which doubled the
destructive potential of tropical storms in the past 30 years.
http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0831-05.htm

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

Displacement Of Historic Proportions
By David Von Drehle and Jacqueline Salmon
The Washington Post
Friday 02 September 2005
The largest displacement of Americans since the Civil War
reverberated across the country from its starting point
in New Orleans yesterday, as more than half a million
people uprooted by Hurricane Katrina sought shelter,
sustenance and the semblance of new lives.
Storm refugees overwhelmed the state of Louisiana and
poured into cities from coast to coast, crowding sports
arenas, convention centers, schools, churches and the
homes of friends, relatives and even strangers. Red Cross
officials reported that every shelter in a seven-state
region was already full - 76,000 people in Alabama,
Mississippi, Florida, Georgia, Texas, Arkansas and
Louisiana. Hundreds of miles from New Orleans, hotels
were jammed or quickly filling.
Rich and poor alike, they found themselves starting
over. The former began buying new houses and leasing
new office space. The latter waited in lines for
a bar of soap or a peanut butter sandwich.
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/090205Y.shtml

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

The Green Party of Alameda County Presents
Back to School, Not War
www.BackToSchoolNotWar.org
Saturday, September 17
The Forum at Laney College
RALLY: 6-8:30pm
Recruiters Out of Schools
US Troops Out of Iraq

Guest Speakers include:

- Peter Camejo, Green Party candidate for Governor
- Clarence Thomas, Longshoreman's Union ILWU Local 10
- Aimee Allison, Army Conscientious Objector
- Dr. Agha Saeed, Chair American Muslim Alliance
- Elaine Brown, Black Panther Party, Green Party Candidate
- Wilson Riles Jr., Former Oakland City Councilor
- Maria Poblet, Deporten a la Migra (Deport the INS)
- Regina Johnson, College Not Combat Proposition

WORKSHOPS: 9am-4:30pm
Topics include

- American Muslims and the Patriot Act
- Labor and Greens
- College Not Combat: Military Out of Schools
- Immigrant Rights
- Saving Public Education
- Strategies for Universal Health Care
PLUS MUCH MORE

PRICE: $20-$40 sliding scale (Students with ID $10)
For more information or to register on-line go to:
www.BackToSchoolNotWar.org

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

'This is criminal': Malik Rahim reports from New Orleans

by Malik Rahim

Malik Rahim, a veteran of the Black Panther Party in New
Orleans, for decades an organizer of public housing tenants
both there and in San Francisco and a recent Green Party
candidate for New Orleans City Council, lives in the
Algiers neighborhood, the only part of New Orleans that
is not flooded. They have no power, but the water is still
good and the phones work. Their neighborhood could be
sheltering and feeding at least 40,000 refugees, he says,
but they are allowed to help no one. What he describes
is nothing less than deliberate genocide against Black
and poor people. - Ed.

New Orleans, Sept. 1, 2005 - It's criminal. From what
you're hearing, the people trapped in New Orleans are
nothing but looters. We're told we should be more
"neighborly." But nobody talked about being neighborly
until after the people who could afford to leave ... left.

If you ain't got no money in America, you're on your own.
People were told to go to the Superdome, but they have
no food, no water there. And before they could get in,
people had to stand in line for 4-5 hours in the rain
because everybody was being searched one by one at the
entrance.

I can understand the chaos that happened after the tsunami,
because they had no warning, but here there was plenty
of warning. In the three days before the hurricane hit,
we knew it was coming and everyone could have been evacuated.

We have Amtrak here that could have carried everybody
out of town. There were enough school buses that could
have evacuated 20,000 people easily, but they just let
them be flooded. My son watched 40 buses go underwater
- they just wouldn't move them, afraid they'd be stolen.

People who could afford to leave were so afraid someone
would steal what they own that they just let it all be
flooded. They could have let a family without a vehicle
borrow their extra car, but instead they left it behind
to be destroyed.

There are gangs of white vigilantes near here riding
around in pickup trucks, all of them armed, and any
young Black they see who they figure doesn't belong
in their community, they shoot him. I tell them,
"Stop! You're going to start a riot."

When you see all the poor people with no place to go,
feeling alone and helpless and angry, I say this is
a consequence of HOPE VI. New Orleans took all the
HUD money it could get to tear down public housing,
and families and neighbors who'd relied on each other
for generations were uprooted and torn apart.

Most of the people who are going through this now
had already lost touch with the only community they'd
ever known. Their community was torn down and they
were scattered. They'd already lost their real homes,
the only place where they knew everybody, and now the
places they've been staying are destroyed.

But nobody cares. They're just lawless looters ...
dangerous.

The hurricane hit at the end of the month, the time
when poor people are most vulnerable. Food stamps don't
buy enough but for about three weeks of the month, and
by the end of the month everyone runs out. Now they
have no way to get their food stamps or any money,
so they just have to take what they can to survive.

Many people are getting sick and very weak. From the
toxic water that people are walking through, little
scratches and sores are turning into major wounds.

People whose homes and families were not destroyed
went into the city right away with boats to bring the
survivors out, but law enforcement told them they
weren't needed. They are willing and able to rescue
thousands, but they're not allowed to.

Every day countless volunteers are trying to help,
but they're turned back. Almost all the rescue that's
been done has been done by volunteers anyway.

My son and his family - his wife and kids, ages 1, 5
and 8 - were flooded out of their home when the levee
broke. They had to swim out until they found an
abandoned building with two rooms above water level.

There were 21 people in those two rooms for a day and
a half. A guy in a boat who just said "I'm going to
help regardless" rescued them and took them to
Highway I-10 and dropped them there.

They sat on the freeway for about three hours, because
someone said they'd be rescued and taken to the Superdome.
Finally they just started walking, had to walk six and
a half miles.

When they got to the Superdome, my son wasn't allowed
in - I don't know why - so his wife and kids wouldn't
go in. They kept walking, and they happened to run
across a guy with a tow truck that they knew, and he
gave them his own personal truck.

When they got here, they had no gas, so I had to punch
a hole in my gas tank to give them some gas, and now
I'm trapped. I'm getting around by bicycle.

People from Placquemine Parish were rescued on a ferry
and dropped off on a dock near here. All day they were
sitting on the dock in the hot sun with no food, no
water. Many were in a daze; they've lost everything.

They were all sitting there surrounded by armed guards.
We asked the guards could we bring them water and food.
My mother and all the other church ladies were cooking
for them, and we have plenty of good water.

But the guards said, "No. If you don't have enough water
and food for everybody, you can't give anything." Finally
the people were hauled off on school buses from other
parishes.

You know Robert King Wilkerson (the only one of the
Angola 3 political prisoners who's been released).
He's been back in New Orleans working hard, organizing,
helping people. Now nobody knows where he is. His house
was destroyed. Knowing him, I think he's out trying
to save lives, but I'm worried.

The people who could help are being shipped out. People
who want to stay, who have the skills to save lives
and rebuild are being forced to go to Houston.

It's not like New Orleans was caught off guard. This
could have been prevented.

There's military right here in New Orleans, but for
three days they weren't even mobilized. You'd think
this was a Third World country.

I'm in the Algiers neighborhood of New Orleans, the
only part that isn't flooded. The water is good. Our
parks and schools could easily hold 40,000 people,
and they're not using any of it.

This is criminal. These people are dying for no other
reason than the lack of organization.

Everything is needed, but we're still too disorganized.
I'm asking people to go ahead and gather donations and
relief supplies but to hold on to them for a few days
until we have a way to put them to good use.

I'm challenging my party, the Green Party, to come down
here and help us just as soon as things are a little
more organized. The Republicans and Democrats didn't
do anything to prevent this or plan for it and don't
seem to care if everyone dies.

Malik's phone is working. He welcomes calls from old
friends and anyone with questions or ideas for saving
lives. To reach him, call the Bay View at (415) 671-0789.

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

A Reverence for Property Over People
Bush Nixed Funding That Could Have Saved New Orleans
By ALEXANDER COCKBURN
and JEFFREY ST. CLAIR
August 31, 2005
http://www.counterpunch.org/cockburn08312005.html

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

Op-Ed Columnist
United States of Shame
By MAUREEN DOWD
Published: September 3, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/03/opinion/03dowd.html

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

Eyes on America
Across U.S., Outrage at Response
By TODD S. PURDUM
Published: September 3, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/03/national/nationalspecial/03voices.html

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

The Levee
Gazing at Breached Levees,
Critics See Years of Missed
Opportunities
By ANDREW C. REVKIN
Published: September 2, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/02/national/nationalspecial/02levee.html

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

Health Challenges
Rotting Food, Dirty Water
and Heat Add to Problems
By SHAILA DEWAN and ABBY GOODNOUGH
Published: September 2, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/02/national/nationalspecial/02health.html

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

KATRINA'S AFTERMATH
As they begin to patrol the chaotic city, troops
are surprised by what they don't find.
By Scott Gold
Times Staff Writer
September 3, 2005
www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-troops3sep03,0,7512924.story?coll=la-home-headlines

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

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

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

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

Wednesday, August 31, 2005

BAUAW NEWSLETTER-WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 31, 2005

***************************************************************
STOP THE WAR AND OCCUPATION!
IRAQ, PALESTINE, HAITI....
MARCH AND RALLY SEPTEMBER 24
11:00 A.M. DOLORES PARK, S.F.
COLLEGE NOT COMBAT CONTINGENT
10:00 A.M. 16TH AND MISSION BART PLAZA, S.F.

ANSWER Organizing Meetings:
Tuesdays, 7:00 p.m.
2489 Mission St., suite 24 (at 21st St., S.F.)

COLLEGE NOT COMBAT Planning Meeting:
Saturday,
September 17th,
2:00 P.M.
110 Capp Street (Buzz #202)
San Francisco
For more information:
college_not_combat@yahoo.com
(415) 248-1701
http://www.collegenotcombat.org/

NEXT BAUAW MEETING:
TUESDAY EVENING,
SEPTEMBER 20, 7:00 P.M.
474 VALENCIA STREET, S.F.
NEAR 16TH STREET

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

1) Martial Law Declared in New Orleans; Situation
Deteriorating
NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana -- Martial Law has been declared
in New Orleans as conditions continued to deteriorate.
Water levels in The Big Easy and it's suburbs are rising
at dangerous levels and officials stated they don't know
where the water is coming from. Residents are being urged
to get out of New Orleans in any way they can as officials
fear "life will be unsustainable" for days or even weeks.
Published on Tuesday, August 30, 2005 by CBS News
http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0830-10.htm

2) Labor Day Report:
CEO: Worker Pay Ratio Shoots Up to 431 : 1
Biggest Defense Contractors
Raise CEOs' Pay 200% Since 9/11
DOWNLOAD THE REPORT HERE: Executive Excess 2005
(PDF, 3.81 MB). Press Release from United for a Fair
Economy and Institute for Policy Studies Contact:
Betsy Leondar-Wright, (617) 423-2148 x113
2004 was a banner year for CEOs and a dismal year for
workers, according to a new report from the Institute
for Policy Studies and United for a Fair Economy,
Executive Excess 2005: Defense Contractors Get More
Bucks for the Bang .
The ratio of average CEO pay (now $11.8 million)
to worker pay (now $27,460) spiked up from 301-to-1
in 2003 to 431-to-1 in 2004.
If the minimum wage had risen as fast as CEO pay
since 1990, the lowest paid workers in the US would
be earning $23.03 an hour today, not $5.15 an hour.
http://www.faireconomy.org/press/2005/EE2005_pr.html

3) Final photos from Crawford: Vets speak out,
American Indian Movement, Hitting the Road
Wed, 31 Aug 2005 00:24:50 -0500 Final photos from Crawford:
Jeff Paterson, Not in Our Name Final Report from Crawford,
Texas (August 30, 2005)
"Jeff Paterson"
http://www.indybay.org/news/2005/08/1763590.php

4) U.S. Poverty Rate Was Up Last Year
By DAVID LEONHARDT
Published: August 31, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/31/national/31census.html

5) At Least 800 Shiite Pilgrims Killed in Panic on Tigris Bridge
By ROBERT F. WORTH
Published: August 31, 2005
Fear had begun spreading in the crowd an hour earlier,
after insurgents fired rockets and mortars near the shrine,
killing seven pilgrims and wounding two dozen, and leading
to a counter-attack by American military helicopters.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/31/international/middleeast/31cnd-
iraq.html?hp&ex=1125547200&en=1fec59f03215dfde&ei=5094&partner=homepage

6) Editorial
New Orleans in Peril
Published: August 31, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/31/opinion/31wed1.html

7) MSNBC.com
Anti-war mom glad she didn't meet Bush
Sheehan says president's refusal to meet has
'galvanized peace movement'
The Associated Press
Updated: 1:09 a.m. ET Aug. 31, 2005
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/9137815/

8) OF GANGSTAS & JOURNALISM: AN APOLOGY
[Col. Writ. 8/13/05] Copyright '05 Mumia Abu-Jamal

9) Reuters cameraman ordered held in Abu Ghraib
Wed Aug 31, 2005 06:55 AM ET
http://go.reuters.com/
newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=9520027&src=eDialog/GetContent

10) Hurricane Katrina: a calamity
compounded by poverty and neglect
By Joseph Kay
31 August 2005
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2005/aug2005/katr-a31.shtml

11) Hurricane Katrina:
Is Looting a Question of Skin Color?
If the pain and destruction caused by Hurricane Katrina
wasn't enough, now the looting has started on the streets
of New Orleans. But many people simply need to feed their
families and are consequently forced to "borrow" food from
waterlogged grocery stores. So what makes somebody a looter?
And does it have anything to do with the color of their skin?
AP

12) Muni Fare Strike
For more info, leaflets, etc., on Muni fare strike:
http://www.socialstrike.net

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

1) Martial Law Declared in New Orleans; Situation
Deteriorating
NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana -- Martial Law has been declared
in New Orleans as conditions continued to deteriorate.
Water levels in The Big Easy and it's suburbs are rising
at dangerous levels and officials stated they don't know
where the water is coming from. Residents are being urged
to get out of New Orleans in any way they can as officials
fear "life will be unsustainable" for days or even weeks.
Published on Tuesday, August 30, 2005 by CBS News
http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0830-10.htm

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

2) Labor Day Report:
CEO: Worker Pay Ratio Shoots Up to 431 : 1
Biggest Defense Contractors
Raise CEOs' Pay 200% Since 9/11
DOWNLOAD THE REPORT HERE: Executive Excess 2005
(PDF, 3.81 MB). Press Release from United for a Fair
Economy and Institute for Policy Studies Contact:
Betsy Leondar-Wright, (617) 423-2148 x113
2004 was a banner year for CEOs and a dismal year for
workers, according to a new report from the Institute
for Policy Studies and United for a Fair Economy,
Executive Excess 2005: Defense Contractors Get More
Bucks for the Bang .
The ratio of average CEO pay (now $11.8 million)
to worker pay (now $27,460) spiked up from 301-to-1
in 2003 to 431-to-1 in 2004.
If the minimum wage had risen as fast as CEO pay
since 1990, the lowest paid workers in the US would
be earning $23.03 an hour today, not $5.15 an hour.
http://www.faireconomy.org/press/2005/EE2005_pr.html

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

3) Final photos from Crawford: Vets speak out,
American Indian Movement, Hitting the Road
Wed, 31 Aug 2005 00:24:50 -0500 Final photos from Crawford:
Jeff Paterson, Not in Our Name Final Report from Crawford,
Texas (August 30, 2005)
"Jeff Paterson"
http://www.indybay.org/news/2005/08/1763590.php

Cindy Sheehan and Steve DeFord, Gold Star Families for Peace,
began yesterday's morning press conference with a call for all
remaining Camp Casey materials to be sent to the devastated
New Orleans area. Military families and veterans, including
National Guardsmen, called on fellow vets in Louisiana to help
with disaster relief. Speakers also expressed concern that
with tens of thousands of National Guardsmen deployed in
Iraq, states are not as prepared as they should be to
handle natural disasters.

Paralyzed Iraq veteran Tomas Young called on President Bush
to meet with him to explain why his best hope to walk again,
stem cell research, was not being pursued. Tomas was wounded
in Iraq the same day that Casey Sheehan was killed.

Later in the afternoon, Dennis Banks, the "Commander and
Chief" of the American Indian Movement (AIM), presented
Cindy a cloak on behalf of her fallen warrior son. He then
presented Cindy a pin of five gold stars (it looked a lot
like the rank insignia of a five star general). Dennis
explained that the pin was not only representative of her
as a gold star mother, but also of a leader in the struggle
against injustice and war. He was also not the first person
to mention Cindy and Rosa Parks in the same sentence.
Four other members of AIM joined Dennis on stage for
a ceremonial drum circle.

This morning the white crosses gracing the front of the
massive Camp Casey II tent were ceremoniously removed,
with the deconstruction of the encampments to follow
throughout the day and into tomorrow. Tomorrow morning
the "Bring Them Home Now Bus Tour" is scheduled to embark
from Crawford. Three different buses are to take different
routes across the country to meet up in Washington DC
for the national mobilization to the stop the war
September 24 - 26.
http://www.bringthemhomenowtour.org/
For a complete archive of my photos, reports, and video
from Crawford, Texas for the last two weeks: http://www.notinourname.net/war/
sheehan.htm
Following up on my coverage of last Saturday's Crawford
rally for "God, Troops, Bush and Endless War (Until
Victory)," I've edited a short 4:30 min. video. The
focus of the video is that of a right-way youth group,
the "Protest Warriors," fleeing the pro-war rally. http://www.indybay.org/news/2005/
08/1763194.php

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

4) U.S. Poverty Rate Was Up Last Year
By DAVID LEONHARDT
Published: August 31, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/31/national/31census.html

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

5) At Least 800 Shiite Pilgrims Killed in Panic on Tigris Bridge
By ROBERT F. WORTH
Published: August 31, 2005
Fear had begun spreading in the crowd an hour earlier,
after insurgents fired rockets and mortars near the shrine,
killing seven pilgrims and wounding two dozen, and leading
to a counter-attack by American military helicopters.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/31/international/middleeast/31cnd-
iraq.html?hp&ex=1125547200&en=1fec59f03215dfde&ei=5094&partner=homepage

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

6) Editorial
New Orleans in Peril
Published: August 31, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/31/opinion/31wed1.html
---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*--------

7) MSNBC.com
Anti-war mom glad she didn't meet Bush
Sheehan says president's refusal to meet has
'galvanized peace movement'
The Associated Press
Updated: 1:09 a.m. ET Aug. 31, 2005
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/9137815/

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

8) OF GANGSTAS & JOURNALISM: AN APOLOGY
[Col. Writ. 8/13/05] Copyright '05 Mumia Abu-Jamal

"The history we read, though based
on facts, is, strictly speaking,
not factual at all, but a series
of accepted judgements." -- Geoffrey
Barraclough, *History in a Changing World* (1955)

Journalists, like historians,
are only as good as their sources, and
reportage, like commentary, is
colored by the lens of belief.

Several weeks ago, I wrote
a piece called, "Keepin' It Gangsta'"
(6/18/05), where I wrote that the
infamous CRIPs, Bloods, and other
urban gangs had their roots in the
Black Panther Party. [One] source
was an article written by Black
political prisoner, Sundiata Acoli and
published as a pamphlet back in 1979.
The article suggests these gangs
had early influences in dress, and
root consciousness, that flowed from
the Black Panther Party, and other
nationalist and revolutionary-type
organizations.

This and other source materials,
like a xerox copy of an August 1973
publication of a C.R.I.P. Constitution,
and the autobiography of former
CRIP, Sanyika Shakur (f/k/a 'Monster'
Cody Scott), led me to the
conclusion that CRIPs had roots in
Black consciousness movements and
had, somehow, gone awry, perhaps
under the influence of the drug game.

I have come to question that conclusion.

No doubt Sundiata Acoli, a proud
Panther and veteran of the Black
Liberation movement, believed many
of his face-to-face sources in state
and federal prisons over many years,
but it seems many of his sources
were telling him what he wanted to
hear, to give a gloss over their
origins that didn't exist in life.
Perhaps because Sundiata wanted to
believe their reports of BPP and
nationalist influences, he believed
them. Just as I wanted to believe
that the Party had such influence, I
too, believed such reports.

I can't say that I do today.

I've re-read Shakur's autobiography,
[*Monster: The Autobiography of
an L.A. Gang Member* (Penguin: 1993/'94)]
and I must admit, it is hard
to find evidence of either social,
communal or nationalist consciousness
in the CRIP-life that Shakur describes.
What is evident is a profound
nihilism.

What almost echoes the Party's
targeting under the COINTELPRO
though, is the easy way L.A. cops
used one group of CRIPs, the Eight
Deuce Trays, against the others,
Rolling Sixties.

Shakur, a teenager, is told
by an LAPD 'anti-gang' sergeant, that
the other CRIP set is out to kill him.
When 'Monster' asks who, the cop
replies:

"'Peddie, Scoop, Kiki, and a few others.
If I were you I'd keep my gun
close at hand, 'cause those
boys seem mighty serious.'
'Yeah, well f--- the Sixties.
They know where I'm at.'
'Yeah, but do you know where
*they are*? I mean right *now*?'
'Naw, you?'
Then, calling me to the car in
a secretive manner he said,
'They on Fifty-ninth Street and
Third Avenue. All the ones I just
mentioned who've been bad-mouthing you.
I was just telling my partner
here that if you were there they'd
be scared s---less. If you get your
crew and go now, I'll make sure
you are clear. But only fifteen
minutes. You got that?' he added
with a wink and a click of the tongue.
'Yeah, I got it. But how I know
you ain't settin' me up?'
'If I wanted to put you in jail,
Monster, I'd arrest you now for that
gun in your waistband.'
Surprised, I said, 'Righteous,'
and stepped away from the car.
We mounted up and went over to
Fifty-ninth and Third Avenue. Sure
enough, there they were. And just
as he had said, we encountered no
police." [pp. 175-176]

'Monster' and his crew lit
the street up, with fire and blood.
(Kinda gives a whole new meaning
to 'gang control', doesn't it?)

It would've been nice, reassuring
even, if the CRIPs, and other
Black youth gangs, had a social
consciousness. But, nice ain't right.
And no amount of wishing will make
it so. They were unconscious
criminals, devoid of knowledge of
their people's long, hard walk to
quasi-freedom.

I stand corrected.

Copyright 2005 Mumia Abu-Jamal

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

9) Reuters cameraman ordered held in Abu Ghraib
Wed Aug 31, 2005 06:55 AM ET
http://go.reuters.com/
newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=9520027&src=eDialog/GetContent

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

10) Hurricane Katrina: a calamity
compounded by poverty and neglect
By Joseph Kay
31 August 2005
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2005/aug2005/katr-a31.shtml

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

11) Hurricane Katrina:
Is Looting a Question of Skin Color?
If the pain and destruction caused by Hurricane Katrina
wasn't enough, now the looting has started on the streets
of New Orleans. But many people simply need to feed their
families and are consequently forced to "borrow" food from
waterlogged grocery stores. So what makes somebody a looter?
And does it have anything to do with the color of their skin?
AP

Looting is rife on the streets of New Orleans, but are
the media picking on African-Americans unfairly?It didn't
take long for reports of looting to filter through. No
sooner had Hurricane Katrina's winds died down, than people
emerged onto the streets and began helping themselves to
whatever New Orleans' shopping paradise had to offer.
Now, dear reader, you might say their actions are
understandable, if not condonable. If your home had
just been washed away, and you hadn't eaten a proper meal
for 48 hours, the urge to help yourself to a few candy
bars or cartons of milk from the local convenience store
might be a strong one. But a number of amazing reports
have described how local residents also loaded up their
vehicles with DVD players and televisions, with the
National Guard and police almost powerless to stop them.
New Orleans is rapidly turning into a lawless city,
with those unable to leave resorting to plunder and
mayhem.

But the really interesting angle on all of this comes
from those smart folks at Metafilter. They cleverly
link to three pictures of apparent "looters" featured
on Yahoo news. Two men are pictured wading through
flood waters with bags of groceries and beer in their
arms. They are described as "looters." And,
coincidentally they are African-American.

Next comes a picture of a white couple carrying food
supplies through the flood waters. According to AFP/
Ghetty Images, these fine young people are on their
way home after "finding bread and soda from a local
grocery store." So the white people don't "loot", they
"find". A curious insight into prevalent racism in
the US media; just as one man's "terrorist" is
another man's "freedom fighter," it seems one man's
"looter", is another man's "finder". You decide.

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

12) Muni Fare Strike
For more info, leaflets, etc., on Muni fare strike:
http://www.socialstrike.net

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

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

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

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

Tuesday, August 30, 2005

BAUAW NEWSLETTER-TUESDAY, AUGUST 30, 2005

***************************************************************
STOP THE WAR AND OCCUPATION!
IRAQ, PALESTINE, HAITI....
MARCH AND RALLY SEPTEMBER 24
11:00 A.M. DOLORES PARK, S.F.
COLLEGE NOT COMBAT CONTINGENT
10:00 A.M. 16TH AND MISSION BART PLAZA, S.F.

ANSWER Organizing Meetings:
Tuesdays, 7:00 p.m.
2489 Mission St., suite 24 (at 21st St., S.F.)

COLLEGE NOT COMBAT Planning Meeting:
Saturday,
September 17th,
2:00 P.M.
110 Capp Street (Buzz #202)
San Francisco
For more information:
college_not_combat@yahoo.com
(415) 248-1701
http://www.collegenotcombat.org/

NEXT BAUAW MEETING:
TUESDAY EVENING,
SEPTEMBER 20, 7:00 P.M.
474 VALENCIA STREET, S.F.
NEAR 16TH STREET

KEEP UP WITH CINDY SHEEHAN!
Photos from Camp Casey; Anti-War
Texas Hoe Down, and Crawford Pro-War Rally

Sun, 28 Aug 2005 14:23:34 -0500

Photos from Camp Casey yesterday:
http://www.indybay.org/news/2005/08/1762910.php

Photos from Crawford pro-war rally yesterday:
http://www.indybay.org/news/2005/08/1762933.php

Jeff Paterson
jeff@paterson.net
Crawford, Texas (August 28, 2005)

***************************************************************

(MODERATORS NOTE: TAKING THE ASVAB TEST NEGATES
THE "OPT-OUT" FORM. DON'T TAKE THE ASVAB TEST!)

Dear UFPJ Member Group:

We're strongly encouraging you to
participate in the following
call to action from the Leave My
Child Alone Coalition, including:
opting out of military recruiter
lists and hosting a back to school event.
Here's an already written email
we hope you will send out to your
membership:

BACKGROUND
Buried deep within the No Child
Left Behind Act is a provision that
requires public high schools
to hand over students' private contact
information to military recruiters.
If a school does not comply, it
risks losing vital federal education
funds. As if that weren't bad
enough, the Pentagon has now
built an illegal database of 30 million
16-25 year olds as another recruitment tool.

ACTION 1: Protect our children
by helping them "Opt Out"!

The Leave My Child Alone coalition
to make it easy to protect children
from unwanted military recruiting
by getting their names off both
Pentagon and high school recruiting
lists. To opt your child out, go
to:

http://www.leavemychildalone.org/index.cfm?event=showContent&contentid=63&mktcode=UFPJ

ACTION 2: Host a Back-To-School Event

Because most high schools turn
over their student lists to military
recruiters in October, it's imperative
that we get as many kids as
possible "opted out" during the
month of September. Parents, teachers,
grandparents and concerned
citizens are planning Leave My Child Alone
back-to-school events from
September 7-30. It's easy to host an event
at your home, church or local
coffee shop -- we provide you all the
forms and information you
need, plus a FREE DVD (
http://www.leavemychildalone.org/DVD
http://www.leavemychildalone.org/DVD )
on opting out featuring Cindy
Sheehan and former
recruiter Jim Massey. Go to
http://www.leavemychildalone.org/eventcenter
http://www.leavemychildalone.org/eventcenter
to register an event now
and help local families opt out!
Consider making Opt Out the subject
of a Sunday School class, youth group
gathering, book club, or other
community activity you already participate in.

Event ideas include:

- Passing out opt-out forms
before and after church services or making
a youth group presentation

- Hosting a house party to talk
with friends and neighbors about
protecting kids from the Pentagon,
watch the new Leave My Child Alone
DVD (featuring Cindy Sheehan),
and write letters to your local
superintendent and school board
to adopt Optimum Opt Out policies.

- Organizing a school board
meeting outing to sure your local district
is educating parents about their ability to opt out.

- Tabling outside the first day
of school to give opt-out forms to
students to bring home to parents.

If you're interested in any
of these options (or have your own
creative ideas) you can find
materials and a way to let other local
Leave My Child Alone supporters know at
http://www.leavemychildalone.org/eventcenter


ACTION 3: Pass it on

Most parents don't even know about
the need to opt out. Please forward
this email to parents, grandparents,
and teachers you know. Tell them
to visit LeaveMyChildAlone.org for
more information and all the forms
needed to opt out.

***************************************************************

Sweet Neo Con
By Mick Jagger,
Rolling Stones

"You ride around your white castle,
On your little white horse
You lie to your people,
and blame it on your war of course
You call yourself a Christian,
I call you a hypocrite
You call yourself a patriot,
well I think you're full of shit


Oh, sweet Neo Con,
What path have you led them on?
Oh, sweet Neo Con,
Is it time for the atom bomb?
You parade around in costume,
Expecting to be believed
But as the body bags stack up,
We believe we've been deceived
The horror you've unleashed,
Will backfire with more grief
When will you ever learn,
Sweet Neo Con,
as the world burns?

Oh, sweet Neo Con,
What path have you led them on?
Oh, sweet Neo Con,
Is it time for the atom bomb?
Oh, sweet Neo Con,
What path have you led them on?
Oh, sweet Neo Con,
Is it time to drop the bomb?

How come you're so wrong?
My sweet neo-con,
where's the money gone,
in the Pentagon.
It's liberty for all,
democracy's our style,
unless you are against us,
then it's prison without trial."

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

1) Op-Ed Columnist
Left Behind, Way Behind
By BOB HERBERT
Published: August 29, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/29/opinion/29herbert.html

2) White House Letter
In the Struggle Over the Iraq War,
Women Are on the Front Line
By ELISABETH BUMILLER
Published: August 29, 2005
WASHINGTON
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/29/politics/29letter.html

3) U.S. Banks on Technology
in Revised Military Plan for
a Possible North Korea Conflict
By THOM SHANKER
Published: August 29, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/29/international/asia/29korea.html

4) Long Island
A High School Counts Its War Dead
By PATRICK O'GILFOIL HEALY
Published: August 28, 2005
BRENTWOOD
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/28/nyregion/nyregionspecial2/28libren.html

5) Chávez May Try to Extradite Robertson
By REUTERS
August 29, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/29/international/americas/
29venez.html?adxnnl=1&adxnnlx=1125295393-yNXEAXPoNe4z8T0Tb4SDpQ

6) US pushes military build-up in
Afghanistan as armed resistance escalates
By Peter Symonds
29 August 2005
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2005/aug2005/afgh-a29.shtml

7) How Easily We Have Come To Take The Bombs And
The Deaths In Iraq For Granted
by Robert Fisk August 28, 2005
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=15&ItemID=8600

8) Bush's Obscene Tirades Rattle White House Aides
By DOUG THOMPSON
Aug 25, 2005, 06:19
http://www.capitolhillblue.com/artman/publish/article_7267.shtml

9) Who's Next?
by KAREN HOUPPERT
[from the September 12, 2005 issue, The Nation]
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20050912/houppert

10) College Not Combat: More than a Feel Good Measure
- Carlos Villarreal
Monday, August 29, 2005
(This is College Not Combat's response to the nasty
piece in SF Gate last week bashing antiwar groups.
Thanks to Carlos for drafting this. –Jeremy)

11) U.S. Studies Report Its Soldiers
Killed Journalist
By REUTERS
Published: August 29, 2005
BAGHDAD, Iraq , Aug. 28 (Reuters) - A soundman working
for Reuters Television was shot dead Sunday in Baghdad, and
a cameraman with him was wounded and then detained by
United States soldiers. An Iraqi police report, read to Reuters
by an Interior Ministry official, said the two had been shot by
American forces.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/29/international/middleeast/29journalists.html

12) Falluja 2004
Dahr Jamail's Iraq Dispatches
http://dahrjamailiraq.com

13) Tuesday, August 30, 12noon - 9pm
Mass Mailing Party, Potluck and ANSWER Activist Meeting
2489 Mission St. Room 30 at 21st St., San Francisco

Help out with a mass mailing for the Sept. 24 National
Anti-War March. Potluck and report back from the national
protests for the extradition of Posada Carriles will start
at 7pm. Plus an update on the Sept. 24 National Marches.
Help spread the word about the upcoming mass march and
socialize with other activists. Bring your favorite dish
to share. Get involved!

For more info call 415-821-6545.

Click here to make a tax-deductible donation to ANSWER
over a secure server, as well as learn how to donate by check.

14) Bring Them Home Now Tour
From Camp Casey, Crawford to Washington DC
From George Bush's door step to Communities along the way,
We Demand That:
Elected Representatives Decide Now to Bring the Troops Home
We Take Care of Them When They Get Here
We Never Again Send Our Loved Ones to War Based on Lies!
http://www.meetwithcindy.org
Photos:
http://www.indybay.org/news/2005/08/1763087.php
http://www.bringthemhomenowtour.org/article.php?list=type&type=3

15) Guard Units Shift From Combat
to Flood Duty
By JOHN M. BRODER
Published: August 30, 2005
State National Guard units, already strained by long
overseas deployments, joined federal, state and private
organizations yesterday in a broad effort to provide
relief in areas thrashed and flooded by Hurricane Katrina.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/30/national/
30rescue.html?hp&ex=1125460800&en=adc7393c7d4dc856&ei=5094&partner=ho
mepage

16) US says kills Iraq al Qaeda fighters; 47 said dead
Tue Aug 30, 2005 09:05 AM ET
By Sebastian Alison
BAGHDAD (Reuters) - U.S. warplanes launched strikes in
western Iraq on Tuesday which the U.S. military said killed an
al Qaeda militant named Abu Islam among other fighters, and
which a hospital source said killed at least 47 people
http://go.reuters.com/
newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=9509253&src=eDialog/GetContent

17) Is Bird Flu Pandemic Chicken Little Scenario?
Paul Joseph Watson & Alex Jones | August 29 2005
[Even if you don't go for the
thesis below, those choice quotes from
parasites Turner and Philip are
psychopathic. Prince Charles is an
'environ-mentalist' also...links
to these articles below]
http://prisonplanet.com/articles/august2005/290805chickenlittle.htm

18) The U.S. in Iraq
Bringing Freedom and Democracy
or Occupation?Tuesday, August 30, 2005 at 7:00 p.m.
Mt. Diablo Unitarian Universalist Church, 55 Eckley Lane, Walnut Creek
Speakers:
STEPHEN ZUNES is a professor of politics and chair of the Peace and Justice Studies
program at the University of San Francisco, and the author of Tinderbox: U.S. Middle
East Policy and the Roots of Terrorism.
SEAN O'NEILL is a decorated Marine who served twice in Iraq and now speaks out
against the war.
Learn more about the historical and political context of the conflict and the reality of
current conditions in Iraq.
Suggested Donation: $5.00-$20.00
Mt. Diablo Peace and Justice Center,
55 Eckley Lane, Walnut Creek, CA
925-933-7850

19) Cubans are following events in Florida and Louisiana
closely with major coverage in the local media there.
Katrina's damage is a top story on Cuban TV news today

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

1) Op-Ed Columnist
Left Behind, Way Behind
By BOB HERBERT
Published: August 29, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/29/opinion/29herbert.html

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

2) White House Letter
In the Struggle Over the Iraq War,
Women Are on the Front Line
By ELISABETH BUMILLER
Published: August 29, 2005
WASHINGTON
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/29/politics/29letter.html

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

3) U.S. Banks on Technology
in Revised Military Plan for
a Possible North Korea Conflict
By THOM SHANKER
Published: August 29, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/29/international/asia/29korea.html

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

4) Long Island
A High School Counts Its War Dead
By PATRICK O'GILFOIL HEALY
Published: August 28, 2005
BRENTWOOD
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/28/nyregion/nyregionspecial2/28libren.html

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

5) Chávez May Try to Extradite Robertson
By REUTERS
August 29, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/29/international/americas/
29venez.html?adxnnl=1&adxnnlx=1125295393-yNXEAXPoNe4z8T0Tb4SDpQ

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

6) US pushes military build-up in
Afghanistan as armed resistance escalates
By Peter Symonds
29 August 2005
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2005/aug2005/afgh-a29.shtml

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

7) How Easily We Have Come To Take The Bombs And
The Deaths In Iraq For Granted
by Robert Fisk August 28, 2005
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=15&ItemID=8600

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

8) Bush's Obscene Tirades Rattle White House Aides
By DOUG THOMPSON
Aug 25, 2005, 06:19
http://www.capitolhillblue.com/artman/publish/article_7267.shtml

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

9) Who's Next?
by KAREN HOUPPERT
[from the September 12, 2005 issue, The Nation]
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20050912/houppert

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

10) College Not Combat: More than a Feel Good Measure
- Carlos Villarreal
Monday, August 29, 2005
(This is College Not Combat's response to the nasty
piece in SF Gate last week bashing antiwar groups.
Thanks to Carlos for drafting this. –Jeremy)

SF Gate www.sfgate.com

College Not Combat: More than a Feel Good Measure
- Carlos Villarreal
Monday, August 29, 2005

The counter-military recruitment movement has
effectively challenged the military on very specific
factual grounds. Cinnamon Stillwell, on the other
hand, chooses to smear the organizations involved and
belittle the voters of San Francisco. Proposition I is
an important statement against military recruiters who
lie, mislead, discriminate, and yes, who are
attempting to replace soldiers in a war for oil and
power that was forced upon the American people through
deceit.

Right-wingers are so scared of a mere "feel good
measure" because they recognize the effectiveness of
the College Not Combat campaign, and the desperation
of the Bush administration to salvage its
neocon-crafted foreign policy. The counter-recruitment
movement has been so effective because recruiting is
where these right-wing fantasies meet the real world,
where the pro-war policies of wealthy men who never
went to war meet the working-class recruits who are
being sent to die. It is critical for the anti-war
movement to focus on this process, and this has meant
picketing recruiting offices, and sometimes disrupting
job fairs. Stillwell describes such disruptions as
„sometimes violent,‰ but there has never been any
violence at such protests except by the random campus
police officer.

It is true that there is no draft, like the one that
existed during the Vietnam War, but it is misleading
to call all recruits "volunteers." First and foremost
because, unlike most volunteers, soldiers are paid and
offered bonuses. They are also lied to and encouraged
to lie themselves. In Cincinnati, for instance,
recruiters were caught telling young people that
because of gun deaths and highway accidents, their
risk of death in this country was actually greater
than the risk in Iraq. In Colorado, recruiters told a
journalism student posing as a potential recruit how
to get a fake diploma and pass a drug test.

Furthermore, unlike typical volunteers, soldiers can‚t
change their mind. Recruits are often told they are
making a brief commitment and are unlikely to face
combat. In fact, the military‚s "stop loss" policy
ensures that regardless of what recruits are told or
the contract they sign, they could be stuck in the
military for decades. This is exactly what happened to
Sgt. Emiliano Santiago. A federal Circuit Court in
April upheld the government‚s right to hold him until
the year 2031, even though he had already finished his
eight-year commitment.

Stillwell claims the scholarships and grants called
for by the proposition are "redundant" because
scholarships and grants for students already exist.
But there should be more scholarships, more money for
college and better opportunities. No one should feel
like they have to join the military just to pay for
college or to get job training. Especially considering
that this is a false hope since two thirds of all
recruits never get any college funding. Put another
way, people shouldn‚t sacrifice their life or a
significant portion of their life in the hope that
they might get some help with a college education.

More fundamentally, we should be spending more on
education and less on unnecessary warfare. The
military spends $1.9 billion each year on recruiting.
The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have already cost
taxpayers $314 billion, and the Congressional Budget
Office projects additional expenses of perhaps $450
billion over the next 10 years. This is money that
could be used to decrease class sizes, increase
teacher pay, build better schools, and provide
scholarships for college to young people.

It is also central to the counter-recruitment movement
that the military discriminates against gays and
lesbians. It‚s true that if the military dropped its
"don‚t ask, don‚t tell" policy, some of the
organizations supporting the College Not Combat
campaign still wouldn‚t want gays and lesbians to join
the military, at least as long as U.S. foreign policy
remained as it is today. But opposing homophobia is
not an excuse for simply opposing the military, it is
one of many reasons why a coalition has come together
to oppose military recruiters. As traditionally the
most reactionary wing of the federal government,
military policies have an effect on the climate in
this country well beyond military bases. Why shouldn‚t
the boy scouts discriminate if the military does? Why
shouldn‚t private organizations discriminate if a
public entity can? Most significantly for San
Francisco, why should schools have non-discrimination
policies if they have to allow military recruiters on
campus anyway? It is no surprise that gay rights are
integral to the counter-recruitment movement.

The military is currently engaged in an illegal and
immoral war in the Middle East. Iraqis and Americans
are dying because of the lies of the Bush
administration. Many young people are taking part in
this war because they are being lied to by recruiters.
It would be bewildering if anti-war organizations did
not take on military recruiters under these
circumstances. College Not Combat is a united
coalition of organizations that recognize the negative
impact the U.S. military presently has on the lives of
young people. Voting Yes on Proposition I will be an
important statement and another step in the growing
chorus against the war in Iraq and the unscrupulous
conduct of our government at all levels.

Carlos Villarreal is executive director of the
National Lawyers Guild. He is writing on behalf of the
College Not Combat Steering Committee.

URL: http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/g/a/2005/08/29/response29.DTL

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

11) U.S. Studies Report Its Soldiers
Killed Journalist
By REUTERS
Published: August 29, 2005
BAGHDAD, Iraq , Aug. 28 (Reuters) - A soundman working
for Reuters Television was shot dead Sunday in Baghdad, and
a cameraman with him was wounded and then detained by
United States soldiers. An Iraqi police report, read to Reuters
by an Interior Ministry official, said the two had been shot by
American forces.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/29/international/middleeast/29journalists.html

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

12) Falluja 2004
Dahr Jamail's Iraq Dispatches
http://dahrjamailiraq.com

*Apparently there were some problems with the previous
links on these, so here it is again:

New on DVD: Falluja 2004

*A film by Japanese independent journalist Toshikuni Doi**

Falluja April 2004 A documentary
by Japanese independent journalist
Toshikuni Doi
http://www.progressiveportal.org/store/ Fallujah has
become a symbol of the resistance
movement against the U.S. occupation
of Iraq. In April 2004, the U.S.
forces invaded Fallujah with several
thousand soldiers. Why did Fallujah
become a base of the resistance
against the occupation? How did the
U.S. forces attack? Who fought
against them? And what damages and
injuries did people suffer? Ten days
after the siege of Falluja was lifted,
Toshikuni Doi, a Japanese
independent journalist, went into
Fallujah. His documentary investigates
the causes of, the conditions during,
and damages from the siege. The
documentary is primarily in Arabic,
with English subtitles. DVD, 55 minutes.

Toshikuni Doi is a Japanese journalist
who has been covering Iraq since
just after the U.S. invasion.

*ORDER ONLINE AT:*
http://www.progressiveportal.org/store/

"For a well documented, powerful
film of what really occurred in
Fallujah during the April, 2004
siege, this is a must see. The film
begins by investigating why the
resistance began in Fallujah shortly
after the Anglo-American invasion
of Iraq. The film then accurately
chronicles what occurred in
Fallujah during the failed April siege. I
couldn't recommend this more
highly. To get a more complete
understanding of the failed
occupation of Iraq, watch this film and
encourage others to do the same./" -Dahr Jamail

*In addition, here is a petitition
against a film being made about
Fallujah in Hollywood which
I encourage you to sign and distribute far
and wide:

To: Patricia McQueeney, Mr Ford's agent*

Harrison Ford has announced that
he wishes to play the role of the
general in charge of the assault
and seige of Fallujah, in an upcoming
movie to be entitled No True Glory.
This action resulted in the
destruction of a whole city and
the loss of many thousand innocent
lives, and caused over 300,000
people to become homeless, while the
insurgent Iraqis mostly slipped
away, to attack again from elsewhere. We
do not trust Hollywood to show the
abuses of the US forces, who broke
Geneva Conventions and denied
civilians hospitals, water, food, opening
fire on ambulances and denying
the press coverage. We do not believe the
military to have been innocent
pawns of flawed government, and do not
wish Mr Ford to play General Mattis,
and we vote against the making of
this film. We ask the studios to
examine history before they rewrite it.
We ask Mr Ford to read up on the
truth. "And the truth shall set us free."

_http://petitiononline.com/b7qrlb5/petition.html

More writing, photos and commentary at http://dahrjamailiraq.com
Iraq_Dispatches mailing list
http://lists.dahrjamailiraq.com/mailman/listinfo/iraq_dispatches

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

13) Tuesday, August 30, 12noon - 9pm
Mass Mailing Party, Potluck and ANSWER Activist Meeting
2489 Mission St. Room 30 at 21st St., San Francisco

Help out with a mass mailing for the Sept. 24 National
Anti-War March. Potluck and report back from the national
protests for the extradition of Posada Carriles will start
at 7pm. Plus an update on the Sept. 24 National Marches.
Help spread the word about the upcoming mass march and
socialize with other activists. Bring your favorite dish
to share. Get involved!

For more info call 415-821-6545.

Click here to make a tax-deductible donation to ANSWER
over a secure server, as well as learn how to donate by check.

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

14) Bring Them Home Now Tour
From Camp Casey, Crawford to Washington DC
From George Bush's door step to Communities along the way,
We Demand That:
Elected Representatives Decide Now to Bring the Troops Home
We Take Care of Them When They Get Here
We Never Again Send Our Loved Ones to War Based on Lies!
http://www.meetwithcindy.org
Photos:
http://www.indybay.org/news/2005/08/1763087.php
http://www.bringthemhomenowtour.org/article.php?list=type&type=3

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

15) Guard Units Shift From Combat
to Flood Duty
By JOHN M. BRODER
Published: August 30, 2005
State National Guard units, already strained by long
overseas deployments, joined federal, state and private
organizations yesterday in a broad effort to provide
relief in areas thrashed and flooded by Hurricane Katrina.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/30/national/
30rescue.html?hp&ex=1125460800&en=adc7393c7d4dc856&ei=5094&partner=ho
mepage

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

16) US says kills Iraq al Qaeda fighters; 47 said dead
Tue Aug 30, 2005 09:05 AM ET
By Sebastian Alison
BAGHDAD (Reuters) - U.S. warplanes launched strikes in
western Iraq on Tuesday which the U.S. military said killed an
al Qaeda militant named Abu Islam among other fighters, and
which a hospital source said killed at least 47 people
http://go.reuters.com/
newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=9509253&src=eDialog/GetContent

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

17) Is Bird Flu Pandemic Chicken Little Scenario?
Paul Joseph Watson & Alex Jones | August 29 2005
[Even if you don't go for the
thesis below, those choice quotes from
parasites Turner and Philip are
psychopathic. Prince Charles is an
'environ-mentalist' also...links
to these articles below]
http://prisonplanet.com/articles/august2005/290805chickenlittle.htm

In 2003 it was SARS, the deadly virus
that caused lethal pneumonia and lung
failure was sweeping the globe and it
was only a matter of time before the
west would succumb to its devastating wrath.

It never happened.

The number of SARS cases never topped 1000,
none of which were proven to be
anything more than traditional lung infections.

SARS has been replaced by a new enemy, an
enemy that may require martial
law, quarantines and forced vaccinations –
H5N1 - the dreaded bird flu.

Are we right to be concerned or is this
just another fearmongering campaign
to make millions for big pharma and keep
us under the suffocating
'protection' of Big Brother nanny state?

In October of last year, the head
of the Russian Virology Institute,
Academician Dmitry Lvov said at
a press conference, „Up to one billion
people could die around the whole
world in six months."

„We are half a step away from
a worldwide pandemic catastrophe."

A catastrophe didn't happen that
year and it didn't happen after six months,
or eight months.

Thank God it didn't happen, but
for people like Ted Turner, Jacques-Yves
Cousteau and Prince Philip, one
billion deaths isn't necessarily a bad thing
for humanity.

"The simplest answer is that the
world's population should be about two
billion, and we've got about six
billion now," Turner told E Magazine, an
environmentalist publication.

Turner (pictured) went even further
in an interview with Audubon magazine.

"A total world population of 250-300
million people, a 95% decline from
present levels, would be ideal."

In a 1991 interview with the UNESCO
Courier, Jacques-Yves Cousteau, the
famous Emmy award winning film producer
who went on to be a kingpin of the
environmental movement said,

"It's terrible to have to say this.
World population must be stabilized and
to do that we must eliminate 350,000
people per day."

That works out to 127,750,000 people
per year, and 1.27 billion people over
10 years.

in the foreword to his 1986 book
“If I Were an Animal”, Prince Philip wrote,

"In the event that I am reincarnated,
I would like to return as a deadly
virus, in order to contribute
something to solve overpopulation."

So the elite are very concerned
about their noble effort to cull the
population for the greater good.
Should we therefore be alarmed by a London
Times article which reports,

"Britain‚s elite have been selected
as priority cases to receive scarce
pills and vaccinations at the taxpayers‚
expense if the country is hit by a
deadly bird flu outbreak."

Is this a red flag or is it simply
a means of creating a false scarcity so
that everyone runs out and buys the
antidote fearing an imminent outbreak?

We should be wise to remember that
the revelation that the Bush cabinet was
on Cipro, the anthrax fighting antibiotic,
only emerged in the media after
the anthrax attack was in process, not before.

Therefore it seems more likely that
this is a ruse to line the pockets of
the government affiliated pharmaceutical companies.

One thing is clear, if this outbreak
did occur then the justification to
suspend Constitutional rights will
be flaunted to its maximum exposure. Back
in April President Bush added pandemic
influenza to the list of diseases for
which quarantine is authorized.

China's zealous martial law tactics
in dealing with SARS, home detention,
curfews, mandatory vaccinations,
restriction of travel, are the model for
what could unfold in the US.

The federal blueprint for the exact
same scenario was released and picked up
by the Associated Press a year ago.

This will make ID cards and airport
security checks look like a tea party.

This is a slow process of conditioning
the public to accept mandatory
vaccinations and restrictions on
mobility under a rule of martial law.

The ball started rolling back in
2001 when the Model States Emergency Health
Powers Act was passed, which allows
for total government takeover of every
industry, vehicle, building, location,
distribution process, you name it.

And when this flu pandemic happens
who will we blame? Surely not US
scientists playing around with the
deadly 1918 Spanish flu virus at "less
than the maximum level of containment"
according to the New Scientist
magazine.

At present, bird flu fearmongering
seems highly likely to be a chicken
little scenario. But if it does happen
just think for yourself about what
the elite have already said on the
record about depopulation and add to that
the fact that the elite were the first
to be protected against any possible
bird flu pandemic.
Marxism@lists.econ.utah.edu
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxism
Russian Expert Says Flu Epidemic May Kill
Over One Billion This Year
MosNews | October 29 2004
http://www.prisonplanet.com/articles/october2004/291004fluepidemic.htm
Prince Philip wrote:
http://www.prisonplanet.com/Pages/100604_prince_philip.html
Britain's elite get pills to survive bird flu
London Times | August 29 2005
MEMBERS of Britain's elite have been selected
as priority cases to receive scarce pills
and vaccinations at the taxpayers'
expense if the country is hit by
a deadly bird flu outbreak.
http://www.prisonplanet.com/articles/august2005/290805getpills.htm
Experts fear escape of 1918 flu from lab
New Scientist | October 21 2004
The 1918 flu virus spread across the world
in three months and killed at least
40 million people. If it escaped from
a lab today, the death toll could be
far higher. "The potential implications
of an infected lab worker - and spread
beyond the lab - are terrifying,"
says D. A. Henderson of the University
of Pittsburgh, a leading biosecurity
expert.
http://www.prisonplanet.com/articles/october2004/211004fearescape.htm

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

18) The U.S. in Iraq
Bringing Freedom and Democracy
or Occupation?Tuesday, August 30, 2005 at 7:00 p.m.
Mt. Diablo Unitarian Universalist Church, 55 Eckley Lane, Walnut Creek
Speakers:
STEPHEN ZUNES is a professor of politics and chair of the Peace and Justice Studies
program at the University of San Francisco, and the author of Tinderbox: U.S. Middle
East Policy and the Roots of Terrorism.
SEAN O'NEILL is a decorated Marine who served twice in Iraq and now speaks out
against the war.
Learn more about the historical and political context of the conflict and the reality of
current conditions in Iraq.
Suggested Donation: $5.00-$20.00
Mt. Diablo Peace and Justice Center,
55 Eckley Lane, Walnut Creek, CA
925-933-7850

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

19) Cubans are following events in Florida and Louisiana
closely with major coverage in the local media there.
Katrina's damage is a top story on Cuban TV news today.

In capitalist Louisiana, individuals are "free". They
are "free" to ignore weather warnings and "free" also
to stay behind when government orders them to leave
endangered areas. As Anatol France famously said, the
poor, like the rich, are equally free to sleep under
the bridge. Only the poor exercise this spurious type
of "freedom". In Cuba, when the government wants its
people to move out of danger, it takes responsibility
and it moves them. Here in the center of the free world,
the government does nothing, leaving the individuals in
its jurisdiction "free" to do what they want. Will they
now trumpet the damage to the poor as examples of what
capitalist freedom looks like?

When Cuba's government took responsibility to move its
people out of harm's way, the US media savaged Cuba for
its successful efforts to save lives. And then it also
continued attacking the right of people from the US
who wanted to help the Cuban people to do so on their
own. Here's an analysis of that from Nelson Valdes:
http://www.walterlippmann.com/npv-09-18-2004.html

Venezuela now offers low-cost oil to needy in the US:
http://tania.blythe-systems.com/pipermail/nytr/Week-of-Mon-20050829/022368.
Html

Walter Lippmann, CubaNews
http://www.walterlippmann.com

Photos forwarded by Ned Sublette:
http://makeashorterlink.com/?V23F353BB

The Wall Street Journal
August 30, 2005

HURRICANE KATRINA

Escape From the Big Easy
Evacuation of New Orleans
Was a Model of Efficiency --
For Those Who Had a Car

By VALERIE BAUERLEIN in Meridian, Miss.,
JEFF OPDYKE in New Orleans,
and AARON LUCCHETTI in Baton Rouge, La.
Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
August 30, 2005; Page B1

A little less than a year ago, state
and local officials in Louisiana
were taking heat for their poor
handling of the evacuation of New
Orleans as Hurricane Ivan stormed
across the Gulf of Mexico. Hundreds
of thousands of people were trapped
in massive traffic snarls. And
Mayor Ray Nagin was criticized for
being slow to open the Superdome
as an emergency shelter for the
poor and the homeless.

Mayor Nagin and other emergency
planners seem to have learned a
lesson -- and how they handled
the evacuation in the face of
Hurricane Katrina could be
a blueprint for authorities elsewhere who
face disasters.

State and local officials across
the 400-mile stretch of the Gulf
Coast in Katrina's expected
path swiftly ordered mandatory
evacuations this past weekend.
To speed the exit of cars from the
region, they sent outbound
traffic down both sides of Interstates 55
and 59, leading north from the
most at-risk areas. Officials
estimated that more than 80%
of the 1.4 million people in the New
Orleans metropolitan area left.
For those that didn't or couldn't
flee, the Superdome started taking
people in early Sunday -- well in
advance of Katrina's landfall.
And in Mississippi, the state issued
mandatory evacuation orders to
375,000 residents near Biloxi,
Gulfport, and other high-risk areas.

By the time Katrina made landfall
yesterday, motels, emergency
shelters and restaurants were
jammed with evacuees from Florida to
Houston. Thousands of others
were bunking with families, friends or
in their cars along the roadways.
It could be days or weeks before
the more than one million evacuees
who fled the storm are able to
return home.

One major area of concern was
poor residents who lacked their own
transportation. Mayor Nagin urged
churches Sunday morning to arrange
evacuations for those who might
not have access to a car. He
mentioned Amtrak and Greyhound
as possibilities, but as time got
scarce, such options grew more
difficult. The mayor encouraged people
leaving the city to pick up
anyone they knew who didn't have means to
evacuate, but acknowledged that
many poor New Orleans residents
lacked a clear way to get out.

New Orleans used city buses to
help transport some people, according
to Michael Brown, director of
the Federal Emergency Management
Agency. "I think enough was done"
to get the roughly 100,000 New
Orleans residents without access
to a car out of the city in time, he
said, adding that the only question
he raised about the handling of
the evacuation is whether the
mandatory evacuation should have been
called earlier.

Emergency-management officials
in Louisiana said their various
agencies cooperated better in the
leadup to Katrina, partly because
of strong pressure from Gov.
Kathleen Blanco to avoid a repeat of
Ivan. But the images coming out
of New Orleans late yesterday of
residents in poorer neighborhoods
trapped on their rooftops and in
attics will doubtless prompt
further scrutiny of whether enough was
done to evacuate the least mobile.

At the House of Pancakes in
Meridian, Miss., on Interstate 20, owner
Sam Abdel stayed open until
a few minutes after a noon curfew
yesterday to serve a steady
stream of police officers, emergency
workers and bayou refugees
camped in nearby hotels. Bobby Caillouet,
34, eating with his wife and
three children, had heard from friends
on cellphones back home in
Slidell, La., that neighbors were stranded
on their roofs. Guests at
a nearby Hampton Inn filled the lobby as
the storm approached through
the afternoon, drinking old coffee and
cold beer, playing cards and dominos.

School buses with flashing lights
rolled slowly through rural
Mississippi yesterday morning,
calling out to people stranded with no
power or radios. Buses took
stragglers to shelters before the storm
hit. The Mississippi Emergency
Management Agency in Jackson estimated
that more than 575,000 evacuees
had come through the state, including
those from its own southern
counties and about 200,000 from
Louisiana.

"Most people did adhere to the
warnings," said Mick Bullock, public
information officer for the agency.
Only about 13,000 people ended up
in shelters in Mississippi, but
Mr. Bullock said that's because most
who left their homes went farther
north to Arkansas, northern
Alabama, and northern Louisiana.
"Most people went other places; they
saw the hurricane was coming
through here," he said.

The relatively smooth evacuation
was little solace, though, to
thousands of displaced residents
who began immediately trying to
return home after the storm passed,
or to thousands of others left
behind in New Orleans because they
were unable to leave their homes
and lacked transportation to depart
the city.

About 9,000 New Orleans residents
unable or unwilling to evacuate the
city took cover from the storm at
the Superdome.

Martha Crumes, 53 years old, worried
yesterday afternoon about the
fate of two of her children, her
sister and her husband, who she
believes stayed behind in New
Orleans. Before the hurricane, Ms.
Crumes was bused to a special
evacuation center in Baton Rouge, La.,
for people with medical problems.
She suffered a stroke in 1999 and
gets around with the help of
a wheelchair. When she left New Orleans
on Sunday, she was told she could
bring just one of her three
children, so 17-year-old daughter
Valencia Dunn accompanied her. Ms.
Crumes said her son didn't evacuate
because he and his father didn't
have enough money to leave.

Two of the four she feared for
were in the lower Ninth Ward, which
sustained heavy flooding yesterday.
"I got very worried today," she
said. "I don't think they made it,
if they didn't move" from the
house.

Some residents began trying to
return to their homes as soon as the
storm passed yesterday -- defying
instructions from state and local
officials. Karen Medina,
a 33-year-old Metairie, La., resident, was
stuck on the highway since the
roads were impassable. She and 10
other family members had slept in
their cars Sunday night. Her
husband, Sergio, began wading through
the floodwaters toward their
home. "It's terrible," Ms. Medina said.
"We don't have water. We
don't have food. Everything is closed."

But few made it far, with many
people stranded on area roads.
Interstate 610 looked like a boat
ramp as it neared downtown New
Orleans, with the roadway
disappearing into neighborhoods of the city
that had become a huge lake.

Back at the Hampton Inn in
Meridian, Miss., the hotel lost power
around noon, the same time a
curfew was imposed. Katrina began to
arrive in full force around 5 p.m.
Hotel manager Rita Harbour called
out through the lobby, "Is anyone
parked on the backside of the
building? The roof is coming off,
and you're going to want to move
your cars."

Soon, the roofs of two cars were
crushed by roof debris, and Ms.
Harbour's office was flooded.
But the 150 evacuees at the hotel were
still secure. The staff of seven
took turns handling the front desk,
issuing emergency keys because the
electronic locks no longer worked,
and passing out sandwiches.
"We'll make it," said Ms. Harbour. I
don't know how, but we'll make it."

--Chad Terhune and Ann Carrns in
Atlanta and Evan Perez in
Apalachicola, Fla., contributed
to this article.
Marxism@lists.econ.utah.edu

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

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

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

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

Sunday, August 28, 2005

BAUAW NEWSLETTER-SUNDAY, AUGUST 28, 2005

***************************************************************
STOP THE WAR AND OCCUPATION!
IRAQ, PALESTINE, HAITI....
MARCH AND RALLY SEPTEMBER 24
11:00 A.M. DOLORES PARK, S.F.
COLLEGE NOT COMBAT CONTINGENT
10:00 A.M. 16TH AND MISSION BART PLAZA, S.F.

ANSWER Organizing Meetings:
Tuesdays, 7:00 p.m.
2489 Mission St., suite 24 (at 21st St., S.F.)
415-821-6545
www.internationalanswer.org/SFcampaigns

COLLEGE NOT COMBAT Planning Meeting:
Saturday,
September 17th,
2:00 P.M.
110 Capp Street (Buzz #202)
San Francisco
For more information:
college_not_combat@yahoo.com
(415) 248-1701
http://www.collegenotcombat.org/

NEXT BAUAW MEETING:
TUESDAY EVENING,
SEPTEMBER 20, 7:00 P.M.
474 VALENCIA STREET, S.F.
NEAR 16TH STREET
www.bauaw.org
415-824-8730

KEEP UP WITH CINDY SHEEHAN!
Photos from Camp Casey; Anti-War
Texas Hoe Down, and Crawford Pro-War Rally

Sun, 28 Aug 2005 14:23:34 -0500

Photos from Camp Casey yesterday:
http://www.indybay.org/news/2005/08/1762910.php

Photos from Crawford pro-war rally yesterday:
http://www.indybay.org/news/2005/08/1762933.php

Jeff Paterson
jeff@paterson.net
Crawford, Texas (August 28, 2005)

***************************************************************

1) GET THE MILITARY OUR OF OUR SCHOOLS!
VOTE YES ON I!
COLLEGE NOT COMBAT HIGH SCHOOL
LEAFLETING FOR PROP. I
TOMORROW MORNING,
MONDAY, AUGUST 29TH, 7:30 A.M.-9:00 A.M.
Mission High School
3750 18th Street
(Entrance on 18th Street between Dolores and Church)
Washington High School
600 32nd Ave.
(Entrance on 32nd avenue in the middle
of the block between Geary and Balboa)

2) Book Review
It Will Be a Great Day When the Navy
Has to Hold a Bake Sale to Buy a Ship
By Tom Crumpacker
Fightback
A collection of Socialist Essays
By Sylvia Weinstein

3) Radioactive Wounds of War
Tests on returning troops suggest serious health
consequences of depleted uranium use in Iraq
News > August 25, 2005
By Dave Lindorff
http://www.inthesetimes.com/site/main/article/2298/

4) NWA Flight Attendant
Refuses To Cross Picket Line
(WCCO) A flight attendant for
Northwest Airlines said she will not be
going back to her job because of
her support for the striking mechanics.
Aug 26, 2005 8:47 am US/Central
http://wcco.com/topstories/local_story_238094822.html

5) Even in Summer, Americans
Dread Winter Heating Bills
By JAD MOUAWAD
Published: August 26, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/26/business/
26energy.html?ei=5094&en=485351b950f3b6f8&hp=&ex=1125115200&adxnnl=1&
partner=homepage&adxnnlx=1125068504-IhjZctK6XHgv7IsS5xHHXA

6) Op-Ed Columnist
Summer of Our Discontent
By PAUL KRUGMAN
Published: August 26, 2005
Employers certainly aren't having trouble finding workers. When
Wal-Mart announced that it was hiring at a new store in Northern
California, where the unemployment rate is close to the national
average, about 11,000 people showed up to apply for 400 jobs.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/26/opinion/26krugman.html

7) Economic Imbalances in U.S.
Worry Greenspan
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: August 26, 2005
Filed at 10:08 a.m. ET
JACKSON, Wyo. (AP) -- Creeping trade protectionism and bloated
budget deficits pose a risk to the United States' long-term economic
vitality, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan warned Friday.
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/business/AP-
Greenspan.html?hp&ex=1125115200&en=178883bf73661ef7&ei=5094&partner=ho
mepage

8) As School-Building Plan Fails,
New Jersey Is Left With Slums
By JEFFREY GETTLEMAN
Published: August 26, 2005
Across New Jersey, hundreds of people have been pushed out of
their homes for school projects that, it turns out, were only dreams.
They were displaced as part of a once-celebrated $8.6 billion
program that, instead of creating new schools, has in several
instances created new slums.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/26/nyregion/26newark.html

9) '63 Tapes Reveal Kennedy and
Aides Discussed Using Nuclear
Arms in a China-India Clash
By ANAND GIRIDHARADAS
Published: August 26, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/26/international/asia/26india.html

10) F.B.I., Using Patriot Act,
Demands Library's Records
By ERIC LICHTBLAU
Published: August 26, 2005
WASHINGTON, Aug. 25 - Using its expanded power under the
antiterrorism law known as the USA Patriot Act, the F.B.I.
is demanding library records from a Connecticut institution
as part of an intelligence investigation, the American Civil
Liberties Union said Thursday.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/26/politics/26patriot.html

11) Ground zero in pot club fight
S.F. DEBATES REGULATIONS FOR SCORES OF OPERATORS
By Mary Anne Ostrom
Mercury News
http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/local/12482081.htm

12) News Feature
8/25/2005
Arresting Resistance
Police turned blocked sidewalks into violent confrontation,
protesters charge
Writer: MARTY LEVINE
Photographer: MARTY LEVINE
Chanting "Shut it down, no recruiters in our town,"
100 protesters marched down Forbes Avenue at 11 a.m.
on Aug. 20 to Oakland's military recruitment center
with help from two Pittsburgh Police cars blocking traffic.
Twenty minutes and a handful of arrests later, protest
organizer Alex Bradley was left shouting at officers
from a dozen police cars and three local law enforcement
agencies: "You want to taser some more of us?"
A taser, an electrical device intended to shock someone
into immobility, was used several times on at least one
protester while the cough-inducing tang of pepper spray
still hung in the air.
http://www.pittsburghcitypaper.ws/news/story.cfm?type=News%20Feature

13) Initiative would force governor to seek
recall of Guard units in Iraq
By Chase J. Davis, Globe Correspondent | August 26, 2005
Under the initiative, governors of Massachusetts would be
required to ''take all necessary steps" under the law to
bring home state Guard units deployed in Iraq. While only
the US president can order such a recall, the initiative
would compel the governor to argue against deployments to
Iraq or risk being sued by a state resident, its supporters said.
http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2005/08/26/
initiative_would_force_governor_to_seek_recall_of_guard_units_in_iraq/

14) Yesterday's from Camp Casey, Crawford, Texas photos
Jeff Paterson Crawford, Texas
(August 27, 2005)
http://www.indybay.org/news/2005/08/1762704.php

15) State Narcotics Agent to Go on Trial for Murder
in Cardenas Case September 26
by Peter Maiden Thursday, Aug. 25, 2005 at 7:58 PM
pmaiden@pacbell.net
http://www.indybay.org/news/2005/08/1762398.php

16) Op-Ed Columnist
The Vietnamization of Bush's Vacation
By FRANK RICH
Published: August 28, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/28/opinion/28rich.html?pagewanted=1

17)In War Debate, Parents
of Fallen Are United Only in Grief
By ABBY GOODNOUGH
Published: August 28, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/28/national/
28parents.html?pagewanted=1&ei=5094&en=c253b1ffc277e7c1&hp&ex=11252880
00&partner=homepage

18) LOCAL NEWS | washingtonblade.com
Farrakhan invites black
gay group to rally
NBJC accepts request to be 'co-convener' of Millions More event
By LOU CHIBBARO JR.
Aug. 26, 2005
Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan has invited the nation's
largest African-American gay civil rights organization to become one
of about 100 co-conveners of the Millions More Movement rally, which
is expected draw thousands of blacks to Washington, D.C. on Oct. 15.
http://www.washblade.com/print.cfm?content_id=6366

19) Bush Thinks Just Like Pat Robertson, Says Fidel Castro
Havana, Aug 27 (Prensa Latina) Fidel Castro said that US
President George W. Bush has the same line of thought of
ultra-conservative Reverend Pat Robertson, who recently
incited to assassinate Venezuela´s statesman Hugo Chavez
http://www.plenglish.com/article.asp?ID=%7B1E7BFBCF-477C-4F7D-91BB-
414E803DC7E9%7D)&language=EN

20) A Long March Towards Justice
The Cuban Five in Atlanta
By RICARDO ALARCÓN de QUESADA
"The sun of justice shall rise,
bearing salvation on its wings"
(Malaquías, 4, 2)
http://www.counterpunch.org/alarcon08272005.html

21) Two "Green Zones"
Dahr Jamail's Iraq Dispatches
http://dahrjamailiraq.com
August 27, 2005

22) Strike shows Northwest's true colors
By Michael Kuchta, St. Paul Union Advocate editor
- August 24, 2005
BLOOMINGTON - The strike by mechanics at Northwest
Airlines demonstrates how far airline executives are
willing to go to cut costs, destroy jobs, and break
promises to workers and Minnesota taxpayers, the state
AFL-CIO says.
"Northwest is just a bad employer," said Minnesota
AFL-CIO President Ray Waldron. "All you have to do
is look at the record. When times were tough and they
came to Minnesota to ask for money to keep them in
business, everybody came to their aid.
http://www.workdayminnesota.org/
view_article.php?print=y&id=713a34031fadcdcffde4bec2f0cedc51

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

1) ***********************************
GET THE MILITARY OUR OF OUR SCHOOLS!
VOTE YES ON I!
***********************************
COLLEGE NOT COMBAT HIGH SCHOOL
LEAFLETING FOR PROP. I
MONDAY, AUGUST 29TH, 7:30 A.M.-9:00 A.M.

College Not Combat is organizing leafleting for
Proposition I at Mission and George Washington
High Schools on the first day of school in San Francisco,
Tomorrow morning,
Monday, August 29 from 7:30 a.m. to 9:00 a.m.

We need volunteers who can show up at 7:30 a.m. at either
school on that day for no more than an hour.

If you can help with either school contact:
Jeremy, 609-610-2332, jtully@riseup.net
Bonnie, 415-824-8730, giobon@sbcglobal.net

Mission High School
3750 18th Street
(Entrance on 18th Street between Dolores and Church)

Washington High School
600 32nd Ave.
(Entrance on 32nd avenue in the middle
of the block between Geary and Balboa)

A press release has been sent out and
we want to make a good showing.

Next CNC meeting:
Saturday, 17, 2PM
110 Capp Street (Buzz #202)
San Francisco

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

2) Book Review
It Will Be a Great Day When the Navy
Has to Hold a Bake Sale to Buy a Ship
By Tom Crumpacker
Fightback
A collection of Socialist Essays
By Sylvia Weinstein

Remember the old saying "It will be a great day when our
schools get all the money they need and the Navy has to hold
a bake sale to buy a ship?" This was one of Sylvia Weinstein's
gems and there are hundreds of others equally perceptive
in this collection of her political essays named after the
title of her monthly columns which appeared in Socialist
Action newspaper from 1984 until the end of 2000. From then
on, her columns appeared in Socialist Viewpoint magazine
until the very month of her death in August 2001.
Fortunately for us, her voice carries on in this book.

Sylvia was a natural essay writer. Like Babe Ruth she hit
lots of home runs. Each of her missiles is brief, usually
just two or three pages. In the Jonathan Swift tradition,
she picks a relevant event of the day (often from media
reports), gets right to the essence of the matter, and
then by exposing and juxtaposing our ruling class propaganda
(as mouthed in the mainstream media) with a dose or two
of common sense, she shows how utterly absurd, irrational
and damaging to ordinary people this society has become.

Reading Sylvia forces one to comprehend if not agree
with Scottish psychiatrist Ronnie D. Laing's observation
back in the sixties: that sane people in this type
of society may need to find their respite in the
mental hospitals.

It's disheartening to think about how little progress
and much regress our society has made since Sylvia wrote
these columns. There are about 190 of them on 350 pages,
interspersed with photos of her with her kids and at work
in the struggle. These essays are sharp, to the point,
often humorous, always provocative, always well researched
and documented. They cover the things which bother us the
most, the crucial battles of our time, topics like the
corruption of our political system, worker exploitation,
privacy in reproduction, welfare, poverty, homelessness,
social security, peace, civil rights, gender and racial
discrimination, children's needs, public education,
health, drugs, ecological crises, imperialism and
many, many others.

Each starts with a specific topic in the news, for example,
an editorial on Social Security, a court decision on abortion,
a TV report on Russian mothers pulling their soldier sons
out of Chechnya, a politician's assertion of the necessity
of a "war" against some small Third World country. Then
follows some logical analysis of the real problem and
its solution.

What is Sylvia's solution? Change has to come from
outside the oligarchic political system we're now
saddled with, which always served only the capitalists
and is way too far gone now to be a vehicle for change.
It has to be based on people power rather than money
power. Most of us are working people, and it's through
grouping together, acting collectively, that we not
only protect ourselves from the ravages of capital,
but also take control of our own destiny to create
a better world.

Instead of voting for the lesser evil of two capitalist
candidates, we need to enter the struggle by activism:
writing, speaking, demonstrating, striking, sitting in,
civil disobedience, direct action, and above all, unity
and organization. Whether called a labor or women's party,
the new movement to be capable of real change must be
based in the class struggle, made up of workers, and it
must include women, people of color, and all others who
seek change. When it becomes a mass social movement it
will necessarily wield power, and we can argue then
about the best ways to use our power, whether within
or without our present political system.

Sylvia's politics are working class politics, the only
reality based politics independent of the capitalist
parliamentary system, which Marx and Engels called "the
executive committee of the bourgeoisie." She was a true
revolutionary, obviously well versed in the Marxist
tradition. But you won't find any of the old 19th Century
language and theoretical niceties in these essays, nor
any dogmatism, reformism, abstraction or ideological
posturing. She chose to think and do as Marx thought
and did, without speaking in an abstract or academic way.

This in my opinion is just the kind of writing we
desperately need these days, practical discussion of
the real problems now facing us, and the institutions
now oppressing us and holding us back. We first have
to deconstruct the ridiculous myths of our rulers,
which is what Sylvia does best.

After all, class struggle is our key analytical tool
not because of its ideological purity, but rather
because it explains what is really happening in our
society today and points us in the direction of real
transformation. In Sylvia's analytical framework, we
see not just some seemingly isolated or unexplainable
social injustices, but we also learn how it fits into
the larger picture of class struggle and people power.
It's exciting and eye-opening to see seemingly
mysterious events and attitudes explained in this way.
Not only worker exploitation, but patriarchy, racial
discrimination, war, fascism, environmental degradation,
almost any serious injustice one can think of.

Sylvia was an active participant in the key struggles
of our time, and it's this experience above all which
informs and blesses her writing. As wife, mother then
grandmother she was also deeply involved in the labor,
women's liberation, antiwar and civil rights movements.
Besides publishing and writing for Socialist Action and
Socialist Viewpoint with her husband, she was an effective
speaker who talked at meetings, demonstrations, strikes,
pickets and other public venues.

She worked in the civil rights movement in Brooklyn and
in the Brooklyn branch of the NAACP. She helped organize
Fidel Castro's initial appearances at United Nations and
in Harlem and was always a strong supporter of the Cuban
revolution. She was one of the more militant voices in
the feminist movement, organizing for Planned Parenthood,
abortion rights, childcare and the defense of clinics
under physical assault by right to lifers. In San Francisco
she was a leader in the progressive wing of NOW and she
once ran for Board of Education featuring an ongoing
campaign for childcare for working mothers. For the
first 38 years of her political life she was a member
of the Socialist Workers Party and worked full time
for 35 of those years as a fulltimer in the business
office of its newspaper The Militant.

The first essay is a biographical speech Sylvia gave
at the University of Maryland in 1993. She grew up in
a working class family in Kentucky during the depression.
Unemployment caused her parents to split and was sent
to Kentucky where she was born to be raised primarily
by her maternal grandmother.

Workers were organizing in CIO industrial unions and by
age ten she and her grandmother were standing in the
picket lines of a major strike. She married in 1944
and had two children. Her husband, a merchant seaman
during the war, had learned about socialism from
a shipmate, and she immediately saw how it "explained
everything." She says that when in his first letter
her husband started with "At last I have found the
truth" she initially feared he had become
a Jehovah's Witness.

She became involved in women's liberation when
in 1959 the Boston police were angered at women
violating Massachusetts law by buying diaphragms
in Connecticut. They threatened to confiscate them
on return-but gave up the confiscation idea when
the women countered by saying they were wearing them.

It was during the civil rights and anti-Vietnam war
struggles that women became more assertive concerning
their rights, not just concerning reproduction but
in many important ways. I suspect Sylvia contributed
significantly to the new boldness.

Living in San Francisco she worked on a major class
action abortion case before Roe v. Wade, organized
women's unions, and was a leader in the local and
national ERA campaign which eventually failed,
she thought, because of too much trust in the
corrupt political system.

Because many of these columns use personal history
and stories to make their points, another reason
to read the book is to get a genuine activist's
perspective of life in the late 20th Century in
this absurd and tragic empire we call the USA.
In this respect, it's a memoir of a life well lived.

Order book from:

Socialist Viewpoint
1380 Valencia Street
San Francisco, CA 94110
Send check for $25.00 + 5.95, shipping and handling
Please include your name, address, city and zip code

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

3) Radioactive Wounds of War
Tests on returning troops suggest serious health
consequences of depleted uranium use in Iraq
News > August 25, 2005
By Dave Lindorff
http://www.inthesetimes.com/site/main/article/2298/

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

4) NWA Flight Attendant
Refuses To Cross Picket Line
(WCCO) A flight attendant for
Northwest Airlines said she will not be
going back to her job because of
her support for the striking mechanics.
Aug 26, 2005 8:47 am US/Central
http://wcco.com/topstories/local_story_238094822.html

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

5) Even in Summer, Americans
Dread Winter Heating Bills
By JAD MOUAWAD
Published: August 26, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/26/business/
26energy.html?ei=5094&en=485351b950f3b6f8&hp=&ex=1125115200&adxnnl=1&
partner=homepage&adxnnlx=1125068504-IhjZctK6XHgv7IsS5xHHXA

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

6) Op-Ed Columnist
Summer of Our Discontent
By PAUL KRUGMAN
Published: August 26, 2005
Employers certainly aren't having trouble finding workers. When
Wal-Mart announced that it was hiring at a new store in Northern
California, where the unemployment rate is close to the national
average, about 11,000 people showed up to apply for 400 jobs.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/26/opinion/26krugman.html

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

7) Economic Imbalances in U.S.
Worry Greenspan
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: August 26, 2005
Filed at 10:08 a.m. ET
JACKSON, Wyo. (AP) -- Creeping trade protectionism and bloated
budget deficits pose a risk to the United States' long-term economic
vitality, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan warned Friday.
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/business/AP-
Greenspan.html?hp&ex=1125115200&en=178883bf73661ef7&ei=5094&partner=ho
mepage

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

8) As School-Building Plan Fails,
New Jersey Is Left With Slums
By JEFFREY GETTLEMAN
Published: August 26, 2005
Across New Jersey, hundreds of people have been pushed out of
their homes for school projects that, it turns out, were only dreams.
They were displaced as part of a once-celebrated $8.6 billion
program that, instead of creating new schools, has in several
instances created new slums.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/26/nyregion/26newark.html

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

9) '63 Tapes Reveal Kennedy and
Aides Discussed Using Nuclear
Arms in a China-India Clash
By ANAND GIRIDHARADAS
Published: August 26, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/26/international/asia/26india.html

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

10) F.B.I., Using Patriot Act,
Demands Library's Records
By ERIC LICHTBLAU
Published: August 26, 2005
WASHINGTON, Aug. 25 - Using its expanded power under the
antiterrorism law known as the USA Patriot Act, the F.B.I.
is demanding library records from a Connecticut institution
as part of an intelligence investigation, the American Civil
Liberties Union said Thursday.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/26/politics/26patriot.html

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

11) Ground zero in pot club fight
S.F. DEBATES REGULATIONS FOR SCORES OF OPERATORS
By Mary Anne Ostrom
Mercury News
http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/local/12482081.htm

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

12) News Feature
8/25/2005
Arresting Resistance
Police turned blocked sidewalks into violent confrontation,
protesters charge
Writer: MARTY LEVINE
Photographer: MARTY LEVINE
Chanting "Shut it down, no recruiters in our town,"
100 protesters marched down Forbes Avenue at 11 a.m.
on Aug. 20 to Oakland's military recruitment center
with help from two Pittsburgh Police cars blocking traffic.
Twenty minutes and a handful of arrests later, protest
organizer Alex Bradley was left shouting at officers
from a dozen police cars and three local law enforcement
agencies: "You want to taser some more of us?"
A taser, an electrical device intended to shock someone
into immobility, was used several times on at least one
protester while the cough-inducing tang of pepper spray
still hung in the air.
http://www.pittsburghcitypaper.ws/news/story.cfm?type=News%20Feature

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

13) Initiative would force governor to seek
recall of Guard units in Iraq
By Chase J. Davis, Globe Correspondent | August 26, 2005
Under the initiative, governors of Massachusetts would be
required to ''take all necessary steps" under the law to
bring home state Guard units deployed in Iraq. While only
the US president can order such a recall, the initiative
would compel the governor to argue against deployments to
Iraq or risk being sued by a state resident, its supporters said.
http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2005/08/26/
initiative_would_force_governor_to_seek_recall_of_guard_units_in_iraq/

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

14) Yesterday's from Camp Casey, Crawford, Texas photos
Jeff Paterson Crawford, Texas
(August 27, 2005)
http://www.indybay.org/news/2005/08/1762704.php

The population of Camp Casey has doubled in the last 24 hours.
From a midweek lull of approx. 150 supporters, folks are now
streaming in for the final weekend of activities. In preparation
for an expected 1,000+ camp visitors, a great wall of bottled
water has been erected under the big tent.

Meanwhile, the "Cindy Doesn't Speak for Me" tour will be
holding a rally in Crawford at the high school football field
- home of the Crawford Pirates. Cindy has repeatedly noted
that she has never claimed to speak for anyone but herself.
However, through Cindy's determined action, thousands have
come to Crawford to be a part of this classic David and
Goliath struggle.

Next Wednesday, August 31st -- the last day of the encampment
-- the Bring Them Home Now Tour will launch three buses from
Crawford, Texas. Each bus will carry military and Gold Star
families, veterans of the Iraq War and veterans of previous
wars. These buses will travel different routes across the
country, converging in Washington, D.C. on September 21st,
for the September 24th-26th anti-war mobilizations.

Folks are working a campaign to encourage churches across
the country to ring their bells for peace once a day
until the war in over.

One example of the outpouring of support, the new Not
in Our Name Statement of Conscience was published in
the Waco Tribune - the paper most read in the Crawford area.

"As George W. Bush bullies his way through his second
term, let it not be said that people in the United
States silently acquiesced in the face of this shameful
coronation of war, greed, and intolerance. He does not
speak for us. He does not represent us. He does not
act in our name."

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

15) State Narcotics Agent to Go on Trial for Murder
in Cardenas Case September 26
by Peter Maiden Thursday, Aug. 25, 2005 at 7:58 PM
pmaiden@pacbell.net
http://www.indybay.org/news/2005/08/1762398.php

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

16) Op-Ed Columnist
The Vietnamization of Bush's Vacation
By FRANK RICH
Published: August 28, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/28/opinion/28rich.html?pagewanted=1

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

17)In War Debate, Parents
of Fallen Are United Only in Grief
By ABBY GOODNOUGH
Published: August 28, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/28/national/
28parents.html?pagewanted=1&ei=5094&en=c253b1ffc277e7c1&hp&ex=11252880
00&partner=homepage

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

18) LOCAL NEWS | washingtonblade.com
Farrakhan invites black
gay group to rally
NBJC accepts request to be 'co-convener' of Millions More event
By LOU CHIBBARO JR.
Aug. 26, 2005
Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan has invited the nation's
largest African-American gay civil rights organization to become one
of about 100 co-conveners of the Millions More Movement rally, which
is expected draw thousands of blacks to Washington, D.C. on Oct. 15.
http://www.washblade.com/print.cfm?content_id=6366

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

19) Bush Thinks Just Like Pat Robertson, Says Fidel Castro
Havana, Aug 27 (Prensa Latina) Fidel Castro said that US
President George W. Bush has the same line of thought of
ultra-conservative Reverend Pat Robertson, who recently
incited to assassinate Venezuela´s statesman Hugo Chavez
http://www.plenglish.com/article.asp?ID=%7B1E7BFBCF-477C-4F7D-91BB-
414E803DC7E9%7D)&language=EN

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

20) A Long March Towards Justice
The Cuban Five in Atlanta
By RICARDO ALARCÓN de QUESADA
"The sun of justice shall rise,
bearing salvation on its wings"
(Malaquías, 4, 2)
http://www.counterpunch.org/alarcon08272005.html

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

21) Two "Green Zones"
Dahr Jamail's Iraq Dispatches
http://dahrjamailiraq.com
August 27, 2005

As the US-backed Iraqi puppet government flails about arguing over the
so-called constitution, Iraq remains in a state of complete anarchy.
There is no government control whatsoever, even inside the infamous
"Green Zone" where the puppets seem to have tangled their strings.

Why the harsh tone for the conflagrations of the so-called Iraqi government?

Because the price paid for this unimaginably huge misadventure of the
neo-conservative driven Bush junta is being paid by real human beings
who shed real blood and cry real tears. Because well over 100,000 Iraqis
and over 1,800 US soldiers would be alive today if it wasn't for the
puppeteers of Mr. Bush.

The coward sits behind his guards in Crawford, Texas, too afraid to deal
with the reality of the grief he and his masters have caused to
thousands of military families who have lost loved ones in Iraq.
Meanwhile, fires are raging out of control not only in Iraq, but right
here in the US.

"I ask you, Mr Bush, if you believe that this war is for "Our Freedom"
and "Our Values" why don't you send your daughters to fight for
freedom," wrote Fernando Suarez del Solar recently, who lost his son in
Iraq due to the lies of Mr. Bush.

He continued, "Why don't your closest associates send their children to
defend these values? Why are the children of immigrant families dying?
Why are children from working families who are the least privileged
dying? Why Mr. Bush? Why?"

Of course Suarez del Solar knows the answer. It's a rhetorical question
asked of a prep school punk who has never earned nor risked anything. A
smirking dimwit, who has never truly served his country, let alone
fellow human beings outside of his gangster corporate crony pals who
inserted him into the highest office...twice.

Today he chooses to ignore the fire which is spreading across the US as
he ignores the debacle in Iraq, where the US military must leave, will
leave, but are unable to leave for fear of tarnishing what is left of
the now sordid reputation of the US.

I get emails daily from sources throughout Iraq...both Iraqi and American.
Even inside US bases in the newest colony things don't seem to be going
so well, according to an American man who is working there as support.

"I don't know how much longer I can stand working for these idiots and
their brothers' mothers' sisters' cousin," he wrote me recently, "They
have acres of armored air conditioned trucks but won't pay to fix the
alternators, so the drivers must use the worst of the equipment...no
armor, no air conditioning...You know the heat here, now add the heat of
an engine to that cab and throw in a few rockets, mortars, and IED's
[roadside bombs] and it makes for a very bad day. I'm trying to expose
the corruption of the Third Country National contractors by finding them
a forum to send the truth. Prisoners, slaves, concubines. My life may be
a contradiction, but I will not compromise with evil. The enemy is
inside the wire."

Wars for empire don't change...and Iraq is the perfect example. Invading
armies using slave labor (foreign in this case due to their deep
distrust of Iraqis), taking advantage of those who lack privilege, the
poor, minorities, to do the dirty work while the top 1% make more money
than ever before.

And the pirates behind the US policy-making in Iraq have chosen, perhaps
to their chagrin at this point, to disregard some of the latest history
from a past occupation of Iraq.

During the previous British occupation of Iraq, the resistance began in
Fallujah. As a response the British shelled half of that city to the
ground, much like the US military did recently as part of their failed
policy. (US soldiers are now dying in and near Fallujah again.)

It was said that if the British left Iraq civil war would ignite. Just
as we are hearing today, even though state-sponsored civil war is in
full swing, thanks to the occupiers.

The rule of the British Empire over Iraq went on for three decades
before the Brits withdrew. Every year of that time found an uprising
against the occupiers...and now less than three years into the failed US
occupation, lesser uprisings occur daily.

Attacks on US forces in Iraq are now back up over 70 per day...we'll cross
the 2,000 dead mark before too much longer, and things are about to get
much, much worse. As Iraqis continue to say, "Today is better than
tomorrow." The same goes for US troops there.

There is a reason why a relatively recent Army survey found that 54% of
all soldiers in Iraq reported either "low" or "very low" morale.

There is also a reason why, again according to the Army, that 30% of all
soldiers returning from Iraq develop mental health problems 3-4 months
after their return.

And there is a reason why soldiers like Nicolas Prubyla come home and
join organizations like Iraq Veterans Against the War.

"Up until five days ago, I had large amounts of blood in my stool," he
told me recently, "I've felt tired all the time, I have had loss of
hair...loss of the feeling in my right arm...I'm battling this stuff."

What he is battling is exposure to uranium munitions in Iraq. He is
battling radiation sickness as the result of the most recent nuclear war
waged by the United States of America. There is a reason why over 11,000
veterans from the '91 Gulf War are dead today, and over 250,000 others
are on medical disability. That reason (hundreds and hundreds of tons of
uranium munitions dropped on Iraq) is the same thing Prubyla is battling
today.

"As the years go on this is going to effect a hell of a lot more people
than we think...radioactive dust and the clouds of smoke and dust from
firing the DU [depleted uranium] is getting to us now," he said, "And I
know I'm not the only person in my unit-my boss got diagnosed with
cancer, one of my other buddies who is 23 years-old is getting
rashes....every time I do more research on DU-I'm seeing that I have all
the side effects."

Prubyla has realized what more and more veterans understand...that the
powers that be in our military plutocracy (also known as the US
government) could care less for their well being. One of the shadow
members of the current plutocracy who is also an exalted
neo-conservative, Henry Kissinger, has referred to military men as
"dumb, stupid animals to be used" as pawns for foreign policy.

People like Prubyla get this; they have had enough, and are now doing
something about it.

Meanwhile in the Crawford "Green Zone," Mr. Bush chooses to ignore the
resistance movement that is standing outside his fence. But that is
alright, because the hundreds of people there now protesting represent
tens (if not hundreds) of millions across the country who, like the
Iraqi resistance, are not going to go away.

More writing, photos and commentary at http://dahrjamailiraq.com
Iraq_Dispatches mailing list
http://lists.dahrjamailiraq.com/mailman/listinfo/iraq_dispatches

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

22) Strike shows Northwest's true colors
By Michael Kuchta, St. Paul Union Advocate editor
- August 24, 2005
BLOOMINGTON - The strike by mechanics at Northwest
Airlines demonstrates how far airline executives are
willing to go to cut costs, destroy jobs, and break
promises to workers and Minnesota taxpayers, the state
AFL-CIO says.
"Northwest is just a bad employer," said Minnesota
AFL-CIO President Ray Waldron. "All you have to do
is look at the record. When times were tough and they
came to Minnesota to ask for money to keep them in
business, everybody came to their aid.
http://www.workdayminnesota.org/
view_article.php?print=y&id=713a34031fadcdcffde4bec2f0cedc51

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

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

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

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