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http://youtu.be/1vaIK8wlAl0
Covid
MASKING SAVES LIVES
Sunday, July 29, 2012
Saturday, July 28, 2012
Three Little Birds -- Apartheid [wonderful song!]
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http://youtu.be/9haR4zyPqig
to read their important story on the In Gaza blog, go here: http://ingaza.wordpress.com/2012/07/28/three-little-birds-talented-ottawa-band-takes-principled-and-musical-stand-against-apartheid/
http://youtu.be/9haR4zyPqig
to read their important story on the In Gaza blog, go here: http://ingaza.wordpress.com/2012/07/28/three-little-birds-talented-ottawa-band-takes-principled-and-musical-stand-against-apartheid/
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
Sunday, July 22, 2012
Saturday, July 21, 2012
A.M. 1090 Progressive Radio Fest Showare Center in Kent
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The
guard chased us off the property with our signs, so David and Phil
doffed their signs and managed to pass out almost 400 flyers to the
folks as they entered the show. One of the flyers, written by Richard, was aimed directly at
the "progressive except for Palestine" talk hosts and the other was
written by an ex-IDF soldier explaining to the seemingly clueless media
that Israel was like a bear sitting on a hive of honey and then
complaining when it got stung. David had his Palestine map shirt and
Phil was wearing his Veterans for Peace shirt. Great job!
Phil & Richard face the multitudes from our appointed spot on the public sidewalk. |
Phil & Richard |
Our "competition". ;) |
David near the end of the gig. |
Sibyl & Ann catch the incoming cars and pedestrians. |
Voices of Palestine crew celebrates new black & white signage, heroically arranged by Richard, with some extra help from Anne and Ziyad. |
Thursday, July 19, 2012
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
Mr. Fish & Real Democracy
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Mr. Fish via Charles Davis
http://www.clowncrack.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/RealDemocracy.jpg
http://www.clowncrack.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/RealDemocracy.jpg
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
Eli Cane: Wounds and Scars [Native America Under Attack]
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http://www.guernicamag.com/daily/eli-cane-wounds-and-scars/
EXCERPT:
EXCERPT:
On August 26, 2011, 68-year-old Vernon Traversie was admitted to the Rapid City Regional Hospital in South Dakota for emergency double bypass surgery. After his operation, Traversie, who is blind, discovered that he had been brutally mutilated while under anesthesia. In addition to the surgical scars, his torso was covered in gashes, with the letters KKK carved into his stomach. Traversie is a Lakota Sioux who lives on the Cheyenne River Reservation.
“They’re squeezing us, just like they were before Wounded Knee,” said Guy Dull Knife Jr., who lives on Pine Ridge Reservation. Along with Cheyenne River, Pine Ridge is one of over a dozen territories scattered throughout the Dakotas, Nebraska, and Minnesota that were granted to the Lakota Nation by the U.S. government in a series of treaties, most of which were signed in the late 1800s. Pine Ridge, about a hundred miles south-east of Rapid City, is in the heart of America’s Great Plains—prairies, canyons, buttes, and dry riverbeds stretch impossibly far in any given direction, framed by the Black Hills on one side and the Badlands on the other. I speak to Guy regularly to get updates on his life and news of the reservation—a result of my visits over the last few years to film a documentary that I am producing.
Sunday, July 15, 2012
Saturday, July 14, 2012
Visualizing Occupation: Freedom of Movement
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http://972mag.com/visualizing-occupation-freedom-of-movement/45605/
Whereas West Bank settlers can travel freely between Israel and the West Bank, Palestinian movement is governed by the Israeli security establishment. This illustration is the fourth in a series of infographics on the effect of the occupation on the Palestinian civilian population.
By Michal Vexler
Whereas West Bank settlers can travel freely between Israel and the West Bank, Palestinian movement is governed by the Israeli security establishment. This illustration is the fourth in a series of infographics on the effect of the occupation on the Palestinian civilian population.
By Michal Vexler
Team Palestine at All Nations Cup in Tukwila! Really Fun to Watch!
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Ziyad tells t-shirts supporting Team Palestine |
Queen of Team Palestine |
Team Palestine's Enthused Supporters |
Team Palestine's Entrance to the Field |
Teams from Around the Globe |
Team Palestine on Way to Match w/Brazil, a hard-fought test. Brazil ended up on top, 3-0. |
Friday, July 13, 2012
Backer of NY Ads Exposing Palestinian Land-Loss Says Response Has Been ‘Astounding’ & News ‘Coverage is Pouring In’
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EXCERPT from Mondoweiss:
Last night I talked to Henry Clifford, the 83-year-old Connecticut man who paid for the smashing ads on New York commuter train platforms that describe the dispossession of Palestinian lands over the last century.
"I've been plowing this field for many years and I am absolutely astounded by the response I've received, and the news coverage," the former financier said. "We've been begging for coverage for years. Now it's pouring in."
He said he had been interviewed by CBS, Fox News, NBC and many radio stations, and the questions were fair ones.
"I have received nothing but positive responses with two exceptions [by email]," said Clifford, whose email address hcliffordws@aol.com, is on the ads. "This has produced an overwhelming response."
Thursday, July 12, 2012
V-I-C-T-O-R-Y for Olympia Co-op Members & BDS!
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Bruce Johnson, on right, and other attorneys discussing happy court result with co-op members and supporters.
http://www.theolympian.com/2012/07/12/2171566/olympia-food-co-op-defendants.html
Read more here: http://www.theolympian.com/2012/07/12/v-print/2171566/olympia-food-co-op-defendants.html#storylink=cpy
Bruce Johnson, on right, and other attorneys discussing happy court result with co-op members and supporters.
http://www.theolympian.com/2012/07/12/2171566/olympia-food-co-op-defendants.html
[FROM THE OLYMPIAN] Five Olympia Food Co-op members who had sued to overturn the store’s boycott of Israeli goods must pay $160,000 in damages, the result of a judge’s prior ruling that the lawsuit was an illegal Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation.
SLAPPs are defined as nuisance lawsuits designed to stifle free speech and create onerous legal costs for those who choose to exercise their free-speech rights. SLAPPs are illegal under a state law that the defendants’ attorney, Bruce Johnson, and another staff attorney at Davis Wright Tremaine helped draft.
The 16 defendants are entitled to $10,000 each under Washington’s anti-SLAPP statute, Thurston County Superior Court Judge Thomas McPhee ruled Thursday.
The defendants are former board members who voted to enact the boycott in July 2010 and current members who joined the board after the boycott was enacted.
The 16 people who’d sued had argued that the co-op’s board acted outside its authority and didn’t follow its own rules when it enacted the boycott. In February, McPhee rejected that argument and ruled that the lawsuit was a SLAPP.
Olympia Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement member Andrew Meyer said Thursday that McPhee’s award recognizes that the co-op acted within its rights to continue the boycott until Israel secures “equal, civil and human rights for Palestinians.”
Attorney Bob Sulkin, who represented the 16 people who’d sued, declined to comment outside court. It’s unknown whether he will appeal.
McPhee ruled that the defendants also are entitled to attorney’s fees but did not decide on a dollar amount. Johnson said outside court that he has asked for $280,000 in attorney’s fees. McPhee told Johnson during Thursday’s hearing that he wants to see a detailed itemized account of each defense attorney’s work on the case within two weeks.
Sulkin called Johnson’s request for $280,000 in attorney’s fees “outrageous.”
He argued Thursday that the co-op itself was responsible for paying for damages under the SLAPP statue. That’s because those who’d sued are in essence “shareholders” in the “corporation” known as the co-op, he said.
“We are nominal parties, nominal,” Sulkin said in court. “The corporation is the real party and interest here.”
McPhee said, “I don’t find that argument persuasive.”
The co-op board voted in July 2010 to boycott Israeli products; it was not a unanimous decision. Products that were removed from the co-op’s two stores, one on Olympia’s east side and the other on the west side, include gluten-free crackers, ice cream cones and a moisturizing cream.
Read more here: http://www.theolympian.com/2012/07/12/v-print/2171566/olympia-food-co-op-defendants.html#storylink=cpy
Tuesday, July 10, 2012
Monday, July 09, 2012
Sunday, July 08, 2012
Water Torture -- Gideon Levy
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http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/water-torture.premium-1.449448
http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/water-torture.premium-1.449448
Avi is an inspection coordinator for the "Civil Administration" - the occupation regime, to speak without euphemisms. Presumably Avi likes his job. Maybe he's even proud of it.
He doesn't bother mentioning his last name in the forms he signs. Why should he? His ornate "Avi" signature is sufficient to carry out his diktats. And Avi's are among the most brutal and inhumane diktats ever to be imposed in these parts.
Avi confiscates water containers that serve hundreds of Palestinian and Bedouin families living in the Jordan Valley.
The containers are these people's only water source. In recent weeks, Avi has confiscated about a dozen containers, leaving dozens of families with children in the horrific Jordan Valley heat, to go thirsty.
The forms he takes pains to complete, in spiffy style, say: "There is reason to suspect they used the above merchandise for carrying out an offense." Avi's bosses claim the "offense" is stealing water from a pipe. This is why the containers are seized - with no inquiry, no trial. Welcome to the land of lawlessness and evil. Welcome to the land of apartheid. Israel does not permit thousands of these wretched people to hook up to the water pipes. This water is for Jews only. Even the greatest Israeli propagandists could not deny the nationalist, diabolical separation taking place here.
The axis of evil is located about an hour's drive from your home. But emotionally distant and far from the heart, it inspires no "social protest." And on the scale of Israeli evil, it is one of the worst. Backed with forms and bureaucracy, applied by ostensibly nonviolent inspectors, it involves not a drop of blood, yet leaves no drop of water either.
The Civil Administration is supposed to take care of the people's needs. But it does not stop at the most despicable measure - depriving people and livestock of water in the scathing summer heat - to implement Israel's strategic goal: to drive them from their lands and purge the valley of its non-Jewish residents.
The stealing of water, whether it did or didn't take place, is of course only the excuse. Even if there was such a thing - what choice do these people have? The authorities won't allow them to connect to the water pipe running through their fields; pipes whose water is flowing to saturate the settlers' green vineyards and fields.
Last week I saw the people whose water container Avi had confiscated, leaving them thirsty. Newborn babies, a handicapped little girl, a small boy post-surgery, women and old folks, and, of course, the sheep - the only source of income here. Denizens with no water - in Israel, not in Africa. Water for one nation only - in Israel, not in South Africa.
But this is not the only watershed. A few days ago, the Israel Defense Forces decided to hold training exercises in the area. What did it do? Evicted the residents from their homes for 24 hours. Not all of them - only the Palestinians and Bedouin. It occurred to nobody to evict the residents of Maskiot, Beka'ot or Ro'i. The authorities don't call that apartheid, either.
Where did the IDF evict them to? Wherever the wind carries them. Thus some 400 people were forced to leave their huts and tents and spend a day and a night on the arid soil by the roadside, exposed to the elements.
Amjad Zahawa, a 2-day-old infant, passed his third day under the hot sun, with no shelter over his head. Greetings, Amjad; welcome to the reality of your life.
Avi, as we have already mentioned, loves his work and is proud of it. Dozens of others like him are also doing this contemptible work. But they are not the only ones at fault. Behind them stand millions of Israelis who are entirely untouched by all this. They blithely drive through the valley roads, paying no heed to the endless embankment alongside the road, imprisoning the residents and blocking their access to the road.
There is an iron gate every now and then. The soldiers, representatives of the merciful occupier, show up every few days to open the gate for a moment. Sometimes they forget, sometimes they are late. Sometimes they lose the key, but what does it matter?
The occupation is enlightened, Israel is right, the IDF is the most moral army, and apartheid is merely an invention of Israel's haters. Go to the Jordan Valley and see for yourselves.
"Israel’s social protest: Will you stand with the Palestinians?" -- Udi Pladott
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http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/israel-s-social-protest-will-you-stand-with-the-palestinians-1.449700
Do Israelis involved in the social protest movement really have a moral argument for affordable housing in Tel Aviv while, only a few kilometers away, the same system of power targeted by protesters has turned entire villages into refugee camps?
By
Udi Pladott
|
Jul.08, 2012 | 5:54 PM
|
"If you have come here to help me, then you are wasting your time…But
if you have come because your liberation is bound up with mine, then let
us work together." (Lila Watson)
Last week Haaretz published an opinion piece by Yotam Marom,
an Occupy Wall St. organizer. The article was presented as “Advice from
the Occupy Movement” for Israel’s social protest movement, which recently faced egregious police violence
in Tel Aviv. Israeli activists, however, do not have to look overseas
for guidance or inspiration in countering forces of oppression in Jewish
Israeli society. The legacy that passes through Gandhi, Martin Luther
King Jr., the Egyptians in Tahrir Square, and the Indignados in Spain
can be found much closer to home: Israeli activists need only look over
to Bil’in, Ni’lin, Nabi Saleh, Sheikh Jarrah and al-Arakib to learn
about the pain of repression and value of resistance.
Marom correctly points out how the forces of deprivation
disproportionately impact those already marginalized, but he forgets to
identify the group of people most clearly marginalized, oppressed,
displaced and dispossessed by decades of Israeli policy and practice:
the Palestinian people. As Israeli protesters rally against rising
prices for housing, food, education and healthcare, there is no
acknowledgement that their current level of welfare, however relatively
eroded, has been accumulated on the backs of the Palestinian people. Can
one really articulate a compelling moral argument for affordable
housing in Tel Aviv while, only a few kilometers away, the same system
of power targeted by protesters has rendered entire villages into
refugee camps?
Some of our finest moments here at Occupy Wall St. were exactly those
in which we recognized - as Marom points out - that oppressed
communities face various systemic forms of violence every single day,
and that this violence is much more destructive than what we face in the
streets of New York City at our protests. Only when we followed the
lead of the people most impacted by this violence and stood with them
against home foreclosures and against the NYPD’s racist policy of “Stop
& Frisk” did we actually embody the world we want to live in.
Organizers in today’s social movement in Israel have crafted messaging
to avoid alienating some of the Israeli public and attract a “broad
tent.” Perhaps it was with that careful, circumscribed messaging in mind
that Marom avoided any mention of Israel’s oppression of Palestinians -
neither those who are citizens of the state, nor those living in the
Occupied Territories or beyond. But would not a much heartier coalition
be created in standing with the most oppressed?
Last summer, and again in these past several weeks, Israelis
demonstrated a readiness to take to the streets to challenge the system
of economic power that has prevailed there for so long. Please don’t
constrain the reach and potential of your movement by adopting national
and ethnic fault-lines to construct and constrict your movement’s
collective identity. These fault lines have been perpetuated and
celebrated by the same system that is the target of your protest. The
very absence of solidarity between all the people within its domain
makes it possible for this system to function. It pits Israelis against
African asylum-seekers, for example, deliberately obscuring the reality
that Tel Aviv’s poor neighborhoods had been severely underserved long
before the recent influx of refugees and other migrant workers.
Over here, the Global Justice Working Group
at Occupy Wall Street has highlighted how our struggles at home are
intertwined with worldwide struggles against oppression and injustice,
seeking guidance from the people directly affected by the target of our
protests and following their lead whenever possible. This brought the
group to trace the use of U.S.-made (and often U.S.-taxpayer financed) tear gas against civil society protesters
in several countries. The gas used against our friends in Oakland and
Seattle is produced by the same companies supplying the forces of
oppression in Bahrain, Egypt, Tunisia, Yemen, and yes – also in Nabi
Saleh and Bil’in. Israelis rising up for social and economic justice
would do well to identify their oppressor and see who has borne the
brunt of the suffering under its violent force: these people are your
allies - those whose liberation is bound up with yours.
As Marom points out, we can learn a great deal from the violent
response of the state when we succeed in challenging the status quo.
Obviously, the repression of dissent in Israel did not start this past
week. There is a rich history of violence to study. Even if you choose
to not extend your inquiry beyond the green line, you may recall how,
last April on Israel’s Independence Day, the police lay siege to the Zochrot office in Tel Aviv
because activists there wanted to read a list of Palestinian villages
that were razed in 1948. You may also recall the events of October 2000,
which left thirteen Palestinian citizens of Israel dead. They also were
your allies. Stand with their families. Stand for their memory, and for
a future in which their communities will not be constantly threatened
and impoverished.
In Israel, where your liberation is intertwined with that of the
Palestinian people, look at where you can work together, not only under
Israeli leadership. What are the Palestinian people asking for? Where
can you stand with them? There have been several groups of Jews and
Palestinians working together for justice for many years. Will you
direct your energy in support of Solidarity - Sheikh Jarrah? Will you support Boycott from Within and other Israelis who heed the call from Palestinian civil society to join the boycott, divestment, and sanctions movement?
A fight for freedom and independence and security and equality that
comes at the expense of another people is not a true fight for
liberation. When our fight for liberation ignores the subjugation of
other people by our own hands, we remain bound and tied.
The Israeli social protest movement faces a challenge and an
opportunity to end its isolation, and to join a global movement. It is a
movement for social and economic justice; it is aimed at ending the
domination of our political systems by the financial elites, but even
more than that it is a movement that transcends the boundaries between
nation-states and calls for reclamation of the Commons for all peoples.
Liberate yourselves by fighting for an end to the occupation of
Palestine, without which none of us will ever be free.
Saturday, July 07, 2012
Israeli Recycling -- Nidal El-Khairy
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Israel often releases prisoners and leaves them in areas where
Palestinians are not allowed to be in and rearrests them immediately.
This is a part of a systematic psychological war on Palestinian
political prisoners.
http://electronicintifada.net/blogs/nidal-el-khairy/israeli-recycling
http://electronicintifada.net/blogs/nidal-el-khairy/israeli-recycling
Wednesday, July 04, 2012
Tuesday, July 03, 2012
Celebrate This Tomorrow, Rather Than Our Imperial Militarist State!
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peoplesworld.org/louisville-orchestra-musicians-win-tough-battle/
LOUISVILLE, Ky. -- Local 11-637 of the American Federation of Musicians, and the Louisville Orchestra Inc. (LOI - the management), recently signed an agreement, ending a lockout of workers from their jobs that began in May 2011.
To understand this we need to travel way back to 1697 and listen to William Congreve: "Music has Charms to soothe a savage Breast,/ To soften Rocks, or bend a knotted Oak." More recently, an unsoothed savage breast, marked by malignant greed, class antagonism and lack of common decency, descended upon the Louisville Orchestra. Management offered an unacceptable contract, and the union said "no."
Louisville Orchestra management then began hiring "scabs," non-union replacements: "Openings are available for qualified symphonic musicians looking for permanent employment to replace musicians ...."
The bosses claimed they had no money to pay the musicians a decent wage, and then said they must also "downsize," a euphemism for throwing employees out of their jobs.
The Louisville Orchestra and the Fund for the Arts boards of directors are dominated by Louisville's financial elite: bankers, stockbrokers, realtors, manufacturers, law firms, health care providers and profiteers, and utility executives. There is big money behind these folks.
Yet and still, orchestras are in crisis all over the country. The League of American Orchestras reported that US orchestra paid attendance fell 8% between 2002 and 2007. Young people don't attend orchestra performances as much as older people. As older people move on, will there be replacements from the younger generation? Yes, but only if there is music appreciation in the school curricula.
Truth be told, music appreciation in the classroom is dying. In Indiana, the Monroe County Community School Corporation voted to trim $4.5 million.
Louisville Orchestra management filed for bankruptcy in late 2010. In May, 2011 the union contract expired. Both the Bankruptcy Court hearings and the negotiations between the musicians union and management were well covered by local media and extended over more than six months.
When the 2011-12 school year started in September 2011, the staff of the Jefferson County School Board (JCSB), as well as its seven board members, were well aware that the management of LOI was not going to be able to fulfill a contract that both parties had signed long ago for a music appreciation program, scheduled for the spring of 2012. The contract was supposed to be the continuation of a 70-year-old joint effort.
Regretfully, JCSB became an objective ally of Louisville Orchestra management. The school board cancelled this 70-year-old music appreciation program for all 14,000 4th- and 5th-grade students this year, depriving LO musicians of a desperately needed source of income. The JCSB, in essence, let itself be dictated to by a vendor that could not fulfill a signed contract.
"Keep Louisville Symphonic,"' a nonprofit formed by the locked-out orchestra musicians, was, on the other hand, indeed able to fulfill the contract that LOI could not. But the school board scrapped the program just the same, using the excuse that it was too late for the music appreciation program to take place in the coming school year.
When the orchestra management began advertising for outside musicians, so as to break the back of the union, there were reports that the musicians recruited to replace the locked-out Louisville Orchestra musicians would be coming from the ranks of Catholic high school music students and from the Jewish Community Center Orchestra.
Catholic Social Justice informs us: "The economy must serve people, not the other way around. All workers have a right to productive work, to decent and fair wages, and to safe working conditions." What would Thomas Merton say about scab musicians?
I spoke with a prominent member of the Louisville Jewish community, and he called the replacement musicians by their rightful name: "scabs." Yet the deafening silence on this issue by the mainstream Jewish community contradicts a point made by Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel: "Morally speaking, there is no limit to the concern one must feel for the suffering of human beings, that indifference to evil is worse than evil itself, that in a free society, some are guilty, but all are responsible."
A notable exception in the Jewish community was Uriel Siegel, the distinguished maestro who served as music director of the Louisville Orchestra for six years, and who came back to Louisville a few months ago to picket the Kentucky Opera alongside the locked-out musicians and their supporters. (The lockout also had adverse consequences for the Kentucky Opera and the Louisville Ballet.)
The union musicians and the orchestra management finally did reach an agreement. It was a tribute to the tenacity of our brave band of musicians; they got what they got under dire circumstances - musicians with major illnesses who were facing big hospital bills and no health insurance, for example.
Local government had become involved. A key role was played by Louisville Metro Council President Jim King, no big-time friend of working people but someone who may be positioning himself to run for mayor next time around. He was perceptive enough to want an agreement. Kentucky AFL-CIO President Bill Londrigan played an important role, as well.
The musicians behaved with dignity, integrity and steadfastness in the face of a management determined to break its back and destroy its union. To those who knew right from wrong in this struggle of workers versus bosses and said nothing, we quote the words of Anaïs Nin: "And the day came when the risk to remain tight in a bud was more painful than the risk it took to blossom."
Ira Grupper, irag@iglou.com, is a retired labor and peace activist in Louisville. This article was originally published by FORsooth, newspaper of the Louisville chapter of FOR, Fellowship of Reconciliation.
Monday, July 02, 2012
Sunday, July 01, 2012
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