Sunday, October 11, 2020

"The King is in the Altoghter, He's Altogether..."

This week, the following letter from Harvey Wasserman, appeared in the good grey New York Times:

 

“This is an absolute red alert moment for our nation and our species. Donald Trump has clearly lost his mind, and this is an extremely dangerous moment for the nation & the world. Between the COVID. the drugs (especially the steroids) and his deeply embedded fast-advancing dementia, this is absolutely not the man to be in charge of the nuclear football…or anything else, not even his i-phone or remote. We are entering territory not experienced since the Cuban missile crisis. This is someone in the White House who at any time could initiate a global apocalypse and have no idea what he’s doing. In more than fifty years as a Times reader, I do not believe I’ve read a singly more disturbing news report. The world’s leaders—especially those with nuclear weapons—must be immediately notified. Again, amidst all the partisan drama of a presidential campaign, this is a moment where someone who is seriously deranged could [do] unlimited and irreversible damage. It is absolutely incumbent on VP Pence, the Cabinet, Congressional leadership of both parties and the military high command to intervene here. We are all at serious, tangible risk. There is no mystery about what’s going on, and it is far behind time to act. There is a reason for the 25th amendment & it’s precisely this. ACT NOW!”

 

That the Times, not known for any signs of adventuresome thought, would print such a letter is clear acknowledgement that Harvey Wasserman comes with all the appropriate credentials of someone who has had a life-long preoccupation with nuclear power and its vast harms.

 

Disease as metaphor

 

 “The king is in the altogether, altogether…” from the “King’s Jester” Danny Kaye’s light hearted lyrics have taken on a deeply somber meaning in October, 2020. We still live more or less attuned (or not) to the gravity of our existential moment, a moment when the arrest has been called for Joe Biden and Kamala Harris, a moment when a small militia, inspired by the fiery emanations from the presidential mouth, had plans to foment a civil war by kidnapping the Governor of Michigan, only to be stopped in its tracks by the FBI. Despite breathing the bad air that may very well be fogging our judgment, we have left the Yellow Brick Road.  

 


Our national headquarters have become a web of pestilence with COVID’s rapid spread, imperiling our national security, that entity so dear to authoritarians, they can’t wait to evoke it.

 

 

Righting the Apple Cart

 

Foremost in the American mind right now is voting. Encouraging as many people as possible to vote: those who neglect voting, those intimidated but inclined to vote, use of early voting, and monitoring every sickening effort to suppress voting and filing opposing lawsuits. The rationale here is that the wider the margin of “victory,” the more likely the opposition will nicely fold its tents and silently steal away. But a growing sense of reality tells us that the opposition violates any laws of predictability, possibility, or elementary psychology. Rather it has long emblemized all that is patriarchal, red blooded, and numero uno in the Good Old Boy view of reality

 

But oranges are not the only fruit. There are some apples in the apple cart. In The Tree  Collin Tudge describes the tree-as-organism thus: “Each cell is dependent on all the rest, [with] groups of cells cooperating to form organs, such as… leaves and flowers. This degree of collaboration requires enormous self-sacrifice…. Each cell must give up some of it own ability to live by itself. Each cell has to trust the others so to speak. Any cell in the organism that goes berserk and tries…to do its own thing destroys the whole, and ultimately destroys itself.  In medical circles, such cells are  said to be cancerous.” As well, Tudge’s description is emblematic of a healthy society itself.

 

But already there are masses of people who are in communion with the world in which they live, collaborating with their environments, intelligent beings on the upward path to further evolution. Extinction Rebellion, started in the UK, and spreading world wide, including in the US, and the Sunrise Youth movement are two such examples; in the cities the Black Lives Matter movement has taken off in response to police atrocities, with a nationwide outcry to defund police, to limit jail expansion, and foreseeing an end to the role of punishment in the Puritan thinking that has traditionally informed much of US society, offering such humane solutions as reallocation of swollen police budgets in favor of funding starved community services. In some cities, such as Oakland for example, mothers with children are appropriating empty buildings in which to live, and in education, outdoor learning, the learning that dares not speak its name, has begun to be considered. In the area of agriculture, still now, along with war and militarism, the major producer of green house gases, many more city gardens are being established, and community gardens are flourishing. And most significantly, both native American and Canadian tribes are Idle No More, reclaiming their cultural tradition as Earth Protectors, defending their rights to establish check points at reservation borders, and  advocating for the and but also by so-called “law enforcement.”

 

The time of looking to government to recognize and foster the growth of life on Earth, human and extra-human, has long vanished. In the face of the stresses humanity faces on multiple fronts, resistance is already flourishing, with a huge wave of  push backs taking root.

 

 


 

PREPARE for November.

 

DONATE to help protect the election in nine battleground states.

 

WRITE TO HALT nuclear arms race.

 

DEMAND firefighter Kao Saelee not be deported/

 

PROTEST sub minimum wages and lack of overtime at

https://actionnetwork.org/letters/submit-an-official-comment-to-the-us-department-of-labor-to-stop-employers-from-cheating-workers-out-of-wages-and-benefits?source=2020LaborDeptWageComments_DK&redirect=https%3A%2F%2Fsecure.actblue.com%2Fdonate%2Fdkdemocracy2020%3Frefcode%3D2020SWLaborDeptComments&link_id=1&refcodeEmailReferrer=email_950577___subject_1305345&can_id=655968a96e1bce05c463b2f640bf633c&email_referrer=email_950577___subject_1305345&email_subject=workers-cannot-be-left-to-earn-subminimum-wages-and-work-more-than-40-hours-per-week-without-getting-any-overtime-pay-please-read

 

DEMONSTRATE in San  Francisco against Barrett’s confirmation at Noon, Monday, Oct. 12 at Hastings Law School McAllister and Hyde; and walk to 9th circuit at 7th & Mission, S.F.

 

Object to Barrett’s nomination at https://action.momsrising.org/sign/SCOTUS_COVID/?t=11&referring_akid=14402.8086.ltvhdx

 


 

Former world leaders and ministers, UN former Secy Ban Ki Moon among them, sign open letter appealing to current political leaders to advance disarmament, especially nuclear disarmament, before it’s too late.

 

Venezuelan gov’t scores legal victory in  $1 billion gold case.

 

Responding to challenge to OPEC’s work, censored Ex OPEC Chief speaks out on Syria.

 

Moroccan PM Othmani told UN Genrl. Assembly there can be no peace without giving Palestinians their rights.

 

Malaysia ratifies UN nuclear weapon bn treaty.

 

World’s biggest wind and solar producer now worth more than ExxonMobil.

 

In a first, UK trade unions commit to challenging Israeli ‘apartheid.”

 

Human rights defenders sue German Parliament over anti-BS resolution.

 

Anti-drone protesters block entrance to US “assassins’ drone base in Nevada.

 

Joint Chiefs of Staff in quarantine at #45 COVID response becomes national security issue.

 

Laying tens of thousands of preventable deaths at foot of #45 failures, top US health official resigns in protest.

 

Citing dubious practices and possible White House interference, Schumer and Wyden demand IG probe into IRS Trump audit.

 

Fed appeals panel unanimously rules Manhattan DA can enforce subpoena for #45 tax returns,

 

Bolstering progressive demand, Fed Chair Jerome Powell says more stimulus crucial to avoid even more unnecessary hardship.

 

3 in 4 Americans, including 55% Repulicrats, want Senate GP to prioritize COVID relief over ramming thru Barrett nomination.

 

Texas cop Shaun Lucas charged with murder of ‘hometown hero” and unarmed black man, Jonathan Price.

 

In a major blow to incarceration, private prison group loss lawsuit challenging California ban.

 

Portland DA declines to prosecute 70% of Portland protest cases.

 

Grand Jury indict St. Louis couple who pointed guns at BLM protesters.

 

Protest in Kansas City over arrest of  black woman enters seventh day.

 

Breonna Taylor’s family demands a special prosecutor to reopen case.

 

Report finds gang-like police clique in E. LA sheriff Villanuela’s station exerting undue influence.

 

California bans choke holds.

 

Facebook asked to shut down large numbers of fake #45 sites run by out of country anons.

 

Facebook pulls hundreds of #45 campaign ads hat lied about refugees and COVID.

 

NIAC condemns new Iran sanctions that stifle humanitarian trade.

 

Labor Unions and green groups sue #45 administration for failure to protect frontline workers from COVID.

 

Worker at Amazon Minnesota Center walk out.

 

Baltimore teachers demand masks, tests, and Plexiglas.

 

#45 USDA sued over program allowing horrific mass slaughter of native wildlife.

 

Groups sue #45 Fish & Wildlife service after officials refuse protections for endangered wolverines.

 

Michigan AG announces felony charges for conservative fraudsters trying to suppress the vote.

 

Just blatant voter suppression: groups sue to stop Texas Gov. from eviscerating ballot drop-off system.

 

“Integrity panel,“ in PA, now considered far more than FLA a key state in election, has been pulled.

 

Friso Five helped oust Police Chief Suhr. Now they want to defund police.

 

Alameda DA to reopen Oscar Grant case.

 

Senate race bet. Graham and Harrison shifts to “toss up.”

 

Former CDC implores agency’s current boss to expose #45’s mishandling of the COVID pandemic.

 

Slimy Facebook removed #45 COVID post, twitter hides similar tweet.

 

House report on Silicon Valley monopolies bolsters  call for far-reaching anti-trust measures.

 

Philly activists reclam 50 vacant houses creating model for organizing as mass evictions loom.

 


 


 




 

 


Sunday, October 4, 2020

Keeping Dinner Down in 2020 America

The evils of government are directly proportional to the tolerance of the people: Frank Kent 

The price of apathy towards public affairs is to be ruled by evil men: -Plato 

 

The kind of thinking that sees Trump as a suddenly appearing phenomena born, like Venus, on a clam shell from hell and supported by the 72 million who voted for him, must keep folks who think like that awake at night. How to keep dinner down in the Age of Trump? First off, I think it’s important to remember that the worship of the Golden apparition on a descending escalator in 2016 has roots in the trajectory of American Elementary education starting after 1900 when the exit exam for people graduating after 8th grade (for many the only education they would even manage) was so demanding of verbal and calculating competence, this reader could not get through it, even with a post graduate education! Since then, the thrust of American education policy has been to dumb down the population because zombie people are easier to manipulate, and bamboozle. We see the articulation of that hobbling policy in the Bush years with its emphasis testing, not critical thinking. We see it in the embrace of Facebook, TV, and the vapidity of much popular culture. 

 

Secondly, endless war brutalizes people, no matter whether they inhabit targeted countries, or pay the taxes to imperial governments that make war possible. War was and is the engine choice that drives the US economy. I say choice because many alternatives are not only possible but far more profitable. But war not only drives the US economy, it is also the engine that siphons wealth upward from the bottom economic segments to the top. It accounts for the actual theft of 50 trillion dollars from the poorest segments upwards to the very wealthiest over the past 40 years. War is how such theft is accomplished. War, and its supporting money-grubbing sectors that ignore global warming like fossil fuels, and fracking to name but two of the most obvious. 

 

As long as war builds up robust portfolios to bursting, rich Americans are quite happy to let war happen with nary a peep, and the people mostly go along. Were they out in the millions objecting to nuclear weapons? No. Were they out in the millions objecting to the slaughter of civilian populations in targeted countries like Afghanistan, Iraq and Somalia? No. Were they out in the millions objecting to the slaughter of their own domestic populations such as the MOVE massacre in Philadelphia, or in Waco, Texas? No. Were they out in the millions objecting to the separation of families in Immigration, and Customs Enforcement, and the death of little children in ICE detention? Not as long as it didn’t affect them directly. Good people as is their want worldwide, did nothing. But now that war at home has begun to eat at the domestic population, the domestic war that already has the poor and disadvantaged in its crosshairs, imagining they’re immune, will good people have lost the capacity of doing something?? How long do they think they will remain immune? 

             (Everything is Burning © Sushanna Dubuiner, 2004)

Until now government policy in the US has always made sure to allow the people just enough carrot to keep their minds off the stick—making things like cars, refrigerators, washing machines, electric kitchens, miracle cures and shopping within reach, keeping them comfortably governed and off the streets. Nothing extravagant like universal medical care. With such bribery, good people said nothing. Meantime the US threw its war resisters in the slammer. It killed any journalists who blew the whistle on real outrage. It underfunded and ignored its artists, its poets, its scientists and people with good ideas. It made sure to suppress the people who could or would not conform to its cultural norms. And it allowed its weak and vulnerable just enough not to croak of starvation in its streets. 

 

But already under Truman’s experiment (he dropped two nuclear bombs on a civilian population of color, “it cost $20 billion. We have to use it”) such calculations started going south. They went seriously sour under Clinton (who shifted the Democratic Party’s focus away from representing its traditional base in favor of becoming just another business party and used Mena AFB in Arkansas to import cocaine in exchange for Contra weapons) to Bush, (who lied our way into destroying Afghanistan and Iraq, and with John Yoo enabled the Imperial Presidency) to Obama (killer of the Tuesday List, destroyer with Hillary of Libya, bail-out artist with Timothy Geitner and deporter of 2 million). Along with their proliferating “security” apparatus, all three nicely paved the way for #45. No surprising horrors on the half shell here. Just the dreary shell of a once-democracy. And good people still say nothing. 

 

Dennis Kucinch once addressed Congress:….We make war with such certainty, yet we are befuddled how to create peace. This paradox requires reflection if we are to survive. Making and endorsing war requires a secret love of death, and a fearful desire to embrace annihilation. Creating peace requires compassion, putting ourselves in the other person's place, and all of their suffering and all of their hopes and to act from our heart's capacity to love, not fear." 

 


 

CLICK for folks who want to engage with the election.

 

READ What Will it take to defend the election by George Lakey.

 

SIGN UP with Common Cause to become an election protestion volunteer with

 

SUPPORT Progressive Action Support Fund caling for nationwide evictions moratorium

 

URGE Senate to suspend business until there is a pandemic relief deal.

 


G7 finance ministers decide to support debt relief for poor countries fighting coronavirus. 

 Mayors of 12 major global cities home to 36 million make unified fossil fuel divestment pledge. 

Masked, socially distanced and mad as hell: Global Youth take to streets in over 3,200 #climate strike events. 

Assange puppet stage hearing: judge grants defense four weeks to prepare silent final argument. 

Assange court testimony undermines US indictment, providing grounds for dismissal. 

 Spanish judge seeks Sheldon Adelson security chief in Assange spying case. 

Israel AG states Netanyohoo could be suspended as PM. 

Pope refuses to meet US Secy of State Pompeo. 

Brazil’s landless workers persist through agroecology. 

Half rose better than none: Venezuela moves towards Parliamentary elections with Arce in the lead. 

On International Day for Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons, Chicago car caravan travels through city from Voices of Creative Non-violence headquarters to neighborhood where first sustained nuclear chain reaction took place. 

Thanks to massive activist efforts, Chris Wallace raised question of climate change at First Debacle. 

After 3 years of court struggle, #45 administration abandons policy of banning abortion for unaccompanied immigrant minors. 

18,000 calls to Senators in just 24 hours signal widespread outrage over #45 Supreme Court power grab. 

In fiery floor speech, Warren rips #45 rush to fill RBG seat as “last gasp right-wing, billionaire-fueled party. 

#45 taxes show chronic losses and years of IRS avoidance. 

Patriotic millionaires launch “knives out” campaign on SCOTUS nomination. 

Angry chant “vote him out!” erupts as #45 visits RBG casket outside Supreme Court. 

‘This is how you normalize a madman:” Scholars, press watchdogs call on corporate media to treat #45 like the authoritarian threat he is, (not dictatorial?) 

100 brave folks in the street at Mitch McConnell’s House over supreme court vacancy. (Where are the other million?) 

Furious protests erupt nationwide after no officers charged in Breonna Taylor killing. 

N.Y. judge orders renewed inquiry into death of Eric Garner. 

Thousands call on Facebook to stop censoring Palestine. (only thousands?) 

Mayor Garcetti of LA joins Mayor Khan of London, Mayor and Mayor deBlasio of New York, and Ann Hidalgo of Paris to announce he will not participate in Urban 20 Mayoral Summit in Saudi Arabia. 

Opponents of Formosa Plastics Louisiana plant move to overturn federal approval. 

SEC charges SCANA Corp, two former execs and S.C. Electric and Gas now Dominion Energy with defrauding investors about a $9 billion nuclear power reactor expansion they ultimately abandoned. 

EPA rescinds anti-science policy after suit by Union of Concerned Scientists. 

Federal court requires EPA to enforce civil rights. 

Court breathes new life in Lake Erie Bill of Rights Legal front. 

Federal Court protects Indiana voters’ ability to extend polling-place hours in November. 

In Texas US district judge blocks state from eliminating straight-ticket voting as poll option in November (to hasten long lines.) 

Federal Judge rejects attempt to block mail in voting in Montana.

National Trust for Historic Preservation places West Berkeley Shellmound and village site on US 11 most endangered historic places list. 

Indigenous activists target Liberty Mutual Boston Headquarters to demand they stop insuring Tar Sands project. 

 Gov. Newsom executive order takes step toward climate action mandating non-gas- fueled cars in California by 2035.

Sanders to offer major speech prior to election on ‘unprecedented and dangerous” threat to democracy posed by #45 (and hose who vote for him?) 

Senate Dems unveil bill investigating #45 meddling at public health agencies that puts lives in jeopardy. 

State Supreme Court ruling like making Maine first in US history to use ranked-choice in a presidential election. 

Armed Black “freedom fighters” patrol to keep Minneapolis streets calm and nonviolent. 

Portland Police arrest far-right protestor Volunteers mobilize in aftermath of Oregon fires. 

U. Michigan goes on Abolitionist strike. 

Philadelphia housing activists claim victory in fight for community land trust. 

Boise ID restaurant workers build solidarity at work amidst pandemic. 

Tiny community of Munds Park AZ rallies to get their post office back! 

San Francisco’s 850 Bryant Jail shutters its doors as part of de-incarceration movement. No new jail to be built to replace it.

Tuesday, September 22, 2020

Seven Plagues

Aside from the abdications of the Bumbler-in Chief in the face of the COVID pandemic, already much was being imposed on Americans.  Added to this are the manifold incidents within the past six months of freak climate occurrences throughout the planet, Including floods in Ohio, catastrophic fires in Washington, Oregon and California, hurricanes in the Gulf states, collapse of the Greenland glacier twice Manhattan’s size, floods and mass starvation in Yemen, Zionist genocide in Palestine, and war, and occupation throughout the globe, and the immiseration of millions.

 

Piled on  top of these many whammies, are the White House occupant’s phobia for calling the moving men, the support of his enablers in Congress, many of them Democrats like Nancy Pelosi, and that segment of the American public willing and itching to re-elect an incumbent who has done more to destroy this country and dismantle any of our ecological protections than any foreign agency could possibly have done (that includes whipping boy nations like China and Russia) and now, the icing on the cake, the passing—and the possible final extinction of our democracy— of Ruth Bader Ginsberg.

 

Before anything else is said, we should be reminded that RBG has worked so hard throughout her life to protect us, to defend us from the depredations of forces either aiming directly to destroy our lives, or whose activities work to destroy our lives and our pursuit of happiness, she deserves her rest now. We must always hold her dear in our hearts and honor her memory. That comes with the obligation to take on and intensify her fight for social justice not only in the face of our enormous repression, but in the face of an outright war, an economic war by the elites against working people that has seen a massive transfer of wealth within the past four and a half decades, an actual theft from the working classes of 50 trillions, not millions, not billions, 50 trillions of dollars.

(Note: social media doesn’t want you to know about this. Here’s one notification following such a post: Sorry, this post has been removed by the moderators of r/politics.)

 


 


 

If there are people who once worked in California’s Kern county now living in tents in the hundreds of thousands all along the railroad right of way from Fresno to Hanford, if there are people living along highway underpasses in the millions, that is what the theft of 50 trillions of dollars looks and smells like: like all war zones, that detritus, that misery, that near-starvation, that smell of urine and feces. Let us never never overlook the connection.  It is a connection that extracts payment in the starvation of children, and in disease, misery, and death of millions.

 

Debs, Rebel In US Colonies

 

Already in 1888, Eugene Debs bent over pencil and paper, drawing calculations. “If a grandson of Cornelius Vanderdbilt started out with $2 million, from father and grandfather, if a locomotive foreman would work 4,444 years, 300 days each year, at $1.50 per day, he would be in a position to bet Mr, Vanderbilt $2.50 that all men are born equal.” Debs left school at 14 to become a scraper on the cars of the Vandalia Railroad for 50 cents a day. He graduated to fireman shoveling two tons of coal an hour, 6 days a week, 16 hours a day. Eventually, he was to found the American Railroad Union, although he had not yet embraced socialism, He still clung to the shibboleths of the two-party system. The American Railway Union voted to strike, a strike which paralyzed transportation west of Detroit for more than a month. From then on, Debs dedicated himself to the struggle between what he identified as the “producing classes and the money power.”

 

Eventually indicted for leading the strike, he was sentenced to 6 mos. in prison, from which he was given certain privileges: allowed to run his union, allowed to leave jail on his honor, and allowed to dedicate most of his time to reading, which included reading Das Kapital.

 


From then on, with Debs, an ideological shift had to take place. Although he endorsed Bryan, business-funded McKinley won election, and in 1897, for the first time, Debs declared himself a socialist. “Money constitutes no basis for civilization,” he wrote. In 1900 a Massachusetts delegate nominated him to the presidency, for which he ran in 1900, and twice afterwards, until 1912, his fourth time, when he won nearly a million votes.  By 1914 and the outbreak of WW I, he wrote, ”The working class who fight the battles, the working class who make the sacrifices, the working class who shed the blood, the working class who furnish the corpses, the working class have never yet had a voice declaring war.”

 

Standing trial during the war for his socialist beliefs, he stated, “If the Espionage Law stands, then the Constitution of the United States is dead.”  But his speech during his sentencing to ten years is best remembered. “While there is a lower class, I am in it; while there is a criminal element, I am of it; while there is a soul in prison, I am not free.” His sentence was commuted to three years, but jail killed him. He emerged little more than a shell of his former self. So America dispenses with the greatest amongst us.

 

But what is notable is that at the height of his struggle, the United States embraced the progressive reforms long advocated by the socialists: women’s suffrage, trust-busting, economic reform, maximum hour and minimum wage laws, the abolition of child labor, and the direct election of U.S. Senators, all reforms espoused by both the Democratic and Republican parties of that time.

 

I Can’t Breathe

Regrettably, no such sign of bi-partisanship has yet been applied to the planet’s greatest task at hand, one that threatens to rob our children of their future, namely the mitigation of global warming, whose latest manifestations are not only the intensity of Gulf hurricanes, Mid-West flooding, the melting glaciers and, under its horrifying pall of chocolate skies, the catastrophic fires engulfing the entire West Coast States brought on by drought, but the threat, one yet more alarming in this writer’s view, of violence brought on by the diminished ability of people to think clearly because they can’t breathe.

 


Repeated studies over many years have revealed the link between the presence of lead in gasoline and house paint with the rise of violent crime, its so called “controlled experiment,” the removal of lead in gasoline, to be the clincher.

 

As we slowly asphyxiate and our skies turn repeatedly to chocolate, can we anticipate a cultural collapse brought on by human inability to grapple thoughtfully with world-shattering problems, and a resort to mass violence and global warfare, shown to be the greatest fossil fuel release of all?

 

 Are we there already?

 

 


 

SHUT DOWN Senate and STOP #45 pick

 

SIGN UP for Indivisible’s “Weekly To Do’s”

 

DONATE to MoveOn in honor of RBG

 

BLOCK any nomination and GIVE to Rebellion PAC

 

HAVE RASHIDA’s targeted BACK & DONATE

 

DEMAND your Senators oppose #45 Supreme pick

 

 

 


 

With planet and future on line, Sunrise Movement doubles down on 2020 after RBG death.

 

As COVID spreads, global peace builders call on  governments to re-commit to peace.

 

Russia bans Wi-Fi.

 

New Simón Bolívar institute for peace and solidarity among people established Sept. 6.

 

Venezuela foils CIA terror clot., arresting agent Matthew John Heath and 3 others..

 

UK Israeli drone-manufacturing factory occupied.

 

Although  you’d never know it from the media: in London over the weekend, thousands come out peacefully to protest medical fraud and wacko BioSecurity State takeoverlula.

 

Opposing deals to set up diplomatic relations bet. Israel, Bahrain and Emirates, Palestinians declare the self-determination not for sale.

 

UN Assembly approves pandemic resolution with objections by twins, US and Israel.

 

US China tariffs ruled illegal by WTO.

 

New York judge blasts US prosecutor’s conduct in Iran sanctions case.

 

Minnesota’s prosecutor, John  Choi quits #45 law enforcement commission.

 

After more than 50,000 people tell CDC to extend no-sail order for cruise ships, environmental good news: No cruises in US until after COVID.

 

Movement for Black Lives and Working Families Party form coalition to protect election and fight for their communities, regardless of election outcome.

 

Federal court pauses anti-voter changes made by Postmaster DeJoyless.

 

Federal judge suspends #45 administration’s move to end 2020 census early.

 

Red States only: #45 to block oil drilling of Fla, GA, and S. C. coasts.

 

Politicians from 27 different countries such as Lula, Rosseff, Zapatero., Corbyn, Paul, Galloway Gravel, and Varoufakis join 189 independent international judges, lawyers, legal academics and legal associations endorse open letter to UK government calling for Assange immediate release.

 

Top Green group aims record $100 million to ditch #45 and Republicans. 

 

New report underscores  Clean Energy would create more jobs than fossil fuels, and that fracking is not a sustainable pathway to prosperity.

 

Landslide vote by NC nurses delivers biggest hospital unionization win in South in 45 years!

 

Sanders and Gillibrand unveil postal banking act to provide alternative to predatory Wall St. banks.

 

Morgan Stanley greenwash: A commitment to reach net-zero financed emissions by 2050.

 

Good riddance party held for Silicon Valley Pallantir, ICE and cop enabler, moving to Denver.

 

AOC urges Dems to prevent #45 filling RBG vacancy,

 

According to ActBlue since 8 Pm Friday until yesterday, $100 million added to war chest investing in candidates up and down ballot and organization on front lines of impending confirmation fight.

 

Reuters/Ipsos polls: 62% adults (including half Republicans) believe the SCOTUS vacancy should be filled by winner of 2020 election; 20% disagree. (I guess that rosemissing 18% are so busy with their cells phones and Facebook, they don’t know.)

 

Backlash against GOP power grab is seen in fundraising numbers: in less than three days, more than one million people sign petition demanding that RBG seat not be filled until 2021.

 

See it when I believe it department: several Repubs promise to oppose any replacement confirmation before election (but not inauguration?)

 

House passes historic legislation protecting pregnant workers from discrimination, prompting Senate to follow suit.

 

Progressive hit back after DOJ designates New York, Seattle, and Portland ‘anarchist jurisdictions.’

 

Lots of luck with that department: as #45 sows chaos, Sanders and Schumer call on Mitch to hold public hearings, help restore confidence in election integrity.

 

ACLU launches voter preparedness campaign.

 

New York Senate attacks monopoly crisis.

 

“just tax the rich,” to avoid austerity, patriotic millionaire tells N.Y. Gov. Cuomo after Mayor de Blasio cuts city spending.

 

First ever endorsement; Scientific American backs Biden.

 

Indigenous stewardship of landscape, 57% federal, and 3% California might help prevent raging climate fires.

 

Student Debt Crisis officially endorses Biden.

 

Warren and Schumer unveil plan to cancel $50,000 for fed student loan borrowers.

 

Kenyon College students organize first campus-wide undergrad union.

 

City of Oakland looking to buy more than 20 buildings for homeless and COVID housing.

 

Redwood City CA approves $1.7 RV parking program.

 

San Francisco new safe sleeping village opens in Mission to include 40 tent sites.

 

San Diego looking to convert hotels to house the homeless now berthed in Convention Center.

 

Important measure for climate voters in Berkeley and Albany appear on ballot: Berkeley’s Measure HH exempting low income households from utility tax., Albany’s Measure DD to provide funds for climate action and emergency response.





 

 

Tuesday, September 15, 2020

Start With a Bang, End With a Book

Last Wednesday the sky fell over the Western States. Skies over San Francisco’s Bay Bridge that morning turned chocolate, not milk chocolate, dark chocolate. Half a million people have been evacuated from their homes as fires spread over all the Western States, dozens of people have been killed or reported missing, the deaths of at least 6 people have been confirmed (not the over 90 number who died last year because of our local utility, PG&E’s, affinity for manslaughter); millions of acres of wild forest, the trees and the animals that make it their habitat have been immolated. This event is a repeat of the multistate conflagration as reported on Sept 15, 1902 by the San Francisco. Call. As I write we are in our 7th day  of dangerously polluted air, some readings exceeding 400 ppm (that’s particles per million) and today’s readings over the Bay Area still hover at 175 ppm. Colorado already reports  a slight overpall of whispy smoke. Next week I hope to address the further implications of this catastrophic event.  Please visit the ACTION section below if you are able to help.

 


 

Mean time the US pre-election Saturnalia continues with solicitations round the clock to keep these abject excuses for rulers in power as youth leading the Sunrise Movement, who represent a generation with little hope of a future remind us: “This is an imminent existential threat.” Right now, not next year, or next decade, or in the next 50 years. NOW. Revisiting the thought of Gene Debs, which I also hope to do next week, has been an eye opener for this writer, who marvels that already by 1875 he was beginning to see that the struggle between the elites and the working classes amounted to a war.

 


    

 

Entry Without Inspection

 

For some years now, I, along with many of my fellow and sister activists, have been demonstrating outside the San Francisco Headquarters of Immigration and Customs Enforcement Headquarters. Once I held the space alone until one reinforcement arrived a half hour later, sometimes we were 4 or 5 crying in the wilderness, Eventually our numbers swelled to nearly 300. The best demonstration was led by Buddhist priests from San Francisco’s Japantown and elsewhere. Elderly Japanese women, two of them sisters, one a diminutive 89 years old, and incarcerated in 1942 in Chrystal City concentration camp, gave testimony of how racist US policies have played out, even against its own naturalized citizens. It climaxed with a walking meditation, and because there were nearly 300 of us passing through two intersections as we walked, we were able to block part of San Francisco’s financial district.

 

I began addressing US immigration policy in 2009 when I first interviewed a Jewish woman activist working in the Patterson N.J. jails to aid the immigrants detained there, some from Iraq, Jamaica, Guiana, and other parts of the world. She had come to prominence because she became the first whistleblower ever to report a death in detention, the death of a Pakistani taxi driver who had simply disappeared without a trace inside the bowels of the bureaucracy.  That led to a 2009 New York Times article identifying as many as 106 deaths in ICE detention accompanied by a coroners report. (Note: cause of death sometimes listed as asphyxiation.) 

 


At the time I had absolutely no idea that I was taking the first step on the journey to discover my authentic origins. Although I did not come into the world an orphan, as I was raised all the truths of my past were deliberately held from me. It’s only with the publication of my debut novel, Face, where I first shed a married name to reclaim the name of my birth (which happens to be matrilineal from my great grandmother) that my journey of discovery began, a journey that  would eventually lead back to the name’s origin in 1746 and to the surprising revelation that climaxes the book.

 

Entry Without Inspection chronicles that story against a background that records the beginning and evolution of US immigration policy, recently come to the forefront of our attention since, as a result of family separation, the first child-in-detention was reported dead, a little Maya Q’eqchi girl, who before setting out on her walk of two thousand miles from her destitute village in Guatemala to reach the US border where she would meet her death, had received the gift of her first pair of shoes.

 

Remember her name: Jakelin Caal, Presente!

 


 

 

LOTS OF ESSENTIAL ACTIONS THIS WEEK

DONATE to California fire victims.


VIEW and SHARE:  #45 Depression ad, “Midas Touch.”

 

REGISTER: Webinar Turtle Island Indigenous Rights of Nature.

 

READ and SHARE: Your voting plan in 4 easy steps from the ACLU

 

READ: The 2020 election and what you can do.

 

DONATE to shore up the Post Office.

 

SIGN for a fossil-free cabinet.

 

CALL on CA leaders to combat the climate crisis that burned up 3 million acres

 

STOP #45 hiding election security from Congress

 

THIS WEEK’S ROSES AMIDST THE THORNS

 

Super victory for human race: Duane Arnold, Iowa’s only Nuclear Power Plant has shut down as Iowa now gets 42% power from wind.

 

UK government says NO to opencast coal mining in Druridge Bay.

 

Montano condemned to serve 133 years for Jesuit murders of 1989 in El Salvador..

 

Australian youth sue to stop coal mine expansion.

 

Dramatic evidence in Assange trial as Prof. Mark Feldstein testifies in no way do publishers get to be prosecuted because for press, publishing classified information is a daily occurrence,

 

Blocking #45 gutting of methane regulation, coalition of state and local governments sue EPA.

 

Targeting ExxonMobil, Connecticut joins wave of climate lawsuits suing fossil giants.

 

Farewell to Big Oil? BP admits demand ay have already peaked, predicts growth of renewables.

 

Milliions demand Congressional action on COVID relief.

 

Massachusetts joins Maine, putting ranked choice voting on the ballot.

 

Social justice demonstrations mark first week of NFL by remaining in locker room, linking arms, and taking the knee during national anthem, following Kaepernick’s earlier, courageous example.

 

Payday Strike Tracker records more than 1,000 strikes across the US since March 1.

 

Draft Report from Homeland Security names white supremacist terror as the gravest threat to US.

 

Post Master Dejoy under House investigation for alleged campaign finance violations and perjury to congress.

 

Condemning attempt at voter suppression, Colorado sues Dejoy over misleading Postal Service mailers.

 

Rochester police chief and deputy chief resign as police department is accused of literal cover up in death of Daniel Prude whose head was covered with a hood, allowing him to suffocate.

 

CNN anchor shuts down Republican’s attempt to dodge #45 lies.

 

Those “vaccines”: Oxford and AstraZeneca COVID vaccine trials put on hold after a UK participant suffers emergency spinal cord infection.

 

Voting reports indicate tiny leads favor needs of Latino voters in 4 key states: AZ, FLA, NC, and Penn.

 

Philadelphia  temporarily to block landlords from enforcing evictions.

 

The list of NBA arenas to be given over he voting sites this year now numbers 20.

 

Protesting the police murder of homeless immigrant by officer originally disciplined in San Francisco, hunger strikers demand police reform in Antioch, California.

 

Hoping to solve the digital divide, Irregulators halt billions in wireless subsidies in favor of fiber optics for kids returning to school, many of whom can’t go online.

 

Will we grab  it? New plan to avert climate catastrophe would create millions of new jobs and save US families money, freeing economy of carbon dependence in 15 years.

 

Following police shooting of now-paralyzed Jacob Blake, Madison protests celebrate 4th peaceful night.

 

Huge vindication for Oceti Sakowin water protests as U.S. District Court judge Daniel Taylor allows lawsuit challenging law enforcement use of munitions and fire hoses in freezing weather, to go forward.

 

Red Fawn Fallis finally free after 4 incarcerated years for joining NODAPL stand at Oceti Sakowin as a medic and falsely imprisoned.

 

Citizens of Toronto rally in support of Six Nations people arrested in land dispute with Govt. of Canada.

 

Yes on proposition 16 promoting equal opportunity for all endorsed by the LA Times.

 

CA Governor Newsom signs bill allowing inmate firefighters to have their records expunged.

 

Believe it when you see it: #45 to ban oil drilling off Coasts of Florida, Georgia and S.C.

 

Top green group aims record #100 million at defeating #45 and Republicans.

 

Countering misinformation flowing from ‘highest levels’ ACLU launches voter preparedness campaign.

 

New York’s state Senate attacks US monopoly crisis. 

 

Pittsburgh’s black farmers work to grow a new future.

 

 

SUNDAY FUNNIES

 

Heard in a N.Y. subway: I can't believe people are comparing Trump to Satan. Sure he's evil, but certainly not as evil as Trump.

 

Dr. Falsie never got the sense that #45 was downplaying COVID-19.

 

Vote for a fossil-free cabinet. Sounds like a  refreshing idea.

 

Sunday grimmie article title on Common Dreams: A Thank You Letter From Coronavirus to My Enablers in the United States.

 

 

 

 

 

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Sunday, September 6, 2020

Thing One and Thing Two

People are functioning like 3-toed sloths. They have too much on their minds, give them a break. And at 3 PM the heat suffocating the Bay Area clocked at 102, which does not  help.  It’s a wonder anyone cares about anything, except the good news is vast numbers of folks do. And 102 is so cold in places like India and Japan, and Nigeria people have to bring blankets. That applies to many other countries as well, even some that use toilet paper. 

 

We have a few issues that concern us. The Disunited States is gripped at the moment in the convulsions of an election circus. Two old white men, neither a candidate known for original ideas, are facing off, and even the 3-toed sloths are galvanized in submoronic attempts to bolster the political creature of their choice. And neither creature represents the millions of people who are about to lose their housing security, to be tumbled out into the streets, alongside their piled up furniture. So let’s restore a bit of sanity to the proceedings, quit the circus tent for a moment to have a gander at the Big Picture. Outside, where cooler heads prevail.

 

Thing One 

 

We have two main issues and only two to really worry about. Call them Thing One and Thing Two: global climate collapse, and the nuclear industry. The latter is a two headed-monster, head one: energy; head two: nuclear weapons. The latter range from small  “depleted uranium" tipped ordnance which is pyroclastic (that is it atomizes on explosion) to Tridents with 96 warheads, each 8 times as powerful as a Hiroshima bomb, which were just lollipops in comparison. 


But these two are joined at the neck. Nuclear power has a two-headed reciprocal relationship, one people entirely overlook, namely that nuclear weapons wouldn’t and couldn’t be there if there were no nuclear plants, and nuclear plants had to be built to create the weapon’s grade plutonium without which nuclear bombs could not be manufactured. So we have a two-headed monster whose heads feed one another (kinda like those cute little parakeet couples that regurgitate, and feed each other their own vomit).  

 

Thing Two

 

We are already in the thick of the first stages of climate collapse: Fires (California, Brazil) , floods (Ohio, Yemen) , desertification (sub-Saharan Africa and Central America), glacier and ice shelf melt (the Andes, Arctic and Antarctic), Hurricanes and Typhoons (southern US and Asia), storms and freak winds (on my street last night one mini whirlwind sheered a huge tree of one of its tree-sized limbs). Migration already displacing millions as soils in sub-Saharan Africa and Central America become too desiccated to farm.


                        Folks in Yemen try to help one another

 

Now Thing One and Thing Two, are kinda like larger sets of nuclear power; they too are joined at the neck. For example, Korea’s Busan  Kori Nuclear Power plant (NPP) lost power because of typhoon Maysak; Preceding this latest event, a whole history exists of other plants failing, even becoming endangered as rivers and oceans surge: Oyster Creek in the Disunited States which came close to being another Fukushima during  superstorm Sandy in 2012 not to mention N.Y, State’s Indian Point; Ft. Calhoun in 2011  which nearly failed when the Muddy Missouri overflowed its banks, and a truck backing up punctured the inflated boom meant to hold floodwaters back.

 

                           Bisan Units 3 & 4 hit by typhoon Maysak 

 

Our orange media bonbon may have boasted he could delay the election, send cops to polling stations, dispatch secret feds to cities to arrest peaceful protesters, and muck with the Post Office to suppress the wrong kind of vote, all the creeping signs of fascism, but as long as Thing One and Thing Two don’t invite each other to dance, planetariily speaking, we have nothing to worry about.

 

What You Can Do

 

By now, it’s pretty clear even to Greta Thunberg and other 88-year-old adolescents that governments, and the UN, and the Davos crowd, and all the Good People of Influence (Jeff Bezos, Murdoch, Bill Gates, Christine Legarde, and all the other felons we worship) are not going to lift a FFinger. (badspeak for inertia) so it’s up to all the little tiny units calling themselves US.  WE can stop eating meat, and substitute eggs, cheese,  and tofu. We can learn to grow our own food, we can stop driving and flying,. We can wash our clothes in a wash tub, and hang them out on a line, we can give up that greatest of luxuries, toilet paper, give up the gadgetry of the moment: cars and cell phones, and rise and retire and heat our homes with the light and heat of the sun.. 

Why don’t we?

 

 



Sign nuclear arms ban.

 

Save USPS and uncouple McConnell conflict of interest with PO superPAC.

 

Demand Senate restore eviction moratorium and rental assistance.

 

Demand Justice for Daniel Prude

 

 

Portuguese youth file “unprecedented’ climate lawsuit against 33 European countries.

 

World Bank suspends Doing Business Report (DBR) after ‘irregularities’ found in 2018 and 2020 reports.

 

Supreme Court rules faithless super electors can’t invalidate millions of voters they represent, but Repugnican strategists are striving to do just that.

 

Lots of luck with that department: Pennsylvania lawmakers call on Postmaster General Dejoy to return sorting machines

and

43 Green Groups demand moderators make climate crisis ‘central focus’ of 2020 presidential debates.

 

CDC directs halt to renter evictions: million at risk in next several months.

 

Harvard activists’ new fossil fuel divestment strategy: make it an inside job,

 

Over a hundred groups demand Biden ban fossil fuel execs and lobbyists from campaign and cabinet.

 

Urging ‘New Good Neighbor Policy,’ 100 groups demand Biden end US destructive imperialist approach to Latin America.

 

Groups sue administration to protect clean water.

 

Largest solar array of its kind in US sits atop a former Pittsburgh steel mill.

 

Green New Deal champion Ed m=Markey defeats Joe Kennedy III in Mass,

 

America’s greatest athletes stand up for racial justice, calling on country to change.

 

Court rules Communities United for Police Reform may intervene in NYPD misconduct database.

 

More than  100 protesters and legal observers to sue NYPD for violent arrests.

 

After 7 months, Rochester Mayor announces 7 cops responding to mental health call and responsible for Daniel Prude’s death have been suspended.

 

Hayward cop charged in shooting death of Black Man in Walmart.

 

‘Flowers for Moses Cemetery’: community fights desecration of African cemetery to build a self-storage facility.

 

New Jersey Mayor rescinds $2500 bill sent to activist for planning Black Lives Matter rally.

 

Gov. Newsom signs California eviction moratorium for renters hurt by pandemic.

 

Police decertification bill amended after discussions with Newsom administration to include an accountability feature, improving its chances..

 

Oakland group launches non-police mental health hotline.

 

Justice Department to investigate Jacob Blake shooting.

 

Court rules San Francisco landlords of single-family homes can’t triple rent to force tenants out.

 

San Francisco supervisors’ committee votes to slash cop budget by $30 million.

 

Ninth Circuit rules warrantless spying program illegal, citing Snowden disclosures.

 

Black-led resistance movements pave way for reparations.

 

Maybe best news of all: protests begun in Minneapolis, and giving way to a national uprising changing ways folks relate and address issues of community safety, strengthening bonds and shifting away from American individualism. 

 

 

 


 

Four boats capsize in #45 boat parade by not lobserving safety rules.