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Archive: Michael Munk's 2007 Regional
(Oregon & Washington) Messages:
The Big O's The ultimate price paid
by Michael Munk
Mon, Dec 31, 2007
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To Oregonian editors:
Re: "The ultimate price paid" (Dec 30, B5)
Your accounting of war deaths of those "with ties to Oregon and southwest
Washington" measures a larger community than the official Pentagon, whose
state counts include only those casualties "with homes of record" in
Oregon and Washington. Also, the Pentagon does not count dead employes of
private companies in the war zones.
These differences presumably account for the difference between your total
of 123 dead from the region and the Pentagon's 74 dead (63 from "hostile
action") from Oregon and 88 (65 from "hostile action") from all of
Washington.*
But the Pentagon does count casualties who were wounded in action--surely
also a significant sacrifice for Oregonians and their families. As of
December 22, 513 military personnel with homes of record in Oregon were
wounded in combat in Iraq (466) and Afganistan (47). You have never provided
these facts to your readers.
Finally, even the Pentagon total of 587 casualties suffered by Oregonians
only tells half the story. Almost the same number of non fatal casualties
are injuries produced by the same causes responsible for "non-hostile"
deaths--accidents, illness serious enough to evacuate and suicides. But
the Pentagon does not break down its official total of over 30,000 such
casualties by state.
* you can look it up at
http://siadapp.dmdc.osd.mil/personnel/CASUALTY/STATE_OEF_OIF.pdf
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Oregon war casualties rise to 531
by Michael Munk
Thu, Dec 27, 2007
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US military occupation forces in Iraq suffered at least 66 combat casualties
as of Dec. 27, as the official total reached at least 62,857.The total
includes 31,950 killed or wounded by what the Pentagon classifies as
"hostile" causes and 30,907 (as of Dec. 10) dead and injured from
"non-hostile" causes.*
The actual total is almost 83,000 because the Pentagon chooses not to count
as "Iraq casualties" the approximately 20,000 casualties discovered only
after they returned from Iraq -mainly brain trauma from explosions.**
US media also divert attention from the actual cost in American life and
limb by routinely reporting only the total killed (3,900 as of Dec. 27) and
rarely mentioning the 28,773 wounded in combat. To further minimize public
perception of the cost, they cover for the Pentagon by ignoring the 30,907
(as of Dec. 10)*** military victims of accidents and illness that caused
death or were serious enough to require medical evacuation, although the
3,900 reported deaths include 723 (up one last week) who died from those
same causes, including 132 suicides.
These totals include 531 Iraq combat casualties with homes of record in
Oregon as of Dec. 22. Another 58 Oregonians are combat casualties in the
Afgan occupation. These figures include deaths but not injuries
from"non-hostile" causes. Reported monthly by the Pentagon at
http://siadapp.dmdc.osd.mil/personnel/CASUALTY/STATE_OEF_OIF.pdf
* The number of wounded is updated weekly (usually Tuesdays) by the
Pentagon
at http://www.defenselink.mil/news/casualty.pdf. The dead are reported by
Iraq Coalition Casualties http://www.icasualties.org/oif/
** see USA Today, Nov. 23, 2007
*** the number of "non combat" injured is reported by Iraq Coalition
Casualties
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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NYTimes: Correction needed
by Michael Munk
Sun, Dec 23, 2007
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The article referred to is at
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/23/washington/23habeas.html?ref=us
In "A 1950 Plan: Arrest 12,000 and Suspend Due Process," (A30, Dec. 23) you
write that "the president signed" the Internal Secuirty Act of 1950 that
codified Hoover's proposed dentention of "subversives."
Harry Truman was an enthusiastic supporter of the supression of the
American Left--the consequence of which we still suffer from--during what
is now referred to as the McCarthy Era, but he did not sign the act. Its
provision for concentration camps for leftists violated the Constitution
too violently even for him, and the President vetoed it. In a reflection on
the
climate in today's Congress, they overrode his veto 248-48 and 57-10.
Michael Munk
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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One Dem cave too many
by Michael Munk
Thu, Dec 20, 2007
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"This is a blank check," complained Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Mass. "The new
money in this bill represents one cave-in too many. It is an endorsement of
George Bush's policy of endless war."
McGovern was one of 141 Dems (and one Rep) to vote against the amended
$700+ B for the Pentagon that includes $70 B more for the Iraq occupation.
But a sizeable minority of Dems--78, incuding the reliable warmonger
Baird-- joined 194 Reps to pass the bill by 272-142. Blumenauer, Wu and
DeFazio voted against (Hooley is still sick).
As McGovern observes,this is "one cave-in too many" but those 78 Dems (see
list below) demonstrate how their party enables the regime in Washington
and
has become is in effect part of it.
Altmire
Baird
Barrow
Bean
Berkley
Berman
Berry
Bishop (GA)
Boren
Boucher
Boyd (FL)
Boyda (KS)
Brown, Corrine
Carney
Chandler
Clyburn
Cooper
Costa
Cramer
Cuellar
Davis (AL)
Davis (CA)
Davis, Lincoln
Dicks
Dingell
Donnelly
Edwards
Ellsworth
Emanuel
Etheridge
Giffords
Gillibrand
Gonzalez
Gordon
Green, Gene
Herseth Sandlin
Hill
Hinojosa
Holden
Hoyer
Kanjorski
Kildee
Kind
Lampson
Larsen (WA)
Levin
Lynch
Mahoney (FL)
Marshall
Matheson
McIntyre
Melancon
Mitchell
Mollohan
Moore (KS)
Murtha
Pomeroy
Reyes
Rodriguez
Ross
Ruppersberger
Rush
Salazar
Schwartz
Scott (GA)
Sestak
Shuler
Skelton
Snyder
Space
Spratt
Tanner
Taylor
Udall (CO)
Walz (MN)
Wilson (OH)
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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History's first draft on Congressional Dems
by Michael Munk
Thu, Dec 20, 2007
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Recent media predictions that the Dems will collapse again and vote another
blank check for the regime in Washington's wars turned out to be correct. So
isn't it time to begin calling them the Dems wars? The leadership intended
the multiple choreographed votes on the eve of the holliday to avoid and
confuse the public and hide its collapse behind media inattention
to the disgraceful spectacle.
As Sen Feingold--one of only three senators(the others were Sanders and
Byrd; six Dems didn't vote) to oppose the $700 billion Pentagon
authorization bill that included almost $200 B for the wars--told his
colleagues:
"If those of us in Congress who want to end this war don't take every
opportunity to push back against this administration, we will be just as
responsible for keeping our troops in Iraq,"
There were only 45 votes* against the $700 B (mostly corporate welfare)
authorization in the House. So it's also time to begin writing the first
draft of history's take on this cowardly and phoney bunch --from Pelosi and
Reid on down to the newest electee who voted for that blank check.
Their names will forever be linked to their enabling the worst debacle of US
imperialism while claiming they were "misled" by false intelligence,
intimidated by charges they were "endangering our troops" and
by an inexplicable and false fear of a Republican fillbuster (enabled by a
few GOP wantabee Democratic Senators) or a Bush veto.
The farce concludes soon with the House voting on the Senate's extra $70 B
for Iraq with no restrictions.
* To their credit, DeFazio and Wu were among them
(Hooley didn't vote)
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Smith still defends racist Lott
by Michael Munk
Thu, Dec 20, 2007
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Gordon Smith Defends Lott's Segregationist Comments
By Sam Stein
The Huffington Post, Dec 18, 2007
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2007/12/18/gordon-smith-defends-lott_n_77296.html
Speaking on the Senate floor Tuesday morning, Sen. Gordon Smith, R-OR,
offered a passionate defense of the pro-segregationist comments made by
his colleague and friend, Sen. Trent Lott, more then three years ago.
"I was half way around the world when an event befell Trent Lott that
shook me deeply," Smith said, referencing Lott's 2002 remarks in praise of
Dixiecrat Strom Thurmond's 1948 run for the White House. "I was
celebrating my re-election and on vacation. I watched over international
news as his words were misconstrued, words which we had heard him utter
many times in his big warm-heartedness trying to make one of our
colleagues, Strom Thurmond, feel good at 100 years old. We knew what he
meant. But the wolfpack of the press circled around him, sensed blood in
the water, and the exigencies of politics caused a great injustice..."
Smith's comments were made in a session noting Lott's impending retirement
from the Senate.
In 2002, Lott lost his Senate Republican Leader post after he was quoted
praising the staunch segregationist Strom Thurmond during Thurmond's 100th
birthday party. "I want to say this about my state: when Strom Thurmond
ran for President, we voted for him," Lott boasted. "We're proud of it.
And if the rest of the country had followed our lead, we wouldn't have had
all these problems over all these years, either."
Lott apologized repeatedly for his remarks, calling them "insensitive,"
"repugnant" and "inexcusable" during an appearance on a black-oriented
cable channel.
And at the time, Smith himself seemed to think an apology was in order. As
the Oregonian declared in December 2002, "However they were intended,
Senator Lott's words were offensive and I was deeply dismayed to hear of
them. His statement goes against everything I and the people of Oregon
believe in. I look forward to working with my Republican colleagues to
arrive at a decision that is best for the U.S. Senate and the country."
Today, however, Smith seemed to insisted that Lott should never have
stepped down from his leadership position. "It was a wrong," Smith said of
Lott's 2002 resignation, "but it was a wrong that was righted."
Lott recently found himself back among the leadership ranks. His election
as minority whip in November 2006 came by a 25 to 24 vote. Sen. Smith
played a key role in the internal party election. According to the New
Republic:
"Smith rose to give a nominating speech for Lott. Smith's address was
deeply emotional: He described Lott's honorable character and talked about
the possibility of redemption. He even quoted from Mark Antony's funeral
oration in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar. The room fell silent; Lott wept.
When the doors opened, Lott had been elected minority whip by a single
vote."
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
Thanks to Gerry Sussman for this item
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Half of Senate Dems vote more money for their wars
by Michael Munk
Wed, Dec 19, 2007
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Seventy senators including about half the Dems voted Tuesday to give Bush
another $70 billion for their wars.
Note that Oregon's Smith was only Republican voting against so all west
coast senators except Feinstein (who didn't vote)were among the following 25
voting "NAY."
Bingaman (D-NM)
Boxer (D-CA)
Brown (D-OH)
Byrd (D-WV)
Cantwell (D-WA)
Cardin (D-MD)
Durbin (D-IL)
Feingold (D-WI)
Harkin (D-IA)
Kennedy (D-MA)
Kerry (D-MA)
Klobuchar (D-MN)
Kohl (D-WI)
Lautenberg (D-NJ)
Leahy (D-VT)
Menendez (D-NJ)
Murray (D-WA)
Reed (D-RI)
Reid (D-NV)
Sanders (I-VT)
Schumer (D-NY)
Smith (R-OR)
Stabenow (D-MI)
Whitehouse (D-RI)
Wyden (D-OR)
Not Voting - 5
Biden (D-DE)
Clinton (D-NY)
Dodd (D-CT)
Feinstein (D-CA)
Obama (D-IL)
visit my website wwwmichaelmunk.com
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588 Oregon war casualties not updated
by Michael Munk
Tue, Dec 18, 2007
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US military occupation forces in Iraq suffered at least 56 combat
casualties in the week ending Dec. 18, as the official total reached at
least 62,791. The total includes 31,884 killed or wounded by what the
Pentagon classifies as "hostile" causes and 30,907 (as of Dec. 10) dead and
injured from "non-hostile" causes.*
The actual total is almost 83,000 because the Pentagon choses not to count
as "Iraq casualties" the aproximetly 20,000 casualties discovered only after
they returned from Iraq--mainly brain trauma from explosions.**
US media divert attention from the actual cost in American life and limb by
routinely reporting only the total killed (3,895 as of Dec. 18) and rarely
mentioning the 28,711 wounded in combat. To further minimize public
perception of the cost, they cover for the Pentagon by ignoring the 30,185
(as of Dec. 10)*** military victims of accidents and illness that caused
death or were serious enough to require medical evacuation, although the
3,895 reported deaths include 722 (up one last week) who died from those
same causes, including 132 suicides.
These totals include 530 Iraq combat casualties with homes of record in
Oregon as of Dec. 8. Another 58 Oregonians are combat casualties in the
Afgan occupation. These figures include deaths but not injuries from
"non-hostile" causes. Reported monthly by the Pentagon at>
http://siadapp.dmdc.osd.mil/personnel/CASUALTY/STATE_OEF_OIF.pdf
* The number of wounded is updated weekly (usually Tuesdays) by the
Pentagon
at http://www.defenselink.mil/news/casualty.pdf. The dead are reported by
Iraq Coalition Casualties http://www.icasualties.org/oif/
** see USA Today, Nov. 23, 2007
*** The number of injured is reported by Iraq Coalition Casualties.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Senate votes for war 90-3
by Michael Munk
Fri, Dec 14, 2007
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Only three Senators-- Byrd (D-WV), Feingold (D-WI), and Sanders (I-VT)--
voted against $700 billion more for the Pentagon, including almost $200
billion for the occupations of Iraq and Afganistan. On Wednesday only 45
members fo the House stood up against it. Clinton, Obama and five others
(Biden, Boxer, Dodd, Innoye and McCain) didn't vote.
All west coast Senators, including Wyden, voted for it except the missing
the action Boxer.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Defazio and Wu oppose war spending; Blumenauer backs it
by Michael Munk
Fri, Dec 14, 2007
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DeFazio and Wu were among the only 45 Dems who stood against the
Pentagon's $700 Billion bloated war machine, including almost $200 billion
for the occupations of Iraq and Afganistan Dec. 12. Inexplicably,
Blumenauer (Hooley is sick and didn't vote) joined Baird, Walden and
almost all the Republicans in another Dem collapse before the phoney
threats of filibuster and veto by the regime in Washington. Constituents
should let them know their views.
Here are the few who may be more favorably looked upon in the history
books--the rest will carry the burden of shame.
Baldwin
Capuano
Clarke
Cleaver
Conyers
Davis (IL)
DeFazio
Doggett
Duncan
Ellison
Fattah
Filner
Frank (MA)
Goode
Grijalva
Gutierrez
Hinchey
Jackson (IL)
Jackson-Lee (TX)
Jones (OH)
Kucinich
Lee
Lewis (GA)
Markey
McDermott
McGovern
Meeks (NY)
Michaud
Miller, George
Moore (WI)
Olver
Pallone
Pastor
Payne
Petri
Schakowsky
Sensenbrenner
Serrano
Stark
Tierney
Towns
Velázquez
Waters
Watson
Welch (VT)
Woolsey
Wu
Wynn
Yarmuth
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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to the Oregonian editor
by Michael Munk
Tue, Dec 11, 2007
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To:
Cc:
That The Oregonian would give a property rights- fossil fuel radical
nutcake like Randal O'Toole ("Contrarian unabashedly bashes Portland" Dec
10) a
front page hede and generous jump space testifies to the rightwing bias of
your owners and editors. If you were to challenge the far-right skewing of
our nation's "legitimate" political spectrum, you'd have to balance it with
to a genuine radical socialist "contrarian view"of our urban condition.
You should have answered PSU's mainstream Ethan Seltzer when he asked why
"anyone would waste time writing about O'Toole -- or even listening to what
he has to say" And did you ask Homer Williams, one of Portland's leading
land speculators who thrives on "growth," why he thinks O'Toole is an
"idiot."
Michael Munk
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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Oregon war casualties rise to 588
by Michael Munk
Tue, Dec 11, 2007
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US military occupation forces in Iraq suffered at least 37 combat
casualties
in the week ending Dec. 11, as the official total reached at least 62,133.
The total includes 31,828 killed or wounded by what the Pentagon
classifies
as "hostile" causes and 30,305 (a figure now more than two months old)
dead
and injured from "non-hostile" causes.* The Pentagon does not count
casualties discovered after they returned from Iraq which total about
20,000-mainly brain trauma from explosions.**
US media divert attention from the actual cost in American life and limb
by
routinely reporting only the total killed (3,888 as of Dec. 11) and rarely
mentioning the 28,661 wounded in combat. To further minimize public
perception of the cost, they cover for the Pentagon by ignoring the 30,305
(as of Oct. 1)*** military victims of accidents and illness that caused
death or were serious enough to require medical evacuation, although the
3,888 reported deaths include 721 (up one last week) who died from those
same causes, including 130 suicides.
These totals include 530 Iraq combat casualties with homes of record in
Oregon as of Dec. 8. Another 58 Oregonians are combat casualties in the
Afgan occupation. These figures include deaths but not injuries from
"non-hostile" causes. Reported monthly by the Pentagon at
http://siadapp.dmdc.osd.mil/personnel/CASUALTY/STATE_OEF_OIF.pdf
* The number of wounded is updated weekly (usually Tuesdays) by the
Pentagon
at http://www.defenselink.mil/news/casualty.pdf. The dead are reported by
Iraq Coalition Casualties http://www.icasualties.org/oif/
** see USA Today, Nov. 23, 2007
*** The number of injured was updated monthly by the Pentagon at
http://siadapp.dmdc.osd.mil/personnel/CASUALTY/gwot_reason.pdf
but this site seems to have closed.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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been through this logging battle before
by Michael Munk
Tue, Dec 11, 2007
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Dec 13: Ask your Rep to act against Iran attack
by Michael Munk
Mon, Dec 10, 2007
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From MoveOn:
This week is a key moment in the fight to block a Bush war against Iran.
Can you help Thursday in Oregon and Washington?
News that Iran stopped its nuclear weapons program years ago has President
Bush on the defensive-scrambling to explain why he misled the nation and
saber-rattled against Iran. But instead of changing course, Bush is
recklessly continuing his march to war.
Now's the time to demand that Congress step in. This Thursday in over 300
places across the country-local MoveOn members are getting together to
demand that Congress make clear that President Bush has no authority to
attack Iran.
Can you join us for a delivery to your Rep in Congress this Thursday, Dec.
13, 2007, at 12:00 PM? Here are the details.
Thursday, 13 Dec 2007, 12:00 PM Petition Delivery
Park&Main Street
3 registered participant(s) (50 maximum)
620 SW Main, Suite 606
Portland, OR 97205
Description We will meet just around the corner from David Wu's Portland
office at the park across the street. Very disability-accessible, kids and
elders welcome!
Thursday, 13 Dec 2007, 12:00 PM Deliver Iran Petitions to Rep. Blumenauer
across NE Oregon St. from the state office bldg
4 registered participant(s) (500 maximum)
729 N.E. Oregon Street
Portland, OR 97232
Directions: 700 block of NE Oregon St., across from the state office bldg.
Description Please come join us as we deliver petitions to Rep. Blumenauer
to express our concern about the possibility of a misguided war with Iran.
Depending on how many of us there are, some or all of us will meet with a
member of Rep. Blumenauer's staff to ask for his help in blocking this
awful possibility.
Thursday, 13 Dec 2007, 12:00 PM Portland's "Stop Bush's Iran War"
Petition
6th & Main
0 registered participant(s) (30 maximum)
3950 SW 102nd Avenue Apartment 116
Beaverton, OR 97005
Directions: Please use Google maps to find either my residence or 6th &
Main downtown.
Description Hi everyone,
We'll be assembling at 6th & Main in downtown Portland at noon. We'll wait
15 minutes to allow everyone to assemble and then deliver the petition to
Rep. David Wu. Looking forward to seeing you all there!
Thursday, 13 Dec 2007, 12:00 PM Stop Bush's War with Iran Petition
Rep. Darlene Hooley's Office
2 registered participant(s) (20 maximum)
21570 Willamette Drive
West Linn, OR 97068
Description It is not handicap accessible
Thursday, 13 Dec 2007, 12:00 PM Wake Up To Iran Intelligence
SE corner of Mission and Commercial
0 registered participant(s) (1000 maximum)
315 Mission Street SE #101
Salem, OR 97302
Directions: Can be easily Googled. A map is available on Darlene Hooley's
page on Google.
Description We will deliver signed petitions regarding the fact that the
President cannot wage war against Iran without the consent of Congress.
Thursday, 13 Dec 2007, 12:00 PM "Stop Bush's War with Iran" Petition
Delivery
Rep. Peter DeFazio's Office, Eugene Federal Bldg.
0 registered participant(s) (100 maximum)
405 East 8th Ave. #2030
Eugene, OR 97401
Directions: New Federal Building. Call DeFazio's office at 465-6732 for
directions.
Description We will meet outside the Federal Building and then go inside
the building to deliver the petitions to Rep. DeFazio and thank him for
his steadfast opposition to the Bush Administration's Iran policy.
Handicap Accessible
Thursday, 13 Dec 2007, 4:00 PM No Free Pass on a War With Iran
Brian Baird's Olympia Office
1 registered participant(s) (50 maximum)
120 Union Ave. SE Suite 105
Olympia, WA 98501
Directions: Baird's office is across Capitol Blvd. from Subway,
kittycorner from Meconi's, and across Union from the United Churches
parking lot.
Description This is a simple action. We are going to present Brian Baird's
staff with a petition with thousands of signatures from MoveOn members
urging Brian to support HJR 64, which would bar the president from
unilaterally attacking Iran.
Thursday, 13 Dec 2007, 12:00 PM Petition Delivery
Bend Office
0 registered participant(s) (100 maximum)
131 NW Hawthorne, Ste. 201
Bend, OR 97701
Description Petition delivery to Congressman Walden.
Thursday, 13 Dec 2007, 12:00 PM Deliver petitions against war with Iran
Across from Norm Dicks Government Center, meet in front of Admiral
Theater, Pacific and 6th
0 registered participant(s) (1000 maximum)
345 6th, suite 500
Bremerton, WA 98337
Description Deliver petitions to Norm Dicks against war with Iran.
This is the best way to make our wishes known to government officials.
Please plan to use your lunch hour for this.
Thursday, 13 Dec 2007, 12:00 PM NO to War with Iran
Rep. Dave Reichert's Office in Mercer Village
5 registered participant(s) (40 maximum)
2737 78th Ave. SE, #202
Mercer Island, WA 98040
Description We'll hand deliver anti-war petitions to Congressman Dave
Reichert with the signatures of voters in WA's 8th District. The petitions
strongly oppose unilateral US military action against Iran. As America
remains mired in endless military occupations in Iraq & Afghanistan we
will not allow Bush/Cheney to instigate further neo-con horror.
Thursday, 13 Dec 2007, 12:00 PM Deliver Petitions Against Iran Action to
McDermott's Office
McDermott's Office
3 registered participant(s) (100 maximum)
1807 7th Avenue
Seattle, WA 98101
Description Join us to deliver the petitions that MoveOn members have
signed to force congressional approval before any action is taken toward
Iran.
Thursday, 13 Dec 2007, 12:00 PM Stop Bush's War with Iran
Between Wall and Hewitt
1 registered participant(s) (20 maximum)
2930 Wetmore
Everett, WA 98201
Directions: It's downtown on Wetmore, between Wall and Hewitt. Please
bring a clipboard and pens.
Description Greet people in front of Rep Rick Larsen's office with
petitions protesting Bush's desire to have war with Iran.
Thursday, 13 Dec 2007, 12:15 PM deliver petition to Rep Norm Dicks
Rep Dick's office
2 registered participant(s) (500 maximum)
332 East Fifth
Port Angeles, WA 98382
Description Let's gather to present the signature positions against war on
Iran at the office of Representative Norm Dicks.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
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On Merkley and the war
by Michael Munk
Wed, Dec 5, 2007
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Fw: Kiss of death? Schumer for Merkley
by Michael Munk
Wed, Dec 5, 2007
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It's worth noting that Chuck Schumer, together with Diane Feinstein, is
responsible for an attorney general who can't say waterboarding is torture
in order to shield his President from a war crimes tribunal. And now the
same Schumer, as bag man for the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee,
is spending its money on the Oregon primary to persuade Dems to put up Jeff
Merkley against Gordon Smith.
But many of those Dems remember Merkley's enthusiastic support for the Iraq
invasion and occupation and sense that Steve Novick might offer Oregonians a
clearer choice. Nevertheless, the local Dem establishment except for Les
AuCoin (minus Elizabeth Furse who continues her outrageous endorsement of
Smith and other Republicans) are on
board with Schumer and Merkley.
Merkley has the Chuck Schumer vote
The Oregonian, December 04, 2007
by Steve Duin
I n the grand scheme of elective politics, $93,000 is chump change, a
weekend ad blitz, a friendly bet between CEOs on the Civil War. For the
Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, Rep. Earl Blumenauer,
D-Portland, said, "$93,000 is a rounding error."
But the DSCC's decision to spend $93,000 on Jeff Merkley's fledgling U.S.
Senate campaign is further evidence that the party's chief fundraising
committee wants to pick the Democrat candidate before Oregon voters do.
What's more, it's a harbinger of things -- and all the dollars -- to come
in the battle with the Republican incumbent, Gordon Smith.
As first reported in the Bend Bulletin, the DSCC spent $93,000 in the
third quarter to hype Merkley's kickoff tour and provide some opposition
research.
That probably bought Merkley, Oregon's speaker of the House, as many votes
as the endorsements by Ted Kulongoski and Barbara Roberts. "It's a
signal," Blumenauer said. "It's not a major commitment. They care about
this race and they're watching. But there are levels of engagement."
The symbolism in that signal -- and the promotion of Merkley as the
anointed one on the DSCC Web site -- understandably irks Steve Novick, who
fared marginally better than Merkley against Smith in a November Roll Call
poll.
"It's their job to help Democrats beat Republicans, not to take sides in a
primary," Novick said Sunday. "What sense does it make for the DSCC to use
the money they've raised from Democrats all over the country not to fight
Republicans but to put their thumb on the scale of a primary between
Democrats?"
Perfect sense, I suppose, if you're betting that a traditional progressive
has a better shot than an authentic iconoclast.
Former U.S. Rep. Les AuCoin bet differently Monday. "I like and respect
Jeff Merkley," AuCoin said. "At another time, in a different election, I'd
be happy to endorse him."
But AuCoin, who lives in Ashland, has been unnerved by the "Republican
Lite" policies of the Democrat centrists such as Sen. Chuck Schumer,
D-N.Y., who recruited Merkley and won't give Novick the time of day.
"We've got a Republican Party that is taking us toward an authoritarianism
I would have never thought possible," AuCoin said. "And I don't see a
commensurate sense of outrage among Democrats to fight that battle.
"That's why I'm for Novick. Gordon Smith is a very talented, traditional
politician. I believe Steve Novick to be a shrewder, tougher, better
fighter against this galloping madness, this clear and present danger."
Blumenauer doesn't believe the DSCC is focused on Oregon to the extent
that it's promoting Mark Udall in Colorado, Mark Warner in Virginia and
Tom Allen in Maine, and defending Mary Landrieu in Louisiana.
But as the drive for control of the Senate intensifies come spring,
Blumenauer believes Oregon will be flooded with politicking that will
rival, even dwarf, the tobacco industry's jihad against Measure 50:
"I'd take the bet that we'll see more money spent here on the U.S. Senate
race than in any time in history. Gordon will have all the money he needs.
You'll see a well-funded challenger."
Yet the candidates' campaigns, Blumenauer said, "will only be 10-12
percent of the media activity. All the rest will be everybody defining you
and beating you up, and doing the same to your opponent. Once this race
gets up onto the radar screen, you'll see swift-boating like you've never
seen before. It's going to be a wild time.
"And that's what people should be outraged about."
Steve Duin: 503-221-8597; 1320 S.W. Broadway, Portland, OR 97201
steveduin@news.oregonian.com http://blog.oregonlive.com/steveduin
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Oregonians to guard those permanent bases
by Michael Munk
Tue, Dec 4, 2007
|
Oregon ,which has already suffered at least 584 combat casualties in the
wars of the regime in Washington, is now ordered to add a 3,500 member
National Gurad unit to the occupation of Iraq in the summer of 2009. Its
mission will be to guard permanent US bases and their supply routes..
The date itself --more than six years after the invasion--confirms that
the Oregonians will be guarding the "permanent" (or "enduring" ) bases
built at the cost of billions of dollars to assure control of Iraq's oil.
This was and remains the strategic objective of the Bush administration's
invasion and appears to be that "vital US interest in Iraq" that Hillary
Clinton supports but refuses to identify.
The background is all here in Tom Ebgelhardt's careful analysis. It offers
very recent evidence for my long term contention that the NYTimes, the
most authoritative US mainstream media, consistently ignores both the
fundamental US efforts to control Iraqi oil and the establishment of
permanent/enduting bases from which to control it. .
Iraq as a Pentagon Construction Site: How the Bush Administration
"Endures"
By Tom Engelhardt
TomDispatch.com
Sunday 02 December 2007
The title of the agreement, signed by President Bush and Iraqi Prime
Minister Maliki in a "video conference" last week, and carefully labeled
as a "non-binding" set of principles for further negotiations, was a
mouthful: a "Declaration of Principles for a Long-Term Relationship of
Cooperation and Friendship Between the Republic of Iraq and the United
States of America." Whew!
Words matter, of course. They seldom turn up by accident in official
documents or statements. Last week, in the first reports on this
"declaration," one of those words that matter caught my attention.
Actually, it wasn't in the declaration itself, where the key phrase was
"long-term relationship" (something in the lives of private individuals
that falls just short of a marriage), but in a "fact-sheet" issued by the
White House. Here's the relevant line: "Iraq's leaders have asked for an
enduring relationship with America, and we seek an enduring relationship
with a democratic Iraq." Of course, "enduring" there bears the same
relationship to permanency as "long-term relationship" does to marriage.
In a number of the early news reports, that word "enduring," part of
the "enduring relationship" that the Iraqi leadership supposedly "asked
for," was put into (or near) the mouths of "Iraqi leaders" or of the
Iraqi
prime minister himself. It also achieved a certain prominence in the
post-declaration "press gaggle" conducted by the man coordinating this
process out of the Oval Office, the President's so-called War Tsar, Gen.
Douglas Lute. He said of the document: "It signals a commitment of both
their government and the United States to an enduring relationship based
on mutual interests."
In trying to imagine any Iraqi leader actually requesting that
"enduring" relationship, something kept nagging at me. After all, those
mutual vows of longevity were to be taken in a well publicized civil
ceremony in a world in which, when it comes to the American presidential
embrace, don't-ask/don't-tell is usually the preferred course of action
for foreign leaders. Finally, I remembered where I had seen that word
"enduring" before in a situation that also involved a "long-term
relationship." It had been four-and-a-half years earlier and not coming
out of the mouths of Iraqi officials either.
Back in April 2003, just after Baghdad fell to American troops, Thom
Shanker and Eric Schmitt reported on the front page of the New York Times
that the Pentagon had launched its invasion the previous month with plans
for four "permanent bases" in out of the way parts of Iraq already on the
drawing board. Since then, the Pentagon has indeed sunk billions of
dollars into building those mega-bases (with a couple of extra ones
thrown
in) at or near the places mentioned by Shanker and Schmitt.
When questioned by reporters at the time about whether such "permanent
bases" were in the works, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld insisted
that the U.S. was "unlikely to seek any permanent or long-term' bases in
Iraq" - and that was that. The Times' piece essentially went down the
mainstream-media memory hole. On this subject, the official position of
the Bush administration has never changed. Just last week, for instance,
General Lute slipped up, in response to a question at his press gaggle.
The exchange went like this:
"Q: And permanent bases?
"GENERAL LUTE: Likewise. That's another dimension of continuing U.S.
support to the government of Iraq, and will certainly be a key item for
negotiation next year."
White House spokesperson Dana Perino quickly issued a denial, saying:
"We do not seek permanent bases in Iraq."
Back in 2003, Pentagon officials, already seeking to avoid that
potentially explosive "permanent" tag, plucked "enduring" out of the
military lexicon and began referring to such bases, charmingly enough, as
"enduring camps." And the word remains with us - connected to bases and
occupations anywhere. For instance, of a planned expansion of Bagram Air
Base in Afghanistan, a Col. Jonathan Ives told an AP reporter recently,
"We've grown in our commitment to Afghanistan by putting another brigade
(of troops) here, and with that we know that we're going to have an
enduring presence. So this is going to become a long-term base for us,
whether that means five years, 10 years - we don't know."
Still, whatever they were called, the bases went up on an impressive
scale, massively fortified, sometimes 15-20 square miles in area, housing
up to tens of thousands of troops and private contractors, with multiple
bus routes, traffic lights, fast-food restaurants, PXs, and other
amenities of home, and reeking of the kind of investment that practically
shouts out for, minimally, a relationship of a distinctly "enduring"
nature.
The Facts on Land - and Sea
These were part of what should be considered the facts on the ground
in
Iraq, though, between April 2003 and the present, they were rarely
reported on or debated in the mainstream in the U.S. But if you place
those mega-bases (not to speak of the more than 100 smaller ones built at
one point or another) in the context of early Bush administration plans
for the Iraqi military, things quickly begin to make more sense.
Remember, Iraq is essentially the hot seat at the center of the Middle
East. It had, in the previous two-plus decades fought an eight-year war
with neighboring Iran, invaded neighboring Kuwait, and been invaded
itself. And yet, the new Coalition Provisional Authority, run by the
President's personal envoy, L. Paul Bremer III, promptly disbanded the
Iraqi military. This is now accepted as a goof of the first order when it
came to sparking an insurgency. But, in terms of Bush administration
planning, it was no mistake at all.
At the time, the Pentagon made it quite clear that its plan for a
future Iraqi military was for a force of 40,000 lightly armed troops -
meant to do little more than patrol the country's borders. (Saddam
Hussein's army had been something like a 600,000-man force.) It was, in
other words, to be a Military Lite - and there was essentially to be no
Iraqi air force. In other words, in one of the more heavily armed and
tension-ridden regions of the planet, Iraq was to become a Middle Eastern
Costa Rica - if, that is, you didn't assume that the U.S. Armed Forces,
from those four "enduring camps" somewhere outside Iraq's major cities,
including a giant air base at Balad, north of Baghdad, and with the
back-up help of U.S. Naval forces in the Persian Gulf, were to serve as
the real Iraqi military for the foreseeable future.
Again, it's necessary to put these facts on the ground in a larger -
in
this case, pre-invasion - geopolitical context. From the first Gulf War
on, Saudi Arabia, the largest producer of energy on the planet, was being
groomed as the American military bastion in the heart of the Middle East.
But the Saudis grew uncomfortable - think here, the claims of Osama bin
Laden and Co. that U.S. troops were defiling the Kingdom and its holy
places - with the Pentagon's elaborate enduring camps on its territory.
Something had to give - and it wasn't going to be the American military
presence in the Middle East. The answer undoubtedly seemed clear enough
to
top Bush administration officials. As an anonymous American diplomat told
the Sunday Herald of Scotland back in October 2002, "A rehabilitated Iraq
is the only sound long-term strategic alternative to Saudi Arabia. It's
not just a case of swopping horses in mid-stream, the impending U.S.
regime change in Baghdad is a strategic necessity."
As those officials imagined it - and as Deputy Secretary of Defense
Paul Wolfowitz predicted - by the fall of 2003, major American military
operations in the region would have been re-organized around Iraq, even
as
American forces there would be drawn down to perhaps 30,000-40,000 troops
stationed eternally at those "enduring camps." In addition, a group of
Iraqi secular exiles, friendly to the United States, would be in power in
Baghdad, backed by the occupation and ready to open up the Iraqi economy,
especially its oil industry to Western (particularly American)
multinationals. Americans and their allies and private contractors would,
quite literally, have free run of the country, the equivalent of
nineteenth century colonial extraterritoriality (something "legally"
institutionalized in June 2004, thanks to Order 17, issued by the
Coalition Provisional Authority, just before it officially turned over
"sovereignty" to the Iraqis); and, sooner or later, a Status of Forces
Agreement or SOFA would be "negotiated" that would define the rights of
American troops garrisoned in that country.
At that point, the U.S. would have successfully repositioned itself
militarily in relation to the oil heartlands of the planet. It would also
have essentially encircled a second member of the "axis of evil," Iran
(once you included the numerous new U.S. bases that had been built and
were being expanded in occupied Afghanistan as part of the ongoing war
against the Taliban). It would be triumphant and dominant and, with its
Israeli ally, militarily beyond challenge in the region. The cowing of,
collapse of, or destruction of the Syrian and Iranian regimes would
surely
follow in short order.
Of course, much of this never came about as planned. It turned out
that, once the Sunni insurgency gained traction, the Bush administration
had little choice but to reconstitute a sizeable, if still relatively
lightly armed, Iraqi military (as a largely Shiite force) and then, more
recently, arm Sunni militias as well, possibly opening the way for future
clashes of a major nature. It had to accept a Shiite regime locked inside
the highly fortified Green Zone of the Iraqi capital that was religious,
sectarian, largely powerless, and allied to some degree with Iran. It had
to accept chaos, significant and unexpected casualties, continual urban
warfare, and an enormous strain and drain on its armed forces (as well as
a black hole of distraction from other global issues). None of this had
been predicted, or imagined, by Bush's top officials.
On the other hand, the Bush administration has demonstrated
significant
"endurance" of its own, especially when it came to the linked issues of
oil and bases. In a recent report for Harper's Magazine, "The Black Box,
Inside Iraq's Oil Machine," Luke Mitchell describes traveling the
southern
Iraqi oil field of Rumaila with a petroleum engineer working for Foster
Wheeler, a Houston engineering firm hired by the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers "to oversee much of the oilfield reconstruction," and protected
by private guards employed by the British security company Erinys. He
describes what's left of the Iraqi oil industry after decades of war,
sanctions, civil war, sabotage, and black-market theft - a run-down
industrial plant with a rusting delivery system that, at a technical
level, is now largely in the hands of the Army Corps of Engineers, the
Department of Energy, the State Department, and private contractors like
KBR, the former division of Halliburton. At the most basic level, he
reports that many of "Iraq's native oil professionals," who heroically
patched up and held together a broken system in the years after the first
Gulf War, have (along with so many other Iraqi professionals) fled the
country. He writes:
"The Wall Street Journal in 2006 called this flight a 'petroleum exodus'
and reported that about a hundred oil workers had been murdered since the
war began and that 'of the top hundred of so managers running the Iraqi
oil ministry and its branches in 2003, about two-thirds are no longer at
their jobs.' Now most of the [oil] engineers in Iraq are from Texas and
Oklahoma."
Similarly, in Baghdad, the government of Prime Minister Maliki is not
expected to handle the crucial energy problems of its country alone.
Here's a relevant (if well-buried) passage from a recent New York Times
piece on the subject: "Earlier this month, the White House dispatched
several senior aides to Baghdad to work with the Iraqis on specific
legislative areas. They include the under secretary of state for
economic,
energy and agricultural affairs, Reuben Jeffery III, who is working on
the
budget and oil law" This is what passes for "sovereignty" in present-day
Iraq.
In this context, the following line of text about agreed-upon subjects
for negotiation in last week's Bush/Maliki "declaration" caused eyebrows
to be raised (at least abroad): "Facilitating and encouraging the flow of
foreign investments to Iraq, especially American investments, to
contribute to the reconstruction and rebuilding of Iraq." As the British
Guardian put the matter: "The promise was immediately seen as a potential
bonanza for American oil companies." A BBC report commented,
"Correspondents say US investors benefiting from preferential treatment
could earn huge profits from Iraq's vast oil reserves, causing widespread
resentment among Iraqis." (American coverage regularly ignores or plays
down the oil aspect of the Bush administration's Iraq policies, even
though that country has the third largest reserves on the planet.)
Bases, Bases Everywhere
Among the most tenacious and enduring Bush administration facts on the
ground are those giant bases, still largely ignored - with honorable
exceptions - by the mainstream media. Thom Shanker and Cara Buckley of
the
New York Times, to give but one example, managed to write that paper's
major piece about the joint "declaration" without mentioning the word
"base," no less "permanent," and only Gen. Lute's slip made the
permanence
of bases a minor note in other mainstream reports. And yet it's not just
that the building of bases did go on - and on a remarkable scale - but
that it continues today.
Whatever the descriptive labels, the Pentagon, throughout this whole
period, has continued to create, base by base, the sort of "facts" that
any negotiations, no matter who engages in them, will need to take into
account. And the ramping up of the already gigantic "mega-bases" in Iraq
proceeds apace. Recent reports indicate that the Pentagon will call on
Congress to pony up another billion dollars soon enough for further
upgrades and "improvements."
We also know that frantic construction has been under way on three new
bases of varying sizes. The most obvious of these - though it's seldom
thought of this way - is the gigantic new U.S. Embassy, possibly the
largest in the world, being built on an almost Vatican-sized plot of land
inside Baghdad's Green Zone. It is meant to be a citadel, a hardened
universe of its own, in, but not of, the Iraqi capital. In recent months,
it has also turned into a construction nightmare, soaking up another $144
million in American taxpayer monies, bringing its price tag to
three-quarters of a billion dollars and still climbing. It is to house
1,000 or so "diplomats," with perhaps a few thousand extra security
guards
and hired hands of every sort.
When, in the future, you read in the papers about administration plans
to withdraw American forces to bases "outside of Iraqi urban areas," note
that there will continue to be a major base in the heart of the Iraqi
capital for who knows how long to come. As the Washington Post's Glenn
Kessler put it, the 21-building compound "is viewed by some officials as
a
key element of building a sustainable, long-term diplomatic presence in
Baghdad." Presence, yes, but diplomatic?
In the meantime, a relatively small base, "Combat Outpost Shocker,"
provocatively placed within a few kilometers of the Iranian border, has
been rushed to completion this fall on a mere $5 million construction
contract. And only in the last weeks, reports have emerged on the latest
U.S. base under construction, uniquely being built on a key oil-exporting
platform in the waters off the southern Iraqi port of Basra and meant for
the U.S. Navy and allies. Such a base gives meaning to this passage in
the
Bush/Maliki declaration: "Providing security assurances and commitments
to
the Republic of Iraq to deter foreign aggression against Iraq that
violates its sovereignty and integrity of its territories, waters, or
airspace."
As the British Telegraph described this multi-million dollar project:
"The US-led coalition is building a permanent security base on Iraq's oil
pumping platforms in the Gulf to act as the nerve centre' of efforts to
protect the country's most vital strategic asset." Chip Cummins of the
Wall Street Journal summed up the project this way in a piece headlined,
"U.S. Digs In to Guard Iraq Oil Exports - Long-Term Presence Planned at
Persian Gulf Terminals Viewed as Vulnerable": "[T]he new construction
suggests that one footprint of U.S. military power in Iraq isn't
shrinking
anytime soon: American officials are girding for an open-ended commitment
to protect the country's oil industry."
Though you'd never know it from mainstream reporting, the single
enduring fact of the Iraq War may be this constant building and upgrading
of U.S. bases. Since the Times revealed those base-building plans back in
the spring of 2003, Iraq has essentially been a vast construction site
for
the Pentagon. The American media did, in the end, come to focus on the
civilian "reconstruction" of Iraq which, from the rebuilding of
electricity-production facilities to the construction of a new police
academy has proved a catastrophic mixture of crony capitalism, graft,
corruption, theft, inefficiency, and sabotage. But there has been next to
no focus on the construction success story of the Iraq War and
occupation:
those bases.
In this way, whatever the disasters of its misbegotten war, the Bush
administration has, in a sense, itself "endured" in Iraq. Now, with only
a
year left, its officials clearly hope to write that endurance and those
"enduring camps" into the genetic code of both countries - an "enduring
relationship" meant to outlast January 2009 and to outflank any future
administration. In fact, by some official projections, the bases are
meant
to be occupied for up to 50 to 60 years without ever becoming
"permanent."
You can, of course, claim that the Iraqis "asked for" this new,
"enduring relationship," as the declaration so politely suggests. It is
certainly true that, as part of the bargain, the Bush administration is
offering to defend its "boys" to the hilt against almost any conceivable
eventuality, including the sort of internal coup that it has, these last
years, been rumored to have considered launching itself.
In an attempt to make an end-run around Congress, administration
officials continue to present what is to be negotiated as merely a
typical
SOFA-style agreement. "There are about a hundred countries around the
world with which we have [such] bilateral defense or security cooperation
agreements," Gen. Lute said reassuringly, indicating that this matter
would be handled by the executive branch without significant input from
Congress. The guarantees the Bush administration seems ready to offer the
Maliki government, however, clearly rise to treaty level and, if we had
even a faintly assertive Congress, would surely require the advice and
consent of the Senate. Iraqi officials have already made clear that such
an agreement will have to pass through their parliament in a country
where
the idea of "enduring" U.S. bases in an "enduring" relationship is bound
to be exceedingly unpopular.
Still, a formula for the future is obviously being put in place and,
after more than four years of frenzied construction, the housing for it,
so to speak, is more than ready. As the Washington Post described the
plan, "Iraqi officials said that under the proposed formula, Iraq would
get full responsibility for internal security and U.S. troops would
relocate to bases outside the cities. Iraqi officials foresee a long-term
presence of about 50,000 U.S. troops"
No matter what comes out of the mouths of Iraqi officials, though,
what's "enduring" in all this is deeply Pentagonish and has emerged from
the Bush administration's earliest dreams about reshaping the Middle East
and achieving global domination of an unprecedented sort. It's a case, as
the old Joni Mitchell song put it, of going "round and round and round in
the circle game."
Tom Engelhardt, who runs the Nation Institute's Tomdispatch.com, is
the
co-founder of the American Empire Project. His book, The End of Victory
Culture (University of Massachusetts Press), has recently been thoroughly
updated in a newly issued edition that deals with victory culture's
crash-and-burn sequel in Iraq.
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Oregon's Jackson Co in the news (but not in the Big O?)
by Michael Munk
Thu, Nov 29, 2007
|
Public Libraries for Profit
By Akito Yoshikane
In These Times
Tuesday 27 November 2007
In late October, Jackson County, Ore., re-opened the doors to 15 of its
public libraries after a lack of funds had forced them shut on April 6 - the
largest library closure in U.S. history. However, as patrons returned to the
bookshelves in the southern Oregon county, they learned that their libraries
are now under private, for-profit management.
Oregon suffered a $150 million budget shortfall - and Jackson County a
$23 million loss - in fiscal year 2007, after the federal government failed
to renew a $400 million annual subsidy designed to help rural communities
suffering from the decline in timber-logging revenue. Though Congress
eventually extended the funding by one year, Jackson County commissioners,
strapped for cash, voted to outsource library services to the Maryland-based
Library Systems & Services (LSSI), which specializes in library management.
Founded in 1981, the company initially operated federal libraries during
President Reagan's era of privatizing government services and contracts.
LSSI now privately manages more than 50 public libraries nationwide.
Companies like LSSI focus on counties that are desperate to keep their
public agencies afloat but lack sufficient funds to do so. In the case of
Jackson County, officials offered LSSI a five-year contract worth $3 million
annually, with an additional $1.3 million reserved for building maintenance.
The deal cuts in almost half what the county previously spent.
Public libraries in Dallas, Riverside, Calif., and Finney County, Kan.
have also hired LSSI staff.
But the trend of farming out public libraries to a private,
profit-oriented business has raised concerns. For one, private companies are
not subject to the same oversight as are public institutions. More
importantly, libraries have long been considered democratic bodies built on
the cornerstone of information diversity, transparency and intellectual
freedom.
"Libraries tend to reflect the communities they serve," says Loriene
Roy, president of the American Library Association (ALA). "[They] respond to
community needs and they do so within their budget, but they are not set up
to make profit. A company coming in that doesn't exist within the community
that is profit-making, you can see that there is a different attitude and
there is concern about that."
Under public management, transparency tends to be clear. As much as 80
percent of public library funding can come from local tax support, making
libraries accountable to a board of trustees with representatives from the
community.
While municipalities have for years contracted "non-library services,"
such as janitorial duties or photocopying, the outsourcing of "core" library
services - cataloging and use of automated systems and material
acquisition - has increased.
This prompted the ALA to create an Outsourcing Task Force and conduct a
study on privatization in 1999. Two years later, the ALA council adopted a
stance opposing outsourcing, stating that libraries are "not a simple
commodity" but "are an essential public good" that should be "directly
accountable to the public they serve."
LSSI makes its money from the difference between the budget and what it
spends - or does not spend. It typically downsizes staff, centralizes
accounting and human resource services, and buys books in bulk, all while
passing down administrative costs - sometimes as high as 15 percent - to
patrons as general handling fees. (The company does not disclose its
earnings.)
"They operate entirely with our tax dollars but they have no
transparency," says Buck Eichler, president of the Service Employees
International Union (SEIU) Local 503 in Jackson County, whose organization
represented the public library employees. "They're completely secretive
about their books. We no longer know where our tax dollars are going."
Although the total cost of running the libraries was cut, so, too, were
library hours. Now, most libraries in Jackson County are open at half the
normal operating times and are closed on Sundays, totaling only 24 hours a
week, down from the 40-plus hours before the April shutdown. The exceptions
are the libraries in Ashland and Talent, which will stay open for 40 hours
and 36 hours a week, respectively, after local residents recently voted in
favor of a levy on monthly utility surcharges in order to pay for the extra
hours.
While counties still own the buildings and retain control of library
policies, LSSI is in charge of hiring employees, which has caused mixed
reactions.
"I don't have any problems with it at all," says Kim Wolfe, manager of
the Medford branch. "I think it's a personal decision for each individual.
The community is thrilled to have the libraries opening again. They're
thanking us and they're glad they can come in and use our services."
SEIU's Eichler, however, has said some workers have refused to go back
to work under a private employer.
"We don't want to sacrifice living wages at the expense of workers,"
says Eichler.
LSSI brought back about 60 of the 88 people who were laid off, according
to one library staffer. But now that they are no longer union employees,
they've been subject to contractual changes in rights, benefits and
disclosure information.
Although salaries are comparable to what they were before, employees in
the Jackson County Libraries are now no longer part of Oregon's pension
system, which has been replaced with a 401(k) program. Medical benefits have
also been cut, and salary levels have been "adjusted depending on market
conditions," says Anne Billeter, a former Jackson County library manager.
"I'm not saying that LSSI has a goal of union-busting, but it is
certainly the net effect," says Eichler.
Some areas have seen a backlash. In Bedford, Texas, after a
community-wide petition campaign to oppose library outsourcing gathered
1,700 signatures in four days, city council members voted 4-3 to reject
privatization in August. "If our library dies, this community dies," said
Mark Gimenez, a local resident who attended the board meeting.
But not every public library is celebrating victories. In
Jackson-Madison County, Tenn., even after a community group lobbied against
privatization, the Tennessee Court of Appeals ruled in April that the county
board has a legal right to outsource.
Thomas Hennen Jr., director of the Waukesha County Federated Library
System in Wisconsin, says, "It is the urgent duty of public librarians to
put the 'good' back into the 'public good' of the public library movement."
Cheers, Mike
check out my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Oregon war casualties now 584
by Michael Munk
Wed, Nov 28, 2007
|
Note that official numbers ignore casualties not discovered until after
they left Iraq.(see below)
US military occupation forces in Iraq suffered at least 55 combat casualties
in the week ending Nov. 27, as the official total reached at least 62,044.*
The total includes 31,744 killed or wounded by what the Pentagon classifies
as "hostile" causes and 30,300 (a figure now almost two months old) dead and
injured from "non-hostile" causes.**
US media divert attention from the actual cost in American life and limb by
routinely reporting only the total killed (3,878 as of Nov.27) and rarely
mentioning the 28,582 wounded in combat. To further minimize public
perception of the cost, they cover for the Pentagon by ignoring the 30,300
(as of Oct. 1)** military victims of accidents and illness that caused
death or were serious enough to require medical evacuation, although the
3,878 reported deaths include 716 (up one last week) who died from those
same causes, including 130 suicides.
USA Today reported Nov 23 that at least 20,000 US troops suffered brain
trauma in Iraq but are not counted as "wounded in action." The reason they
are excluded from official Pentagon figures is that "Soldiers and Marines
whose wounds were discovered after they left Iraq are not added to the
official casualty list, says Army Col. Robert Labutta, a neurologist and
brain injury consultant for the Pentagon.
This total includes 527 Iraq combat casualties with homes of record in
Oregon as of Nov. 24. Another 57 Oregonians are combat casualties in the
Afgan occupation. These figures include deaths but not injuries from
"non-hostile" causes.Reported monthly by the Pentagon at
http://siadapp.dmdc.osd.mil/personnel/CASUALTY/STATE_OEF_OIF.pdf
** The number of wounded is updated weekly (usually Tuesdays) by the
Pentagon at http://www.defenselink.mil/news/casualty.pdf. The dead are
reported by Iraq Coalition Casualties http://www.icasualties.org/oif/
** The number of injured is updated monthly by the Pentagon at
http://siadapp.dmdc.osd.mil/personnel/CASUALTY/gwot_reason.pdf
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
Cheers, Mike
check out my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Sunday Dec 2: Two Book Fairs in Portland
by Michael Munk
Tue, Nov 27, 2007
|
The annual Radical Book Fair sponsored by Portland Wobblies takes place
11AM- 5PM at Liberty Hall, 311 N. Ivy (near Emanuel Hospital).Lots of good
stuff, including my Portland Red Guide, should be there.
The annual Oregon Historical Society's "Holiday Cheer and Authors' Party"
happens the same day from Noon to 4PM at OHS, 1200 SW Park Ave. The
authors of many books on Portland and NW history will be signing copies
including John Trombold's "Reading Portland: The City in Prose"
(OHSPress,2007) and me and my "The Portland Red Guide: Sites & Stories of
Our Radical Past" (Ooligan Press, 2007).
visit my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
10 Days That Shook Olympia
by Michael Munk
Sat, Nov 24, 2007
|
|
The courage of Berkeley Lent
by Michael Munk
Wed, Nov 14, 2007
|
To:
Cc:
Subject: The courage of Berkeley Lent
Missing from your fine appreciation of the late Judge Berkeley Lent ("
Berkeley L:ent: lawyer, legislator,judge," Nov. 14) is his courageous
record during the McCarthy era, when too many attorneys were reluctant to
represent people accused of Communist connections. But during the House
Un American Actitivities Committee hearings intended to silence Portland
radicals in 1954*, Judge Lent defended two of its targets--Sign Painters
Union president Sam Markson and laid-off railroad laborer David Gregg.
And when HUAC later tried to jail four of the local witnesses--the
"Portland Four"-- for contempt of congress, Judge Lent defended
businessman Thomas Moore.
The Oregonians who stood up to the witch hunters and those who
represented them deserve out thanks.
Michael Munk
*See pp. 156-158 of the Portland Red Guide for more details.
check out my website www.michaelmunk.com
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|
Nov. 17: Meet Norman Solomon
by Michael Munk
Mon, Nov 12, 2007
|
Saturday November 17
9pm
Haven Coffee House, SE 35th Place and Division
Sliding Scale $5-$25 (no one turned away)
The Portland Alliance and KBOO proudly present a benefit with Norman
Solomon touring
with his new book /Made Love, Got War (Close Encounters With America's
Warfare State) - /a personal account of the author's four decades of
trying to stop his country's march to one war after another.
Join friends for a reception to meet Norman, and see
clips from the movie based on his last book, War Made Easy: How
Presidents & Pundits Keep Spinning Us To Death, narrated by Sean Penn.
It opens November 16 at The Clinton Street Theater.
Jennifer Polis
Editorial Coordinator
The Portland Alliance
"Distressing Portland's Elite Since 1981"
|
Nov. 10: Labor Arts Festival at PSU
by Michael Munk
Wed, Nov 7, 2007
|
for more and any updates go to www.nwlaborarts.org
Pacific Northwest Labor Arts Festival - November 10, 2007 - Portland State
University
Music Stage - PSU's Cramer Hall - Room 053 (Basement level):
Master of Ceremony - Bruce Feif, President, American Federation of Musicians
Local 99
1:00 PM - Native American Ceremony - Robert Van Pelt, Umatilla Nation
1:55 PM - M.C. introduces, Festival Coordinator Jim Cook, who introduces the
other members of the Coordinating Committee.
2:00 PM - Jimmy Kelly (Santa Cruz) - Founder of the Western Workers Labor
Heritage Festival (1987)
2:05 PM - Paul McKenna, Labor Songwriter with Original Songs of Cesar Chavez
and Dr. Martin Luther King / 1968 Sanitation Worker Strike
2:15 PM - General Strike Band - Local Labor /Social Justice Band leading
songs over 20 years.
2:30 PM - The Joe Hillbillies - Local Professional and Amateur Musicians /
IWW members
2:50 PM - George Mann (New York City) - Labor Musician / Producer of Film -
[Music Partner Julius Margolin, 91 years young, is severely ill at home in
NYC.]
2:55 PM - Film - George Mann introduces: "A Union Man - The Life and Work
of Julius Margolin"
4:00 PM - Melinda Pittman
4:40 PM - Mic Crenshaw and Walidah Iramrisha - Hip Hop - Spoken Word Artists
5:30 PM - Citizens Band (Olympia)
6:15 PM - Judy O'Connor - NW Oregon Labor Council, Executive
Secretary-Treasurer
Others as time permits until 6:30 PM, then during transition of each act -
KBOO Radio, PNLHA, Oregon AFL-CIO, Education Without Borders, S.U.N.,
I.W.W., HERE....
6:30 PM -The AFTRA Radio Players Presents - A Stage Reading of Studs
Terkel's "American Dreams"
6:55 PM - Rebel Voices (Seattle)
7:30 PM -The AFTRA Radio Players Presents - A Stage Reading of Studs
Terkel's "American Dreams"
7:50 PM - Dick Weissman - Folk Music Legend / Musician for the Oil,
Chemical, Atomic Workers Union
8:15 PM - Anne Feeney - "The Best Labor Singer in North America" ---- Utah
Phillips
9:00 PM - Finale
**********************************************************************************************************************************
Native American Student Community Center --- SW Broadway and Jackson
History Programs from 2 - 6 PM
The Gathering Place - Room 110 ----- Writers Speaking About Working Class
Culture, History, and Solidarity
Introductions of Writers by Jim Strassmaier, Oral Historian, Retired from
the Oregon Historical Society
2:00 PM - David A. Horowitz, PSU Professor of U.S. Cultural and 20th Century
History
Author of "The People's Voice: A Populist Cultural History of Modern
America"
Presentation: "Looking for the People's Voice in Popular Music of the Great
Depression and World War II"
3:00 PM - A Panel from PSU's Ooligan Press presenting selections from the
recently published
"Dreams of the West--The Chinese in Oregon 1850-1950"
4:00 PM - Michael Munk, Retired Professor / Author of the "Portland Red
Guide--Sites and Stories of Our Radical Past"
"Labor Poetry, Music, and Visual Arts from the Portland Red Guide"
5:00 PM - Douglas Lain, Author
"Science Fiction with Working Class Themes"
5:30 PM - Don McIntosh, Associate Editor, Northwest Labor Press
"Why the corporate media cover labor so poorly."
*****************************************
2 PM - 6 PM - Union Memorabilia Tables - "Historical Union Display
Collections of Michael Richards, Don Patch, NW Oregon Labor Council, Bakers
Union, Letter Carriers' Union, and other unions."
********************************************
Multnomah Room 170 - Video Activists' Forum
2:15 PM - David King and Jim Lockhart, Local social justice / labor video
activists David King and Jim Lockhart
"Telling the Story of Our Struggle Using Video and Cable Access TV"
4:15 PM - Wes Brain, SEIU Retired, Labor Media Activists
"Rolling Our Own - Making Our Own Media and Using It!"
5:00 PM - Michael Birtchet, NALC 82
"Getting it down for Posterity / Capturing the Moment with Video
Chief Joseph Room 180 - Oral Histories of Local Activists and Unions
2:00 PM - Michael O'Rourke, Oral Historian
"Highlights of interviews of local community leaders and activists including
Nellie Fox-Edwards and Russell Jim
3:00 PM - Lois R. Stranahan Interviewed by Jim Cook, NW Oregon Labor Council
History Committee
"Live Oral History Interview including friendship with Harry Bridges and
Cesar Chavez"
4:00 PM - Edward Beechert, Writers Union, Retired Labor History Professor
"A Brief History of ILWU Local 5, The Powell's Books Workers' Union
5:00 PM - TBA
PiNeeWaus Room 150 - Films about Work and Solidarity
2:00 PM - Modern Times by Charlie Chaplin
3:30 PM - Matewan by John Sayles (Rated R for Violence)
Artists panel in Smith Memorial Student Union Room 228 or Neuberger Hall,
3rd floor.
check out my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Kulongoski fronts for for-profit utilities
by Michael Munk
Wed, Nov 7, 2007
|
Note that Gov. Kulongoski is fronting for the for-profits PGE and PP by
opposing a limit on their subsides from the customers of public utitlities.
The solution is to follow Washington's lead and enable more publicly owned
utilities in Oregon.
BPA deal could trim utility bills 7 percent
Electricity - Most Oregonians would again benefit from cheap hydropower
after a court ruling led to a 13 percent increase in May Tuesday,
November 06, 2007TED SICKINGER The Oregonian Staff
Most Oregonians would see lower electricity bills next October under a
tentative deal that reallocates the benefits of the cheap hydropower sold in
the region by the Bonneville Power Administration.
Advocates for public utilities and their counterparts at private utilities
have reached a preliminary agreement that would reinstate BPA payments to
private utilities, which were suspended last May, at about 65 percent of
their previous level, according to several parties close to the talks.
If the payments flowed to all ratepayers in equal proportions -- though
that's by no means assured -- that could mean a rate reduction of about 7
percent for customers of Portland General Electric and Pacific Power. If
that were the case, average residential customers of PGE would see their
bills drop by about $6.50 a month.
Ratepayers were hit with an increase of some 13 percent in late May after a
federal court ruled that the BPA had ignored the prescribed formulas for
calculating the payments and overpaid private utilities.
Public utilities, which dominate in Washington, originally filed suit
against the power marketing agency because they believed the "overpayments"
were driving up their rates. Their customers also could see a rate
reduction, though details remain to be worked out.
Advocates on both sides of the agreement declined to confirm specifics, as
they are still shopping the deal with various stakeholders. But Scott
Corwin, executive director of the Public Power Council, said he hoped "to
have something for the broader community to review in the next couple days."
The BPA sells low-cost electricity generated at 31 hydroelectric dams and a
nuclear plant in the Columbia River basin, primarily to consumer-owned
utilities that were given preferential rights to the power when the agency
was established in 1937.
Since 1980, however, the agency has been required to address the disparity
between its own cheap rates and those offered to residential customers by
private utilities, such as PGE, that have higher costs than the BPA. It does
that through a system of monetary payments known as the residential
exchange.
BPA's suspension of the payments in May led to an outcry from Oregon's
ratepayer advocates, congressional delegates and the governor. Public
utilities, meanwhile, were thrilled with the court outcome. Many hoped for a
substantial rate reduction and refund of past overpayments.
Since then, BPA has urged negotiators from public and private utilities to
continue a series of closed-door meetings, ostensibly to negotiate a
resumption of the payments at a new level.
Before BPA suspended the residential exchange, it was making payments to
private utilities of about $28 million a month, or about $330 million a
year. Under the deal being discussed, BPA would resume making payments next
October of between $200 million and $225 million a year. The payments would
reportedly be fixed for 20 years, with no escalation.
That provision could meet opposition from Oregon Gov. Ted Kulongoski, who
has strongly opposed the idea of capping the payments, because the cheap
power produced by the federal system is getting more valuable as the price
of power from other sources rises.
Freezing the payments, the governor said earlier this year, "would have the
effect of decreasing the relative share of the monetary benefits . . . to
Oregon ratepayers over the long term. Such an outcome would be unfair and is
unacceptable to me."
Marc Hellman, an administrator at the Oregon Public Utility Commission, said
the numbers being discussed aren't as large as the PUC had proposed and the
PUC was chagrined by the proposal to cap the payments. But he added that
there may not be an alternative.
"This is a top-down process," Hellman said. "There may not be much Oregon
can do."
Public utility customers also may balk at a deal fixing the payments at more
than $200 million -- either because they consider it too high or because the
agreement does not expressly mandate specific refunds of what they contend
were overpayments of up to $1.5 billion between 2002 and 2006.
Ultimately, it's the BPA that needs to come up with a final number in a
formal rate case that starts in December. While federal court told the
agency that it couldn't simply enter a settlement on the number, the agency
apparently has enough discretion in tweaking the financial assumptions in
its rate case to come up with whatever residential exchange benefit is
acceptable to all its customer groups.
What BPA Chief Executive Steve Wright has been looking for is guidance from
utilities on a politically palatable, and thus legally sustainable, level of
benefits.
"There has been good progress made to date," BPA spokesman Scott Simms said
Monday. "But ultimately the parties need to decide whether they can come to
agreement."
Ted Sickinger: 503-221-8505, tedsickinger@news.oregonian.com
check out my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Oregon combat casualties rise to 580
by Michael Munk
Tue, Nov 6, 2007
|
US military occupation forces in Iraq suffered at least 178 combat casulties
in the six days ending Nov. 6, as total casualties reached at least
61,596*.The total includes 31,596 killed or wounded by what the Pentagon
classifies as "hostile" causes and 30,294 (as of Oct. 1) dead and injured
from "non-hostile" causes.**
US media divert attention from the actual cost in American life and limb by
routinely reporting only the total killed (3,855 as of Nov. 6) and rarely
mentioning the 28,451 wounded in combat. To further minimize public
perception of the cost, they cover for the Pentagon by ignoring the 30,294
(as of Oct. 1)** military victims of accidents and illness serious enough
to require medical evacuation, although the 3,855 reported deaths include
710 (up one since Oct. 31)who died from those same causes, including 130
suicides.
*This total includes 523 Iraq combat casualties as of Nov.1 with homes of
record in Oregon. Another 57 Oregonians are combat casualties in the Afgan
occupation. These figures include deaths but not injuries from
"non-hostile" causes.Reported monthly by the Penatgon at
http://siadapp.dmdc.osd.mil/personnel/CASUALTY/STATE_OEF_OIF.pdf
** The number of wounded is updated weekly (usually Tuesdays) by the
Pentagon at http://www.defenselink.mil/news/casualty.pdf. The dead are
from
Iraq Coalition Casualties http://www.icasualties.org/oif/
** The number of injured is updated monthly by the Pentagon at
http://siadapp.dmdc.osd.mil/personnel/CASUALTY/gwot_reason.pdf
check out my website www.michaelmunk.com
|
Nov. 7: Ooligan Press Open House
by Michael Munk
Wed, Oct 31, 2007
|
Book Publishing Program at PSU Hosts Open House
Date: Wednesday, November 7, 2007
Place: Native American Community Center
Portland State University
710 SW Jackson Street
Portland, OR 97201
Time: Noon - 6 pm
Ooligan Press is the publisher of my Portland Red Guide
How is a book made? Who decides on the design? How can I get published?
The Event:
The public is invited to get the answers to these and other questions
about book publishing at an Open House November 7th sponsored by
Portland State University's Ooligan Press. Writers are encouraged to
bring book ideas to the "Pitch Your Book," desk open all afternoon.
There will be visual displays on all aspects of the publishing process
and opportunities to talk with teachers, authors, students, and alumni.
The event features presentations on book design, children's books,
working with editors, marketing a book, how the book publishing industry
works, and in particular what Ooligan Press looks for when acquiring
manuscripts from authors as well as community organizations. Working
with the community is important to the press, and book partners to date
have included the Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association, the
Croatian Government, PSU's Geography Department, and the Arlington Club.
Background on Ooligan Press:
It is part of the only publishing program in the country with a Master's
Degree that includes a student-run press. The 6-year old program
currently has a list of 12 books with 6 more to be published this year.
With guidance from 11 teachers who are all experienced publishing
professionals, students gain hands-on experience in running the Press,
from acquiring manuscripts and editing to book design and marketing.
Graduates have started their own publishing companies and literary
agencies; teach in the program; and work as book editors and designers.
Members of The Friends of Ooligan Press (FOOP) will be on hand and books
will be for sale. The Open House is free and open to the public.
Schedule updates will be posted on events at www.ooligan.pdx.edu.
Schedule of Open House Presentations
Noon
Book Surgery
John Henley, book buyer & Linny Stovall
Noon - 12:30
Publishing with University
& Community Partners
Terra Chapek, student
12:30 - 1:15
So You Want to Get Published?
Dennis Stovall, Coordinator of Publishing Curriculum
1:15 - 2:00
The Naked Children's Book:
From Words to Pictures to Books
Michelle McMann, author and Ooligan teacher
1:15: - 1:45
Pitch Your Book
Megan Wellman & Kylin Larsson, students
1:45 - 2:15
Reading
Geronimo Tagatac, author of The Weight of the Sun
2:00 - 2:30
Robin Cody, author of Ricochet River
Confessions of an Author
Who LIKES His Publisher
2:30 - 3:00
Book Surgery
John Henley, book buyer & Linny Stovall
3:00 - 4:00
When You Care Enough to Send the Very Worst:
Hate Mail from concept to publication
Ink & Paper Group, owned by Oolilgan alumni
4:00 - 4:30
Classroom Editing
Karen Kirtley, editor and Ooligan teacher
5:00 - 5:45
So You Want to Get Published?
Dennis Stovall, Coordinator of Publishing Curriculum
More Info at:
Contact: Linny Stovall 503-245-5280
Ooligan Press 503-725-9748
www.ooligan.pdx.edu
|
It's about oil--except in the MSM
by Michael Munk
Fri, Oct 12, 2007
|
This worthy article reflects what is received wisdom in the rest of the
world. It also suggests that when Clinton talks those "vital US
interests"--code words for what will compel any new president to stay in
Iraq-- this is what she's talking about. Buit you have to go to the London
Review of Books for it: the NYTimes even censored Greenspan's quote(see
below)
http://www.lrb.co.uk/v29/n20/holt01_.html
It's the Oil
London Review of Books
Oct. 18, 2007
Jim Holt writes for the New York Times Magazine and the New Yorker. So how
come he didn't publish this in the US?
Iraq is 'unwinnable', a 'quagmire', a 'fiasco': so goes the received
opinion. But there is good reason to think that, from the Bush-Cheney
perspective, it is none of these things. Indeed, the US may be 'stuck'
precisely where Bush et al want it to be, which is why there is no 'exit
strategy'.
Iraq has 115 billion barrels of known oil reserves. That is more than five
times the total in the United States. And, because of its long isolation, it
is the least explored of the world's oil-rich nations. A mere two thousand
wells have been drilled across the entire country; in Texas alone there are
a million. It has been estimated, by the Council on Foreign Relations, that
Iraq may have a further 220 billion barrels of undiscovered oil; another
study puts the figure at 300 billion. If these estimates are anywhere close
to the mark, US forces are now sitting on one quarter of the world's oil
resources. The value of Iraqi oil, largely light crude with low production
costs, would be of the order of $30 trillion at today's prices. For purposes
of comparison, the projected total cost of the US invasion/occupation is
around $1 trillion.
Who will get Iraq's oil? One of the Bush administration's 'benchmarks' for
the Iraqi government is the passage of a law to distribute oil revenues. The
draft law that the US has written for the Iraqi congress would cede nearly
all the oil to Western companies. The Iraq National Oil Company would retain
control of 17 of Iraq's 80 existing oilfields, leaving the rest - including
all yet to be discovered oil - under foreign corporate control for 30 years.
'The foreign companies would not have to invest their earnings in the Iraqi
economy,' the analyst Antonia Juhasz wrote in the New York Times in March,
after the draft law was leaked. 'They could even ride out Iraq's current
"instability" by signing contracts now, while the Iraqi government is at its
weakest, and then wait at least two years before even setting foot in the
country.' As negotiations over the oil law stalled in September, the
provincial government in Kurdistan simply signed a separate deal with the
Dallas-based Hunt Oil Company, headed by a close political ally of President
Bush.
How will the US maintain hegemony over Iraqi oil? By establishing permanent
military bases in Iraq. Five self-sufficient 'super-bases' are in various
stages of completion. All are well away from the urban areas where most
casualties have occurred. There has been precious little reporting on these
bases in the American press, whose dwindling corps of correspondents in Iraq
cannot move around freely because of the dangerous conditions. (It takes a
brave reporter to leave the Green Zone without a military escort.) In
February last year, the Washington Post reporter Thomas Ricks described one
such facility, the Balad Air Base, forty miles north of Baghdad. A piece of
(well-fortified) American suburbia in the middle of the Iraqi desert, Balad
has fast-food joints, a miniature golf course, a football field, a cinema
and distinct neighbourhoods - among them, 'KBR-land', named after the
Halliburton subsidiary that has done most of the construction work at the
base. Although few of the 20,000 American troops stationed there have ever
had any contact with an Iraqi, the runway at the base is one of the world's
busiest. 'We are behind only Heathrow right now,' an air force commander
told Ricks.
The Defense Department was initially coy about these bases. In 2003, Donald
Rumsfeld said: 'I have never, that I can recall, heard the subject of a
permanent base in Iraq discussed in any meeting.' But this summer the Bush
administration began to talk openly about stationing American troops in Iraq
for years, even decades, to come. Several visitors to the White House have
told the New York Times that the president himself has become fond of
referring to the 'Korea model'. When the House of Representatives voted to
bar funding for 'permanent bases' in Iraq, the new term of choice became
'enduring bases', as if three or four decades wasn't effectively an
eternity.
But will the US be able to maintain an indefinite military presence in Iraq?
It will plausibly claim a rationale to stay there for as long as civil
conflict simmers, or until every groupuscule that conveniently brands itself
as 'al-Qaida' is exterminated. The civil war may gradually lose intensity as
Shias, Sunnis and Kurds withdraw into separate enclaves, reducing the
surface area for sectarian friction, and as warlords consolidate local
authority. De facto partition will be the result. But this partition can
never become de jure. (An independent Kurdistan in the north might upset
Turkey, an independent Shia region in the east might become a satellite of
Iran, and an independent Sunni region in the west might harbour al-Qaida.)
Presiding over this Balkanised Iraq will be a weak federal government in
Baghdad, propped up and overseen by the Pentagon-scale US embassy that has
just been constructed - a green zone within the Green Zone. As for the
number of US troops permanently stationed in Iraq, the defence secretary,
Robert Gates, told Congress at the end of September that 'in his head' he
saw the long-term force as consisting of five combat brigades, a quarter of
the current number, which, with support personnel, would mean 35,000 troops
at the very minimum, probably accompanied by an equal number of mercenary
contractors. (He may have been erring on the side of modesty, since the five
super-bases can accommodate between ten and twenty thousand troops each.)
These forces will occasionally leave their bases to tamp down civil
skirmishes, at a declining cost in casualties. As a senior Bush
administration official told the New York Times in June, the long-term bases
'are all places we could fly in and out of without putting Americans on
every street corner'. But their main day-to-day function will be to protect
the oil infrastructure.
This is the 'mess' that Bush-Cheney is going to hand on to the next
administration. What if that administration is a Democratic one? Will it
dismantle the bases and withdraw US forces entirely? That seems unlikely,
considering the many beneficiaries of the continued occupation of Iraq and
the exploitation of its oil resources. The three principal Democratic
candidates - Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama and John Edwards - have already
hedged their bets, refusing to promise that, if elected, they would remove
American forces from Iraq before 2013, the end of their first term.
Among the winners: oil-services companies like Halliburton; the oil
companies themselves (the profits will be unimaginable, and even Democrats
can be bought); US voters, who will be guaranteed price stability at the gas
pump (which sometimes seems to be all they care about); Europe and Japan,
which will both benefit from Western control of such a large part of the
world's oil reserves, and whose leaders will therefore wink at the permanent
occupation; and, oddly enough, Osama bin Laden, who will never again have to
worry about US troops profaning the holy places of Mecca and Medina, since
the stability of the House of Saud will no longer be paramount among
American concerns. Among the losers is Russia, which will no longer be able
to lord its own energy resources over Europe. Another big loser is Opec, and
especially Saudi Arabia, whose power to keep oil prices high by enforcing
production quotas will be seriously compromised.
Then there is the case of Iran, which is more complicated. In the short
term, Iran has done quite well out of the Iraq war. Iraq's ruling Shia
coalition is now dominated by a faction friendly to Tehran, and the US has
willy-nilly armed and trained the most pro-Iranian elements in the Iraqi
military. As for Iran's nuclear programme, neither air strikes nor
negotiations seem likely to derail it at the moment. But the Iranian regime
is precarious. Unpopular mullahs hold onto power by financing internal
security services and buying off elites with oil money, which accounts for
70 per cent of government revenues. If the price of oil were suddenly to
drop to, say, $40 a barrel (from a current price just north of $80), the
repressive regime in Tehran would lose its steady income. And that is an
outcome the US could easily achieve by opening the Iraqi oil spigot for as
long as necessary (perhaps taking down Venezuela's oil-cocky Hugo Chávez
into the bargain).
And think of the United States vis-ŕ-vis China. As a consequence of our
trade deficit, around a trillion dollars' worth of US denominated debt
(including $400 billion in US Treasury bonds) is held by China. This gives
Beijing enormous leverage over Washington: by offloading big chunks of US
debt, China could bring the American economy to its knees. China's own
economy is, according to official figures, expanding at something like 10
per cent a year. Even if the actual figure is closer to 4 or 5 per cent, as
some believe, China's increasing heft poses a threat to US interests. (One
fact: China is acquiring new submarines five times faster than the US.) And
the main constraint on China's growth is its access to energy - which, with
the US in control of the biggest share of world oil, would largely be at
Washington's sufferance. Thus is the Chinese threat neutralised.
Many people are still perplexed by exactly what moved Bush-Cheney to invade
and occupy Iraq. In the 27 September issue of the New York Review of Books,
Thomas Powers, one of the most astute watchers of the intelligence world,
admitted to a degree of bafflement. 'What's particularly odd,' he wrote, 'is
that there seems to be no sophisticated, professional, insiders' version of
the thinking that drove events.' Alan Greenspan, in his just published
memoir, is clearer on the matter. 'I am saddened,' he writes, 'that it is
politically inconvenient to acknowledge what everyone knows: the Iraq war is
largely about oil.'
Was the strategy of invading Iraq to take control of its oil resources
actually hammered out by Cheney's 2001 energy task force? One can't know for
sure, since the deliberations of that task force, made up largely of oil and
energy company executives, have been kept secret by the administration on
the grounds of 'executive privilege'. One can't say for certain that oil
supplied the prime motive. But the hypothesis is quite powerful when it
comes to explaining what has actually happened in Iraq. The occupation may
seem horribly botched on the face of it, but the Bush administration's
cavalier attitude towards 'nation-building' has all but ensured that Iraq
will end up as an American protectorate for the next few decades - a
necessary condition for the extraction of its oil wealth. If the US had
managed to create a strong, democratic government in an Iraq effectively
secured by its own army and police force, and had then departed, what would
have stopped that government from taking control of its own oil, like every
other regime in the Middle East? On the assumption that the Bush-Cheney
strategy is oil-centred, the tactics - dissolving the army,
de-Baathification, a final 'surge' that has hastened internal migration -
could scarcely have been more effective. The costs - a few billion dollars a
month plus a few dozen American fatalities (a figure which will probably
diminish, and which is in any case comparable to the number of US
motorcyclists killed because of repealed helmet laws) - are negligible
compared to $30 trillion in oil wealth, assured American geopolitical
supremacy and cheap gas for voters. In terms of realpolitik, the invasion of
Iraq is not a fiasco; it is a resounding success.
Still, there is reason to be sceptical of the picture I have drawn: it
implies that a secret and highly ambitious plan turned out just the way its
devisers foresaw, and that almost never happens.
|
Dirty bomb set for Portland's Steel Bridge Oct 15
by Michael Munk
Wed, Oct 3, 2007
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What the Big O pooh-poohed yesterday
Questions Raised Over Terror Exercise
October 3, 2007
http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldatest/story/0,,-6967511,00.html 10:01 AM
VIA CLG News
By EILEEN SULLIVAN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The nation is preparing for its biggest terrorism exercise
ever next week when three fictional "dirty bombs" go off and cripple
transportation arteries in two major U.S. cities and Guam, according to a
document obtained by The Associated Press.
Yet even as this drill begins, details from the previous national exercise
held in 2005 have yet to be publicly released - information that's supposed
to help officials prepare for the next real attack.
House lawmakers were expected to demand answers Wednesday, including why the
"after-action" report from 2005 hasn't been made public. Congress has
required the exercise since 2000, but has done little in the way of
oversight beyond attending the actual events.
Next week will be the fourth Top Officials exercise - dubbed TOPOFF. The
program costs about $25 million a year and involves the federal government's
highest officials, such as top people from the Defense and Homeland Security
departments.
"The challenge with TOPOFF is not the exercise itself. It's to move as
quickly as possible to remedy what perceives to be the problems that are
uncovered,'' former Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge said in an
interview with AP this week.
Ridge, who launched his own security consulting company on Monday, said he's
a big fan of the TOPOFF exercises. But he said "it's not acceptable" that
the review from the 2005 exercise is still not released publicly.
The House Homeland Security emergency communications, preparedness and
response subcommittee was holding a hearing Wednesday on the terrorism
exercise program.
This year's TOPOFF will build on lessons learned from previous exercises,
according to the Homeland Security Department, which runs the program. The
agency said the Oct. 15-19 exercise would be "the largest and most
comprehensive" to date.
According to an internal department briefing of next week's exercise
obtained by AP, a dirty bomb will go off at a Cabras power plant in Guam;
another dirty bomb will explode on the Steel Bridge in Portland, Ore.,
impacting major transportation systems, and a third dirty bomb will explode
at the intersection of busy routes 101 and 202 near Phoenix.
Local hospitals and law enforcement agencies will be involved in the
"attacks" by the dirty bombs, which are conventional explosives that
include some radioactive material that would cause contamination over a
limited area but not create actual nuclear explosions.
"Lessons learned from the exercise will provide valuable insights to guide
future planning for securing the nation against terrorist attacks, disasters
and other emergencies," according to the department's Web site.
The after action report from TOPOFF 3, which deals with issues that came up
in the 2005 exercise, is supposed to identify areas for improvement. That
report is still going through internal reviews.
According to a brief summary of the 2005 exercise - marked For Official Use
Only, but obtained by AP - problems arose when officials realized the
federal government's law for providing assistance does not cover biological
incidents.
The exercise involved a mustard gas attack from an improvised explosive
device in Connecticut and the release of the pneumonic plague in New Jersey.
This caused certain federal disaster programs to be unavailable to some
residents suffering from the attack, according to the summary.
A 2005 Homeland Security inspector general report suggested the department
start tracking the lessons learned from these exercises.
And a 2006 White House report on Hurricane Katrina criticized the department
for not having a system to address and fix the problems discovered in the
TOPOFF exercises.
"The most recent Top Officials (TOPOFF) exercise in April 2005 revealed the
federal government's lack of progress in addressing a number of preparedness
deficiencies, many of which had been identified in previous exercises,"
according to the White House.
Previously, a more detailed version of lessons-learned from TOPOFF 2, held
in 2003 was not released to states for security reasons.
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US Iraq casualties rise to 60,546
by Michael Munk
Tue, Oct 2, 2007
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Unless you are already on my "military list" to receive these weekly
casualty updates, this is the last one I will send to your address. If you
want on that list, you can reply to me directly or to my new website at
www.michaelmunk.com. You can also use this opportunity to remove your
address from all my contact lists.
Cheers, Mike
US military occupation forces in Iraq suffered at least 92 combat casulties
in the week ending Oct. 1, as total casualties reached at least 60,546*.The
total includes 31,200 killed or wounded by what the Pentagon classifies as
"hostile" causes and 29,346 (not updated since August 31) dead and injured
from "non-hostile" causes.**
US media divert attention from the actual cost in American life and limb by
routinely reporting only the total killed (3,808 as of Oct 1) and rarely
mentioning the 28,093 wounded in combat. To further minimize public
perception of the cost, they cover for the Pentagon by ignoring the 28,645
(as of August 31)** military victims of as accidents and illness serious
enough to require medical evacuation, although the 3,808 reported deaths
include 701 (up two last week) who died from those same causes, including
122 suicides (as of Aug 31).
Although not defined as "casualties" since they have been discharged from
active duty, as of the end of 2006 more than 180,000 U.S. military
veterans of Iraq and Afganistan had filed disability claims.
The LA Times recently estimated that the number of employes of the US
military contractors (182,000--not including all mercenaries) exceeds the
number of the US troops in Iraq (160,000). It broke down that number as
118,00 Iraqis and 64,000 foreigners, including 21,000 Americans. Reuters
reports that these contractors had suffered 11,502 contractor casualties
(933 dead as of June 30; 10,569 wounded as of March 31).About 200 of the
dead were Americans.
*This total includes 515 Iraq combat casualties as of August 31 with homes
of record in Oregon. Another 51 Oregonians are combat casualties in the
Afgan occupation. Reported monthly by the Penatgon at
http://siadapp.dmdc.osd.mil/personnel/CASUALTY/STATE_OEF_OIF.pdf
** The number of wounded is updated weekly by the Pentagon at
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/casualty.pdf. The dead are from Iraq
Coalition Casualties http://www.icasualties.org/oif/
** The number of injured is updated monthly by the Pentagon at
http://siadapp.dmdc.osd.mil/personnel/CASUALTY/gwot_reason.pdf
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Down to 15 of 535
by Michael Munk
Sat, Sep 29, 2007
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Only Feingold in the senate, and 14 in the House stood up against throwing
away more taxpayer dollars into the occupation. The 14 included Oregon's
Earl Blumenauer,one Republican,:Ron Paul of Texas, and 12other Democrats:
Missouri's William Clay, Minnesota's Keith Ellison, California's Bob Filner,
Massachusetts' Barney Frank, New York's Maurice Hinchey, Ohio's Dennis
Kucinich, Washington's Jim McDermott, New Jersey's Donald Payne,
California's Barbara Lee, Maxine Waters, Diane Watson and Lynn Woolsey.
Where the hell is the rest of the 72 member "Get Out of Iraq" caucus?
By the way, I have a new website at www.michaelmunk.com
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CP leader in Salem Oct. 6
by Michael Munk
Fri, Sep 28, 2007
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The Frederick Douglass School/Willamette Reds will sponsor a talk by
community solidarity activist Juanita Rodriguez and Communist Party
leader Scott Marshall on Saturday, October 6 in Salem, Oregon. The event
will be held at Salem's First Congregational Church, 700 Marion St. NE.
We will start at 2:00 pm on Saturday, Oct. 6. The title of the event
will be: Who's World Is It? Global and Local Communities In Action.
Please attend and please tell others.
Scott Marshall is a vice-chair of the Communist Party, USA and chair of
its national labor commission. Scott grew up in Alabama and Virginia
where he first became active in the movements for civil rights and
against the Vietnam War in high school in the mid 1960's.
Scott has been a life long trade unionist and was active in rank and
file reform movements in the Teamsters, Machinists and Steelworkers
unions in the 1970's and '80's. He was co-chair of the Save Our Jobs
committee of USWA local 1834 at Pullman Standard in Chicago and active
in nationwide organizing against plant closings and layoffs.
Scott has worked for the Communist Party since 1987 when he became the
district organizer for the party in Illinois. He was elected chair of
the labor commission in 1998. His main focus is on labor and
anti-globalization issues. Scott is also active in the Steelworkers
Organization of Active Retirees (SOAR). He is the author of Working
Class Strategy in the Era of Capitalist Globalization, a basic text used
by Willamette Reds in creating a series of local events.
Juanita Rodriguez lives in Corvallis, Oregon and calls herself a
"Freelance Community Catalyst". While she has traveled to South America,
the Caribbean, and Latin America to learn first hand about the effects
of Plan Colombia, the Blockade against Cuba, and NAFTA, her advocacy at
home includes everything from representing women escaping domestic
violence, to working through the deportation process with a young,
undocumented Latino, to getting financial assistance for a Mexican
mother to have a necessary operation, and to helping marginalized youth
apply for scholarships to study medicine in Cuba. Since 2001 she has
been a volunteer representative of a Zapotec women's weaving collective
from Oaxaca, Mexico, working together with them to develop fair pricing
and a dignified and mutually supportive group that markets their
handcrafted goods directly to the consumer. She is a single mother of
four, a gardener and an artist.
The sponsoring group hopes to have music at the event. There will be
snacks and beverages and time to dialogue with the speakers.
More information on Willamette Reds may be found at
http://willamettereds.blogspot.com. Please call Bob Rossi at
503-838-6676 for additional information.
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Only 38 of 535 stand up against Iran war
by Michael Munk
Thu, Sep 27, 2007
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Only 19 Senate Dems --including Wyden and Cantwell-- (plus 2 Reps and one
IND) voted
against giving defacto authority to the regime in Washington for an attack
on Iran.
Blumenauer was among the 16 to oppose a similar anti_Iran bill in the
House, while DeFazio, Hooley, Wu and Baird joined Walden and 392 others to
support it.
Only these Senators won't have to hang their heads in shame:
Biden (D-DE)
Bingaman (D-NM)
Boxer (D-CA)
Brown (D-OH)
Byrd (D-WV)
Cantwell (D-WA)
Dodd (D-CT)
Feingold (D-WI)
Hagel (R-NE)
Harkin (D-IA)
Inouye (D-HI)
Kennedy (D-MA)
Kerry (D-MA)
Klobuchar (D-MN)
Leahy (D-VT)
Lincoln (D-AR)
Lugar (R-IN)
McCaskill (D-MO)
Sanders (I-VT)
Tester (D-MT)
Webb (D-VA)
Wyden (D-OR)
Not Voting - 2 (not sure whether these two "paired')
McCain (R-AZ) Obama (D-IL)
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Portland area mobilizes Saturday
by Michael Munk
Thu, Sep 27, 2007
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Burma-Shave for Peace!
At 7:45AM, this Friday morning, September 27,
PPRC volunteers will be out on at
SE Hawthorne Boulevard & SE Grand Avenue with
banner signs to promote the big
Peace Rally and March on Saturday. If you'd
like to help hold up one of
these GREAT banners, to get the word out to
Portland's morning commuters,
please call Mikel at 503-331-0236.
The big mobilization is set for 11:00AM,
Saturday, September 29, gathering at
the North Park Blocks at NW Park and Flanders.
And there's the feeder march
that will gather at 9:30AM at the military
recruiting station at NE 14th &
Broadway.
Help us get the word out! The commercial media
have ignored all the press
releases ... it's time to BECOME the media!
You can also help by coming to the Friday rally
and march, this Friday and
every Friday, at 5:00PM at Pioneer Courthouse
Square. This Friday we'll be
hitting the downtown commute arteries with the
banners for Saturday's big
mobilization.
Peace,
PPRC General Meeting
503-344-5078
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Only Blumenauer stood up for MoveOn
by Michael Munk
Thu, Sep 27, 2007
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It's really getting worse! DeFazio, Hooley, Wu and Baird were among the 341
idiots who voted for the regime in Washington's anti-MoveOn abomination!
Only Blumenauer stood with the 79 for sanity.
In the Senate, Wyden and Murray were amog the 25 who voted against, Cantwell
didn't votewas absent.
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Bollinger's bizarre behavior
by Michael Munk
Wed, Sep 26, 2007
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Presdient Lee Bollinger
Columbia University
bollinger@columbia.edu
As a retired academic in your former state of Oregon, I was shocked by your
introduction of the Iranian president. You presented yourself as a screaming
head on Fox news and embarrased a great University.
I suspect that if you were free to follow your personal instincts, you would
behaved with more dignity. But, especially after the economic threats made
against the University by leaders of the New York legislature, the kindest
explanation of your bizarre behavior was your fear of the Likudniks among
your contributors.
In sorrow,
Michael Munk
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Rosenberg's son in Ashland,Eugene & Seattle
by Michael Munk
Wed, Sep 26, 2007
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Robert Meeropol and Lauren Regan speak on
McCarthy Era Lessons for Bush's America:
From Communists to Environmentalists.
September 27, 2007, 7-9 pm
First Unitarian Church, 1011 SW 12th Ave., Portland, OR
September 28, 2007, 7-9 pm
Rogue Valley Unitarian Fellowship, 87 4th St., Ashland, OR
September 29, 2007, 7-9 pm
The Wesley Center, 1236 Kincaid, Eugene, OR
September 30, 2007, 7-9 pm
Wyckoff Auditorium, Bannan Building, 901 12th Ave, Seattle University,
Seattle, WA
The government has finally given up on communists. Now they're after the
environmentalists. The Red Scare of the 50s is turning into the Green
Scare of today. Don't let Bush, Inc. snatch away your rights, make you
point a finger, lock you up, or label you a terrorist.
Featuring:
Attorney Robert Meeropol, son of Ethel and Julius Rosenberg who were
wrongfully executed in 1953 for conspiring to steal the secret of the
atomic bomb.
Attorney Robert Meeropol was six years old when his parents, Ethel and
Julius Rosenberg, were sent to the electric chair in 1953, executed by
the U.S. government after one of the most hotly debated trials in
American history. In the wake of 9/11 and the war with Iraq, the
Homeland Security Act and the USA PATRIOT Act have given the government
unprecedented new powers to investigate citizens' lives in the name of
preventing terrorism. In this address, Robert Meeropol--who is also an
activist, author, and Executive Director of the Rosenberg Fund for
Children--will discuss his parents' case and the many dangerous
parallels between 1953 and the Bush administration's post-9/11 America
This public forum is a benefit for the Rosenberg Fund for Children,
www.rfc.org, a public foundation that provides for the educational and
emotional needs of the children of targeted activists in the U.S., and
for targeted activist youth. A request for donations will be made at
each event.
Attorney Lauren Regan
Executive Director of the Civil Liberties Defense Center, a non-profit
whose goal is to make the progressive social change movement stronger,
more informed, and more effective by educating people about their
rights, defending activists from corporate and government attacks, and
exposing and confronting the persistent erosion of civil liberties and
the Bill of Rights.
For more information on these events, contact the Civil Liberties Defense
Center in Eugene at info@cldc.org or 541-687-9180. Interviews with the
press may be arranged at by contacting 541-687-9180.
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