Monday, January 25, 2010

WORLD SOCIAL FORUM: Talk vs Action - the Tug-of-War Continues By Mario Osava

http://bit.ly/5MQZcc

WORLD SOCIAL FORUM: Talk vs Action - the Tug-of-War Continues
By Mario Osava

PORTO ALEGRE, Brazil, Jan 25, 2010 (IPS) - A call issued by social movements to evolve towards a more active role in generating concrete action marked the opening session of a seminar assessing the 10 years of the World Social Forum (WSF) Monday in this southern Brazilian city, the birthplace of the annual global civil society gathering.

"It would be a step forward if the Forum were to adopt a declaration containing positions on which a consensus has been reached, such as anti-imperialism, the 'financialisation' of wealth, and the condemnation of the failure of the Copenhagen conference on climate change," said João Antonio Felicio, president of the Central Única dos Trabalhadores (CUT), Brazil's main trade union federation.

A consensus agreement would help drive "more compelling mass action," which is necessary to strengthen social movements and avoid "a political setback in Latin America," along the lines of what happened in Chile, where the right won the presidential elections on Jan. 17 for the first time in two decades, the trade unionist asserted.

Felicio clarified that he was not talking about approving "a common minimum programme of the kind traditionally hashed out by leftwing movements, but about establishing a consensus-based platform that would serve to intensify actions."

"Mass movements are essential in order to change the world; the game can only be won if you step out in the field to play," said João Pedro Stédile, one of the national coordinators of Brazil's Landless Workers Movement (MST) and a head of the global peasant movement Via Campesina in Brazil.

In Stédile's view, "mass movements are the only instrument society has to modify reality, by pressuring governments and other powers-that-be, such as transnational corporations."

But the WSF, which initially emerged as a rejoinder to the World Economic Forum (WEF), an annual meeting of the world's political and financial movers and shakers in Davos, Switzerland, has already begun to foment mass actions, argued Oded Grajew, a former businessman who organised the first WSF in 2001.

It has done so by bringing together the broadest range of organisations and movements from all around the world, and facilitating the creation of coalitions and common agendas and joint actions, he maintained.

"The WSF was conceived of as a facilitator, where activists network and join together to strengthen or broaden their activities," said Grajew. "Those who want to propose actions can go ahead and do so, and drum up support and participants; no one is stopping them. But nobody is forced to do anything either."

"We should remain a forum, where everyone has a chance to debate and discuss things; resolutions, no matter how consensual they appear to be, end up excluding someone," Chico Whitaker, another WSF founder and a representative of Brazil's Catholic Commission for Justice and Peace, told IPS.

Cándido Grzybowski, director of the Brazilian Institute of Social and Economic Analysis (IBASE), who is another of the WSF's leading organisers, remarked to IPS that he does not believe it would be possible to approve a consensus document, although he said "it is legitimate to try."

At the 2005 WSF, the last edition that was held in Porto Alegre - at which time a decision was reached to hold the global gathering every two years instead of annually - a group of intellectuals closely involved in the process issued the "Porto Alegre Consensus", a "manifesto" that drew harsh criticism and found little echo.

"The WSF has unavoidable limits because of its nature as a gathering space and a generator of ideas," said Grzybowski. "It is an opportunity to reflect and exchange ideas, and concrete action to actually create 'another world' is a task that goes beyond the forum," he said.

"The crisis of civilisation called our own previous ideas and practices into question, when there was talk of social justice and it was said that increasing production would solve other problems. Today we have to link social justice to environmental justice, which was not really present in the debate in 2001," he said.

"There are challenges like deepening the interdependence between global and local actions…and 'decolonising' our minds of categories that were not born of our struggles," he said, stressing the hopes he has for the young people who have "taken over" the WSF.

At last year's global edition in the northern Brazilian Amazon jungle city of Belem, 34 percent of the participants were under the age of 24, he pointed out.

There is a clash between new and old "cultures" within the WSF, whose first edition, in 2001, "frightened many because of its overwhelming diversity," said Lilian Celiberti, a Uruguayan feminist with the Articulación Feminista Marcosur, which groups women's organisations from several South American countries.

"A 'hierarchisation' of struggles puts certain issues, like anti-imperialism, in the forefront, but there are also other questions, like anti-sexism, anti-racism and anti-patriarchal systems," she said.

"Forging a common agenda would mean reducing diversity. But the WSF is a chance to get together and rebuild hope - an end in and of itself," she stated.

This year's WSF will not feature a single global centralised gathering. Instead, 27 different national, thematic and local activities will be held throughout the world year-round. The calendar of events kicked off with the 10 Years World Social Forum Seminar and other activities in Greater Porto Alegre - the city and several nearby towns.

This week's events in Brazil will also include a Solidarity Economy World Fair, the 10th Intercontinental Youth Camp, a cultural meeting and a thematic panel on World Forum Theology and Liberation. (END)

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Unidos Venceremos! United We Will Win!

~Peta~de~Aztlan~ Sacramento,California, Amerika

Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com   

http://twitter.com/Peta_de_Aztlan  

http://www.facebook.com/Peta51  

http://help-matrix.ning.com/

 

"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible, make violent revolution inevitable."

~ President John F.Kennedy ~ Assassinated November 22, 1963

c/s



Sunday, January 24, 2010

Some Amazing Numbers Re: Growth of Net & Social Media by Adam Thierer + Comment

http://bit.ly/5s69hk

Some Amazing Numbers Re: Growth of Net & Social Media by Adam Thierer by Adam Thierer on January 24, 2010 · Comments


Most of you have probably already seen this but Pingdom recently

aggregated and posted some amazing stats about "Internet 2009 In Numbers."  Worth checking them all out, but here are some highlights:

  • 1.73 billion Internet users worldwide as of Sept 2009; 18% increase in Internet users since previous year.
  • 81.8 million .COM domain names at the end of 2009; 12.3 million .NET & 7.8 million .ORG
  • 234 million websites as of Dec 2009; 47 million were added in 2009.
  • 90 trillion emails sent on the Internet in 2009; 1.4 billion email users worldwide.
  • 26 million blogs on the Internet.
  • 27.3 million tweets on Twitter per day as of Nov 2009.
  • 350 million people on Facebook; 50% of them log in every day; + 500,000 active Facebook applications.
  • 4 billion photos hosted by Flickr as of Oct 2009; 2.5 billion photos uploaded each month to Facebook.
  • 1 billion videos served by YouTube each day; 12.2 billion videos viewed per month; 924 million videos viewed per month on Hulu in the US as of Nov 2009; + the average Internet user in the US watches 182 online videos each month.

And yet some people claim that digital generativity and online innovation are dead!   Things have never been better.

Comments ShareThis Posted in: Miscellaneous

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Comment: Certain unnamed forces do not want you on the Internet. Just use your common sense, esp. when your children are involved. I have been encouraging many of your in various groups I belong to about at least getting a Twitter Account and if you are bold enough getting a Facebook Account. We are in the New Millennium people! Wake up!

Many times it could be our teenage sons and daughters who are more hip to what is going on via the Power of the Internet than us as parents. Don't get left behind. Be willing to change.

Unidos Venceremos! United We Will Win! ~Peta~de~Aztlan~

Sacramento,California, Amerika

Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com   

http://twitter.com/Peta_de_Aztlan  

http://www.facebook.com/Peta51  

http://help-matrix.ning.com/

 

"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible, make violent revolution inevitable."

~ President John F.Kennedy ~ Assassinated November 22, 1963

c/s



Saturday, January 23, 2010

FYI: Seven Reasons to Push for Immigration Reform this Year

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Unidos Venceremos! United We Will Win!

~Peta~de~Aztlan~

Sacramento,California, Amerika

Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com   

http://twitter.com/Peta_de_Aztlan  

http://www.facebook.com/Peta51  

http://help-matrix.ning.com/

 

"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible, make violent revolution inevitable."

~ President John F.Kennedy ~ Assassinated November 22, 1963

c/s



----- Forwarded Message ----
From: Center for American Progress <progress@americanprogress.org>
To: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com
Sent: Fri, January 22, 2010 10:01:24 AM
Subject: Seven Reasons to Push for Immigration Reform this Year

Center for American Progress Email

Center for American Progress

January 22, 2010 | View Online


Seven Reasons to Push for Immigration Reform this Year

By Gebe Martinez, Marshall Fitz

A protestor at an immigration rally.Immigration reform has been, is now, and always will be a bipartisan issue. It engenders support from both sides of the political aisle because serious lawmakers know that our broken system continues to get in the way of other pressing priorities, that a practical solution is at hand, and that it is in both parties' interest to get this issue off the table.

Politicians on both sides of the aisle who are concerned about securing the borders and growing our economy will continue to push for immigration reform this year. Here are seven reasons why:

  • The American public wants its leaders to quit playing politics and to step up and solve tough problems.
  • Support for comprehensive immigration reform is broad, deep, and bipartisan.
  • Fixing our immigration system will promote economic growth and stability.

Find out more here.

 

By the Numbers

How comprehensive immigration reform helps workers and the economy.
Read more.

Event Video

Watch the video from the Center for American Progress Action Fund's recent event, "Next Up, Comprehensive Immigration Reform: How We Will Make It Happen."
Watch the video.

Eavesdrop: Comprehensive Immigration Reform

Catch the highlights of CAPAF's progressive bloggers event on comprehensive immigration reform, as they discuss social, political, and economic reasons for legalizing America's undocumented workers.
Listen here. (mp3).

Support the Center for American Progress

This email was sent to peter.lopez51@yahoo.com.



Monday, January 18, 2010

Haiti Earthquake: More US Troops, UN Peacekeepers Expected + Comment

http://bit.ly/8i4qiV

The Huffington Post January 18, 2010
Haiti Earthquake: More US Troops, UN Peacekeepers Expected
ALFRED de MONTESQUIOU and MIKE MELIA | 01/18/10 10:36 PM | AP

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — The staggering scope of Haiti's nightmare came into sharper focus Monday as authorities estimated 200,000 dead and 1.5 million homeless in the quake-ravaged heart of this tragic land, where injured survivors still died in the streets, doctors pleaded for help and looters slashed at one another in the rubble.

The world pledged more money, food, medicine and police. Some 2,000 U.S. Marines steamed into nearby waters. And ex-president Bill Clinton, special U.N. envoy, flew in to offer support. Six days after the earthquake struck, search teams still pulled buried survivors from the ruins.

But hour by hour the unmet needs of hundreds of thousands grew.

Overwhelmed surgeons appealed for anesthetics, scalpels, saws for cutting off crushed limbs. Uncounted thousands of survivors sought to cram onto buses headed out of town. In downtown streets, others begged for basics.

"Have we been abandoned? Where is the food?" shouted one man, Jean Michel Jeantet.

The U.N. World Food Program (WFP) said it expected to boost operations from feeding 67,000 people on Sunday to 97,000 on Monday. But it needs 100 million prepared meals over the next 30 days, and it appealed for more government donations.

"I know that aid cannot come soon enough," U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said in New York after returning from Haiti.

"Unplug the bottlenecks," he urged.

In one step to reassure frustrated aid groups, the U.S. military agreed to give aid deliveries priority over military flights at the now-U.S.-run airport here, the WFP announced in Rome. The Americans' handling of civilian flights had angered some humanitarian officials.

Looting and violence flared again Monday, as hundreds clambered over the broken walls of shops to grab anything they could – including toothpaste, now valuable for lining nostrils against the stench of Port-au-Prince's dead. Police fired into the air as young men fought each other over rum and beer with broken bottles and machetes.

Hard-pressed medical teams sometimes had to take time away from quake victims to deal with gunshot wounds, said Loris de Filippi of Doctors Without Borders. In the Montrissant neighborhood, Red Cross doctors working in shipping containers and saying they "cannot cope" lost 50 patients over two days, said international Red Cross spokesman Simon Schorno.

Amid the debris and the smoke of bodies being burned, dozens of international rescue teams dug on in search of buried survivors. And on Monday afternoon, some 140 hours after the quake, they pulled two Haitian women alive from a collapsed university building. At a destroyed downtown bank, another team believed it was just hours from saving a trapped employee.

The latest casualty report, from the European Commission citing Haitian government figures, doubled previous estimates of the dead from the magnitude-7.0 quake, to approximately 200,000, with some 70,000 bodies recovered and trucked off to mass graves.

If accurate, that would make Haiti's catastrophe about as deadly as the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, which killed an estimated 230,000 people in a dozen countries.

European Commission analysts estimate 250,000 were injured and 1.5 million were made homeless. Masses are living under plastic sheets in makeshift camps and in dust-covered automobiles, or had taken to the road seeking out relatives in the safer countryside.

On the capital's southern edge, thousands of people struggled to get onto brightly painted "tap-tap" buses heading out of town.

"We've got no more food and no more house, so leaving is the only thing to do," said Livena Livel, 22, fleeing with her 1-year-old daughter and six other relatives to her father's house in Les Cayes, near Haiti's western tip.

"At least over there we can farm for food," she said.

She said she was spending her last cash on the "insanely expensive" bus fare, jacked up to the equivalent of $7.70, three days' pay for most Haitians, because gasoline prices had doubled.

The European Union and its individual governments boosted their aid pledges for Haiti to euro422 million ($606 million) in emergency and long-term aid, on top of at least $100 million pledged by the U.S.

A dirt-poor nation long at the bottom of the heap, Haiti will need years or decades of expanded aid to rebuild. After meeting with Haitian President Rene Preval and other international representatives in the neighboring Dominican Republic, Dominican President Leonel Fernandez said Haiti would need $10 billion over five years.

For the moment, however, front-line relief workers want simply to get food and water to the hungry and thirsty.

The U.N. humanitarian chief, John Holmes, said in New York not all 15 planned U.N. food distribution points were up and running yet. "That's a question of people, trucks, fuel, but the aid is scaling up very rapidly," he said.

The priorities are clearing roads, ensuring security at U.N. distribution points, getting this city's seaport working again and bringing in more trucks and helicopters, WFP Executive Director Josette Sheeran said in Rome.

Evidence of the shortfall could be found at a makeshift camp of 50,000 displaced people spread over a hillside golf course overlooking the city. Leaders there said a U.S. 82nd Airborne Division unit had been able to deliver food to only half the people.

The 1,700 U.S. troops on the ground in Port-au-Prince were to be reinforced by 2,000 Marines, who Marine Corps Capt. Clark Carpenter, a spokesman, said were off shore Monday. Other U.S. help was on the way, including two U.S. civilian crane ships that could unload cargo at the quake-damaged port.

Getting clean water into people's hands was still a dire concern.

"People can survive a few days without food but we must try to avoid major outbreaks of waterborne disease," said Brian Feagans, a spokesman for the aid group CARE.

Clinton and accompanying daughter Chelsea pitched in, helping unload cases of bottled water from their plane to a U.N. truck.

Some aid groups and foreign officials have blamed the U.S. military for slowing down aid deliveries, saying the American units that took charge of the small Port-au-Prince airport last week gave priority to U.S. military flights.

Doctors Without Borders said Monday its specialists were 48 hours behind on performing surgery for critically injured patients because three cargo planes loaded with supplies were denied clearance and forced to land almost 200 miles away in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic.

The WFP's Sheeran said things would change. She announced an agreement with the U.S. so that "we now have the coordination mechanism to prioritize the humanitarian flights coming in."

At the airport, a U.S. military spokesman said the parking ramp designed for 16 large aircraft at times was holding 40. "That's why there was gridlock," said Navy Cmdr. Chris Lounderman. He said about 100 flights a day were now landing.

The U.S. Air Force itself resorted to an air drop of aid Monday. A C-17 from Pope Air Force Base, N.C., parachuted pallets of food and water into an area outside Port-au-Prince secured by U.S. forces. The Americans have been reluctant to use air drops for fear of drawing unruly crowds.

There remained a "huge demand for lifesaving surgery for those who suffered terrible injuries," Doctors Without Borders reported. The U.S.-based Partners in Health, coordinating aid at Port-au-Prince's central hospital, reported "a desperate need for all the resources required to run a hospital," including surgical instruments, anesthesia gear, alcohol, sutures, and saws.

Clinton, visiting the hospital, reported its staff had to use vodka to sterilize equipment. "It's astonishing what the Haitians have been able to accomplish," he said.

More than 1,000 patients awaited surgery at the hospital, Partners in Health said. Right outside the U.S.-run airport, one man died as Navy helicopters scrambled to evacuate patients to the aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson, the military reported.

Across the city, thousands of abandoned bodies had been picked up by government crews, but residents dragged still others to crossroads, hoping municipal garbage trucks or aid groups would deal with them.

Looting and violence added to the casualties. Riot police opened fire – mostly in the air – to break up a mob of several hundred fighting over rum bottles in a burning shop. One teenage boy was hit in the thigh by a shotgun blast. "Friends! Save me! Save me!" he cried, curled up in a pool of blood, one foot almost severed. A medical aid truck happened by and picked him up.

The ranks of Haitian police and U.N. peacekeepers trying to restore order in this stricken city had themselves been decimated in the quake, which destroyed the U.N. headquarters.

In New York on Monday, U.N. chief Ban asked for 1,500 more U.N. police and 2,000 more peacekeepers to join the 9,000 or so U.N. security personnel in Haiti. Alain Le Roy, the U.N. peacekeeping chief, said a "tremendous" number of requests had come in to escort humanitarian convoys. Haitian police had returned to the streets in only "limited numbers," he said.

The Security Council was expected to approve the reinforcements on Tuesday.
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http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/01/18/haiti-earthquake-more-us-_n_426889.html


http://bit.ly/7XZNT5

Sunday, January 18, 2010 @8:55 PM/PST

In its aftermath we should be calm, centered and disemotional about the Haiti Earthquake. On a global level we should view it all in an historical continuum. The greed of Amerikan Western civilization allowed social conditions to deteriorate in Haiti making it the poorest land of the Americas. It was never a true strong independent nation in the ordinary sense of a nation being with territorial integrity, a sovereign state system and the basic infrastructure of civil society.

Uncalculated thousands upon thousands of innocent human beings among the people of Haiti have already perished and Haiti as such no longer exists. The whole country lays in ruins, its surviving people are in survival mode willing to be and do anything to survive. Indeed, the Haitian people have offered up to the whole world the possible perils that are now dormant in many regions of the planet Earth, especially the Third World of Latin America, Asia and Africa.

Let us take heed of the great historical lessons of the Haiti Earthquake. Let us open our hearts, open our spirits, open our accounts and expand our humane consciousness to encompass a true unbounded love for all peoples of all lands. In the end, if our endangered species survives its tendency towards destruction and self-destruction, we wil behold the truth that we are truly all one family all along!

Namaste, ~Peta-de-Aztlan~

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Unidos Venceremos! United We Will Win!

Hermano Peta~de~Aztlan

Sacramento,California, Amerika

Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com   

http://twitter.com/Peta_de_Aztlan  

http://www.facebook.com/Peta51  

http://help-matrix.ning.com/

 

 "Those who make peaceful revolution impossible, make violent revolution inevitable."

~ President John F.Kennedy ~ Assassinated November 22, 1963

c/s