Friday, April 16, 2010

Legal Defender Isabel Garcia: Arizona Bill Forcing Officers to Determine Immigration Status Marks “All-Out Assault” on Latino Communities

http://www.democracynow.org/2010/4/16/az

Legal Defender Isabel Garcia: Arizona Bill Forcing Officers to Determine Immigration Status Marks "All-Out Assault" on Latino Communities

~See Video at Website~
Arizona lawmakers have approved what's being described as the harshest anti-immigrant measure in the country, forcing police officers to determine the immigration status of someone they suspect of being an undocumented immigrant. Meanwhile, over fifty people were arrested Thursday in a federal immigration sweep targeting van operators allegedly involved in smuggling in undocumented migrants from Mexico. We speak to Isabel Garcia, co-chair of the Tuscon-based Coalition for Human Rights and legal defender of Pima County, Arizona. [includes rush transcript]

Guest:

Isabel Garcia, co-chair of Coalición de Derechos Humanos, or the Coalition for Human Rights, a Tucson-based organization. She is also the legal defender of Pima County, Arizona and won the Lannan Foundation Cultural Freedom Award in 2008 and the 2006 National Human Rights Award from Mexico's National Commission for Human Rights.

JUAN GONZALEZ: In Arizona, state lawmakers have approved what's being described as the harshest anti-immigrant measure in the country. On Tuesday, the Arizona House of Representatives voted to force police officers to determine the immigration status of someone they suspect of being an undocumented immigrant. The state Senate passed a similar measure earlier this year, and Republican Governor Jan Brewer is expected to sign it into law.


Introduced by State Senator Russell Pearce, the bill would give an unprecedented amount of immigration enforcement power to local police officers. Immigrant rights and civil liberties groups in the state have vowed to challenge the new bill, warning that it will only increase racial profiling.

AMY GOODMAN: Meanwhile, federal law enforcement agencies mounted a massive operation across Arizona Thursday targeting van operators allegedly involved in smuggling undocumented migrants from Mexico. Nearly fifty people were arrested, and more than 800 federal agents were involved in the bust, that the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency is touting as its largest-ever human smuggling case.

For more on what's happening in Arizona, we're joined here in New York by Isabel Garcia, the co-chair of the Coalition of Human Rights, a Tucson-based organization. She's also the legal defender of Pima County, Arizona, and won the Lannan Foundation Cultural Freedom Award in 2008 and the 2006 National Human Rights Award from Mexico's National Commission for Human Rights.

Welcome to Democracy Now!

ISABEL GARCIA: Thank you very much.

AMY GOODMAN: Let's start with the legislation. Can you explain what legislators have just passed?

ISABEL GARCIA: Yes. This legislature is probably the most extreme legislature in this country. This particular bill is intended to clean up everything they've not been able to do in the past few years, obligating police officers to determine immigration status, really giving racial profiling, of course, its largest boost, converting it to its most important law enforcement technique.

This law would also create a new crime in the state. If you're undocumented in the state, you would be guilty of a trespass. People would have a private right of action, if police and other agencies didn't determine immigration status. Immigration status would have to be shared by all agencies. It criminalizes day workers, day labor workers, whether you're trying to hire somebody or whether they're trying to be hired.

And so, of course, it represents for us an all-out assault on our communities, guaranteeing that Arizona, in fact, is the engine for all of the anti-immigrant legislation and politicians in this country, with apparently eleven states poised to follow suit, if in fact Governor Brewer signs this bill.

JUAN GONZALEZ: When you say criminalizing even day laborers, I was struck by—one part of the law would prohibit people from blocking traffic when they seek or offer day labor on the streets. So this would be—allow a license, basically, for the police to really target day laborers across the state.

ISABEL GARCIA: Absolutely. For instance, in New York City here, you wave a cab, and when they pull over, of course, it blocks traffic for a few seconds. That's exactly what would be criminalized in all of the state of Arizona, guaranteeing, of course, that day laborers could not be out looking for work. We've criminalized work in the state of Arizona.

AMY GOODMAN: Who is the engine for this?

ISABEL GARCIA: Well, Russell Pearce is the author, but ultimately—

AMY GOODMAN: He is a state legislator.

ISABEL GARCIA: Yes, he's a senator in the state legislature. But ultimately, it really is our federal policy. Beginning in 1994, Arizona was pretty much selected to be the place to funnel all immigrants, to create chaos, division, eventually leading to the election of anti-immigrant politicians, from, as you know, the Sheriff Arpaio there, Andrew Thomas, who just recently resigned to run for attorney general. And Arpaio states he's going to run for governor, too. The superintendent of schools is an anti-immigrant. And, of course, Russell Pearce is joined by an entire gang of extremists in the legislature. So I really put the onus and blame on the federal government, in addition to the state government, for funneling and purposely creating Arizona as the laboratory for all of these anti-immigrant measures.

JUAN GONZALEZ: Now, those who defend these measures say that Arizona has become the main transit point along the 2,000-mile border with Mexico for undocumented migrants coming over.

ISABEL GARCIA: Absolutely.

JUAN GONZALEZ: What is the situation in southern Arizona in terms of migrants? And is there any—

ISABEL GARCIA: Yes.

JUAN GONZALEZ: —legitimacy to the concerns of folks that Arizona has become like the main doorway now to illegal immigration to the country?

ISABEL GARCIA: Yes, Arizona is, in fact, the doorway. Over 50 percent of all crossings occur through Arizona. Again, it was purposeful.

JUAN GONZALEZ: And why is that?

ISABEL GARCIA: It was purposeful. Beginning in 1994, we began with this prevention through deterrence, but really with military-type operations—Operation Gatekeeper in California; Operation Blockade, and then became Hold the Line, in the El Paso area; Rio Grande in the rest of Texas; and unfortunately, in Arizona, Operation Safeguard, that has resulted of course in the deaths of thousands of immigrants along the border.

So, yes, they're correct that Arizona has become the gateway. New York Times reported that that area, in fact, was the bottleneck for all of America, North America. But that was purposeful, in fact intended. We believe so, because not only is a very conservative state, but the border is owned basically by the federal government, the state government and the Tohono O'odham Nation, which, for the most part, we ignore as much as we can.

And so, as a result, we have created Arizona to be the place where traffickers come, smugglers come. We have made smuggling an incredibly profitable business. Prior to 1994, people did not require the use of a smuggler. Now most people need a smuggler. But instead of catching smugglers—imagine, 800 agents to—ICE agents descending on Arizona with ski masks and armor like you can't believe and vehicles and helicopters to arrest forty to fifty people? It's really absurd justification, when we know that it's an all-out assault on the public and the community, right at the heels of this legislation passing, and this operation coming forward, when really we're not interested in the smugglers in Maricopa County. They have convicted hundreds and hundreds of people who have simply crossed and admitted that they were going to pay a smuggler. They're the ones that are being prosecuted as being smugglers, as co-conspirators to their own smuggling.

And unfortunately, the courts have not been of much help. They have upheld almost every single piece of legislation that we believe is unconstitutional, illegal, a federal grab. And yet, they've been okayed by the courts.

AMY GOODMAN: Isabel Garcia, how does the new legislation compare to the 287(g) agreements?

ISABEL GARCIA: Well, 287(g), as you know, is a federal program that has two models. One is the field model that Joe Arpaio became the poster child for. And then the jail model. In spite of his massive violations and, you know, having—

AMY GOODMAN: And for people, just very quickly, who don't know who Sheriff Arpaio is?

ISABEL GARCIA: He's the sheriff in Maricopa County who has made it his mission to be the most visible anti-immigrant in the country. He's authored a book and made profits, and of course has become the poster child for all of them. He was the person who instituted 287(g) with a vengeance, even though he violated so many rights. He was only limited not to do the federal—I mean, the field model, and that permits—that permitted those agents to, in fact, determine citizenship and residency. He states, "I don't care if I've been stripped of 287(g) field model, I have Arizona laws"—that, by the way, were signed by our now-Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano—"I have those state laws to enforce, and so I don't care if I have a 287(g) or not." So it's a 287(g) institutionalized on the state.

AMY GOODMAN: We have a clip of Glenn Beck interviewing Sheriff Joe Arpaio.

    SHERIFF JOE ARPAIO: Local law enforcement comes across some people that have a erratic or scared or whatever—you know.

    GLENN BECK: Demeanor?

    SHERIFF JOE ARPAIO: They're worried. And if they have their speech, what they look like, if they just look like they came from another country, we can take care of that situation. But I don't need that anyway, Glenn.

    GLENN BECK: Wait, wait, wait. Are you telling—hang on, hang on, hang on.

    SHERIFF JOE ARPAIO: I can still do the job.

    GLENN BECK: When was that—when was that law written? Because all I hear about is, that sounds like profiling. And the government is saying you can't profile anybody.

    SHERIFF JOE ARPAIO: Well, that law, in 1996, part of the comprehensive law that was passed, it's in there. It's in there.

AMY GOODMAN: That's Sheriff Joe Arpaio. Isabel Garcia?

ISABEL GARCIA: Yes, that's Joe Arpaio. And as other clips that people have seen him on the television, he has stated upfront he does not care what the federal government tells him. He is going to enforce the laws in Arizona, even though it is driving the economy downward. The situation for our communities, of course, is really acute. People yesterday were scrambling, didn't send people to school, didn't go to work. And, of course, the south side, where my mother still lives, was under full-out assault.

JUAN GONZALEZ: That's the south side of Tucson.

ISABEL GARCIA: Absolutely. Under the guise of going after a few shuttle companies, come on. Eight hundred ICE agents, together with US marshals, local police officers, stopped traffic in that part of town.

JUAN GONZALEZ: Well, there was an expectation by many supporters of Barack Obama that once he got into office, these massive type raids would stop and that there would be some effort at some kind of comprehensive immigration reform. There's been some now increased talk about it in recent weeks. What is your—what is your assessment of the first year of Obama administration and your hopes for some kind of change in immigration policy in the future?

ISABEL GARCIA: Well, unfortunately, under the Obama administration, we've seen more deportations than under any other administration. Not that he's more anti-immigrant, but Democrat administrations, as well as Republican administrations, have continued to build the enforcement buildup, and therefore it's not a surprise to us that there's more and more deportations.

Unfortunately, this administration is responsible for yesterday's assault on our community. This administration continues to follow the flawed concept that migration is somehow a law enforcement or national security issue. And it is not. It is a economic, social, political phenomenon. And until we begin to address root cause and—for instance, what NAFTA has done to the agriculture in Mexico, displacing millions of workers, flooding of course to the United States. They knew they would flood in here. That's why they began to build walls in 1994. They didn't build the walls, as some people would believe, on September the 12th of 2001. We began building those walls in 1994. So we're very disappointed with this administration.

AMY GOODMAN: Isabel Garcia, I wanted to ask you about the money that Arizona has to do this. I mean, you have, last month, Arizona becoming the first state to eliminate SCHIP, right, the Children's Health Insurance Program—

ISABEL GARCIA: Absolutely.

AMY GOODMAN: —leaving tens of thousands of kids without coverage. The Arizona governor signed a new budget canceling the program, which also—which covered 47,000 low-income kids. The move coincided with cuts to Medicaid coverage for childless adults, dropping an additional 310,000 people from the rolls. So where is the money coming from?

ISABEL GARCIA: Absolutely. We are seeing a downward dive in our economy, precisely because we are so anti-immigrant, in addition to, of course, the economic woes of this country. Not only what you've stated, but we have eliminated the full-day kindergarten. We're at the bottom of the list in terms of the states for funding for education. We have eliminated, wholesale, all funding for GED adult education. And the cuts go on and on. At the same time, they're attempting to give tax cuts, of course, to corporations and businesses. And so, we are on a real downward spiral.

And of course they pluck out the immigrant, as they have historically, to blame all the societal ills, in spite of the fact that there's recently been very credible studies to show that the undocumented labor force represent almost a billion dollars in terms of a net gain, when you subtract all of the costs that are associated with undocumented immigrants. You know very well we don't have 12 million people here on welfare or—because we're benevolent. We have 12 million undocumented people here because our economy depends on it, and the state economies depend on them.

JUAN GONZALEZ: And Janet Napolitano obviously, the head of Homeland Security, is your former governor.

ISABEL GARCIA: Absolutely.

JUAN GONZALEZ: Did you have any expectation that she would be—take on these kind of policies when she was governor?

ISABEL GARCIA: We knew she became the Department of Homeland Security Secretary precisely because of her war on immigrants. She, too, is quite responsible for the buildup in Arizona. She signed, as she stated, the toughest employer sanction laws, that now have been copied by Mississippi and other states. She signed a bill making workers criminals, agreeing to sign the bill that says if you use a fictitious Social Security number—of course, contributing to the Social Security suspense fund, over $200 billion worth—that you are guilty of being an aggravated identity thief. So she called the National Guard on the borders. So we did not expect anything good when Obama, President Obama, appointed Janet Napolitano to this position.

AMY GOODMAN: A few years ago, May Day was huge for immigrants' rights marchers around the country. What are your plans for this May Day? And what are your demands right now?

ISABEL GARCIA: We are planning, of course, massive May Day mobilizations across the country. Ours in Tucson, of course, will be very clear. Our demands will be that we, number one, not demand just immigration reform. We want details. We are not in agreement with the four pillars, as spelled out by Senators Schumer and Graham, that continue that flawed analysis as immigrants committing a crime. We have to get off of that and recognize it. So we're demanding that the enforcement stop, that we stop resourcing the billion-dollar structure that is going along the border, a militarization, of course, that is creeping up into the United States. I mean, Julie Myers, in 2006, at the Swift plants, announced what we've been saying all along: remember, this is signaling that enforcement will not remain at the border; it will go interior. And it has. So that's our first demand.

Our second demand is that we immediately address the root cause, that if we're interested about migration and the suffering of people coming into this country—the eighty-six people that we have already found in the state of Arizona at the border as of three or four weeks ago—we want a stop to that. And we need also a reform that reflects the reality. We should legalize the 12 million people here and begin to address those issues along the border that have caused so much suffering, environmental degradation and devastation by the Border Patrol and ICE and other agencies.

And so, our demands are huge. And we know that we're going against even the prominent immigrant rights groups that are following the framework that is being spelled out by the Senators Schumer and Graham.

JUAN GONZALEZ: One final question, the immigrant rights movement that had such a huge outpouring in 2006, subsequently fractured between what I would call the more grassroots organizations, that supplied the people power, and the national groups, the trade unions, the Catholic Church and some of the major Washington immigration groups, that urged a more realistic compromise approach to legislation, what's your—how is the movement faring these days in terms of the tension between these two wings of the movement?

ISABEL GARCIA: Well, unfortunately, the brokers, that you've stated very clearly here for us, have really attempted to co-opt the grassroots movements. As you saw, maybe 200,000, 500,000 people marched on Washington, DC, and of course the brokers and those that handled the march and handled the message, I hate to say, used the people that marched onto DC.

I think that there's a great opportunity for the grassroots immigrant rights people to actually come forward now, because people are questioning: what do you mean I should just call and ask for comprehensive immigration reform? What does that mean? We will not accept any reform. And we can see that the millions and millions of dollars that have been spent by these organizations promoting a campaign-type, rather than a movement-building, you know, phenomenon—they should have spent some of that money educating the American public about the realities of immigration, the immigration situation, immigration laws and immigration history in this country. We have to begin to know the truth. And a lot of immigrant rights groups are, in fact, challenging those brokers and those messages as we speak today.

AMY GOODMAN: I think it is very important to point out that weekend, it was the anniversary of the invasion of Iraq weekend, the march on Washington, 200,000 to 500,000 immigrant rights protesters, the comparison of the size of that to the Tea Party rally that also took place, and then you compare the coverage—

ISABEL GARCIA: Absolutely.

AMY GOODMAN: —of the couple thousand people at the Tea Party rally versus the 200,000 to 500,000 people who rallied for immigrants' rights. I think most people in this country did not realize that was going on.

ISABEL GARCIA: Absolutely.

AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now! Isabel Garcia, thanks so much for being with us.

ISABEL GARCIA: Thank you.

AMY GOODMAN: Co-chair of Coalición de Derechos Humanos, Coalition for Human Rights, which is based in Tucson, Arizona. We're glad to have you here in New York for a few minutes.

ISABEL GARCIA: Thank you so much.


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Comment: Amnesty Now! = The only rational solution for sane humane immigration legislation
is Amnesty Now, period. Any other way will not work. In fact, we need to all get radical, purge the poltroons and cower the cowards, and at least have the sanity to question the legitimacy of the U.S. Government with its history of genocide and slavery to even dictate terms for our own liberation.

Unidos Venceremos! United We Will Win!

~Peta-de-Aztlan~ Sacramento, California, Amerika
Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com 
http://help-matrix.ning.com/
http://twitter.com/Peta_de_Aztlan
http://www.facebook.com/Peta51
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NetworkAztlan_News/   
"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible,
make violent revolution inevitable."
~ President John F.Kennedy ~ Killed November 22, 1963
c/s


Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Commentary The Engaged User: Bridging Your Web Site And Social Networks via Brian Kissel

Bit Link~ http://bit.ly/csbdNl
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Commentary The Engaged User: Bridging Your Web Site And Social Networks
via Brian Kissel

MediaPost Publications
Apr 13, 2010 07:00 AM

While incorporating social media into marketing strategy is becoming standard practice, many organizations still struggle with how to make the most of opportunities created by social media platforms and tools. It has been well documented that just having a Facebook page or sending the occasional tweet are not enough to have a significant, sustainable impact on business results. The good news is that there are multiple ways to take advantage of the social media space and one of the most effective places to start is actually from your own Web site.

If we step back and look at the value of social networks, it becomes immediately obvious that just because there is a new ecosystem in which to operate, the fundamentals of interaction remain unchanged. The customer experience still matters and luckily there are multiple ways to create powerful online experiences that are customized to the user. The objective should be for a user who is on your website to stay engaged with content, products, services or other key parts of the site.

The engaged user can now become a proponent of your content, products or services. This is similar to a customer picking up the phone, or telling the neighbor about a great experience they just had, or a deal they found. In this case you make it easy for the online user to share that information back to their friends on the social networks. In doing so, a bridge is created between your website and the social networks, and that bridge is built on the strongest marketing material available -- social influence through an engaged user.

Traffic to your Web site from a social media platform is, by its very nature, more valuable than traffic from other sources. That may be a bold statement, but when you think about what social networks like Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn has been created for, and you look at the data, it makes sense. The Nielsen Company published research showing that global consumers spent more than five and a half hours on social networking sites in December 2009. This represents an 82% increase from the same time a year ago. Facebook continues to be the number one global social networking destination and people are spending more time per month on the site - almost six hours according to Nielsen, but the concurrent meteorite rise in Twitter usage shows that consumers like variety.

People spend time on social networks and share information with people who are interesting and important to them. At the same time, they are interested in learning from these same people, hearing their stories and experiences, and checking out what they think is important. Because trust is high among peers, recommendations and messages exchanged among friends are more likely to resonate than those from a company directly to an individual. Thus, you can augment your organization's push marketing strategy (advertising or email marketing, for example) with a pull strategy that empowers your users to promote their online interactions with your brand to their friends on the social networks.

Here's how it works:

You have a visitor on your Web site. Whether the focus of your site is commerce, content or community, one goal is most likely to have that visitor login or register on the site thus becoming an engaged user and doing more -- make a purchase, contribute to the conversation with a comment or expertise, or post content. Once that user is engaged on your site, make it easy for that person to communicate back to the social networks of their choice without leaving your site.

Activity-based social publishing tools enable the user to perform this action from within the flow of your website experience.

Once the user publishes activity or content to a social network, your website has a presence there as well - and the presence has been defined by the user. This is critical to note. The user has found something of interest on your website and then called that specific piece out to promote to his or her community.

The engaged user is an effective filter both for their community and your Web site. Online users are overwhelmed by the amount of information and data resources online, and organizations need to stand above the noise to be both heard and seen as credible. When an engaged user on your site decides to share information back to a social network, it is a win for both their network and your organization. The user's network benefits from gaining a window into his/her thoughts and activities online, and your organization benefits by enabling word of mouth marketing through its users.

Instead of a standalone Facebook page that you need to drive traffic to, the engaged user is doing that piece for you. But this is just the beginning. People spend time on social networks to learn and share. When an engaged user on your site publishes information back to a social network, it is being viewed by people who are hungry to learn new information. What happens next is a benevolent circle of referral traffic. As the user shares their activity or content from your site to friends on a social network, the post from the initial engaged user drives traffic back to your site, some of whom will login and publish comments of their site activities back to their networks, and so on and so on. Many organizations that have implemented this functionality are experiencing a range of 6-25 new referral visitors for each social action a user shares with friends on the social networks. As this cycle repeats, these organizations create a direct link to the social networks and a sustaining stream of new referred visitors.

Tapping into an engaged user's social network is an approach that has relevance for any type of organization. One of the challenges of crafting an effective social media program is how to make best use of the new tools. One popular tactic and a great first step is to create a Facebook fan page. This is an effective method for organizations to reach their target market directly on the social networks and directly push content and information. An organization can complement this approach by leveraging tools that tap into word of mouth marketing and utilize a pull strategy to drive users to their website.

A Facebook fan page can be an influential communication platform to promote your message, but to reach individuals not already familiar with your brand or following you on Facebook, you still need to invest in outbound marketing activities to drive traffic to the fan page. Consider the more powerful scenario of a user influencing other users, and driving traffic back to the website at a point of activity.

By connecting your website to the social platforms through the engaged user and empowering that user to be your advocate, any organization can tap into the social networks to reach new audiences. Content sites can enable users to interact and share their thoughts with their social network. Community sites can allow members to share their blogs, surveys, videos, downloads, or other site activities with friends on the social networks. Commerce sites can make it easy for customers to share their purchases or product recommendations with friends on the social networks. These are all examples of how any organization can implement a strategy that leverages engaged users on its website as a bridge to the social networks.

You can expand your organization's digital footprint and tap into a wider set of social graphs by supporting multiple social platforms. While Facebook boasts a vast member base and robust social sharing features, data shows that not all Internet users are on Facebook, and many prefer other social networks as a means of connecting and sharing information with friends. The ensuing sample of major U.S. media and entertainment organizations all enable social publishing and sharing of user-generated content from their websites to multiple social networks.

As the Web continues to evolve, success will come to organizations that take advantage of new tools to reach target audiences and create meaningful interactions. Social media has democratized communication and made information sharing easier. Augmenting push marketing strategies with tools to empower your engaged users as a bridge between your website and the social networks will yield the most powerful results and true word of mouth marketing success on the social Web.
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http://www.mediapost.com/publications/?fa=Articles.showArticle&art_aid=125954#
 
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Unidos Venceremos! United We Will Win!
~Peta-de-Aztlan~ Sacramento, California, Amerika
Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com 
http://help-matrix.ning.com/

http://twitter.com/Peta_de_Aztlan

http://www.facebook.com/Peta51

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Humane-Rights-Agenda/

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NetworkAztlan_News/   

"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible,
make violent revolution inevitable."
~ President John F.Kennedy ~ Killed November 22, 1963
c/s


Monday, April 12, 2010

Echo~ Take This Empire and Shove It! by Cindy Sheehan + Comment

http://bit.ly/9ewj6D

Take This Empire and Shove It! by Cindy Sheehan


"Listen, I can't get involved. I've got work to do. It's not that I like the Empire; I hate it. But there's nothing I can do about it right now... It's all such a long way from here."

Luke Skywalker in Star Wars


Dear Reader—raise your hand if you don't know that atrocities happen in war. Now put your hands in the air like you just don't care.


Psychologist, Robert Jay Lifton, who is a pioneer in the study of what drives otherwise "normal" human beings to commit war crimes calls war: "an atrocity-producing situation." Atrocities have been committed in every war since the beginning of time, and the sad thing is the barbarity hasn't decreased. Recently a US soldier tried to justify to me committing atrocities because the "British did it to the Native Americans" in the French-Indian War. This soldier was essentially agreeing with Lifton.


Since war is an atrocity in the first place, war crimes will be committed, period. In many of my speeches soon after Casey was killed, I used to call war "a failure of imagination." Now I know that's crap—war is imagined by and for the war machine and gladly perpetrated by its toady elected officials and promoted by its toady media.


This week, several things have upset me about our genocidal foreign policy, but I can't decide what upsets me more—the genocidal foreign policy or the fact that most of my fellow USAins are sheeple who blindly follow (or not follow) whoever is infecting the Oval Office depending on whether that person has a (D) or an (R) behind his name.


I have spoke in dozens of venues since Obama was inaugurated promoting my e-book: Myth America: 20 Greatest Myths of the Robber Class and the Case for Revolution. Everywhere I speak, someone will ask me this question, and it is almost always this exact question, worded in almost the exact same way: "I didn't agree with George Bush getting us into these wars, but don't you agree that we have to stay in Afghanistan to protect the women?" When I ask the person if he/she believed that propaganda when Bush was infesting the Oval Office, he/she says with 100% regularity: "No." And of course, Afghan women were Mrs. George (43) Bush's greatest cause. Now we have "peace" groups parroting the same line. Sheeple live in Red AND Blue states. The Robber Class counts on at least ½ of the public being in full compliance with its crimes, that's why they get away with these crimes on a daily basis.


How's this for "protecting women?" On February 12th, US Special Forces attacked a home near Gardez and in that attack three women were killed. Two of the women were pregnant. Our military claimed that the women were stabbed to death before the US raid, but the truth finally came out—US Special Forces who subsequently tried to dig the bullets out of the women to hide their hideous crimes killed them, too. Cover up—the specialty of The Empire and The Pope. How can we believe anything that comes out of the mouth of Stainly McChrystalMeth much less that the US is "minimizing" civilian deaths?


At the end of last year, eight Afghan students in Ghazi Khan were handcuffed and executed by US troops. Presumably, these eight students were sons of Afghan women—and where is the righteous anger in this country over our military executing school children? I guess if Tiger Woods would keep Little Tiger in his pants, our toady media might report these outrages—but probably not. When I hear about our troops raping 14 year-old girls in Iraq, or executing Afghan schoolboys, I want to burn something down—but I would rightfully be considered "crazy" if I gave into that temporary impulse—while some US troops (in not-so-isolated incidents) behave like sociopathic maniacs and we don't consider them crazy at all and, in fact, we are supposed to "support" them.


And what about this Cult of Troop Worship? Even the antiwar movement is so careful to not criticize anything The Troops do. We are constantly admonished to "hate the war, but love the warrior." I am sorry, but I don't even like that word, "warrior." It implies that our children join the military to commit war crimes, but we all know that most of our children join for education benefits, or health insurance. "Warrior" also implies that we live in a War State—which we do—but the antiwar movement does not have to use the nomenclature of The Empire. Most of us teach our children the difference between right and wrong, but when our young people become The Troops they receive a thorough brainwashing and get sent off to murder and rape children and pregnant women. Our kids become hired goons for imperial greed—more like victims of a system that neglects everyone's essential needs, than heroes.


The second bit of news yesterday (not covered in the toady media because Tiger and Little Tiger held a press conference) was the video of The Troops in Iraq slaughtering two Reuter's journalists, the man who tried to save one of them, and ten others. Oh, and The Troops laughed about it and shot up a van filled with children, seriously wounding two of them. The Troops that did this were in a helicopter, and The Troops that rushed up in a HUMVEE are shown intentionally running over the victims (more laughter). These atrocities happened in 2007 and Reuters has been trying to get the video (shot from the Apache helicopter's gun sights) for two years now. Wikileaks courageously de-crypted the video and posted it. Warning—it is horrible to watch what The Troops do to these people. Previously, the military's investigation into these atrocities was ruled as "following rules of engagement." Which is probably not a lie, since it seems like there are no rules of engagement that protect civilians from The Troops and The Empire.


There have been reports of war crimes for years—from Abu Ghraib to Guantanamo to Bagram; and from Falluja to Haditha to Marja—the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan are totally and completely war crimes. The Nuremburg war crimes tribunals stated that wars of aggression are: "essentially an evil thing...to initiate a war of aggression...is not only an international crime; it is the supreme international crime, differing only from other war crimes in that it contains within itself the accumulated evil of the whole." Anyone involved in these war crimes from President to Private must be prosecuted—that includes the new regime—killing is not okay, even if the killer is a Democrat.


This Empire has lost what little of its mind that it had left after the syphilitic Bush years. The Empire is literally living on borrowed time. The expensive occupations, the expansion of Empire into South America, the new threats of sanctions against Iran, the continued and unwavering support of Israel, the increase (66% over the Bush years) in drone bombings, hellfire missiles raining down in Yemen, presidential targeting of American citizens abroad, yadda, yadda, yadda—will lead to the eventual downfall of the American Empire. It always happens and it will happen this time, too.


What can we do about an Empire that is so many noodles short of a full casserole, but divorce ourselves from it? Can we do a full-frontal attack against a psychopath that has nukes? Can we do what the president of Afghanistan recently threatened—join the resistance? I know for sure what doesn't work—marching around in circles and shaking our fists at empty buildings on the weekend in Washington, DC—or spending a weekend as a "guest" of the DC criminal justice system.


"Only the little people pay taxes."

Leona Helmsley


I haven't paid my income taxes since my son was killed in Iraq in 2004. I am ashamed that I ever paid taxes to fund the crimes of this Empire. I started paying taxes around 1974 and this Empire was embroiled in crimes then as it was before and has been ever since. Get this, in 2009, Exxon, a multi-national billion-dollar crime syndicate paid zero dollars in income taxes!


Some years since 2004, I have made enough to be required to file, most years my reportable income has been way below the filing level. I rarely even receive letters from the IRS. However, I would rather go to prison than know that one of my dollars went to pay for the murder, torture, false imprisonment, or oppression of one person here or abroad.


Think of it this way—what if St. Obama himself walked up to you and asked you to write him a check for two-grand so he could have money to buy a water board, or other torture apparatus, or for bullets, or for one square inch of a bomber? Would you do it? Some of you might, but most of you wouldn't.


There are many ways to be war tax resisters and there are a handful of us doing it. If more of us who really believed in peaceful conflict resolution did it that would be a far more effective and more courageous way of opposing this Empire than marching in circles.


If we don't come up with more creative solutions to the violence of this Empire, more and more innocent people will suffer.


This bill renders a horrible accounting. Newly placed gravestones. Mangled bodies. Shattered minds. Broken hearts and homes. Economic instability. Depression and all its attendant miseries. Back-breaking taxation for generations and generations.


From War is a Racket by Major General Smedley Butler


I think as an antiwar-peace community, the only way we can "Support the Troops" is by working as hard as we can to make sure none of our children become The Troops.


If you can't come to DC to take part in our Civil Resistance efforts for Summer Camp OUT NOW, I suggest the you pour all of your efforts into doing counter-recruitment.


There are so many good organizations doing this work that you can help, or support with donations.


World Can't Wait—WE ARE NOT YOUR SOLDIERS.


American Friends Service Committee: Youth and Militarism


Arlington West Film


Iraq Vets Against the War


No "warriors," no wars.


These are just two of the ways that we can Take This Empire and Shove It—there are many more suggestions in my e-book, Myth America: 20 Greatest Myths of the Robber Class and the Case for Revolution.

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Comment: Companera Cindy has suffered a great loss and her healing process involves her exposing the original insanity of why her son was in Iraq in the first place. U.S. soldiers dying and killing in unjust wars in foreign countries are not fighting for my people, my family or my own freedom. They are suffering from a blind patriotism.
 
Cindy Lee Miller Sheehan (born July 10, 1957) is an American anti-war activist whose son, Specialist Casey Sheehan, was killed during his service in the Iraq War on April 4, 2004.

Unidos Venceremos! United We Will Win! Amnesty Now!

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"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible,
make violent revolution inevitable."
~ President John F.Kennedy ~ Killed November 22, 1963
c/s

The Political Reality on Immigration Reform Part One, The March on Washington

http://bit.ly/97ulxL

Mon, April 12, 2010 1:57:54 PM
...
From: javier rodriguez ~ bajolamiradejavier@yahoo.com


by Javier Rodriguez, Isabel Rodriguez, William Torres, Antonio Rodriguez, Don Justin Jones

We are today in the last stage in a 24-year old struggle to obtain just and humane comprehensive immigration reform. The present moves are concentrated in assuring the placing of a proposed Senate bill on the floor of Congress and also breaking the deadlock created by the Republicans on even a minimal debate on the bill. In other words, the contradiction which began the minute former Republican President Ronald Reagan signed the 1986 IRCA Law, which left out an estimated 2.5 million out of the amnesty process, may soon come to a resolution. What the reform will contain will be further analyzed. Nevertheless, the recent 200,000 people March for America-Change Takes Courage on Washington D.C. held on March 21, amongst other things, clearly signaled the movement is once again on the offensive.

The protest was a sight to behold, setting off powerful feelings at seeing the momentum of grass roots power now building up in the country in the epic fight for immigrant empowerment. Make no mistake, it was a politically mature crowd. And I speculate the majority came from DC and surrounding areas with giant delegations from New York and Chicago respectably at ten and eight thousand a piece. It was multicultural but overwhelmingly Latino, working class, young, college students, African Americans, Asians and many other ethnic groups. It also it included the undocumented who by the tens of thousands crossed cities and states, -risking it all- “se las jugo”. On Javier’s flight back to Los Angeles he sat next to an Guatemalan immigrant whom three days after was observed in the news defiantly declaring, “I marched in Washington and I am undocumented”. Let us convey that as some of the principal leaders in the making of the Los Angeles record breaking 1.7 million mega demonstration of March 25, 2006 and also co-directing the National Great American Boycott, which closed cities and many industries in the country on May 1st of the same year which also successfully defeated the infamous Sensenbrenner BiIl, the gathering in the capitol, the political center of the American empire, was a magnificent display of the strength and power of the people on the streets.

Although the popular event was held during the same week that national attention and the media centered on the health reform issue, the political pressure brought forth by the organizing campaign at the end had several critical results. It set in motion the set of events that placed us at the door of the legislative debate. At the start of the week a national delegation of immigrant rights leaders met with President Obama, who then later that day had a discussion with key Senators Schumer and Graham. On Friday March 19 the two senators published an op-ed article in the Washington Post, with a four pillar framework setting their general perspective on the upcoming reform bill to be introduced in April in the senate. Additionally, in a precedent-setting move, Obama addressed the marchers through a taped video, declaring his belief that change emanates from the people on the streets as well as his unequivocal support for the framework. Of course in the House, both the framework and the bill introduced by Cong. Luis Gutierrez in late 2009, exhibit a deeper approach to overhauling the dysfunctional immigration system.

But more significantly, the march brought back into the national consciousness the importance of taking the streets as a primary means for social change. However, since the birth of this movement in 1968, the principal characteristic that differentiates this historic mobilization is the fact that it was conceived, convened and coordinated in the beltway as part of a multifaceted national plan of action, directed also by a national coordinating body. Furthermore, the young leadership in this struggle set the mood for the next round of massive events. On stage, during the Capitol Mall rally, with a powerful sound system and three giant screens that creatively captivated the audience for three hours or so, Ali Noorani -the Pakistani- American and national director of the 652 member umbrella coalition, Reform Immigration FOR America (RIFA), made the call for the May 1st 2010 national mobilizations.

As in 2006, the spring of the immigrant, the momentum has begun to build. As of this writing the national lobbying and organizing has continued. On April 10, in cities from coast to coast, once more thousands rallied and loudly continued the demand that immigration reform take place this year. The largest event with 6,000 people reported in the New York Times, was held in Las Vegas, Nevada, the embattled home state of Senate leader Harry Reid, an immigration reform supporter. More revealing though is Dallas, where on April 10, 2006 , 500,000 people exploded against HR4437. The Mega March Coalition there has officially made the call for another massive protest on May Day with the goal of mobilizing 100,000 people. Significantly, in a recent interview, acclaimed Mexican novelist Carlos Fuentes incisively told the TELEMUNDO Network, “If the 12 million undocumented immigrants stop work for a week they will break the back of the US economy.” We will add that with respect to immigration reform, a protest of this magnitude on the part of the immigrant population, would bring the country to its knees.

Work in Washington continued after the march on the 21st. On Monday March 22, hundreds of enthusiastic and adrenalin charged activists flooded congressional halls to lobby legislators and at midday, in a clever and bold move, close to a hundred people, Javier included, staged a loud and raucous sit-in at the National Republican Party headquarters. Accompanied by demonstrators, making their demands known outside under the rain, the delegation demanded a meeting between RIFA and the Republican leadership to discuss their cooperation on the immigration issue. As was mentioned before by Javier in a February 17 article, “This reform process as a whole has already entered the massive and irreversible galvanization that apparently is about to produce the coveted goal, the big prize, immigration reform”. We can assure you at this moment John Tanton, the extreme right wing ideologue and founder of the anti- immigrant network FAIR , the Federation for American Immigration Reform, with all its millions in its treasury, knows he is in a losing cause.

Different from 2009, nationally the political landscape is set for Saturday May 1st. The indicators all point to a massive round of mega marches in the hundreds of thousands and perhaps millions of demonstrators in many cities in the United States. There is an exception though in Los Angeles. After recently breaking the gridlock of division, the four major coalitions came together on Wednesday March 31 and designed a provisional plan of work, pledging to hold one unified march in downtown LA. Unfortunately however, in the following days the coalition was inexplicably and unilaterally dismantled. For the sake of the immigrant community, there is still time to responsibly rehabilitate the process of unity so LA may proudly once again regain its rightful stature as the birth place of this movement.

Javier Rodriguez is a political and media strategist, Atty. Isabel Rodriguez is an activist and writer now at Claremont College, William Torres is a boxing promoter, Atty. Antonio Rodriguez specializes in civil rights and police brutality law, and Atty. Don Jones is a tenant rights veteran in Pasadena now fighting a freeway extension and a third eviction process against the State of California. All of the signees were fundamental in the building of the mega marches in 2006 and have been members of the March 25 Coalition.

Information at bajolamiradejavier@yahoo.com, gtorres66@hotmail.com, camarada@socal.rr.com


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