Archive for September 24th, 2003


Sun not visible in Los…

Sun not visible in Los Angeles. Residents terrified


A bizarre meteorological phenomenon oldtimers refer to as “clouds” struck metropolitan Los Angeles today. Not only is the sun not visible, temperatures in the San Fernando Valley have plunged to a mere 68, down from the 103 recorded just a few days ago, causing residents to hunt for their fleece jackets in protection against such frigid temperatures.


Rumors are flying this lack of direct sun might be related to a “seasonal” change known as “Fall”, however this remains unconfirmed.

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Worthless but fascinating thing to…

Worthless but fascinating thing to do



While sitting at your desk, lift your right foot off the floor and make clockwise circles. Now, while doing this, draw the number “6″ in the air with your right hand. Your foot will change direction.


From the ProRev newsletter 9/22

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L.A. March and Rally. This…

L.A. March and Rally. This Sunday Sep 28. Noon.


End occupation
Say NO to colonialism in Iraq, Palestine and everywhere.


Protests will be happening in 40 countries and six U.S. cities this weekend!
 
Assemble Hollywood and Vine this Sunday Sep 28 at Noon. March down Vine to Sunset to La Brea then to the rally site at Hollywood and Highland. The rally will start about 2 pm. Full details including logistics are on the ANSWER LA website.


Here at ANSWER LA we are in major organizing mode. 25,000 flyers have gone out, as well as hundreds of posters (check the on and off ramps on the Hollywood Freeway in Hollywood!). We have eight co-sponsor organizations plus eighty groups have endorsed.


There’s an excellent lineup of speakers and entertainment, including Korean drummers, a Phillipine vocal group, Ron Kovic (maybe), Fernando Suarez (his son was recently killed in Iraq), Sherman Austin’s mother (he was jailed for a year for linking to a web site that later posted an article on bomb-making), Josh Connole, representatives from the Free Palestine Alliance, National Lawyers Guild. and lots more. 


It’s time to get out in the streets again and make some noise! Join us!

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More on Josh Connole

More on Josh Connole

Josh Connole and William Paparian, his lawyerJosh Connole and his lawyer William Paparian spoke last night at the regular Tuesday ANSWER LA meeting. Josh of course was recently arrested for the Hummer firebombings then quickly freed when it became apparent the FBI had no proof at all. In fact Josh said the FBI didn’t even question the fourteen other people who live in his co-op about where he was that night. Not a single question. How very curious.

The co-op residents are still waiting to get their computers back and his lawyer said the search was illegal because warrants specifically rule out searches after 10 pm, and this particular search was filmed by many TV crews as it happened - which was well after 10 pm.

He said the policer also took address books and, for example, one house member had a listing for a friend he hadn’t seen in four years who lived on the East Coast. That person was questioned by the FBI.

So why did they arrest Connole and not even bother to question his housemates? And why the huge expenditure of resources for a case where they are so obviously wrong?

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Antarctic vortex causing Australian drought

Antarctic vortex causing Australian drought



Australia may be facing a permanent drought because of an accelerating vortex of winds whipping around the Antarctic that threatens to disrupt rainfall, scientists said on Tuesday.


Spinning faster and tighter, the 100-mile (160 km) -an-hour jetstream is pulling climate bands south and dragging rain from Australia into the Southern Ocean, they say. They attribute the phenomenon to global warming and loss of the ozone layer over Antarctica.

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The L.A. Eight.

The L.A. Eight.


The U.S. government will be using the Patriot Act to attempt to deport two L.A. activists, Khader Hamide and Michel Shehadeh, in the sixteen year old case of the Los Angeles Eight. To do so the government will claim they can make the Patriot Act retroactive to sixteen years ago, something most say will not stand up to a court challenge.



The Bush administration has decided to pursue a 16-year-old effort to deport two Palestinian activists who as students distributed magazines and raised funds for a group the government now considers a terrorist organization, despite several court rulings that the deportations are unconstitutional because the men were not involved in terrorist activity.


The PFLP was not considered a terrorist group when this happened. It was judged terrorist after the fact and the law was then applied retroactively.



The case, which has long had a high profile among Palestinian Americans, could pose a new judicial test of a controversial provision in the Patriot Act, passed in 2001. The provision prohibits supplying material support for organizations the government deems “terrorist,” even without evidence of a link to specific terrorist acts.


In other words, a group is “terrorist’ because we say it is and we don’t have to show any evidence. Charming.



In seeking the deportation in 1987 of Hamide, Shehadeh and six other Palestinian immigrants allegedly associated with the PFLP, the Reagan administration’s Justice Department invoked a provision of the Cold War-era McCarran-Walter Act, which barred membership in communist groups <by non-citizens>.


But a lawsuit filed by the so-called L.A. 8 led a federal appeals court to declare the law an unconstitutional infringement of free speech, and Congress repealed it in 1990.


The deportation cases nonetheless continued to churn through the courts because Congress’s action did not affect pending disputes. Then-FBI Director William Webster conceded in 1987 that none of the eight had engaged in terrorist activity and that they would not have been arrested if they were U.S. citizens.


This seems politically inspired. The government doesn’t like the (nonviolent peaceful) politics of the L.A. 8 and wants them out of the country. Fortunately they have friends and allies and this attempt by the government to deport them will be fought long and hard, just like it has for the past 16 years.

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