Archive for January, 2007


L.A. Eight case dismissed

The US government for twenty years has tried to deport eight Palestinian activists in Los Angeles who were doing nothing illegal. They twice got laws changed so as to prosecute them again, slimed them with guilt by association, and get this, never actually filed any criminal charges against them.

Yesterday a judge dismissed the case, slamming the government for “gross failure” to produce exculpatory information, saying it violated the defendant’s constitutional rights, and was “an embarrassment to the rule of law.”

Given the government has spent millions of dollars on this case and lost every round, a rational person would think they will not appeal, especially given the judge’s scathing comments. But we are not dealing with a rational prosecution here.

However, this is a huge victory. Let’s hope it ends here and the L.A. Eight can get on with their lives.

No Comments »

Germany issues warrants for CIA operatives.

CIA operatives kidnapped a German citizen, tortured him, held him in a secret prison before releasing him months later because they had the wrong person. Now Germany has issued warrants for their arrest.

While some might be outraged by thugs kidnapping and torturing, the WaPo, as is too often their wont, tries to justify it.

But the prosecutions have strained U.S.-European relations and underscored deep differences over how to fight terrorism.

The operatives involved are stomach-turning thugs and WaPo is attempting to defend the indefensible.

No Comments »

Major global warming report Friday

Global warming

The IPCC draft report due Friday on climate change is dire indeed.

It’s been six years in the making. 2500 reviewers, 800 authors, and 450 lead authors from 130 countries have participated. Some of the already released findings conclude

Billions will face water and food shortages. Yes, billions.

Seven million homes will be flooded due to rising oceans. Rich, poor, it matter not. They will be gone.

Heatwaves and storms will be more severe. Hurricanes will be less frequent but more powerful.

The Great Barrier Reef, the largest living thing on earth, is toast.

A couple more degrees temperature increase and Australia’s alpine regions and the Amazon forest will collapse.

Sea ice will disappear in the summer.

Snow cover will shrink and permafrost wil vanish.

Apocalyptic, isn’t it?

No Comments »

Exxon meets with global warming groups

Exxon-Mobil has funded global warming denial organizations with millions of dollars. They now say they’ve cut of the funding and might be willing to change their position on global warming. Wow, maybe next year they’ll decide the world isn’t flat too.

The bilious public relations gas emitted by Exxon PR spin is nearly as toxic as the greenhouse gases they so happily produce. They’ve consistently been obnoxious and deceptive about global warming. So, while other large US corporations are already working on remediating global warming, Exxon still can’t bring themselves to admit the obvious truth.

Who cares. Leave them to the scrap heap of history. They don’t get it and they never will. And even if they said they did, how could they be trusted? In a few years they will be among the most loathed and detested entities on the planet after it’s become obvious to all just how how treacherous and duplicituous they were. With any luck, their leaders will be indicted, in prison, or social pariahs. Extreme words? I don’t think so.

Reversing global warming is about to get real serious real fast and there will be no mercy for those who deliberately blocked progress; not when your land is slowly going underwater, or the rains aren’t coming, or monster storms are becoming routine. Nope, people in circumstances like those will not be disposed at all kindly towards a corporation that for years did everything they could to block progress on global warming.

2 Comments »

Biggest yet wind farm coming

The London Array

The London Array will be 12 miles out from the Kent and Essex coasts in Britain, with 271 turbines producing 1,000 MW, as well as preventing the emission 1.9 million tons of greenhouse gases.

No Comments »

Former black militants arrested on murder-related charges

Black Panther Party logo
Former members of the Black Panthers and the Black Liberation Party have been arrested on charges related to a 1971 murder of a police officer.

Police say they have new evidence including a fingerprint recovered from a lighter in 2003 using new techniques and forsenics from a shotgun and buckshot - yet they lost the shotgun in question for several years. And, oh yeah, there’s testimony from an informer.

An unidentified informant, who was provided with immunity from prosecution and financial assistance for housing relocation, identified the men responsible for the attack in 2005.

Ya, I bet he’s reliable and trustworthy…

Two of the men arrested had the charges thrown out in 1976 because the judge said police tortured them.

PSL and Anarkismo detail the flimsy evidence, attempts to trash the Panthers legacy, and more.

Hey, could they have done it? It’s possible I suppose, but this case, with torture, lost evidence, compromised informants, and new charges filed decades later is stinky indeed.

No Comments »

Apple pays $700,000 in bloggers’ legal fees

Apple subpoenaed bloggers over reports that had been posted about a new Apple product claiming they weren’t entitled to First Amendment protections. (Say what? And why wouldn’t they be entitled such protections.)

Happily, the court sided with the journalists and told Apple to pay their court costs plus a 2.2 multiplier.

In a crucial, maybe landmark part of the decision

The Court upheld the rights of online journalists to protect their confidential sources and putting them on par with traditional print journalists. In its ruling, the appeals court said that bloggers and webmasters are no different in their protections than a reporter and editor for print publications.

This should serve as a warning to other companies who might also wish to shred freedom of the press to serve their short-term gain and greed. Why anyone thinks Apple is an enlightened company is beyond me. Recently there’s been options manipulations involving Jobs, a flaky product (the Macbook) that locks up randomly and their response primarily has been to stonewall, now this ugly attempt to curb constitutional freedoms. Yuck.

No Comments »

When does green rage become “ecoterrorism”?

Several members of Earth Liberation Front face lengthy prison terms, possibly life, for their role in several environmentally motivated firebombings and destruction of buildings. The goverment says they are “terrorist” thus the possibly extremely harsh sentences. Ordinary arson just gets you a few years in prison. But if the arson is politically motivated then it becomes way more serious legally.

AlterNet has a thoughtful piece on this using it as a way to discuss if and when violence is ever justified.

The Question of Violence sometimes gets discussed in political circles. Should violence be used? If so, when? Hey, the US was founded on violent revolution, so our founding fathers apparently thought it justifiable sometimes. But that doesn’t mean that a fringe group adopting it as a tactic won’t end up in prison or dead. As Saul Alinsky famously said in the 60’s about the Black Panthers, it’s lunacy to say all political power grows out of the barrel of a gun when the other side has all the guns. But there’s also state-sponsored violence (and lots of it) and sometimes people choose to fight back using “any means necessary” calling it self-defense. So when does that become justifiable?

I’m guessing the defendants were influenced by or are fellow travelers with Green Anarchy and the ideas of John Zerzan.

Their central precept is not that civilization needs to be reconstructed, but rather that it needs to be overthrown in its entirety and never replaced. Things started to go wrong, they contend, when humans first domesticated plants and animals.

John Brow’s gravestoneWell, the door to the Garden of Eden is closed. We can’t go back. And maybe Eden wasn’t all that idyllic in the first place. The best way to create mass change is by creating mass movements, and that requires mass organizing. That’s the flaw I see in anarchist thought. If you want to be without rules and hierarchies, then mass action can’t happen because there’s no structure to organize it, guide it, and make it happen.

The article closes by wondering if the defendants will eventually be seen as abolitionist John Brown is now, as a symbol of a movement that grew in power until it changed the country, even though they paid dearly for it.

2 Comments »

The Real McCain

John McCain was completely for the war when not opposing it. He says the extreme Religious Right are abhorrent except when for when he praises them.

Repeat as needed on most any issue.

website (with videos)

blog

No Comments »

Tax protestor barricades self in home

Ed Brown of New Hampshire was convicted of federal tax evasion. He’s barricaded himself in his home saying he’s ready for an ‘armed standoff.’ Supporters, generally of the homegrown prickly libertarian type that New Hamphire readily produces, are rallying around him.

He claims income taxes are illegal, a oft-tried and never successful defense. Wesley Snipes recently got indicted for attempting the same kind of thing. Taxes may be unfair, they may be onerous, but claiming they are illegal makes CPA’s like my wife wince because such defenses are doomed to failure.

Brown has accused at least one person who was helping him of being a government agent and threw him out of his house. Paranoia strikes deep, indeed. This caused the editor of the Keene Free Press to say she no longer wants to be out at his house even though she supports him.

Background

Let’s hope police wait him out, and that’s there no assault on the house.

No Comments »

Free Kenny!

Free Ken Krayeske

That would be Ken Krayeske who was arrested for standing on the sidewalk photographing the governor of Connecticut (pictured here) as she walked by on her inaugural march. The state police seemed to have gone to quite a bit of trouble to target him. His bail was an outrageous $75,000 and his case has got major attention not just from activists but also from mainstream media as well as legislators.

His case goes to trial tomorrow. In a bizarre coincidence, he was the campaign manager for the Green Party candidate for governor who Governor Rell, a Republican, refused to debate. Instead, it appears he ended up on a political enemies list.

No Comments »

Global warming: The frog jumps free of the hot water

Jumping frog

The Viridian Design Movement started eight years ago, focusing on global warming and how do we get people to realize it’s happening. I was an original member. Back then, global warming was a fringe issue indeed and the group was and is an eclectic bunch of visionaries, geeks, designers, etc. from all over the planet.

There have been 487 newsletters on the listserv and numerous contests over the past eight years. Yesterday our Pope Emperor and chief instigator, (sf author Bruce Sterling) announced the obvious, that the war is over and we won.

We are winning because we were ahead of the curve: we Viridians were an avant-garde who understood, almost ten years ago, that something like this was bound to happen. That does not make us the proper people to actually carry it out. First, we don’t have the scale, the resources, or the ability. Second, and let me be very clear to you here: the primrose path to sustainability, even it is construed as sexy, trendy and stylish, will be dark and thorny. Behind Corporate Green is its darker, bloodstained cousin, Khaki Green, and we’ll be seeing a lot of that. Sustainability will be a comprehensive revolution in the tenor of daily life. There will be blood on the hands of the people who bring it about. Not because they are bloodthirsty. But because there is so much blood.

Yes, what happens when one area runs out of water and there’s no longer enough water to grow crops. Especially if, say, a somewhat nearby area suddenly has more water and the land becomes more fertile. Political unrest and war can and will be the outcome.

Genuine climate mayhem is underway. It is intensifying fast. People are going to die: of heat, of disease, freezing, starving, drowning and dying of thirst. Not in mere tens of thousands as they did in the Paris heatwave, but in hecatombs. We have a global climate crisis. A real one, not a futurist speculation. People are going to make agonizing sacrifices in increasingly frantic efforts to ameliorate that and redress that crisis. Then, next year, they will discover that the situation is vastly worse than then imagined, and the spillage of blood and treasure and sacred honor that they thought would surely help is a fraction of what was necessary.

Nevertheless, the frog will jump from that hot water. We are winning.

From the fringe to mainstream in eight years, the global warming movement is now front and center and being taken seriously planetwide. Even Dubya The Denier now (grudgingly) admits it’s a problem.

We have much to do. All of us. Yes, Sterling is right, to stop this will require huge scale and the resources of the huge corporations and governments. We can do it, we must do it. The politics of global warming will now be a major theme here at Polizeros.

Jump, froggie, jump.

No Comments »

Antiwar movement goes mainstream

The antiwar protests on Saturday were a watershed event of sorts. The media covered it well and mostly favorably. Left-of-center bloggers and sites who previously ignored antiwar demos paid attention this time, sometimes sympathetically, sometimes a bit snidely. As with global warming (see above post) the message has been delivered and the mainstream is, at long last, onboard.

As one who has helped organize antiwar marches and rallies since before the Iraq invasion began, the movement has gone from screaming in the wilderness and being marginalized to the front pages of major newspapers and websites. It was radicals who sparked it, who provided the impetus and the organizing chops, who worked countless hours building demos for little or no money. Think about it, who else but radicals would have done it?

So now it’s gone mainstream, just like antiwar protest did in the Vietnam war. We’ve won the battle for the attention of the mainstream, and they overwhelmingly oppose the war. Now let’s all work to end it.

The real message is the Iraq War wasn’t an aberrant event but rather a quite logical continuing of the decades-long policy of US imperialism. That’s what needs to change.

1 Comment »

World running out of water: UN adviser

River

Delhi has “no more rivers to take water from.”

“The Ganges [in India] and the Yellow river [in China] no longer flow. There is so much silting up and water extraction upstream they are pretty stagnant”

The Colorado and Rio Grande rivers in the US no longer reliably flow into the sea because some much water has been used up.

Scary, huh?

No Comments »

Sinn Fein backs policing in Northern Ireland

The IRA killed many police (and the police many of them) during their underground days. Their leaders, elected officials now, just backed a vote and got an overwhelming 90% in favor of supporting policing. One who voted yes killed an police officer as a teenager, spent 15 years in prison, and said it was time for the party to change.

The vote doesn’t mean Sinn Fein supports the police as constituted now as other events must occur first for this to happen, but this is a seriously big deal.

From the BBC.

Will that mean Sinn Fein members and supporters lining up to apply for the right to don the uniform of [the police]?

That sounds unthinkable, incredulous, even ridiculous. But then again for almost a century, so did what happened today.

Gerry Adams and Martin McGuinness were underground armed insurgents who not only survived but eventually assumed positions of power. Whatever you might think about them, their political and survival skills are quite extraordinary.

Slugger O’Toole, a blog in Northern Ireland, comments on what happened with their usual astute on-the-ground observations.

No Comments »

In Debt We Trust

In Debt We Trust
From Danny Schechter, producer/director of “WMD: Weapons of Mass Deception” and author of ” author of “Embedded: Weapons of Mass Deception: How the Media Failed to Cover the Iraq War”, comes his new movie “In Debt We Trust. America Before the Bubble Bursts.”

It is a journalistic confrontation with what former Reagan advisor Kevin Phillips calls “Financialization”–the “powerful emergence of a debt-and-credit industrial complex.”

While many Americans may be “maxing out” on credit cards, there is a deeper story: power is shifting into fewer hands…..with frightening consequences.

The poor get gouged and swindled while a tiny few get wealthier. But it’s a bubble and it won’t last. Foreclosure rates are rising in California. Interest rates on credit cards rise with lots of extra fees. Those who get caught in the credit trap generally are hard working with jobs, the problem is a system stacked against them where increasingly they can’t make enough to live. Then the credit vultures swoop in. But now, even some of the vultures are dying.

Trailer and movie info

Blog

No Comments »

Avatars Against The War

Avatars Against The War

From reader Kiwini Oe

The Second Life Netroots group has partnered with the Second Life chapter of CodePink to help bring a virtual version of the January 27th national peace march on DC to Second Life.

The SL peace march to Capital Hill takes place Monday 2 pm

More

This makes, to my knowledge, the second such protest in the virtual world of Second Life, the first being by the Scottish Socialist Party against extreme right National Front of France.

In a few years such events will may well be commonplace, large, and influential.

4 Comments »

Save the gay sheep

Seriously.

No Comments »

Hey California inmates, want a better prison?

Then watch the video, made by State of California, detailing the amenities available in out-of-state prisons.

No Comments »

As we protest the war today

But as you march, bear in mind that the the White House is not the only target in this fight, and not the only subject of concern. We need to stand in solidarity with the suffering people of Iraq, with the dead and wounded civilians and soldiers on all sides and from so many countries, and protest all the equivocating politicians, complicit companies and still collusive media companies that deny access to the voices of the anti-war movement and continue to frame this debate so narrowly with little reference to new wars (and other old ones) underway.

votenowar.jpgIt’s not about being the loyal opposition within the Democratic Party, trying to convince them to end the war. The real problem is an economic system that feeds on war, invades other countries based on lies, with a complicit political apparatus in DC. 75% of the people oppose the war. Yet the politicos continue to fund and support it. In a real democracy they would be beholden to the people and the war would be over. We need a system that genuinely does the will of the people.

No Comments »

Mideast religious extremists burn “immodest” womens clothes

They attack women with spray. Stores have been vandalized. They go door to door demanding women turn over clothes theydon’t like. Then they burn the clothes in public.

Some of the Jewish religious extremists in Israel are a freedom-hating and woman-loathing bunch, aren’t they?

HT: Angry Arab

No Comments »

Talk to a human not a phone tree

Gethuman 500 details how to get past voicemail hell at large corporations and talk to a human.

1 Comment »

Indigenous victory: Palm Island cop to be charged

Brisbane,Australia:A major victory has been won by the Indigenous movement in Australia. The Queensland Attorney General’s Department has decided that Senior Sergeant Chris Hurley will be charged with manslaughter over the death of Mulrunji Doomadgee. Mulrunji, an aboriginal man, died in police custody on Palm Island, an aboriginal community, in 2004.

The announcement was greeted with a massive outbreak of cheers, applause and the cry of “justice!” when it was made by Andrew Boe, the legal advisor to the Palm Island council to the seven hundred gathered at the annual Invasion Day rally here.

“I think it is important , “ Boe told the rally, “that once we have got to a point where a decision has gone our way that we with grace and with real generosity let this process occur so that at the end of the day a result comes back that we can, as an overall community, be comfortable with. “

“The one thing I have been looking for, “ he continued,” is a just result according to law and today is the first hope that this is going to occur.” [Background]

The announcement that Hurley would be charged changed the focus of the rally he was addressing. It became a more conscious celebration of aboriginal resistance. Since many indigenous activists had come to Brisbane for the protest from communities across Queensland and New South Wales, Invasion Day was also presented an opportunity to discuss and plan ahead.

This was a theme taken up by Lyle Monroe from Mooree, NSW, who urged the rally to use the success in securing a charge against Hurley as a catalyst for re-uniting Indigenous political activists on the east coast of Australia.

“This day is the day of the invasion and the massacre of our people and that will continue unless we on the East Coast of this country stand up constructively with the intestinal fortitude to say ‘No more!’”

Monroe then asked the crowd to remember the great indigenous leaders who were involved in the first great political resistance in 1938. Aboriginal warriors like Jack Paton, Bill Ferguson, William Cooper, and Pearly Gibbs

“We have to be the east coast of this country again,” he continued,” and we have to tell all those blacks who have allowed themselves to be appointed by respective governments whether they be the Labor right wing or the Liberal right wing:’Shut your mouths!’”

This sense of the continuity of struggle was a major theme for the day. Prior to the rally, forty indigenous activists and their supporters had gathered at the central Brisbane post office to commemorate Dundalee — an aboriginal warrior executed in 1855 by the colonial authorities for defending his land and culture.

Invasion Day events continued throughout the day with a march following the rally and a concert at Musgrave Park in West End.

The decision to charge Hurley with manslaughter was made after a report by former New South Wales chief justice Sir Laurence Street found there was enough evidence to charge the officer . This was in contrast with the recommendation handed down by the state’s Director of Public Prosecutions, Leanne Clare, which had ruled that Hurley was innocent of wrong doing.

While Sen Sgt Hurley has now been suspended, ABC News has reported Police Union’s Denis Fitzpatrick as saying that “police right across this state are furious.” And a report in the local The Courier Mail said that Fitzpatrick was warning that the state’s 9200-strong police force could strike over the decision.

No Comments »

Escalation in Iraq insurgent tactics

In perhaps the boldest and most sophisticated attack in four years of warfare, gunmen speaking English, wearing U.S. military uniforms and carrying American weapons abducted four U.S. soldiers last week at the provincial headquarters in the Shiite holy city of Karbala and then shot them to death.

This will have the effect of making US military in Iraq jumpy and maybe suspicious of any soldier they don’t personally know - which no doubt was one of the aims of the attack.

The uniforms and weapons, I suppose, can be stolen easily enough or bought on the black market. That they apparently spoke English well enough to not arouse suspicion is significant.

Global Guerillas has another example of the increasing sophistication of the attacks, a “hook, line, and sinker” ploy that brought down a Blackwater helicopter, with the four crew members then being shot in the head.

No Comments »

Bring the troops home now

Tomorrow and on March 17, there will be mass anti-war marches and protests in D.C., L.A., and dozens of other cities. It’s no secret that United for Peace, organizers of tomorrow’s protests and the ANSWER Coalition, organizers of March 17, disagree on substantive issues like Palestine and linking the wars to imperialism in general. But one thing they both agree on is Bring The Troops Home Now, so let’s all get in the streets on both days to protest these insane wars.

United for Peace, Jan 27 march

ANSWER Coalition - March 17 march

1 Comment »

Next »