Archive for March 25th, 2007


Podcast: Karina Garcia. Immigrant Rights Forum

Tawnee Stair, Karina Garcia, Raul Rivera

ANSWER Coalition organizer Karina Garcia helped lead a large protest against Jim Gilchrist of the Minutemen at Columbia University on Oct 4, 2006. Days after, he stormed off the air on Democracy Now when she debated him. She speaks about that, and of how the virulent racism and hatred of Minutemen needs to be confronted and stopped whenever it occurs because, like their predecessor the Ku Klux Klan, they have support within the ruling class who uses them for their purposes.

Danny Shaw, also an ANSWER organizer, spoke first about Bush’s recent trip to Latin America where he was met with large protests wherever he went and also about the March 17 March on the Pentagon.

Karina Garcia MP3 (16:41 min, 5.6 MB)

Danny Shaw MP3 (8:26 min, 2.8 MB)

Recorded in New Haven CT, 03/24/06 at an Immigrant Rights Forum sponsored by Unidad Latina en Accion and the ANSWER Coalition

Photo: ANSWER organizer Tahnee Stair, Karina Garcia. ULA Organizer Raul Rivera.

2 Comments »

The mendacity of MoveON.org

American Leftist is running a comprehensive series of posts on the sellout by Democrats of the antiwar movement and how MoveON.org supports the war while pretending to oppose it.

In fact, MoveON.org, to cite Noam Chomsky, manufactures consent within the boundaries established by Pariser, Joan Blades and their allies within the Democratic Party. It is the political equivalent of an astroturf group, a fake grassroots organization created by a corporate lobbyist or public relations firm to create the impression that the agenda of their client has broad based public support.

The Democrats just voted to fund the war, making a mockery of their toothless pullout vote, and MoveON is a PAC that exists to raise money for mainstream Democrats. Any questions?

Peter Camejo explains the process in the always-relevant Avocado Declaration.

When social justice, peace or civil rights movements become massive in scale, and threaten to become uncontrollable and begin to win over large numbers of people, the Democratic Party begins to shift and presents itself as a supposed ally. Its goal is always to co-opt the movement, demobilize its forces and block its development into an alternative, independent political force.

The Democratic Party is different. They act as a “broker” negotiating and selling influence among broad layers of the people to support the objectives of corporate rule. The Democratic Party’s core group of elected officials is rooted in careerists seeking self-promotion by offering to the corporate rulers their ability to control and deliver mass support. And to the people they offer some concessions, modifications on the platform of the Republican Party. One important value of the Democratic Party to the corporate world is that it makes the Republican Party possible through the maintenance of the stability that is essential for “business as usual.” It does this by preventing a genuine mass opposition from developing.

An independent people’s movement is what will end the war, not donations to self-perpetuating fundraising organizations who exist to support the status quo and their own power base and not by pleading with Congress to end the war when the repeated votes have shown they’ve no interest in doing so. The recent vote by the House to bring the troops home is a perfect example of what Camejo is talking about. It pretends to oppose the war, but offers no means to do so and is not binding on the president. So, by doing nothing, the bill instead tacitly supports the war. This is precisely what Democratic leadership wants to do, co-opt the dissent and render it harmless. Ditto for MoveON.

2 Comments »

Pouring oil on the ground

plastic bag

4% of the world’s oil production goes into making plastic grocery bags. That’s four out of every 100 barrels of oil pumped out of the ground!

Too many of them end up in landfills, where it takes 1000 years for them to decompose. Ditto for all the other petroleum-based plastics that get used once (or were used as packaging and thus never really used) then discarded. A hideously wasteful, and uncomprehending system indeed.

7 Comments »