US invades South Florida

February 3rd, 2010

We happened to catch the nightly news, the one that features Katie Couric.

Watching the desert-khaki clad, machine-gun toting “Police” on maneuvers for “Super Bowl security” in Miami, I commented to my wife, “hey, it looks sort of like Baghdad or Kandahar, but without all the bombs going off.”

There were the heavy, armored troop-transport vehicles. The circling helicopters. The usual manhandling suspected “domestic terrorists” and throwing them on the ground, intimidating people in vehicles, all the stuff you’d expect at a Baghdad checkpoint. Without, of course, the up-close explosions and depleted uranium rounds thudding in the distance.

Not that I’d ever want to attend a Super Bowl game anyway. Or any other corporate spectacle these days, for that matter… But what if I wanted to attend a, for example,protest march? Would that be my lot, slammed to the ground, perhaps deafened ppermanently with high-decibel hearing-damage equipment such as police forces are ready to deploy in Vancouver against the Olympics protests?

This week, of course, all the heads of US security forces were in front of Congress whipping up the fear and anxiety level about an “imminent attack” from the usual people who terrorize us, including of course Mr. Bin Laden, now long dead.

It’s just too bad that all hints of a US movement for peace and in opposition to militarising every aspect of our “civilian” lives have now evaporated. It’s easier to accomplish that goal under a “liberal” administration instead of a hated “neo-con” administration, ever notice that?

Alas, we’ll have to rely on the workers, peasants, and slum dwellers in distant parts of our globalized world to do the heavy lifting in opposition to US militarism and imperialism. Much as the Haitians used to attempt to do, before being completely crushed in 1994 and 2004.

Bobby G
Central Wisc.
http://twitter.com/BioDiverseCity

Need continues to rise in our area’s food pantries

February 2nd, 2010

The story is from the Stevens Point, WI Journal, at this link.

Mary Ann Krems wins today’s award for talking accurately about reality, instead of sugar-coating things:

“Mary Ann Krems of Portage County Hunger and Poverty Prevention Partnership said the economy is to blame for the increases, but it’s hard to tell what the future holds.”I think a lot depends, because the jobs are still going down the tubes,” she said. “We’re expecting and anticipating an increase.”

While this increase in need at food pantries is coming during a time of supposed “job-less recovery” (an Orwellian doublespeak term if ever there was one), all the while, there is a “perfect financial storm” still coming.

Welcome to the perfect financial storm  (click)

I’d say the food pantry business is in for some, as they say, “robust growth” in the next 24 to 60 months, wouldn’t you? Story is below my initials, in case the link doesn’t work.

b.g.

—————–

Food requests continue to increase at Portage County food pantries.

Data from the Portage County Hunger and Poverty Prevention Partnership show the number of people unable to afford an adequate amount of food is continuing to rise in many pantries.

Operation Bootstrap, an emergency pantry, saw the largest increase between October and December, when it provided food for 259,749 meals in Portage County, and filled almost 700 requests for emergency assistance, said director Roseann DeBot. Last year during that time, she said, it provided food for 252,722 meals.

Operation Bootstrap received a check for $30,000 from an anonymous donor at the Community Foundation of Central Wisconsin on Jan. 21, which will help address an increased demand for emergency services in Portage County, she said.

“This will help us really across the board continue all the good projects we have going and meet the increased demand,” said. “We’re going to be able to continue with … granting people money for prescriptions and dental, which are two of the biggest needs in the community.”

The money also will go toward fresh food, milk and other products that Operation Bootstrap provides to people in crisis.

St. Vincent de Paul in Plover also saw an increase in demand. It periodically provided food to 1,673 households between April and June. Between July and September, that rose to 1,748, and to 1,876 during the fourth quarter.

The Salvation Army is seeing the same trends, though the numbers dropped slightly because it was under construction for several months in 2009.

Bob Quam of The Salvation Army said in general, more people are coming in for meals. The center served 4,809 meals during the third quarter and 4,574 during the fourth.

“Right now our pantry is in pretty good shape. We can always use (donations), and I always know other food pantries that aren’t in as good a shape,” Quam said.

Mary Ann Krems of Portage County Hunger and Poverty Prevention Partnership said the economy is to blame for the increases, but it’s hard to tell what the future holds.

“I think a lot depends, because the jobs are still going down the tubes,” she said. “We’re expecting and anticipating an increase.”

Do you believe Friday’s economic “good news?”

February 1st, 2010

Friday’s economic news was abuzz with the announcement that Gross Domestic Product grew by 5.7% in the previous quarter of 2009.  Now, have the economic wizards in Washington/Wall Street figured out how to keep the economy growing with only 80% of the population participating in it–I’m subtracting the 20% of us who live in what I call the “OtherAmerica.”  Can they actually keep it limping along as each week, another 400,000+ workers are added to unemployment rolls?  Can you run an eight-cylinder economy on just six cylinders this way?  For how long?

Is my outlook too negative? Why don’t I publish more “good news?”

The answer is, I’m trying to accurately reflect the reality that I see facing the 20% of US population now living in the “OtherAmerica.”  Who are these?  It’s the people now permanently unemployed. The people living on part-time incomes who really can’t afford to live on part-time incomes.  The 40 million (or whatever the real number is) who are living without health insurance. Or enough health insurance–just one major accident or illness away from full bankruptcy.  The people living at or below the federal poverty line.  That’s our “OtherAmerica.”

And for us, the economic news is unrelentingly bad. Day after day, week after week, month after month.  There is no recovery out here in OtherAmerica, sorry to report.

I don’t believe the good news on the GDP.

B.G.

Why I’ll Vote for Patty Dreier for Portage County Executive

January 31st, 2010

Here in Portage County, WI, there’s a primary election on Feb. 16th 2010 for the County Executive. Of the three candidates, I think Patty Dreier offers the best prospects for a different approach to the problems this county faces. Other candidates are the current County Executive, Mark Maslowski, and County Supervisor Jim Gifford.

In his appeal to voters, Maslowski seems to stress the fact that he’s been the County Exec. for the last four years, and is “proud to have served the people” during that time. Going forward, the big project that seems to appeal to Mr. Maslowski is the building of a new courthouse for Portage County, with the current estimate being $29 million to build it.

Keep in mind: the voters rejected a $72 million referendum to build a new “justice center” (courthouse plus jail) in the County last November. One does get the sense that the County Exec. and the County Board would like to sneak this project past the voters in incremental stages–$30 million here, $20 million there, perhaps another $24 million elsewhere, until we end up with their original goal, the $72 million new “justice center.”

Sustainability activists have noted the lack of any commitment by the County Exec. even to making this new courthouse a truly “green” sustainable building project.

Criminal justice activists may note the lack of commitment to de-criminalizing certain activities, for example, small amounts of marijuana possession. Instead, we have the prison-industrial complex mentality still in full force in Portage County. Marijuana busts are annoyingly routine and highly touted in the press, as the prosecutory system ruins countless lives over activities that should carry no criminal penalties whatsoever, not even a fine.

Unfortunately, Jim Gifford offers, as the reason to vote for him, the fact that he’s been in County government a darn long time. Seventeen committees he’s served on. Experienced. Ready to keep leading the county using the paradigms and thought processes that served us so well 10, 15, or 20 years ago. He also would like the expensive, new edifice constructed for the County Courthouse, again without any (apparent) thought to its green credentials or inclusion in any sustainability plan. At least, that’s not on his website.

In short, I think you’ll find the two men, Gifford and Maslowski, amount to clear votes for what is known as the “old boys’ network.” You know, the guys who know which guys to call when you need things done the good, old-fashioned, back-to-the 90s (or ’80s, or ’70s, or someplace in the wayback machine) Way We’ve Always Done It.

I’ve never heard a peep from Maslowski nor Gifford addressing the need for less fossil fuel reliance, understanding the Peak Oil problem, addressing sustainability, considering the urgent need of the youth for some means of livelihood and sustaining themselves, worrying about the overuse of groundwater by Big Agriculture in our region, thinking about whether it’s really okay to allow the constant urban sprawl that seems to be this county’s signature passion.

In fact, when the Stimulus package was announced last winter, local officials (city, county, state) for the most part fell all over themselves looking for projects to keep the Old Ways going for another decade or two: “shovel-ready” projects, keeping the highways growing, the highway bridges in tip-top shape, more roadwork, more whatever it takes to keep using petroleum-fueled personal automobiles, in disregard of the fact that petroleum-fueled vehicles are fully obsoleted by the approach of the downslope of global peak oil production. Well, you can’t expect imaginative new solutions from gentlemen whose vision is locked in the rear-view mirror of their 450-horse V-8 SUV, can you?

With Patty Dreier, I do get a sense, on the other hand, that she is aware of these issues. You see her at local food group breakfasts. You see her reaching out to younger people, calling meetings that focus on students, and wondering how things can be done in a more sustainable, “green” manner. You actually get the sense that Patty is listening to you, when you raise difficult questions.

There is experience to consider, and Patty’s work in grant-writing for the County, as well as working for the Central Wisc. Environmental Station as Director, and a solid background in biology and natural resources, are key experiences that will serve a County Executive well in going forward into an era when nature matters, more so than the needs of developers and construction firms.

Even further, I get the sense that even if Patty Dreier doesn’t win this election, she’ll still be there at the local food group events, or reaching out to sustainability-oriented people, or mixing it up with students and younger people to sketch out the future that these younger folks are going to have to contend with.

I decided not to run for the County Board again this election cycle, because I wanted to put full efforts into the work of doing community-supported agriculture and marketing the local food idea to the local communities. So, instead, I’m throwing what little weight my words may have behind getting you to first go out and vote in the primary election on Tues. Feb. 16th, 2010. Then, when she secures a spot on the April ballot, go out and vote for her again.

Especially if you’re a student of voting age, I’m urging you to vote. Every year, 9,000 students become part of our County’s population base. In order to maintain the good old status quo, Way We’ve Always Done Things, our local elected officials count on minimizing or just ignoring the issues, needs, and contributions of college, technical school, and recent high school graduates. I think with Patty Dreier’s campaign, you’ve got at least a shot at having those issues, needs, and contributions acknowledged.

I’m Bobby G, and I wrote this blog independently of any campaign, and I’ll take the flak for whatever I just said that might irritate some folks.

Bobby G.

Ended, Tree Sit to Stop Mountaintop Removal Coal Mining

January 30th, 2010

Friday, January 29th, 2010
posted by norag

Tree Sit Ends, Sitters Vow Not Over Until Blasting Stops
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: 304-854-7372, news@climategroundzero.org
Note: For more info, see : www.climategroundzero.org, www.mountainjustice.org

January 29, 2010

PETTUS, WVa—After blocking Massey Energy’s operations on the Bee Tree Permit for nine days, Amber Nitchman, 19, and Eric Blevins, 28 descended from their respective trees. They had occupied the two oak trees—originally accompanied by a third tree sitter, David Aaron Smith, 23—to protest mountaintop removal and the blasting of Coal River Mountain. Upon descent, they were immediately arrested by West Virginia State Troopers. The sitters’ decision to leave the trees was made in light of the recent drop in temperature.

After a week of Massey security harassing the sitters with deafening sirens and air horns, acall-in pressure campaign was launched by Climate Ground Zero, Mountain Justice and other anti-mountaintop removal groups. The receipt of hundreds of calls from around the country led to an emergency meeting with Climate Ground Zero volunteers, the Raleigh County prosecutor and Governor Manchin. The meeting resulted in the moratorium and a call for aninvestigation of the abuse.

The tree sit represents Climate Ground Zero’s most sustained intervention in mountaintop removal mining operations since its campaign of nonviolent direct action began last February. Volunteers know that the fight is far from over and expect work to commence on the Bee Tree site immediately. However, they see this tree sit as a victory. “It halted blasting for nine days. I think they’ve wildly succeeded with their goals,” said Climate Ground Zero volunteer Mike Bowersox. In a final communication from her perch, Nitchman captured the group’s resolve. “Its not over until the blasting is stopped,” she said.

“Move to Amend” responds to Supreme Court ruling on corps.

January 27th, 2010

Ben Manski has started this website Move to Amend which attempts to start the petitioning for an amendment to the US Constitution prohibiting corporations being treated as persons–whether for purposes of buying elections, or any other purposes where you don’t want people and corporations confused.

Anyway, the “corporation” is just a business organization that serves the interests of members of the ruling class(es) isn’t it?  Why do we have a hard time saying it’s time to rein in the power of the “ruling classes?”

Americans are so afraid of class struggle, or any hint of class struggle, aren’t we?

bg

Obama’s Yemeni Odyssey Targets China

January 11th, 2010
This linked story well worth reading if you want to help others around you sort
out why the US is so interested in Yemen now. 

Hint: it has nothing to do with the "junk-in-the-trunk" bomber on a Christmas
Day flight. 

Of note is that this link appeared in a larger context on The Oil Drum,
"China's global quest for oil." 

RT @TheOilDrum Drumbeat: January 9, 2010: China’s global quest for oil When the
going gets tough, China goes shopping for ener... 

http://bit.ly/8nzJxr 

Peak Oil: It gets complicated now. 

Bobby G
Middle Wisconsin

Response to County Republican Party Chair in Stevens Point (WI) Journal

January 7th, 2010
The letter below responds to an open letter sent in by
Ms. Olszewski, Chairwoman of the Republican Party of Portage
County, WI. In her letter, she employed the usual Limbaugh-Hannity
talking points about "America changing so much you won't recognize
it. She harped about "taxes and spending" not being a solution to
health care reform (as if anyone ever said they were). She ominously
warned that "November, 2010 is close." She employed a batch of other
content-free cliches and platitudes. This letter is my response.
-Bobby G.

Current political change is minimal 

The letter from the Chair of the County Republican Party illustrates
the low level of political discussion in the USA at this time.
Ms. Olszewski asserts  that "We need common sense and leadership," yet
we find in this letter an absence of leadership. 

As a Wisconsin Green Party member at-large I see cluelessness among
leaders of the two major parties on the health care reform issue.  I'm
not letting the Dems off the hook--I skewer them after a remark about
the County Chair's letter. 

Ms. Olszewski asserts that "no matter what poll you read, most of the
public is not in favor of the health care bills passed by Congress."  She
should know that a huge number of polls have shown that the public is
in fact very much in favor of 1) single payer health-care, failing that,
2) the "public option" and failing that, 3) no forced purchases of health
insurance, and strict controls on premium costs. 

In our AARP household, I can verify that constant polling is done of
the tens of millions of AARP members. The sentiment in favor of single-
payer or public-option is overwhelming. 

The Chair asserts that "to overhaul the entire system in the course of a
few months is short-sighted."  Health reform has been in the works since
the New Deal--it is constant, ongoing. Short sight comes from ignorance
of your history. 

The Chair asks, as if prompted by Hannity, Limbaugh & Beck:  "will we
even recognize this country in 10 to 15 years?"  I can answer as a
working class person: I don't recognize the country I knew as a young
worker in 1970; it has changed ever for the worse, for workers.
The worst changes came under GOP administrations.  Since the GOP does
not represent workers, this should not bother the County Chair. 

The Dems deserve sharper criticism, and many seats lost in Congress,
for their role in allowing the health care corporations to gut the
crucial parts of health reform, under Republican bullying: no single
payer, no public option, and a gift of 35 million new insurance
policies under penalty of law. 

The Dems allowed the most depraved red-baiting of liberal health
reform  proposals, as if McCarthy had never been defeated but instead
was in charge of both houses. 

I too expect our representatives will represent "our values:" Working
class values of economic justice, social safety net, kicking lobbyists
out of Congress, forbidding untold millions of dollars given by the
corporate elites to purchase votes in Congress. 

However, Ms. Olszewski's conclusion that "November 2010 is not too far
away" cuts two ways. She may that right-wing Democrats replaced by far
more left, progressive Dems. Republicans may split in two: The GOP of
old--rational, capable of civil discourse; and the Tea Party of new,
irrational, incapable of any coherent argument without a script from
Limbaugh-Hannity. 

Bobby G--

How America went from a nation of producers to consumers: Part V: The Reagan (Counter)Revolution begins race to the bottom

December 16th, 2009

Gil Scott-Heron again:

“What has happened is that, in the last 20 years, America has changed from a producer to a consumer; and all consumers know that when the producer names the tune, the consumer has got to dance. The way it is.

“We used to be a producer–very inflexible at that–and now we are consumers and finding it difficult to understand: Natural resources and minerals will change your world.” –Gil Scott-Heron, “B Movie,” ca. 1981.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=56ipWM3DWe4&feature=related

I’m using Gil Scott-Heron’s words to anchor this piece because I always saw him as the voice of the voiceless, the underclass, the black workers and those who couldn’t get a job. And when the 1980s decade began, black workers and poor people in general were the canaries in the coal mine for what was going to befall the rest of the working class and what we called “the middle class” in those days.

Ronald Reagan became a larger-than-life figure for a lot of voters in this country who saw him as someone who could deal with the threat of the Soviet Union, with the Iranian revolution, take on the labor unions, stop inflation, cut taxes, curtail welfare spending, and usher in new prosperity, even if only for a quarter of the US population.

The election of Reagan caused some splits in the US labor movement, where in many cases, labor unions of the more conservative bent such as Teamsters and some of the construction trades actually endorsed Reagan. In order to grasp why some labor unions in the USA have tended toward the conservative side of the spectrum, you might go back a ways in history and consult writers of the real left, starting with Frederick Engels’ 1892 book The Condition of the Working Class in England. Engels, and later V.I. Lenin in Russia, spoke of an “aristocracy of labor” who more and more tended to side with the capitalists, even while occasionally getting into conflict with these capitalists.

It all had to do with the use of the super-profit that could be derived from the laboring people in the colonies (later, neocolonies), who worked at the very bottom of the wage-labor pyramid. With such extraordinary profit in hand, the theory goes, capital can sort of “bribe” the highest-paid sectors of its home labor force in the home country (England or the USA) to take its side in political matters. The most important of these political matters was the continued oppression and exploitation of foreign nations’ work forces. With the highest standard of living in the world somewhat assured, the higher tiers in the US labor movement (as well as professional workers and those not in unions) could usually be counted on to support wars of foreign intervention.

Domestically, the form that this kind of “super-profit” extraction and division of the labor force into an “aristocracy” and a highly-exploited general workforce took was in the division of white workers against African-American and Latino workers. Within the US labor market, the deep south and the southwest provided a source of such super-profit for capital for decades. The deep south also became a kind of foundry for the civil rights movement, a general uprising of southern black working people against the intolerable treatment that persisted since the first slaves arrived.

All this is to suggest some explanation for why Mr. Reagan, no friend of the working class, could nonetheless have gotten a lot of votes, and support, from the working class. White workers understood him to be out to slash spending on social welfare, seen as disproportionately supporting poor black working families. They thought his administration would lower their taxes and bring new prosperity. They thought this administration would stand tough against the communist threat arising from Latin America, the Caribbean, and Afghanistan.

So, a sector of labor was willing to throw their votes to Reagan, then watch for the next eight years as the producing, industrial sector of America’s economy was hollowed out and shipped overseas. They watched as de-regulation was introduced in a number of sectors of the economy, especially the financial sector, and where a large bubble would build up in the stock market, along with the savings and loan industry and other key sectors that would later come crashing down, starting in October, 1987.

Left economists often point out how big capital uses recessions to “rationalize production,” that is, to down-size manufacturing, introduce new automation techniques, shed less-profitable factories or entire divisions, and especially since the Carter years, these downturns have served as opportunities to move work abroad. The recession that began shortly after Reagan took office was a deep one, and left US organized labor in a greatly weakened condition.

The Reagan Recession introduced America to a new wave of homelessness among poor workers that had not been seen since the Great Depression era. In 1984-1985, I had been living and organizing in Philadelphia at a time when there were some 40,000-50,000 homeless working poor people living out on the streets, in full public view. This was the time when Bruce Springsteen was organizing benefit gigs for homeless groups, and when the issue of homelessness became a major issue in many large cities in the USA.

This recession began to raise the question both for capital and for labor: how far can you cut the standard of living of your domestic working class before their ability to be a consumer class is badly damaged and begins to feed into the growing recession? It is one thing to gain super-profits by opening hundreds of new factories in the maquiladora region of Mexico (just across the US border). It is another thing if this impoverishes so many US workers in the domestic market that they can no longer afford to drive retail sales onward and upward.

This tension between falling standard of living in the USA and the need for constant growth in the US gross domestic product was only temporarily resolved in the boom period of the Clinton-Gore years. It would come back to haunt the USA with the start of another recession just at the beginning of the GW Bush administration, and would take on an entrenched, scary scope with the recession that began in December, 2007. It turns out, you can’t just turn a nation of producers into one of consumers, if the consumers have not got the income to drive a healthy consumer economy. This is the pickle in which America finds itself today.

What of Reagan’s role as the liberator of those behind the “Iron Curtain” of the Soviet Bloc?  “Mr. Gorbachev: tear down this wall” and look, a few years later, the wall came down.  I don’t think Reagan liberated those people through his tough rhetoric and huge military spending.  But Reagan certainly landed on the scene at the opportune time, when the Soviet Union had been struggling under 40-year history of maintaining an unsustainable bloc of countries hostile to the Russian homeland, trying to match the USA in war spending, and finally, making the historically fatal error of trying to invade and occupy Afghanistan.  I think you can argue that as hollowed-out as the USA was becoming, the Soviet Union was even more hollowed-out in terms of its ability to sustain itself as a going concern.

The legacy of the collapse of the Soviet Union is still playing out today in many ways, in the Persian Gulf, in Afghanistan, Iran, as well as Latin America and Africa.  With the disappearance of socialism as an economic system for most of the globe, the way was clear for global capitalism to take over, and take over it did, rapidly.  In a way, this rapid takeover prepared the way for future economic crises to take on the sort of apocalyptic scale that our current global economic meltdown is taking.

Next: Part VI: Clinton/Gore, Bush, and Obama: Laying the Groundwork for Collapse.

Readings

Max Elbaum and Robert Seltzer, Theory of the Labour Aristocracy, Resistance Books, 1984. E-book available here.

Bill Fletcher, Jr. and Fernando Gapasin, Solidarity Divided: The Crisis in Organized Labor and a New Path toward Social Justice, University of California Press, Berkeley, 2008.

Steven F. Hayward, The Age of Reagan: The Conservative Counterrevolution 1980-1989, Crown Forum, 2009.

V.I. Lenin, Imperialism: The Highest Stage of Capitalism, International Books, 1969.

Michael Round, Grounded: Reagan and the PATCO Crash, Routledge, 1999.

James B. Stewart, Den of Thieves, Touchstone Books, 1992.

COP-enhagen

December 16th, 2009

Copenhagen’s climate change summit. #COP15 is the hashtag on Twitter.

Activists are calling it COP-enhagen, because of its eerie resemblance to the Battle in Seattle, Quebec City, Genoa, the G20, Republican Convention, etc. That is, COPs are in control, not the civil society electeds.

My conclusion is that Subcomandante Marcos was right on this point: “the police have replaced politics.” Ruling classes in any country, in any city, merely turn over the nasty job of bashing in youth activists’ heads to the police, wash their hands of any blood, and go on about their useless, fruitless meetings.

COP-enhangen has proven no different.

What it illlustrates to me is the need for municipalities, local govts., to wrench control over their police forces from the higher-up levels of govts. (e.g. federal, or WTO, or NAFTA, or whomever really rules). Control over police should be in place BEFORE these cities ever invite large gatherings where there is a possibility of mass protest.

This could pave a whole new avenue of struggle–local autonomy, autonomous zones, anti-authoritarian local govts. just trying to serve the people, etc.

Otherwise, these municipalities like Cope and Hang ‘Em just end up looking like fascist police depts. in the good old USA, who they’re so eager to not look like.

Just my comments from monitoring the situation chronically.

Peace

Bobby G
http://www.twittercom/biodiversecity