There’s A Hot Wind Blowing
Posted: March 5, 2012 Filed under: #Occupy and We are the 99 percent!, Anti-War, Austerity, Banksters, Civil Liberties, Department of Homeland Security, financial institutions, income inequality, Russian elections 8 CommentsThere were few surprises in yesterday’s Russian election. Vladimir Putin won in what he declared a ‘clean victory.’ For his side.
For protestors of the last few months, the White Ribbon movement, opinion was to the contrary, comments generally expressing ‘shame, disgrace, treachery.’ Yet according to official results, Putin pulled a 64% majority, well over the 50%, which would require a run-off vote. Independent observers, however, reported widespread irregularities, insisting that Putin’s majority was perilously close to the 50% cliff. According to one observer, Roman Udot, with Galos, a free election watchdog organization, which recorded many cases of multiple voting and voter intimidation:
“It’s one pixel away from a second round.”
What was the reaction to Putin’s victory speech? Thousands of protestors hitting the streets in Moscow and St. Petersburg. And combat-style police, 12,000 reported in Moscow alone, on the ready.
One of the details that piqued my interest was the fact that Putin’s support comes heavily from elderly pension holders. Putin has been wise enough to keep the pension money flowing, even with a slight increase. For the older generation, Putin is the Devil they know. For the digital-savvy young? Not so much. The educated middle-class have reached a tipping point, disgusted with governmental fraud, corruption and political lip service to democratic principles.
This is not a new phenomenon. Social uprisings have been springing up all over. Currently, we’re watching Syria fall apart, desinigrating into civil war. This is on the heels of insistent calls for change across the Middle East—Egypt, Bahrain, Yemen, Libya—the message of which spread like a virus across Europe, the UK, the United States, Japan, China and now Russia.
Say what the pundits will but just beneath our own political process, the charade of another electoral season guided and shaped by money and corporate interests, there’s a hot wind blowing. The strident cacophony of the right wing, each member trying to outdo the other with outrageous comments or the pitiful whines of Wall St. bemoaning the decline in kingly bonuses, only underscores the obvious: the self-regulating, free market, privatize-the-world philosophy is a bust. Fraud is as wide as our broken housing market, the Big Lie deeper than a fracking well.
The intriguing question is what common denominators run through all these movements, despite the vast geographical/political differences? And why, presumably, did these social/political movements catch so many pundits, experts and leaders by surprise?
These are two of the questions, Paul Mason, a UK journalist and Economics Editor for the BBC attempts to answer in his book: ‘Why It’s Kicking Off Everywhere: The New Global Revolutions.’ Mason brings on-the-ground reporting, essay-like reflections, economic insights as well as a historical perspective to what we read in the headlines, websites and tweets of last year. And what we might expect coming at us, all of us in the coming months. He also does an effective job of bringing the pain, the anxiety, the suffering of people caught in the jaws of poverty, austerity and political crackdowns to life. We can see it. We can feel it and understand that we share more with the rest of the world than we have differences. This is a shattering truth.
The ‘why’ of the Dissent that Circled the World is intricately tied to the shuddering economic principles of globalization, fueled by a neoliberal narrative, the particular type of capitalism that has been favored and defended for the last forty years and has enriched the top 1% at the expense of everyone else. This is a system that insists markets are self-regulating, that free, unimpeded markets are the path to Paradise and privatization is always superior to public [government] direction. It is an ideology that refuses to look at the damage caused to vast swaths of the world’s population–the liberties extinguished, the income inequality produced, the environmental destruction–the very realities which are rejected, even when the evidence is undeniable. For instance, the global economic collapse and the implications of climate change.
Mason has reduced the drivers of the world-wide pushback to three main factors: graduates without a future, the rise and sophistication of social networks and the change in consciousness those very networks have produced, particularly as it relates to the definition of freedom and what that really means to ordinary people. Social networks—Facebook, twitter and cell phone usage—have changed the way we see and interact with one another and have fundamentally erased barriers of class, nationality, language and geographical distances. This is the hum of the hive and it’s growing stronger, which is why it’s regarded as a threat.
Anyone thinking the use of the word ‘threat’ is hyperbole should check the recent bill [HR 347] passed overwhelmingly in the US Congress making it a felony to participate in many of the Occupy Wall Street protests of last year. In fact, the bill has been coined the ‘anti-Occupy bill.’ Why haven’t we heard about this? Where is our brave press, the Fourth Estate, defending American liberty? They claim it simply isn’t relevant—no big deal. Interesting too–not a single Democrat voted against the bill’s passage. Not one. In fact, it’s reported that only Ron Paul and two other Republicans voted ‘nay.’ The bill’s vague language leaves the discretion regarding events of ‘national significance’ up to the discretion of the Department of Homeland Security.
Why is there a hot wind blowing? This is why.
Frank Rizzo and a Militarized Police Force
Posted: January 2, 2012 Filed under: #Occupy and We are the 99 percent!, Anti-War, Civil Liberties, Injustice system, Patriot Act, U.S. Politics 8 CommentsWhile I grew into my young adulthood, Frank Rizzo was the Police Commissioner and then later served as mayor of Philadelphia, Pa.
Rizzo died in 1991 but I suspect somewhere in the Great Unknown, the man wails with disappointment, bemoaning the fact he lived before his time. Rizzo once said that if necessary he would roll tanks down Market Street to preserve the peace.
My parents loved Rizzo’s blustery, make-my-day style. I thought he was nuts. As it turns out? The man was a visionary.
One of the overlooked or rarely mentioned contributions of the Occupy Wall Street Movement has been the public eyeballing of today’s military style, domestic police force. Many were surprised, even appalled by the military-style uniforms, the aggressive force, the ‘shock and awe’ approach of smoke and sound cannons caught on video.
Let me start off by saying I enjoy safe environments, appreciate the fact that children walk our streets without the fear of immediate abduction, that little old ladies are not routinely bashed over the head for their social security checks or that drug cartels have yet to murder mayors and judges in turf wars [eg., Mexico].
Crime is down in America. That’s a good thing.
But the push for overkill security measures from our national police forces, fueled by the residual shock of 9/11, defense contractors recognizing small but reliable profit centers and Federal grants under the Homeland Security Department has shot into hyper-drive. This transformation has occurred not simply in urban settings, where drug-related crime is often a legitimate concern, the source of violence against innocent citizens and police alike. No, the rise of military-style SWAT teams has come to small town America. And numerous Federal Agencies.
Why should we, ordinary citizens, be concerned? Surely, there is a parallel between the military and police—the hierarchal structure, the use of weaponry and force. However, the main difference is a soldier is expected to kill the enemy, break the place up in times of war. In contrast, police departments are expected to protect the peace and citizenry, as well as respect our Constitutional rights. Situations quickly grow hairy when these roles [soldier/policeman] begin to morph into one another.
A case in point, actually several cases were laid bare by Radley Balko, who as early as 2007 testified before Congress, warning of the growing number of SWAT Teams in America and/or the militarization of our police departments. This did not happen overnight. In fact the swing to military-style policing has been growing steadily since the 1980’s when Congressional legislation made military surplus available to police departments.
Here are a few examples that Balko has described:
Dress cops up as soldiers, give them military equipment, train them in military tactics, tell them they’re fighting a “war,” and the consequences are predictable. These policies have taken a toll. Among the victims of increasingly aggressive and militaristic police tactics: Cheye Calvo, the mayor of Berwyn Heights, Md., whose dogs were killed when Prince George’s County police
mistakenly raided his home; 92-year-old Katherine Johnston, who was gunned down by narcotics cops in Atlanta in 2006; 11-year-old Alberto Sepulveda, who was killed by Modesto, Calif. police, during a drug raid 2000; 80-year-old Isaac Singletary, who was shot by undercover narcotics police in 2007 who were attempting to sell drugs from his yard; Jonathan Ayers, a Georgia pastor shot as he tried to flee a gang of narcotics cops who jumped him at a gas station in 2009; Clayton Helriggle, a 23-year-old college student killed during a marijuana raid in Ohio in 2002; and Alberta Spruill, who died of a heart attack after police deployed a flash grenade during a mistaken raid on her Harlem apartment in 2003.
As well as:
. . . paramilitary creep has also spread well beyond the drug war. In recent years, SWAT teams have been used to break up neighborhood poker games, including one at an American Legion Hall in Dallas. In 2006, Virginia optometrist Sal Culosi was killed when the Fairfax County Police Department sent a SWAT team to arrest him for gambling on football games. SWAT teams are also now used to arrest people suspected of downloading child pornography. Last year, an Austin, Texas, SWAT team broke down a man’s door because he was suspected of stealing koi fish from a botanical garden.
Btw, the case of child pornography? Turned out the man raided had a password-free wifi connection. It was his next-door neighbor who was into kiddie porn.
On SWAT teams employed specifically by Federal Agencies:
In 2007, a federal SWAT team raided the studio of an Atlanta DJ suspected of violating copyright law. And in June, the Department of Education’s Office of Inspector General sent its SWAT team into the home of Kenneth Wright in Stockton, Calif., rousing him and his three young daughters from their beds at gunpoint. Initial reports indicated the raid was because Wright’s estranged wife had defaulted on her student loans. The Department of Education issued a press release stating that the investigation was related to embezzlement and fraud — though why embezzlement and fraud necessitate a SWAT team isn’t clear, not to mention that the woman hadn’t lived at the house that was raided for more than a year. Ignoring these details, however, still leaves the question of why the Department of Education needs a SWAT team in the first place.
The Department of the Interior also has one [SWAT team], as does the Consumer Products Safety Commission. Last August, gun-toting federal marshals raided the Gibson Guitar factory in Nashville, Tenn. The reason? The company is under investigation for importing wood that wasn’t properly treated.
In 2006, a group of Tibetan monks inadvertently overstayed their visas while touring the U.S. on a peace mission. Naturally, immigration officials sent a SWAT Team to apprehend them.
Concerned yet?
According to Andrew Becker and GW Schulz from the Center for Investigative Reporting, Federal funds deluged America after 9/11 with little oversight. And so, a place like Fargo, ND though an unlikely target for jihadist terrorism, has received 34 billion dollars over the last decade, resulting in a wild spending spree.
In recent years, they [Fargo’s PD] have bought bomb-detection robots, digital communications equipment and Kevlar helmets, like those used by soldiers in foreign wars. For local siege situations requiring real firepower, police there can use a new $256,643 armored truck, complete with a rotating turret. Until that day, however, the menacing truck is mostly used for training runs and appearances at the annual Fargo picnic, where it’s been displayed near a children’s bounce house.
And,
No one can say exactly what has been purchased in total across the country or how it’s being used, because the Federal government doesn’t keep close track. State and local governments don’t maintain uniform records. But a review of records from 41 states obtained through open-government requests, and interviews with more than two-dozen current and former police officials and terrorism experts, shows police departments around the U.S. have transformed into small army-like forces.
Last month, I wrote a post for Sky Dancing on the growing popularity of drones for domestic applications, Eyes in the Sky. Yes, it is true police departments have routinely employed helicopters for apprehension purposes but a drone can be kept in the air for 20+ hours, employ cameras to spy on citizens in their own homes. There’s been no public discussion or debate on using drones in American airspace. For good reason, I would argue. The public identifies the drone to our recent wars in the Middle East, an effective killing machine. On its face, remote aircraft application takes the issue of surveillance to another level, one that many citizens would reject.
Perhaps more disturbing is the fact that with all the money spent on military weaponry and hardware over the last decade+, it’s reported that local municipalities have pinched costs when it comes to basic training, the how to’s, the when and wherefores for their personnel. Basic safety and procedural training protects not only the innocent citizen bystander but police officers as well.
The tragedy we witnessed in Oakland during the Occupy protests where Scott Olsen, an Iraqi vet, was nearly killed was a preventable action. The pepper-spraying and crackdown of peaceful protestors in NYC and elsewhere by overzealous police is a chilling development, as is the routine use of stun guns on the elderly, on children, even pregnant women, and/or the multiple shooting of family pets in warrantless house raids [an alarming number of which have been mistakes]. These are steps too far, steps we will surely regret as a society. This is particularly true at a moment when authoritative incursions are being made on our basic civil rights, eg., the recent sign off on indefinite detention; the kill order on and ultimate assassination of Anwar al-Awlaki, a bad guy but an American citizen nonetheless; a continuing war against whistleblowers; the veil of secrecy in an ever-expanding state of war and surveillance; the deliberate fear-mongering and scapegoating used by our politicians; the disturbing rise and spread of corporatism, etc.
The slide into tyranny is an easy hop, skip and jump from where we find ourselves right now. We’re deluding ourselves by pretending our democratic principles cannot be/have not been eroded. This should not be a partisan issue because all parties have been responsible and all parties will be injured if the trend continues.
Frank Rizzo may be smiling in the afterlife. But Benjamin Franklin leans over his shoulder, reminding us all:
‘Those who sacrifice liberty for security deserve neither. ‘
Sorry, Frank. Ben was the far wiser man.
Donald Rumsfeld’s Book Event Spurs Protests in Boston
Posted: September 29, 2011 Filed under: Anti-War, U.S. Military, U.S. Politics | Tags: Afghanistan, Boston, citizen's arrest, demonstrations, Donald Rumsfeld, IRAQ, Protests, Veterans for Peace, war crimes, war criminals 9 CommentsFormer Bush Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld stopped by Boston on Monday night to sell his book. The event was disrupted by protesters who heckled Rumsfeld and attempted to make a citizen’s arrest for war crimes. From WCVB Channel 5 in Boston:
Several protesters tried to disrupt a forum with Rumsfeld at the Old South Meeting House, shouting and holding up signs as most of the audience shouted and booed them down.
“I went down in front and looked Donald Rumsfeld in the eye and said, ‘I’m making a citizen’s arrest,’ said protester Nate Goldschlag, a member of the group Veterans for Peace, who had to buy Rumsfeld’s book to get into the event.
“He lied us into Iraq. He lied about weapons of mass destruction. He lied about Saddam Hussein being involved in 9/11,” Goldschlag said.
Four demonstrators were dragged out of the hall by police and one person was arrested outside the building for assaulting an officer with a bullhorn, police said.
The event was sponsored by right wing talk radio station WRKO, which explains why most of the 300 people there were supportive of Rumsfeld. Unfortunately for the protesters, they had to purchase copies of Rummy’s book in order to get into the event.
It did my heart good to learn about this little demonstration–sorry I’m a little late finding this story. Here are some videos from and about the event:














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