Monthly Archive for September, 2005

Every Bush Flight is Costly

President Bush is on his seventh trip to the Gulf Coast since Hurricane Katrina hit a month ago. The visit comes even as he encourages Americans to save gas, and to cut out unnecessary travel. He says federal employees will do the same.

The president’s spokesman says this trip is, in fact, essential — so the president can get a look at recovery efforts.Spokesman Scott McClellan says the president’s motorcade of gas-guzzling vans and SUVs is being shortened. But it’s hard to make similar savings on Air Force One. The Air Force recently estimated that fuel costs on the presidential aircraft have risen past six-thousand-dollars an hour, up from just under four-thousand in the last budget year.

Copyright 2005 Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Why I Was Smiling by Cindy Sheehan

From Cindy’s Diary
Tue Sep 27th, 2005 at 10:42:28 PDT

I had a huge grin on my face when I was getting arrested yesterday. I have received a lot of flak for smiling. Apparently I am not supposed to smile, but I had some really good reasons for doing so.

Ohio to Rally at Statehouse for Gay Community this Saturday, Oct. 1st

OIA Newswire

COLUMBUS, Ohio - From Toledo to Athens, from Cincinnati to Cleveland, and from many other cities and towns across Ohio, people will be traveling to Columbus for Equality Ohio’s “Homecoming Rally for Equality,” Saturday, Oct. 1, 2005.

By joining together on the Statehouse lawn at 3:30 p.m., Ohio’s LGBT residents, as well as supportive straight allies, will make a strong statement to elected officials — and to the entire state — about the need for equal protections for all people in Ohio.

At the rally, local and national leaders will speak about the challenges facing LGBT Ohioans; students will share their experiences in Ohio’s high schools and colleges; religious leaders will talk about how the belief in equal rights is a religious value; and families will give their insights into today’s debates about marriage and children.

“Homecoming is a time when people return to a place where they spent their days in safety and full of hope,” said Lynne Bowman, who was recently named executive director of Equality Ohio. “Ohio’s lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender residents have had many occasions to lose that hope in recent years, but we stay in Ohio because this is our home.”

Bowman said the rally is a chance for the community and its friends to let lawmakers as well as the state know that equal rights are a value Ohio should hold high.

“Ohio’s lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender residents and our friends know that once Ohioans hear our stories they will agree,” she said.

For more information on Equality Ohio and the Homecoming Rally for Equality, go to http://www.equalityohio.org

King George!

here is my awesome dad striking an abu-ghraibesque pose in one of the t-shirts i designed:

Front Text:
“King George: Protector of the Saudi Royal Family, Brother of Osama, Killer of Americans”
Back Text:
25 Similarities Between Bush and Hitler

now here’s my shameless plug:
you can get a King George shirt for your very own
@ www.cafepress.com/saucylady!

Cindy Sheehan and at Least a Dozen Others Arrested in Washington, D.C.

By Ryan G. Murphy and Emma Vaughn

L.A. Times

WASHINGTON — Cindy Sheehan, whose protest camp outside President Bush’s vacation home in Texas became a focal point of the antiwar movement this summer, was arrested today outside the White House at the head of a civil disobedience campaign intended to dramatize the opposition to the war in Iraq.

On the third day of demonstrations that brought tens of thousands of opponents to the war to Washington on Saturday, a much smaller group sat down in front of the executive mansion, after being refused an opportunity to meet with a White House staff member.

They sought to present a petition calling for the withdrawal of the U.S. troops in Iraq.

At least a dozen were arrested.

Before Sheehan, 48, was arrested, she took a picture of her son, Casey, who was killed in an ambush last year in the Sadr City section of Baghdad, from around her neck and tied it with a pink ribbon to the tall, wrought iron fence that surrounds the White House.

Earlier in the day, 41 people protesting the war in Iraq were arrested at the Pentagon.

Outside the White House, Bill Mitchell, 54, of Atascadero, Calif., said, “We are here to bring an end to this war. No more blood for oil. No more Iraqi and American blood in our children’s names. We are here to bring them home.”

As police moved in on the protesters, the demonstrators sang Amazing Grace, This Little Light of Mine, and other songs.

U.S. Park Police spokesman Sgt. Scott R. Fear said, “it’s a peaceful demonstration. We are going to take our time arresting them.”

The demonstrators were given three warnings, after which they were arrested for demonstrating without a permit.

“Call my office-tell them I’ll be late,” said Cheryl Norris, from the back of a police van. She had traveled from Houston, ahead of Hurricane Rita.

David Barrow, 58, from Washington, wore an orange jumpsuit and a black hood, evocative of the detainees mistreated at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq.

“I want this image in the minds of the American people. What our country is doing is practicing torture. We cannot be a part of this torture. It’s a disgrace,” he said.

One man climbed over the fence. Police grabbed him almost as soon as he set foot on he north lawn.

On Capitol Hill, meanwhile, other opponents of the war sought to lobby members of Congress to withhold funding for the military operations.

“There are two fronts to this antiwar movement-the street action which shows the court of public opinion and the will of the people, and the lobbyists, who are saying ‘we recognize that this is the power Congress has, that they hold the purse strings for war,’ ” said Frances Anderson, a Los Angeles actress and an organizer of Code Pink and Progressive Democrats of America.

Mimi Kennedy, an actress who is chairing Progressive Democrats of America, and several others under the banner of Code Pink and United for Peace and Justice, spent the day seeking to argue their case before Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) and other Democrats.

Feinstein left her office moments before the Kennedy and her group arrived; they met instead with Richard Harper, the senator’s legislative aide.

“Feinstein wasn’t there to hear our concerns, and she could have been. She chose not to because she does not want to hear our concerns,” Kennedy said.

Howard Gantman, a spokesman for the senator, said the group had not sought a scheduled meeting with Feinstein, who was spending much of the day at a meeting of the Aspen Institute’s Middle East Strategy Group, of which she is a co-chair.

Tim Goodrich, a member of Iraq Veterans Against the War, and a former senior airman in the Air Force, said, “We want Feinstein to take a stance, instead of staying in the middle or voting with the Republicans.”

He compared her with Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), whom he praised for “representing her California constituents.”

Make levees, not war: September 24th Peace Rally in D.C.

From Salon.com
By Jeff Horwitz

Sept. 25, 2005 | WASHINGTON — Though Saturday was the first day a permit had been granted for an antiwar march past the White House since the Iraq war began, one could be forgiven for having low expectations for the event.

To begin with, the joint organizers, International ANSWER and United for Peace and Justice (UFPJ), feud so regularly that they had to sign a pact promising not to attack each other until the event was over.

Then there was ANSWER’s rejection of message control — its leadership demanded that each of its component organizations be allowed to protest issues besides the war. Starting at 9 a.m., therefore, the Palestinian boosters took over Farragut Square with their own signs and chants, while bands of anarchists, affordable housing advocates, and Hugo Chavez supporters staked out intersections around D.C.’s downtown.

Finally, rain was in the forecast, and Hurricane Rita was already sure to dominate the next morning’s lead news slot.

But yesterday’s protesters beat the odds and pulled off what was certainly D.C.’s biggest antiwar demonstration since the Iraq occupation began. Organizers claimed as many as 250,000 demonstrators attended; though D.C. police estimates were more conservative, none pegged the crowd at below 100,000. By the time the rally convened at 11:30 a.m., scores of demonstrators filled the Ellipse, spilling onto the Mall, the streets around the White House, and the Washington Monument — a hopeful sign that the effectiveness of the peace movement may have reached a turning point.

While the half-dozen UFPJ and ANSWER speakers held forth on incongruous topics ranging from discrimination against American Muslims to the illegitimacy of Bush’s 2000 Florida victory, their two principal demands were an immediate withdrawal of American troops from Iraq and a new federal focus on the devastated Gulf Coast. “National security begins in New Orleans, homeland security begins at home,” Jesse Jackson told the crowd. “Bring the troops home now.”

Other speakers made the same Baghdad-New Orleans link, reminding the crowd that many Louisiana National Guardsmen were fighting abroad when the hurricane struck. Demonstrators waved signs bearing the phrase “Make levees, not war” in response. “I think that it’s broadening the focus,” Baptist Peace Fellowship demonstrator Tom Burkett said of the combined antiwar and disaster relief message. “Are we going to be a better country by spending another 200 billion [in Iraq] or spending it on the Gulf Coast?”

It would have been a stretch to call the speech given by bereaved military mother turned peace activist Cindy Sheehan memorable, but those gathered loved it anyway. In a strained voice, she copiously congratulated the audience for coming and condemned the moral abominations of torture and preemptive war before demanding that American troops be immediately brought home. “We’re going to say not one person should have died, not one more should die,” she said with the White House lawn at her back. “Can you scream that to the White House?” The audience could.

For Sheehan, it was the final stop on the Bring Them Home Now Tour. Operating out of a tent dubbed “Camp Casey” in honor of her dead son, the military family organizations that have traveled with Sheehan were neither the protest’s largest nor its most vocal contingent. As the afternoon march began, several such families opted to sit it out. “Can’t march,” said Phil Waste, a sturdy 65-year-old who sat on a bench with his wife, Linda, watching demonstrators carrying dozens of flag-draped cardboard coffins stream by. “My knees are shot.” With three sons and two grandchildren currently serving in the military, the Shellman Bluff, Ga., couple had been traveling with Sheehan for the last six weeks as members of Military Families Speak Out. Seeing her in Crawford, Texas, they said, had convinced them they owed it to their children to protest.

“They’re being misused,” Phil said. “They’re forward observers, and now they’re being used as policemen, driving up and down the streets of Baghdad like ducks in a shooting gallery. They’re not trained for that.” The couple believes stress is taking a great toll on their family: One of their sons brought a backpack full of disposable cameras with him on his first deployment, Linda said, and “when he got home, he threw them all away. He said he never wanted to see the pictures.”

Demonstrators like the Wastes and Cindy Sheehan added gravitas to an event in search of it. As folk musician Steve Earle would bluntly state later in the afternoon, “Cindy simply has credentials that a lot of us do not have. We needed her.”

The press coverage in the run-up to the protest — which has hardly been favorable to the antiwar movement in the past — this time characterized the protesters as a more mainstream force to be reckoned with. “Antiwar rally will be a first for many,” a front-page Washington Post’s Friday headline announced. “Focused message draws protesters of all types.” Associated Press reporter Jennifer Kerr somehow found Paul Rutherford, a 60-year-old lifelong Republican-cum-peace-activist from Vandalia, Mich. “President Bush needs to admit he made a mistake in the war and bring the troops home, and let’s move on,” Rutherford declared.

Although there must have been a few other Rutherfords scattered throughout the crowd, the overwhelming majority of attendees were committed activists whose politics ranged from progressive to leftist — the sort of people who always go to war protests, or at least stay home and feel guilty about it.

That’s not to say Sheehan and crew didn’t have a profound impact on the protest — they did — but it was largely an internal one. Lauren Sullivan, a Lawrence, Kan., graduate student who took a hiatus to staff Sheehan’s now-mobile Camp Casey, believed Sheehan cleared much of the static out of the antiwar movement’s message. “Cindy got it down to ‘What noble cause?’ and ‘Bring them home now,’” Sullivan said. Everywhere Sheehan went on Saturday, she was mobbed by well-wishers, seeming to escape the often-fractious ideologies of protest politics: Even bandanna-masked anarchists said she’s cool.

Whether due to Sheehan’s media juggernaut or the fallout over the Bush administration’s continuing stumbles at home and abroad, some of the organizers of Saturday’s protest spoke for the first time like politicians with something to lose. “We are at a tipping point whereby the antiwar sentiment has now become the majority sentiment,” ANSWER coordinator Brian Becker proudly proclaimed. Nowhere does he touch upon his former statements to Workers World regarding Iraq’s “long, proud tradition of anti-colonial resistance.” Good polling data can do strange things to people.

That’s not to suggest that the antiwar movement has come down with anything resembling military discipline. In the frequently carnivalesque march that looped around the White House and downtown, one could spot just about any slogan imaginable, from the 9/11 conspiracy theorists to the simply unintelligible: Riding a green ladies’ bicycle, a white-bearded hippie sanctimoniously coasted past a line of stationary D.C. cops, holding aloft a poorly lettered sign reading “WHY? Motherfucker$.” Four of D.C.’s finest double over laughing in his wake. “The city prefers the officers to keep a straight face,” their sergeant said. “Sometimes that’s hard.”

Earlier that afternoon, a group of anarchists splintered off the parade route onto K Street NW, overturned newspaper boxes and, according to Jeremy Hammond, a self-described “anti-capitalist traveler,” controlled the street for two hours. The police arrested one or two, and chased the rest out on motorcycles. Later, Hammond says, the anarchists regrouped in front of a military recruiting office, and succeeded in being shot at with rubber bullets. (The skirmish has not appeared in any other published accounts.)

In front of the J. Edgar Hoover FBI Building, a few hundred counter-protesters drew notice far out of proportion with their numbers. Organized by Karl Singer, a New Jersey I.T. technician from a military family, the “Support the Troops” rally lined a block heavily fortified by barriers and police, baiting the less pacifistic protesters through a bullhorn on everything from abortion to personal grooming. “Even people in the military don’t want to fight wars,” Singer admitted in a reflective moment. “But sometimes wars are necessary.” Behind the counter-protesters’ lines, a solidly built young man with two prosthetic legs rode a Segway up and down the block like a general patrolling his ranks.

These are all minor ripples, though, not much more of a crisis than the light drizzle that fell for a few minutes at the march’s beginning.

In the late afternoon, the protesters, tired after the slow-moving march, begin to put down their signs and disperse. A Salvation Army employee named Kevin Lindsey, who says he is “embarrassed he didn’t get involved in war protests earlier,” has gotten stuck with the front end of one of the flag-draped coffins. He isn’t sure which of the dozens of organizations the prop belongs to — he just took over, he says, because “somebody was getting really tired.” As he nears the Washington Monument, Lindsey, not sure what to do with it, says, “I know I can’t just put it down.”

Police Mistreatment and Abuse Widespread in LGBT Communities Nationwide

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL PRESS RELEASE
Thursday, September 22, 2005


New Amnesty International Study Finds LGBT People of Color and Youth Most Likely to Suffer; Calls on Police to Improve Training and Accountability
“The police are not here to serve; they are here to get served…every night I’m taken into an alley and given the choice between having sex or going to jail.”
— Amnesty International interview with a Native American transgender woman, Los Angeles

(New York) – In the most comprehensive report of its kind to date, Amnesty International (AI) reveals that police mistreatment and abuse of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people are widespread nationwide and go largely unchecked due to underreporting and unclear, under-enforced or non-existent policies and procedures.

“Across the country, lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people endure the injustices of discrimination, entrapment and verbal abuse as well as brutal beatings and sexual assault at the hands of those responsible for protecting them – the police,” said Dr. William F. Schulz, Executive Director of Amnesty International USA (AIUSA). “Some, including transgender individuals, people of color and the young suffer disproportionately, especially when poverty leaves them vulnerable to homelessness and exploitation and less likely to draw public outcry or official scrutiny. It is a sorry state of affairs when the police misuse their power to inflict suffering rather than prevent it.”

In its 150-plus page report, Stonewalled: police abuse and misconduct against lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people in the United States, AI focuses on four cities – Chicago, Los Angeles, New York and San Antonio – surveys the 50 largest police departments in the country, as well as Washington, D.C., about LGBT policies and practices, and includes information from several hundred interviews and testimonies. AI’s findings strongly indicate that there is a heightened pattern of misconduct and abuse of transgender individuals and all LGBT people of color, young people, immigrants, the homeless and sex workers by police. At times, the mere perception that someone is gay or lesbian provokes physical or verbal attacks.

The mistreatment and abuse documented in the report includes targeted and discriminatory enforcement of statutes against LGBT people, including so-called “quality of life” and morals regulations; profiling, particularly of transgender women as sex workers; verbal abuse; inappropriate pat-down and strip searches; failure to protect LGBT people in holding cells; inappropriate response or failure to respond to hate crimes or domestic abuse calls; sexual harassment and abuse, including rape; and physical abuse that at times amounts to torture and ill-treatment. Several examples include:

  • Young gay men and advocates in Chicago told AIUSA of a police officer who, according to one man, will “remove his badge, gun and belt and then beat you unless you give him a blowjob, after which he’ll just leave you there.”

  • Police officers accused a Latina transgender woman in San Antonio of stealing. One officer reportedly said, “People like you make the world a bad place.” Three police officers and two detectives allegedly surrounded her while one officer searched her, exposing her pubic hair, buttocks and one of her breasts. She said, “I didn’t ask to be searched by a female officer. I’ve tried that before – they don’t care, to them we’re all men.” She was not charged with any crime. Officers refused to give her their badge numbers. She said, “I know to be respectful to police officers but I’m tired of the way they are treating us.”
  • Police officers allegedly beat, hog-tied and dragged Kelly McAllister, a white transgender woman, across hot pavement upon her arrest in Sacramento, CA. She was placed in a Sacramento County Main Jail cell with a male inmate who struck, choked, bit and raped her. That inmate received a mere three-month sentence. No officer has been disciplined for the incidents surrounding Kelly’s incarceration.
  • Two lesbians of color reported that two men in Brooklyn, NY, followed, harassed and threatened them, saying, “I’m going to kill you, bitch. You’re not a man….I’m gonna put you in your place.” The verbal abuse escalated to physical abuse; the two women called 911. When police were told this was a homophobic crime, the officers reportedly left without further investigating the incident or taking a complaint, telling the ambulance attendants responding to the women’s call to leave. One woman reportedly was bleeding from the head due to a blow from one of the men. Her companion stated, “It was ridiculous. There she was running down the street bleeding and chasing after the ambulance.”
  • A Native American transgender woman reported that two Los Angeles police officers handcuffed her and took her to an alleyway. One officer reportedly hit her across the face, saying “you f—ing whore, you f—ing faggot,” then threw her down on the back of the patrol car, ripped off her miniskirt and her underwear and raped her, holding her down and grabbing her hair. The second officer is also alleged to have raped her. According to the woman, they threw her on the ground and said, “That’s what you deserve,” and left her there.

While it is impossible to obtain accurate statistics, the AI study showed that transgender people, particularly women and the young, suffer disproportionately. A large percentage of transgender people reportedly are unemployed or underemployed, leaving the population more vulnerable to homelessness or situations that leave them exposed to police scrutiny and abuse. Meanwhile, 72 percent of police departments responding to AI’s survey said they had no specific policy regarding interaction with transgender people.

AI welcomed the initiative taken by several police departments to improve their practices. The West Hollywood Station of the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department has a Gay and Lesbian Conference Committee that is open to the public and allows police to stay in touch with community concerns. The City of West Hollywood also established a Transgender Task Force that addresses policing issues. In Washington, D.C., the Gay and Lesbian Liaison Unit (GLLU) is staffed by four full-time officers and ten volunteers, and the head of the unit, Sgt. Brett Parson, reports directly to the police chief. GLLU is also involved with training efforts within the police department.

However, the AI report demonstrates that despite initiatives such as these, police departments nationwide need to do more to protect LGBT people – something that was reflected in responses to the AI survey of police policies and practices with regard to LGBT people. Of the 29 departments that responded to the survey, only 31 percent instruct their officers on how to strip search a transgender individual; two thirds (66%) of police departments reported providing training on hate crimes against LGBT individuals; and while most departments provide training regarding sexual assault (86%), about half (52%) do not include LGBT-specific issues.

“Police officers are hired to protect and serve all of their communities, not only the ones they deem worthy,” said Michael Heflin, Director of Amnesty International USA’s OUTfront program, which focuses on LGBT human rights. “Every human being, without exception, has the right to live free from discrimination and abuse, yet LGBT people nationwide are afraid to report hate crimes or other abuses to the police, who at times prove themselves to be the criminals. If we can’t count on law enforcement to set an example, hate crimes and discrimination will continue to flourish in a land that otherwise has made relative headway in the fight for LGBT rights.”

Under international law, everyone, regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity or expression, is guaranteed the fullest enjoyment of his or her civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights. The United States is party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the principal international treaty that lays out fundamental rights such as freedom from arbitrary arrest and detention and torture, cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment, as well as the Convention Against Torture and the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination.