Monthly Archive for September, 2005

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At Least the British Get It: American dream eludes the poorest

All around the world the lasting images of Hurricane Katrina were not of the storm, but of the poor.

In the superpower where President George Bush promised “no child left behind” – tens of thousands of children, and their parents, were indeed left behind. Literally.

Because the United States is the richest country on earth, there was something particularly shocking about the images of America’s poor, stranded, helpless and hopeless, begging for aid from the US federal government.

What we saw was poverty with a black face. All around the world – and in the United States itself – people asked why the American Dream was not able to touch every American.

Poverty and race

Newsnight wanted to explore the twin issues of poverty and race in George Bush’s America. The simple fact is that most Americans in poverty are not black – whites make up most of the population, and most of the poor.

And, whatever the pictures from New Orleans seem to suggest, most black Americans do not live in poverty. There is a healthy black middle class, and of course many outstandingly successful African American citizens, from Colin Powell and Condi Rice to black business-people all over the US.

But where poverty and race do come together they produce America’s most explosive political cocktail: the idea that 140 years after the end of slavery and 40 years after the South was de-segregated, black Americans still do not get a fair deal.

Why – for example is a black American child five times more likely to live in poverty than a white child? Why is a black American baby more likely to die in the months after birth than a Cuban baby, or one born in Beijing?

We chose to film in Savannah, Georgia for a number of reasons. In many ways it is like New Orleans – a grand city of the Old South, a port where African slaves were once brought in for sale, a town in America’s hurricane belt much loved by tourists.

Food handouts
It is also a city which has begun a very encouraging anti-poverty programme. Behind the rich colonial facade of Savannah there is the same kind of hidden chronic poverty, especially among African Americans, that you find in New Orleans.

We crossed over to the wrong side of the tracks – up Martin Luther King Boulevard to the largely African American area known as Cuyler Brownville. What we found there was utterly shocking.

At seven o’clock on Thursday mornings about 50 African Americans gather on the breadline at a Cuyler Brownville community centre. They are waiting for day old bread and vegetables donated by a local supermarket to a Catholic charity run by Sister Pat Baber.

Many of the volunteers are white, and there were absolutely no signs of racial tension. Just desperation. We met Bernice Beatty who works in childcare for $150 a week, and also receives a modest veteran’s pension because her dead husband was in the US military. But she cannot make ends meet and comes here for free food.

In the centre of town in one of the grand Savannah squares I met black men desperate for a job as day labourers. When a van arrived offering a day’s work they swarmed around. The going rate is about £3 an hour, £120 a week, £6,000 a year. In America, it is difficult to see how you can live on that.

Healthcare

Then we visited Savannah Health Mission where doctors and nurses give their time and expertise for free to treat the poor. Around 50 million Americans – the same as the population of all of England – have no health insurance.

One patient, Cindi, was grateful for her treatment but could not afford any of the drugs prescribed by the free doctors. One prescription costs $266 a month. Another $150. Cindi requires seven different medications. Cindi happened to be white.

The big question for George Bush as he ponders the aftershocks of Hurricane Katrina, is how far the US federal government can and should help the poor.

Ever since President Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society programmes of the 1960s Democrats and Republicans have concluded that simply throwing tax dollars at the problem does not work.

Churches, charities, valiant individuals like Sister Pat, local governments like the enterprising folk who run the city of Savannah are trying their best.

But it is not enough.

And what is the responsibility of the poor to help themselves?

On Newsnight, we will also hear from a black community worker who says the fast-track to poverty is dropping out of high school, taking drugs, and getting pregnant as a teenager.

Avoid all that, and at least you have a chance of the American Dream.

Gavin Esler’s report on poverty in the United States will be shown by Newsnight on Thursday, 22 September on BBC Two at 2230 BST.
(so if you’re in the U.S. like me, you’re S.O.L.)

Story from BBC NEWS
Published: 2005/09/21 10:52:41 GMT
© BBC MMV

We’ve surpassed 1,900: bombings kill 5 U.S. soldiers in Iraq

Five US troops have died in three separate bomb attacks in Iraq, US military officials say.

One soldier died in a roadside bombing north of Baghdad on Tuesday, and four Marines died on Monday in two attacks near Ramadi, west of the capital.

The deaths were announced hours after the US confirmed the death of three military and one diplomatic security agents near Mosul on Monday.

More than 1,900 US servicemen have died since the invasion of Iraq in 2003.

Tuesday’s attack happened about 75 miles (120km) north of Baghdad, the US military said, killing a US military policeman.

Regular attacks

The attacks in Ramadi were the latest in a string of strikes against US troops in the western town.

Ramadi, with a population of about 400,000, has long been a focal point for Sunni Muslim insurgents.

US troops and Iraqi military and police forces have regularly come under attack in and around the city.

The attacks near Mosul on Monday came as Arabic media reports said the US consul in Mosul had been holding talks with residents of nearby Talafar.

The city has recently been the target of a big American and Iraqi military operation.

Story from BBC NEWS
Published: 2005/09/20 15:35:36 GMT
© BBC MMV

An Antiwar Speech in Union Square Is Stopped by Police

BY SHADI RAHIMI
NY Times

An antiwar speech by Cindy Sheehan, the mother of an American soldier killed in Iraq, was cut short yesterday after the organizer of the event was arrested and police officers confiscated his audio equipment.

The claps and cheers that had greeted Ms. Sheehan’s arrival at the rally in Union Square quickly turned to furious chants of “Let her speak!” as officers ushered away the organizer, Paul Zulkowitz, who the police said lacked audio permits for the event.

Angry activists followed officers as they led Mr. Zulkowitz away, waving their fists and shouting, “Shame, shame, shame.” Ms. Sheehan, who was visiting New York on the last leg of a bus tour across the country, was nearing the end of her speech when the police officers arrested Mr. Zulkowitz. She was whisked to a car by two supporters just before the police officers seized the microphone. Mr. Zulkowitz was arrested because he did not have a permit, said the commanding officer of the 13th Precinct, Inspector Michael J. McEnroy.

Detective Kevin Czartoryski said Mr. Zulkowitz was charged with unauthorized use of a sound device and disorderly conduct, and was released after being given a court summons. Detective Czartoryski said the police had taken the “appropriate action” in response to a lawbreaker.

But many people attending the event, dozens of whom yelled accusations into the faces of the more than 20 police officers who blocked them from following Mr. Zulkowitz, interpreted the arrest as a demonstration of citywide disdain for free speech, referring to last year’s arrests of protesters at the Republican National Convention.

“This is what’s been happening for the last couple of years,” said Daniel Starling, the co-chairman of the Green Party chapter in Manhattan, who attended the event yesterday. “Every time we try to hold a demonstration, they arrest us.”

The crowd of New Yorkers had waited more than an hour to catch a glimpse of Ms. Sheehan, who was thrust into the national spotlight in August when she sought a meeting with President Bush by camping out for days near his ranch in Crawford, Tex. Though soft-spoken, Ms. Sheehan has not shied away from controversy, opening her New York visit on Sunday night in Brooklyn by accusing Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton of failing to challenge the Bush administration’s policies in Iraq.

Ms. Sheehan, who did not mention Ms. Clinton yesterday, urged her supporters in Union Square to continue pushing to end the war in Iraq. One supporter, Lien Corey, a 51-year-old Manhattan resident who was living in Vietnam during the war there, said that Ms. Sheehan had become a larger-than-life figure who represents the sentiments of many people across the country. “She’s beyond herself now, she’s a symbol,” Ms. Corey said. “She’s a catalyst, and we all unite behind her.”

Ms. Sheehan, who has been credited by many activists with reinvigorating the antiwar movement in the United States, began speaking out against the war in Iraq soon after her 24-year-old son, Casey, was killed in Baghdad on April 2, 2004. She attributes her sudden fame to the news media’s need to find a “focal point” on certain high-profile issues like the Iraq war.

At a news conference in Chelsea earlier in the day, she said she regretted not speaking out sooner. “I didn’t think that one person could make a difference,” Ms. Sheehan said. “After Casey was killed, I thought, well if I can’t make a difference, at least I’m going to my grave knowing I tried.”

Although many opponents of the war said they were thrilled by the attention Ms. Sheehan has attracted to the cause, some are frustrated by her celebrity status, which they said can deflect the focus away from other issues.

After the news conference, George Weber, 57, a Vietnam War veteran from Warwick, N.Y., said little attention was being paid to issues of concern to veterans, like the possible closing of the Manhattan Veterans Affairs hospital.

Ms. Sheehan’s message has been heard across the nation on television ads sponsored by antiwar groups and at well-publicized stops on her bus tour, which was launched from Crawford on Aug. 31 and has visited 51 cities in 28 states. She has been joined on her journey by families of soldiers and veterans, many of whom have been working for years to rally people against war.

Many New Yorkers said yesterday that Ms. Sheehan gave them back hope that was lost when war was declared on Iraq.

Laurie Arbeiter, 46, of Brooklyn, said she flew to Crawford in August and spent two weeks camped out with Ms. Sheehan and others. Ms. Arbeiter said that the arrest of the event organizer, Mr. Zulkowitz, was another example of the “country’s suppression of dissent.”

“We are being railroaded toward a state in which we can’t speak up,” she said.

Save Darfur: National Day of Action This Wed. Sept. 21st

On September 21st, 2005, leaders of major American organizations – from religious groups to humanitarian aid agencies – will convene in Washington, DC for a National Leadership Assembly for Darfur. At the assembly, leaders will meet with elected officials to express America’s concern for Darfur.

Simultaneously, communities across the nation will reinforce their leaders’ demands that the United States take action to save the people of Darfur.

At each event, nation-wide, participants will write postcards or letters to President Bush urging the United States to lead the world in protecting the civilians of Darfur. As Americans we must voice our conviction that we cannot allow genocide to occur on our watch.

Locally in Columbus, Ohio
Description: Awarenesss raising and community discussion in conjunction with National Day of Action
Time: 6-6:30 pm
Directions: Radisson Hotel (look for signs for specific room) 7007 N. High St. Worthington, OH 43085. Just south of 270 on US 23 (High St.)
Contact name: Gloria Philpott
Contact Info: 614-478-1030

Try Googling “miserable failure”


…and tell me what your first listed result is. i don’t care if it is just a result of “Googlebombing” it’s still hilarious and relevent. Go pranksters, preach it!

Message: I Care About the Black Folks – NY Times Op-Ed

By FRANK RICH

ONCE Toto parts the curtain, the Wizard of Oz can never be the wizard again. He is forever Professor Marvel, blowhard and snake-oil salesman. Hurricane Katrina, which is likely to endure in the American psyche as long as L. Frank Baum’s mythic tornado, has similarly unmasked George W. Bush.

The worst storm in our history proved perfect for exposing this president because in one big blast it illuminated all his failings: the rampant cronyism, the empty sloganeering of “compassionate conservatism,” the lack of concern for the “underprivileged” his mother condescended to at the Astrodome, the reckless lack of planning for all government operations except tax cuts, the use of spin and photo-ops to camouflage failure and to substitute for action.

In the chaos unleashed by Katrina, these plot strands coalesced into a single tragic epic played out in real time on television. The narrative is just too powerful to be undone now by the administration’s desperate recycling of its greatest hits: a return Sunshine Boys tour by the surrogate empathizers Clinton and Bush I, another round of prayers at the Washington National Cathedral, another ludicrously overhyped prime-time address flecked with speechwriters’ “poetry” and framed by a picturesque backdrop. Reruns never eclipse a riveting new show.

Nor can the president’s acceptance of “responsibility” for the disaster dislodge what came before. Mr. Bush didn’t cough up his modified-limited mea culpa until he’d seen his whole administration flash before his eyes. His admission that some of the buck may stop with him (about a dime’s worth, in Truman dollars) came two weeks after the levees burst and five years after he promised to usher in a new post-Clinton “culture of responsibility.” It came only after the plan to heap all the blame on the indeed blameworthy local Democrats failed to lift Mr. Bush’s own record-low poll numbers. It came only after America’s highest-rated TV news anchor, Brian Williams, started talking about Katrina the way Walter Cronkite once did about Vietnam.

Taking responsibility, as opposed to paying lip service to doing so, is not in this administration’s gene pool. It was particularly shameful that Laura Bush was sent among the storm’s dispossessed to try to scapegoat the news media for her husband’s ineptitude. When she complained of seeing “a lot of the same footage over and over that isn’t necessarily representative of what really happened,” the first lady sounded just like Donald Rumsfeld shirking responsibility for the looting of Baghdad. The defense secretary, too, griped about seeing the same picture “over and over” on television (a looter with a vase) to hide the reality that the Pentagon had no plan to secure Iraq, a catastrophic failure being paid for in Iraqi and American blood to this day.

This White House doesn’t hate all pictures, of course. It loves those by Karl Rove’s Imagineers, from the spectacularly lighted Statue of Liberty backdrop of Mr. Bush’s first 9/11 anniversary speech to his “Top Gun” stunt to Thursday’s laughably stagy stride across the lawn to his lectern in Jackson Square. (Message: I am a leader, not that vacationing slacker who first surveyed the hurricane damage from my presidential jet.)

The most odious image-mongering, however, has been Mr. Bush’s repeated deployment of African-Americans as dress extras to advertise his “compassion.” In 2000, the Republican convention filled the stage with break dancers and gospel singers, trying to dispel the memory of Mr. Bush’s craven appearance at Bob Jones University when it forbade interracial dating. (The few blacks in the convention hall itself were positioned near celebrities so they’d show up in TV shots.) In 2004, the Bush-Cheney campaign Web site had a page titled “Compassion” devoted mainly to photos of the president with black people, Colin Powell included.

Some of these poses are re-enacted in the “Hurricane Relief” photo gallery currently on display on the White House Web site. But this time the old magic isn’t working. The “compassion” photos are outweighed by the cinéma vérité of poor people screaming for their lives. The government effort to keep body recovery efforts in New Orleans as invisible as the coffins from Iraq was abandoned when challenged in court by CNN.

But even now the administration’s priority of image over substance is embedded like a cancer in the Katrina relief process. Brazenly enough, Mr. Rove has been officially put in charge of the reconstruction effort. The two top deputies at FEMA remaining after Michael Brown’s departure, one of them a former local TV newsman, are not disaster relief specialists but experts in P.R., which they’d practiced as advance men for various Bush campaigns. Thus The Salt Lake Tribune discovered a week after the hurricane that some 1,000 firefighters from Utah and elsewhere were sent not to the Gulf Coast but to Atlanta, to be trained as “community relations officers for FEMA” rather than used as emergency workers to rescue the dying in New Orleans. When 50 of them were finally dispatched to Louisiana, the paper reported, their first assignment was “to stand beside President Bush” as he toured devastated areas.

The cashiering of “Brownie,” whom Mr. Bush now purports to know as little as he did “Kenny Boy,” changes nothing. The Knight Ridder newspapers found last week that it was the homeland security secretary, Michael Chertoff, not Mr. Brown, who had the greater authority to order federal agencies into service without any request from state or local officials. Mr. Chertoff waited a crucial, unexplained 36 hours before declaring Katrina an “incident of national significance,” the trigger needed for federal action. Like Mr. Brown, he was oblivious to the humanitarian disaster unfolding in the convention center, confessing his ignorance of conditions there to NPR on the same day that the FEMA chief famously did so to Ted Koppel. Yet Mr. Bush’s “culture of responsibility” does not hold Mr. Chertoff accountable. Quite the contrary: on Thursday the president charged Homeland Security with reviewing “emergency plans in every major city in America.” Mr. Chertoff will surely do a heck of a job.

WHEN there’s money on the line, cronies always come first in this White House, no matter how great the human suffering. After Katrina, the FEMA Web site directing charitable contributions prominently listed Operation Blessing, a Pat Robertson kitty that, according to I.R.S. documents obtained by ABC News, has given more than half of its yearly cash donations to Mr. Robertson’s Christian Broadcasting Network. If FEMA is that cavalier about charitable donations, imagine what it’s doing with the $62 billion (so far) of taxpayers’ money sent its way for Katrina relief. Actually, you don’t have to imagine: we already know some of it was immediately siphoned into no-bid contracts with a major Republican donor, the Fluor Corporation, as well as with a client of the consultant Joe Allbaugh, the Bush 2000 campaign manager who ran FEMA for this White House until Brownie, Mr. Allbaugh’s college roommate, was installed in his place.

It was back in 2000 that Mr. Bush, in a debate with Al Gore, bragged about his gubernatorial prowess “on the front line of catastrophic situations,” specifically citing a Texas flood, and paid the Clinton administration a rare compliment for putting a professional as effective as James Lee Witt in charge of FEMA. Exactly why Mr. Bush would staff that same agency months later with political hacks is one of many questions that must be answered by the independent investigation he and the Congressional majority are trying every which way to avoid. With or without a 9/11-style commission, the answers will come out. There are too many Americans who are angry and too many reporters who are on the case. (NBC and CNN are both opening full-time bureaus in New Orleans.) You know the world has changed when the widely despised news media have a far higher approval rating (77 percent) than the president (46 percent), as measured last week in a CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll.

Like his father before him, Mr. Bush has squandered the huge store of political capital he won in a war. His Thursday-night invocation of “armies of compassion” will prove as worthless as the “thousand points of light” that the first President Bush bestowed upon the poor from on high in New Orleans (at the Superdome, during the 1988 G.O.P. convention). It will be up to other Republicans in Washington to cut through the empty words and image-mongering to demand effective action from Mr. Bush on the Gulf Coast and in Iraq, if only because their own political lives are at stake. It’s up to Democrats, though they show scant signs of realizing it, to step into the vacuum and propose an alternative to a fiscally disastrous conservatism that prizes pork over compassion. If the era of Great Society big government is over, the era of big government for special interests is proving a fiasco. Especially when it’s presided over by a self-styled C.E.O. with a consistent three-decade record of running private and public enterprises alike into a ditch.

What comes next? Having turned the page on Mr. Bush, the country hungers for a vision that is something other than either liberal boilerplate or Rovian stagecraft. At this point, merely plain old competence, integrity and heart might do.

Impeachment Movement Responds to Bush’s Speech

George Bush went to New Orleans last night. In the devastated city, he brought generators to provide electricity solely for his elaborate photo-opportunity.

Those guilty of criminal negligence rarely have an opportunity to go on national TV for nearly a half an hour to camouflage and conceal their criminal conduct. This is precisely what George Bush did tonight on prime time national television. Two weeks after the fact, Bush and the spin doctors at Fox News and other corporate media are now attempting to do damage control – that is, political damage control, not human damage control.

Bush’s handling of the Katrina catastrophe, and the actions of the administration prior to the hurricane, constitute a clear pattern of criminal negligence and gross misconduct.

Here are just a few of the facts that highlight the criminal negligence and Presidential misconduct:

  • The Bush administration is spending $200 million each day or $1.4 billion each week for its criminal war of aggression in Iraq
  • Despite the fact that scientific experts had widely publicized predictions of the coming catastrophe in New Orleans, the Bush administration was hell bent on diverting resources to the Iraq war, while it slashed funds for flood control operations in New Orleans.
  • Bush’s war on Iraq left the Corps of Engineers only 20% of the needed funding to protect New Orleans from flooding from Lake Pontchartrain. Before the Iraq war, FEMA officials warned of a looming disaster in New Orleans. The Southeast Louisiana Urban Flood Control Project (SELA) is authorized by Congress to protect the people of New Orleans and the port facilities as well as oil refineries. After the start of the shock and awe invasion of Iraq however, SELA’s monies were diverted. The Times-Picayune, the daily newspaper of New Orleans, published numerous articles during the last two years citing the danger caused by the loss of hurricane protection funds to the war in Iraq.

Bush has taken the money needed to protect and serve the needs of society and spent it on his war of aggression against the people of Iraq, on multi-billion dollar contracts for his corporate friends, and on tax cuts for the super-rich. Although he turned away as hundreds of people – including babies and the elderly – drowned and starved, now he is compelled to at least pretend to take action. This is not out of concern for the well-being of the suffering people, but concern for his popularity – the people of the United States have turned against his criminal administration.

The impeachment movement has responded powerfully to the criminal neglect and subsequent charade of the administration. Thousands of organizers around the country are preparing to make the trip to Washington DC on September 24. Former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark will be speaking at the White House on the Ellipse calling for Impeachment.

You can help mobilize a massive contingent for the September 24 National March on Washington DC. This is a demonstration initiated by the peace movement and is shaping up to be the largest demonstration since the beginning of the Iraq war. We will make the demand “Impeach Bush” highly visible throughout the day. The ImpeachBush movement will be assembling at the south side of the White House (an area called the Ellipse at 11:00 am). You can pick up ImpeachBush banners, placards, signs, literature, hats, and petitions. We need volunteers to help us dispatch people and materials starting in the early morning of September 24. If you can help out, please send an email letting us know your availability to be an ImpeachBush.org volunteer.

We have one week left – we need your help today to make impeachment resound at the White House and throughout the streets of Washington on September 24. In the last few weeks, 30,000 new people have voted to impeach in our grass-roots referendum. Every day people are taking petitions and literature and spreading the word.

-> www.votetoimpeach.org