|
|
(ARCHIVES: July 4, 2008) Independent's
Day: I want my Democracy back!
in·de·pend·ent
- adjective
1. not influenced or
controlled by others in matters of opinion, conduct,
etc.; thinking or acting for oneself.
2. not subject to another's
authority or jurisdiction; autonomous; set free.
3. not bound by, or
committed to, a political party.
July 4th is here again.
Time once more for festivities and fireworks, hotdogs,
potato salad and Big
Red.
Many Americans will head
to the beaches or mountains to camp, fish or golf
(although with rising cost of gas this is getting
harder to do). Some will flock to stores to find comfort
in consumer goods, oblivious of economic peril. Others
will drown their fears in the latest fictional movie
or book, watching television while their country burns.
A few will take time to vaguely consider Freedom and
Independence. Others will act, working for the health
of our land.
At our home we will probably
do a bit of all of the above. However, this July I
feel less like celebrating and more like joining in
a New Revolution.
I want my Democracy
back!
For too long,
traitorous, murderous thugs and their cult followers
have controlled the agenda of this nation while this
country has been run like a third-rate corrupt banana
republic. Who do they think we are, sheeple?
Breach of peace at home
and abroad, pillage of the treasury, corporate cronyism,
perjury and torture are only some of the many charges
against the current regime. American voices have been
silent, but no more a
I want my country back, the one described
in the
Declaration of Independence.
In this country, men and women recognized
the self-evident Truth that all persons are created
equal. In this country, Patriots weren't afraid to
abolish the existing system in order to create a new
government driven by the "consent of the governed".
In this country they at first patiently suffered -
the acted - to make needed changes. In this country
they were Independents, yet pledged to one another.
I want my country back, the one codified
in
The Constitution.
In this Republic, people focused on
freedoms: Freedom of Expression, Freedom to Worship
in the manner of one's own choosing; Freedom from
Want; Freedom from Fear. This Republic's leaders hoped
to usher in a new world in which the tyranny of kings,
potentates, dictators and warsmongers was replaced
by a "more perfect" unions focused on justice,
tranquility, common defence, general welfare and Liberty
for all generations to come. They sought to create
an indispensable system of government for effective
management of common concerns. They represented a
country of free thinkers building a nation that would
"cultivate peace and harmony with all."
I want my country back, the nation that
once served proudly as a beacon to the world.
In this nation a place people around
the world felt welcomed by the
"lamp beside the golden door". In
this nation, torture was illegal and jurisprudence
reigned supreme. In this nation, government began
with a small "g" and wasn't prayed to by
the people. This nation relegated demagogues to back-alley
liaisons with liars and thieves -
it did not elect them to office.
I want my Democracy
back.
On this July 4th Texans for Peace calls
on all Americans to join together in a common purpose
- a New Revolution for Democracy.
As free and independent people, secure
our own liberty and safe in the knowledge that peace
and justice are within our reach, we call for the
following measures to restore the nation and correct
the current imbalances:
1.
Impeachment of the current leaders and executives
of this nation for dereliction of duties and common
crimes;
2. Replacement of Congress with members who
are representatives of the people and reflect the
diversity of this great land;
3. Abolition and reconstitution of all
executive federal agencies and bodies to ensure
that they remain servants, and subservient, to civilian
control.
It's time to take control of our lives
and to place the destiny of this nation in the
"hand and heads and hearts of its millions of
free men and women." We will no longer
depend on politicians, pundits and parties to bring
about needed change.
In doing so, we will help to usher in,
what Langston
Hughes called the America that will be.
Stand and declare your own independence
on this Independent's Day.
Take your Democracy back!
|
|
Dallas man freed after 15 years
A
man sent to prison more than 15 years ago has been
freed after DNA testing concluded he was innocent.
Patrick Waller had been behind bars since
late 1992 on convictions for aggravated robbery and
aggravated kidnapping stemming from the abduction
of a Dallas couple. DNA testing conducted late last
year proved Waller was innocent. Waller is the 19th
man in Dallas County since 2001 shown by DNA evidence
to be innocent of the crime for which he was convicted
Pastors for Peace held up at border
The annual Pastors for Peace caravan
to Cuba has been detained at the Mexica border by
U.S. officials. Border authorities are holding up
the 'Friendshipment" while agents search for
and confiscate
all donated computers. Trade sanctions against
Cuba have been in place since the presidency of John
F. Kennedy, more than forty-seven years ago, and American
citizens are forbidden to travel to the island.
Pastors
for Peace is an interreligious community organization
created to deliver humanitarian aid to Latin America
and the Caribean and to challenge the U.S. embargo
of Cuba. Thousands of people have participated in
more than 40 caravans to Mexico and Central America,
inculding 16 to Cuba since 1992.
|
|
Oil up, Jobs down, Congress AWOL
The price of a gallon of gasoline has
topped $4 in much of the sate, with steady rises expected
throughout the year. The State
of Utah and many school
districts are switching to 4-day workweek
in desparae attempts to manage public budgets in these
tough times.
Americans are losing
their jobs, homes and life savings in record
numbers. Economic worries of Texans has nearly reached
a boiling point. More
are becoming homeless.
Meanwhile, Congress expects to go on
holiday for much of July and August..but not before
they eviscerate
rights to privacy and give the President a
pass on all of his illegal activities. Candidates
hit the campaign trail, asking for money. America
burns.
Impeachment Day in Fort Worth
Texans will gather outside the Fort
Worth City Hall on July 8th at 7pm to attend the City
Council meeting where a resolution calling for the
impeachment of President George W. Bush will
be offered. This is part of a growing effort around
the U.S. of "Citizens for Impeachment".
|

|

(ARCHIVES: June 20, 2008) When
the power goes out
It's already looking like
Texas will be hotter'n the hinges of Hell this summer
with temperatures in the triple digits for much of
the time; and when your lights darken, the refrigerator
goes silent and the AC no longer cools, you might
just want to remember this article. You won't be able
to look it up online without Internet access.
Rolling blackouts
and equipment-frying brownouts are on their
way to the Lone Star State.
Rising
demand due to extremely hot temperatures will
be blamed by energy and political officials. Additionally,
just as we saw with Enron, some of these will be manipulated
on purpose to gain public acceptance for approval
of coal and nuclear power plant applications
and more aggressive drilling for oil and gas
in otherwise off-limit areas such as the Artic Wildlife
Refuge or Texas schoolyards. However, much of the
fault lies with the Great Electrical Deregulation
Roulette, played by those same officials.
A Brief History of Texas
Deregulation
In 1999 then Governor George
W. Bush signed into law Senate Bill 7 the Texas
Electric Restructuring Act which allowed
"the electric utility industry in Texas to provide
retail competition and customer choice beginning January
1, 2002, for all customers now served by investor-owned
utilities." It even "guaranteed" a
rate cut of 6%.
When deregulation became
mandatory in 2002 the great electric roulette wheel
began to spin. Texas Legislators, under sway of the
"free market" ideology machine, set
into motion the dismantling of one of the public's
remaining services - electricity.
By January 2007 Texas electric companies in deregulated
territories were released from the last bit of government
regulation and free to prey upon consumers without
regulation by the
Public Utility Commission (PUC) of Texas.
As a result, most Texans were now free
to "choose" their electrical service provider,
just as they have a "choice" of their local
telephone company, cable provider and roads on which
to drive. In other words, consumers get to select
from what is essentially a single public monopoly
provider.
What did the companies get in return?
The law designated the Electric
Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) would
have the authority to oversee grid reliability and
operations so as to ensure no particular buyer or
seller would gain an unfair advantage in the marketplace.
Instead we've gotten mismanagement, fraud, and even
higher electrical rates - while domestic and foreign
energy pirates make off with the booty.
A recent failure by Riverway forced
35,000 Houston-area customers to switch to
a new provider, at higher rates. Last week
E-tricity's 12,000 customers were forced to
switch after that company defaulted on financial obligations.
In May 8,430 customers of PreBuy
Electric were left hanging while 15,100 customers
of National Power were transferred.
National Power founders are being
investigated by the SEC for allegedly bilking investors
of our money in various dubious deals. Customers who
were paying 11.9 cents a kilowatt-hour to National
Power before it failed last month found themselves
facing new rates of 21.7 cents. Patricia Dolese, the
former head of consumer protection at the PUC who
now runs a consulting firm says, "Legislators
and regulators are fond of saying that a competitive
market requires transparency, but It seems it is about
time that transparency trickled down to consumer information
as well."
In addition to these failures of "free
market" companies, complaints have risen dramatically
by captive consumers in other areas of the state.
The PUC reports that complaints related to the electric
market jumped from 704 in January to 1,123 in May.
One company has collected payments from customers
but not delivered any electricity, according to some
complaints.
Figment of cheaper rates through market
mechanisms
The assumption of deregulation is that
increased competition will lead to lower rates. However,
the facts show publicly-owned utility rates are lower.
The deregulation in Texas permitted
a few regions to retain regulated rates, such as Austin
Energy (city owned) and San Antonio (city
owned). In these areas, the electricity rate has stayed
closer to the average American rate of about 10 cents
per kilowatt-hour. San Antonio's City
Public Services (CPS) residential electricity
rate now stands at 8.2 cents per kilowatt-hour. The
City of Georgetown, which gets its wholesale electricity
from the Lower Colorado
River Authority (LCRA) a public entity, recently
announced that consumers' rates would rise to 11.46
cents per kilowatt-hour starting June 25.
By comparison, most fixed-rate prices
in the Houston area - provided by private companies
- currently are running in the range of 14.5 cents
(Reliant
Energy) to 22.2 cents (Commerce
Energy) a kilowatt-hour. The lowest fixed-rate
price in North Texas is 13.3 cents per kilowatt-hour,
provided by private firms. The PUC said that prices
in 2008 alone have
already risen by 5% and are expected to higher
by the end of the year.
In the face of this deregulation debacle,
parts of East Texas are fighting to remain regulated.
In Marshall, local officials plan to take their fight
back to the Capitol. "Our
area enjoys much lower costs for electricity than
parts of the state that are deregulated,"
State Sen. Kevin Eltife, recently said. "Because
the state is experiencing problems in those deregulated
areas, we will probably be taking a hard second look
at deregulation." State Rep. Tommy Merritt, R-Longview,
said the low cost of power in East Texas will keep
potential competitors out of the market. "We're
already well below cost compared to the rest of Texas,"
Merritt said. "I plan to fight to keep us segregated
from the rest of the state as long as that is the
case."
Another way to keep the lights on
Carol Bierdrzycki, director of the Texas
Ratepayers' Organization to Save Energy (ROSE),
says it's time to declare the electric market a bona
fide disaster. The consumer advocate urges the Texas
Legislature to make dramatic changes. "This whole
system is defective," she said.
The state of Texas is the largest electricity
market in the United States; Texas also ranks as the
11th largest worldwide market, falling between Great
Britain and Spain in terms of annual consumption.
As such, it is a rich target for corporate profiteers
who may have little regard for Texas consumers. Some
of the private energy companies operating locally
are owned by pools of investors outside of the state
(AEP - Ohio, Calpine - California, Ecel - Minnesota).
Not all public services are best suited
for the "free market", particularly those
that are essential to the public good - schools, roads,
utilities - and where privatization would results
in high-priced monopolies, such as local phone, cable
television and Internet access.
A better way to deal with the energy
needs of Texas is to provide more publicly-owned and
operated grids and re-regulation of private industry
providers. At least then, if the lights do go out,
it's only a matter of getting in touch with local
officials and not a remote board of investors.
As the long days of summer roll on,
let's hope we can keep our cool and not to remain
in the dark regarding our energy needs and available
options. And, if it gets really, really hot, don't
worry - you can always cool your beer with
ice from Mars.
|
|
Racist, Sexist Texans don't get it
We're sad to have to acknowledge that
there are still racist and sexist people who don't
understand that their wod can be not only offensive,
but hurtful to their fellow Texans. At the recent
Republican convention in Texas this "humor"
hit a near low. One vendor sold buttons that read,
"If Obama is President ... will we still call
it the White House?"
During the same week, Senator John McCain
came under criticism for using
disgraced former Governor Clayton Williams to raise
funds for his campaign. Williams, an anti-environmental
Republican oil man, is infamously known for saying
"As long as its inevitable, you might as
well lie back and enjoy it in response to a
question about the rape of women in texas.
War Accomplices
Last wek the U.S. House of Representatives,
by
a vote of 268-155 provided an additional $162
Billion to extend the occupations and wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan through 2009.
War accomplices from Texas include:
Aye TX-1 Gohmert, Louis [R]
Aye TX-2 Poe, Ted [R]
Aye TX-3 Johnson, Samuel [R]
Aye TX-4 Hall, Ralph [R]
Aye TX-5 Hensarling, Jeb [R]
Aye TX-6 Barton, Joe [R]
Aye TX-7 Culberson, John [R]
Aye TX-8 Brady, Kevin [R]
Aye TX-10 McCaul, Michael [R]
Aye TX-11 Conaway, K. [R]
Aye TX-12 Granger, Kay [R]
Aye TX-13 Thornberry, William [R]
Aye TX-15 Hinojosa, Rubén [D]
Aye TX-16 Reyes, Silvestre [D]
Aye TX-17 Edwards, Thomas [D]
Aye TX-19 Neugebauer, Randy [R]
Aye TX-20 Gonzalez, Charles [D]
Aye TX-21 Smith, Lamar [R]
Aye TX-22 Lampson, Nicholas [D]
Aye TX-23 Rodriguez, Ciro [D]
Aye TX-24 Marchant, Kenny [R]
Aye TX-26 Burgess, Michael [R]
Aye TX-27 Ortiz, Solomon [D]
Aye TX-28 Cuellar, Henry [D]
Aye TX-29 Green, Raymond [D]
Aye TX-31 Carter, John [R]
Aye TX-32 Sessions, Peter [R]
|
|
Tx Monthly: End the War
In a forceful editoral, Texas Monthly
this month called for an immediate end to the war
in Iraq. "So,
let's bring the troops home now. Let's give them parades
and take care of them and their families. They deserve
it. Let's give the Iraqis economic, technical, and
diplomatice supporttohelp the stand up for themselves,"
wrote Willam Broyles, founding editor, in
the July edition of the Magazine. Broyles served as
a Marine in Vietnam. His son, David,
served three tours in Iraq with Special Ops and today
raises money for injured soldiers. Now William
has, "had enough of this war."
For years the Texas media establishment
has served the Administration's purposes by frequently
publishing stories written by soldiers or "embedded"
reporters, while refusing to listen to Iraqis and
civilians on the issue. Perhaps in the future they
will give as much room to the views
and facts from peacemakers as they do to that
of warriors. Otherwise, we'll continue to have "the
pictures of good American families, the mom with her
arms around her children and the caption saying shed
just celebrated her wedding anniversary when she was
killed in Iraq...pictures of wounded Americans trying
to learn to walk or talk or eat again...of the Iraqi
children dead in our bombings, their homes destroyed,
their families blown away..."
Pastors for Peace visit Tx on way to
Cuba
The annual Pastors for Peace caravan
to Cuba has finally reached Texas. One leg of the
caravan was
in Dallas this weekend, and more "carvanistas"
are expected during
the coming week.
Pastors
for Peace is an interreligious community organization
created to deliver humanitarian aid to Latin America
and the Caribean and to challenge the U.S. embargo
of Cuba. Thousands of people have participated in
more than 40 caravans to Mexico and Central America,
inculding 16 to Cuba since 1992.
|

|

(ARCHIVES: June 1, 2008) Is Congress
still needed?
Long after buttonhooks
and buggy whips have gone out of style, we have a
small group of persons who put on jackets and ties
each day and meet in splendid solitude to ponder and
debate weighty matters of state. Bowing to advances
in technology, their platitudes can be viewed daily
on C-SPAN.
They call themselves "Representatives of the
People".
But in a world ruled by
oligarchs the question arises, is Congress relevant
anymore?
During this season of incontinence
and 'lections, like our four score and seven-fathers
and mothers, Americans are once again faced with the
challenge of whether this grand experiment
"so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure."
We expect our nation, like
all cultures and institutions, to struggle as it evolves.
The interplay of societal forces - politics, religion,
economics, knowledge, technology - generates new opportunities,
but sometimes also leads to crises.
At least this time, let's
hope we can solve our differences without trampling
out any wrath vintages.
But it's getting hard to
leave the lasso in the barn when we see an impotent
Congress neglecting to protect the citizens on issues
ranging from starting overseas wars to corporate cronyism.
Setting aside for a moment
the executive and judicial branches of government,
Americans are asking themselves if the legislative
branch still has relevancy. Would anyone even notice
if "people's house" ceased to exist?
The Shrinking Domain of
"Religion" and "Politics"
Even backwoods Texans know
that religion and politics have been on decline for
centuries when it comes to our daily lives. That's
not to say that people are any less spiritual, religious
or interested in politics, but rather that the impact
of these institutions on our daily lives pales in
comparison to other things such as media, sports,
and worklife.
Religionists no longer
dictate (despite their tries) science, entertainment,
economics and public policy. Likewise, as people have
grown wealthier, we've grown less dependent on
the polis (or state) for the greatest
part. Our interconnectedness and improved forms of
communication, transportation and commerce have made
political control more fragmented and less significant
- except for those who derive their daily sustenance
from suckling at the teat of government.
As these old systems of power pass away,
new forms have taken their place.
The rise of "Corporatism"
Capitalism and Consumerism have supplanted
religion and politics as the dominant social forces.
One Shopping Sunday trumps an entire deck of churches,
and three CEOs can beat a full house of Senators every
time.
With the increase in general wealth
and commerce and the rise of ever larger businesses,
corporations now rule the overwhelming part of "modern"
societies and, increasingly, "emerging"
parts of the world as well.
Does anyone doubt that banking, manufacturing,
medicine, education, work and other "corporate"
institutions don't affect our lives to the greatest
degree today?
If we compare global corporations to
countries' production of goods and services (gross
domestic product or GDP), some interesting things
appear. For example, we see that
the revenues of Walmart ($351 billion in 2006)
were more than the GDP of Saudi Arabia ($309 B).
The top 10 public companies together,
with total revenues of $2.25 trillion outrank
all countries but the U.S., Japan, Germany and China
($13.2 T, $4.3 T, $2.9 T, $2.67) and the 500 largest
corporations account for 70 percent of all world trade.
Of the world's hundred largest economies,
fifty-one are not countries but corporations. All
of this just means is that money has central control
over our lives - whether we like it or not.But the
political machine in Washington isn't out of the picture
quite yet. While dancing the Virginia Quick Step,
members of Congress know that they control the largest
"corporation" on the planet.
Congress just might still be relevant
... like a tube of hemorrhoid ointment.
Biggest gorilla in the yard
Growing at a rate faster than private
industry is one entity -
the United States federal government.
At $3,000,000,000,000 per year,
this behemoth is greater than all of the fortune 500
profits for last year combined. Writing out
check after check from this enormous entity is the
U.S. Congress.
Need a few hundred million dollars for
your favorite perk? Ask a member of Congress.
Want to get rich? Build throwaway armaments,
nuclear missiles or supply a war. Sell to the government.
It is estimated that since WWII, the
U.S. Congress has spent $25 Trillion on military and
defense. For example, since 1940 the U.S. spent $5.8
trillion just on the manufacture, stockpiling and
dismantlement of nuclear bombs, according to the Brookings
Institute -
that's a lot of beans.
This waste was clear to President Eisenhower
as far back as 1953 when he wrote,
"Every gun that is made, every warship launched,
every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense,
a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those
who are cold and are not clothed." Not
since Roman dictators bankrupted that republic with
wars and monumental follies has so much public treasury
been thrown away - and never so fast.
Thanks to Congress, Washington
will spend $25,117 per American in 2008.
"Get a Rope"
While a natural inclination to the pilfering
of the nation's wealth might be to call for the abolishment
of government altogether, legislators still hold our
wallets and necks for ransom.
So long as the Republican institution
that we call the United States Government makes workers
give up their earnings under threat of jail, requires
soldiers to remain in Iraq under threat of courts
martial, spies on most of its citizens while rewarding
a few, we cannot hold Congress in much esteem. However,
with a checkbook of $3 Trillion, it's something to
be reckoned with.
We can only hope that, in the coming
year, the House and the Senate will be filled with
good and honest citizens so that "government
of the people, by the people, for the people, shall
not perish from the earth."
But if that doesn't
work out, there's always next season's American
Idol.
|
|
Crawford is coming to Crawford
What happens to the 705 residents of
Crawford, Texas when George W. Bush moves to town?
The new movie
Crawford, by David Modigliani will be
shown in the Texas town for which it is named this
Sunday. The movie depicts how this small community
was changed when President Bush decded to move next
door. The film follows the lives of residents as they
confront the issues that the Administration brought
to their tiny town.
The movie will be shown at 8:30 pm at
the Crawford Football Stadium in Tonkawa Park, Sunday
June 8, thanks to the help of the Alamo Drafthouse
Cinema of Austin. Tickets
can be purchased online.
Texas GOP tries to stifle dissent
A Harris County judge has ordered the
Texas Republican Party to comply with state election
law at its state convention in Houston next week after
Republican
activists alleged that the party illegally uses procedures
to minimize grass-root dissent.
Activists complain that party leaders
violated procedural laws at past conventions and plan
to do so again. Texas Republican Party spokesman Hans
Klingler said the party follows the rules and is willing
to address complaints about how the convention is
conducted. The state convention in Houston will select
delegates to the
Republican National Convention in August.
Note: Texans for Peace will have
a table at the state Democratic Party and Green Party
conventions. We would also like to have a table at
the Republican convention.
|
|
Kill TxDOT Commission?
The Sunset Advisory Commission, the
panel created by the Texas Legislature to regularly
assess state agencies, has recommended that the Texas
Department of Transportation (TxDOT)'s five-member
commission should be abolished and replaced with a
single commissioner accountable to the governor and
lawmakers.
In addition, the report said, the Legislature
should create a new
oversight committee that will more closely monitor
the agency and in many ways take over the
policymaking and project priority-setting roles now
filled by the Texas Transportation Commission. All
five current commission members were appointed by
Gov. Rick Perry and are loyal to his vision of building
the
Trans-Texas "Nightmare" Corridors.
The Sunset Commission also recommends
that the TxDOT's next sunset report be delivered in
just four years -- in essence, putting the agency
on probation.
Exxon confronted
Activists confronted Exxon-Mobil outside
of their annual shareholder meeting in Dallas last
week.
A coalition
of environmental, faith and peace organizations
held anews conferences and a demonstration to increase
shareholder and public awareness about ExxonMobil's
irresponsible pollution and how it is causing illness
and death, and destroying quality of life for people
living in the Texas Gulf Coast while that same company
enriches itself from the war in Iraq.
|

|

Worse than oil subsidies - food
for ethanol
With the price of a gallon
of gasoline expected to reach $4 (or even perhaps
$5!) by this summer, American consumers are angrier
than ever over the effects of the war in Iraq and
the declining dollar on world oil prices. Oil companies
are also a target of rage because of their rising
profits and tax subsidies. But, there's something
even worse - the "clean energy" ethanol
movement.
Big Oil is the largest
business in the world today. Last year the five largest
companies, ExxonMobil,
Chevron/Texaco, BP-Amaco, Royal Dutch Shell and ConocoPhilips
had a combined profit of $104.6 Billion. Exxon's profits
($39.5) nearly exceeded those of IBM, Microsoft, Walmart
and AT&T combined ($40.45 B). Oil corporations
have come a long way from the wildcatters of East
Texas to the corporate behemoths of Dallas and Houston.
However it's not the size
of the oil industry, nor their profits, that is of
the greatest concern in a free market economy. It
is the fact that they take enormous profits while
being subsidized by you and me, the taxpayer, for
the production of non-renewable resources
A multitude of state and federal income
tax credits and deductions results in an
income tax rate of less than 11% for the oil industry
compared to average business taxes of 18%.
A 2006 study by the Interior Department estimated
that royalty-free incentives by the government allow
oil companies to escape
tens of billions of dollars in royalties that
they would otherwise pay the government for oil and
gas.
Oil subsidies aren't the worst thing.
As unbalanced as public policy is regarding
non-renewable energy, it pales compared to the looming
disaster being created by converting crops into ethanol.
Every new ethanol project (also taxpayer subsidized)
essentially takes food out of the mouths of the poor
and the spectre of food shortages is already casting
a shadow around the globe. Children may die while
Americans and Europeans pat themselves on the back
for their being "environmentally conscious".
Grain is essential to sustain human
life and accounts for nearly 50% of the calories consumed
by each person. In recent centuries, the production
of grain has improved so much that no person in the
world need go hunger. The
world's grain farmers produced record crops in 2007
- more than 2.3 billion tons of grain.
Grain is also used for livestock feed,
and increasing for ethanol and other fuels. Worldwide,
the amount of coarse grains converted to energy jumped
15 percent to 255 million tons and food stocks are
falling fast. The U.S. Department of Agriculture is
predicting that supplies of on-hand stocks may fall
to a 47-year by the end of this year. "The
USDA projects global grain supplies will drop to their
lowest levels on record. Further, it is likely
that, outside of wartime, global grain supplies have
not been this low in a century, perhaps longer,"
said NFU Director of Research Darrin Qualman.
But 2007/08 will mark the seventh year
out of the past eight in which global grain production
has fallen short of demand. Data and analysis from
the Earth Policy Institute shows how the drive to
create biofuels
is accelerating the rise in food prices around the
globe.
There have already been riots in parts
of the world as the poor find themselves unable to
buy need grains - rice, corn, and wheat. In Mexico
and much of Central America, many people live on diets
of mostly tortillas and beans. Now, even tortillas
are becoming too expensive. The World Bank reports
that for each 1 percent rise in food prices, caloric
intake among the poor drops 0.5 percent.
The spectre of food shortages is casting
a shadow across the globe,
causing riots in Africa, consumer protests in Europe
and panic in food-importing countries. In
a world of increasing affluence, the hoarding of rice
and wheat has begun. The President of the Philippines
made an unprecedented call last week to the Vietnamese
Prime Minister, requesting that he promise to supply
a quantity of rice. Half of the planet depends on
rice but stocks are at their lowest since the mid1970s
when Bangladesh suffered a terrible famine. Rice production
will fall this year below the global consumption level
of 430 million tonnes. n Mexico, Morocco, Uzbekistan,
Yemen, Guinea, Mauritania and Senegal. There have
also been protests in Jakarta, the Indonesian capital,
over government price increases.Population
If 80 percent of the 62 distilleries
now under construction in the are completed by late
2008, grain used to produce fuel for cars will climb
to 114 million tons in the U.S., or 28 percent of
the projected 2008 U.S. grain harvest.
Congress needs to immediately roll back
all subsidies on non-renewal
energy production and for
converting food grains into ethanol. While
this won't be popular with corn growers, it will help
to divert a growing food crisis. What should be a
call for justice is turning out to be a hobbesian
choice.
|
|
Summer lectures at Dallas Peace Center
The Dallas Peace is proud expanding
its Summer
Dinner Lecture Series this year with three
lectures: June 4, July 23 and Aug 6.
First on the series will be Rita Marie
Johnson founder of the Academy for Peace of Costa
Rica. Next up will be Col. Ann Wright, author of Dissent:
Voices of Conscience. Third in the series will
be Dr. Erika Frank, president of the Nobel Peace Prize-winning
Physicians for Social Responsibility (PSR). Tickets
for each fundraiser/dinner are $75 and the are opportunities
for sponsorship.
Another homegrown redneck terrorist
Jeffrey Don Detrixhe, 38, of Higgins,
Texas, was arrested this week after trying to sell
a 25-gallon drum of cyanide to an FBI informant, touting
the poison's usefulness in mass killings.
"I could kill a city with that ... Euthanize
a whole village," Detrixhe said in the
taped conversation, according to an affidavit.
FBI agents taped conversations in which
Detrixhe told an informant that he had a 25-gallon
drum of cyanide and was willing to sell it in exchange
for $10,000, a thermal imager and a fully automatic
Russian-made AK-47 assault rifle.
In 2003 a A Tyler man with ties to white
supremacists pleaded guilty to possessing chemical
weapons in one of the most serious cases of domestic
terrorism. Documents seized indicated there may be
other co-conspirators across the country.
Iraq vets return to E. Texas
More than one hundred National Guard
members from Delta Company of the 144th Infantry Division
got a huge "Welcome Home." this week in
Palestine after returning from more than a year in
Iraq.
Every soldier had their own story of
relief to finally be home. One couple married five
years has been apart for three of them. "It's
hard, it's hard on people, it's hard on the family
and it's just pretty difficult sometimes,"
said Sergeant Sergio Dominguez
|
|
Violence grips Juarez
Juarez, Mexico is in the grips of an
epidemic of violence with more than 200 people killed
this year. Last Week
thousands of white-clad people marched silently
to protest a surge of drug-related violence in a Mexican
city across from Texas where the
No. 2 police officer was shot dead.
The crowd of several thousand students,
church leaders, businessmen and politicians walked
for about four miles (six kilometers) across
Ciudad Juarez to a park near a border crossing,
breaking the silence in a burst of speeches, dancing
and singing. "We need to unite against this,"
said Julian Ochoa, an architecture student at the
march. "I hope we achieve something."
Guns in schools
Last week an East
Texas High School student was arrested after
bringing a rifle on his school campus while a sixth-grader
in San Marcos was suspended after
a handgun was found in his backpack.
These are only a couple of gun-related
incidents that have struck Texas schools this year.
In September, a
Rio Hondo High School student was arrested
after taking a gun to school and A.
Maceo Smith High School, in Dallas, was locked
after a student brought a pistol to school. A similar
incident occured at
Anna High School in Collin County. Near Houston,
a Katy
student at Mayde Creek High School brought
a gun for "protection".
A Beaumont
7th grader was arrested in December for having
a gun at school while 9-year-old elementary student
brought a gun on board his school bus in Nacogdoches.
In Brownsville, an
elementary student was taken away in handcuffs
after bringing a gun to school. Tragedy occured
at Greenville High School, in Hunt County,
when a Junior brought a gun to school and shot himself.
Easy access to handguns and poor parenting
(afterall, exactly how do kids get access?) are blamed
for increase in guns in schools.
|

|
(LAST WEEK: May 1, 2008) Immigrant
Rights: No hay ser humano ilegal
Not like the brazen
giant of Greek fame,
With conquering limbs astride from land to land;
Here at our sea-washed, sunset gates shall stand
A mighty woman with a torch, whose flame
Is the imprisoned lightning, and her name
Mother of Exiles. From her beacon-hand
Glows world-wide welcome; her mild eyes command
The air-bridged harbor that twin cities frame.
"Keep ancient lands, your storied pomp!"
cries she
With silent lips. "Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!"
The New Colossus (Statue
of Liberty poem) by Emma
Lazarus
Throughout America's history,
the topic of immigration has engendered strong emotions
- especially
as most of the continent became populated with foreign
born families. And while arguments for and
against immigration have varied only slightly through
the years (they will bring disease, take away jobs,
etc.) the heart of the matter is racism and religious
prejudice - a willingness or unwillingness to welcome
the other.
Chinese laborers, African
slaves, Irish, Italians, Morovians, Jews
the
list is long of those who came to America only to
face the brunt of "nativists" who subversively
(i.e.
KKK) terrorized and institutionally created
barriers to those not born within the country's boundaries.
Nativism is even enshired in the U.S.
Constitution's provision that excludes immigrants
from attaining the highest elected office - that of
the President.
It's happening again.
Along with the
neoconservative ideologies that grew out of the post-Nixon
era, anti-immigration sentiment has grown
to become a major political issue. The 1994
Contract on America launched the current crisis
when supporters sought to cut off public aid to undocumented
workers. The same businessowners (and their pandering
politicians) who refuse to pay livable wages, began
to dismantle "safety nets" for the poor,
many who are immigrants. (They are surely inheritors
of industrialist who fought against the eight-hour
work day -
that led to the May 1 strike of 1886).
Today's anti-immigrant forces - from
the Minute Men to neo-liberal activists - argue that
the issue isn't about race or religious prejudice,
but rather about economic necessity and "population
stabilization". But even these argument, at heart,
are racist. The implication is that one sort of person
is somehow superior to another. That one's own child
(or tribe) is inherently more valuable that another's.
Such nonsense is the antithesis of humanity
and the principles enshrined in this experiment called
"America".
Our
Declaration, Constitution and tremendous
statue-gift
from the people of France stand for the rights
of all people to enjoy inalienable rights of life,
liberty and pursuit of happiness. This, is the dream
and hope of America.
Immigrants, whether recently arrived
or on this continent for hundreds of years, shall
be treated with equal dignity and value. From the
language (no person is "illegal") that is
used to refer to undocumented workers to the policies
regarding their housing, healthcare, education and
livelihoods, all people should be given the full benefits
of participation in, and contribution to, society.
No one should live in fear or needlessly face prejudice
because of where they happened to be born.
Texans for Peace,
as followers of peace and social justice,
will stand
firmly by anyone who faces discrimination
and work to build up, rather than tear down, families.
We will continue to counter and oppose anti-immigrant
legislation, the criminalization of immigrant communities,
the militarization of the Texas border, the detention
and deportation of immigrants, while showing friendliness
by making room for all of our fellow Texans.
We will gently counsel our anti-immigrant
neighbors and work with others to build bridges to
one another rather
than building walls. And, we will march for
the rights of immigrants because we also remember
what it's like to
be a stranger in a new land.
|
Immigration
Rights Marches on May 1 (Thursday) 2008
Austin - 4:30 pm Rally at the Capitol, 5:30
March
Houston - 2 pm Rally at Mickey Leland Federal
Building, 3 March
San Antonio - 5 pm Rally at La Plaza del Zacate,
6:30 March
|
|
|
TX housing agency sued over discrimination
The Texas
Department of Housing and Community Affairs
is being sued by Inclusive Communities Project, a
Dallas civil rights group, over claims that claims
the agency has awarded housing tax credits primarily
to apartment complexes in minority-dominated urban
areas with high rates of crime and poverty. The suit
asks for an equal number of credit in both minority
and non-minority census tracts.
"Tax-credit
housing is now the largest program for providing affordable
housing in the country, the state and in this area,"
Mike Daniel, an attorney for the Inclusive Communities
Project, told the Morning News. "Like
all the other affordable housing programs, it is still
marked by racial segregation which reduces its value
to many of the people it's supposed to serve by subjecting
them to conditions of slum and blight in order to
get the housing."
Creation "science" degree
rejected
The Texas
Higher Education Coordinating Board voted
last week to reject the Institute for Creation Research's
application to offer a master's degree in science
education. The Board flatly rejected that teaching
creationism was "science". Evolution
is such a fundamental principle of contemporary science
it is hard to imagine how you could cover the various
fields of science without giving it [evolution] the
proper attention it deserves as a foundation of science,
said Texas Higher Education Commissioner Raymund Paredes.
Texas public school biology classes
teach that the universe and organisms evolved over
millions of years. Creationists,
advocate a literal, Bible-based theory that God created
the earth and all life forms instantly in their current
state. However, most religious people reject
this view of the world (and also know that the earth
revolves around the sun, not vice versa).
|
|
Welfare for the rich
Rackspace
is a much-admired successful and profitable technology
firm in San Antonio that is getting ready
to launch a $400 million IPO. The company's CEO/investor,
Graham Weston, is a wealthy scion whose family
is a member of the billionaire asset class. Graham's
uncle,
is reportedly worth $9.4 billion and the Weston family's
holdings also include Fortnum & Mason,
a famous department store in London founded in 1707,
and the $1 billion British department store Selfridges
& Co.
However, that hasn't stopped Governor
Perry from giving the company
$22 million of taxpayer dollars from his crony capitalism
fund. In a state where business owners complain
about raising the Federal minimum wage
to $6.55 per hour in July and where
median household income is only $46,715 (2005 Dollars),
Texas taxpayers do not need to give corporate welfare...especially
by the hand of weak-willed "public servants".
25% of 8th-graders failing math
More than
70,000 eighth-graders failed the math portion of the
Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills (TAKS) test
this year, according to the Texas Education
Agency (TEA), much worse than in past years. Students
who don't pass the math and reading exams (they have
2 more tries), could be held back this year.
"I
think we've just had a larger, more intense focus
on reading over the years for this group of students,"
said Debbie Ratcliffe, spokeswoman for the TEA.
"We've increased our math focus, but reading
still has dominated. We know that students who can't
read have trouble not only in reading class, but in
social studies and even in math class because there
are so many word problems."
|

| (ARCHIVES: April
17, 2008) Peace on EARTH
April 22 is celebrated
as Earth
Day, in Texas and around the planet. From
tending trees in Austin's "Peace Grove"
(Zilker Park) and attending the Living
Green Festival to Mothers
for Clean Air 5K in Houston, tens of thousands
of Texans will celebrate our planet this weekend.
Plenty more will be out enjoying wildflowers, sunshine
or tending to gardens. Everywhere people are searching
for better ways to be good stewards of nature.
On this day, we are pleased
to bring you the following essay to reflect (and act)
upon:
On
Earth Day, by Alex
Steffen, executive director of World
Changing
Green is the new black.
No buzz-phrase better sums up both the excitement
many of us feel about the blooming environmental and
social consciousness around us and the essential hollowness
of the answers being promoted by many newly-minted
eco-pundits.
The flood of environmental
magazine cover stories, documentaries and advertisements
has pushed us over a public-opinion threshold, which
is great. But the solutions being touted by many of
our new-found allies are themselves creating a new
kind of problem -- people who should know better are
selling a muddle-headed, style-over-substance, "lite
green" environmentalism at a time when we need
to be rebuilding our civilization to avoid disaster.
To be blunt, we're being sold out.
People are being told to
buy organic cotton T-shirts, keep their tires inflated
and recycle their beer bottles. But the reality of
the situation is that the impacts of these sorts of
actions are totally out whack with the magnitude of
the planetary problems bearing down upon us. Those
of us who care about the future of the planet need
to reclaim this moment from those who would have people
think that our biggest challenge is picking the most
stylish vegan shoes.
With every passing day, we are discovering
that things are worse than we thought. Our climate
is ripping apart at the seams at a rate that's surprising
even the so-called alarmists. Natural systems are
collapsing. The
ocean seems headed towards a series of catastrophic
tipping points. Economic inequity is producing
a planet of billionaires and a billion desperate people.
Our political systems are suffering a massive crisis
of legitimacy, while
insane fundamentalists, violent criminals
and
two-bit dictators (wearing both uniforms and
Armani suits) are stealing or destroying everything
they can get their hands on. Everywhere on the planet
we find an empty consumer culture so accepted we barely
speak of it, except perhaps to make an ironic joke.
We have placed a Great
Wager on the future of humanity, and the odds
are getting worse.
In the face of this reality, recycling
a bottle is an act so insignificant as to be merely
totemic. Paper or plastic? Who the hell cares?
In the developed world, few of us, essentially
none of us, currently live a "one-planet
life." The vast majority of us, even
of those of us who have committed ourselves to change,
consume more resources and energy than our sustainable
share: indeed, it is very, very difficult to live
an individually sustainable life, because the very
systems in which we are enmeshed -- which enfold and
make possible our lifestyles -- are themselves insanely
unsustainable. We're driving our hybrid
SUVs down the highway to the Collapse.
Most of the harm we cause in the world
is done far from our sight, created through the workings
of vast systems whose workings are often intentionally
hidden from us, and over which we have very little
influence as single individuals. Alone, we are essentially
powerless to change anything that matters. We can't
shop our way to sustainability.
I believe we are bombarded with messages
encouraging us to take the "small steps"
precisely because those steps are a threat to no one.
They don't depress sales of fashionable
crap we don't need. They don't bring people
into the streets or sweep corrupt politicians from
office. They certainly don't threaten the powerful,
entrenched interests who
are growing fantastically rich off keeping
us locked into the systems that make our lives such
a burden on the planet and
impoverish our brothers and sisters elsewhere.
Buying a hemp hoodie is not a blow for
better world, it's at best a mere gesture towards
the idea that the world ought to better. And, here
in the Green Spring of 2006, we must finally admit
to ourselves that gestures are no longer enough. That
to be focused on lifestyle tweaks and attitudinal
adjustments at this moment in history is like showing
up with a teaspoon to help bail out a sinking ship.
If the New Green degenerates into handing out more
stylish spoons, we're screwed.
We don't need more carpool lanes.
We need to eliminate fossil fuels from our economy.
We don't need more recycling bins. We need to create
a closed-loop, biomimetic, neobiological industrial
system. We don't need to attend a tree-planting ceremony.
We need to become expert at
ecosystem management and gardening the planet.
We don't need another unscented laundry detergent.
We need to ban the vast majority of the toxic chemicals
upon which our livestyles currently float and invent
a completely
non-toxic green chemistry. We don't need lite
green fashions. We need a bright green revolution.
To really change the world we need to
hand out real tools: rugged, free, collaborative tools
for understanding the world and our role in it, for
seeing the systems in which we are trapped; tools
for learning how to work together to either transform
those systems or destroy them completely and bioremediate
the rubble. Tools that help us as people make meaningful
changes in both our own lives and the world. We need
to make people participants, not consumers. We need
answers that address peoples' lives, not their lifestyles.
We need to
take back the ballot box. With the exception
of a couple small nations like Finland, most governments
on earth are now seething messes of corruption, oppression
and entrenched privilege, and our government here
in the U.S. is worse than many. We need transparency,
accountability, genuine equity, real democracy and
human rights. No environmental or social issue transcends
the need for worldwide political reform, and none
of our huge planetary problems can be solved without
it.
We need to seize the trading floor.
Most large corporations, and most of the markets
we've established through regulation, incentive and
tradition, demand that we participate (as
employees, consumers or investors) in ecological destruction,
unfair labor practices and an assault on the public
realm. We need to grab hold of these economic systems,
strip them down to their component parts and rebuild
them anew. That means supporting (or becoming) clean
energy entrepreneurs, green builders, sustainable
product designers, socially-responsible investors,
and so on. We need a new generation uncompromisingly
innovative and determined regulators, planners, bankers,
insurers. We need to take back business as a realm
of service and do away with the dinosaurs who dominate
it today, and we need an army of people ready to put
their careers and investments on the line to do it.
We need to share. There is no sustainable
future without a vigorous and lively public realm.
We need to defend the commons, from the air we breath
to the culture we create together. That commons is
everywhere under attack from those who would privatize
it for profit and stifle innovation to protect the
status quo, the way, for instance, that the music
and film industries are trying to take away our ability
to freely (and legally) share our own music and videos,
because they're worried not only that someone might
illegally share some of their music or videos, but
because the explosion of free music and video we're
seeing threatens their out-of-date business models.
We must counter-attack, supporting open culture and
public ownership, and working everywhere to redistribute
the future.
We need better mousetraps. The stuff
that surrounds us is crap: toxic, wasteful, unjust,
ugly. We need innovation everywhere, real innovation,
stuff that isn't just marginally better or superficially
green, but stuff that is actually, right now or as
soon as possible, an order of magnitude more efficient,
completely non-toxic and closed-loop. We need to support
the folks out there trying to design these things.
We need to laud their efforts, invest in their inventions,
and generally do everything we can to get better design,
technology and thinking applied to every aspect of
our lives. Then we need to help regular people separate
the bright green from the
greenwashed.
 |
|
We need to grow new systems. The systems
which surround us are awful. Some of them we can hack.
Some of them simply need to be replaced.
Suburban sprawl, for instance, is simply wrong:
there's no way to make it sustainable. We should simply
bring it to a halt. Farming, on the other hand, needs
to be reformed -- and through conscious buying, political
activism and ethical leadership, we can help steer
agriculture away from petrochemical factory farming
and towards innovative local sustainable farms. Some
of our choices nurture changed systems -- those are
the choices we need to show people how to make.
We need to help each other. Consumer-based
approaches and "simple things" lists tend
to reinforce our sense that the only sphere in which
we can act is our own little private lives, and that
isolates us. But the isolation we all sometimes feel
in the face of the magnitude of the problems is itself
a major part of the problem. None of us can change
the world single-handedly: as Wendell
Berry says, "to work at this work alone
is to fail." We need to organize, mobilize, join
together, act in concert. We need to seek out our
allies and get their backs when they need us. That
happens through applied effort, not impulse buying.
We need to admit that we're at war over
the definition of the future. There are a lot of powerful
interests spending a lot of money to keep people ignorant,
make them uncertain, postpone action, encourage cynicism
and apathy, and lock them in the mental prison of
thinking that no better future is possible. To the
extent they are successful, nothing we advocate can
happen. We need to fight back. We need to speak clearly,
intelligently, and, if possible, with humor and passion.
We need to label our opponents (from climate denialists
to apologists for the status quo) what they are --
enemies of the future. We need to make the nature
of our times crystal-clear for all to see. We need
to hew to the demanding standards our actual real
situation imposes on us -- that we achieve measurable
sustainability, honest-to-goodness one-planet living,
for everyone, within our lifetimes -- and scorn the
mental tyranny of small goals. We need to break through
the meaningless chatter around environmental and social
issues, and point to genuine alternatives, hold real
conversations, and create a culture that speaks to
the soul of our times.
We need, above all else, to show
that another world is possible, indeed, it's
here all around us, though we do not see it. We need
to inspire not only our fellow citizens but ourselves
with visions of what we're beginning to accomplish
together, visions of what a planet brought back to
sanity will look and feel like, visions of how we
will live in a bright green future. That future should
be beautiful and stylish, dynamic and creative, but
it must before all else be genuinely sustainable,
or it's not much of a future at all, is it?
The world is listening. It's our obligation
to tell it a better story.
|
|
Dallas building greener
Dallas has joined the short list of
major American cities to pass comprehensive environmental
building standards for both residential and commercial
construction.
On April 9, the City Council unanimously adopted a
green construction ordinance aimed at reducing energy
and water consumption in all new houses and commercial
buildings.
The newly enacted ordinance will be
implemented in two phases beginning in 2009. The first
phase requires that homebuilders construct their homes
to be 15 percent more efficient than the base energy
code and meet four out of six high-efficiency water
reduction strategies. For commercial projects, Phase
1 of the new ordinance requires buildings smaller
than 50,000 square feet to be 15 percent more efficient
than the base energy code and use 20 percent less
water than required by the current Dallas Plumbing
Code.
El Paso Catholics urge Pope to create
"peace shield" for Iran
Catholics in El Paso, concerned about
a possible U.S. attack on Iran, have issued a call
to Pope Benedict XVI to go to Iran, and invite other
dignitaries to join him, to set up a Peace Shield.
"Iraq has already been devastated. Over 4.5 million
people have been forced to flee their homes. Will
we launch another unjust war in this already troubled
and unstable region? We must not!" the Christians
say.
The initiative for
this urgent, prayerful call began with the Catholic
peace community in St. Louis, Missouri where
the Massive Ordinance Penetrator bomb is made and
recently was delivered to the military. This call
has been sent to Catholic peace communities in New
York and Washington, D.C. where the Pope will be visiting
and giving talks in the following days. It recently
became a focus for El
Paso's Border Peace Presence as well.
|
|
May 1 - Day Off for "Silent Majority"
Americans, disatisfied with the state
of national and international affairs, are urging
one another to take a day off from work, school and
shopping on May 1 -
the "real" Labor Day. This "silent
majority" is concerned about poor labor
conditions and wages, Administration torture policies,
rising gas prices and taxes, racist immigration bashing,
the War
in Iraq, and other issues.
"We need to visit our congressmembers'
local offices at high noon," says David Swanson
of After
Downing Street, "and demand change."
Other groups joining the call include: Immigrant
Solidarity Network, American
Postal Workers, West
Coast Longshormen, Stop
ICE Raids, and a
possible trucker shutdown across the U.S.
Evironmental laws ignored on border
wall
The Bush Administration has announced
that it will ignore some 30 environmental laws and
regulations in order to accelerate its project to
wall along the Texas-Mexico border by the Department
of Homeland (in)Security (DHS). The
border "fence" is one of those harebrained
schemes that might be funny if it weren't so cynical
and racist.
Passed by the House and Senate in September
2006, the Secure
Fence Act mandated the construction of a barrier
stretching along a 700-mile portion of the 1,969-mile
U.S.-Mexico border. Aside from the fact that wall
a costly mess of a project that has angered people
across the political spectrum, the administration
has infuriated local municipalities by systematically
overriding their say in what happens in their own
backyard - including protecting the fragile environment
along the Colorado River.
|

| (ARCHIVES: April
2, 2008) Paying for War
By the time President Bush
leaves office, Americans will have already spent more
than $1 Trillion on war - more
than the entire costs of the Korean and Vietnam wars
combined - and an additional $5 Trillion on
other "defense" and "security"
projects.
Who is funding this? You
and me.
Of the nearly $3 Trillion
annual U.S. federal budget, a
full 54% ($1,449 Trillion) is now going to pay for
present, past (including interests) and future wars.
America accounts for more than half
of military expenditures worldwide.
It now takes nearly four
months of labor, for the average worker, to pay one's
tax burden as government grows and continues to dominate
daily life. "Americans
will still spend more on taxes in 2008 than they will
spend on food, clothing and housing combined,"
says Tax Foundation president Scott Hodge.
The costs of war had risen
to $2.5 Billion per week and the White House was asking
for hundreds of billions more. Newly appointed Defense
Secretary Robert Gates was afraid to venture
outside the walls of the Green Zone.
Wise men and women long
ago noted that where people put their treasure is
where the heart lies. Martin Luther King, Jr. echoed
that sentiment in describing the richest and most
powerful country in the world. "America
would never invest the necessary funds or energies
in rehabilitation of its poor so long as adventures
like Vietnam (Afghanistan and Iraq) continued to draw
men and skills and money like some demonic destructive
suction tube." Since he spoke those prophetic
words, U.S. military expenditures have continued to
climb and militarism and profit motives continue to
outpace human development.
GSD&M, a creative and
talented agency in Austin, this week heralded its
award of
a 10-year $372 Million advertising contract from the
U.S. Air Force. This comes at the same time
that the USAF is accused of committing
daily war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan.
During the past two weeks, airstrikes in those countries
have
killed and injured dozens of women and children
as they targeted residential neighborhoods and homes
- a clear violation of the Geneva Conventions. Tyler
refiner, Delek, will see a tripling in Defense
contracts for aviation fuel. Shell Oil, in Deer Park,
will receive $883 Million and
San Antonio's Valerio $397, also from the
USAF.
Amarillo and Fort Worth business leaders
are crowing at $10
Billion in new contracts for their local community.
Even small towns, like New
Braunfels, get in on the action. Meanwhile
in Houston, Halliburton's former subsidiary KBR -
the single largest defense contractor -
is implicated in another rape. These are only
a few of your Texas neighbors who profit from death
and destruction.
And where does the money come from?
You and me of course, if we pay taxes.
However, there are growing movements
to change the equation, to redirect taxes into peaceful
pursuits or refuse to pay them at all.
The National
Campaign for a Peace Tax Fund has been working
for passage of the Religious Freedom Peace Tax Fund
Bill (currently H.R. 1921) which would allow federal
taxes of designated conscientious objectors will be
placed in a non-military trust fund. The bill has
32 congressional co-sponsors but faces an uphill battle
against the military-industrial complex that gorges
on the country's treasure.
Another movement, the Campaign to establish
a U.S.
Department of Peace, is working to create
a federal department which would be funded by 1% of
the Department of Defense (DoD) budget. It currently
has 69 co-sponsors. Texas DoP groups plan "Peace
of the Pie" actions on Mother's Day.
A more historic, but fast growing, movement
is of war tax resistance.
In 1202 King John of England imposed
the first income tax to pay for a war with France,
infuriating local landowners (Barons) who marched
on London - and in 1215
the Magna Carta was born. In 1709 Quakers
refused
to pay for an expedition into Canada, replying
"it was contrary to their religious principles
to hire men to kill one another". During the
American Revolution many Quakers were jailed or had
their property seized for their war tax resistance.
Henry
David Thoreau was briefly jailed in 1836 for
refusing to pay taxes in protest of the Mexican-American
War. His "On
the Duty of Civil Disobedience" became
a seminal part of American literature and social action.
In his Autobiography Martin Luther king said of Thoreau's
work: "As a result of his writings and personal
witness, we are the heirs of a legacy of creative
protest". Mahatma
Gandhi noted that "Withholding payment
of taxes is one of the quickest methods of overthrowing
a government."
During WWI in England, there were so
many war resisters that the British government added
a 'the conscience clause' to the 1916 Conscription
Act. Over
16,000 men claimed the right to military exemption
in that country.
Up until WWII, most war tax resistance
in the U.S. primarily manifested itself among members
of the historic peace churches - Quakers, Mennonites,
and Brethren - but after than time it began to spread
to other faith and non-religious groups. War tax refusal
succeeded in achieving nationwide publicity
in 1949 when forty-one peacemakers from Chicago refused
to any longer pay income tax (six were eventually
imprisoned). In 1963 the Peacemakers published the
first handbook on war tax resistance, appropriately
titled Handbook on Nonpayment of War Taxes.
During Vietnam,
Joan Baez announced in 1964 her refusal to
pay 60% income taxes because of the war. By the 1970's
nearly 20,000 joined in.
Today, war tax resistance has grow into
a nationwide movement. The National
War Tax Resistance Coordinating Committee (NWTRCC).
They have called for all taxpayers who oppose the
wars in Afghanistan and Iraq to "join together
in nonviolent civil disobedience and show Congress
how to cut off the funds for this war and redirect
resources to the pressing needs of people," by
refusing to pay at least a portion of taxes. More
and more information on methods can
be found all over the Internet. and in many
cities, people will conduct "penny polls"
in front of IRS facilities and post offices. There
will be other
tax day protests.
While pundits and presidential candidates
discuss some future state (what's wrong with taking
action now Senators Clinton, McCain and Oboma?), of
the U.S. government and its relationship to the citizenry
and the world economy, the war in Iraq grows by $12
Billion every month.
It could eventually cost between $2.4 and $3 Trillion
- all monies that could have been spent on the betterment
of people at home and abroad.
Paying for war has become an institutional
part of every American's life and we are burdening
our children and grandchildren with the dept of the
folly of past decades. The militarization of our society
(mil·i·ta·rism
n. Predominance of the armed forces in the administration
or policy of the state) continues as more
and more citizens suck at the teet of a golden cow.
As our society militarizes and more
citizens suck at the teat of camo cow, we need to
demonstration that these are our earnings - not theirs
- and we will decide how they are spent. Together
we can reset the priorities for our family, nation
and world. "We must move past indecision to action,"
said Dr. King, if we are to find new ways to speak
for peace and justice in our world. And, we must do
it today, before we are "dragged
down the long dark and shameful corridors of time
reserved for those who possess power without compassion,
might without morality, and strength without sight."
What will it take to make a change?
You and me.
|
|
40th Anniversary of MLK's Assasination
Remembered
Throughout Texas - from Amarillo
to Austin
and the world, the 40th anniversary of the assination
of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was honored in song,
marches, vigils and other events. MLK, America's foremost
peace and justice leader, was killed on April 4, 1968
in Memphis.
King was a champion of nonviolent protest
for social change, and his writings and speeches still
stir followers. "The world still listens to Martin,"
says Rev. C.T. Vivian, a former King associate. "There
are people who didn't reach for him then who reach
for him now. They want to know this man. What did
he say? What did he think?"
Texan elected to Nt'l CAIR board
A Muslim peacemaker from San Antonio,
Sarwat
Husain, was recently elected to the board
of the National Council on American Islamic Relations
(CAIR). Sarwat, publisher of Al-Ittihaad
Monthly, came to the U.S. from Pakistan
more than thirty years ago.
Since that time, she has become an instrumental
leader in San Antonio and throughout Texas - becoming
particularly active after 9-11. "I thought, What
will happen to Muslims in this country? It will never
be the same. My whole self changed." She is now
invited to give talks on American Muslims and minority
media around the country.
New El Paso office for TX Civil Rights
The
Texas Civil Rights Project is inviting everyone
to the grand opening of their new office in El Paso,
on April 17. The TCRP promotes racial, social, and
economic justice through education and litigation
and the new "Paseo del Norte" will be the
first civil rights office in that city.
|
|
Texas deadly for children
Children living in Texas are
up to three times more likely to die before adulthood
than elsewhere in the U.S. Anew study that
puts Texas among the bottom 10 states in the nations
for child well-being.
Lack of pre-natal care, access to healthcare,
and poverty are just some of the failiings to children
in one of the richest places on earth. In Texas, a
child is five times as likely to be uninsured as a
child in Rhode Island. And, Texas' teen birth rate
is 3.5 times that of New Hampshire's, according to
"Geography
Matters: Child Well-Being in the States,"
by the Every Child Matters Education Fund
Failed High School? - Work for the
U.S. govt.
Don't have a college degree and worried
about getting a job? Worry no more. The Department
of Homeland Security has reduced requirements that
its agents (carrying a badge and guns) need to have
a high school diploma or a GED. The
only major qualifications for the job are that you
are younger than 40, a US citizen (they're considering
eleminating this provision), possess a driver's
license and pass tests. You don't even need
a worry about a record by the FBI, security checks
have been outsourced!
In May 2006, President Bush outlined
a plan to increase the border protection force by
50 percent, from 12,000 agents to 18,000 and to further
militarize Texas. Equipping agents
is expected to cost $2 Billion. Recently
border
control officers and customs agents have been accused
of bribery, drug trafficking, and immigrant smuggling.
Be careful the next time you get stopped while traveling
in South Texas.
|

|