"In the most terrible way imaginable
they show to the whole world that it is not only the
lives of people in Baghdad, Fallujah and Palestine that
Bush holds cheap. It is also his own citizens - the
black and poor people left behind with no food, water
or shelter. This is not simply manslaughter through
incompetence, though the White House's incompetence
abounds. It is murder - for Bush was warned four years
ago of the threat to New Orleans, as surely as he was
warned of the disaster that would come of his war on
Iraq. ...
"His [Bush] is the America of Halliburton,
the M-16 rifle, the cluster bomb, the gated communities
of the rich and of the billionaires he grew up with
in Texas. There is another America. It is the land of
the poor of Louisiana, it is the land of the young men
and women economically conscripted into the military.
It is the land of the glorious multiethnic mix that
was New Orleans, it is the land of Malcolm X, Martin
Luther King and of great struggles for justice."
And for the record, Galloway's testimony
before Norm Coleman in Washington earlier this year:
"Now, Senator, I gave my heart
and soul to oppose the policy that you promoted. I gave
my political life's blood to try to stop the mass killing
of Iraqis by the sanctions on Iraq which killed 1 million
Iraqis, most of them children. Most of them died before
they even knew that they were Iraqis, but they died
for no other reason other than that they were Iraqis
with the misfortune to be born at that time. I gave
my heart and soul to stop you committing the disaster
that you did commit in invading Iraq. And I told the
world that your case for the war was a pack of lies,"
Galloway informed the fool on Capitol Hill.
"I told the world that Iraq, contrary
to your claims, did not have weapons of mass destruction.
I told the world, contrary to your claims, that Iraq
had no connection to al-Qaida. I told the world, contrary
to your claims, that Iraq had no connection to the atrocity
on 9/11, 2001. I told the world, contrary to your claims,
that the Iraqi people would resist a British and American
invasion of their country and that the fall of Baghdad
would not be the beginning of the end but merely the
end of the beginning.
"Senator, in everything I said
about Iraq, I turned out to be right and you turned
out to be wrong, and 100,000 people paid with their
lives; 1,600 of them American soldiers sent to their
deaths on a pack of lies; 15,000 of them wounded, many
of them disabled forever on a pack of lies."
From the Wisconsin
State Journal: "British
MP and anti-war activist George Galloway told a crowd
of about 1,000 at the Union Theater on Sunday night
that the governments of the United States and Britain
had created a "swamp of hatred" among Muslims
worldwide that led to the rise of Islamic fundamentalism
and al-Qaida.
"Galloway, speaking in Madison
as part of his "Mr. Galloway Goes to Washington"
North American tour, said that while he did not excuse
the actions of terrorists - calling the Sept. 11 New
York and July 7 London attacks "criminal acts of
mass murder" - he believed that the past actions
of the U.S. and United Kingdom toward Muslims helped
motivate the attacks."
Amy Goodman hosted a fiery debate Wednesday
between British antiwar MP George Galloway and columnist
and author Christopher Hitchens in a public duel over
the war in Iraq. It was held at the Baruch College performing
arts center in Manhattan. Speaking before a sold-out
crowd, both men battled it out for over two hours. We
play an excerpt of the debate that centers on Hurricane
Katrina.
15 September 2005
These days, anything goes
14 September 2005
Twin City Greens advance 7 candidates
past primaries
Five Green candidates for Minneapolis
City Council will advance to the general election in
November, including incumbent Dean Zimmerman who took
44% of the vote. The others are incumbent Natalie Johnson
Lee, Cam Gordon, Dave Bicking, and Aaron Neumann.
Also, Annie Young was the top vote getter
for the at large Parks and Recreation Board, where there
were 8 running for 3 seats. Dave Berger will also move
on to the general election for Board of Taxation.
In the Mayoral race, Farheen Hakeem
came in third out of 12 candidates with 14% of the vote.
In the St. Paul Mayoral race, Green Elizabeth Dickinson
came very close to knocking the incumbent out of the
race, garnering 19% of the vote to Kelly's 27%, while
Coleman got 52%.
13 September 2005
Primary Day for Twin City Greens
Tuesday is a big primary day for the
Twin City Greens, who are fielding a whopping 10 candidates
for municipal offices, including candidates for Mayors
of both Minneapolis and St. Paul.
The Zimmerman
story has risen up to overshadow the two promising
Mayoral candidates. Dean Zimmerman, the encumbent
Green on the Minneapolis City Council, had the great
honor of having his house raided by the FBI five
days before the primary. Accusations of bribery
could hurt him, although the timing of the raid,
which stinks of politics, may actually backfire
and help him.
Elizabeth
Dickinson is the Green candidate for Mayor of
St. Paul. Dickinson has been campaigning hard and
has been getting good press. She is running against
incumbent Randy Kelly, DFL candidate Chris Coleman,
and five others. The top two will move on to the
general election in November.
In Minneapolis,
the Greens have united behind Farheen Hakeem,
one of 12 candidates vying for the vote. Hakeem
is a teacher, an active community organizer, and
coordinator for the Girl Scouts. She is pro LBGTQ
Rights, pro-choice, and was apparently a stand up
comic at one point. She is taking this race seriously.
Other candidates running in Minneapolis:
Natalie Johnson Lee
- Incumbent candidate for Minny City Council Ward
5
Annie Young - Incumbent
candidate for Parks and Recreation Board
Cam Gordon - Minny City
Council Ward 2
Aaron Neumann - Minny City
Council Ward 3
Reggie Birts - Minny City
Council Ward 8
Dave Bicking - Minny City
Council Ward 9
Dave Berger - Minny Board
of Estimate and Taxation
Rae Vogeler campaigns for
U.S. Senate in Wisconsin
Baraboo, WI - Former
Green Party (US) Co-Chair Ben Manski worked
the crowds at Fighting Bob Fest IV on Saturday
introducing the Wisconsin Green Party's candidate
for U.S. Senate Rae Vogeler.
Throughout her adult life, Rae
Vogeler has been a leader bringing people together
in effective movements for peace, justice, and
equal rights. "I have been a social and
community activist for years." Rae says,
"Now, as my children grow older, I'm deeply
concerned for their future. Our society is not
valuing education, healthcare, or the environment."
Rae is challenging Democratic
Senator Herb Kohl, one of the richest U.S. Senators.
Kohl's voting record shows his willingness to
protect the wealth and privilege of the very
rich: he voted for the Bankruptcy bill that
favors credit card companies over people, he
supported the billion dollar give away to the
oil companies with the Energy Bill, he voted
to cut taxes for the rich like himself, and
Herb Kohl has supported the War in Iraq from
the beginning and shows no sign of wavering.
"Greed has twisted the
priorities of our Government." Rae says,
"Profits have become more important than
human needs."
In response to inadequate government
coordination and delivery of aid to victims of Hurricane
Katrina, Oxfam America has launched, for the first time
in its 35-year history, a relief effort within the United
States. While we have conducted relief operations in
Africa, Asia, and Latin America for decades, we learned
from our local partner organizations in the Gulf Coast
region that they were not getting the help they needed.
As a result, we are now distributing food, supplies,
and electric generators to some of the hardest-hit residents
of Biloxi, Mississippi, and are also providing emergency
grants to local organizations in the region.
A major obstacle has been the lack of
centralized coordination. In many of the chaotic
overseas emergencies in which weve worked, weve
had a much better idea of who was doing what than we
do right now, and a better sense of what the governments
response was likely to be, Mr. Offenheiser said.
To date, Oxfam Americas response
to Hurricane Katrinas devastation includes:
Working with local congregations
in Biloxi to provide up to 1,000 meals a day and sheltering
up to 150 people a night.
Granting $30,000 to Vision of Hope,
a local social service group, which will enable homeowners
to obtain $200 vouchers to buy materials needed to
make their homes watertight before another storm passes
through.
Providing $25,000 grants to each
of three organizations working in the Gulf region
that support rural agricultural and fishing communities.
As with the South Asian tsunami, poor
people have been hit the hardest. They had limited resources
and few choices for escape from the storms path.
The hurricane ripped roofs off houses, knocked out power,
blocked roads, and flattened farmers fields, leaving
already-marginalized people homeless and with no means
to support themselves.
Oxfam America has been asked by several
partner organizations with whom it has worked to focus
its emergency response on marginalized communities.
In addition, Oxfam America will explore new partnerships
with other organizations working in the region. In the
meantime, Oxfam America welcomes contributions to its
Hurricane
Katrina Response and Recovery Fund.
8 September 2005
Why I am going to Fighting
Bob Fest 2005 - and you should too
The theme of this year's Fighting
Bob Fest is "The Vote at Risk : 40 years
after the voting rights act". Given the trauma
of two failed presidential elections in a row,
America needs therapy, and America needs to restore
confidence in the electoral process.
The good folks at FightingBob.com
have put together a great program to be held this
Saturday from 8-5:30 at the Sauk Co. Fairgrounds
near Baraboo, WI. Included are:
John Conyers, ranking
Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee and
leading instigator of the
"Conyers Report" on the Ohio
Election Fraud of 2004.
Bernie Sanders, the
nation's favorite Independent in the House,
who is intending to replace Jeffords as the
nation's favorite Independent in the Senate
from Vermont. Bernie Sanders was also the subject
of an excellent piece in the August Rolling
Stone.
Amy Goodman, from Democracy
Now, is the underground's favorite rogue
journalist.
Jim Hightower, from
Texas. If you don't know who he is, Google him.
Known as America's #1 Populist.
Wisconsin Democrats Galore,
including Gwen Moore, Tammy Baldwin, David
Obey, and the man you hate to love, Russ
Feingold.
And so many more! With such
a Progressive line up, and Progressive theme,
you almost have to ask: Where's the Greens?
(Sorry, I had to drop that in. There are going
to be a lot of Greens in attendence. Maybe soon
the Fighting Bob folks and the People's Legislature
will take advantage of the Wisconsin Green Party's
leadership, instead of just taking the Wisconsin
Green Party's Platform...)
New Orleans authorities today began
to forcibly evacuate the 10,000 residents refusing to
move more than a week after Hurricane Katrina flooded
80% of the city.
Mayor Ray Nagin yesterday gave orders
that only relief workers could remain behind for the
clean-up, and 5,000 paratroopers were dispatched in
small boats to find and rescue anyone still left behind.
Gas leaks and disease carried by the
floodwaters could carry a serious risk to anyone remaining
in the city, Nagin said in a radio message to remai
5 September 2005
A makeshift tomb at a New Orleans street
corner conceals a body that had been lying on the sidewalk
for days in the wake of Hurricane Katrina on Sunday,
Sept. 4, 2005. Elvira Smith was killed Monday by a hit
and run driver as she walked to a store to find food
after Hurricane Katrina came ashore. Her body lay on
the sidewalk for 5 days until eventually a passerby
entombed her body. (AP Photo/Dave Martin)
Times-Picayune: An open
letter to the President (Link)
Dear Mr. President:
We heard you loud and clear Friday when
you visited our devastated city and the Gulf Coast and
said, "What is not working, were going to
make it right."
Please forgive us if we wait to see
proof of your promise before believing you. But we have
good reason for our skepticism.
Bienville built New Orleans where he
built it for one main reason: Its accessible.
The city between the Mississippi River and Lake Pontchartrain
was easy to reach in 1718.
How much easier it is to access in 2005
now that there are interstates and bridges, airports
and helipads, cruise ships, barges, buses and diesel-powered
trucks.
Despite the citys multiple points
of entry, our nations bureaucrats spent days after
last weeks hurricane wringing their hands, lamenting
the fact that they could neither rescue the citys
stranded victims nor bring them food, water and medical
supplies.
Meanwhile there were journalists, including
some who work for The Times-Picayune, going in and out
of the city via the Crescent City Connection. On Thursday
morning, that crew saw a caravan of 13 Wal-Mart tractor
trailers headed into town to bring food, water and supplies
to a dying city.
Television reporters were doing live
reports from downtown New Orleans streets. Harry Connick
Jr. brought in some aid Thursday, and his efforts were
the focus of a "Today" show story Friday morning.
Yet, the people trained to protect our
nation, the people whose job it is to quickly bring
in aid were absent. Those who should have been deploying
troops were singing a sad song about how our city was
impossible to reach.
Were angry, Mr. President, and
well be angry long after our beloved city and
surrounding parishes have been pumped dry. Our people
deserved rescuing. Many who could have been were not.
Thats to the governments shame.
Mayor Ray Nagin did the right thing
Sunday when he allowed those with no other alternative
to seek shelter from the storm inside the Louisiana
Superdome. We still dont know what the death toll
is, but one thing is certain: Had the Superdome not
been opened, the citys death toll would have been
higher. The toll may even have been exponentially higher.
It was clear to us by late morning Monday
that many people inside the Superdome would not be returning
home. It should have been clear to our government, Mr.
President. So why werent they evacuated out of
the city immediately? We learned seven years ago, when
Hurricane Georges threatened, that the Dome isnt
suitable as a long-term shelter. So what did state and
national officials think would happen to tens of thousands
of people trapped inside with no air conditioning, overflowing
toilets and dwindling amounts of food, water and other
essentials?
State Rep. Karen Carter was right Friday
when she said the city didnt have but two urgent
needs: "Buses! And gas!" Every official at
the Federal Emergency Management Agency should be fired,
Director Michael Brown especially.
In a nationally televised interview
Thursday night, he said his agency hadnt known
until that day that thousands of storm victims were
stranded at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center.
He gave another nationally televised interview the next
morning and said, "Weve provided food to
the people at the Convention Center so that theyve
gotten at least one, if not two meals, every single
day."
Lies dont get more bald-faced
than that, Mr. President.
Yet, when you met with Mr. Brown Friday
morning, you told him, "Youre doing a heck
of a job."
Thats unbelievable.
There were thousands of people at the
Convention Center because the riverfront is high ground.
The fact that so many people had reached there on foot
is proof that rescue vehicles could have gotten there,
too.
We, who are from New Orleans, are no
less American than those who live on the Great Plains
or along the Atlantic Seaboard. Were no less important
than those from the Pacific Northwest or Appalachia.
Our people deserved to be rescued.
No expense should have been spared.
No excuses should have been voiced. Especially not one
as preposterous as the claim that New Orleans couldnt
be reached.
Mr. President, we sincerely hope you
fulfill your promise to make our beloved communities
work right once again.
"Among the dozens of pieces of
legislation are bills that would allow residents to
carry concealed weapons; prevent University of Wisconsin
System students from receiving emergency contraception;
enable doctors and pharmacists to object on moral grounds
to performing certain procedures; and create statewide
smoking standards for restaurants and other businesses."
Babblemur comments: In Iowa,
a party must win 2% of the vote for either President
or Governor to gain state wide ballot access. In 2000,
the Iowa Green Party did this with Nader's campaign
(2.3% of the vote). I was able to register as a Green
by February of 2001, but after 2002, when Green candidate
for Governor Jay Robinson received only 1.4% of the
vote, the Green Party lost their ballot access in Iowa,
and my voter registration was automatically changed
to Independent.
Because ballot access has to be retained
every two years in Iowa, and the Governor race is during
the non-Presidential general election, it is very difficult
to retain ballot access in Iowa, especially given the
political balance between the Republicans and Democrats
that leads many "progressives" to vote for
the Democrat for Governor.
Seperating the party registration from
ballot access is one step for Iowa. Easing the ballot
access rules would be another big step.
Either side would need to put together
a coalition government to rule, Green Party could be
the swing party. "Traffic Light" coalition
includes Red-Yellow-Green, unlikely "Jamaica Coalition"
would consist of Black-Green-Yellow.
WASHINGTON, Sept 13 (Reuters) - The
chairman of the U.S. House Judiciary Committee said
on Tuesday he had no intention of reopening a sweeping
bankruptcy law passed by Congress earlier this year,
despite proposals to exempt Hurricane Katrina victims
from some of its provisions.
The new, more stringent bankruptcy law
will not harm people left "down and out" by
the storm, Wisconsin Republican Rep. James Sensenbrenner
said.
He said he would not hold a hearing
in his committee on a bill by the panel's ranking Democrat,
Michigan Rep. John Conyers, and 31 other Democrats who
want to exempt Hurricane Katrina victims from parts
of the new bankruptcy law. A chairman's decision not
to hold a hearing usually prevents a House bill form
advancing.
Congress last spring passed the new
bankruptcy law, which makes it harder for heavily indebted
Americans to wipe out their obligations. It goes into
effect on Oct. 17.
A federal judge in California said the
recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance in public schools
is unconstitutional, in a ruling that will rekindle
a debate over the use of the phrase ``under God.''
Diplomats and analysts said the Bush
administration seemed to be making little headway in
achieving even the first step towards sanctions, which
would involve the board of governors of the International
Atomic Energy Agency agreeing next week to refer the
issue to the Security Council.
With the filings, an unprecedented four
of the nation's seven largest carriers will be operating
under bankruptcy protection, marking a low point for
an industry that many analysts said had shown signs
of turning a corner this year -- if not for the run-up
in jet fuel prices.
Five of eight top Federal Emergency
Management Agency officials came to their posts with
virtually no experience in handling disasters and now
lead an agency whose ranks of seasoned crisis managers
have thinned dramatically since the Sept. 11, 2001,
attacks.
FEMA's top three leaders -- Director
Michael D. Brown, Chief of Staff Patrick J. Rhode and
Deputy Chief of Staff Brooks D. Altshuler -- arrived
with ties to President Bush's 2000 campaign or to the
White House advance operation, according to the agency.
Two other senior operational jobs are filled by a former
Republican lieutenant governor of Nebraska and a U.S.
Chamber of Commerce official who was once a political
operative.
It's a low-turnout race in one of the
most liberal areas of the city, Mount Airy and Chestnut
Hill. Marlene Santoyo, a Democratic committeewoman with
a long record as a progressive activist, is carrying
the Green banner.
Katrina hit and Chávez, who claims
President Bush has plans to assassinate him and invade
Venezuela, had a public relations softball.
He was the first foreign leader to offer
aid workers, food and fuel. Citgo soon offered a $1
million donation and yesterday the company announced
it would sell an additional 1 million barrels of oil
to offset losses from the hurricane.
Thus the pickle: the Bush Administration,
which accuses Chávez of using oil money to feed
populist revolutions in America's "back door,"
is watching it come through the front in humanitarian
envelopes.
California is already one of the most
gay-friendly states in the nation. Its domestic partnership
legislation grants same-sex couples most of the benefits
of married couples except a few, such as the right to
jointly file income tax returns, the right to bring
a foreign partner into the United States and right to
pass Social Security benefits on to a spouse. So far,
more than 30,000 same-sex couples are registered in
California as domestic partners.
"Our government failed those people
in the beginning, and I take it now there is no dispute
about it," Clinton told CNN. "One hundred
percent of the people recognize that -- that it was
a failure."
"It is fitting that a great chief
justice be followed in office by a person who shared
his deep reverence for the Constitution, his profound
respect for the Supreme Court and his complete devotion
to the cause of justice," Bush said from the White
House, with the judge by his side.
Galloway, the British member of Parliament
who blew our minds away with his testimony before Congress
(ripping Norm Coleman a new poo-hole in the process)
and Republican Lighting Rod Jane Fonda are bringing
their tour to Madison, WI on September 18. -babblemur
"Do they take away with them an
awareness that it has always been not only a great white
metropolis but also a great black city, a city where
African-Americans have come together again and again
to form the strongest African-American culture in the
land?"
"On Tuesday, August 30, a federal
district judge set a trial date for the Green Partys
Ohio Recount lawsuit and indictments were handed down
against two Cuyahoga County elections officials for
their roles in the bungled election audit. The timing
was coincidental; the two actions are not related though
they both stem from charges that the recount was conducted
in violation of state and federal law."
"Green Party leaders asserted that
the Katrina disaster raises some urgent questions about
the environmental, safety, and public health priorities
of the Bush Administration, as well as state and local
governments in the region affected by Katrina"