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We Must Practice Dissent Print
Friday, 21 August 2015 13:53

Excerpt: "It's fitting that we should have come to this place. Dr. King believed that peace and the civil rights movement are tied inextricably together, that the people who are working for civil rights are working for peace, and that the people working for peace are working for civil rights and justice."

Julian Bond. (photo:  AP)
Julian Bond. (photo: AP)


We Must Practice Dissent

By Julian Bond, Democracy Now!

21 August 15

 

t’s fitting that we should have come to this place. Dr. King believed that peace and the civil rights movement are tied inextricably together, that the people who are working for civil rights are working for peace, and that the people working for peace are working for civil rights and justice. Accordingly, on April 4th, 1967, King delivered his famous speech against the Vietnam War. This was not without risk, because the mainstream press immediately denounced his speech, including The New York Times, The Washington Post and Life magazine. King was compelled to speak out, he said, because, one, the cost of war made its undertaking the enemy of the poor; two, because poor blacks were disproportionately fighting and dying; and, three, because the message of nonviolence is undermined when, in King’s words, the United States government is "the greatest purveyor of violence in the world." Georgia asked me if that was on this memorial. It’s not.

The organization of which I was a part in 1960, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, or SNCC, also felt compelled to speak out against the war, a year before King did so. In January 1966, Samuel Younge Jr., a Tuskegee Institute student and a colleague in SNCC, went to a civil rights demonstration in his hometown Tuskegee. He needed to use the bathroom more than most, because during his Navy service, including the Cuban blockade, he had lost a kidney. When he tried to use the segregated bathroom at a Tuskegee service station, the owner shot him in the back. The irony of Sammy losing his life after losing his kidney in service to his country prompted SNCC to issue an antiwar statement. We became the first organization to link the prosecution of the Vietnam War with the persecution of blacks at home. We issued a statement which accused the United States of deception in its claims of concern for the freedom of colored people in such countries as the Dominican Republic, the Congo, South Africa, Rhodesia and in the United States itself. We said, "The United States is no respecter of persons or laws when such persons or laws run counter to its needs and desires." This, too, was not without risk.

I was SNCC’s communication director and had just been elected to my first term in the Georgia House of Representatives. When I appeared to take the oath of office, hostility from white legislators was nearly absolute. They prevented me from taking the oath and declared my seat vacant. I ran for the vacancy, and I won again. And the Legislature declared my seat vacant again. My constituents elected me a third time, and the Legislature declared my seat vacant a third time. It would take a unanimous decision by the Supreme Court before I was allowed to take my seat. As King counseled, every man of humane convictions must decide on the protest that best suits his convictions, but we all must protest. And protest we did. And in so doing, we helped to end the war, and we changed history.

Now we have both a Vietnam Memorial and a Martin Luther King Memorial. But we don’t tell the truth about either. As Tom Hayden has written, "the worst aspects of the Vietnam policy are being recycled instead of reconsidered." I urge you to read his Forgotten Power of [the] Vietnam Protest. We refused to allow the Vietnamese to vote for reunification in 1956, for fear they would vote for Ho Chi Minh. Many people still sadly believe the pervasive postwar myth that veterans returning home from Vietnam were commonly spat upon by protesters. As Christian Appy says, "it became an article of faith that the most shameful aspect of the Vietnam War was the nation’s failure to embrace and honor its returning soldiers." Honoring returning soldiers doesn’t make the war honorable, be it Vietnam or Afghanistan or Iraq. And the best way to honor our soldiers is to bring them safely home. As James Fallows writes, "regarding [military] members as heroes makes up for committing them to unending, unwinnable missions." The Pentagon has chosen to commemorate the Vietnam War as a multiyear, multidollar thank you, because, as Afghan vet Rory Fanning said, "Thank yous to heroes discourage dissent."

We practiced dissent then. We must practice dissent now. We must, as Dr. King taught us, "move beyond the prophesying of smooth patriotism to the high grounds of a firm dissent based upon the mandates of conscience and the reading of history." As King said then, and as even more true now, "A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death."

I want to close as King closes the Vietnam speech, with an excerpt from James Russell Lowell’s "The Present Crisis." He wrote:

“Once to every man and nation comes the moment to decide,
In the strife of Truth with Falsehood, for the good or evil side;
Some great cause, God’s new Messiah, offering each the bloom or blight,
And the choice goes by forever ’twixt that darkness and the light.

"Though the cause of Evil prosper, yet ’tis Truth alone is strong,
Though her portion be the scaffold, and upon the throne be Wrong,
Yet the scaffold sways the future, and, behind the dim unknown,
Standeth God within the shadow, keeping watch above his own!"

I wish us the right choice. Thank you.

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#BlackLivesMatter Activists Confront Hillary Clinton Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=18308"><span class="small">Charles Blow, The New York Times</span></a>   
Friday, 21 August 2015 13:50

Blow writes: "The activists called on Clinton to answer for her and her husband's part in the rise of mass incarceration in this country, a phenomenon that disproportionately affects black and brown people."

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton meeting with Black Lives Matter activists during a closed-door meeting in New Hampshire. (photo: BlackLivesMattersBOS/Twitter)
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton meeting with Black Lives Matter activists during a closed-door meeting in New Hampshire. (photo: BlackLivesMattersBOS/Twitter)


#BlackLivesMatter Activists Confront Hillary Clinton

By Charles Blow, The New York Times

21 August 15

 

newly released video from Good magazine, showing Hillary Clinton in a meeting being confronted by young activists from the Black Lives Matter movement, thrilled me to no end. It also depressed me just as much.

The activists called on Clinton to answer for her and her husband’s part in the rise of mass incarceration in this country, a phenomenon that disproportionately affects black and brown people.

Julius Jones, a Black Lives Matter activist from Boston, said to Clinton:


READ MORE

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FOCUS | Symone Sanders: "We Must Commit Ourselves to a Multiracial Political Revolution" Print
Friday, 21 August 2015 11:46

Galindez writes: "We must pursue policies that transform this country into a nation that affirms the value of its people of color. That starts with addressing the four central types of violence waged against black and brown Americans: physical, political, legal and economic."

Symone D. Sanders was named national press secretary for Bernie Sanders earlier this month. (photo: CNN)
Symone D. Sanders was named national press secretary for Bernie Sanders earlier this month. (photo: CNN)


Symone Sanders: "We Must Commit Ourselves to a Multiracial Political Revolution"

By Scott Galindez, Reader Supported News

21 August 15

 

e must pursue policies that transform this country into a nation that affirms the value of its people of color. That starts with addressing the four central types of violence waged against black and brown Americans: physical, political, legal and economic.

That is the opening paragraph of Bernie Sanders’ new Racial Justice platform. What follows is a very ambitious plan to end the violence of racism in all of its forms.

Senator Sanders has had two of his speeches interrupted by Black Lives Matter protesters. The first was at Netroots Nation, a progressive conference in Phoenix, Arizona, a few days after the death of Sandra Bland. The second was at an event in Seattle celebrating the anniversary of Social Security and Medicare. That protest fell one year after the death of Michael Brown in Ferguson. In the days that followed you would have thought that Black Lives Matter was singling out Bernie Sanders, which was not the case.

Daunasia Yancey, who met with Hillary Clinton, told Democracy Now! “Well, every presidential candidate should expect to hear from us and expect to be held accountable. It’s actually a practice called ‘power mapping,’ where it’s similar to lobbying, where you actually map who’s closest to you on the issue and go to those folks first in order to force them to articulate their stance and then hold them accountable to it. So this movement is very strategic, and that’s what we’ve been doing.”

Many Sanders supporters were angry that the long time civil rights activist was targeted by the protests, but Bernie’s new national presssecretary, Symone Sanders, told RSN that “This campaign is about everyone. In Portland, I encouraged supporters to respond with the chant of ‘we stand together’ as opposed to attacking the protesters. As I stated before, the issues the activists and protesters are raising are important issues. We should not overlook that.” 

Symone Sanders is a supporter of the Black Lives Matter movement and a young black criminal-justice advocate. She is the national youth chair of the Coalition for Juvenile Justice. Sanders met Bernie Sanders three weeks before the Seattle protest and was brought in to give advice to the senator on how to more effectively reach out to the Black Lives Matter movement. After Symone gave Bernie advice he offered her a job, and she has become an important face of his campaign. When 15,000 people gathered in Seattle a few hours after the Black Lives Matter protest, Symone introduced Bernie, making a spirited case that Bernie would be the candidate that would “turn words into action.”

When I asked Symone Sanders why she has committed to the Bernie Sanders campaign, she told me: “There is no candidate for presidentwho will be stronger in fighting against institutional racism and reforming our broken criminal justice system than Senator Sanders. The senator believes we need real change, such as doing away with the militarization of our police departments, investing in education and jobs for our young people as opposed to jails and incarceration, and ending unjust mandatory minimums as well as the death penalty.”

Symone Sanders went on to say, “The senator believes the issues Black Lives Matter activists are raising are important issues. Like the Black Lives Matter activists, the senator believes we need real changes, and no candidate for president will be stronger in the fight for those changes than he will.” Symone also believes the platform has been well received: “Activists have stated the violence framing in our platform is powerful.”

Some may disagree with the tactics used to push Bernie Sanders but the result has been effective. The senator will be meeting soon with a leader of the Black Lives Matter movement after an exchange on twitter.

Despite the media frenzy that followed the protests, it is clear that both Black Lives Matter and Bernie Sanders have emerged stronger. I asked Symone Sanders if she had anything to add, and she delivered the perfect close to thisstory:

“We must commit ourselves to a multiracial, political revolution that fights for social justice, racial justice, and economic justice. Whether we are talking about advocating for workers’ right to form unions, jobs for our kids, fighting institutional racism, quality and affordable education for people who work hard, humane community-based policing, comprehensive immigration reform, or ending Citizens United and getting big money out of politics ... Senator Sanders is the candidate who, with our support, will bring the transformative change – the political revolution – that this country needs.”



Scott Galindez attended Syracuse University, where he first became politically active. The writings of El Salvador's slain archbishop Oscar Romero and the on-campus South Africa divestment movement converted him from a Reagan supporter to an activist for Peace and Justice. Over the years he has been influenced by the likes of Philip Berrigan, William Thomas, Mitch Snyder, Don White, Lisa Fithian, and Paul Wellstone. Scott met Marc Ash while organizing counterinaugural events after George W. Bush's first stolen election. Scott will be spending a year covering the presidential election from Iowa.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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The Puritanical Glee Over the Ashley Madison Hack Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=29455"><span class="small">Glenn Greenwald, The Intercept</span></a>   
Friday, 21 August 2015 08:56

Greenwald writes: "Anonymous hackers yesterday published a massive trove of data containing private information about roughly 33 million people from around the world. The data was hacked from the website Ashley Madison, which promotes itself as a pro-infidelity venue where married people can find sexual partners and 'have an affair.'"

Glenn Greenwald. (photo: Guardian UK)
Glenn Greenwald. (photo: Guardian UK)


The Puritanical Glee Over the Ashley Madison Hack

By Glenn Greenwald, The Intercept

21 August 15

 

igh school students have long read The Scarlet Letter, the 1850 novel by Nathaniel Hawthorne set in a Puritanical Massachusetts town in the mid-17th Century. It chronicles the life of a woman who is found to have committed adultery (on her long-presumed-lost-at-sea husband); as punishment, she is forced to stand before her village with the letter “A” attached to her dress. The intent is to forever publicly shame her for her moral transgression. As The Atlantic noted in 1886, “the punishment of the scarlet letter is a historical fact.”

The moral premise of that ritual, its animating righteousness, is by no means an obsolete relic of the Puritanical era. It is as vibrant as ever. Busybodies sitting in judgment of and righteously condemning the private, sexual acts of other adults remains one of the most self-satisfying and entertaining – and thus most popular – public spectacles. It simultaneously uplifts the moral judges (I am superior to that which I condemn), distracts them from their own behaviors (I am focused on those other people’s sins, and thus not my own), and titillates (to condemn this, I simply must immerse myself in the tawdry details of their sexual acts). To see just how current is the mentality driving the Scarlet Letter, observe the reaction to the Ashley Madison hack.

Anonymous hackers yesterday published a massive trove of data containing private information about roughly 33 million people from around the world. The data was hacked from the website Ashley Madison, which promotes itself as a pro-infidelity venue where married people can find sexual partners and “have an affair.” The data published by the hackers includes the names, physical and email addresses, and credit card purchases provided by the users, along with whatever information they posted about their sexual desires and proclivities.

The primary justification offered by the hackers was that the site is a scam. The hackers complain that most of the female profiles were fake (a claim that has some evidence), and that the site demanded a payment of $19.99 in exchange for the unfulfilled promise to permanently delete users’ profiles and personal data. When the hackers last month announced their hack, they portrayed themselves as fraud-fighting vigilantes: they threatened to release all of the users’ data unless the site owners removed the site completely.

But there was also a significant component of sexual moralism to the hacker’s self-described mission. In their original manifesto, they echoed the moral paternalism offered by Gawker’s Max Read to justify his site’s outing of an obscure married financial officer of a magazine company. The hackers proclaimed: “Too bad for those men, they’re cheating dirtbags and deserve no such discretion.” In yesterday’s statement announcing their data dump, the hackers directly lectured the users they were exposing with this sermon: “Learn your lesson and make amends. Embarrassing now, but you’ll get over it.”

That the cheating scoundrels of Ashley Madison got what they deserved was a widespread sentiment yesterday. Despite how common both infidelity and online pornography are, tweets expressing moralistic glee were legion. Websites were created to enable easy searches of the hacked data by email address. An Australian radio station offered to tell listeners on air if their spouse’s names appeared in the data base, and informed one horrified woman caller that her husband did.

The Washington Post actually promoted those newly created searching sites under the encouraging headline “How to Search The Ashley Madison Leak,” helpfully linking to a site that “will tell you if an e-mail address or phone number appears in the leaked files.” When the leak was first announced last month, The Post published a similar article headlined “Was your spouse on Ashley Madison? A new breed of private eye is ready to help.”

The names of various prominent figures appearing in the database have already been published, some of whom insist they never used the site.

It’s hard to overstate the devastation to some people’s lives from having their names published as part of this hack: not only to their relationships with their spouses and children but to their careers, reputations, and — depending on where they live — possibly their liberty or even life. What appears on the Internet is permanent and inescapable. All of the people whose names appear in this database will now be permanently branded with a digital “A.” Whether they actually did what they are accused of will be irrelevant: Digital lynch mobs offer no due process or appeals. And it seems certain that many of the people whose lives are harmed, or ruined, by this hack will have been guilty of nothing.

For numerous, obvious reasons, the fact that someone’s name appears in the Ashley Madison database does not mean they have engaged in marital infidelity. To begin with, it is easy to enter someone else’s name and email address, as happened to The Intercept’s Farai Chideya. Beyond that, there are all sorts of reasons someone may use this website without having cheated on their spouse. Some may use the site as pornography because it titillates them, or because they are tempted to cheat but are resisting the urge, or because they’re married but in a relationship where monogamy is not demanded, or because they’re researchers or journalists observing this precinct of online interaction, or countless other reasons. This permanent, highly public shaming of these “adulterers” is not only puritanical but reckless in the extreme, since many who end up branded with the scarlet “A” may have done absolutely nothing wrong.

This underscores how invasions of digital privacy can be as misleading as they are invasive. It is similar to the NSA’s analysis of metadata — with whom one communicates, where one goes — to determine who is a terrorist and who should be targeted with drones. Algorithmic assumptions of those sorts can lead to looking at someone who visits Taliban hotspots and communicates with Al Qaeda members and declaring them based on that data to be a leading terrorist — when, in fact, the “terrorist” is nothing more than the Pakistan bureau chief of Al Jazeera engaged in that behavior in order to do his job.

But let’s confine ourselves to a discussion of those who actually used the Ashley Madison site to “cheat” on their spouse in the worst possible sense of that word: namely, used it to find and have sex with someone outside of their marriage despite a vow of monogamy. Even in that scenario, adultery, as Adam Johnson put it, “is a moral misdemeanor,” something the law does not even punish. To destroy someone’s reputation and life over it is so wildly out of proportion to the actual transgression.

In some cases, even that form of adultery may not be unambiguously wrong, or wrong at all. When the hackers first threatened last month to disclose their hack, Dan Savage asked a great question: How could someone be so furious at Gawker for outing one adulterer, but take pleasure in this Ashley Madison hack, which invades the privacy of millions? To make his case, Savage referenced the point I made about Max Read’s justification for the Gawker outing and wrote this:

Long-term marriage, like Glenn Greenwald says, is a complicated dynamic, and people invent all sorts of ways to manage that complicated, long-term dynamic—and, yes, cheating is one of the ways people manage that dynamic. It’s not ideal, it would be great if everyone who felt compelled to cheat could either negotiate an open relationship or end the one they’re in now, but sometimes cheating is the least worst option. Slogging through the Savage Love mail for the last 25 years has convinced me of this: There are a lot of people out there who have good cause to cheat. Men and women trapped in sexless marriages, men and women trapped in loveless marriages, men and women who have essentially been abandoned sexually and/or emotionally by spouses they aren’t in a position to leave—either because their spouses are economically dependent on them (or vice versa) or because they may have children who are dependent on both partners.

Take a woman who has two children with special needs, who has been out of the workforce for 15 years, and who is financially dependent on a husband who decided five years into their marriage that he was “done with sex” but refuses to allow her to have sex with anyone else. The marriage is good otherwise, she and her husband have an affectionate, low-conflict relationship, their kids are happy and well cared for, but sexual deprivation is driving her out of her mind and threatening both her marriage and her children’s health and security. What would you advise this woman—whose letter, coincidentally enough, came in today’s pile of e-mail—to do? I would advise her to do what she needs to do to stay married and stay sane. (And until this morning I might have advised her to join Ashley Madison.)

Or say you’re a gay man or lesbian forced through societal or religious pressure into a heterosexual marriage, and “cheating” is your only form of sexual fulfillment: Is that clearly morally wrong? If you’re a minister in Puritanical Boston, or Queen Victoria, bitter condemnation of adulterers in all cases may come easy. But if you’re a rational person living in the 21st century, aware of all the complexities of adult sexuality and marital arrangements, the picture is far murkier.

But whatever else is true, adultery is a private matter between the adulterer and his or her spouse. Except in the most unusual cases — such as a politician hypocritically launching morality crusades against others — it’s most definitely not any of your business. None of us should want (ironically) anonymous hackers serving as vigilante morality police by exposing the private sexual acts of other adults. Nor should any of us cheer when the private lives of ordinary people are indiscriminately invaded, no matter how much voyeuristic arousal or feelings of moral superiority it provides. We love to think of ourselves as so progressive and advanced, yet so often leap at the opportunity to intervene and wallow around in, and sternly pass judgment on, the private sexual choices of other adults.

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Beheading the Guardian of Palmyra Print
Friday, 21 August 2015 08:43

Fisk writes: "Isis has killed 'the guardian of Palmyra.' Tortured for a month and then beheaded for refusing to betray the secret location of the Roman's city's priceless artifacts, Khaled al-Asaad's gruesome death has appalled his fellow archeologists."

Khaled Asaad, 82, is beheaded by ISIS militants outside the museum where he worked for more than 50 years looking after the Palmyra's ancient artifacts. (photo: Reuters)
Khaled Asaad, 82, is beheaded by ISIS militants outside the museum where he worked for more than 50 years looking after the Palmyra's ancient artifacts. (photo: Reuters)


Beheading the Guardian of Palmyra

By Robert Fisk, CounterPunch

21 August 15

 

sis has killed “the guardian of Palmyra”. Tortured for a month and then beheaded for refusing to betray the secret location of the Roman’s city’s priceless artefacts, Khaled al-Asaad’s gruesome death has appalled his fellow archeologists.

“[He was] a joyful guy. You had to see him if you went to Palmyra. He was a guardian of the past,” a Lebanese archeologist, Joanne Farchakh, recalled. “You felt his passion when he talked.”

The 82-year old was long retired, remaining at home when Isis descended on Palmyra three months ago. What would the “Islamic Caliphate” want with an old man steeped in antiquity? Certainly no tour of the Roman forum and amphitheatre, the remains through which he walked with countless foreign archeological teams over half a century, ensuring – as Ms Farchakh said – “that they made no mistakes, didn’t get the facts of history wrong”.

In truth, Mr al-Asaad knew that most of Palmyra’s movable artefacts had long ago been taken to the comparative safety of Damascus (no one could transport the entire Roman city away), but Isis believed he knew where other treasures might have been buried.

After a month, the fighters realised that Mr al-Asaad knew nothing – or would say nothing – and so they decapitated the old man and strung his torso to a Roman pillar in the ancient city.

He had, in his long career as a civil servant, visited overseas archeological conferences, and this alone would have merited a death sentence in the eyes of his puritan torturers. If you work for the Syrian government, in however lowly a role, you are a “regime man”.

For months, Isis has operated an antiquities smuggling ring, selling objects from Syria’s Roman past to international dealers, usually through Turkey.

“Khaled al-Asaad was always there, and then he became a hostage,” said Ms Farchakh. “The truth is that Palmyra is a hostage itself – to two wars and to two political systems.”

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