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Obama: The Internet Is a Utility Print
Tuesday, 11 November 2014 13:53

Bennett writes: "A new 'net neutrality' plan released by the White House on Monday morning includes an endorsement of an old idea that some activists have been pushing for years: the treatment of the Internet as a public utility."

President Obama surfing the web. (photo: Pete Souza/White House)
President Obama surfing the web. (photo: Pete Souza/White House)


ALSO SEE: FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler Refuses to Attend Any Public Meetings on Net Neutrality

Obama: The Internet Is a Utility

By Dashiell Bennett, The Atlantic

11 November 14

 

new "net neutrality" plan released by the White House on Monday morning includes an endorsement of an old idea that some activists have been pushing for years: the treatment of the Internet as a public utility.

In a letter and a video posted on the White House website, President Obama said he believes "the FCC should reclassify consumer broadband service under Title II of the Telecommunications Act," allowing Internet Service Providers to be more heavily regulated. According to Obama, the change would acknowledge that "the Internet has become an essential part of everyday communication and everyday life."

Obama's proposal explicitly rejects proposed rules that FCC considered earlier this year to allow paid prioritization, a plan by which content providers can make deals with ISP to get faster service to their websites. (Those rules are still under consideration and have not been finalized.) The White House proposal calls for no paid prioritization, no blocking of any content that is not illegal, and no throttling of Internet services, where some customers have their Internet speeds artificially slowed down.

The proposal also asks that any new rules include mobile broadband, which is already the primary access point for many users.

As the president himself reminds us, the FCC does not answer to him, and does not have to listen to (or even consider) his suggestions. So there's no guarantees that any of these rules will even come to pass. However, an endorsement by the White House would be the strongest push, yet toward an FCC that treats all internet traffic as equal.

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How the GOP Bought, Rigged, Stole and Lynched the 2014 Election Print
Tuesday, 11 November 2014 13:50

Excerpt: "Since the Bush-Cheney-Rove theft of the 2000 election in Florida, the right of millions of American citizens to vote and have that vote counted has been under constant assault. In 2014, that systematic disenfranchisement may well have delivered the US Senate to the Republican Party."

(illustration: The Free Press)
(illustration: The Free Press)


ALSO SEE: Catherine Rampell: Voter Suppression Laws Are Already Deciding Elections

How the GOP Bought, Rigged, Stole and Lynched the 2014 Election

By Bob Fitrakis and Harvey Wasserman, Freepress.org

11 November 14

 

irst in a series

Since the Bush-Cheney-Rove theft of the 2000 election in Florida, the right of millions of American citizens to vote and have that vote counted has been under constant assault.

In 2014, that systematic disenfranchisement may well have delivered the US Senate to the Republican Party. If nothing significant is done about it by 2016, we can expect the GOP to take the White House and much more.

The primary victims of this GOP-led purge have been young, elderly, poor and citizens of color who tend to vote Democratic. The denial of their votes has changed the face of our government, and is deepening corporate control of our lives and planet.

There’s no doubt the Democrats have alienated their core constituency and given millions of their former supporters little reason to vote. Perpetual war, blank checks for mega-banks, stiffing the working poor while giving away the planet to the rich----these are all part of the malaise. Our political landscape is currently defined by corporate personhood and its gutting of the Democratic Party.

Part of that is the destruction of our electoral rights, and the refusal of the Democrats to even face the issue, let alone do something about it. Our voting system is, to put it mildly, bought and rigged, further feeding the deadening sense of public futility and frustration.

As the GOP moves toward total control of our governance---the media, the internet, the Supreme Court, the Congress, local government and, in 2016, the presidency---our future depends on knowing the nuts and bolts of how the destruction of our democracy proceeds, and what we can do to stop it.

In this year’s takeover of the US Senate and many statehouses, barely more than a third of the eligible citizenry was credited with having voted. Official vote counts gave the GOP a consistent “bonus” of about 5% over pre-election polls. In the US Senate race in North Carolina and the Governor’s race in Florida, that margin clearly gave the Republicans their victories, and probably did the same in many other close races.

The GOP’s Jim Crow disenfranchisement campaign has outright robbed millions of citizens of their right to vote. It’s deliberately created an air of confusion and doubt that’s further suppressed the turnout.

Greg Palast, for example, has reported extensively on the Kansas-based “cross-check” technique, used in 28 states, where Republican secretaries of state denied voting rights based on arbitrary judgements that allowed them to eliminate several million potential Democratic voters. (Greg will discuss this on the Solartopia Show at prn.fm Tuesday, 11/11, 5pm EST; the show will be archived for later listening).

Deliberate (and often illegal) disinformation campaigns, destruction of voter registration forms, outright intimidation, repressive photo ID requirements and other suppression techniques made things worse. It’s by design, not accident, that America’s voter turnout is ranked 120th among all nations.

In evaluating the actual vote count, manipulation of untrackable electronic voting machines must also be accounted for.

Over the years, Bev Harris, Brad Friedman, Jon Simon, Richard Charney and many others have added vital research leading to the inevitable conclusion that the 2014 election---like 2000 and 2004---was essentially bought, rigged, stolen and lynched.

We do not believe the Republican Party legitimately won the US Senate or many of the statehouses they’ve been granted, any more than George W. Bush should have been handed the White House in 2000 and 2004.

Unless we finally face the core issues of election protection, history could repeat itself in 2016 as both tragedy and farce.

Because the dust is still settling, many of the specifics about 2014 remain hidden. In the coming weeks we’ll present as much of the evidence as we can gather.

In the meantime, we welcome President Obama’s new statements supporting net neutrality. There’s no more important foundation for what shreds of democracy remain to us than the ability to freely communicate. Handing control of the internet to mega-corporations, as proposed by the current (Democratic) head of the Federal Communications Commission, would be catastrophic. As with reclaiming our elections, our future on this planet demands an open global highway for unfettered communication. We must do everything we can to preserve and expand it.

We also congratulate US Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) for proposing that election day become a national holiday. After the 2004 debacle, we proposed a four-day election holiday to cover the first Saturday, Sunday, Monday & Tuesday in November. (The Constitution requires that voting happen the first Monday after the first Tuesday in November). This four-day stretch would help enshrine access to our election process as the sacred ritual it should be.

We also propose universal automatic voter registration, universal hand-counted paper ballots, abolition of the Electoral College, and a massive reform of the role of money in politics.

We hope Sen. Sanders’ initial proposal opens the door to a bottom-up remake of our electoral system. Without it, our democracy is nothing more than a hollow shell.

Over the coming weeks, we’ll explore how that shell was cracked yet again in 2014.

All indicators are that it could be definitively crushed in two years if we don’t act now.

to be continued....

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FOCUS | As Gorbachev Warns of New "Cold War," Hot War Rages in Ukraine Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=20877"><span class="small">William Boardman, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Tuesday, 11 November 2014 11:05

Boardman writes: "From fragmentary reports, it appears that at least sporadic fighting continues in eastern Ukraine, with the Kiev government's forces shelling Donetsk with little regard for civilians there, the rebels fighting back, and everyone still calling it a 'ceasefire.'"

Former Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev. (photo: Jose Luis Gonzalez/Reuters)
Former Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev. (photo: Jose Luis Gonzalez/Reuters)


As Gorbachev Warns of New "Cold War," Hot War Rages in Ukraine

By William Boardman, Reader Supported News

11 November 14

 

Ukraine drifts toward new accommodation, or new Cold War, or (worst case) nuclear war, or …

rom fragmentary reports, it appears that at least sporadic fighting continues in eastern Ukraine, with the Kiev government’s forces shelling Donetsk with little regard for civilians there, the rebels fighting back, and everyone still calling it a “ceasefire.”

Whatever is actually happening in Ukraine nowadays, reporting on the struggle remains remarkably unreliable and seemingly biased from all directions. Reports like one from Bloomberg typically treat mysterious military convoys spotted in the region as greater threats to peace than the Ukraine government’s actual killing of 200 people by bombarding Donetsk. This conventional but ridiculous narrative can get grotesque in the hands of Yahoo! News, where “fears grow of all-out war in Ukraine as MH17 families mourn,” as if families scattered around the world were worried about the dead and dying in the Donbass.

From the Russian side, RT (formerly Russia Today) reported that “US, NATO say no evidence of new ‘Russian invasion’ of Ukraine,” basing that report partially on the word of a Pentagon spokesman. The “invasion” report had come initially from a Ukrainian government spokesman in Kiev. At the Pentagon, Rear Adm. John Kirby had said, “I don’t have any independent operational reporting that would be able to confirm that report that these formations have crossed the border.”

That’s really a non-denial denial that leaves the listener no better informed. But the White House seemed to have missed the memo, treating the unconfirmed Russian “invasion” as if it were real and expressing de-stabilizing “grave concern” over the unconfirmed reports from a Kiev government always ready to cry “Wolf!”

When the news is opaque and it’s all but impossible to find honest reporting, the safest course is to trust no one.

Even the actual stakes in Ukraine are uncertain, and unspecified

What does Russia want? Does Russia want more than Crimea and a chunk of eastern Ukraine, either independent or annexed? Does Russia want ALL of Ukraine? That seems unlikely as well as irrational, but Russia might well want as much of eastern Ukraine as it can get at low cost. Nobody really knows what Russia wants, maybe not even the Russian leaders themselves as they keep their options open.

What does the West want? Yes, that’s a silly question for many reasons, not least of which is that “the West” is much less a single entity than Russia. However the West is defined, what the West wants seems to be a great deal more than what the West is willing to fight for, which is pretty much a good thing for the rest of the world. Does the West want Russia to abandon Crimea and eastern Ukraine? Probably, but not to the point of making it a “non-negotiable” demand, much less being willing to invade and occupy Crimea. The more important question, as with Russia, is what will the West settle for? That brings us to Ukraine.

What does Ukraine want? And what does “Ukraine” even mean today? There is an elected government that grew out of a coup d’état, giving it roughly the same theoretical legitimacy as the governments of the People’s Republics of Donetsk and Luhansk, which is pretty much nil, except for the facts on the ground. If “Ukraine” is defined as the government under President Petro Poroshenko, then Ukraine is acting as if it wants to reassert its sovereignty over eastern Ukraine. Does Ukraine also want Crimea? Does Ukraine want a potentially long civil war, with the constant threat of heavy Russian intervention?

Asymmetrical diplomacy may be no easier than asymmetrical warfare

The asymmetry of the parties makes the outline of a solution easily discernible, and also makes it likely more difficult to achieve. Geographically, ethnically, historically, and rationally, the present status quo, roughly, is reasonable, and the relevant local populations have generally voted in support of it. What’s needed is a modus vivendi among neighbors, which requires a real ceasefire and serious negotiation. These were goals of the September 5 agreements between the two sides in Ukraine, supported by Russia, with little more than lip service from others.

The West promptly reacted to undermine any cessation of fighting. The European Union went ahead with new sanctions against Russia. NATO continued its Operation Reassurance, which is what NATO calls its military build-up in its eastern European member states. And President Obama framed the ceasefire in deliberately unacceptable terms, at best not helpful, at worst designed to be a self-fulfilling prophecy of failure:

With respect to the ceasefire agreement, obviously we are hopeful but based on past experience also skeptical that in fact the separatists will follow through and the Russians will stop violating Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity. So it has to be tested.

Rather than support the possibility of reducing the bloodshed in eastern Ukraine, the President chose to make that less likely by using code words that tie the outcome to Crimea. Seeking to restore Crimea to Ukraine, following its restoration to Russia, is a policy aimed at creating a crisis from which neither side can easily back down without a fight. It is the kind of “stupid thing” President Obama had set out to avoid: setting out to “free” a Crimea that already feels it is freer than it was as part of Ukraine.

Ukraine hasn’t ever been a consistently rational, coherent place with meaningful borders, other than the Black Sea. Outside forces have overrun the land going in opposite directions for centuries. Now Ukraine is in the midst of a civil war that, if the opposing sides play it right, could stabilize the region for generations and, at the same time, save the rest world from a lot of suffering. A Ukrainian realignment approximating the status quo is the kind of realignment that the West (U.S., NATO, European Union, et al.) sponsored and supported and militarily enforced on the former Yugoslavia. Is there any decent reason why Donetsk or Luhansk should be treated differently from Scotland?

Did the U.S. ever really decide the Cold War was over?

The American Cold War mentality did not end with the Cold War, but rather transformed itself into the view that American exceptionalism makes the United States the indispensable nation that has the sole duty to keep the world in order. Not all the other, presumably dispensable nations are all that happy with a policy that, in the case of Russia, overthrows the governments of neighboring states with no apparent good intent, as in Ukraine.

Cold War zeal to punish Russia has now surfaced as an alternative preferable to reaching accommodation with Iran on the question of Iranian nuclear weapons. Accommodation with Iran across the board is long overdue, but remains held hostage to irrational appeals to fear (not unlike long overdue accommodation with Cuba).

A reliably-right-of-center columnist in The New York Times floated just such a Cold War style tradeoff November 10, under the title: “The Iran-Ukraine Affair.” In remarkably weasly-worded prose, Roger Cohen suggests there’s some sort of unspoken quid pro quo between Russia and the United States, according to which the U.S. “turns a blind eye to the big Russian military build-up” in exchange for Russia’s help smoothing the way to an Iran nuclear deal. That might sound like a sensible choice to some people, but for Cohen, the imagined dangers in Ukraine outweigh the imagined dangers from Iran. “The reality is dangerous,” Cohen writes, agreeing simultaneously with George Soros and Mikhail Gorbachev. Then Cohen demagogically overstates the danger as “Russian dismemberment” of Ukraine and the end of NATO.

This shrillness attached to fearful projection, but detached from present reality, has long fed American military disasterism, from the imaginary dominoes of Viet-Nam to the imaginary global dominion of an Islamic State. This shrill fearfulness is the sound of American policy since 9/11. All this is far from the sober steadiness that seemed to bring the Cold War to an end more than 20 years ago, thanks primarily to Mikhail Gorbachev, the former Soviet president, who led and persisted in the “constructive and serious dialogue that is so necessary now,” as he put it near the beginning of his November 8 speech to a Berlin symposium commemorating the 25th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall.

Widely reported as the “World on Brink of New Cold War” speech

“All issues must be addressed and decided politically,” Gorbachev said, reflecting on the success of his policies of perestroika and glasnost [restructuring and openness] that transformed the Soviet Union and opened the way to ending the Cold War. “We have never met in such a tense and dangerous environment,” Gorbachev said in Berlin, later lamenting that the “breakdown in the dialogue of the major powers is of enormous concern.” Then came the most-reported line of his speech, usually omitting the reference to the United Nations:

The world is on the brink of a new Cold War. Some say that it has already begun. And yet, while the situation is dramatic, we do not see the main international body, the U.N. Security Council, playing any role or taking any concrete action.

Gorbachev linked international inaction to an international “collapse of trust” that has its roots in NATO’s July 1990 London Declaration, when, as Gorbachev understood it, NATO promised a significant degree of demilitarization that has not yet happened. The Declaration says, in part: “Our Alliance will do its share to overcome the legacy of decades of suspicion.” Whatever that may have been supposed to mean, it did not prevent NATO from expanding to the Russian border, setting off new decades of suspicion. In Gorbachev’s analysis, the opportunity presented by the end of the Cold War was squandered:

The West, and particularly the United States, declared victory in the Cold War. Euphoria and triumphalism went to the heads of Western leaders. Taking advantage of Russia’s weakening and the lack of a counterweight, they claimed monopoly leadership and domination of the world. And they refused to heed the words of caution from many of those present here [in Berlin on November 8].

The events of the past few months are the consequences of short-sighted policy, of seeking to impose one’s will and fait accompli, while ignoring the interests of one’s partners. A short list will suffice: the enlargement of NATO, Yugoslavia, particularly Kosovo, missile defense plans, Iraq, Libya, Syria, and the list goes on. To put it metaphorically, a blister has now turned into a bloody, festering wound.

For all its accuracy, this analysis was not much reported, if at all, in the West. Media silence was maintained, even though Gorbachev’s description of recent events – as “the consequences of short-sighted policy, of seeking to impose one’s will and fait accompli, while ignoring the interests of one’s partners” – seems to apply as much to Russia as to NATO and the U.S. But one wonders why European media would hew so closely to the American propaganda line, given Gorbachev’s further observations:

Now who is suffering the most from what’s happening?

I think the answer is more than clear: It is Europe, our common home. Instead of becoming a leader of change in a global world, Europe has turned into an arena of political upheaval, of competition for spheres of influence and finally of military conflict. The consequence inevitably is Europe weakening at a time when other centers of power and influence are gaining momentum. If this continues, Europe will lose a strong voice in world affairs and gradually become irrelevant.

Turning specifically to Ukraine, Gorbachev outlined a basis for hope that people on all sides could act constructively and in good faith:

The key to it is political will and the correct setting of priorities. The first signs of a renewed dialogue have now emerged. The first and albeit modest and fragile results have been achieved – I’m referring to the Minsk agreements on ceasefire and military disengagement in Ukraine, the tri-lateral gas agreements between Russia, Ukraine, and the European Union, and the suspension of the escalation of mutual sanctions.

There are those in the U.S., Ukraine, and Russia who, for their own reasons, do not want the Ukrainian ceasefire to last. The question is whether these forces for chaos and destruction will overwhelm those looking for an end to fighting and the beginning of rebuilding. “I am not by nature pessimistic,” said the man who changed the Soviet Union, adding that it was “very difficult to be optimistic in the present situation … [to avoid] a vortex without a way out …”



William M. Boardman has over 40 years experience in theatre, radio, TV, print journalism, and non-fiction, including 20 years in the Vermont judiciary. He has received honors from Writers Guild of America, Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Vermont Life magazine, and an Emmy Award nomination from the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.

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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FOCUS | How to Scrap the Two-Party System in Three Steps Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=7118"><span class="small">Carl Gibson, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Tuesday, 11 November 2014 09:15

Gibson writes: "Lots of people feel understandably hamstrung after the midterm elections. It's obvious the Republicans don't represent anyone but the billionaires who bought their seats for them, and everyone is sick and tired of Democrats taking bribes from those same billionaires, and curling up in the fetal position to get kicked around without putting up a fight."

Carl Gibson appearing on MSNBC to discuss the Affordable Care Act. (photo: MSNBC)
Carl Gibson appearing on MSNBC to discuss the Affordable Care Act. (photo: MSNBC)


ALSO SEE: Ranked Choice Voting Could Break the Hold of the Two-Party System

How to Scrap the Two-Party System in Three Steps

By Carl Gibson, Reader Supported News

11 November 14

 

ots of people feel understandably hamstrung after the midterm elections. It’s obvious the Republicans don’t represent anyone but the billionaires who bought their seats for them, and everyone is sick and tired of Democrats taking bribes from those same billionaires, and curling up in the fetal position to get kicked around without putting up a fight. As a matter of fact, 42 percent of Americans identify not as Democrats or Republicans, but as Independents. Even though the media doesn’t make it seem that obvious, we really are the majority.

But on the flipside, everyone is afraid to vote for Independent candidates who actually propose real solutions and refuse to be compromised by big money. So how do we get around that? It’ll take three steps. They aren’t easy, but if we can accomplish these steps by 2020, our country may start to finally look like a real democracy.

1. Pass Ballot Initiatives Demanding Instant Runoff Voting

Instant runoff voting is great, because it allows you to rank all candidates in order of preference, rather than having to choose just one. If there are five candidates from five different parties, each of them get ranked one through five. At the end of the day, the candidate with the most "1" rankings is the winner. It may seem confusing at first, but think of it like scoring a golf game. This puts Socialists, Greens, and Libertarians on the same playing field as Democrats and Republicans. And the two parties will no longer have a monopoly on our political process and will actually have to work hard for our vote.

While it may seem like an impossible task to pass at the federal level in a two-party-owned Congress, the people can put pressure on Congress by passing ballot initiatives to do it in their own states. Currently, 24 states allow for statewide ballot initiatives and popular referendums. And the initiative process yielded surprisingly progressive results in the last election, even in the reddest of states. And having more candidates to choose from on the ballot is something that everyone can get behind.

2. Pass a Constitutional Amendment to Say Corporations Aren’t People and Money Isn’t Speech

When 42 billionaires can fund a third of all political ads, there’s something clearly wrong with our democratic process. And when looking at voter turnout trends, there were more voters in 2008 than there were in 2012, despite 2012 being a multi-billion dollar election. In 2014, when $4 billion was spent, voter turnout hit a historic low, with only 36 percent of the electorate participating. One could argue that the more money there is in politics, the less motivated people feel about voting. To make our political process accessible to regular people again, we have to stop the torrent of money infecting our politics. Most would say we need to overturn the Citizens United vs. Federal Election Commission decision of 2010, and point to a failed attempt by the Senate to pass a constitutional amendment a few months ago that would’ve done that. However, Citizens United is actually a distraction. The core problem is over a century old.

Since the Santa Clara County vs. Southern Pacific Railroad case of 1886, when a court reporter inserted a few sentences about the court asserting that corporations have the same constitutional rights as people into the header of the case filing, corporations have been treated as legal persons by the court. While Santa Clara was just a tax case, it’s been used as the precedent for corporate constitutional rights ever since. In the Buckley vs. Valeo decision of 1975, donations to political campaigns were ruled to be the same as free speech. And the First National Bank of Boston vs. Bellotti Supreme Court case in 1978 allowed corporate money to be used as free speech not only for political campaigns, but for any issue campaign. The floodgates have been open ever since. Citizens United and the McCutcheon vs. FEC decision of 2014 just made a bad problem even worse.

However, Move to Amend’s We the People Amendment stating that only human beings have constitutional rights, and that money is property and not free speech, has already been passed in over 200 communities. An additional 400 communities have passed amendments with similar language. And no matter how red or blue that community is, every time the amendment has been brought up for a vote, it has passed. In this past election, 12 Wisconsin communities passed the We the People amendment. After communities pass the amendment, it puts pressure on state legislators to pass the amendment in the statehouse. And after enough statehouses pass the amendment, it puts pressure on Congress to act. Then we can finally rid our elections from the influence of billionaires and corporations.

3. Pass a Constitutional Amendment That Makes Voting an Inalienable Right and Election Day a Holiday

After removing the corporate cancer from our elections, we need to remove all current barriers that get in the way of voting and prevent any future barriers from being built. These barriers include cumbersome voter ID laws allegedly aimed at stopping the mythical problem of “voter fraud” – which actually only occurs 31 times out of every 1 billion votes cast – as well as restrictions on early voting and people being forced to work and go to class on the first Tuesday of November. A new constitutional amendment could fix that for good.

This new amendment needs to explicitly state that voting is the inalienable right of every citizen, that every vote cast will be counted, that citizens will only vote on paper ballots, and that no election will be called for any candidate until every last vote is counted. The second part of the amendment will state that Election Day is a federally-recognized holiday, that all schools will be closed, and that no business can force their employees to work on that holiday.

By default, all the laws passed requiring citizens to get a photo ID with their current address, which often costs more than the unconstitutional poll taxes of the pre-Civil Rights era, will be rendered unconstitutional. All the restrictions on early voting passed in states like Ohio and Florida will be undone, and everything will be closed on Election Day except for polling places. All electronic voting machines, like the voting machines that somehow tallied -16,022 (negative) votes for Al Gore in Volusia County, Florida, in the 2000 election, will be removed and all votes will have a paper trail.

Can you imagine an election cycle without a constant barrage of negative attack ads funded by anonymous billionaires? Can you imagine all voters having ample time to vote, with no cumbersome and bureaucratic obstacles to jump through just to be able to cast a ballot? Can you imagine an election decided by paper ballots, in which work or school is no longer a barrier between you and your polling place? Can you imagine having multiple parties on the ballot, and being able to vote for someone who isn’t a Democrat or a Republican knowing they have an equal chance to win?

That’s what democracy looks like.



Carl Gibson, 26, is co-founder of US Uncut, a nationwide creative direct-action movement that mobilized tens of thousands of activists against corporate tax avoidance and budget cuts in the months leading up to the Occupy Wall Street movement. Carl and other US Uncut activists are featured in the documentary "We're Not Broke," which premiered at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival. He currently lives in Madison, Wisconsin. You can contact him at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , and follow him on twitter at @uncutCG.

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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In Defense of My Friend Bill Maher's Statements on Islam Print
Tuesday, 11 November 2014 07:30

Moore writes: "Bill Maher is a friend of mine. He stood up for me when I was attacked after my Oscar speech (given on the fourth night of the Iraq War, a war Bill publicly opposed while 70% of the country, including the majority of Democrats in the U.S. Senate, supported it), and I stood up for him when ABC fired him and cancelled his show when he attempted to stop the hysteria and fear-mongering after 9-11."

Filmmaker and activist Michael Moore. (photo: Dog Eat Dog Films)
Filmmaker and activist Michael Moore. (photo: Dog Eat Dog Films)


In Defense of My Friend Bill Maher's Statements on Islam

By Michael Moore, Reader Supported News

11 November 14

 

ill Maher is a friend of mine. He stood up for me when I was attacked after my Oscar speech (given on the fourth night of the Iraq War, a war Bill publicly opposed while 70% of the country, including the majority of Democrats in the U.S. Senate, supported it), and I stood up for him when ABC fired him and cancelled his show when he attempted to stop the hysteria and fear-mongering after 9-11 -- resulting in the Bush White House publicly ordering him to watch what he says -- or else. When Bill got his HBO show, he went on a 7-year tear against the Bush administration and became one of our most unapologetic and unrelenting voices against the insanity being shoved down our throats.

I, for one, am glad there's at least one top comedian who isn't afraid to say the word "capitalism" or give credence to the good of socialism. You may not agree with Bill on everything. Yet I'm guessing you love it when he goes after the Uterun Police/Protectors of Child Rapists (also known as The Vatican), or when he brilliantly satirizes the crazy Christian Right which has controlled much of our politics for the past 33 years. I certainly do.

But when Bill goes after Islam, or crazy people professing to be Muslim, we grow uncomfortable. Why is that? Because when he bravely ridicules and attacks Christian assassins of abortion doctors who cite the Bible as justification for their evil acts, we heartily applaud him. But when he mercilessly stomps on Islamic assassins who cite the Koran, we grow uneasy. Why the switch on our part? Is it because Bill doesn't just stop with the Islamic assassins -- he thinks anyone who follows the Koran is a bit nuts? Or the Bible or the Talmud or the... you name it. He thinks it's all coo coo for cocoa puffs.

I have, when I'm on Bill's show, told him there are far more examples historically of the death and destruction that Christians have brought to the planet, from the Crusades to the Inquisition to the wiping out of Native Americans to the Holocaust. But he points out that, in truth, the Jesus followers seem to have taken a break lately in their genocidial lust -- and that the debate should be about the present; i.e., which religion is now doing most of the terrorizing?

Though I would maintain that it is still the Judeo-Christian West whose armies and banks and institutions keep much of the third world under a heavy economic boot, resulting in a lot of hunger, suffering and death, Bill asks, "If I draw a cartoon of Jesus in a dress, will Christian leaders issue a call to assassinate me?"

I can't speak to Bill's drawing skills, but it's safe to say that in the USA he can draw whatever he wants. In fact, other than those murdered abortion doctors, a hundred bombed or ransacked Planned Parenthood clinics and a few people like me, there are not many activists or artists who have to worry about Baptists blowing up their homes. Sinead O'Connor was not beheaded for beheading a photo of the Pope on NBC. Your middle name can be 'Hussein' and you can still win the state of Virginia if you're running for President.

Sure, I can make a daily list of all the horrible things so-called Christians still do in this country. Rarely, though, do their actions involve decapitation.

But if you're a Dutch filmmaker who makes a movie about violence against women in some Islamic countries, or if you're a Danish cartoonist who draws an image making fun of the Prophet -- well, you are then either shot to death or you are now in hiding.

So if Bill is taking the same exact position liberals usually take whenever we see free speech being threatened, or women being abused or people forced to submit to fundamentalist dictates, why then is he facing any criticism for speaking out against these wrongs? When Christians do these things we speak up -- loudly. So why not speak out when Muslims do it? 'Cause it's none of our business? Isn't it?

I think I may have a couple answers as to why some liberals are uncomfortable with Bill's humor when it comes to Islam:

1. We have witnessed, since 9/11, Arabs and Muslims in this country undergoing huge amounts of prejudice, bigotry and sometimes outright violence. This sickens us (as I know it does Bill). So we are extra sensitive to what sounds like, as it goes through the liberal filter in our ears, any "anti-Arab" comments. We don't want to hear anything even remotely anti-Muslim. But we have to be careful that this doesn't stop us from listening to legitimate criticisms about things that go on in the Muslim world. I just think that, due to our illegal actions (invasions) of the past decade, our government lacks any moral authority on this and should be forbidden from any attempts to "fix" those problems.

2. Liberals are intensely fed up with these two wars against mostly Muslim populations (not to mention the indiscriminate drone strikes on at least four other nations). And now the party that won the elections last Tuesday would like a war with Iran. An ignorant American public was manipulated with fear and lies to start and maintain the Afghanistan and Iraq Wars -- and that manipulation continues today in order to justify things like the mass spying by the NSA on our entire citizenry. When the Cold War ended (25 years ago today in Berlin), the defense industry went berserk with worry that their salad days were over. A new enemy was needed. Arab terrorists fit the bill perfectly! Not only has the defense industry since thrived, a whole new fake industry has arisen -- the Homeland Security behemoth. As our infrastructure, our freedoms and our middle class vaporize, billions are spent as a grossly out-of-proportion response to a few shitty disasters.

So we liberals don't want to hear another word about an "Islamic threat" or some non-existent Iranian nukes or... or whatever! We know we're being set up to get behind another war effort, another arms race, another diversion intended to make the point-one-percenters even filthier rich -- and the rest of us distracted with false fears and hatreds.

I don't even know if I want to see Jon Stewart's new film about the Iranian who was unjustly imprisoned. WHY not? It's a true story! It happened! But the liberal panic button says this film will be used in ways to pump up fear of Muslims. At the very least, it will be the first thing Jon Stewart has done that the Republicans will like. So does that mean he shouldn't have made it?

Two weeks ago on Bill's HBO show, he had on the wonderful Palestinian writer Rula Jebreal. They had a good and testy back and forth (Bill often has Muslims who disagree with him on his show, like the great Ben al-Afleck). Rula was giving it to Bill pretty hard, but when he paused and asked her if he were a Muslim, living in certain Muslim countries, and he walked into the Men's Club one day and announced he was now a Presbyterian, would that be ok? She paused, and then said "No."

Comedy is and should be a dangerous business. Those comedians who play it safe are far less interesting, less funny and, frankly, are often boring. Those who are willing to take their comedy to the Line That Shall Not Be Crossed -- and maybe step over it from time to time -- are the ones we are drawn to. But in order to encourage them to take those chances, we have to give them some leeway, give them a break when, in our mind, they've crossed that line. To not do so is to encourage them to go toward the bland, the passe and to the non-offensive. Those comedians like Bill Maher who are willing to take the risk of being the court jester -- saying the things that the rest of us are often thinking (or wish we were thinking) but are afraid to say -- should be supported, not silenced.

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