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Voters Are Not Inspired by Moderation and Centrism Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=35918"><span class="small">Michael Moore, Michael Moore's Facebook Page</span></a>   
Tuesday, 10 September 2019 08:17

Moore writes: "We need millions of young adults and Americans of color to create a stampede to the polls next year. They are not inspired by moderation and centrism."

Michael Moore. (photo Getty Images)
Michael Moore. (photo Getty Images)


Voters Are Not Inspired by Moderation and Centrism

By Michael Moore, Michael Moore's Facebook Page

10 September 19

 

es, Dan McCready must win this seat tomorrow in NC. I sent him $500. But when we support cowards - because we must win at all costs!—and we MUST win tomorrow— keep in mind we carve away a piece of our soul each time we do this. In the end, it could wreak havoc and cost us the bigger battle in 2020. Timid moderates believe McCready’s action gains voters in the middle because he takes a brave stand against a Somali refugee woman! That’ll teach her!

No, that’ll convince just enough people in our base whom we need next year at the polls to possibly stay home. The depressed voters who are too quick to give up on the Democrats because they see the Dems as weak, ineffectual or hypocritical — the “party of the people” who does nothing to arrest the politicians who poisoned the water in Flint. The party that lets Detroit die. The party that left 30 million uninsured and 50 million underinsured with a half-way-there health system. Yes, fellow white people over the age of 40 — I know you have an answer and a rationalization for all of this. Keep talking to each other. But we need millions of young adults and Americans of color to create a stampede to the polls next year. They are not inspired by moderation and centrism. They are only fired up by the possibility of not just getting rid of Trump but by the hope that their daily lives will get better because there’s a party and candidates who are going to FIGHT for them and never back down. It was not that long ago that Democrats dared not support gun control for fear of the NRA defeating them. Not that long ago when Democrats dared not fight for abortion rights. And it was even in the first decade of this 21st century when Democrats had to make damn sure they never called themselves a “liberal.”

Now, in 2019, they are being told by pundits and moderates that it is dangerous to question how the Palestinians are being treated! They are warned that they should not go all the way and support Medicare for every American? They they should stop all this “socialist” talk about free college and day care? I can promise you that if we don’t fight for these things, we risk paving a path to another upset defeat next year. If your big idea is that hatred of Trump will speed us to glorious victory next year — well, I’m sorry, I refused to ride your rickety, ill-conceived train in 2016 as you drove it off the cliff, and I will not hop on board this time either. If we must, I and millions of others will build our own bullet train for 2020, riding with the American majority — 70% of the electorate are women, people of color and young adults (or some combination of the three). They are our ticket to a true victory — and they don’t have any time to waste on cowards or bloviators who keep telling them they have to wait “just a while longer” in the middle of road, while those in power try their “best” to find them a seat at the table.

Those days are over. The table is ours — and we’ll make sure everyone sits there.

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Citation Needed, Mr. President Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=45696"><span class="small">Rafi Schwartz, Splinter</span></a>   
Tuesday, 10 September 2019 08:15

Schwartz writes: "Fresh off of screaming about jobs in another characteristically unhinged White House video, President Donald Trump kicked off his Monday morning by doubling down on employment news - specifically, his own - insisting he had reached 'record' approval ratings among Republicans."

Supporters hold up their hats during a rally held by President Trump on March 15, 2017, in Nashville, Tenn. (photo: Andrea Morales/Getty Images)
Supporters hold up their hats during a rally held by President Trump on March 15, 2017, in Nashville, Tenn. (photo: Andrea Morales/Getty Images)


Citation Needed, Mr. President

By Rafi Schwartz, Splinter

10 September 19

 

resh off of screaming about jobs in another characteristically unhinged White House video, President Donald Trump kicked off his Monday morning by doubling down on employment news—specifically, his own—insisting he had reached “record” approval ratings among Republicans.

There’s just one problem: As far as anyone could tell, Trump is both totally incorrect and almost certainly making the whole thing up.

Let’s do this in order, shall we?

First, that 94 percent claim. Where did the president come up with this number? As The Washington Post noted the last time Trump bragged about this impressive-sounding stat back in June, it seems to have appeared out of thin air—or, charitably speaking, it could be polling that’s not public. Trump previously touted a straw poll among attendees at the annual CPAC conference back in 2018, which saw the president’s approval at 93 percent among his most hardcore supporters. Could he have added an extra point on this extremely unscientific popularity rating and then recycled it hoping that no one would notice the difference? Entirely possible!

This isn’t to say that Trump isn’t popular within the GOP. According to Gallup’s presidential approval ratings, Trump has held steady at 88 percent approval among Republicans for the past month and a half. Impressive stats to be sure, but still solidly below that supposed 94 percent of which Trump is so fond.

As for that claim that the already dubious 94 percent is “a record,” well, that one’s even easier to dissect. In a thorough debunking of Trump’s penchant for self-aggrandizement, Politifact pointed out that George W. Bush enjoyed a staggering 96 percent approval from his own party, while President Eisenhower topped off at 92 percent, without even having to cite potentially made-up polls.

Anyway, have a terrific day Mr. President. You’re off to a great start already!

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Kids Are Back to Schooling Us on Climate Change Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=51573"><span class="small">Chip Giller, Grist</span></a>   
Tuesday, 10 September 2019 08:10

Giller writes: "Let's take a minute to admire those among us who spend study hall planning to save the world."

(photo: Grist/Robin Loznak/Our Children's Trust)
(photo: Grist/Robin Loznak/Our Children's Trust)


Kids Are Back to Schooling Us on Climate Change

By Chip Giller, Grist

10 September 19

 

ey there,

It’s September: Pumpkin spice is (already?!) in the air, northern states are beginning to mourn the long days of summer, and kids everywhere are headed back to school.

Well, until September 20, at least. That’s the date of the global climate strike, a youth-led effort to get kids and grown-ups alike to call in sick-of-this-shit.

This won’t be the first time the rest of us have been schooled by a bunch of teens when it comes to climate action. In fact, the seven-hour climate town hall held on CNN earlier this week was a surreal, unprecedented culmination of the work youth activists have done to push for more climate-crisis air time. As a climate obsessive since 1989, I gotta say … these kids are better than alright.

So, let’s take a minute to admire those among us who spend study hall planning to save the world. Then, let’s take some time to help. “I don’t want your hope … I want you to act,” says 16-year-old Swedish activist Greta Thunberg.

Read on for some ideas on how to do that, and to meet a few of the young people who are leading the charge toward a brighter future.

This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it about Shift Happens is always welcome, and please encourage your friends to sign up.

— Chip, Grist Founder

1. Your new hero

How do you get millions of kids across the United States to walk out of school all at once (without playing Alice Cooper’s “School’s Out For Summer” over the loudspeakers)?

Isra Hirsi, that’s how. As executive director of U.S. Youth Climate Strike, an organizing force behind much of this month’s and other climate strikes in the United States, Hirsi helps coordinate youth leaders around the country — all while navigating high school (as if that’s not enough of an existential crisis on its own).

“I respond to texts and messages during the school day, and then I come home at four and that’s when I start doing all my calls,” Hirsi told Grist ahead of a strike last spring. “I have calls every single night. It’s kind of go-time.”

Hirsi, whose mom is Ilhan Omar, the United States’ first Somali-American member of the U.S. House of Representatives, is also trying to get a wider range of people involved in the environmental movement — people whose activism may look a little different from what we’re used to.

Hirsi wrote about that in her recent op-ed for Fix: “I don’t strike every Friday, because I can’t. But that doesn’t mean my activism is not valid. That doesn’t mean that the activism of thousands of youth across the world is not valid.”

(After you read that op-ed, follow Hirsi on Twitter — she’s got some of the best, funniest climate tweets in the game.)

2. Your reading list

Xiuhtezcatl Martinez has an impressive resume. The 19-year-old is an indigenous activist, hip-hop artist, and youth director of the activist organization Earth Guardians, just for starters. Martinez is also one of 20 youth plaintiffs in landmark climate lawsuit Juliana v. United States, which has put a spotlight on what, exactly, the next generation stands to lose in the face of inaction.

Martinez’s 2017 book We Rise is, in part, an account of his time as an activist — and it might make you feel a tinge of embarrassment about spending your teenage years trying to figure out how to ollie on your friend’s skateboard (just me?). Reflecting on one of his seminal climate speeches, he writes: “I now know that that speech was the culmination of an incredible period of growth in my life. My voice had just dropped, I was sprouting up, and I was taking my fight to a much bigger stage.”

But We Rise is mostly a guide for others who want to make their own waves. Says actor Mark Ruffalo: “This book offers practical solutions for how everyday people can be a part of the most important movement in the history of humanity.”

3. Your pick-me-up

4. Your next move

5. Your Sunday plans

One other arena in which we should take some cues from Gen Z: the art of protest signage. From the irreverent to the strikingly clever to the just plain silly, here are some of our favorite signs from past climate protests. May they inspire you to make your own.

  1. Youthful impulsivity might not be such a bad thing right about now.

  2. Don’t be afraid to include a little profanity in your sign.

  3. Pop culture references are always a hit. (But be prepared to feel old when the kids in the crowd have never heard of your favorite TV show.)

  4. Make your sign into a performance art piece!

  5. There’s nothing wrong with artistic renditions of bikini-clad polar bears, but sometimes it’s best to just keep it simple.

Now, make like a kid and go save the world.

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We're Only Beginning to See the Consequences of the Bush-Era Assault on Civil Liberties Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=51548"><span class="small">Matt Taibbi, Rolling Stone</span></a>   
Monday, 09 September 2019 13:00

Taibbi writes: "Like a number of 'War on Terror' measures, the Terrorist Screening Database's unconstitutionality was obvious from the jump."

President George W. Bush reflects on a question as he holds his last formal news conference at the White House in 2009. (photo: J Scott Applewhite/AP/Shutterstock)
President George W. Bush reflects on a question as he holds his last formal news conference at the White House in 2009. (photo: J Scott Applewhite/AP/Shutterstock)


We're Only Beginning to See the Consequences of the Bush-Era Assault on Civil Liberties

By Matt Taibbi, Rolling Stone

09 September 19


Like a number of “War on Terror” measures, the Terrorist Screening Database’s unconstitutionality was obvious from the jump

judge last week ruled the federal government’s Terrorist Screening Database (TSDB), which secretly categorized more than 1 million people as “known or suspected terrorists,” is unconstitutional.

Like a number of “War on Terror” reforms instituted in the Bush years, the TDSB’s unconstitutionality was obvious from its inception. Indeed, the very idea that we needed to “take the gloves off” in our post-9/11 “State of Exception” was an original selling point of some of these programs.

The TDSB is cousin to the No-Fly List (a different and more restrictive list ruled unconstitutional in 2014), the Distribution Matrix (the drone assassination program also known as the “Kill List”), the STELLAR WIND warrantless surveillance program, multiple expansions of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, the broadened use of National Security Letters to obtain private data without warrant, the “Enhanced Interrogation” program the rest of the world calls torture, and countless other War on Terror initiatives that were and are clear violations of the spirit of the constitution.

Many of these programs were sold to the public as temporary measures — Diane Feinstein way back in 2001 said five-year sunset provisions would be a “valuable check” on potential abuse of the Patriot Act — but turned out to be essentially permanent features of the state.

The TSDB is produced by the Terrorism Screening Center, a “multi-agency center” administered by the FBI. The Department of Homeland Security, the National Counterterrorism Center, the Transportation Security Administration, and the United States Customs and Border Protection also contribute. Even the FBI proudly uses the program’s creepy sobriquet, “the watchlist.”

The recent lawsuit (Anas Elhady et al v. Charles Kable, Director of the Terrorist Screening Center) was brought by 23 Muslim-Americans who complained of a “range of adverse consequences.” Plaintiffs complained of being repeatedly handcuffed at the border, searched, denied access to flights, and other issues.

The ugliest detail in the lawsuit involves the sheer reach of the list. From Judge Anthony Trenga’s memorandum:

The FBI… shares TSDB information with more than 18,000 state, local, county, city, university and college, tribal, and federal law enforcement agencies and approximately 533 private entities through its National Crime Information Center (NCIC) program, which these law enforcement agencies and private entities then use to screen individuals they encounter in traffic stops, field interviews, house visits, and municipal permit processes. 

After the towers fell, Americans wanted to feel safe from terror attacks, by any means necessary. The notion that some kind of profiling had to go on in order to tighten up security procedures was fairly uncontroversial eighteen years ago.

As a result, few cared about the long-term implications of giving the state power to informally tab people terrorists, before blasting out to 18,000 different entities, including schools, embassies, and potential employers.

There was no real brake on the listmaking process, which allowed “the watchlist” to balloon. The list expanded from 680,000 people in 2013 to 1.2 million in 2017. Some 4,600 of the people on the list are said to be Americans.

Inclusion on the TSDB happens according to a space-age, Homeland version of the infamous stop-and-frisk policing technique, another program that became an end run around probable cause. In the mid-2000s, hundreds of thousands of people in cities like New York, mostly young black and Hispanic males, were stopped every year based upon the “reasonable” or “articulable” suspicion that a person has committed, is committing, or is about to commit a crime.

Similarly, a person could land on the TSDB based upon the “articulable intelligence” that a person “is engaged, has been engaged, or intends to engage” in terrorist activities.

There was no requirement that a person commit a crime before being placed on the list, and being acquitted of a terrorism-related offense didn’t prevent one from being placed on this informal dishonor roll.

The mere fact of the list gave federal authorities enormous power. One whiff of a person’s name near the “known or suspected” terror roster would be enough to end applications for FAA or transportation licenses, hazmat permits, access to military bases, and a variety of government or private sector jobs or education opportunities.

This is probably a highlight of the program for some – it’s difficult to question the wisdom of keeping a suspected terrorist away from hazardous materials – but the huge problem was that people had no real recourse for contesting their inclusion on the list.

The official complaint method for travelers who experienced difficulties was the Department of Homeland Security’s Travel Redress Inquiry Program (TRIP). However, as Trenga noted:

The submission triggers a review… which, in 98% of cases, results in a determination that the claimed travel difficulties had no connection to an individuals inclusion on the TSDB. 

When the complainant is a match to someone on the watchlist, the complaint goes to the “TSC Redress Office,” which would then conduct an internal review and send the complainant a determination letter that, no matter what, would not inform the person if they were or were not on the list.

In a lot of War on Terror programs, the fact that no one can be sure if they’re even on a list becomes a major defense against challenges to the system. As an American Bar Association editorial noted back in 2011,

A second doctrinal problem arises from the deeply problematic intersection between secrecy and the doctrine of standing…

For years, the government has advocated… a restrictive theory of standing… requiring would-be challengers of government surveillance programs to demonstrate that the government has actually intercepted their communications.

It’s a Catch-22. You need standing to challenge an abuse of authority, but that very abuse of authority prevents you from gaining information to secure standing.

Want to claim the government is violating disclosure rules under the FOIA law? You might have a problem if you can’t prove what’s being rebuffed in a FOIA request. Want to contest your inclusion on the No-Fly List, or the TSDB? It’s a problem if you don’t even know for sure you’re on it.

I watched this process play out in court last year. When an American citizen named Bilal Abdul-Kareem, who claimed to have survived multiple drone attacks overseas, sued to get himself removed from the “Distribution Matrix,” he faced a serious hurdle because he could not prove he was on the list.

The government argued the suit should be thrown out because neither Kareem nor his co-plaintiff, a journalist named Ahmad Zaidan, could “plausibly” make a case they were on a list.

“The much more plausible explanation,” the government lawyer argued in a DC court last spring, “is that plaintiff Kareem experienced explosions in Syria because he was covering the Syrian civil war as a journalist.”

The Kill List, the TDSB, and all the secret surveillance programs pose the same problem: they exist more or less completely apart from meaningful public oversight. They’re bureaucratic states within states.

For instance, part of the PATRIOT Act governing the issue of National Security Letters (NSLs) – by which the FBI can demand that private companies turn over subscriber information, billing records, and other private data – allows the government to place gag orders on recipients of such letters.

Because of this, we only have a faint idea of what NSLs look like. In one rare case, a man named Nicholas Merrill balked and sued when his company was issued a National Security Letter. In that case, the government argued that even releasing the existence of the letter would compromise national security.

This is frightening given that a) no courts need to approve the issuance of such letters, and b) the quantity of such demands is massive. Over a ten-year period, the government reportedly issued over 300,000 NSLs, at one point reaching a pace of 60,000 issued per year. The Merrill case in 2015 represented the first time a gag order was lifted on one of these operations.

The recent watchlist lawsuit should remind us we’re assassinating, torturing, snooping on, and blacklisting people all over the world, by means of a continually expanding federal bureaucracy that exists outside of any specific mission, and refuses to recognize the oversight authority of courts or congress.

One of the reasons these secret bureaucracies keep expanding is that there is no powerful lobby, no civil liberties version of PhRMA or the National Rifle Association, to oppose them. The people affected by these programs aren’t drug companies or gun manufacturers, just everyone, and everyone doesn’t have much juice in Washington.

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How We Shut Down the Nation's Largest Child Detention Center Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=51570"><span class="small">Kristin Kumpf, YES! Magazine</span></a>   
Monday, 09 September 2019 13:00

Kumpf writes: "We were determined to shut down the detention center before the school year started, rallying around the cry that children belong in schools, not prison camps."

Protesters with American Friends Service Committee protest in Washington D.C. (photo: Carl Roose/AFSC)
Protesters with American Friends Service Committee protest in Washington D.C. (photo: Carl Roose/AFSC)


How We Shut Down the Nation's Largest Child Detention Center

By Kristin Kumpf, YES! Magazine

09 September 19


Now the Trump Administration wants to reopen it.

n the morning of Aug. 3, the last of more than 3,000 children were taken out of the Homestead detention center in Florida. The controversial detention center had served as an indefinite holding place for migrant youth, many of whom fled violence and poverty in Central America and were seeking asylum in the United States.

Homestead was an “emergency influx facility”—a designation used to skirt the Flores settlement agreement, which requires oversight and certain standards of care for children in detention. It was run by Caliburn—a for-profit prison operator that includes former White House Chief of Staff John Kelly on its board of directors, and cost taxpayers $1 million dollars a day to operate.

Children were not allowed to leave the compound, where they slept in military-type dorms, were constantly overseen by guards, and were prohibited from hugging anyone—even their siblings.

For months, the American Friends Service Committee, along with a coalition of local and national organizations, held rallies and vigils outside the center, wrote letters to the children inside, marched in the streets, and delivered more than 128,000 signatures to the Department of Health and Human Services, which oversaw the facility. We were determined to shut down the detention center before the school year started, rallying around the cry that children belong in schools, not prison camps.

The public pressure worked. Most of the young people were placed with families and sponsors, in time to start the school year. Some were transferred to other smaller, state-licensed detention facilities. Homestead now stands empty.

But if the Trump administration has its way, it won’t be empty for long. And the number of children in detention will only grow.

Just last week, the administration announced it intends to terminate the Flores Settlement agreement, ending limits on the amount of time kids can be held in facilities that aren’t licensed to care for children.

The administration also announced it wants to build several new—and permanent—influx detention centers, which they want to make operational by the spring of 2020. And rather than shutting down the Homestead detention center permanently, the Department of Health and Human Services is retaining 1,200 beds and may start detaining children there again as early as October.

We can’t let this happen.

Since the beginning of the campaign, we have demanded that the government shut down Homestead detention center immediately, unite children with sponsors as quickly as possible, and pledge to never again open or operate an?emergency influx center. For months we were told this was impossible. But once the government capitulated to public pressure, the detention center was emptied out in a matter of weeks.

Clearly the problem was not the impossibility of the task, but the lack of political will.

The Trump administration is manufacturing the need to detain children as part of its anti-immigrant agenda. Policies like family separation and the criminalization of immigrants are driving the increase in detention. As thousands of parents were ripped from their children and deported last year, the children were placed in the care of the Department of Health and Human Services. The government’s plan to terminate the Flores settlement agreement is designed to allow indefinite detention of whole families. And the consequences of these policies are deadly. In the last year alone, seven children have died after being taken into immigration custody. Families belong together but not in cages.

What if, instead of spending billions of dollars on building infrastructure designed to incarcerate children and adults, we invested that money in building communities where all children can thrive? What if Congress refused to fund emergency influx facilities and other forms of detention?

If our work in Homestead has taught us anything, it is that the tireless actions of thousands of people actually do have the power to make change. Even in a political climate imbued with racism and fear, we were able to shut down the largest detention center for migrant children in the country. And we won’t go back.

On Mother’s Day, hundreds of people took part in a protest organized by the AFSC and our partners outside of the detention center in Homestead. For hours, the crowd chanted and held signs, showing solidarity with the nearly 3,000 migrant children on the other side of the wall.

Los vemos. Los queremos. Estamos con ustedes,” the protestors cried out over the fence. “We see you. We love you. We are on your side.”

We need policymakers on our side, too. It’s time to end child detention.

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