Monday, July 6, 2009

thank you! we're at 500 signatures - seeking more

Thank you if you are one of the 502 signatures so far. If you aren't, please
sign here: https://hermanasgonzalez.org/petition/en/
En Español

As organizations and individuals committed to the basic dignity of all peoples and convinced that governments should actively uphold human rights principles, we, the undersigned, urge the Mexican government to grant reparations in the case of Ana, Beatriz, y Celia González (Hermanas González). These three indigenous Tzeltal women were raped by soldiers at a military checkpoint in the state of Chiapas, Mexico in 1994. They and their mother Celia González, together with the Colectivo de Mujeres de San Cristóbal, la Comisión Mexicana de Defensa y Promoción de los Derechos Humanos, and the Center for Justice and International Law, courageously denounced the rapes before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) of the Organization of American States (OAS). In 2001 the IACHR found the Mexican military responsible for the rapes and torture of the sisters.

Since then, the sisters' case has been a clear example of unpunished state violence against indigenous women's bodies, territories, and basic freedoms. In its official finding the IACHR stated that Mexican government violated six articles of the American Convention on Human Rights, its governing document. This Convention is an international instrument reflecting the agreement of all parties to undertake the protection of certain fundamental human rights and freedoms. Mexico's violations included the right to humane treatment and to privacy (Articles 5 and 11); the right to personal liberty (Article 7); the right to a fair and judicial protection (Articles 8 and 25); and in the case of Celia González, who was sixteen at the time of the rapes, the rights of the child (Article 19). These all fall under the Mexican state's general obligation to respect and guarantee rights, found in Article 1(1) of the Convention. The IACHR also found the Mexican State responsible for violating Article 8 of the separate Inter-American Convention to Prevent and Punish Torture. As a result of these established violations, the IACHR recommended the state conduct a serious investigation to determine the criminal liability of those responsible, punish the perpetrators, and compensate the victims. Eight years later, Mexico has failed to comply with any of these recommendations. We believe that until justice is served and the sisters are awarded just reparations, the Mexico seriously neglects its human rights commitments.

Organizations that struggle against violence against indigenous women are especially concerned with the case's challenge to the United Nations Declaration of Rights of Indigenous Peoples, to which Mexico is a signatory. By letting this case drag on, the Mexican government fails to take measures to ensure that indigenous women and children enjoy full protection and guarantees against all violence and discrimination (Article 22); and fails to remedy the ongoing use of indigenous territories for military activities without previous consultation (in violation of Article 30).

We are demanding reparations be granted for the Hermanas and their mother promptly because the Mexican government's pattern of behavior towards indigenous peoples is alarming and ongoing. Inés Fernández and Valentina Rosendo are Tlaxcaltecan women from the state of Guerrero raped by the military in 2002. Their cases as well as the case of the Hermanas González remain unpunished despite IACHR findings against the Mexican military. The Army continues to deploy forces in indigenous territories in Chiapas and Guerrero and other areas with high indigenous populations. There have been too many victims of this increased militarization of indigenous territories.

As organizations and individuals committed to justice and dignity, we see the Mexican government's compliance with IACHR recommendations as the beginning, rather than the end, of the process of justice and reparations for the Hermanas and their mother. We call on the State to take this first step of granting reparations so that the Hermanas González may conclude their difficult and brave legal struggle and move on to healing at the level of territory, community, and family.

Saturday, June 6, 2009

The Comité pro-Reparaciones para las Hermanas González de Chiapas, el Centro de Derechos de la Mujer de Chiapas, el Colectivo de Mujeres de San Cristóbal de las Casas, la Comisión Mexicana para la Defensa y Promoción de los Derechos Humanos, and el Centro para la Justicia y el Derecho Internaciónal invite you to join a campaign to pressure the Mexican government to grant reparations to the Celia, Beatriz, and Ana González, three indigenous women raped by soldiers at a military checkpoint in Chiapas, Mexico in 1994. (www.hermanasgonzalez.org) After fifteen years of injustice, the sisters and their mother, a witness to the attacks, completed key depositions on May 21, 2009. This progress will only be realized, however, through political pressure by organizations since the Mexican military actively resists acknowledging the crimes of its soldiers. As an organization or individual who struggles against violence against women of color, militarization of indigenous territories, and state violence against indigenous communities, we, in consultation with the survivors themselves (consulted on May 18) urge you to participate in this campaign.

There are two ways to participate in the campaign.

1. If you belong to an organization, we urge you to send a fax in the name of your organization to the three government agencies most closely related to the case as well as the Inter-American Commission, who is in charge of seeing that Mexico follows its recommendations for justice and reparations. We have prepared a letter in a word document for each agency. Please download each letter, insert the name of your organization and sign at the bottom. You may also want to modify the letter in some way. The download letter includes the fax number for each agency. Follow these links for: www.hermanasgonzalez.org/fax/mexicomilitary.doc; www.hermanasgonzalez.org/fax/Mexicodepartmentofstate.doc ; and www.hermanasgonzalez.org/fax/IACHR.doc. If you are interested in sending a fax but do not have a way to do so please contact us at comite@hermanasgonzalez.org. We hope to be able to facilitate sending a fax on your behalf.

2. If you wish to participate as an individual, we encourage you to either send a fax as indicated above, or sign a petition we have prepared, including your organization in the "comments" section. To get to the petition please click the following link. The petition is growing every day. Please pass this information on to your friends.

https://hermanasgonzalez.org/petition/

We hope that you are able to join us in this cause.

In struggle against state violence against indigenous women,

Comité Pro-Reparación de las Hermanas González de Chiapas, the Chiapas Women’s Rights Center, Colectivo de Mujeres de San Cristóbal, Comisión Mexicana para la Defensa y Promoción de los Derechos Humanos, Centro para la Justicia y el Derecho Internacional

(Esta información está disponsible en español en el sitio web hermanasgonzalez.org)

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Stop Military Rape in Chiapas

Dear supporter of indigenous women’s rights and freedoms,

The Comité pro-Reparaciones para las Hermanas González de Chiapas, el Centro de Derechos de la Mujer de Chiapas, el Colectivo de Mujeres de San Cristóbal, la Comisión Mexicana para la Defensa y Promoción de los Derechos Humanos, and el Centro para la Justicia y el Derecho Internacional invite you to join a campaign to pressure the Mexican government to grant reparations to the Celia, Beatriz, and Ana González, three indigenous women raped by soldiers at a military checkpoint in Chiapas, Mexico in 1994. After fifteen years of injustice, the sisters and their mother, a witness to the attacks, have completed key depositions. Justice will only be realized, however, through political pressure by organizations since the Mexican military refuses to acknowledge the crimes of its soldiers. As an organization or individual who combats violence against women of color, militarization of indigenous territories, and state violence against indigenous communities, we, in consultation with the survivors themselves (consulted on May 18, 2009) urge you to participate in this campaign.

There are two ways to participate in the campaign.

1. If you belong to an organization, we urge you to send a fax in the name of your organization to the two government and military agencies most closely related to the case as well as the Inter-American Commission, who is in charge of seeing that Mexico follows its recommendations for justice and reparations. We have prepared a letter in a Word document for each agency. Please download each letter, insert the name of your organization and the date, and sign at the bottom. You may also want to modify the letter in some way. The download letter includes the fax number for each agency. Follow these links for: “https://hermanasgonzalez.org/fax/mexicomilitary.doc”; “https://hermanasgonzalez.org/fax/Mexicodepartmentofstate.doc”; and “https://hermanasgonzalez.org/fax/IACHR.doc". If you are interested in sending a fax but do not have a way to do so please contact us at comite@hermanasgonzalez.org so we can facilitate sending a fax on your behalf.

2. If you wish to participate as an individual, we encourage you to either send a fax as indicated above, or sign a petition we have prepared. To get to the petition click the following link.

https://hermanasgonzalez.org/petition/

We hope that you are able to support this cause.

In struggle against state violence against indigenous women,

Comité Pro-Reparación de las Hermanas González de Chiapas, the Chiapas Women’s Rights Center, the Colectivo de Mujeres de San Cristóbal, the Comisión Mexicana para la Defensa y Promoción de los Derechos Humanos, and el Centro para la Justicia y el Derecho Internacional

Monday, June 1, 2009

Support Reparations for las Hermanas González

Dear supporter of indigenous women's rights and freedoms,

The Comité Pro-Reparaciones para las Hermanas González de Chiapas, in coordination with the legal team of the Centro de Derechos de la Mujer de Chiapas, the Women's Collective of San Cristóbal, the Mexican Commission for the Defense and Promotion of Human Rights, and the Center for Justice and International Law invite you and the organizations with which you work to join an international campaign to pressure the Mexican government for justice and reparations for indigenous victims of military rape.

In 1994 Celia, Beatriz, y Ana González were raped by soldiers at a military checkpoint in Chiapas, Mexico. In 2001 the Organization of American States' Inter-American Human Rights Commission held that Mexican State was responsible for this crime, yet the guilty parties have not been brought to justice nor have the sisters and their mother, a witness, been indemnified. This case is especially important because it is the first time the Inter-American System has recognized the indigenous identity of a rape victim.

Grassroots pressure has gotten this case moving forward after fifteen years of impunity. Now is a crucial time to pressure the Mexican government for justice-and stop growing generalized state violence against indigenous women in Mexico. In preparation for a letter writing campaign, in which we will request the participation of your organization, we are sending out links to a website where you can find more information on this and related cases, in English and Spanish, taken from legal, academic, and news documents. We will contact you again in the last week of May with a model letter, written in consultation with the CDMCH, and instructions on how to send it via fax to specific Mexican government and military offices.

For documents in English on the Hermanas González case, click here:

https://hermanasgonzalez.org/docs/en/

For documents in Spanish on the Hermanas González case, click here:

https://hermanasgonzalez.org/docs/es/

Please also sign up for an email list which will facilitate contact with your organization for the letter campaign. Note it is just an email list for this specific purpose and not a listserv.

https://hermanasgonzalez.org/email/es/

We urge you to send this letter and the website link on to organizations within your networks and to contact us if there is any information on the case you need clarified. We are available for interviews or we can put you in contact with lawyers and activists in Mexico working on the case.

We look forward to collaborating with you as we launch our letter-writing campaign and we thank you for joining us in this effort to bring justice to the Hermanas Gonzalez and their mother.

In struggle against state violence against indigenous women,

The Comité Pro-Reparaciones de las Hermanas González and the Chiapas Women's Rights Center Legal Team,

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

OBTENEMOS LIBERTAD ABSOLUTA PARA DAVID VENEGAS REYES “ALEBRIJE”

http://www.kaosenlared.net/noticia/obtenemos-libertad-absoluta-david-venegas-alebrije

El día lunes 20 de Abril de este 2009, a las dos horas con treinta y cinco minutos de la tarde al fin fue dictada sentencia final a nuestro compañero David Venegas Reyes “alebrije” en el proceso penal relativo al delito fabricado de POSESION CON HIPOTESIS DE VENTA DE COCAINA Y HEROÍNA, ultimo proceso penal de los dos procesos penales con que lo mantuvo preso el mal gobierno del asesino Ulises Ruiz en el año 2007 y parte de 2008.

Después de once meses de estar en prisión y más de un año de libertad condicionada a firmar cada quince días ante el juzgado tercero de distrito, al fin el compañero ha recibido su sentencia final. A pesar de los retrasos en la sentencia y de las dilaciones a propósito que privaron en este proceso, de las presiones del mal gobierno del asesino Ulises Ruiz hacia el sistema judicial, al fin la contundencia de las pruebas mostradas por la defensa jurídica y sobre todo la presión popular que hizo el movimiento social en Oaxaca sobre el sistema judicial y de la presión que compañeros y compañeras de otros pueblos de México y del mundo han hecho también al sistema judicial, el juez Amado Chiñas Fuentes, juez tercero de distrito ha dictaminado

SENTENCIA ABSOLUTORIA TOTAL

De esta manera la inocencia de nuestro compañero en los delitos por los que fue preso once meses en el año 2007 Y 2008 queda totalmente demostrada, con lo que también queda demostrada la utilización del sistema de justicia del estado de Oaxaca y de México como instrumento de venganza política usada por los malos gobiernos estatal y federal para someter al movimiento social, pues esta SENTENCIA ABSOLUTORIA lejos de ser producto de la salud o rectitud del sistema judicial mexicano, fue arrancada por la fuerza del movimiento popular y con la solidaridad de compañeros y compañeras de todo México y varios pueblos del Mundo. El sistema judicial en México esta corrompido hasta sus entrañas y es un vil instrumento de los gobernantes en turno para someter y reprimir a quienes luchan por justicia y libertad.

Agradecemos fraternalmente la solidaridad incondicional que han tenido con nuestro compañero nuestros hermanos y hermanas del movimiento social Oaxaqueño de la Asamblea Popular de los pueblos de Oaxaca, y de los movimientos sociales de México y el mundo que se han solidarizado con nosotros.

Ratificamos antes ustedes compañeros y compañeras que no nos conformaremos con haber logrado la libertad incondicional de nuestro compañero y que al quedar demostrada la mentira del mal gobierno, iremos ahora por el encarcelamiento de los represores de nuestros pueblos de Oaxaca que tienen responsabilidad en esta detención arbitraria e ilegal, desde el policía que practico la detención y la represión directa hasta los jefes mas altos de estos esbirros. No nos mueve el odio ni el afán de revancha sino la búsqueda legitima de justicia para nuestros pueblos.

Asimismo seguiremos luchando por la libertad de los presos políticos de Oaxaca y solidarizándonos con el dolor de los presos políticos de México y el mundo.

Los invitamos a seguir caminando unidos y unidas como hasta ahora no solo en la lucha por la libertad de nuestros presos políticos sino en la lucha fundamental por JUSTICIA, LIBERTAD, PAZ, DIGNIDAD para nuestros pueblos.

¡LIBERTAD Y JUSTICIA PARA OAXACA!

¡LIBERTAD Y JUSTICIA PARA PALESTINA!

¡LIBERTAD Y JUSTICIA PARA ATENCO!

¡ALTO AL HOSTIGAMIENTO MILITAR A LOS ZAPATISTAS!

¡PRESOS POLITICOS LIBERTAD!

¡FUERA ULISES RUIZ ASESINO!

¡LA APPO VIVE LA LUCHA SIGUE!

FRATERNALMENTE

VOCES OAXAQUEÑAS CONSTRUYENDO AUTONOMIA Y LIBERTAD

Oaxaca de Magon, ciudad de la resistencia a 21 de abril de 2009

Monday, April 13, 2009

Sign This Petition For A Compenero Convicted of Fabricated Drug Charges

Please sign this petition for a wonderful compenero I had the pleasure to meet in Oaxaxa- he was a political prisoner and has been subjected to endless harassment by the Mexican state. He was recently convicted of the fabricated charge of possession with intent to sell cocaine and heroin - and is awaiting the sentence. http://www.petitiononline.com/VENEGAS/petition.html

For more information read
  • request for urgent action request by VOCAL, David Venegas Reyes’ collective, at http://merimononen.spaces.live.com/blog/cns!396617B948266A0D!242.entry
  • Amnesty International campaign for David from when he was initially arrested in 2007 http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/AMR41/017/2007/en/e37aa44d-d39b-11dd-a329-2f46302a8cc6/amr410172007en.html
  • Amnesty International on Mexico: Laws without Justice http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/AMR41/015/2007/en/ba77b8dc-d39c-11dd-a329-2f46302a8cc6/amr410152007en.html.
  • Narco News Article http://narcosphere.narconews.com/notebook/kristin-bricker/2009/04/appo-councilor-david-venegas-faces-trial-april-6-fabricated-drug-ch
  • http://angrywhitekid.blogs.com/weblog/2009/04/sentencing-on-monday-for-appo-member-david-venegas-support-needed.html#more

Saturday, February 28, 2009

Rebellious Lawyering Media

- "The African Public Interest Lawyer: Rebellious Lawyering on the Continent" panel (audio only) http://ylsqtss.law.yale.edu:8080/qtmedia/reblaw/RebLawAfricanPI_s.mov
- "Rejecting 'Tough on Crime': Fixing a Broken Criminal Justice System" panel (audio only): http://ylsqtss.law.yale.edu:8080/qtmedia/reblaw/RebLawCrime_s.mov

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Justice for the Women of Atenco


Tuesday, February 17, 2009

travel plans

i will be in NY this week...and hopefully at the event below.
i will be in CT for the rebellious lawyering conference this weekend http://islandia.law.yale.edu/reblaw/.
i will be in Chiapas again May 18-29 and hope to travel after.
if you would like to meet up, let me know.

Oaxaca: a Story of Struggle and Resistance

Oaxaca: a Story of Struggle and Resistance
Political Cultural Benefit for
Juan Manuel Martinez
Political Prisoner
from Oaxaca


Brief Historical Context:

October 17, 2008, Juan Manuel Martinez was arrested, having been unjustly accused of killing US photojournalist Bradley Roland Will, one of 27 killed in the Oaxacan uprising in 2006.

We, human rights defenders and friends and family of Brad Will, know that the accusation against Juan Manuel Martinez and the investigations allegedly conducted by the Mexican authorities (PGR) regarding Brad's murder are flawed by numerous irregularities and omissions. One of our main concerns now is the continuation of the Merida Initiative (a.k.a. Plan Mexico) and US government pressure move forward with this $1.5 billion plan that aims to militarize Mexico in the name of the war on drugs, terrorism and organized crime.

The Merida Initiative will worsen the ongoing criminalization of social protest, the persecution of organizers and human rights defenders and a long list of violations of the Mexican people's constitutional and human rights.

We, the friends and family of Brad Will, oppose PLAN MEXICO and its repressive policies that perpetuate impunity. We will continue the struggle for truth and justice in the murder of our friend Brad. This will be achieved when Juan Manuel Martinez is freed and all charges against him are dropped, and when Oaxaca's governor Ulises Ruiz Ortiz is held accountable for the death of Brad and 27 Oaxacans killed and disappeared in the conflict since 2006.

Invitation
:
We are spreading the word about the organized struggle that has been led by the Oaxacan people since 2006 via the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca (APPO), strengthening and reactivating international connections and solidarity with the struggles of the Peoples of the World. We invite you to join us at a cultural event at the Peña del Bronx.

Event
:
Presentation and brief talk about the book Teaching Rebellion from the CASA-Chapulín Collective in Oaxaca. The book is a collection of testimonies from 23 people that were actively involved in the social movement, APPO, in Oaxaca in 2006. http://teachingrebellion.wordpress.com/

Photography Exhibit: OAXACA ATAKA (Vilcoyote). More than 35 black and white photographs that show the dignity and rebellion of the Oaxacan people at the height of the APPO movement. http://teachingrebellion.wordpress.com/2008/10/18/gustavo-slideshow/

Merida Initiative (Plan Mexico): A brief talk and explanation of how our community can stop the agreement, presented by Friends of Brad Will. http://www.friendsofbradwill.org/

Music: Rebel Díaz finish the event with their rebellious and explosive music. http://www.rebeldiaz.com/


free
(Donations accepted)

Date: February 19, 2009
Time: 8 to 10 pm
Place: La Peña del Bronx
478 Austin Place
Bronx, NY 10455

Subway 6 (local) 149th st. Station.



Event made possible with the efforts of:

La Peña del Bronx
Rebel Díaz
Art Collective
http://www.rebeldiaz.com/

Friends of Brad Will
http://www.friendsofbradwill.org/

Colectivo CASA
http://www.casacollective.org/en

y la comunidaaa!




and that is why we shout and demand!
ENOUGH IMPUNITY
NO TO THE MERIDA INITIATIVE
STOP PLAN MEXICO


______________________________________________________________________________________________________

Favor de reenviar!


Oaxaca: historia de Lucha y resistencia.
Evento politico-cultural a beneficio de
Juan Manuel Martínez
Preso Politico
Oaxaca

Breve contexto histórico:
El pasado 17 de Octubre del 2008 fue detenido Juan Manuel Martínez acusado injustamente de ser el autor material en el homicidio del camarógrafo estadounidense Bradley Roland Will, uno de los 27 compañeros asesinados durante el 2006.

Nosotros, luchadores sociales, organismos defensores de derechos humanos, familiares y amigos de Brad Will sabemos que las acusaciones contra Juan Manuel Martínez y las supuestas investigaciones realizadas por las autoridades mexicanas (PGR) en torno al asesinato de Brad están llenas de irregularidades y omisiones, pero principalmente sabemos que es la implementación y continuación de la Iniciativa Mérida (aka Plan México) y la presión que esta ejerciendo Estados Unidos sobre México en el acuerdo que hay entre ambos países con la finalidad de militarizar el territorio mexicano en la supuesta Guerra contra las drogas, el terrorismo y la delincuencia organizada.
En efecto esto conlleva a la criminalización de la protesta social, la persecución de luchadores sociales, defensores de derechos humanos y una repetida lista de violaciones a las garantías humanas y constitucionales de la población en México.

Nosotros amigos y familiares de Brad Will nos oponemos al PLAN MEXICO y sus políticas represivas y llenas de impunidad, continuaremos luchando por el esclarecimiento en el homicidio de nuestro compañero y amigo Brad esto conllevaría a evidenciar la inocencia de Juan Manuel Martínez y su libertad inmediata y por ende el cargo de responsabilidad contra el gobernador oaxaqueño Ulises Ruiz Ortiz en el homicidio de los más de 27 oaxaqueños asesinados y desaparecidos desde el 2006.


Invitación:

Con el deseo de difundir y compartir el proceso de lucha organizada que ha desarrollado el pueblo oaxaqueño a partir del 2006 dentro de la Asamblea Popular de los Pueblos de Oaxaca APPO y el fortalecimiento y reactivación de los lazos internacionales en solidaridad con las luchas de los Pueblos del Mundo, hacemos extensa la invitación a que nos acompañes en el evento cultural que llevaremos a cabo la ya conocida Peña del Bronx.


Evento:

Presentación y breve charla del libro TEACHING REBELLION del Colectivo CASA-Chapulín Oaxaca. Libro compuesto de 23 testimonios de la gente que se involucro activamente en el Movimiento Social APPO-Oaxaca-2006. http://teachingrebellion.wordpress.com/

Exposición Fotográfica: OAXACA ATAKA (Vilcoyote), mas de 35 fotografías blanco y negro que muestras la dignidad y rebeldía del pueblo Oaxaqueño durante los meses más álgidos del movimiento de la APPO. http://teachingrebellion.wordpress.com/2008/10/18/gustavo-slideshow/

Iniciativa Mérida (plan México): Breve charla y explicación de como nuestra comunidad puede contrarrestar dicho acuerdo. Presentado por Friends of Brad Will. http://www.friendsofbradwill.org/

Performance musical: Rebel Díaz acompañando y finalizando el evento con su rebelde y explosiva música. http://www.rebeldiaz.com/


Entrada Libre
(Donaciones)

Fecha: 19 de Febrero del 2009
Hora: 8 a 10 pm
Lugar
: La Peña del Bronx
478 Austin Place
Bronx, NY
10455

Subway 6 (local) 149th st. Satation.




Evento realizado con el esfuerzo de:

La Peña del Bronx
Rebel Díaz
Art Collective
http://www.rebeldiaz.com/

Friends of Brad Will
http://www.friendsofbradwill.org/

Colectivo CASA
http://www.casacollective.org/en

y la comunidaaa!



____________________________________________

por eso gritamos y exigimos

YA BASTA DE IMPUNIDAD
NO A LA INICIATIVA MERIDA
STOP PLAN MEXICO

Sunday, January 11, 2009

ATTEMPTED MURDER OF COMRADE RUBÉN VALENCIA NÚÑEZ

In the latest of a string of intimidations and attacks, an attempt is made on the life of the libertarian activist and former APPO Councillor RUBÉN VALENCIA NUÑEZ.

Oaxaca de Magon
City of Resistance
Saturday 10th January 2009
Spanish original: http://vocal.lahaine.org/articulo.php?p=211&more=1&c=1
English translation from libcom.org: http://libcom.org/news/attempted-murder-appo-activist-12012009

Urgent Action: ATTEMPTED MURDER OF COMRADE RUBÉN VALENCIA NÚÑEZ

We wish to denounce the intimidatory actions that have endangered the life of our comrade in the popular movement in Oaxaca

FACTS:
Tonight, Saturday 10th January at approximately 10:57 at night, our comrade RUBÉN VALENCIA NUÑEZ and another person were walking on the street Porfirio Díaz, headed for the political-cultural space 'CASOTA', found at 408 Crespo, in the centre of the city of Oaxaca. A number of persons (approximately three), on board a moving vehicle, colour electric blue and apparently a Peugeot began to shout insults. One of them shouted "Fucking APPO" in the direction of comrade RUBÈN, amongst other things. One then attempted to exit the vehicle but was dissuaded by the others not to do so before the vehicle continued on, stopping about a block away.

Faced with this situation, the comrades continued walking and took refuge in a café on that same street. Only five minutes after arriving and whilst comrade RUBÉN VALENCIA NUÑEZ was in the bathroom washing his hands, the same person who had shouted at him in the street entered the premises full of people, and installed himself next to the bathroom with our comrade inside it. Without any exchange of words he produced a sharp, stabbing weapon and between pushes and shoves, aimed three blows at our comrade at the level of his neck, nape and head, causing three wounds. At this time the comrade only felt the blows (not realising they were wounds) as due to the pushing he had exited the bathroom area with the aggressor. During the confusion a waiter was caught up and was wounded in the neck by the same weapon.

The attacker, approximately 28, robust and with short hair (of the style common to the ministerial or judicial Police) remained blatantly barefaced in the place for several seconds more before later retreating, leaving behind the weapon. It was at this point that our comrade became aware of his injuries due to the blood that was quickly staining his clothes.

The comrade was taken to hospital to be attended to and is now out of danger. The wounds were: one cut, approximately 3.5cm long and 1cm deep at the nape of his neck. Another, approximately 3cm long and 1cm deep also in the neck, damage from a blow to the head and a scratch from the left eye to the ear, along with other scratches from the same weapon. Six stitches were needed in each wound and it must be noted that one wound was only 1cm from the jugular vein, which would have had fatal consequences had it reached it. The waiter was admitted with a neck wound by the same weapon, which we are unaware of the gravity.

We firmly denounce these acts as part of a strategy of repression and violence orchestrated by the government of the state of Oaxaca, but carried out through paramilitary police groups or civilians in the service of that same state. For this we denounce to the entire world the possibility of the initiation of a selective repression, in the style of the dirty war suffered by the social movements of this country thirty years ago. The aggression suffered at this moment by comrade RUBEN comes at the head of a string of aggressions, intimidations and detentions against different comrades in the social movement over recent months, and whilst none of which have been successful, demonstrate the authoritarian and illegal acts of the State that continue with this latest aggression, which may signal a new and yet more dangerous type of governmental repression and violence carried out by paramilitary police, paramilitaries and thugs in the service of the bad government of ULISES RUIS ORTIZ, in the style of a dirty war.

WE DECLARE:
-Our decision to continue on our path of building a different Oaxaca, where those who seek justice for the people are not repressed and where assassins are punished. A Oaxaca in which it is possible to live without fear or repression.
-These acts demonstrate the urgency of the need for change and the necessity to continue forward so that in the future murderers will not govern.

WE DEMAND:
-An end to the criminal strategies of repression and intimidation against the different struggles of the peoples of Oaxaca on the part of the Mexican State and the State Government.
-Respect for the life and peace of each of those comrades of the people of Oaxaca who continue building alternatives, for a just, dignified and free life.
-Punishment of those responsible for this action against comrade RUBÉN VALENCIA NUÑEZ.

We respectfully request that the peoples of Mexico and the World to be attentive of this situation that Could mark the beginning of a strategy of Dirty or Low-Intensity Warfare against the legitimate movement of the peoples of Oaxaca.

FRATERNALLY,

VOCAL (Oaxacan Voices Constructing Autonomy and Liberty)
CASOTA (Oaxacan House of Solidarity and Self-Sustaining Work)
University of the Earth-Oaxaca
Diploma of Barefoot Investigators

Sunday, January 4, 2009

Indy Media Chiapas- Coverage of the Festival of Dignified Rage

2 de enero. Otro Mundo, Otra Política. Festival de la Digna Rabia en Chiapas
Sábado 3 de Enero 2009 / Saturday January 3, 2009
La primera jornada del Festival Mundial de la Digna Rabia en el CIDECI-SCLC, contó en la mañana con la participación de compañeros y compañeras de UNOPII, UNIOS, de la CGT, de Ya Basta y de Justicia para el Barrio (NY). Dieron su palabra acompañados por parte de la comandancia del CCRI-CG, del SI Marcos y de las niñas Lupita y Toñita. La presentación y moderación de la mesa corrió a cargo del TCI Moisés.

En la tarde se dio continuidad a la mesa y dieron su palabras los y las compañeras del MTD Solano, del Comité de Solidaridad con los pueblos de Chiapas en lucha, de la Confederación Campesina de Perú y de la Revista Alana de Grecia. Después de esta última intervención en que se dio cuenta de la reciente revuelta popular en el país tras el asesinato del joven Alexis, el EZLN, de la mano de Lupita y Toñita, hizo entrega de un cuadro de Beatriz Aurora para los jóvenes rebeldes griegos. Para ellos fueron las primeras palabras del SI Marcos, en el primero de los siete vientos en los calendarios y geografías de los de abajo, la digna juventud rabiosa.

Leer crónica del 2 de enero del 2008 desde el CIDECI

Transimision en Vivo del Festival Mundial de la Digna Rabia en San Cristobal de las Casas
Viernes 2 de Enero 2009 / Friday January 2, 2009
2 de Enero.- Hoy ha iniciado el Festival Mundial de la Digna Rabia en el CIDECI en San Cristóbal de las Casas, Chiapas.

Las actividades del festival se están transmitiendo en vivo a través de la transmisión del festival
escuchar aquí

y a través de las transmisiones de los medios libres:

Regeneración Radio

o Vea el evento en video transmitido en vivo desde CIDECI
Vea el Video en Stream tambien


Transmision en VIVO del Festival Mundial de la Digna Rabia desde Oventic
Miércoles 31 de Diciembre 2008 / Wednesday December 31, 2008
Escucha la transmision en vivo de la bienvenida y de la ceremonia del año nuevo y decimo quinto aniversario del levantamiento Zapatista. La transmision se hará Diciembre 31 del 2008 en vivo desde el Caracol de Oventic.

Escucha la Bienvenida a las 21:00 horas, hora Zapatista, 20:00 horas, hora Mexico y Chicago.

Luego se transmitirá la ceremonia y celebración del aniversario y fiesta de la Digna Rabia a partir de las 23:00 horas, hora Zapatista, y las 22:00 horas, hora Mexico y Chicago.


Transmisión en vivo del Festival Mundial de la Digna Rabia
Viernes 26 de Diciembre 2008 / Friday December 26, 2008
26 de diciembre.- Hoy ha iniciado el Festival Mundial de la Digna Rabia en la Ciudad de México, luego continuará en Oventic, y en el CIDECI en San Cristóbal de las Casas, Chiapas.

Las actividades del festival se están transmitiendo en vivo a través de la transmisión del festival
escuchar aquí

y a través de las transmisiones de los medios libres:

Ke Huelga Radio

Regeneración Radio

Radio Zapote

Tambien se está transmitiendo en el 104.5 FM, transmisión de La Digna Rabia,

por el 102.9 FM, Ke Huelga Radio en la Ciudad de México,
y en Radio Frecuencia Libre 99.1 de FM en San Cristóbal de las Casas, Chiapas.

más información y el programa completo en la página del festival:

Página del Festival Mundial de la Digna Rabia

Saturday, December 27, 2008

Call for Support from CASA

Saludos a tod@s and warmest holiday greetings!

TeachingRebellionfront-small.jpgGreetings to CASA supporters, and to all our new friends from the Teaching Rebellion Speaking Tour. The tour was a success (see our weblog), and between two speakers and four facilitators, we covered much of the United States and Canada. The book is available for purchase online. Consider a copy for your friends, family, teachers... These stories of oppression in Oaxaca need to be heard, and spread.

The repression continues in Oaxaca, notably in the case of Brad Will’s murder, where protestors are being held responsible by authorities, despite ample evidence to the contrary. See CASA's website for urgent actions, interviews and analysis, including an interview with Juan Manuel Martinez, currently accused of the murder and held in Ixcotel.

Our Oaxacan companeros need your ongoing support and, unfortunately, so do we.

I’m sad to come with an urgent plea. Though book sales and donations were significant, we have committed all of those proceeds to publishing the book in Spanish and to supporting the people and organizations that made Teaching Rebellion a reality. Meanwhile, our fundraising for CASA's general fund has fallen short.

These are tough times for everyone. Many organizations big and small are calling out for help and slimming down. Fortunately, CASA requires very little to support our Mexico staff and maintain programs and facilities. With our streamlined budget, even small donations make an incredible impact for our operations in Mexico. This said, CASA needs to raise $2000 by early 2009 to be able to maintain our center for activists in Oaxaca and continue solidarity work in Chiapas.

If you value our work, if you see a need for activists to be hosted in Mexico to support and learn about social justice in Mexico, please make a tax-deductible donation. You can choose to make a recurring monthly donation, if you prefer. Either way, it's easy, and donations of any size will help keep us alive.

Thank you for reading. With your help, we look forward to being able to continue our mission through 2009.

En solidaridad,

Colectivos de Apoyo, Solidaridad y Accion

CASA
c/o Faithful Fools
230/234 Hyde St.
San Francisco, California 94102
US

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

CCR's message about human rights this week

"Today, CCR argued the case of innocent Canadian rendition victim Maher Arar in federal court. Maher was changing planes at JFK on his way home when he was sent to Syria to be tortured, interrogated and kept in a tiny underground cell for a year - the U.S. officials responsible, including John Ashcroft and FBI head Robert Mueller, want to keep his case out of court.

Tomorrow, the Supreme Court will hear the case of Jamal Iqbal, one of hundreds of Muslim, Arab and South Asian men rounded up in the New York area after 9/11 based on their religion and race. Ashcroft v. Iqbal is a companion case to CCR's class action, Turkmen v. Ashcroft, on behalf of the men swept up on minor immigration charges and kept in abusive conditions until they were cleared of any connection to terrorism. Muslim immigrants were treated as guilty of terrorism until proven innocent, and again, the U.S. officials responsible want to keep the case out of court.

It is fitting then, that this Wednesday, December 10, marks the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, a document championed by Eleanor Roosevelt at the United Nations in 1948 that still provides the finest guide to the most important rights inherent to all human beings.

When the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) was adopted by the UN General Assembly, it was the first time that the fundamental freedoms and rights of all people were set forth in detail by the international community. As World War II ended, the 58 Member States of the UN, despite wide variations in ideological, cultural, and political contexts, laid out a common vision for a world where every person is entitled to equal justice, opportunity and dignity without discrimination. Its principles continue to inspire national legislation and the constitutions of many new countries. Embodied within the UDHR are the right to life, liberty, and security of person, the right to be free from torture, arbitrary arrest and detention, the right to a fair and public hearing, the right to an adequate standard of living for health and well-being, the right to work, education, medical care and other essential social services and the right to freedom of opinion, expression and peaceful assembly and association. These are inherent rights belonging to all people and cannot be granted or withdrawn by anyone or any government.

CCR recognizes this anniversary by renewing the call for accountability to these critical universal standards. Accountability must be a cornerstone to any human rights agenda. Although a majority of states are legally bound to uphold their commitment to human rights and the UDHR, the reality is shockingly different. As a country, we do not guarantee shelter, medical care, or jobs to our citizens and residents. Racial profiling of Muslim, Arab and South Asian communities after 9/11, detention without trial, torture, the use of coerced evidence and other abhorrent practices that have come to define the current administration's "war on terror" show the United States consistently violating the human rights standards it is bound by. Through litigation and organizing, CCR is fighting to establish accountability for these standards at all levels of government and to achieve justice for the victims of human rights violations."

Political & Cultural Space in Oaxaca Raided, Fired On

Link

Casota-front-door

The destroyed front door of CASOTA

[Version en espanol despues del link]

Please spread the word about this incident. Until a week ago when I left Oaxaca, I lived in this space with many others, helping it get started. Last night it was raided by state and local police forces in Oaxaca. They opened fire on the house, used tear gas and beat those inside with bricks and batons. I'll pass on more information and actions to take when I have it, for now, please just use the communique. My English translation is first, followed by the Spanish original. - scott

To the people of Oaxaca
To the people of Mexico
To Section 22
To the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca
To the media

In the early morning of Monday, December 8, 2008, murderer Ulises Ruiz's Oaxacan state government, through its Preventative and Municipal police, onboard various police pickup trucks and motorcycles, violently attacked those who live and work in the political and cultural space of the house located at 408 Crespo Street in the historic center of Oaxaca, "Oaxacan Autonomous Solidarity House of Self-Sustaining (Autogestive) Work" (Casa Autonoma Solidaria Oaxaquena de Trabajo Autogestivo - CASOTA).

FACTS:
At approximately 12:30 AM, two State Preventative Police patrol units violently and without reason stopped two comrades who left the political space, forcing them to show identification and submit to pat-downs. One of them was detained and violently put into a police vehicle, while the rest of the comrades in this political space gathered to try and rescue our comrade, and once we got into the house around 15 preventative police trucks began their repressive aggression, without caring that inside the house was a child of no more than two years old, using tear gas, gunfire, and beatings with bricks. For about an hour they attacked the house, destroying the main door and windows.

As a result of the state police's aggression, various comrades have contusions from the rocks and billy clubs they repressed us with, and intoxicated with gas those of us who were inside the house, as well as causing considerable damage to the building, such as the destruction of the main door and windows and the bullet impacts that damaged the facade of the house.

WE DENOUNCE:
That this action was planned by the bad government of murderer Ulises Ruiz Ortiz as a consequence for our participation in the movement of the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca, it is known that those who make up this space continue participating in the movement and we maintain a complete repudiation of the bad government of Ulises Ruiz and we continue in the search for a profound and radical change in our society in a peaceful but forceful manner and in an open struggle against the state, the bad government and the political classes of all the political parties.

Moreover, we denounce that this cultural and political house, where diverse collectives and people in the APPO, among others VOCAL, meet, have been constantly criminalized by the bad government and some segments of the media in a tenacious manner, above all for what happened on November 25, 2008, when we participated in the march commemorating two years of the worst repression the people of Oaxaca have ever faced.

WE DECLARE:
That this aggression with not stop those who make up this space in their search for a society with justice, freedom, peace and dignity, even though this has awakened the hate, criminal anxiety and violence of the bad government.

That this aggression is not an isolated incident but forms a part of the bad government's general strategy to strangle and suffocate the reorganization that is currently happening inside of the APPO.

That this cultural and political space located at Crespo 408 is a place where we practice peaceful initiatives to construct a new society in an autonomous manner independent of the state, the economic powers, and the political classes of all political parties. This has been done principally through different workshops where we share our skills freely, as in silk screening, binding, editing and printing of texts, urban agriculture, a peoples kitchen, recycling, electronics repair and activities such as video screenings and talks, performances of resistance music, and other political-cultural events.

WE REQUEST in a fraternal and firm manner the backing and solidarity of the people of Oaxaca who struggle and resist, of Section 22 of the democratic teachers' union, and of the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca, that this aggression is a clear display of the repressive and violent climate through which Ulises Ruiz is again trying to suffocate the reorganization of our social movement, and above all, all those sectors the don't give in to negotiations or to the surrendering the principles of the APPO and the just struggle of the people of Oaxaca.

WE FIRMLY DEMAND:
An end to the repression and harassment of the different collectives and persons who live and work in this space and the complete repayment for the damages caused to the building as well as the immediate removal of the police forces who permanently harass and surveill this space.

WE INVITE YOU TO PARTICIPATE IN A BLOCKADE ABOVE CRESPO 408 (ON THE SIDE OF THE RETIREMENT HOME) TODAY, DECEMBER 8, AT 5PM.

WE MAKE AN URGENT CALL TO ALL THE PEOPLE OF OAXACA, THE ORGANIZATIONS IN THE POPULAR ASSEMBLY OF THE PEOPLE OF OAXACA, THE DEMOCRATIC TEACHERS' UNION OF SECTION 22, FOR THE REPUDIATION OF THIS AGGRESSION WHICH WE SUFFERED AND WE ASK FOR YOU TO JOIN US TO DEFEND THIS SPACE, WHICH IS OPEN TO THE PEOPLE OF OAXACA, IN A FORCEFUL AND MASSIVE MANNER.

BECAUSE TO PROTEST IS NOT A CRIME:
FREE POLITICAL PRISONERS!
THE APPO LIVES, THE STRUGGLE CONTINUES!
JUSTICE, FREEDOM, PEACE, DIGNITY!

FRATERNALLY:
OAXACAN AUTONOMOUS SOLIDARITY HOUSE OF SELF-SUSTAINING WORK (CASOTA)
MAGONIST LIBERTARIAN COLLECTIVE
OAXACAN VOICES CONSTRUCTING AUTONOMY AND FREEDOM (VOCAL)

Oaxaca de Magon, City of Resistance, December 8, 2008.


---------------------------------------

Al pueblo de Oaxaca
Al pueblo de Mexico
A la seccion 22
A la Asamblea Popular de los Pueblos de Oaxaca
A los medios de comunicacion

La madrugada del dia lunes 8 de diciembre de 2008, el gobierno del estado de Oaxaca del asesino Ulises Ruiz, a traves de las Policia Preventiva y Municipal, a bordo de varias patrullas y motos realizaron una agresion violenta en contra de quienes vivimos y trabajamos en el espacio politico y cultural de la casa ubicada en la calle de crespo Numero 408 del centro historico "Casa Autonoma Solidaria Oaxaquena de Trabajo Autogestivo".

Hechos:
Aproximadamente a las 0:30 de la madrugada, dos patrullas de la policia preventiva estatal detuvieron con violencia y sin ningun motivo a dos companeros que salian de este espacio politico, a pesar de que los dos fueron obligados a mostrar sus documentos y ser sometidos a revision, uno de ellos fue detenido y subido a una de las patrullas de manera violenta ante lo cual los companeros que habitamos este espacio politico acudimos a rescatar a nuestro companero, una vez que entramos a la casa empezo la agresion represiva de alrededor de 15 patrullas de la policia preventiva, sin importar que al interior se encontraba un nino de no mas de dos anos, quienes con gases lacrimogenos, disparos de armas de fuego y pedazos de tabique, durante alrededor de una hora agredieron la casa, destrozando la puerta principal y ventanas del inmueble.

Como resultado de la agresion los policias estatales produjeron contusiones a varios companeros con las piedras y toletes con los que nos reprimieron e intoxicaron con gases a quienes nos encontramos dentro de la casa, ademas que produjeron danos considerables al edificio, como el destrozo de la puerta principal y de las ventanas, los impactos de armas de fuego causaron danos a la fachada del edificio.

Denunciamos:
Que esta accion fue planeada por el mal gobierno del asesino Ulises Ruiz Ortiz, como consecuencia de nuestra participacion en el movimiento de la Asamblea Popular de los Pueblos de Oaxaca, pues es conocido que quienes formamos parte de este espacio seguimos participando en el movimiento y mantenemos en todo lo alto el repudio al mal gobierno de Ulises Ruiz y seguimos en la busqueda de un cambio profundo y radical de nuestra sociedad de manera pacifica pero contundente y en abierta lucha en contra del estado, el mal gobierno y la clase politica de todos los partidos politicos.

Denunciamos ademas que esta casa cultural y politico, donde diversos colectivos y personas del movimiento de la APPO, entre ellos VOCAL, nos reunimos, ha sido criminalizada constantemente por el mal gobierno y algunos medios de comunicacion de manera insistente, sobre todo a raiz de los hechos ocurridos el dia 25 de noviembre de 2008, cuando participamos en la marcha que conmemoro los dos anos de la peor represion que han sufrido nuestros pueblos de Oaxaca.

Declaramos:
Que esta agresion no detendra a quienes formamos parte de este espacio en la busqueda de una sociedad con justicia, libertad, paz y dignidad, aun cuando esto despierte el odio, el ansia de crimen y violencia del mal gobierno.

Que esta agresion no es aislada sino forma parte de una estrategia general del mal gobierno para coartar y sofocar la reorganizacion que en este momento esta ocurriendo dentro de nuestro movimiento de la APPO.

Que este espacio cultural y politico ubicado en crespo 408 es un lugar donde hacemos iniciativas pacificas de construccion de una nueva sociedad de manera autonoma e independiente del estado, del poder economico y de la clase politica de todos los partidos politicos. Principalmente a traves de diferentes talleres donde se comparten conocimientos de manera gratuita, como serigrafia, empastado, edicion e impresion de textos, agricultura urbana, cocina popular, reciclaje, arreglo de equipos electronicos y actividades como video platicas, convivencias musicales de resistencia y otros eventos politico culturales.

SOLICITAMOS de manera fraterna y firme el respaldo y la solidaridad de los pueblos de Oaxaca que luchan y resisten, de la Seccion 22 del Magisterio democratico y de la Asamblea Popular de los Pueblos de Oaxaca pues esta agresion, es una clara muestra del clima represivo y violento con que Ulises Ruiz pretende nuevamente sofocar la reorganizacion de nuestro movimiento social, sobre todo aquellos sectores que no se rinden a la negociacion y la claudicacion de los principios de la APPO y de la lucha justa de los pueblos de Oaxaca.

EXIGIMOS FIRMEMENTE:
El cese de la represion y hostigamiento en contra de los diferentes colectivos y personas que habitamos y trabajamos en este espacio y la indemnizacion total por los danos causados en el edificio ademas del retiro inmediato de los cuerpos policiacos que de manera permanente acosan y mantienen vigilado este espacio.

LOS INVITAMOS A PARTICIPAR EN UN BLOQUEO A LA ALTURA DE CRESPO 408 (AL LADO DEL ASILO DE ANCIANOS) A LAS 5 DE LA TARDE HOY 8 DE DICIEMBRE.

HACEMOS UN LLAMADO URGENTE A TODOS LOS PUEBLOS DE OAXACA, A LAS ORGANIZACIONES DE LA ASAMBLEA POPULAR DE LOS PUEBLOS DE OAXACA, AL MAGISTERIO DEMOCRATICO DE LA SECCION 22, PARA REPUDIAR ESTA AGRESION QUE SUFRIMOS Y LOS CONVOCAMOS A DEFENDER ESTE ESPACIO, QUE ESTA ABIERTO AL PUEBLO DE OAXACA, DE MANERA CONTUNDENTE Y MASIVA.

POR QUE PROTESTAR NO ES DELITO:
!PRESOS POLITICOS LIBERTAD!
!LA APPO VIVE, LA LUCHA SIGUE!
!JUSTICIA, LIBERTAD, PAZ, DIGNIDAD!

FRATERNALMENTE:
CASA AUTONOMA SOLIDARIA OAXAQUENA DE TRABAJO AUTOGESTIVO
COLECTIVO LIBERTARIO MAGONISTA
VOCES OAXAQUENAS CONSTRUYENDO AUTONOMIA Y LIBERTAD


Oaxaca de Magon, Ciudad de la Resistencia a 8 de deciembre de 2008.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

THE FOUR HORSEMEN OF CHIAPAS : TOURIST DEVELOPMENT, MINING, “BIO”FUELS, AND NOW OIL

http://narcosphere.narconews.com/notebook/jessica-davies/2008/12/four-horsemen-chiapas

In Spanish at Maderas Del Pueblo English

"1. OIL

What Hermann Bellinghausen calls the ‘four horsemen of Chiapas’ have come into focus again with the announcement that Pemex are to start prospecting and drilling for oil in the Lacandon Jungle, among other areas in the Mexican South-East. In 2009, private companies will be invited to tender for this work. During her visit to Chiapas, the Mexican Energy Secretary Georgina Kessel predicted that the Chiapas oilfields could be producing 500,000 barrels of oil a day from 17,000 new wells by 2021. The Zapatistas have always predicted that this prospecting would happen, especially in their heartland area of La Garrucha, invaded by the Mexican army in June 2008. The announcement generated opposition from indigenous communities, and two days later, Ms Kessel denied her previous statement: “I never said there were going to be oil explorations in the Selva Lacandona”. When asked where Pemex’s new refinery would be situated, she replied that this was a ‘highly technical’ matter.

2. “BIO”FUELS (1)

During her meeting with Chiapas governor Juan Sabines, Georgina Kessel also announced the construction of a “bio”-fuel plant, to produce “bio”-diesel using Colombian technology. She said Chiapas was a “strategic location” for this plant. The diesel would be produced from Jatropha curcus, a native to Central America. This controversial plant is a member of the Euphorbia family, and is also known as Black Vomit Nut, due to its toxic properties, which can affect humans and animals. As few as three seeds have been found to produce a toxic reaction. The plant has been banned in parts of India. It is popular because it can be grown in dry, marginal soils. Experts predict at least 7,500 acres of monoculture production of this crop will be required to supply the plant. Two previous such plants in Mexico, funded by the state at a cost of $US 500,000 have been abandoned due to the lack of a market for this relatively expensive form of fuel.

3. MINES

The granting of mining concessions to transnational companies, many of them Canadian, is growing in Chiapas, particularly in the Sierra Madre, and the Frontier region. Canadian mining companies are notorious throughout Latin America, from Peru to Guatemala, for their ruthless eviction of traditional communities and for their devastation and pollution of lands and rivers. There are apparently 55 new mining applications pending in Chiapas, for the exploration and extraction until 2056 of gold, silver, copper, barite, lead, titanium, iron, zinc, antimony, molybdenum, and other minerals needed for the oil industry. The JBG of La Realidad were approached by a mining company in 2007 who offered a clinic, equipment, medicines, a salary of over 200 pesos a day and a good payment in return for a mining agreement. Their reply was “our dignity has no price”.

4. TOURIST DEVELOPMENTS

The planned vast tourist development for the area between Palenque and San Cristobal has been delayed by the international financial crisis, Sabines announced on November 23; however the airport at Palenque is going ahead at a cost of 240 million pesos. The current proposed site is now considered a haven for drug traffickers. There are negotiations going on for a new site with the owners of fields near the current airport where the viability of the soil for crop-growing has been destroyed by growing oil palm and rubber as monoculture, according to La Jornada, describing the situation as “full neoliberalism”. They also show a photo of a road being built to the Caracol of Roberto Barrios, together with a bridge over the river, part of the planned tourist development. Another 140 million pesos has already been spent on the controversial highway between San Cristobal and Palenque.

RESURGENCE OF PLAN PUEBLA PANAMA

This ambitious neo-liberal development has now been recycled as ‘the Mesoamerica Project’, but it involves the same four horsemen of Chiapas: tourism, minerals, “bio”energy and oil. It now has the added link with Colombia. The international market and the multinationals demand road construction, minerals, tourist infrastructure and agro-industry. These developments are not, however, going ahead without substantial grassroots community opposition. (2)

OIL, MINES, INFRASTRUCTURE AND PLANTATIONS: THE AGGRESSIVE PILLAGE OF BIODIVERSITY AND THE PLUNDER OF INDIGENOUS LANDS IN CHIAPAS.

PUBLIC COMMUNIQUE ISSUED 23/11/08 BY THE NGO ‘MADERAS DEL PUEBLO’

On 21st November , during a trip to the state of Chiapas, the Mexican Energy Secretary, Georgina Kessel, made two official announcements which imply further very serious threats to the rich biodiversity of the state of Chiapas and to the rights and the lands of the indigenous peoples of the region.

These announcements relate, on the one hand, to the imminent exploitation of oil deposits in the Lacandon Jungle, and, on the other, to the construction in Chiapas of a “bio”-fuel plant, using Colombian technology (together with its extensive rapacious monoculture plantations of African oil palm), which - according to Kessel and to Governor Juan Sabines – represent “more progress and development for the benefit of the families of Chiapas”.

In addition, we need to add to this picture the accelerating growth, in the Sierra, Frontier, and Central regions of Chiapas, of mining concessions in favour of multinational companies, mainly of Canadian origin; as well as the recent official decision from the Calderon government, announced on the 20th November by the Secretaries of Public Finance and Communication – and encouraged and praised by the cartel of building companies headed by Carlos Slim – to consider public investment in infrastructure (motorways, like the planned one between San Cristobal and Palenque; dams like la Parota or Boca el Cerro; oil extraction, and airports) as “the most important foundation of the official plan to confront the international economic crisis”.

With this, the federal and state governments have shown that they have embarked on a ‘schizophrenic demagogy’ in which, at the same time as they announce policies, programmes and “green” resources to tackle climate change, there is an obvious contradiction as they are clearly demonstrating themselves in favour of a return to a savage capitalism, of a short-term and extractive character, together with the interests of grand capital, of the biotechnology and pharmaceutical sectors, of those producing bottled water and all those keen to convert wood and forest cover into “sinks” for the multinational carbon market; of all those hiding behind a disguise of green philanthropy and supported by cross-governmental, national and international organisations, and calling themselves “conservationists”, and who have been encouraging and applauding the official policy of pillaging and plundering the biodiverse indigenous territories and turning them into ‘Protected Natural Areas’ “for the benefit of humanity”.

Today, with the recent announcements in favour of short-term predatory and extractive capital , multinational “conservation” organisations and corporations will be able to say to themselves “no one knows who we are working for....”

( The basic question is: Will the indigenous people and campesino communities, with their lands, natural resources and rights all threatened, permit this proposed plunder to take place?)

Maderas del Pueblo del Sureste, A.C., San Cristobal de Las Casas, Chiapas, Nov 23, 2008 (3)"

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

From the Chicago Police Department to CIA Black Sites: Ending Torture

December 2, 2008
6:00-7:30 PM
DePaul University Law School
Lewis Building Room 804
25 East Jackson Street (between State and Wabash)
Chicago, IL

Join Vincent Warren, CCR Executive Director, Joey Mogul, Attorney at the
People's Law Office and Flint Taylor, People's Law Office Founding Partner,
as they discuss their work to end torture. From the notorious Chicago cases
involving the torture of over 100 African American men over a 20 year
period, for which former Chicago police commander Jon Burge was recently
indicted by the FBI on charges of perjury and obstruction of justice, to
U.S. torture and war crimes in Abu Ghraib, Guantánamo Bay and CIA secret
detention sites, torture is perpetrated around the world. Learn more about
what's being done to end torture at this exciting event sponsored by the
National Lawyers Guild - DePaul Chapter, the National Lawyers Guild -
Chicago Chapter and the Center for Constitutional Rights.

Monday, December 1, 2008

Teaching Rebellion On Worldview



"Last week, Reporters Without Borders announced that a local reporter in Oaxaca Mexico was beaten and psychologically tortured for 12 hours on the night of October 25th before being dumped outside the city.

The incident is one of many over the last two years in the after math of the 2006 grassroots protests in the southern Mexican city.

In late 2006, tens of thousands of striking public school teachers joined with indigenous, youth and labor organizations to launch a civil disobedience campaign in Oaxaca. Once just a teachers strike, the protests grew into a movement that took over the capital city with calls for Oaxaca’s governor to resign. Clashes between security forces and protestors resulted in the deaths of over two dozen protestors.

Among the dead was U.S. journalist Brad Will.

Over 2,000 people marched across the state capital in the dead journalist’s memory last month. In the U.S., protesters staged a hunger strike outside of Senator Hillary Clinton's New York office. The Mexican government marked the occasion by charging Oaxacan activist leaders with Brad's murder.

My next guest has a warrant out for his arrest and is worried that he’ll be charged with if he goes home. Photographer Gustavo Vilchis accompanied the dying journalist to the hospital.

Gustavo is in the U.S. promoting the book Teaching Rebellion: Stories from the Grassroots Movement in Oaxaca. It’s a collection of testimonies from participants in the Oaxacan social movement. The book also features Gustavo’s photography and his account of Brad Will’s murder.

We also spoke with Rachel Wallis, Board Member with CASA, Collectives of Support, Solidarity and Action (Colectivos de Apoyo, Solidaridad y Acción). They helped put together the book Teaching Rebellion and she interpreted for Gustavo."

Thursday, November 13, 2008

ICE Raids, Due Process, and the Separation of Powers Tues the 18th

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Examining Immigration Policy History: The Bracero Guest Worker Program

Examining Immigration Policy History: The Bracero Guest Worker Program

Tour Schedule
Please email laureneva@mexicosolidarity.org for more details. Presentation times, locations & directions will be added as they are confirmed.

11/14: Chicago, IL @ DePaul University

As we prepare for a new administration with hopes of a more humane and just policy regarding immigration, it is helpful to review lessons from the past. The current administration and many others have been busy promoting reform measures similar to the post-World War II Bracero program. During this program migrant workers were little more than indentured servants with contracts dependent upon specific employers. Workers were vulnerable to extreme exploitation and were unable to negotiate the terms of their employment. Under these contracts, the US government withheld 10% of their wages, allegedly for a retirement fund that "encouraged" Braceros to return to Mexico. But the money disappeared - billions of dollars lost either to corrupt US bankers or Mexican government officials.

Thousands of ex-Braceros have organized to demand their retirement funds. Recently, the Mexican government agreed to pay four thousand dollars in total to Braceros who are registered with a government agency, a tiny fraction of the billions that rightly belong to these senior citizens. The ex-Braceros are demanding full justice, but the US and Mexican governments turn a deaf ear. The need for full repayment is urgent as most ex-Braceros are now over 70 years
old.

The Mexico Solidarity Network will accompany an ex-Bracero,Don Felipe Munos, from Tlaxcala,
Mexico, where nearly 10,000 are now organized in the National Assembly of ex-Braceros to: discuss the historic impact of guest worker programs in the US and the struggle to recuperate lost wages provide additional social and economic context discuss strategies on how we can work together at the grassroots level to demand justice that is long overdue understand how current
immigration trends are linked to US trade policies like NAFTA and CAFTA.

Done Felipe: A Short Bio

Don Felipe Munos was born in 1920, the last of 12 brothers, several of which lived to a hundred years-old. His father died when he was 21, and his mother ten years after. For most of his early life, Don Felipe worked in a factory, quitting to buy and work the land in the 1930s. He is a founding member of the National Assembly of Former Braceros of Tlaxcala, which has been fighting since 1999 for the recovery of 10% of their savings which was deducted when they worked in the States United as part of the Bracero Program. Philip Don was hired on three occasions during the Bracero Program, and was sent to California (1944), Michigan (1955) and Texas (1963). Currently 88 years-old, Don Felipe farms a small plot of land (ejido) where he lives in Tlaxcala, Mexico.


Cicero Declares New Protections for Immigrant Residents

Cicero Declares New Protections for Immigrant Residents
A New Direction for Suburban Communities

Celebration to Be Held Sunday, Nov. 16th after 4:00pm mass at St. Mary Queen of Heaven Church. 5300 W. 24th St.

On Nov. 12th, President Dominick signed the Safe Space Resolution into law. The resolution developed from the efforts of the Interfaith Leadership Project and the Latino Union of Chicago to increase protections and counter the fear rippling through immigrant communities.

"After we saw what happened in Waukegan and Carpentersville, we knew we had to do something to prevent that here," explains Delia Barajas, a Cicero resident. Residents and day laborers met with the Town to express their concerns and present the resolution modeled after 75 other cities across the country.

"Previous Cicero administrations didn't have the best reputation for how they treated immigrant residents. With the new President, we saw a real opportunity to improve things," states Gonzalo Cruz. "We wanted to make sure that the police wouldn't ask people about their status. If someone is the victim or witness to a crime, we wanted them to have the confidence to seek help. The Safe Space Resolution makes that possible."

As suburbs become the new port of entry for immigrant communities, how local municipalities approach their growing immigrant population is a crucial question. Cicero, like Chicago, St. Paul, and others has taken steps to serve as a counterpoint to the anti-immigrant measures that have caused mass exodus from locations such as Carpentersville. With a new law on the books, a new era in Cicero history of cooperation and good relations can continue to take root.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Latin America Sends Obama Congratulations—and a Piece of its Mind


Laura Carlsen | November 7, 2008



Americas Policy Program, Center for International Policy (CIP)

Pundits have said that the election of Barack Obama to the presidency of the United States will not change the nation's world image overnight. But in Latin America, it already has.

Congratulations have poured in from Western Hemisphere leaders, press, and citizens. Most celebrate how the United States "has broken racial barriers" by electing the first African-American president. In countries struggling with issues of diversity and discrimination, this is major news—and news they didn't expect to come out of the inertial U.S. political system. Afro-American populations in Brazil and elsewhere greeted the occasion with added enthusiasm.

But fascination with the 2008 U.S. elections in Latin Americans goes beyond race. After watching from afar as Americans elected George W. Bush amid accusations of fraud that were buried by the courts, and then did it again in 2004, any suggestion that the U.S. electoral system could generate change in that country would ordinarily be met with skepticism. For many, the election of Barack Obama showed a capacity for changing course and a level of citizen participation not thought possible.

Latin Americans really despise George W. Bush. There, Bush popularity hit some of its lowest marks in the world. Obama has a tremendous leg-up in Latin America simply for not being George Bush—or of his ilk. Most believe that the president-elect will at least to some degree turn away from the radical foreign policy of unilateralism and U.S. hegemony in the region.

While Bush policy did not include military interventions, it did consist of relentless bullying to force nations to accept Washington economic models, as codified in Free Trade Agreements, and Bush foreign policy, as expressed in the counterterrorism paradigm and the invasion of Iraq. When nations like Bolivia or Ecuador refused to toe the line, the Bush administration applied measures designed to economically and diplomatically isolate those nations, divide the continent, and promote domestic opposition. The inflexibility and unwillingness to enter into real dialogue deepened resentments, even among allies.

Congratulations—With Conditions

An improved U.S. global image is not the same as on-the-ground policies and actions. Although statements from the region welcome change and the new profile in the White House, Latin American leaders still aren't running to the mountaintop to proclaim the dawn of a new era in U.S. relations. The response can be characterized more as hope seen through the ever-leery eye the continent keeps on its northern neighbor. The U.S. government has a long way to go to undo the damage done to its relations and its reputation through decades of both Republican and Democratic presidencies.

Latin American leaders placed conditions and qualifications on their congratulations. Lula in Brazil and Evo Morales in Bolivia called for an end to the "unjustifiable" embargo against Cuba. Morales added a demand for withdrawal of U.S. troops from the region. Mexico's Felipe Calderon sent a brief congratulatory note, calling for strengthening bilateral relations and emphasizing the role of Mexican-Americans in the elections and the U.S. economy. This was his way of insisting on action toward legalizing the status of Mexican immigrants and creating legal frameworks for future immigration flows.

Argentina's President Cristina Kirchner called Obama's election "a great moment on the journey against discrimination and for equality of opportunities" and urged the new president to commit to multilateralism in confronting the financial crisis: "... those who faced the challenge of the world war understood the importance of multilateralism, and we should also ... deepen the needed and urgent changes so multilateralism can respond to the complexities of our realities."

Hugo Chavez stated his hope "to build a constructive bilateral agenda" with the new President Obama, while getting his last digs in at Bush. The U.S.-Venezuela relationship embodies the major challenges facing regional foreign policy, and has been particularly fractious. The two nations are critical to each other's economies as trade partners, and Venezuela oil imports play a key role in U.S. energy security. Yet relations between Hugo Chavez and Bush deteriorated to the point of breaking off diplomatic (but not economic) relations last September. Chavez has spearheaded a move to regional integration sans Uncle Sam that the Bush administration considers a threat to its interests, and espouses "socialism of the XXI century."

Obama has offered to sit down and talk with Chavez and Chavez says he's ready to reciprocate the offer, "and work together against the evils of the world, hunger, AIDS, poverty, malnutrition." He hailed Obama's promise to "close the torture center at Guantanamo, withdraw troops from Iraq, and converse with the presidents who have been pointed to as the evil axis" (a tongue-in-cheek allusion to himself and other world leaders so designated by President Bush).

Rafael Correa offered declarations regarding his moderate expectations for new relations with the U.S. government. "I think that the foreign policy (of the United States) will be more reasonable, more human, less imperialist; I believe that there will be more attention to Latin America, but I don't believe there will be radical changes," he said on a television interview.

Even Pres. Alvaro Uribe of Colombia tagged petitions on his congratulations note. And Uribe is painfully aware that he's in no position to ask for favors. Uribe openly supported John McCain for the presidency, hosted his visit to South America, and bitterly criticized the Democratic candidate for his refusal to support the Free Trade Agreement now stalled in Congress over Colombia's dismal human rights record.

In spite of being the nation most dependent on U.S. aid, Uribe painted himself into a Republican corner just as the Democrats were poised to gain control of the White House and Congress. Analyst Daniel Garcia Peña quoted by AFP notes, "(In these elections) President Uribe also loses because he took on the ideological and bellicose agenda of George W. Bush, a politics that was defeated by U.S. citizens ... Obama has a very different set of priorities from Bush in the agenda with Colombia." Uribe's "asks" included continuation of funding for Plan Colombia and passage of the FTA, citing dubious statistics on reduction of the Colombian cocaine flow to the U.S. market, and ended stating that given the successes Plan Colombia "... must be considered before it's abandoned."

The phrase indicates he's really worried about the future of the controversial military aid plan. Unless he knows more than he's letting on, it's hard to understand exactly why. If there is one point where Obama has followed in the Bush footprints, it's security issues. He supports Plan Colombia and extension of the regional drug war under Plan Mexico (the Merida Initiative). For Colombian human rights activists, indigenous protesters, and union leaders, Uribe's expulsion from the haven provided by his primary financial and political supporter in the hemisphere offers an opportunity to seek more peaceful solutions. But so far Obama's campaign statements give them mostly just hope for a different attitude in Washington.

Correa said his real dream is that "the day will come when Latin America, really, doesn't have to worry about who is in the presidency of the United States, because it will be sovereign and autonomous enough to stand on its own two feet." In the meantime, Latin America remains highly dependent on what happens in the United States. The interconnectedness of not just markets but human lives, make U.S. politics more than a game of idle speculation.

President Obama rides in on a wave of enthusiasm from the South and the North. He has a huge agenda awaiting him. He should quickly appoint new ambassadors in Latin America, diplomats with greater knowledge and sensitivity to the region. Currently Bolivia and Venezuela have no ambassadors at all and other Bush appointments represent old and repudiated ways of doing business.

By far the most important challenge will be to listen. Bush imposed an agenda that sought to divide the continent in the narrow pursuit of the economic interests of transnational corporations and political interests of his own administration.

When Mexicans say: "If you don't develop a fair and legal immigration system, you push migrants into the hands of human smugglers and feed organized crime. We have to do something differently."

When Bolivia says: "Our constitutional process is a long-overdue historical reckoning with an indigenous majority suffering poverty and discrimination. It deserves a chance."

These are messages worth listening to.

Latin America is a good place to start to lay out a new foreign policy approach of non-intervention, multilateralism, and mutual respect. The region poses no real threats, and is not a hotspot for war or international terrorism. Democratic societies there are on the cutting edge of redistribution efforts aimed at what Obama tepidly suggests with his theme of dismantling policies that "help Wall Street but hurt Main Street." A good neighbor foreign policy could create more horizontal relations directed toward shared objectives like peace, justice, stability, security, and well-being rather than the pursuit of the narrow interests of the rich and powerful.

This is the kind of change many people down here are hoping for under an Obama presidency.

Laura Carlsen (lcarlsen(at)ciponline.org) is director of the Americas Policy Program (www.americaspolicy.org) in Mexico City, where she has been an analyst and writer for two decades.

Americas Policy Program, Center for International Policy (CIP)








The Merida Initiative, providing $500 million dollars in aid primarily to Mexican military and police forces, is now before Congress. Find out how U.S. taxpayers' money could wind up increasing impunity, corruption, and human rights violations in Mexico, while missing the mark in the battle against drug-related violence. Defeat Plan Mexico Sign On.


Related Americas Policy Program Articles:

A Primer on Plan Mexico
http://americas.irc-online.org/am/5204

Hemispheric Conference against Militarization Says No to Merida Initiative, U.S. Military Bases
http://americas.irc-online.org/am/5605

Plan Mexico and the Billion-Dollar Drug Deal
http://americas.irc-online.org/am/4611
Also in Spanish here.

Plan Mexico
http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4684

Other resources:

Laura Carlsen appeared on the Merida Initiative panel discussion at the Americas Social Forum in Guatemala. Listen to all the panelists to learn more at http://www.narconews.com/Issue54/articulo3218.html.

Defeat Plan Mexico Sign On
http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/dia/organizationsORG/gx/petition.jsp?petition_KEY=978

AFL-CIO Letter: http://americas.irc-online.org/pdf/MeridaInitiative_AFL-CIO_letter.pdf

Leaked document #1: http://americas.irc-online.org/pdf/MeridaInitiative_FY08-09_descriptions_1-2.pdf

Leaked document #2: http://americas.irc-online.org/pdf/MeridaInitiative_FY08-09_descriptions_3.pdf

NO to Plan Mexico (article by John Gibler)
http://www.globalexchange.org/countries/americas/mexico/planmexico

Friends of Brad Will Plan Mexico site
http://www.friendsofbradwill.org/category/plan-mexico/

Listen to an informative talk by Laura Carlsen here:
http://www.radio4all.net/pub/files/knash@igc.org/123-1-20080302-planmexicontl.mp3

Radio interview with Harry Bubbins:
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2008/03/28/18489141.php

Blip TV panel (approximately 17 minutes)
http://blip.tv/file/717142/

USW press release on Plan Mexico here.

Public Service Announcement on Plan Mexico: (3.5 minutes)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zfImBQGg6RM

CRS Report for Congress "Proposed U.S. Anticrime and Counterdrug Assistance for Mexico and Central America"
http://fpc.state.gov/documents/organization/103694.pdf

Congressional Budget Office Cost Estimate May 21, 2008
http://www.govtrack.us/data/us/110/bills.cbo/h6028.pdf

"Defeat Plan Mexico" is now a group on Facebook.

Americas Policy Program Mexico Blog:
www.americasmexico.blogspot.com

Compact for Racial Justice





The Compact for Racial Justice offers concrete strategies and policy proposals to reverse racial disparities and move our society towards full equity, inclusion and dignity for all people. The Compact transcends talk of personal prejudice with compelling evidence of institutional racism and realistic proactive solutions. It seeks to engage a broad multiracial base of activists, opinion leaders and policymakers in making government and powerful institutions accountable for eliminating racial inequality in our schools, hospitals, courtrooms and workplaces.

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Illinois

Did you know the name "Illinois" is an Algonquian word? It comes from the Miami-Illinois tribal name Illiniwek, which means "the people."

Chiapas Media Project/Promedios 10 YR Anniversary



On Saturday November 8th in Pilsen, Chiapas Media Project/Promedios will be opening a photo exhibit honoring 10 years of indigenous video production in resistance.

Photographer: Francisco Vasquez, CMP/Promedios Program Coordinator, Chiapas, Mexico

5-8pm
1640 S. Blue Island
Cafe Efebos

In the last decade CMP/Promedios has:

- Trained over 250 indigenous men, women and youth in video production in Chiapas

- Built four Regional Media Centers (RMCs) in Chiapas in collaboration with Zapatista communities

- Assisted in the production of hundreds of videos for internal use within the communities that document important meetings, celebrations, ceremonies, and development projects in communities across Zapatista territory. These videos have been an important vehicle for communication and cultural exchange between communities that often remained isolated from one another.

- Facilitated the growth of a network of 73 indigenous video makers in Chiapas named Caracole Productions. Through the four RMCs, members of Caracole Productions are coordinating and collaborating on productions, workshops, and trainings.

- Provided training in the video documentation of human rights abuses, and worked with the Community Human Rights Defenders Network to establish six human rights offices in the most conflicted regions of Chiapas.

**In 1999, a CMP/Promedios associate presented video evidence of an incident involving the army in a case in which the state court ruled against the army and awarded a Zapatista family a sizable monetary settlement. **

**In 2000, a video produced by the Defenders with the assistance of CMP/Promedios provided evidence that led to the arrest of 11 leaders of a paramilitary organization.**

- Produced four documentaries with Tlachinollan Human Rights Center of the Montaña region of Guerrero on deforestation, a local indigenous policing project, the effects of militarization in the Montaña, and internal migrant workers. These documentaries have brought the grave human rights situation in Guerrero to audiences through universities, film festivals, and TV broadcasts in Mexico, the US, and beyond.

** In 2005, CMP/Promedios was awarded the prestigious Reebok Human Rights Award for our work in Guerrero

- put 28 videos from Chiapas and Guerrero in international distribution through our distributors in Mexico City, the US, France, Italy, Spain, and Germany. Since 1998, CMP/Promedios has distributed over 3500 videos that have been screened at over100 film festivals in 20 countries and received 13 awards worldwide, and have been broadcast on TV in New Zealand, Canada, US, and Mexico. We have also presented videos at over 100 universities to more then 15,000 students. CMP/Promedios videos are in 215 university libraries throughout the world.

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

believing in change

I saw someone from Voices for Creative Nonviolence speak today. She had good things about "change we can believe in."

Here is one action in Chicago http://camphope2009.org/.

In January, 2009, Barack Obama will be inaugurated as president of the United States. We earnestly hope his presidency will signal the dawning of long-needed progressive change in the United States. To help build popular momentum behind the progressive goals of President Obama’s campaign, we invite you to join us in maintaining a 20-day presence, from January 1 – January 19, 2009, in Hyde Park, Chicago: "Camp Hope: Countdown Toward Change."

Every day from New Years’ to Dr. Martin Luther King Day (1/1-1/19), whatever winter has in store for us, we will set up at the intersection of E. Hyde Park Blvd. and 5100 S. Drexel Ave to congratulate Senator Obama as our new President-elect and recommit ourselves to progressive actions he promoted on his campaign trail. We are urging President-elect Obama to take eight actions immediately upon being sworn into office, and reminding ourselves that these are only eight early steps to more profound policy changes.

Camp Hope asks President Obama to:

  • 1. Withdraw troops from Iraq by 5,000 each month and immediately cease offensive operations.
    2. Take all nuclear weapons off hair trigger alert.
    3. Close Guantanamo, eliminate miliatry tribunals and allow detainees, access to the U.S. court system.
    4.Suspend deportation of immigrants and stop raids.
    5. Submit the Kyoto Protocol to Congress for ratification.
    6. Establish a commission to explore policies for full employment.
    7. Issue a 90 day moratorium on all housing foreclosures.
    8. Start a commission to explore policies on Universal Health Care
*******************more thoughts about believing in change******************8

Uncritical Exuberance? by Judith Butler

"Very few of us are immune to the exhilaration of this time. My friends on the left write to me that they feel something akin to "redemption" or that "the country has been returned to us" or that "we finally have one of us in the White House." Of course, like them, I discover myself feeling overwhelmed with disbelief and excitement throughout the day, since the thought of having the regime of George W. Bush over and gone is an enormous relief. And the thought of Obama, a thoughtful and progressive black candidate, shifts the historical ground, and we feel that cataclysm as it produces a new terrain. But let us try to think carefully about the shifted terrain, although we cannot fully know its contours at this time. The election of Barack Obama is historically significant in ways that are yet to be gauged, but it is not, and cannot be, a redemption, and if we subscribe to the heightened modes of identification that he proposes ("we are all united") or that we propose ("he is one of us"), we risk believing that this political moment can overcome the antagonisms that are constitutive of political life, especially political life in these times. There have always been good reasons not to embrace "national unity" as an ideal, and to nurse suspicions toward absolute and seamless identification with any political leader. After all, fascism relied in part on that seamless identification with the leader, and Republicans engage this same effort to organize political affect when, for instance, Elizabeth Dole looks out on her audience and says, "I love each and every one of you."

It becomes all the more important to think about the politics of exuberant identification with the election of Obama when we consider that support for Obama has coincided with support for conservative causes. In a way, this accounts for his "cross-over" success. In California, he won by 60% of the vote, and yet some significant portion of those who voted for him also voted against the legalization of gay marriage (52%). How do we understand this apparent disjunction? First, let us remember that Obama has not explicitly supported gay marriage rights. Further, as Wendy Brown has argued, the Republicans have found that the electorate is not as galvanized by "moral" issues as they were in recent elections; the reasons given for why people voted for Obama seem to be predominantly economic, and their reasoning seems more fully structured by neo-liberal rationality than by religious concerns. This is clearly one reason why Palin's assigned public function to galvanize the majority of the electorate on moral issues finally failed. But if "moral" issues such as gun control, abortion rights and gay rights were not as determinative as they once were, perhaps that is because they are thriving in a separate compartment of the political mind. In other words, we are faced with new configurations of political belief that make it possible to hold apparently discrepant views at the same time: someone can, for instance, disagree with Obama on certain issues, but still have voted for him. This became most salient in the emergence of the counter Bradley-effect, when voters could and did explicitly own up to their own racism, but said they would vote for Obama anyway. Anecdotes from the field include claims like the following: "I know that Obama is a Muslim and a Terrorist, but I will vote for him anyway; he is probably better for the economy." Such voters got to keep their racism and vote for Obama, sheltering their split beliefs without having to resolve them.

Along with strong economic motivations, less empirically discernible factors have come into play in these election results. We cannot underestimate the force of dis-identification in this election, a sense of revulsion that George W. has "represented" the United States to the rest of the world, a sense of shame about our practices of torture and illegal detention, a sense of disgust that we have waged war on false grounds and propagated racist views of Islam, a sense of alarm and horror that the extremes of economic deregulation have led to a global economic crisis. Is it despite his race, or because of his race, that Obama finally emerged as a preferred representative of the nation? Fulfilling that representative-function, he is at once black and not-black (some say "not black enough" and others say "too black"), and, as a result, he can appeal to voters who not only have no way of resolving their ambivalence on this issue, but do not want one. The public figure who allows the populace to sustain and mask its ambivalence nevertheless appears as a figure of "unity": this is surely an ideological function. Such moments are intensely imaginary, but not for that reason without their political force.

As the election approached, there has been an increased focus on the person of Obama: his gravity, his deliberateness, his ability not to lose his temper, his way of modeling a certain evenness in the face of hurtful attacks and vile political rhetoric, his promise to reinstate a version of the nation that will overcome its current shame. Of course, the promise is alluring, but what if the embrace of Obama leads to the belief that we might overcome all dissonance, that unity is actually possible? What is the chance that we may end up suffering a certain inevitable disappointment when this charismatic leader displays his fallibility, his willingness to compromise, even to sell out minorities? He has, in fact, already done this in certain ways, but many of us "set aside" our concerns in order to enjoy the extreme un-ambivalence of this moment, risking an uncritical exuberance even when we know better. Obama is, after all, hardly a leftist, regardless of the attributions of "socialism" proffered by his conservative opponents. In what ways will his actions be constrained by party politics, economic interests, and state power; in what ways have they been compromised already? If we seek through this presidency to overcome a sense of dissonance, then we will have jettisoned critical politics in favor of an exuberance whose phantasmatic dimensions will prove consequential. Maybe we cannot avoid this phantasmatic moment, but let us be mindful about how temporary it is. If there are avowed racists who have said, "I know that he is a Muslim and a terrorist, but I will vote for him anyway," there are surely also people on the left who say, "I know that he has sold out gay rights and Palestine, but he is still our redemption." I know very well, but still: this is the classic formulation of disavowal. Through what means do we sustain and mask conflicting beliefs of this sort? And at what political cost?

There is no doubt that Obama's success will have significant effects on the economic course of the nation, and it seems reasonable to assume that we will see a new rationale for economic regulation and for an approach to economics that resembles social democratic forms in Europe; in foreign affairs, we will doubtless see a renewal of multi-lateral relations, the reversal of a fatal trend of destroying multilateral accords that the Bush administration has undertaken. And there will doubtless also be a more generally liberal trend on social issues, though it is important to remember that Obama has not supported universal health care, and has failed to explicitly support gay marriage rights. And there is not yet much reason to hope that he will formulate a just policy for the United States in the Middle East, even though it is a relief, to be sure, that he knows Rashid Khalidi.

The indisputable significance of his election has everything to do with overcoming the limits implicitly imposed on African-American achievement; it has and will inspire and overwhelm young African-Americans; it will, at the same time, precipitate a change in the self-definition of the United States. If the election of Obama signals a willingness on the part of the majority of voters to be "represented" by this man, then it follows that who "we" are is constituted anew: we are a nation of many races, of mixed races; and he offers us the occasion to recognize who we have become and what we have yet to be, and in this way a certain split between the representative function of the presidency and the populace represented appears to be overcome. That is an exhilarating moment, to be sure. But can it last, and should it?

To what consequences will this nearly messianic expectation invested in this man lead? In order for this presidency to be successful, it will have to lead to some disappointment, and to survive disappointment: the man will become human, will prove less powerful than we might wish, and politics will cease to be a celebration without ambivalence and caution; indeed, politics will prove to be less of a messianic experience than a venue for robust debate, public criticism, and necessary antagonism. The election of Obama means that the terrain for debate and struggle has shifted, and it is a better terrain, to be sure. But it is not the end of struggle, and we would be very unwise to regard it that way, even provisionally. We will doubtless agree and disagree with various actions he takes and fails to take. But if the initial expectation is that he is and will be "redemption" itself, then we will punish him mercilessly when he fails us (or we will find ways to deny or suppress that disappointment in order to keep alive the experience of unity and unambivalent love).

If a consequential and dramatic disappointment is to be averted, he will have to act quickly and well. Perhaps the only way to avert a "crash" – a disappointment of serious proportions that would turn political will against him – will be to take decisive actions within the first two months of his presidency. The first would be to close Guantanamo and find ways to transfer the cases of detainees to legitimate courts; the second would be to forge a plan for the withdrawal of troops from Iraq and to begin to implement that plan. The third would be to retract his bellicose remarks about escalating war in Afghanistan and pursue diplomatic, multilateral solutions in that arena. If he fails to take these steps, his support on the left will clearly deteriorate, and we will see the reconfiguration of the split between liberal hawks and the anti-war left. If he appoints the likes of Lawrence Summers to key cabinet positions, or continues the failed economic polices of Clinton and Bush, then at some point the messiah will be scorned as a false prophet. In the place of an impossible promise, we need a series of concrete actions that can begin to reverse the terrible abrogation of justice committed by the Bush regime; anything less will lead to a dramatic and consequential disillusionment. The question is what measure of dis-illusion is necessary in order to retrieve a critical politics, and what more dramatic form of dis-illusionment will return us to the intense political cynicism of the last years. Some relief from illusion is necessary, so that we might remember that politics is less about the person and the impossible and beautiful promise he represents than it is about the concrete changes in policy that might begin, over time, and with difficulty, bring about conditions of greater justice."

Monday, November 3, 2008

Election Food for Thought

Election food for though. I find the matching funds argument particularly compelling: "If the Green Party gets 5% of the national vote, the Party will qualify for millions of dollars of taxpayer matching funds in 2012. That would change the nature of the political process..."
***************
I am attaching two messages concerning the election, both of which make a lot of valid points that are food for thought as we approach Election Day. As to the second message, by Eric Mann, I certainly respect the views of him and others who see the priority of pushing for Obama to get the highest possible vote and the value of inspiring many progressive young people, especially Black people, to become voters and have raised expectations for social change. But ultimately I am persuaded (as argued in the first message below by Ron McGuire) to cast my vote for Cynthia McKinney and Rosa Clemente -- they have the most radical politics of anyone running today (I would add to Ron McGuire's list of their positions that both support the freedom of U.S. political prisoners, and Cynthia McKinney came to Philadelphia earlier this year to rally for Mumia's freedom).

The only reason I feel comfortable NOT giving Obama another vote to defeat McCain -- who I think is far more dangerous for all the reasons Eric Mann lays out below -- is because I live in a state (New York) where it is overwhelmingly clear that Obama will win anyway. And of course it is electoral college votes, rather than popular votes, that determine the winner.

Another affirmative reason for voting for McKinney/Clemente is that now that they are in (apparent) leadership of the Green Party, I think it is possible (though far from sure!) that that entity may become a more useful vehicle for creating another front to expose capitalism/imperialism. Perhaps the two of them can help begin a process to overcome the white supremacy which has predominated that party up until this year. In any case, casting votes for them may also help in registering support for the direction they want to take that party.

Finally, I believe that voting for McKinney/Clemente is a small way of putting pressure on Obama from the left to win concessions from the increasingly corporate centrist politics to which he has pledged allegiance. Obviously, voting is the least important part of such pressure, and what is far more important is building a post-election movement to keep up the pressure both on him and on the Democratic-controlled Congress.

Having said all this, I also want to also note the importance of educating folks about the Republicans' well-financed, well-organized plans to try to steal this election, as they did in 2000 and 2004, by mounting massive dirty tricks, disruption, and harassment before and on Election Day. For details, see http://www.gregpalast.com/, and spread the word. Regardless of who one supports, we should be prepared to get behind massive protests if the right wing succeeds yet again in stealing an election.
Bob Lederer
***************************************************************************
McKinney or Obama? Don't Waste Your Vote!!

Youngbloods, Elders and Friends:

Why should we vote for Cynthia McKinney and Rosa Clemente? One good reason is that your vote for Obama will be wasted if you live in New York, California, New Jersey, Connecticut, Oregon, Washington State, Washington D.C., Vermont or Illinois, where most of the folks on my list live. Obama will win all those states by landslides with or
without our votes. The Democrats easily carried New Jersey, Connecticut, Vermont and Illinois in the last four presidential elections. In New York and all the other states listed, it has been at least 20 years since the Republicans carried those states.

All of us would rather have Obama as President than McCain. But most of us recognize that the Democratic Party and the Republican Party both represent the same corporate interests that have made the United States the enemy of people seeking freedom and self-determination throughout the world. Obama is pledged to continue those evil policies. Even Obama's so-called opposition to the Iraq war is really a promise to redeploy troops from Iraq to Afghanistan and possibly Iran and to continue the U.S. war against "radical Islam." The war against "radical Islam" is actually a euphemism for American and Israeli opposition to self-determination in the Middle East and the rest of the Third World.

We need to build an alternative to the two headed one party system. We need a party that offers us more than a choice between two evil imperialist candidates every four years.

During the Democratic convention Cynthia McKinney attended a rally opposing the occupations of Afghanistan, Iraq, Palestine, Puerto Rico, Hawaii and North America where the U.S. continues to violate treaties with the Native Americans. Obama wants to redeploy U.S. troops from Iraq to Afghanistan, and possibly Iran. He supports the Zionist occupation of Palestine. Obama calls for the overthrow of Robert Mugabe in Zimbabwe and Cynthia supports Mugabe's land reform program to return to Native Zimbabweans land forcibly stolen by European settlers.

Cynthia and Rosa have consistently supported a foreign policy based on peace and justice. They support reparations to the victims of American imperialism in the United States (slavery reparations) and abroad. They support free public college education, child care, health care and worker rights.

Cynthia and Rosa won't be elected this year. But they are both young enough to be elected in 12 to 20 years. It took 400 years for this country to develop into the imperialist empire that the United States is today. It will take us more than 4 years to create an alternative.

Cynthia and Rosa need to get as many votes they can in order to show the Democrats that there are people in this country who will not buy the lie that Obama is the most progressive alternative we can hope for. A vote for Obama in New York or any of the other state where he is guaranteed to win by landslides, won't help him defeat McCain.

On the other hand, every vote for Cynthia and Rosa will do two things. First, it will show the Democrats (and Republicans) that there is a growing number of people who won't accept the fact that Obama is the most progressive alternative we can expect.

Second, your vote for Cynthia and Rosa will help build an alternative we can believe in. If the Green Party gets 5% of the national vote, the Party will qualify for millions of dollars of taxpayer matching funds in 2012. That would change the nature of the political process since it would end the two party system. The Democrats would have to negotiate with the Greens or else face the possibility of a third party continuing to grow and eventually contend for power.

Some of us want to move the Democratic Party to the left and others of us want to move out of the Democratic Party to create a new alternative. If you support either of these two goals and you vote in New York, California or another "Blue landslide" state, the best way to support your goal is to vote for Cynthia and Rosa. Nothing can change the fact that Obama is going to win New York, California and most of the other "Blue" states by landslides. But if we vote for Cynthia and Rosa we can change the future. Our votes can't help Obama win those states. But our votes for Cynthia and Rosa will show the next President that there is a growing third party movement which the two headed Republican/Democrat ic Party must consider. Your vote for Cynthia and Rosa will help send a wake-up call to the Democratic Party. If the Democratic Party refuses to wake up, then those votes will build an alternative to the two party system that is leading the United States and the world to more suffering, war and barbarism.
Vote for the future!
Vote for change we can believe in!
Vote for Cynthia and Rosa!

Ronald B. McGuire

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Ten Reasons We Should
Turn Out the Vote for Barack Obama

by Eric Mann
For those of us who are in the Civil Rights, Immigrant Rights, Women's Liberation, Environmental Justice, and Anti-War Movements, for those of us on the Left, the election of Barack Obama is of the utmost urgency. Voting for Barack Obama is not enough. In the next two weeks we need to put all our energy into getting out the vote to elect Obama and defeat McCain.
Because of his brilliant organizing, the possibility of an Obama victory is palpable. Because of the racism of this country and the strong reactionary elements of the general population, the threat of a McCain victory is only too real.
The stakes leave no room for passive support. The Republicans coalescing against Obama are carrying out a calculated strategy to preserve and extend the victories of Reagan and Bush. If it can be imagined, they intend to take the country even further to the right. They want to destroy what is left of democratic liberalism, destroy the Civil Rights and Black Liberation movements, destroy the Immigrant Rights, Women's Liberation, LGBT, Anti-War movements, to destroy the Left.
To his credit, unlike Al Gore and John Kerry, Barack Obama is fighting back against the Right. Whether or not he cedes too much to them, which I believe he does, his election is a direct challenge to the neo-cons, the racists, and bellicose fascists who have controlled the White House, the media, and the political discourse in this country for decades. For all of us who consider ourselves "on the Left" and "organizers," for those of us who have a base, for those of us who are working in low-income Black, Latino, Asian/Pacific Islander communities and doing anti-racist work in white working-class communities-this is a turning point in history. We understand the stakes of a racist McCain victory only too well, and we are the ones who can be pivotal in turning the tide for Obama. It is time for the antiracist Left to show the muscle of our community organizing and put that energy into the Obama campaign for the next two weeks.

For some of us, we are already there. For others, you are needed. Obama needs and deserves our full support. As a strategist and tactician, you weigh all the arguments, all the options, but when the time comes, you must go into battle with great energy and enthusiasm. You must fight to win. Now is such a time.
We have to work for Obama's election and fight to win. Right now the Obama campaign is calling for the most intense involvement by those of us who support his candidacy. Our job is very straightforward. The Obama campaign urgently needs us to contribute money, to phone bank, to protect the vote at ballot boxes where the Republicans will try to steal the election (that is, every ballot box), and to hit the ground in aggressive door-to-door organizing in swing states. For those of us who do not live in a swing state that means traveling to Florida, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Nevada, New Mexico, Virginia, North Carolina, Missouri, Indiana, West Virginia, Colorado and other states where the margins are still too close to call.

I am an organizer, that is what I do. In this election, reflecting my own views on the subject, I am committed to working on two major campaigns.
The Strategy Center's No on the Six Campaign. This is a state-wide campaign in California that opposes six reactionary ballot initiatives. We are doing citywide lawn signs, on-the-bus organizing, phone banking, and precinct walking to defeat The Six. Two initiatives, Propositions 6 and 9, would further criminalize Black and Latino youth. Two bond and sales tax proposals, Proposition 1A and Measure R in Los Angeles County, would pass regressive taxes and bonds for pork-barrel, environmentally dangerous rail and highway projects that would further attack the funding for a clean fuel bus system, the centerpiece of our environmental plan. Two propositions attack LGBT people and women. Prop 8 tries to overturn gay marriage, and Prop 4 threatens women's reproductive rights through the onerous requirement of parental notification for minors. I work for this campaign through the Strategy Center in a broad coalition with many other progressive, grassroots groups. See www.noonthesix.org

The Obama Campaign. I am working to elect Barack Obama president of the United States. I have attended a two-day training at Camp Obama along with 350 people in Long Beach, along with thousands throughout the state and tens of thousands throughout the country at similar trainings. Many people are going from California to Nevada, a neighboring swing state with five electoral votes, to turn out the vote for Obama. I am working with the phone bank team to make phone calls to Nevada to elect Obama. I will be spending the last long weekend of this month through Tuesday, November 4 splitting my time between the No on the Six and the Obama phone bank teams.

Ten Reasons to Turn Out the Vote for Barack Obama:
1) Because Barack Obama is Black and qualified, Black and liberal, Black and can be elected the first Black president in the United States.
Obama is a Black man running for president in a white settler state. Regardless of how much or little he chooses to campaign on race or against racism-and in my view it is far more than some of his critics think-Obama is Black. Everyone knows he is Black and the Republicans are making it a referendum against Blacks and for white supremacy.
The election of a Black president in a country built on conquest and slavery is almost unimaginable. And it cannot be imagined without the foundational work of Sojourner Truth and Harriet Tubman, Marcus Garvey and W.E.B. DuBois, Fannie Lou Hamer, Martin Luther King, Jr. Huey P. Newton, and Malcolm X. Obama is running as a Black man at a time when one million Black people are in prison. He is Black at a time when the Black community is on the defensive and under siege, Black when many of its most gifted and dedicated organizers are tired, not discouraged, but exhausted from the assaults of the reactionary decades from Reagan to Clinton to Bush. Obama is Black as opposed to white, as in white supremacy, white racism, white chauvinism, white xenophobia, white fascism, white racist mobs, white McCain and white Palin.

Barack Obama is a Black Harvard graduate, a president of the Harvard Law Review, married to Michelle Obama, a Princeton graduate. They gave up jobs in corporate America to do work among the urban poor and working class. He is charismatic, a great debater, and a man of intellect. He is so much better qualified than John McCain that it is a testament to the racism of the U.S. that McCain is still in a close race. This is a white man who is clearly unhinged even in a prepared debate and has nothing to run on but the "Abuse of the Day" against Obama and his family.
Barack Obama is a gifted organizer who deserves the support of every dedicated organizer in the country. As a Black man in a white country, he out organized Hillary and Bill Clinton and their ostensibly unbeatable machine, a blow from which they may never recover. He is out organizing the Democratic Leadership Council, the anti-liberal caucus of Bill Clinton and Joe Lieberman that has dominated the Democratic Party since the defeat of Mondale and Dukakis. Obama has a very good chance of out organizing the entire white, Christian, conservative, aka fascist clique that has run this country since Reagan rose, Gingrich organized, Clinton capitulated, and Bush/Cheney took the dictatorship to its highest levels.

Electing a highly qualified, brilliant Black man against a Neanderthal white man is a major step forward in history and a high stakes fight that we need to be part of. It will be a major setback to the forces of white racism in the country and a real encouragement of the broad anti-racist coalition that is at the core of the Obama campaign. Let's turn out the vote for Obama. Now.

2) Because a Black man is being attacked by a white lynch mob and we have to throw our bodies in front of them and beat them back.
The McCain/Palin campaign rallies are becoming Klan rallies. Shouts of "traitor," "terrorist," "treason," "liar," "Hussein" "kill him" and "off with his head" have rung from the rabid racists at McCain and Palin rallies. Palin whips them up and McCain sometimes doesn't challenge them and sometimes goes through the motions, all the while praising them to the sky as "loyal Americans." These are the very kind of people who have populated lynch mobs in the past. They are capable of carrying out their threats. What part of "off with his head" do we not understand?

If many in the Democratic Party in fact conciliate with this racism by refusing to call it by name, preferring to use the vague term "extremism," Obama does not. At the last national debate he told McCain that some of his supporters have crossed a line by calling him a terrorist and proposing to kill him. McCain responded by saying how great and patriotic his supporters are. Do we really have to invoke King and Malcolm, Medgar Evers and Emmett Till, the Birmingham children and Bobby Hutton to understand that the assassination and lynching of Black people is deep in the DNA of white and U.S. culture and is a clear and present danger today?
John Lewis, the civil rights veteran from SNCC and now a U.S. congressperson from Atlanta saw it clearly,
"What I am seeing reminds me too much of another destructive period in American history. Senator McCain and Governor Palin are sowing the seeds of hatred and division, and there is no need for this hostility in our political discourse. George Wallace [the racist governor of Alabama] never threw a bomb. He never fired a gun, but he created the climate and the conditions that encouraged vicious attacks against innocent Americans who were simply trying to exercise their constitutional rights. Because of this atmosphere of hate, four little girls were killed on Sunday morning when a church was bombed in Birmingham, Alabama."
We cannot stand by while a rabid white mob attacks a Black man screaming "Hussein, Hussein," "the one over there," "the F-ing Harvard Graduate," "the uppity one," "terrorist" and-we must take this very seriously-"kill him" and "off with his head." The McCain forces are the forces of evil and must be defeated.
McCain and Palin should be under arrest for encouraging, inciting, aiding, and abetting, racist hate crimes. Let's turn out the Vote for Barack Obama, Now.


3) Because there are differences of life and death significance to our communities between Barack Obama and John McCain.
Obama is advocating many positions that are conservative, and some, like his proposals to expand the war in Afghanistan and violate the sovereignty of Pakistan, that are reactionary. But there is still a profound Left/Right battle going, albeit within the confines of U.S. electoral politics and the two-party system in 2008. While he does not have a comprehensive progressive program, there are some key issues on which the difference between Obama and McCain are Black and white.
Let's look at some of the real choices Obama is making.
  • Economic Crisis, Housing Crisis. Obama has supported the $750 billion bail out for U.S. financial markets. This is a major setback for working people. He is now arguing, however, that now it is time to bail out not "Wall Street" but "Main Street." He is calling for a 90-day moratorium on foreclosures by any bank or company that receives any U.S. government aid. Is that enough? Of course not, but he is the only candidate even talking about helping people losing their homes in the foreclosure tsunami. If such a moratorium is imposed, it can lead to far more stringent demands to extend and expand that moratorium. By contrast, McCain is talking about letting the free market run its course.
  • Woman's Right to Choose. Obama vigorously defends a woman's right to choose. When asked in the last debate if they would make Roe v. Wade a "litmus test" in the selection of Supreme Court justices, both Obama and McCain, after considerable dancing, said yes. McCain said that he could not imagine a qualified candidate who would not want to overturn Roe v. Wade and Obama said he could not imagine a qualified candidate who would not defend a woman's right to privacy-making abortion a right.
  • Unions, Third World. McCain said free trade was great and accused Obama of holding up trade with Columbia. Columbia is governed by one of the worst military dictatorships in world, propped up by the CIA, the U.S. military, and cocaine traffickers. At this time, I do not assume Obama wants to dismantle Plan Columbia. If he does not, that will be a major post-election confrontation with him we will have to have. But Obama did say that he could not support trade with Columbia while its government was imprisoning and murdering trade unionists. This is significant. Obama has campaigned for the right to organize unions for workers in the U.S. and proposed laws to encourage those rights. While that in itself is major, there is no history I know of for a U.S. presidential candidate to openly expose the murder of trade union organizers in a country that is allied with the United States and to call for their right to organize against U.S. transnationals. In the middle of a high-profile nationally televised event, just the mention of trade unionists existing and being under attack in the Third World is a moment of rupture in the imperialist ideological sphere. By contrast, McCain is a union buster at home and a supporter of terror, torture, and the suppression of unions and the Left abroad.
  • Equal Pay for Equal Work. Obama defends equal pay for equal work and McCain opposes it. In the final debate, Obama raised the example of a lawsuit filed by Lily Ledbetter, a woman who tried to sue her employer for paying her less for the same job that a male employee was getting paid more to do. Obama talked of working in Congress to extend the statute of limitations in Congress on her case so that it wouldn't be dismissed. McCain snickered, What do we want to do, keep these cases going 20 or 30 years after the fact?
  • International Relations. Obama talks about American exceptionalism, American power, and the "responsibility" of the United States throughout the world. In short, his view is imperialist and his objective is still U.S. world domination. But we should not underestimate what is at stake in his proposal for "unconditional conversations" with heads of states that the Bush administration has named in the "Axis of Evil." Obama has held his ground on the importance of "conversations and negotiations" and has challenged the policy of sanctions and invasions. This is a clear signal to people in the Third World, and the European nations who disagree with the Bush doctrine. Under an Obama administration, there may be alternatives for people in the Third World to the decades of napalm, blockades, shock and awe, and invasions that they have suffered under Republicans and Democrats alike. Obama recognizes that the U.S. is a declining empire and is trying to signal that it can't continue to throw its weight around in the failed policies, as he calls them, of Bush and McCain. Obama's argument for greater use of negotiations and discussions-as well as some of his reservations about massive military deployments-is likely to reflect a tactical debate between pragmatic imperialism on his side versus neo-con messianic imperialism on that of McCain. Again, both share the imperialist goal of U.S. world domination and the control of the politics and economy of Third World nations.
But that is a split in the ruling class that is of great importance to anti-war, anti-imperialist organizers in the U.S. and to governments and movements in the Third World. Let's be clear. McCain supports "the surge" and future unilateral military aggression. He talks always about the hard line and views the solution of every problem through a military lens. We cannot allow his unstable hand anywhere near the nuclear button.

I think that most Blacks, women, and trade unionists would argue there is a profound benefit for an Obama victory and a profound danger in a McCain election. I do not think that those who are working to overturn the rightwing clique controlling the Supreme Court that is ruling out of order every civil rights and civil liberties case will argue there is little difference between Obama and McCain. I think trade unionists in Columbia, militants and governments in Venezuela, Cuba, and South Africa, as well as those governments and NGOs who witness the daily bullying and dictatorial practices of the U.S. at the United Nations-all see a profound difference between the candidates and are deeply invested in an Obama victory and a McCain defeat.
Let's turn out the vote for Obama, Now.

4) Because John McCain is a war criminal.
How do you think McCain ended up in a POW camp in North Vietnam in the first place? Did the North Vietnamese come to the Naval Academy to kidnap him? No, he was flying a mission over North Vietnamese territory, violating their sovereignty, dropping bombs on civilian populations in an attempt to destroy their power plants and utilities, impose terror from the air, and knowingly cause civilian illness, starvation, death and destruction.
McCain was part of a group of air pirates who flew missions of destruction over Vietnam. After already having bombed North Vietnam, as the L.A. Times reports, "In August 1967 the squadron he joined had destroyed a power plant in Hanoi. Two months later, the plant had been rebuilt and was back on the Navy's sites. McCain begged for the mission. 'The earlier raid was the pride and joy of the squadron. I wanted to destroy it again. I was feeling pretty cocky as well.'" He flew the mission and was shot down in his efforts to kill. He wasn't feeling as cocky at that point. He was captured by the North Vietnamese. McCain is a war criminal for his actions; for he admits he begged for his mission and felt destroying the power plants of another country to be his "pride and joy."

His actions stand in profound contrast to the millions of people in the U.S. who dedicated and, in some cases, gave their lives to end the war in Vietnam. He is a disgrace to the many GI's who refused to kill civilians, to those who resisted the draft and risked exile and imprisonment, to those who joined the Vietnam Veterans Against the War and who testified in the Winter Soldier hearings (see Clay Claiborne's film Vietnam: American Holocaust), and to the courageous veterans today who are speaking out against the war in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The actions of the United States government, the U.S. Navy, and pilots of death and destruction like McCain led to the murder of three million Vietnamese civilians and one million combatants all trying to protect their country from a U.S. invasion. McCain was part of the force that inflicted poison gas, assassination squads, napalm, Agent Orange, rape, and premeditated murder against the people of Vietnam. The U.S. systematically committed crimes against humanity in Vietnam and John McCain was a willing, enthusiastic perpetrator. John McCain should be tried for war crimes in violation of the Nuremburg statutes.
Let's turn out the vote for Obama, Now.

5) Because Sarah Palin's election would turn the women's movement on its head-Palin is a fascist, a racist, a white separatist, and a misogynist
There is nothing funny about Sarah Palin. (Tina Fey's brilliant parodies are the exception.) But do not laugh at Palin any more than you should laugh at Bush. She is not stupid. She is deadly serious, armed and dangerous. She is tied to extreme vigilante groups who want to secede from the United States because they feel it is too liberal and too multi-racial. She uses oil revenues to buy the loyalties of people in Alaska, tying their futures to the global warming that will in fact destroy Alaska and the planet.

She and McCain will cut social services, already hanging by a thread. They will ramp up the police state and the war on terror. She has broken with John McCain by proposing a constitutional amendment against gay marriage and is moving ever further to his right. Some speculate she is doing this out of a lack of discipline. Others think she wants to position herself even more strongly with the extreme Right base in case McCain loses and she wants to pursue other national elected positions.

She has drawn the fascist mobs to the campaign and operates in the tradition of reactionary demagogues Father Coughlin and Lou Dobbs. She is the hit person against Obama, the warm-up act for McCain that gets the white mob into a racist rage. She will support a police state and will lock us up without a second thought. And the talk of her being one 72-year-old's heartbeat away from the presidency is not a joke. She may be a future president of the United States if we don't defeat McCain.
Governor Palin believes a woman who chooses to have an abortion is a sinner, period. She believes that such is the case even if the woman chooses to terminate a pregnancy forced on her through rape or incest. She is an enemy of the movement for reproductive rights. Her message to desperate, working class women is that being a loyal wife is a woman's best chance for escaping poverty, your subjugation is liberation. She appeals to misogynist men and assures them that their domination of the family is God's will. While she has been able to get out of the house with five children to pursue a professional career, her gender politics will prevent most women from doing the same-locking women in the home as single parents or prisoners of their husbands-as she leads choruses of "Stand by Your Man." Her election will be an attack of Roe v. Wade, women's reproductive rights, and women's liberation.
Let's turn out the vote for Barack Obama, Now.

6) Because the McCain campaign is an attack on the Left.
The McCain campaign wants to kill the Left in the U.S. and internationally, kill social security, the social safety net, and anything "social" including even the hope of social-ism. Obama is being attacked as an enemy because he is Black and because he is a moderate liberal. The attack on the Left broadly defined must be met by a counter-attack against McCain and for Obama in the last two weeks of this campaign.

Look at McCain's targets:
  • William Ayers, billed a "terrorist" by the McCain camp, worked against the war in Vietnam in which four million people were killed. Ayers is a symbol of the anti-war movement and its most militant wing.
  • Reverend Wright. Reverend Wright is a respected theologian whose "crime" was saying that racism is "endemic" to the United States and that the U.S. sees the world through the eyes of an empire.
  • ACORN is being attacked by the McCain campaign for registering Democratic-leaning voters. ACORN may have gotten some bad names in the voter registration process but none of those people could vote or be counted. By contrast, the Republicans prevent people from voting who are registered to vote, deny valid signatures and voters, and close down polling places in Black and heavily Democratic districts. They defy the electoral process and have stolen state and national elections.
  • Socialism. McCain has begun attacking as "socialist" Obama's efforts to make income taxes more progressive and to use some of the wealth to help the poor. McCain said, "At least in Europe the Socialist leaders who so admire my opponent are upfront about their objectives. They use real numbers and honest language." McCain proposes cutting capital gains taxes and giving more subsidies to the rich.
Obama's ties to Ayers were minimal and nothing to apologize for. His ties to Reverend Wright were profound and his disassociation from his mentor deplorable. Obama's distancing himself from ACORN reflects weakness. But, as Reverend Wright pointed out, Obama is a politician running for office; he makes his tactical moves according to his strategic aim of getting elected. I wish that Obama would defend socialism but he is not a socialist and if he were, he would not be the Democratic nominee for president.

Whether or not Obama chooses to disassociate, denounce, or distance himself from the anti-Vietnam war movement, from the rhetoric and analyses of the Civil Rights and Black Liberation Movements, from grassroots voter registration, and from socialism-those of us on the Left have our own interests in this election that include but also go beyond Obama's objectives.

Whether Obama chooses to identify with or to renounce these connections, we on the Left need to grasp that these attacks from McCain are against us, not just Obama. If McCain is elected, what do we think he will do to those of us who fought against the war in Vietnam and are fighting to end the U.S. occupation of Iraq? What will he do to those who will continue to speak and act against the endemic racism of the United States, or to those of us who would study and advocate socialist alternatives to capitalism? I fear for those on the Left who do not see the writing on the wall.
Let's turn out the vote for Barack Obama, Now.

7) Because an Obama victory will be a defeat for the Clintons.
Hillary and Bill Clinton have been treacherous opponents of Obama. They are threatened by his possible victory and are doing very little to help him. At a white tie dinner John McCain told a great joke. He brought down the house when he observed, "Even in this room full of proud Manhattan Democrats, I can't shake that feeling that some people here are pulling for me. I'm delighted to see you here tonight, Hillary!" Obama understood only too well the truth of that statement.
The Clinton's opened up the floodgates of racism against Obama during the Democratic primaries. I made the argument then that Hillary Clinton was forming a white bloc with John McCain to defeat Barack Obama. I wrote an article that documented this in great detail: Hillary and John: The White Bloc That Must Be Stopped.
Throughout Hillary's campaign she argued that only she and McCain were qualified to be president and Obama was not. She ran that ridiculous ad campaign, "Who do you want to answer the phone at 3 in the morning?" She told the press that she and John McCain had the standing to be commander and chief and Obama did not. As she realized her dreams of victory were slipping away, her campaign reached its moral nadir. She told voters in Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and throughout the country that she did not think that "working, hard-working Americans, white Americans" would vote for Obama. Hillary and Bill Clinton have opened up the door for the racism of the McCain/Palin campaign, aiding and abetting their "dear friend" John McCain.

Hillary also made continued false claims that Obama was not supportive of women (meaning her). Only when it was absolutely clear she was losing did she come out as a born-again feminist, a white feminist, attacking Obama. In so doing she set the conditions for "her friend" John McCain to pick Sarah Palin to mine the anti-Obama sentiment Hillary had agitated among Democratic white women voters. Fortunately, Obama is winning more and more women voters. Needless to say these women include the Black, Latino, Asian/Pacific Islander, and Indigenous women among whom he is also polling strongly. Women recognize how important is his defense of choice and his support for equal pay, and they are impressed with the way he relates to the women in his life, a strong Black partner and his daughters.
The Clinton's, when they were in office, brought us the end of welfare, the Anti-Terrorism Act, the Effective Death Penalty Act, and the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act. They typify cynicism and opportunism. Hillary has demanded the vice-presidency and now has demanded an appointment to the Supreme Court as the price of her jaded support. Obama has refused.
When Bill Clinton was on David Letterman, Chris Rock was also a guest. During Clinton's interview with Letterman he barely could say anything good about Obama and kept referring to McCain as "my friend" and "a war hero." After Clinton left, Rock went off on him, "Is it me or does Clinton have a problem saying the name Barack Obama? He doesn't get it, he keeps talking about Hillary. Hillary lost! Hillary lost. It wasn't sexism. She ran against a Black guy nobody ever heard of and he beat her. She lost."

If Obama wins in spite of the Clintons' treachery it will strengthen his hand against the Democratic Leadership Council that they control-the hard core of conservative center-right Democrats. It is good to see Hillary Clinton campaigning for Obama. She has no other choice. She too fears eight years of a McCain/Palin ticket and fears her own isolation in the Democratic Party. The Clintons are a Trojan Horse inside the Obama campaign. But Obama is beating the Clintons, Yes He Can. An Obama victory would weaken the Clinton oligarchy.

Let's turn out the vote for Barack Obama, Now.

8) A victory for Barack Obama will usher in a revolution of rising expectations.
If Obama is elected he will do so with the support of 95% of the Black vote and the highest Black vote in U.S. history, along with enormous numbers of white, Latino, Asian, and Indigenous peoples. He will attract a very large and energetic white vote with a strong anti-racist orientation. He will win over the majority of young people who are more influenced by the victories of the Civil Rights Movement than the crimes of the Klan and the White Citizens Councils.
Listen to how in every talk, besides his recitation of the obligatory "the American people" a dozen times, he goes out of his way to say, "My election is for everybody. The red states and blue, for the middle class, for Blacks, whites, Latinos, Asian/Pacific Islander, and Indigenous peoples." The mentioning of specific oppressed nationality peoples and cultures is in itself a major breakthrough in the public discourse of race in the country. Notice that the Republicans and most Democrats will never acknowledge that those communities even exist because to do so creates a momentary awareness that whiteness is not the norm, that whites are not the boss. It also creates support for group-specific demand development among oppressed nationality peoples.
After an Obama election the entire field of "community organizing" will get a major boost. I was there when Kennedy was elected and Johnson beat Goldwater. Those elections raised hopes that helped the Civil Rights Movement and the New Left and later the Black
Liberation, Women's, LGBT, and Environmental Justice Movements. Obama will have to decide, after he is elected, what policies he wants to carry out. If he betrays his best promises or carries out his worst, I believe he will receive significant organized opposition with demands that he change his policies.

I was also there when John F. Kennedy moved to invade Cuba at the Bay of Pigs and tried to assassinate Castro. I was there when Lyndon B. Johnson initiated and then tried to disband the poverty programs, when Johnson escalated a genocidal war in Vietnam. These actions by Kennedy and Johnson led to more protests, not less. They led to the emergence of some very principled left liberal Democrats, and the radicalization of many formerly Democratic liberal students who came to see that more radical, structural, revolutionary change was needed.
I hope that Barack Obama understands that the U.S. is a declining superpower in a multi-polar world. I think he knows full well the economic crisis facing U.S. and world imperialism. I think he may propose a less bellicose and a less aggressive foreign policy if only to protect the system itself. Regardless, my argument is not that we work to elect Obama based on an ability to predict all of his actions or choices.
I think every successful organizer has to have an independent program and an independent grassroots base. I am part of the Labor/Community Strategy Center, and the Bus Riders Union. I work in alliance with thousands of grassroots groups reflected, in one instance, by the 12,000 social movement organizers who attended the first U.S. Social Forum in Atlanta in 2007.
I hope that Obama, as a former community organizer, will understand pressure from his left. Even if he does not always respond to our specific demands, it will be the job of the movements to assess his response and figure out our best tactics to win our demands.
I hope that we can make sure that Obama respects the civil rights and civil liberties of protestors and reigns in the campaign of terror against protestors by local police, the National Guard, and the U.S. military. An Obama administration cannot sanction the level of brutality and repression against demonstrators that the Bush police state has perfected. Under pressure from the Left, I believe he could expand civil rights and civil liberties and expand the rights of protest and demonstration, which in turn would help the movement further. Can I guarantee that? Of course not, but I do believe that the entire climate for anti-racist, anti-poverty, environmental justice, immigrant rights, anti-police state, anti-war organizing will be radically improved by an Obama victory.

Let's turn out the vote for Barack Obama, Now.

9) Because I have faith in the Obama supporters, faith in the Black community, faith in the grassroots Left.
Obama supporters
I spent a weekend at a Camp Obama training program in Long Beach and have since been going to phone bank at the local Obama headquarters. They are a wide variety of folk coming from many different points on the political spectrum. They are decent, hard working, motivated, and wonderful people. There is a movement atmosphere among the group. I was deeply moved by the 350 of us who came to the Obama training. We worked together from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Saturday and Sunday in a very intensive organizer training program. On every break I asked people, What is the most important thing about an Obama victory for you? I was surprised by the number and diversity of answers. "Because he is so intelligent. I am sick of having a stupid president." "He is the most ethical, the most humane." "He will defeat Karl Rove." "He is the most qualified Black man." "Because he will help me not be ashamed to be an American." "Because I was involved in the Civil Rights Movement and had lost hope. This brings me from 'We Shall Overcome' to 'Yes We Can.'" "Because I want my children to see we can elect a Black president."
Of the 350 people who attended, 100 were Black, 15 were Asian/Pacific Islander, 15 were Latino, and more than 200 were white. This election is drawing a line of demarcation among white people that is very profound-a civil war within a larger civil war, the anti-racist whites versus the racist whites. Just as in the Civil Rights Movement, a large anti-racist white bloc is consolidating itself as a critical ally of communities of color. Remember, these are white folk voting for a Black man for president of the United States. We should not underestimate the good intentions and high levels of activism and sacrifice of the Obama camp and their critical role in history in the years ahead.

The Black community
The Black community is driven like nothing I have seen since the March on Washington, the fight against segregation in the South, the fight against racism and police brutality in the North. The Obama campaign has a mass character to it that is unprecedented in U.S. politics, having sprung from the traditions of Black protest, Black rebellion and Black organizing. In the past months I have spoken with many Black members of the Obama Campaign and the Bus Riders Union. Having grown up in Jim Crow segregation, many say how hard it is to believe that Black people could come from slavery to the possibility of electing the first Black president of the United States. While that makes them very hopeful, in the same sentence they also talk of wanting it so badly they cannot acknowledge it. They do not want to get their hopes up and let the white racist voters crush them. They fear something bad happening to Obama. They fear the white backlash and fear another set of hopes dashed against the rocks of racism by this country. They are working with all their heart and soul for Obama but do not want to acknowledge how much this election means to them because, if he loses, they don't know if they can bear the pain.
There is no community stronger and tougher than the Black community. It has suffered more pain in America than at times is humanly imaginable. Today more than a million Black men are in prison and millions more are being hunted down by the police as we speak. And yet, the Black community has a power and resilience that is legendary, a long history of leading the anti-racist and Left movements in this country. Its capacity to recover and fight back is admired by friend and foe alike. Still, we cannot let a McCain victory happen, we just cannot. An Obama victory will raise the spirits and fighting capacity of the Black community.
There are some who worry that Obama will co-opt the Black community. They think that Black people who are against the growing police state or the occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan will look the other way if those policies are carried out by Obama. Some have expressed a fear that Black people will protect and defend Obama in a way that brooks no criticism, giving him a free pass at a time of crisis. But while that is possible, it would contradict everything I have seen in 40 years of organizing. My experience says that it all depends on how you organize and how well you grasp and assert your own independence and initiative in the united front.

I have been in social movements that helped elect and then challenge mayor of Newark Kenneth Gibson, and Los Angeles mayors Tom Bradley and Antonio Villaraigosa. Obama is a brilliant organizer, a brilliant politician. He has his own program, his own priorities, and he will fight to win support for them. Cooptation is not the most helpful concept, taking the focus off our own role. Obama will do what he has to do. It is for those of us who are organizing in low-income communities of color, those of us who consider ourselves good strategists, good tacticians and organizers-it is for those of us who have a grassroots base to drive our own programs, our own demands, and to develop the tactical plans to win those demands.
After the election, in just two weeks, thousands of grassroots groups that have been working on life and death issues for decades will be in the much stronger position of being able to place their demands on a more receptive Obama presidency. As just a few key examples of structural demands we must raise:
  • Dramatically cut the $400-billion military budget. Massively expand social services and direct transfers of money to the unemployed, the poor, and those facing foreclosures and evictions.
  • Release the vast majority of the one million Black and 500,000 Latino prisoners incarcerated in the U.S. gulag. Provide humane treatment for those who remain, including plans for parole and rehabilitation.
  • Remove all combat and occupation forces from Iraq and provide support for the self-determination of the Iraqi people. End the U.S. occupation of Afghanistan. End the military threats against Iran, and Pakistan.
  • Provide free, safe, and legal abortions for women. Do not impose parental notification. Provide U.S. funds for birth control and sex education in the U.S. and Third World.
  • Pass a new provision of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, strengthening Title VI, that will allow grassroots parties to sue government agencies over racial discrimination and to block federal funding to racially discriminatory projects based on disparate racial impacts.
  • Stop the environmental disaster of "clean coal" ethanol and nuclear power. Dramatically expand clean fuel bus transportation and dramatically restrict the auto.
  • Stop the ICE raids and surveillance on the 12 million immigrants in the U.S. Offer them amnesty. Take down the wall with Mexico.
  • End the blockade of Cuba and stop U.S. subversion of the Venezuelan revolution.
  • Support self-determination for the Palestinian people and protect their right to a viable homeland.

Those of us who see ourselves in a united front alliance with Obama and with his millions of supporters should carry out a policy of simultaneous alliance and challenge, defending his candidacy and challenging some of its key policies. The Right is like a pack of attack dogs. They will not stop even after Obama is elected. If they lose the election, they will begin attacking the Obamas the day they take office. They will try to subvert his presidency at every turn. We want to build an alliance with Obama against the Right, a united front against racism and fascism that never loses sight of our unities with him and with our stand against the barbarians at the gate. At the same time, we want to build stronger grassroots movements to his left that can carry out their own independent programs and tactical plans. For grassroots organizers we are working with millions of other Obama supporters who can be won to a broader progressive and Left agenda in the process of fighting for an Obama presidency. We need organizers who do not sit on the sidelines of history but see their participation in this historical battle as a major development that can expand the chances for more radical and revolutionary changes in U.S. society.
Let us be able to rejoice in an Obama victory and then face the inevitable challenges together. I am convinced that many of the people who are working so hard for Obama-who are making millions of phone calls, contributing their money, and going door to door for his election-will expect the most of him. They will not go quietly into the night if he betrays their trust. Obama has argued to his supporters that he expects us to keep up the organizing to keep him on track, that the role of those who work to elect him will be to organize to push him once he is elected. There are millions of people working their heart out for his election who will be there to take him up on his post-election offer.

Let's turn out the vote for Barack Obama, Now.

10) Because it's time to act. Here is what you can do.
There are at least four major ways you can take positive action in the next two weeks to elect Obama and defeat McCain:
  • Contribute funds to the Obama Campaign. Over three million people have donated already. Obama raised $150 million in September from 632,000 people, an average of $86 per contribution. My wife Lian and I have contributed to his campaign and plan to do so again in the next few days. Whether you give $25, $50 or $100, consider that another 600,000 people will be doing the same. If we each do this, we can raise another $150 million in the next two weeks to elect Obama and defeat McCain. Last minute ads to counter last minute attack ads from McCain are needed and funds are essential. Every McCain ad is an ad against liberals, against the Left, against Black civil rights leaders, against socialism, against any progressive future.
  • If you are in a swing state, plug into the Obama Campaign now. For the next two weeks, get involved with phone banking and precinct walking. On the weekends before the election and on Election Day, volunteer with Get Out The Vote (GOTV) operations.
  • If you are not in a swing state, phone bank into swing states with your local branch of the Obama Campaign. Also consider volunteering to travel to your nearest swing state the last weekends before the election or whenever you can to go door to door turning out voters. The more experience you have, the better, but the Obama campaign is good at plugging you in.
  • Become a poll worker. There are millions of people who will vote for the first time or vote after years of absence. The polls will be jammed. The Republicans will commit any crime under the books to deter voters in Democratic districts and Black voters in particular. We need election protection. People who have signed up as poll workers in L.A. are already saying that South L.A. and East L.A. are under-staffed. We can assume that communities of color will need special attention and that this is a critical job.
There is work to be done, and it is great to be an organizer, not a bystander. Obama is making history and so should we. It our job to be part of this historic movement and to come home with a victory in hand.
* * * * *
A respectful acknowledgment of the historic presidential campaign of Congressperson Cynthia McKinney.
The candidate with whose views I most agree is former Congressperson Cynthia McKinney, a dynamic Black woman running on the Green Party ticket. I know many people of good faith and good politics who are working for her. I encourage them to carry out their plan to its fullest and wish her campaign the greatest success. She should be encouraged for what she is doing. At this point this is not the choice I am making in my own tactical assessment of the best way to confront racism and empire. When the election is over, whether Obama is elected or McCain, we all have to work together in a broad united front against the war in Iraq and racism at home. Any tactical disagreements on this election, no matter how profound, should not divide us in our broader long-term objectives. At the end of the day, we are sisters and brothers in the struggle.

______________________________________________
Eric Mann, a veteran of the Congress of Racial Equality, Students for a Democratic Society, and the United Auto Workers, is the author of: Comrade George: An Investigation into the Life, Political Thought, and Assassination of George Jackson, Dispatches from Durban: Firsthand Commentaries on the World Conference Against Racism, and Katrina's Legacy: White Racism and Black Reconstruction in New Orleans and the Gulf Coast.

The views expressed in this article are his own.
If you have received this commentary through the generous forwarding of others and would like to get new commentaries directly, please send an email to
ericmann@leftviews.com

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Day of The Dead PATRIARCHY KILLS!

Below is a call-out from folks in SF to honor Sali & Kirsten this day of the dead.

PATRIARCHY KILLS!
Nov. 2nd, Day of The Dead 7pm
24th St. and Bryant St., Mission District, San Francisco

"The last week of September of this year two of our friends and
comrades, Sali Marcella Grace and Kirsten Brydum, were both brutally
murdered in acts of blatant violence against women.

These young and strong anarchist women truly died in the struggle-
Sali was raped and murdered while doing solidarity work in Oaxaca,
Mexico, and Kirsten, who was missing for 8 hours before found shot
dead, was on a tour researching "collective autonomy" projects in New
Orleans.

During this year's Day of the Dead procession in the Mission, we will
be present in the streets to show our grief and rage for our fallen
comrades but also to demonstrate what Sali and Kirsten embodied-
resistance to the very same interconnected systems of oppression that
led to their untimely deaths. We will walk in a contingent with a
banner that reads "Patriarchy Kills" and we are encouraging people to
bring signs, banners, or incorporate messaging against patriarchy into
their face paint and on costumes.

We do not view Sali and Kirsten as victims but rather casualties in
the on-going war on women and trans people- a war that the state and
economic systems enable, empower, finance and benefit from. We
recognize that murder is a direct result of rape and gendered
violence. In rejecting the social model of the "white middle class
woman victim" present in mainstream discourse concerning violence
towards women, we see race, class and gender oppression dangerously
intersecting for many women around us .

As anarchists, we know that we cannot effectively fight the state or
capitalism without also smashing patriarchy. Join us in solidarity in
showing our resistance to patriarchy in remembrance of women
casualties of the gender war.

We recognize the spiritual nature of Dia de los Muertos and will
reflect the solemn yet celebratory tone of the evening."

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Legal Observer Training Oct 8th 1-3:30PM

go to demonstrations? critical mass? this is the event for you!

You are invited to a Legal Observer Training
Put on by
Jerry Boyle & DePaul Law School's National Lawyers Guild Chapter
Sat Nov. 8th 1-3:30PM
25 East Jackson St Between State & Wabash- Lewis Building Room 516
Free!

What Is the Legal Observer Program?
The Legal Observer program is part of a comprehensive system of legal support
coordinated by the National Lawyers Guild designed to enable people to express their
political views as fully as possible, without unconstitutional disruption or interference by
the government and with the least possible consequences from the criminal justice
system. In addition to Legal Observers, Guild attorneys provide legal defense for
protesters who are arrested and bring civil litigation to protect protesters' Constitutional
rights.

Who Are Legal Observers?
Legal Observers are typically, but not exclusively, law students, legal workers (for
example, paralegals or employees of a community based organization that works on legal
issues) and lawyers who may or may not be licensed locally. Legal Observers are trained
and directed by Guild attorneys, who often have established attorney-client relationships
with activist organizations, or are in litigation challenging police tactics at political
protests.

More info here http://www.nlg.org/resources/LO_Manual.pdf

Thursday, October 23, 2008

The Teaching Rebellion Speaking Tour is Coming to Chicago Nov. 5th, 6th and 7th!

"Once you learn to speak, you don't want to be quiet anymore," an indigenous community radio activist said. Accompanied by photography and political art, Teaching Rebellion is a compilation of testimonies from longtime organizers, teachers, students, housewives, religious leaders, union members, schoolchildren, indigenous community activists, artists and journalists—and many others who participated in what became the Popular Assembly of the People's of Oaxaca. This is a chance to listen directly to those invested in and affected by what quickly became one of the most important social uprisings of the 21st century.

The Teaching Rebellion speaking tour aims to foster dialogue among activists from Oaxaca and the U.S. around organizing strategies and movement building utilizing the experience of Oaxacan organizers, who brought together labor, indigenous, women's, youth, and neighborhood organizations to build a powerful movement for democracy and accountability. Speaker Gustavo Vilchis will join us from Mexico, accompanied by co-facilitator and translator Rachel Wallis to speak about the book, present art and photography from Oaxaca and promote discussion and reflection on the former and current political climate in Oaxaca and its relevance to organizing in their own communities.

Speaker: Gustavo Vilchis, a native of neighboring state of Guerrero arrived in Oaxaca as an independent photographer, seeking to cover the people's resistance and provide an alternative to the coverage offered by the commercial media. An eyewitness to the 2006 murder of Indymedia Journalist Brad Will by plainclothes Oaxacan police officers, Gustavo is speaking out against recent attempts to charge protesters for Brad's murder.

Come hear Gustavo's testimony and see an exhibit of his photographs of the Oaxacan movement

November 5th 6 pm
Northwestern University
Kresge 2-359

November 6, 7pm
Decima Musa Restaurant
1901 S Loomis St
Sponsored by ChicagOtra, Radios Populares and La Voz de Los de Abajo

November 7th 7:30 pm
Maya Essence Fair Trade Store
4357 N. Lincoln Ave
Sponsored by Casa Guatemala and ChicagOtra

For more information Contact Rachel Wallis at Rachel.a.wallis@gmail.com or by phone at 202-557-1449

Or check out the Teaching Rebellion Tour Blog:
www.teachingrebellion.wordpress.com

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

La Calavera Oaxaquena -Nov 1st

Friday, October 10, 2008

PRONUNCIAMIENTO ante el asesinato de nuestra compañera

PRONUNCIAMIENTO http://mujeresylasexta.org/

Compañeras y compañeros de la Comisión Sexta del EZLN, de la Otra Campaña y de la Zezta Internacional:

Hace unos días nos enteramos del brutal asesinato de Marcella Sali Grace Eiler, ocurrido el 15 de septiembre en San José del Pacífico, Oaxaca. Ante ese crimen tan artero queremos decir lo siguiente.

Algunas de nosotras conocimos a Sali; otras somos madres y tenemos hijas o hijos de su edad; otras nos vemos reflejadas en ella, en su juventud y en su amor por la vida. Por esto y por mucho más, no tenemos las palabras necesarias para expresarle nuestro pésame a su madre, a su padre, a su familia entera y a todas y todos sus amigos. Pero sí tenemos algo que decir porque el dolor y la indignación que nos provoca este crimen es muy grande.

Marcella Sali representa aquello por lo que nosotras luchamos. Quienes la conocieron la describen como una mujer valiente, libre, independiente, fuerte y comprometida con la justicia, y la recuerdan bailando llena de entusiasmo.

Sus amigas y sus amigos afirman que Sali estaba viviendo persecución política en Oaxaca, la cual ella misma había denunciado. Entendemos que las investigaciones tienen que seguir su curso, pero en un país como México en el que no hay procuración de justicia, quizá nadie más que Sali pueda saber exactamente lo que sucedió el día de su asesinato. Si el motivo fue político, será muy difícil conocer la verdad porque el seguimiento policiaco intentará nulificarse y será otro de los miles de casos que se archivan a lo largo de la historia, esa historia en la que la violencia hacia la mujer y los feminicidios sólo son una estadística y a veces ni siquiera eso. No olvidemos que fueron los propios amigos de Sali quienes entregaron al asesino a la policía. No fue la policía la que investigó el crimen.

El dictamen del reconocimiento del cuerpo señala que Sali fue violada, por lo que exigimos una investigación exhaustiva. Algunas versiones, como la de su asesino confeso, Omar Yoguez Sin Gu (alias “El Franky”), hablan de que Sali tuvo una discusión con él y murió defendiéndose de una agresión. Una actitud defensiva habría sido muy justificable en Sali, consciente de su derecho a defenderse.

Pero no tenemos por qué creer cada palabra de lo que diga el criminal. Por eso queremos dejar claro que independientemente de las circunstancias bajo las cuales haya sido asesinada, nada justifica ni atenúa el crimen y la brutalidad de las que Sali fue víctima.

Además, queremos hacer hincapié en que justificar una violación o un crimen de una mujer a partir de su sensualidad, su estilo de vida o el ejercicio de sus libertades jamás nos parecerá aceptable. Sabemos que una mujer como Sali, con esa postura fresca y natural ante la vida, resulta ofensiva para cualquier macho o misógino, así como para un Estado represor y patriarcal, que no acepta el comportamiento digno y libre de una mujer insumisa.

Es por ello que si el motivo de su muerte no fuera la persecución política, estamos convencidas de que de cualquier modo se trataría de un crimen cargado de odio por lo que ella era, por lo que representaba y sin ninguna atenuante. Sali fue asesinada por creer en la libertad y por estar construyendo otro mundo.

Hay otro punto que queremos destacar. La información en los medios señala que el asesino ya tenía antecedentes por dos intentos de violación y sin embargo estaba libre. Esto nos hace pensar que el crimen de Sali pudo haberse evitado si se hubieran respetado la palabras de las mujeres que acusaron a este criminal de haberlas abusado, o si quienes lo conocían no lo hubieran protegido. ¿Cuántos abusos más antes del de Sali habrá cometido este asesino confeso? ¿Cuánto daño les habrá hecho a otras mujeres?

En febrero de este año, una de nosotras, integrante de Mujeres y la Sexta, fue víctima de secuestro, abuso sexual y robo por parte de un delincuente que se protege bajo la negligencia de las autoridades del Distrito Federal. Aparte del abuso que sufrió, nuestra compañera tuvo que enfrentarse al trato inhumano del ministerio público que le dio más importancia al robo del vehículo que a la integridad de nuestra amiga.

Sabemos que en nuestro país se les da un trato inhumano a las víctimas porque ante la exigencia de prevenir delitos mayores, la policía se escuda en el pretexto de que hay delitos que no se consideran graves hasta que las personas afectadas desaparecen o son asesinadas. Cuando se reportó el secuestro de nuestra compañera la policía tuvo el cinismo de decir que sólo se considera secuestro cuando hay una llamada telefónica que pide un rescate y no cuando las personas son privadas de su libertad.

Si nuestra compañera hubiera desaparecido o hubiera muerto, entonces sí habría sido un delito grave y tal vez habría sido investigado. El ministerio público necesitaba que nuestra compañera llegara en estado de shock, sangrante y con la ropa desgarrada para considerar que el delito era grave. Poco después, a pesar de existir una denuncia, la Procuraduría General de Justicia le envió un comunicado a nuestra compañera en el cual le anunció que no ejercerá ninguna acción penal en contra del delincuente aún en caso de ser detenido.

Esta es la ciudad y este es el país en el que vivimos. Situaciones como ésta se repiten con cientos, si no es que miles de mujeres a lo largo y ancho del país. Los feminicidios en Ciudad Juárez son el ejemplo viviente de la brutal violencia hacia las mujeres en México, ante la cual las autoridades muestran una cruel indiferencia que las hace cómplices.

Como Mujeres y la Sexta, integrantes de la Otra Campaña, hemos insistido y seguiremos insistiendo en no guardar silencio ante los casos de violencia contra mujeres vengan de donde vengan. No tenemos por qué tolerar la violencia ni de nuestros propios maridos, ni de nuestros parientes, ni de nuestros compañeros. Una madre tiene que creerles a sus hijas. Una amiga tiene que creer en las palabras de denuncia de sus amigas. Y entre compañeros y compañeras, no podemos ignorar y mucho menos condenar a las mujeres que se atreven a denunciar a algún integrante de nuestras organizaciones.

No importa la incomodidad que esto genere, no importan las fuerzas y la energía que esto nos demande. Tenemos que empezar a condenar y no tolerar nunca más violaciones, acosos, y ningún tipo de violencia hacia ninguna mujer. El silencio y la tolerancia no pueden continuar.

Hoy exigimos justicia para Sali y para todas y cada una de las mujeres que son víctimas de violencia, asesinadas o desaparecidas, ya sea por motivos políticos o por crímenes de odio.

Sali acababa de participar en la Caravana Nacional e Internacional de Solidaridad con las Comunidades Zapatistas que se realizó en agosto del 2008, apoyando a las comunidades indígenas de Chiapas que llevan años siendo agredidas por militares, policías y paramilitares. Sabemos, además, que luchaba por el respeto a nuestros derechos como mujeres y que durante mucho tiempo apoyó la digna lucha del pueblo de Oacaxa. Reconocemos su trabajo solidario con el pueblo de México.

Mujeres como ella son ejemplo para todas nosotras.

Su lucha no será en vano.

Exigimos justicia para Marcella Sali Grace Elier.

Abajo y a la izquierda con todo el corazón, siempre.

Por Mujeres y la Sexta DF-Edomex:

Fabiola Cruz, Eugenia Gutiérrez, Raquela Vázquez, compañera Vero, Gloria Arenas, Claudia Torres y compañera Meche.

8 de octubre del 2008

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Two statements from the children of Santa Maria Yaviche on Sali Grace

Scott's translation of two communiques released on September 28. [Spanish original] [Original post regarding the murder of Sali]

The Children of Santa Maria Yaviche Demand Justice in the Death of Marsella Sali Grace

September 28, 2008

TO THE HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION
TO SOCIAL ORGANIZATIONS
TO THE OTHER CAMPAIGN
TO ALL PEOPLE WITH A GOOD HEART

The children of Santa Maria Yaviche, Oaxaca, want to let you know that our hearts today are in mourning for a comrade from CIPO-RFM (Popular Indigenous Council of Oaxaca - Ricardo Flores Magon), with whom we shared experiences, sadness, fears, happiness, amongst other feelings. Yes! We are speaking of this big-hearted friend, "Marsella Sali Grace."

Her fight was mainly that women and children be free and respected, her form of expressing her sentiments was to paint banners, to make posters among other forms of rebellion, except violence.

We children are a new generation, we bring new and different ideas, different feelings, different forms of expressing ourselves, but we should have the same goal of remaking the state of Oaxaca so that there is justice and freedom!

Justice has three meanings: not only that those guilty of whatever crime are jailed, but that they also don't reoffend and that the victim, in this case Marsella Sali Grace, is always remembered fondly and that her death was for a just cause.

At the same time, what Sali Grace taught us and learned from us will not be in vain, it is a step to continue forward, to finish what Sali Grace started, trying to make the state of Oaxaca better.

Unfortunately, we don't have her with us anymore because she was murdered, suffering a painful and slow death.

For their part, the authorities did not start an investigation and they have the suspect now because he confessed to his friends that he had killed Sali Grace, and thanks to our comrades who were friends with her they brought him to the authorities. (Source: La Jornada)

Because of this: the children of Santa Maria Yaviche demand the complete clarification regarding the death of our comrade and friend Marsella Sali Grace.

Justice for our comrade Marsella Sali Grace
A real investigation into the case of Brad
Freedom for APPO and Atenco political prisoners

THOSE WHO CREATED THIS DOCUMENT
Wilfrido Flores Martinez
Semei Flores Martinez
Gennifer Perez Yllescas
Dulce Maria Perez Yllescas
Almadelia Flores Yescas
Elizabeth Flores Yescas
Emmanuel Flores Yescas
Alejandro Flores Yescas


Enough of the killing of those who fight for justice

My name is Wilfrido Flores Martinez
I am 13 years old
I am from Santa Maria Yaviche

I want to share a feeling that at this moment is invading my soul, and it is because of the death of a great friend and comrade, Marsella Sali Grace. She provided international accompaniment for the CIPO-RFM (Popular Indigenous Council of Oaxaca - Ricardo Flores Magon) and because of this she came to visit us in our village of Santa Maria Yaviche, because of this many children knew here and shared with her happiness and sadness.

She was here in our village this past June. With her we were drawing, painting posters and banners, so that through these paintings people can become aware of the suffering of indigenous villages under the bad government of Ulises Ruiz Ortiz.

We think the murder of Sali Grace could be related to the governor of Oaxaca because she fought for human rights and because it is customary that when villages organize the government sends people to kill us, as is what happened here in Santa Maria Yaviche on October 16, 2003, when an armed group showed up firing at us and killed Bartolome Chavez Salas and shot my dad Francisco Flores Manzano seven times.

Until now the material and intellectual authors of this aggression against us are walking free and are considered untouchable because the government protects them.

Because of this we demand:

* Justice for our friend Marcella Sali Grace
* The arrest of those who killed Bartolome Chavez Salas.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

What Caitlin's Up to Now..

Starting to volunteer at the Latino Union Friday http://latinounion.org/ (video below)

The Latino Union collaborates with low-income immigrant workers to develop the tools necessary to collectively improve social and economic conditions. Our mission is accomplished by developing leadership from within the immigrant worker community, developing feasible alternatives to the injustices immigrant workers face, and building the larger movement for immigrant worker rights.

Also heading to the National Lawyer's Guild Law for the People Convention in Detroit http://nlg.org/convention/

Collective Autonomy and the Murder of Kirsten Brydum

Another young female activist tragically murdered.
SF Activist Kirsten Brydum was murdered on Friday, September 26, in New Orleans, LA. She had been traveling since August, researching for the Collective Autonomy project http://news.infoshop.org/article.php?story=2008kirsten-brydum1.

Monday, September 29, 2008

Announcement of march for Marcella Sali Grace in Oaxaca

Justice and an end to violence against women!! Dignity and respect for women!!

Oaxaca
MARCH
JUSTICE
For Marcella Sali Grace
End violence against women
Tuesday September 30
Fuente de las 7 regiones
4:00 PM

On September 30, Sali would have turned 21 and a gift for her would have been to uphold the causes she was involved in here.

Freedom and respect for women!
Bring signs demanding justice for Sali and an end to violence against women.


I want to be a woman

And to not be afraid of being one
And not to be murdered for being one

I am a woman without being one

I am a woman when I hide
When I plan how to defend myself
I am a woman when they persecute me
I am a woman when they kill me
I am a woman when they rape me

For being a women they stare at and accost me

I am a woman without being one

I am a woman building
I am a woman and here I am
Ready for the war they've declared
I am a woman and that is my resistance
Because I did not wish to be born in this trench, but here I've found myself

I am a woman and I have another cause
Never on my knees
Never defeated
Giving live for this right, the natural right of being a woman

The hate planted in my being for not understanding the hate that persecutes me

Resisting woman
Fighting woman
Woman that keeps fighting

I've thrown every word in the trash that does not define me as I wish to define myself, every whisper that harasses me in the streets, every images that imposes itself on me and every duty they assign me. And in spite of having won, they keep killing me, keep accosting me...

Regardless I am ready...
I will not accept your war
I will not accept the terror you sow in my heart
I will not accept your violence
And I will not accept my own death

I remain with my FREEDOM, with my decision to keep being a woman and not to die for being one.

I am a woman and want to keep being a woman

I've died with each murdered woman,
And I've lived in each of them that live, in each of them that struggle.

I will continue being the carrier of live and if you turn around to see me,
I am your mother...

(i don't know who to credit for these words)

More links & photos

http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2008/09/26/18541460.php
http://portland.indymedia.org/en/2008/09/380060.shtml

IMC articles by Sally:

http://arizona.indymedia.org/news/2007/07/63660.php
http://portland.indymedia.org/en/2007/08/362944.shtml
http://portland.indymedia.org/en/2007/08/363536.shtml
http://portland.indymedia.org/en/2007/11/367894.shtml
http://arizona.indymedia.org/news/2007/11/70724.php

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Sally Grace, presente! Ahora, y siempre!

Update from Scott 9.27

Friends, there have been many developments in the past two days. More information will become available soon, but it can be confirmed that through the hard work of activists in San Jose del Pacifico, Oaxaca, and Mexico City, Sally's killer, Omar Yoguez Singu, has been identified and arrested in Mexico City, and transferred to Oaxaca. People here are confident that what happened to Sally was not "political" in the sense that it did not happen as a result of her political activities. Of course violence against women is very much a tragic political aspect of life under patriarchy. And regardless of the reason, it does not make her murder any less appalling or the loss any less severe. Feel free to leave your thoughts in the comments section. I will post more when it is available.

The AP has posted a mostly-accurate story about Sally's murder. Kristin Bricker has an accurate accounting of the lead-up to the arrest of Yoguez Singu.

Friday, September 26, 2008

Justice for our sister Marcella Sali Grace!

Please read and sign the below call to action. The Spanish version follows my translation. This event is beyond tragic.

Oaxaca de Juarez, Oaxaca.
Thursday, September 25

Justice for our sister Marcella Sali Grace!

Brother and sisters,

Our hearts are full of sadness and rage because our sister Sali was brutally raped and murdered 20 minutes from San Jose del Pacifico and up to this moment the Oaxacan Attorney General's Office, as is its custom, is not doing anything regarding the fact that there exist witnesses who have information to identify those responsible.

Sali Marcella Sali Grace was born in the United States, with a big heart in solidarity with just causes. She had many friends because she was always inclined to help, using her artistic talents to paint a banner or a wall or doing Arabic dance to raise funds for the struggle, or putting on punk shows, or giving self-defense courses for women because she knew very well how the men accosted them. This was one of her struggles, that women were free and respected. Sali was so involved in the struggle that she was an international accompanier of brothers and sisters who felt harassed by the bad government of Ulises Ruiz Ortiz.

Unfortunately, on September 24, a woman's body was found with the physical characteristics of Sali, in a deserted cabin twenty minutes from the village of San Jose del Pacifico and at the moment when a village member went to feed some dogs around that area, he was struck by a fetid odor coming from this cabin and notified the municipal authorities of the village, who proceeded to remove the body which was already in a state of decay, and after these events, they did not give any more information to the people in the village.

Yesterday, companera Julieta Cruz (who knew Sali was headed for San Jose del Pacifico) was informed that a young, foreign woman was at in the Miahuatlan amphitheatre, where she went, and where she recognized the body of Sali because of the tattoos she had, as her face was unrecognizable. Julieta thinks it is because of burns, but it doesn't explain why the rest of her body has less visible damage. When we asked for the case number we were denied as well from seeing the results of the autopsy, as they argued with us that because we weren't relatives they couldn't give us any information.

Due to her solidarity work with the popular struggle of the people of Oaxaca, in other struggles in the world and against the racism on Mexico's border with the U.S., on different occasions and to different people, Sali mentioned that recently in Oaxaca she had suffered political persecution and surveillance. This makes us think that her cowardly murder is related to the widespread repression against the social movement and directed particularly at international observers. Because of this, we don't dismiss that the intellectual authors are the same who ordered the repression against the people of Oaxaca in their struggle for justice and freedom.

In the face of these bloody events, and for the brutal cruelty used against companera Sali, we don't disregard that this could be a clear message directed at all the people of Oaxaca, as well as the companeros in solidarity from different parts of the world; we say this based on the recent national and international news which says that "APPO members were the ones who killed U.S. journalist Bradley Roland Will" and as there is no justice in Oaxaca, we worry that the distortion of information could interfere in procuring true justice for our companera and the clear bureaucratic slowness with which the involved authorities are already treating this investigation.

In the face of these lamentable events, WE DEMAND:

The immediate speeding up of the investigations.

The immediate clarification of the facts.

Punishment for the intellectual and material murderers.

Justice for our sister Marcella Sali Grace!

Enough is enough with of the murders, violence and hatred against women who fight for justice!


We ask you to sign on (at the email indicated) to this demand for justice and to become a part of the urgent activities to demand the clarification of these cowardly acts.

rebeldiasentrelazadas@yahoo.com
Information: (01 951) 5178190 CIPO

FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 25

9:00 am Presence at the U.S. Consulate in Oaxaca
(Santo Domingo Plaza, Col. Centro, Oaxaca)

12:00 noon Rally at the State Attorney General's Office: To demand the case is brought to Oaxaca and to speed up the bureaucratic procedures for the administration of justice.
(Domicilio conocido, San Antonio de la Cal, Col. Experimental).

Signed:
Encuentro de Mujeres Oaxaquenas "Compartiendo Voces de Esperanza"
Colectivo Mujer Nueva
Consejo Indigena Popular de Oaxaca Ricardo Flores Magon
Voces Oaxaquenas Construyendo Autonomia y Libertad
Colectivo Tod@s Somos Pres@s
Encuentro de Jovenes en el Movimiento Social Oaxaqueno
(...)


Oaxaca de Juarez, Oaxaca.
Jueves 25 de septiembre.

!Justicia para nuestra hermana Marcella Sali Grace!


Hermanos y hermanas.

Nuestros corazones estan llenos de tristeza y rabia porque nuestra hermana Sali fue violada y asesinada brutalmente a 20 minutos de San Jose del Pacifico y hasta este momento la procuraduria de Oaxaca como es su costumbre no esta haciendo nada a pesar que existen testigos que dan indicios para identificar a los responsables.

Marcella Sali Grace nacio en los Estados Unidos, con un corazon grande y solidario con las causas justas quien tenia muchas amigas y amigos porque siempre estaba dispuesta a ayudar, asi con sus dotes de artista pintaba una manta o una pared o bailaba su danza arabe para sacar fondos para la lucha, o hacia sus conciertos con bandas de punks, o daba sus cursos de defensa personal a las mujeres pues conocia muy bien como los hombres las acosan, esta era una de sus luchas, el que las mujeres fueramos libres y respetadas, Sali estaba tan comprometida en la lucha que fue acompanante internacional de hermanos y hermanas que estan siendo hostigadas por el mal gobierno de Ulises Ruiz Ortiz.

Desgraciadamente este 24 de septiembre fue encontrado el cuerpo de una mujer con las caracteristicas fisicas de Sali, en una cabana deshabitada a veinte minutos de la poblacion de San Jose del Pacifico y al momento en que un poblador fue a alimentar a unos perros que se encontraban por ahi, lo impresiono un olor fetido que provenia de dicha cabana y dio aviso a las autoridades municipales de dicha poblacion, los cuales procedieron a hacer el levantamiento del cuerpo que se encontraba ya en estado de putrefaccion, y despues de dichos sucesos, no se dio mas informacion a los pobladores.

El dia de ayer se le dio aviso a la companera Julieta Cruz (quien tenia conocimiento de que Sali se dirigia para dicho lugar), que una joven extranjera se encontraba en el anfiteatro de Miahuatlan, a donde ella se dirigio, en donde reconocio el cuerpo de Sali debido a los tatuajes que tenia, ya que su rostro estaba irreconocible, la companera supone que es debido a quemaduras, pues no se explica por que el resto del cuerpo tiene danos visiblemente menores. Al momento en que pedimos el numero de averiguacion se nos fue negado al igual que los resultados de la necropsia, argumentandonos que debido a que no eramos familiares de la persona no se nos podria facilitar ningun dato.

Debido al trabajo solidario con la lucha popular del pueblo de Oaxaca, de otras luchas del mundo y contra el racismo en la frontera de Mexico con Estados Unidos, en diversas ocasiones y a diferentes personas, Sali comento que en Oaxaca, en fechas recientes sufria de persecucion politica y vigilancia. Esto nos hace pensar que su cobarde asesinato tiene relacion con la represion generalizada a los movimientos sociales y dirigida particularmente a los observadores internacionales. Por esto mismo no descartamos que los actores intelectuales sean los mismos que ordenan la represion contra el pueblo de Oaxaca que lucha por justicia y libertad.

Ante estos hechos sangrientos, y por la brutal crueldad que ejercen sobre la companera Sali, no dejamos de lado que puede ser un claro mensaje dirigido a todo el pueblo de Oaxaca, asi como a los companeros solidarios de diferentes partes del mundo; esto lo decimos basado en las recientes noticias que estan circulando a nivel nacional e internacional, de que "los appistas son los que mataron al periodista norteamericano Bradley Roland Will" y como no hay justicia en Oaxaca, nos preocupa la distorsion de la informacion que pudiera interferir en la procuracion de una verdadera justicia para nuestra companera y la ya evidente lentitud burocratica con la que estan tratando el caso las autoridades actualmente implicadas en la investigacion.

Ante estos hechos lamentables EXIGIMOS:


La inmediata agilizacion de las investigaciones.

El esclarecimiento inmediato de los hechos.

El castigo a los asesinos intelectuales y materiales.

!Justicia para nuestra hermana Marcella Sali Grace!

!Basta de asesinatos, violencia y odio contra las mujeres que luchan por justicia!



Pedimos su adhesion (en el correo que se indica) a esta exigencia de justicia y a formar parte de las actividades urgentes para demandar el esclarecimiento de estos hechos cobardes.

rebeldiasentrelazadas@yahoo.com
Informacion: (01 951) 5178190 CIPO

VIERNES 25 DE SEPTIEMBRE


9:00 am Presencia en el Consulado de los Estados Unidos en Oaxaca
(Plaza Santo Domingo, Col. Centro. Oaxaca)

12:00 del medio dia Mitin en la Procuraduria de Justicia del estado de Oaxaca: Para la exigencia de atraer el caso a la ciudad de Oaxaca y agilicen su tramite burocratico para la imparticion de justicia
(Domicilio conocido, San Antonio de la Cal, Col. Experimental).


Firmas:
Encuentro de Mujeres Oaxaquenas "Compartiendo Voces de Esperanza"
Colectivo Mujer Nueva
Consejo Indigena Popular de Oaxaca Ricardo Flores Magon
Voces Oaxaquenas Construyendo Autonomia y Libertad
Colectivo Tod@s Somos Pres@s
Encuentro de Jovenes en el Movimiento Social Oaxaqueno
Café Calavera's opening night, Saturday Oct 11th, 7pm for a Dia de los Muertos exhibition evening to benefit Oaxacan Artists at the:

Million Fishes Gallery in the Mission of San Francisco

2501 Bryant Street (at 23rd), 94110

A celebration of the dead and the living with delicious food, drinks, yummy baked goods, live music, jangely dancing skeletons, live silkscreening, circus antics, projected documentaries of the Oaxacan movement of 2006, and much more! Many incredible bakers have offered to contribute their skills of tasty oven alchemy to turn out fresh cakes, pan muertes, flans, cupcakes and other delicious delights..

Please bring your sweet tooth and an article of clothing you would like to print, as there will be a silk screening station or two.

* * *

All proceeds of this event go to the supporting artists in the upcoming art installation scheduled for the month of November at the Million Fishes Gallery: Calavera Oaxaqueña: Mensajes de la Lucha Social. The month long exhibit is a collaboration of over 65 Oaxacan and Bay Area Artists, featuring the collections of three revolutionary Oaxaquena artist collectives which formed as a result of the social and political movement of 2006.

Perhaps you are wondering about Oaxaca and the APPO movement of 2006? What is happening over there now?

Here's a couple worthwhile links:

http://www.asambleapopulardeoaxaca.com/appo/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2006_Oaxaca_protests
http://www.narconews.com/Issue43/article2191.html


Also, please check out some of the movement's video footage:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yds4bH_WfmA
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kc0QgfwRWi0
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=trFiL3L0WKE
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VfGRYIrmzW8

Below are short bios of the featuring Oaxaquena artists:

Lapiztola is a collective of 3 local oaxacan artists who focus in the media of street based stencils and silk-screening. It was founded by two artists in direct action to the movement of 2006. Today, they continue to be great contributors in the street art movement of Oaxaca.

http://lapiztola.blogspot.com/

ASARO (Asamblea de Artistas Revolucionarios de Oaxaca) is a collective of approximately 25 artists who call upon the creative strength of community for positive social transformation. They use public art as a means to create a dialogue of image and word, allowing people to view the conditions of existence, standards and contradictions from the society in which we live. ASARO emerged from the search to create a new reality of support, morality and communication, as well as from the need to reject and transcend authoritarian forms of power and culture that has been characterized as discriminatory and dehumanizing.

http://www.myspace.com/asaroaxaca

Taller Bambu is a Oaxacan printing workshop and art space founded by Abraham Torres. He is a local artist, teacher and great contributor to the Oaxacan Art Community. Taller Bambu housed the production of the 38 artist collaborative series Calavera Oaxaquena created in response to the movement of Oaxaca in 2006.


THANK YOU FOR YOUR INTEREST & PARTICPATION IN THIS EVENT TO SUPPORT LOCAL ARTISTS & THE STRUGGLE FOR JUSTICE IN OAXACA, MEXICO…

Monday, August 18, 2008

Moved to Chicago

Found a place to live (couldn't have done it without mom), and move in tomorrow.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

egsoaxaca.blogspot.com



Online Videos by Veoh.com

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

photobucket.com/caitlinhenry

Photobucket Album

Monday, August 11, 2008

Report Back & Farewell Event Wednesday

hello to all, it is wonderful to be back in San Francisco.
i hope to see you this Wednesday 7-9PM (presentation at 8pm) for my report back and farewell event.
i will share what i learned in mexico, as well as more information about what the funds you all helped raise were contributed to. mexican art will be displayed, materials, propaganda, resources, and movies will be shared. it is also a chance to say goodbye before i move to chicago on saturday to start depaul law school. you will, of course, have another opportunity to support women in chiapas by donating again.

Location: Skot's SPACE Warehouse, 354 5th Street (between Folsom & Harrison)
Time: this Wednesday, August 13th, 7-9PM
What to contribute: information about your work, as well as food, drink, and/or a donation
Who to invite: everyone! tell your friends
************************
el miércoles- la celebración de la acción y compartiendo y se despide a mí....Informaré atrás lo que aprendí en México. el arte será demostrada, las materias y propaganda serán compartidas. es también una oportunidad de despedirme antes que muevome a Chicago el sábado.

lugar: El Almacén del SPACE de Skot, 354 5th st (entre Folsom & Harrison)
Tiempo: El miércoles, 13 de agosto, 7-9PM
lo que traer: información sobre su trabajo, así como alimento, la bebida, y/o un donativo
¡Quién invitar: todos!

Saturday, August 9, 2008

Language School Advice in Oaxaca

I highly recommend taking classes or volunteering with Omar Núñez Méndez at the Ollin Tlahtoalli: Centro de Lenguas y Cultura Mexicana A.C. Oaxaca, Oax., México www.ollinoaxaca.org.mx
tel/fax
(52) 951 51 4 55 62

He has a grounded, thoughtful, approach to in classroom grammar lessons and beyond the great delivery of that that, relevant subject matter and interesting themes. Omar made an effort to find reading material and movies that fit my specific interests, and the personal attention in the small class really helped my Spanish progress. The school has well thought through reciprocal volunteering programs with rural artisans and their families. Your modest tuition goes to subsidise and support activities that help the artisans with negotiation vocabulary to gain more for their work. There are also FREE English classes for local Oaxacans at the center, taught by volunteers...I have been recommending the school for learning English too.

"The name of our center is composed of two Nahuatl words “Ollin” and “Tlahtoalli” which mean movement and language respectively. Nahuatl is an indigenous language to central Mexico where it is spoken by more than 1.5 million people."

This experience was in stark contrast to my time at ICO the Instituto Cultural de Oaxaca. I would strongly oppose anyone spending money there. They are a profit oriented and overpriced large institute, and at the time I was there, were only catering to Americans. Though I had an amazingly kind, thoughtful and talented teacher, the materials in the school designed book were fairly devoid of themes regarding Oaxacan culture, history, and certainly devoid of current cultural context. Our teacher went out of her way to make things fun, bring us resources if we had questions, and think of interesting conversation topics. The way the classes were structured encouraged a very traditional student as empty receptacle model, not a participatory model. They had two American women on staff- I felt strongly that my tuition should not be going to support that kind of economy, but rather support jobs for Mexicans.

In the works

Save the date for this Wednesday evening the 13th, the reportback event plans are in the works for a SPACE warehouse space in SOMA.

Also, I have spent two days in front of the computer trying to format and update the blog and photos, my big update is coming. In the mean time, here is a good summary of what I was up to via snipits from an email from a wonderful compan Scott.

"On July 16, I went out to observe a protest march. Observe being the operative word, as it is against the Mexican constitution for foreigners to be involved in political activity. It was an intense and uplifting event. The cause for it was the attack by police on a march on July 16, 2007. Then, the APPO ("What's the APPO?" - see my first email caitlin's emphasis, see link on the right), were protesting the government-run and corporate-sponsored Guelaguetza. Guelaguetza is a Zapotec word meaning something along the lines of mutual aid/support. It's also a festival where on the last two Mondays of July, indigenous groups from Oaxaca's seven regions come to the city and perform traditional dances. Many years ago the government took control of the Guelaguetza, turning it into the state's biggest tourist attraction and charging an exorbitant $40 per person to attend the "mutual aid" festival. Since 67% of working Oaxacans earn less than $8 (27% earn no money, relying on subsistence farming or trade), the people are pretty indignant about the theft of, and profiteering off of, their culture.

The day before the Guelaguetza in 2007, the people attempted to peacefully march to the site of the festival, only to be brutality attacked by the police. Dozens were tortured (they have special "torture vans"), severely beaten and arrested. (
http://www.asambleapopulardeoaxaca.com/appo/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=41&Itemid=35)

The march this year started right next to a military barracks and ambled its way all around town before ending up in the town center four hours later. The people of Oaxaca know how to protest. There were indigenous dancers, stilt walkers, fireworks, people throwing candy, people giving out mescal, bands, and swarms of kids (sometimes older folks, and sometimes families, too) going out and graffiti-ing everything in sight. Some of the crazier places they hit were the military admissions center and the entrance to the barracks, while it was guarded by federal police with automatic weapons. The rest of the marchers were down with it, only urging them to hurry up and not to succumb to any provocations (from pissed off bank managers, for example). There was no overt police presence, though there were obviously undercovers.

The following night was Loren's birthday and involved a game of Wisest Wizard at the apartment of Caitlin and Lindsey, two more folks from the Bay Area. The highlight of the evening, besides the novelty of taping beer cans together to form wizard staffs, was meeting Octavio and David from VOCAL (Oaxacan Voices Constructing Autonomy and Freedom -
http://vocal.lahaine.org/), an anarchist group that is part of the APPO".....caitlin omission... "David was a political prisoner for 11 months, tortured and accused of first possessing cocaine and heroin, then of conspiracy and sedition, and finally, of rebellion. (http://www.amnesty.org/fr/library/asset/AMR41/017/2007/en/dom-AMR410172007en.html) His cases are slowing winding down, as the only "witnesses" are police or government employees, whose testimonies either completely contradict one another or are exactly the same, verbatim. However, given that the thugs and murderers are still in power, and particularly following the events in Zaachila in June (see my first email), anywhere he goes he must be accompanied by others to ensure he isn't arrested or disappeared.

The next week was one of dueling Guelaguetzas - the people's version and the Coca-Cola version. (Literally, the site of the official version is on a hill over the city, on which there was a gigantic Coke can. As friend observed, "Who knew Coke played such a large role in centuries-old indigenous traditions?") On Saturday, July 19, the government calenda occurred, led by the hated Governor Ulises Ruiz, surrounded by at least 100 bodyguards (everyone stopped clapping when he walked by). A calenda is a traditional parade/roving-festival. For the Guelaguetza it involved all the performers from all over the state, with their bands, fireworks, costumes, etc., marching through town. I thought the official one was pretty cool, until the next day, when the people's calenda happened. It was both stridently revolutionary and extremely festive. Copious amounts of fireworks, candy, mescal, music, and dancing ensued. We ended up with a crew from Putla, on the coast, who not only had incredible costumes and generous theories on mescal distribution, but also a model bull that they thought would be a great to have the gringos dance with. The calenda ended five hours later in the zocalo with what must have been at least 10,000 people pumping their fists to revolutionary songs, setting off revolutionary fireworks (that included a fist and spelled out "APPO Lives, We Will Win") and the burning of the Ulises Ruiz/Felipe Calderon rat. It was by far the greatest protest/parade/action/event I've ever experienced.

The calenda was followed on Monday, July 21, by the free Guelaguetza Magisterial-Popular. This was the third annual Guelaguetza put on the APPO, with a shoe-string budget and lots and lots of tequio (voluntary community service). We arrived at 9am, left at 4pm, and it wasn't even close to over. Group after group proudly presented their people's traditional dances in their traditional dress introduced in their own indigenous language, often with a description of the struggles their communities are facing. This Guelaguetza was dedicated to the murdered APPO members and the remaining political prisoners. A particularly amazing moment was the deployment of two homemade hot-air balloons, made of some kind of plastic and inflated using hairspray and a lighter. Beneath the balloon dangled the letters "APPO", and they conveniently drifted off towards the site of the government Guelaguetza, occurring at the same time. An announcement informed attendees that the gov't. one drew 10,000 people (including those bussed in and given free tickets to fill it up, but not including the 10,000 police on hand), while the people's one drew 35,000. Observing the solidarity, commitment and ingenuity of the movement here has been very instructive. Not only are they fearlessly challenging the government in the streets, but they are building alternative, more successful and egalitarian institutions separate from the government, and thereby further delegitimizing it. It truly is a people's movement. Not of activists or non-profits, but of the people.".....caitlin omission...
"What we've been most recently up to is helping out at a project in Santiaguito Etla, on the outskirts of town. A month-long program called the School of Warriors Without Weapons (
http://egsaoaxaca.blogspot.com/) brings internationals to live in and work with a neighborhood, talking with them, listening to them, hearing about their needs and dreams. After three weeks, the students propose a project, and with the community decide on what actions to take to address these needs and dreams. The last week is dedicated to creating that. As a few of our friends and contacts where involved in the school, we headed out for a few days to help in the construction of a soccer field, altar, jungle gym, mural, garden, palapa (gazebo) meeting space, and drainage system for the raw sewage and black water that runs down the mountains through town. It is all done non-hierarchically and with no money - all materials are donated or recycled. It's pretty amazing to see it all come together and the enthusiasm of the community and students.

Other than that, we recently returned (sick) from an absurdly bizarre trip to the Isthmus of Tehuantepec with Caitlin and have been saying hello and goodbye to comrades Lindsey, Loren, Dave, Caitlin, Janky, Steve and Sarah."

thanks Scott for letting me use your comprehensive and well written summary...you are a wise wizard

Sunday, June 22, 2008

Life in a Zapatista Caraole

I haven´t had much internet access as of late. I have been living in a Zapatista Caracole participating in Tsotsil classes, and will participate in Spanish classes this Monday-Friday. Also, the screen on my digital camera stopped functioning, so I can´t see what I am taking pictures of. When I have a moment the week after next, I hope to load more pictures. I have an aps film camera too, so in August I´ll have those put on a cd and uploaded.

Before heading to Oventic I was fortunate
to spend some time with the inspiring women and men that work with with
el Centro de Derechos de la Mujer de Chiapas.
  • My first visit (another 6;15 am wakeup) was to a community called San Vincente for a Women´s group formation meeting in a church. I learned a great deal about the lives of indiginous community members there (they recieve government aid, and shared what issues arise because of that) and of themes of violence the center brought out through allegories and visuals. We went to lunch in Teopisco for one of the staff women´s birthday´s and one´s anniversary at the center.
  • The next day I went to the Center at 9am to participate in another visit, but waited there for two hours and it turned out that there was a miscommunication and the people came and left during that time and left me behind ;(.
  • Friday I went to the performance of the play at El Barco, a wonderful art space in San Crsitobal. There was a lively and long discussion after the play about violence and community live and issues facing indigenous people in Mexico.
  • Saturday (another 7;15 am wakeup) we went to Chenalo for a really special morning. We were invited to the home of one of the local leaders for breakfast(the best tortillas I have had yet). The women from the community (which also recieved government aid) brought clothes to outfit the performers more authentically (they performed in Tzotil). All these foreigners setting up a stage in the middle of the basketball court in the Zocolao was quite amuzing for folks to see. Even more amusing and giggle provoking was the awkwardness of people trying to put on the traditional outfits- I will post the pictures of the very tall men in very tiny and backwards tunics. They presented the play in the Zocalo to much laughter, and engaged in a discussion led by the local leader afterwords. The actors asked for proposals for alternate endings and re-played the ending- a local man suggested what I thought was the ideal ending, then acted it out with the Italian and Spanish actors. At night there was live music and dancing at a hole in the wall-ish place called Espiral.
  • Sunday we went to Napite, (another 6;15 am wakeup- and another mis-communication- I was told 7am but the message never got to me that the meeting time was changed to 8am). We were there to show a movie about violence, and we arrived as church was winding down. We set up the projector and sheet outside, but alas, after much work, you couldn´t see the image very clearly outside. One of the women that was hosting the center invited us to show it in the church and asked us to come in at the end of the service so people wouldn´t leave. So we set up the movie, and watched in in a very powerful emotional convening. We had translation from a promotor and cathecist from FRAYBA. Their community also deals with the challenges arising from receipt of government aid. We had fathers day lunch in Teopisco and listened to some Marimba with traditional Mayan xylophone type instruments.
Sunday night I saw a great Argentinian circus with trapeze, poi style juggling with neon, and much more.

The Zapatista Rebel Autonomous Secondary School (or ESRAZ), through the Zapatista Rebel Autonomous Spanish and Maya Languages Center,
http://www.serazln-altos.org/eng/celm.html is in Oventic. We live in dorm bunks and share facilities with the adjacent secondary school and living quarters of the promotores (teachers in the Zapatista´s horizontal structure). We wake up around 5,30 or 6;30 to the sounds of people chopping wood or the students´music. One of the 9 students participating in the Mexico Solidarity Network´s summer program brought bands and a jump rope to exercise. I have been using them (and so have about 15 of the local kids) and one day I even ran to the top of the 45 degree hill from the bottom of Oventic to the top. There are three wonderful vegetarian meals prepared for us each day- 8am- 2pm - 7pm. We have morning class mostly outside on the grass, on hills, under trees- then a short break before lunch- a break after lunch (for studying or shopping at the co-ops)- then night time activities like learning weaving from the co-op members, watching movies (I think I am going to compile a resource list of movies), or participatory discussions about Zapatismo. The Spanish students have been working on using collective verbs, through acting out books and other participatory activities involving ski masks. I would recommend it to any anti-capitalist, for at least a 2 week minimum stay. I feel strongly drawn to stay, but have commitments to other plans. It is also difficult for me to physically find a quiet place and time to focus on studying because there are so many people engaging in group activities in the few free spaces all the time.

There have been more incidences of small world moments...There are two New Yorkers in the program, one of whom also worked at CCR and just graduated CUNY law, that were in a band with a certain current liberation orchestra member who went to the oventic school too! They also know a certain someone who worked for a certain health care union in NY. Oh, for those of you that told me to say hi to a certain promotore, he says hi to all three of you.

This weekend three amazing women I met at Oventic and I went to Palenque- two students (one of whom
sells Zapatista wares in Chicago) and one social justice teacher. We wanted to see the ruins and perhaps visit one of the many beautiful waterfalls. Upon talking to local activists, we learned that the two waterfalls we were interested in seeing (Misol-Ha and Agua Azul), are currently being controlled by (and hence money spent would fund) paramilitaries. So we opted to go to Palanque and stayed in the jungle at the lush and lively El Panchan (labeled as a bohemian paradise) in an amazing cabana at Ed and Margarita´s (I would recommend it). It was HOT AND HUMID- a nice change from rain on and off about 3x per day for the last three weeks. We ate great food, drank the local beer/lime/hotsauce drink, and watched great live music and a FIRE SHOW- and watched a real live scorpion run across the deck! I asked the performers about the fuel they use for the poi performance I am preparing to do in Oventic. I have been teaching some of the students, volunteers, and other people who live in Oventic how to do poi with beanbags, glow, and socks/balls, but haven´t had fuel to do the fire performance. Now I do- so this week should be exciting. The ruins were massive and breathtaking (literally- the steps were huge and steep and numerous)- the queen´s waterfalls and wooden bridge there were also incredible.

I had yet another small world moment, seeing one of the Depaul students (who in another coincidence swam against me in college!) at dinner and on the bus back to San Cristobal.

We have thrown around the idea of going to
las Cascadas el chiflon y Lagos de Montebello next weekend before they go back to school and I go back to Maderes and hopefuly the Womens Center...and hopefully upload pictures.

I have the kindest, most generous and inclusive host letting me crash. It is such peace of mind and body to have a quiet(er) place to sleep.

cafe is closing. more later....

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Week 1

  • Yesterday morning I went to an group information session about Civil Observation Brigades for Peace and Human Rights (BriCO) at Fray Bartolomé de Las Casas (Frayba) Center for Human Rights. The presentation on the background of the conflict and current roles for civil society was very comprehensive and informative. They presented a booklet with their rules for spending time in communities that is very helpful for me to think about for my time in the Oventic community. For more information about their work in ¨´defense and promotion of human rights, especially for the indigenous villages and communities in the state of Chiapas, Mexico´ and brigades that ¨´respond to the need to open up spaces of civil society to help keep the faith alive for indigenous communities, to preserve their dignity and to try to reconstruct the social tissue with respect for their own dynamics and in accordance to their self-determination as indigenous Peoples´´visit http://www.frayba.org.mx/observadores.php. Oh, and they have 2 DePaul law interns there too. I made a contribution to their work.
  • Yesterday afternoon a woman from Missouri/my hostel and I visited Maderas del Pueblo ¨´an environmental organization supporting indigenous people and rural communities, contributing to their sustainable development in a manner that is socially just and in harmony with nature.´ We learned a great deal from their presentation, literature, and tour of their gardens and tinctures. We made a contribution and bought DVD´s More information about their work to to foster the technical, legal, and social strengthening of people and communities in their process of self-organization and autonomy´¨ here http://www.maderasdelpueblo.org.mx/home.htm. They invited me to volunteer and this morning I had my first day there. They need documents translated from Spanish to English- so I am helping- the first was talking points on ecotourism. I will go back tomorrow and offer to do it remotely as well.
  • This aftenoon I visited with an inspiring Women´s Human Rights Organization Centro de Derechos de la Mujer. There is not much information about their amazing work, structures, and inspiration at their site http://www.ddhhmujerchiapas.org/ but I have materials to share at the report back event. I also made a donation and offered to volunteer. They have been kind enough to let me accompany them on four different trips to different community and observe their activities. I hope I wrote them down correctly: Ocoscingo, Aguacatengo, Chenalo, and Napite. One of the activities is a play about sexual violence put on by a collective ´´el barco´´ that I intended to see in San Cristobal on Friday night. Oh- and they have 2 Depaul law students there too.

Saturday, June 7, 2008

Day 3 in San Cristobal

  • This city is very enchanting, and the area of Chiapas we drove through is green, lush, and rich with bio-diversity. I haven´t found a usb cable yet, but i´m looking forward to sharing a photo journal of the abundant stencil tags and political graffiti.
  • The political situation is so complicated here- and told so thoroughly and so differently by each person- that for now I am just including links to organizations with postings/updates/information on recent denunciations, updates on the freeing of political prisoners, and indents of Mexican Army repression of Zapatistas.
  • The first meeting we set up was with Consejo de Médicos y Parteras Indígenas Tradicionales del Estado de Chiapas (COMPITCH). They met with us for 3 hours and explained the history and current conflicts over natural resources and neoliberal economic policies. It was very informative and very heavy. They did not want a financial contribution, they encouraged us to visit rural communities and contribute.
  • Then I met up with a very inspiring woman who I had been in contact with about supporting indigenous women she works with. She also set up a meeting for me with Centro de Derechos de la Mujer. We then went to dinner with two american educators & longtime traveling activists, one of whom works with Via Campesina and a wonderful and inspiring local woman who works for the Centro De Investigaciones Y Estudios Sueperiores en Antropologia Social. I learned so much from all of them.
  • Yesterday we met with SiPaz and learned about their methods of conflict mediation and resolution, and perspective on conflicts in Chiapas, Oaxaca, and Gurrerro. We made a contribution that they were very grateful for. One of the women was kind enough to invite us to her house (full of international folks working on solidarity projects here) for dinner tonight, and I gladly accepted.
  • Later that day I stopped by CAPISE to offer volunteer assistance or participation in their brigades, and one of Women I spoke with is a 3rd year law student at DePaul (the school I currently plan to go to in August). So we are getting lunch tomorrow!
  • We went to dinner at another great tea house/cinema/art gallery Kinoki and saw one of the best Zapatista documentaries I have seen, Dignidad Y Libertad. The night before we saw a great movie at anothe organic cafe/community space/school/cinema about Mexican and American food soverginty & security.
  • I am still set to meet with
Chiapas Media Project
Maderas Del Pueblo
Centro de Derechos Humanos Fray Bartolomé de Las Casas, A.C.

Sunday, March 2, 2008

Please Contribute

Dear Family, Friends, Colleagues, and Supporters,

  • I have established this website to ask you to support solidarity activities with indigenous communities in Mexico through socially responsible travel and volunteering. As you may know, I am planning to build on my experience organizing communities for social justice by attending law school in Chicago in August. Before this, I will be learning skills from and sharing skills with the global community via travel to Chiapas and Oaxaca- both regions have rich models of self-governance and autonomy. I hope that experiencing different perspectives will strengthen my ability to engage in advocacy and solidarity work more consciously and effectively.
  • I will participate in the Zapatista Rebel Autonomous Spanish and Maya Languages Center in Oventic. The activities offered are "part of the educational and cultural exchange and are given in reciprocity for the economic support that helps to feed local secondary school students."
  • I also intend to do peace camping and volunteer with local organizations in Chiapas and/or Oaxaca and continue Spanish language studies in Oaxaca. See links to right.
I am using this site and hosting events in attempts to gain the following support:
  • Three thousand dollars in donations [1/2 Will Be Matched-This can be made via Paypal, check, or cash (email me to coordinate)]:
    • $1,500 To donate directly to grassroots organizers and efforts who often have a harder time raising funds than larger NGOs or non-profits. This includes but is not limited to: three indigenous women raped by the Army in 1994 when their region was occupied by the Mexican Army, Zapatista Juntas, and Collectives of Support, Solidarity and Action (CASA).
    • $1,500 To cover expenses to group activities I plan to participate in: the Zapatista Rebel Autonomous Spanish and Maya Languages Center in Oventic, peace brigades/camping, Universidad De La Tierra in Oaxaca.
  • Names of your friends, family, colleagues and organizations who might be interested in helping to fund my efforts- and help contacting them.

  • Report Back Event & Bon Voyage to Law School Party in August (date & location TBD) - Upon my return I plan to share stories, a slide show and materials collected in my travels with my friends, family, neighbors and colleagues about what I learned. I hope to increase the visibility of the amazing efforts of people I have encountered.
  • Please let me know if there are:
    • People or groups you would like me to deliver something to.
    • Crafts or other materials you want me to send to you from Mexico.
    • If you have a cause/group you need outreach for.

Thank you for all your support!

Caitlin Kelly Henry

Para más información o para contribuir contacto caitlinkhenry@gmail.com

Make A Donation

Email caitlinkhenry@gmail.com to arrange cash or check pickup or mailing.
Or donate through www.paypal.com using the same email (Paypal takes 2.9% + $0.30 USD of your contribution)

Contributions (Donating gladly accepted through the end of July)

Total (including match funds) on June 1st = $4,817.89!

Contributions (advice, in kind, cash): Lindsey Shively, Hillary Klein, Tessa Landreau-Grasmuck,Vivian Newdick, Marina Sitrin, Eric Lindsay, Jonathan Stribling-Uss, Andrea Lino, ACME/Department of Spontaneous Combustion: Scott Simpson, Don Cain, Bohdi Baber, Glitter Girl: Isa Isaacs, Captain Roger Cooke & First Mate V Cooke, Colleen Henry,Catherine Marroquin, Nick Chomicki, Natane Davis, Blessing Schuman-Strange, Diane DiPrima, Cara Burgoyne, Marianne Ortega, Katie Sutherland, Meredith Scheff King, Adam Bernstein, Heidi Zimmerman, Margaret Kelly, James Henry, Dan Nugyen Tan, Matthew Evinger, Matthew Andreoli , Mathilde Landberg, Alex Roselle, DJ Sulaiman Ahmad, DJ Cooky, DJ Zaius, Tony Wang, Joanna Marie Van Brusselen, Kristina Sutherland, Banshee Ghost, DJ Boneshaker, Quintin Mecke, Emily Utter, Marina Sitrin, Dianne Gallo/Loose Interpretations, James Tracy, Aaron Wieler, Rachel Kraai, , Bryan Sebastian Kiechle, Nicole Puller, Jeremy Dalmas, Brandy Hansen, Bryan Wyatt, Adam Boggs, Celine Hollombe, Joe Raphael, Peter Osbourne, Oliver Pavick, Kate Hegre, Michael Scribner, Tommy Bensko, Marie Glynn, Jean Killacky, James Henry, Michael & Ellen Kelly, Heidi Zimmerman, Liz Collett, John Wester, Adam Bernstein, Joan Lewis, Jane & Tyke Nollman, Leyna Lightman, DJ Nomadeeq,Mariana Parreiras, Raja Sarkar, Frank Chan, Michael Ferguson, Diane Grieman, Christopher Guillard...Everyone who attended and helped with the two events!