Local Demonstrators Demand Closure of Guantanamo Bay Prison (photos)
About 20 demonstrators gathered in the rain on June 13 to demand closure of the US prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The rally was held at the 12 Corners in Brighton. President Obama called for closure of the prison in his 2008 campaign but it remains open. Nearly 100 inmates have been cleared of terrorism charges but have not yet been released. Demonstrators wore orange in solidarity with orange uniforms worn by the inmates. The action was sponsored by Rochester Against War, Metro Justice, Progressives In Action, Veterans For Peace and Band Of Rebels. Another demonstration is planned for Thursday, June 20 4:30 to 5:30pm.
Attorney Gregory Lippor Speaks on Town of Greece vs Galloway and Stephens Case
Gregory Lipper, attorney for Americans United for Separation of Church and State
speaks in Rochester, NY, on 6/5/13. Mr. Lipper spoke on the case Town of Greece vs Galloway and Stephens, which will be argued in the U.S. Supreme Court later in 2013.
Mr. Lipper spoke on how this is a case about the advancement of religion by the town of Greece, NY., which is in direct violation of the 1st Amendment of the constitution of the United States, in particular the establishment clause.
Galloway and Stephens, both town of Greece residents, did not immediately file a lawsuit against the Town of Greece, but tried to handle the issue directly. They tried to meet with the supervisor and thought they had an appointment with him, but when they went to the meeting the Supervisors underlings were there, Chief of Staff - Jeffery McCann and Constituent Services Director-Kathryn Firkins. Where upon Galloway and Stephens were told they could just not listen to the prayer or leave. Since the towns reponse was unsatisfactory, the two residents than solicited help from Americans United for Separation of Church and State, who wrote a letter to the Town on their behalf, asking the Town to replace the Christian prayers with nondenominational ones. The Town again refused. And in response, the pastor who delivered prayer at the Board meeting in October 2007, said that those who opposed the Town's practices are “in the minority and they are ignorant of the history of our country.” In 2008, the lawsuit aganst the Town of Greece was filed by Americans United for Separation of Church and State on behalf of litigants Susan Galloway and Linda Stephens.
Greece had not always opened its town board meetings with prayer. Until John Auberger became Supervisor, the meetings were opened with primarily with a moment of silence.
From 1999 through 2007, every single one of the Town's monthly prayers was delivered by a Christian. From 1999 until the time that the lawsuit was filed , over 2/3 of the prayers were explicitly Christian. No other religions were referenced in any of these prayers. Lipper stated, "More importantly, it became clear that the four non-Christian prayergivers in 2008 were being treated as tokens. Most of the other prayers in 2008 contained explicitly Christian content. And from the beginning of 2009 until the middle of 2010 (at which point the record for our case was closed) all of the prayer givers were Christian and 90 percent of the prayers contained Christian references—a rate of Christian references even higher than before the case."
The long wait, and finally, the jury selection process starts
Dispatch 2 from the George Zimmerman Trial
June 10, 2013
Sanford, FL—It's almost 10:00am and court is in recess with no word from Judge Debra S. Nelson regarding when the trial against George Zimmerman will start. Zimmerman was charged with second degree murder in the killing of Trayvon Martin, a 17-year-old who was walking back to the home of his father's fiancee from a local convenience store on February 26, 2012.
Currently, I am sitting in courtroom 1-B, which has been designated the “media overflow room” at the Seminole County Criminal Justice Center. In order to get a seat in the actual courtroom, individuals and organizations had to sign up for a seat in early March of 2013. There were only 24 seats available for media and I was told that the list is tens of names long after the initial 24 journalists and news organizations.
In order to get a sense of the dynamics in play in the courtroom, it is always best to see the real thing without the mediation of other news agencies or even the court's camera feed. What's missed by not being in the courtroom is where and how the families of Trayvon Martin and George Zimmerman are seated, how many officers are present, what vibe the defense and DA teams are giving off, and whether the judge is in a good mood or a bad mood. It would give me the chance to see who the potential anonymous jurors are as well as see their body language and the courtroom reaction to their testimony.
When I made my decision to come to Sanford, the deadline for requesting a seat in court was past and unfortunately, if I wanted to follow the trial it would be from the media overflow room. The room itself is nice, and we're allowed to sit past the bar. (See the image above.) They have charging stations and power strips as well. Computers and recording devices may be used and the 12 media people in the room can be heard in the background clicking away on their keyboards, sending texts, or receiving tweets. It's also cold—they've got the air conditioning going full blast in the building.
My role here is two fold. On the one hand, I am bearing witness to the train wreck that is our legal system, while on the other hand I am doing direct media work. I am biased, but that's nothing new coming from a journalist@ with the Independent Media Center. The nature of that bias will hopefully reveal itself through my dispatches.
Speaking of bias, these first couple of weeks of the trial are going to be about selecting a jury. Some might ask, why follow the jury selection process? Isn't that a boring activity? Listening to the attorneys ask the same questions again and again to each individual juror? Well, it's true—it can be tedious. However, jury selection can make or break a trial. It can lead to a hung jury or findings of guilt or innocence. It is the foundation of trials. Thus, it is critical to observe and report on.
Sadly, many of the potential jurors who have been interviewed thus far in either don't want to be informed about the world around them or are too busy to be informed.
To protect potential jurors, the judge ruled that they are to remain anonymous. Meaning no video or photos can be taken of them and they have been assigned a letter and number to designate them. On the live feed you can hear their responses, but you don't see them. The only way to see them is to be in courtroom 5-D where they are physically testifying.
Looking at my notes, I have written down that Juror B12 was asked if they knew the difference between a cop drama and real life; did B12 understand the real world from make believe?
“Yes,” B12 responded.
The prosecutor, Bernie de la Rionda, asked, “Could you keep an open mind in this case?”
B12 responds, “I have not formed an opinion.”
Another juror, B29, was asked similar questions. “Can you disregard anything you've heard or seen on the TV or read in the newspaper about this case?”
“Yes. I don't like to watch anything that happens in the real world,” B29 responds. B29 enjoyed watching dramas on the Bravo channel.
“Are you saying you are a blank slate for this case?” asked de la Rionda.
“Yes,” B29 responds.
At the same time, there has been a resounding suspicion and indictment of the corporate news media; almost every single potential juror has said something like the media isn't trustworthy, or the media doesn't always get it right, or the media is biased.
On the first day of the trial, four jurors were interviewed. Forty-one were dismissed. On the second day, 14 jurors were interviewed, with another 30 dismissed. This from a pool of 500 potential jurors who could decide this case.
In the hours of interviews I'd heard, many potential jurors seemed to hold desperately to an apolitical, center position where they could hear facts but refuse to come to any decision or opinion about the case until it's been codified in court. This kind of thinking is dangerous because a lot of unexamined or unconscious prejudices are exposed in the questioning and if these I-need-to-be-neutral-and-apolitical! jurors are selected, then we have unconscious and uncritical people making decisions that could be manipulated through unequal and dominator power relations in the jury room. Of course, these dynamics are not pointed out by the State and there is no referee present during deliberations. This notion that we need jurors who are completely objective seems counter to the reality that human beings are absolutely subjective beings and that in our ever increasing and spied on technologically advancing world it would seem harder and harder to find an objective or near objective juror.
Mansfield Frazier of The Daily Beast wrote a good description of why the jury selection process is important within the context of Florida law:
Voir dire is the process whereby attorneys from both sides get to ask potential jurors questions. Under Florida law six jurors (not 12) will hear the case against Zimmerman. In the state’s code of criminal procedure, the section that outlines the “grounds for challenge to individual jurors for cause” (Section 913.03) is the longest and most detailed by far, and for good reason. All criminal-defense lawyers (and prosecutors, as well) know cases can be won or lost during jury selection. In addition to striking a juror for “cause,” each side has six “preemptory” challenges, which means a potential juror can be dismissed without a reason being given. After Jim Crow laws were abolished, these preemptory challenges were the tool used to keep blacks off of juries. (Italics added.)
For myself, the first time I sat through a high profile trial was the Tyquan Rivera case where Rivera was accused and found guilty of shooting officer Anthony DiPonzio. (one, two, three, four, five, six) Observing the case, I was able to witness how the corporate media reported on proceedings. Generally, the journalists would sit in court, observe what was going on, or do crossword puzzles & sleep, and then at the end of the day, come out and ask then District Attorney Mike Green what happened in court. That sound bite would be reported as fact. The crazy part of it was that Green would choose to give the media subtle twists or manipulations of what was said in court to full on lies. The bored corporate media never questioned this even though they presumably sat through the same testimony. Observing and reporting on the case, I always felt that there was always doubt and never evidence amounting to a conviction based on a legal standard of beyond a reasonable doubt. In the last article I wrote on the case, I said
Throughout the trial, the jury was charged with finding "The Truth" of the matter beyond a reasonable doubt. With no ballistic evidence, no finger prints, no DNA, a gun that couldn't be testified to as the weapon that shot DiPonzio, and no eye-witness testifying to seeing the shooting, coupled with a whopping ton of innuendo and circumstantial evidence presented by Green to the jury, is it any wonder that doubt exists? We think not.
Observing the trial allowed me the opportunity to see the reality of the evidence and the testimony without the media filter. This included the corporate media interviewing former District Attorney Mike Green and then reporting exactly what he said as “The Truth”—even though they sat in the same room, heard the same testimony, and could identify when he was being manipulative or lying. What the public is allowed to see, what is reported, and what actually happens in court are all different from each other.
Jury selection is related to this because it lays the foundation of who is going to hear the case and make the decisions. The public has the opportunity to not only see what the composition of the deciders of the case will be, but also hear the potential biases and see the red flags that the defense and the prosecution are looking for through their lines of questioning. Direct observation and reporting is direct action. As George Orwell said, “In a time of universal deceit - telling the truth is a revolutionary act.”
Earlier Monday morning
Before even getting to the media overflow room, I had to get to the courthouse. I had two Seminole County Courthouses to choose from—one was civil the other was criminal and the courts were about five miles apart. I chose the civil, but eventually made my way to the criminal court once I realized the mistake.
Upon arriving at 101 Bush Blvd., I was asked by sheriffs where I was going. I explained I was a journalist from New York covering the Zimmerman trial. They directed me to the overflow parking lot which was around the bend, and in a field (about a ten minute walk to the courthouse). I parked my car, grabbed my gear, and headed toward the building.
On the way, I was directed to a bridge over water which would cut my walk time down. I thanked the sheriff and proceeded on. As I crossed the bridge, however, I felt like I was entering some kind of fantasy world of corporate media! Tents, trucks, lights, generators, air conditioners, and trailers were all parked very close together and everywhere! Seeing the huge media presence, I was curious what I would find in the protest areas. Know what I found? About 40 Martin supporters and zero Zimmerman supporters. The sheriffs had everything logistically pinned down, but the masses were no where to be seen. I wouldn't be surprised if people were waiting for the actual trial to start before coming out. Did I mention the glut of done-up corporate media people—primed, painted, and polished—wandering around armed with cameras, laptops, lenses, recorders, pads and pens, and gear bags? Everywhere?
Moving into the Martin support pen, I was able to capture an interview being conducted by one of the local affiliates with Oscar Grant's uncle, Cephus “Uncle Bobby” Johnson. He talked about the murder of his nephew and compared the two cases. Watch the video:
I headed into the courthouse and was told that media have a special metal detector that they can go through instead of the public metal detector. I thanked the sheriff and went through. My R-IMC press badge helped me a ton because it seemed like if you didn't h
ave a press badge, then there would be a lot more scrutiny.
The trial is being held in courtroom 5-D so I got onto the elevator and pressed five. When the doors opened, I headed toward the metal detector outside the courtroom. I was asked if I had a special badge to get into the courtroom and I replied in the negative. I was then directed to see Michelle Kennedy, an employee of the court. Michelle and her intern Rachel have been very kind hosts to all the media. Rachel told me that media spaces in the courtroom have been booked for months with tens of names on the waiting list. The deadline to register to get into the court ended sometime in March. Therefore, I was invited to watch the trial from the media overflow room.
10:35am
On the screen, with no audio, we saw stacks of questionnaires being passed between lawyers and Judge Nelson. Sometimes the live feed would focus only on the court's seal whereas other times you'd see a long shot of Zimmerman or the lawyers from either side conferring. The cue that something was happening was when the audio cut back in.
Seminole County had called in some 1,400 prospective jurors for jury duty. Of those initial 1,400 potential jurors, five hundred were asked to stay in court. In order to expedite the process, a questionnaire was given to jurors to fill out which gave the prosecution and defense some information that they could use to hone their lines of questioning.
The main concern of the lawyers on both sides is what's called pretrial publicity. Basically, is the jury pool too “contaminated” with information pertaining to the case to give the defendant a fair trial. What have the jurors heard, read, and/or seen? Have they formed opinions, and if so, could those opinions be left at the door in order to keep an open mind to the facts presented in court? Reporters in the overflow room were assured that we would be able to hear the questions and responses of the prospective jurors regardless of their anonymous status. I recall a collective sigh.
11:15am
I would categorize the day as one of hurry up and wait. Lunch recess had not been called yet so I decided to go warm up outside. Courtroom 1-B can get incredibly cold even though, outside, it was sunny, humid, and in the high 80s.
After taking a stroll outside, I came back in to continue observing and writing. Imagine my surprise when entering courtroom 1-B to see a press conference underway with Robert Zimmerman, George's brother. I pulled out my Flip camera and joined the two dozen or so others who were listening and recording.
Robert looked sleek in his gray suit, polished in his demeanor and body language, and fielded questions like a champ doing some media jiujitsu that deflected questions that might tip his hand or give too much away, while embracing the softball questions with calm and reassuring answers. And the media loved it.
Lunch came and went. Around 1:55pm, court went back into recess because the prosecution (Bernie de la Rionda) and the defense (Mark O'Mara & Don West) were having trouble reading the questionnaires. Once potential juror made the comment that it was hard to write out the questionnaire because there was no hard surface on which to write.
2:30pm
Finally, after a long day of waiting, the attorneys, the judge, and the potential jurors seemed ready to go for the interview process based off the questionnaire that all 500 had filled out. Four potential jurors were interviewed before the end of the day. Generally, the lines of questioning were about what they had heard about the case, when they had heard it, what they remember, what they would do if the situation occurred where, when deliberating, something came up from theirs or other jurors' memories that was not presented in court, if they were blank slates, and if they could be objective and fair.
To see the live feed of the proceedings, check out: http://www.mediaite.com/tv/watch-live-george-zimmerman-trial-jury-selection-3/. The court has said that once their feed is archived, it will be made public--but that didn't seem to be something that would happen quickly.
At 5:00pm, Judge Nelson recessed the case until the following day and admonished the potential jurors. She told them not to talk about the case or watch any news.
While she did that, I went outside to de-thaw from the cold inner depths of the Seminole County Criminal Justice Center.
Additional Information: Leading up to it--some thoughts from Sanford, FL | "Million Hoodie March" Across the US | Zimmerman's Trial Approaching; Trayvon Martin Rally from 2012 | After Trayvon Martin Incident, Hypocrisy Continues To Run Rampant in Rochester, New York!
Fannie Mae Calls Off Eviction of Renee Madison in Rochester, Amid Community Pressure
- 1. A local, state, and national moratorium on foreclosures in the courts and a moratorium on their enforcement by local police and SWAT teams.
- 2. End all financial incentives for banks to foreclose including ending foreclosure insurance for bank mortgages by the government-backed Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and FHA. Universal housing for all, not universal mortgage-care for the banks.
- 3. Institute a systematic policy for the bailed-out banks to hand over pre- and post-foreclosures to local Community Land Trusts, where community control of land and permanently affordable housing can be secured.
- Sign Petition To Stop the Eviction (signatures still needed until deal is in writing!)
- Rochester Mother: "I Have No Where Else to Go" - Channel 13 (WHAM-ABC)
- 'Take Back the Land' Joins with Local Family To Fight Bank Eviction Order - Minority Reporter
- Renee Madison Pledges to Stay in Her Home, Defies Eviction Order
Police Brutality and the new Jim Crow
Ream Kidane of the International Socialist Organization gave a presentation on how the so-called "War on Drugs" has sparked a new legal system much like the old "Jim Crow" laws that followed the Civil War. Under Jim Crow, black and white people were separated by law. The laws were repealed in 1965.
The presentation was followed by a discussion. Present at the meeting was Benny Warr, a local disabled man who was caught up in a recent violent police action while waiting for a bus.
Corrected higher res video of Benny Warr being attacked: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7xifmR0C3Mk
Rochester Indymedia (Rochester.Indymedia.org) has also released a new video by a community member who goes by the handle “Colbert.” The video shows Benny Warr being elbowed in the face and neck by one of the officers at the :25 - :28 mark. See the video at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NTyO1KDusB4
Please sign the petition to have the charges dropped and the officers fired: https://www.change.org/ petitions/demand-all-charges- against-benny-warr-be-dropped- and-the-officers-involved-be- fired
Related Rochester Indymedia articles: Rochester Indymedia checks in with the Center for Disability Rights on Benny Warr's case | Video Reportback! Enough Is Enough! Community Rally and March! | "Not Guilty!" Benny Warr Arraigned | Disabled Man Assaulted by RPD While Waiting for Bus | Flyer for Benny Warr Rally | The RPD's policies and procedures for ADA compliance: Are they doing a good job? | Have you seen these guys? | Have you seen "Big Face"? | Flyer for Benny Warr Rally on May 30th! | Dredging Up the Past on Police Union President Mike Mazzeo
Related articles: Rochester, NY Police officers Assault Disabled Man in Motorized Wheelchair | Rochester, NY Police officer Cedric Felton Remains Professional, When Asked About Incident With Disabled Man in Wheelchair Being Assaulted by RPD officers, but Female officer Has No Comment | Rochester, NY's So-Called 'Black Leaders' Silent After Disabled African-American Man In Wheelchair Is Beaten By RPD Officers | SocialistWorker.org: "My god, they're beating him" | Minority Reporter: Support Growing for Wheel-Chair-Bound Man Beaten by Police
Ream Kidane's presentation
Discussion part 1 (video starts 3 minutes into audio)
Discussion part 2
Renee Madison at 612 Brooks Ave. Pledges to Stay in Her Home
original article: http://takebackroc.rocus.org/node/100
Open Letter to Fannie Mae from Renee Madison in Rochester, NY
Federal National Mortgage Association
Attorneys: Rosicki and Rosicki, P.C.
Attn: Gillian Brown and Ralph Bernard
51 East Bethpage Road
Plainview, NY 11803
June 6, 2013
Dear Federal National Mortgage Association, a/k/a Fannie Mae,
My name is Renee Madison and I live at 612 Brooks Ave., Rochester, NY 14619 where I’ve lived for 17 years with my family. I live here with my two daughters and my partner. After I was unjustly foreclosed on, Fannie Mae bought my house at auction and is now trying to evict my family. Fannie Mae sent the Rochester City Marshal to my door to deliver a 72 hour eviction notice on Monday, June 3, 2013. I am requesting that you immediately stay the eviction and so my family has time to buy the house back.
In 2006 my Mom took out a mortgage with GMAC. Without our knowledge GMAC transferred the mortgage to MERS and then my understanding is that the mortgage was illegally robo-signed over to NationStar. Despite this, NationStar took over the mortgage and fraudulently foreclosed on my family.
In 2007 my Mom, the original owner of the property, passed away. This was a very difficult tragedy for my family and it took a toll on us and took some time for us to recover. During this time we fell behind on our payments. To make matters worse I became very sick. I have lupus and since December 2007 I was diagnosed with Graves disease and have had my left hip replaced. This is all in addition to my episcleritis (a serious condition). During this time NationStar aggressively foreclosed on my family. In the foreclosure they were represented by the disgraced foreclosure mill Steven J. Baum. Because Baum’s unethical foreclosure practices, the firm was shut down. Yet the foreclosure continued even though I never got a notice who the new lawyers for the bank were. The next thing I knew my house was going up for auction in September 2012. When I got that notice I contacted the bank and they said it was too late to negotiate and Fannie Mae bought my house at the auction.
Needless to say, my family has fallen on hard times. Yet we are still willing and able to pay. We only want you to give us the time we deserve. We understand that when you, Fannie Mae, fell on hard times you were given at least $116 billion of government funded bailout money and you are yet to repay all that money. We aren’t even asking for bailout. We are just asking for the more time to get the money to buy the house back.
My 12 year daughter is scared she is going to lose her home. Unfortunately, she answered the door when the marshal came to deliver our 72 hour notice leave. She was distraught. No child should have to be put through this. There is no need to rush the eviction and displace my family and leave another home vacant in my neighborhood. We have no place to go.
We have no plans to leave our longtime home. Fannie Mae doesn’t need another home. We’ve seen what you’ve done to my neighborhood. It never should have gotten this far in the first place. If you are unable to deliver a notice by Friday, June 7, 2013 requesting the court stay the eviction we will be forced with to call in our community for support including Take Back the Land Rochester to stop the eviction. We’ve been trying to work out this matter privately for some time to no avail. Please reconsider your position.
Sincerely,
Renee Madison
612 Brooks Avenue
Rochester, NY 14619
CC:
Federal Housing Finance Agency
U.S. Senator Charles Schumer
U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand
U.S. Congresswoman Louise Slaughter
New York Attorney General, Eric Schneiderman
Rochester Mayor Thomas Richards
Rochester City Council President, Lovely Warren
Rochester Councilmember, South District, Adam McFadden
Take Back the Land Rochester
Metro Justice of Rochester
COME OUT MONDAY AT 11AM TO HELP WITH EVICTION DEFENSE!
Home Defenders,
The forces of greed haves set their sights on Renee Madison's family at 612 Brook Ave. in the 19th ward. But they have another idea. They are preparing to make stand and keep their long time home. And Take Back the Land Rochester will stand beside them.
We will rally outside her home on Monday with the community to let Fannie Mae know that they will not steal her home from her without resistance.
see the facebook event: https://www.facebook.com/events/166172216893654/
Ursula Le Guin’s anarchist utopia
original link: https://philebersole.wordpress.com/2013/05/16/ursula-le-guins-anarchist-utopia/
THE DISPOSSESSED: An Ambiguous Utopia by Ursula LeGuin is a thought experiment on how an anarchist society would work. I read this science fiction novel when it first came out in 1974 and I re-read it a few weeks ago because of a new-found interest in anarchism.
The novel begins with the journey of the physicist Shevek from the hardscrabble planet Anarres, which was settled by anarchists a century and a half previously, to the lush planet Urras, a caricature of our own world in the 1970s.
In alternating chapters, it tells the story of Shevek’s life on Annares and its discontents, leading up to his decision to leave, and his adventures on Urras and how grotesque a society based on power and profit seems in his eyes.
The Dispossessed is worth reading as a novel, but in addition it gives an idea of how a possible anarchist society could function and, more importantly, the moral foundations of such a society. Anarres is flawed and falls short of its ideals of individual freedom, mutual aid and voluntary cooperation, but is still infinitely preferable to the money-hungry, power-hungry nations of Urras.
I think LeGuin was realistic in putting her anarchist society on a separate planet. Utopian societies, anarchist and otherwise, have sometimes flourished in the United States, but they have all been pulled apart by the gravitational pull of the larger society around them. By this SF device, she was able to show the normal functioning of a hypothetic anarchist society rather than its battles with external enemies.
Anarres is a society without government, laws, police, courts, corporations, money, salaries, profit, organized religion or private property, except for a few hand-carried personal possessions. Its people speak an artificial language, a kind of benign Orwellian Newspeak which lacks words for concepts such as “debt” or “winner.”
The society is organized to forestall any possibility of hereditary privilege. There are no family names. Everybody has a unique two-syllable, four- or five-letter name assigned by computer. Couples may stay together or not, as the choose. Some are bonded for life, but there are no laws pertaining to marriage or divorce. Children may be raised by both parents, either one or public nurseries. People live in dormitory rooms. Nobody lives in an free-standing house.
Productive work on Anarres is done by syndicates of workers, who produce what is needed and receive what they need without monetary payment. Every local community strives to be self-sufficient in food and energy, but there is some exchange and specialization among the communities.
Although there is no government, there is a coordinating agency called the PDC. It is guided by policy debates and consensus developed in public meetings in which anyone can take part. Advanced computer technology substitutes for central planning or the working of the law of supply and demand. The PDC advises the syndicates on what is needed, and keeps postings of jobs that need to be done. People volunteer for difficult and dangerous jobs, mostly when young, because of the challenge and because their work is honored.
In the individual syndicates, unpleasant work is done in rotation. People who shirk their duties are subject to social pressure, then to public reprimand and possibly summary justice with fists and then, in extreme cases, to expulsion. There are no police and no courts, but there are mental institutions.
By locating her society on a world where living is difficult, Le Guin avoided the easy path of saying that people in the new utopian society would live a life of ease simply because of the absence of exploitation and unnecessary work.
In the course of the novel, there is a near-famine on Anarres which strains the social fabric. Shevek in one chapter is on a food train which is raided by hungry villagers when it stops. But the ethic of mutual aid is strong enough to keep things from falling apart.
The people of Anarres possess the full range of human impulses and desires, but as in any society, they suppress some impulses and foster others. Children are taught to share and not to compete. They are taught to not be “egoists,” but also not to be altruists. Nobody, in theory, is asked to sacrifice themselves for the greater good. Instead they are asked to cooperate with others for their mutual benefit.
In the novel, it is hard to maintain the ideal of the free and equal society. Power-seeking, privilege and envy creep in, and conformity to the group becomes oppressive.
I might have thought that she was depicting her anarchist society as a failure if it were not for the contrast with Urras, with its wars, power structures, privileged rich and oppressed poor. Conformity on Urras is enforced not by social pressure, but by helicopter gunships firing on rioting mobs.
I confess that I don’t completely understand how Le Guin’s hypothetical society would work. For example, Shevek and his wife Takvar decide Anarres has become too conformist and they form a Syndicate of Initiative which, among other things, publishes works that can’t otherwise find a printer.
My question is: Who supplies the Syndicate of Initiative with paper? There is no money, so they can’t buy paper. They can ask the paper syndicate to allocate paper, but since they are unpopular and paper is scarce, they would be unlikely to get an allocation. There are no laws that would give them a right to claim a share of paper, or of anything else.
The great merit of the novel, aside from being a good story and a good science fiction story, is that it shows a set of moral values in action that are different from the values that guided the United States of 1974 or of today. The challenge to the reader is whether the reader would want to live according to those values.
For some people, a society without competition, private property or structures of authority might be the opposite of a utopia. For myself, I’m not sure. I rewrote this last paragraph several times, and may rewrite it again.
Click on The Dispossessed for the full text of the novel in The Anarchist Library.
Click on The Dispossessed Quotes for 61 quotations that give the essence of Ursula Le Guin’s novel.
Click on Ursula Le Guin’s The Dispossessed: Anarres as Description of the Communist Future for a thoughtful review from a Marxist perspective by Karlo Mikhail Mongaya. [Added 5/27/13]
Click on Takver’s Anarres – Comments on Ursula Le Guin, The Dispossessed and Anarchism for thoughtful comment from an admirer. [Added 5/31/13]
Click on And Then There Were None for Eric Frank Russell’s classic 1951 anarchist SF satire.
Rochester Is Getting On Board ROC Transit Day
original article: http://www.rochestersubway.com/topics/2013/06/rochester-is-getting-on-board-roc-transit-day/
A few short weeks ago I told you about ROC Transit Day 2013. The idea is simple… pedestrians make for a vibrant city. The more people Rochester has walking the streets instead of driving, the stronger our community will be; and the stronger our local economy will be. ROC Transit Day is a holiday from our cars. It’s a day to celebrate local businesses. And it’s a day to cast a symbolic vote for a stronger transit system…
Rochester’s business community is quickly catching on. Over the past two weeks the ROC Transit Day map has begun to fill up with restaurants, merchants, and businesses who understand why this effort is so important. From Downtown Rochester to Avon NY, businesses are stepping up and offering fantastic deals for anyone who rides the bus on June 20.
But with just under three weeks to go, we still see large areas of Rochester that aren’t represented. So we need YOUR help…
Do have a job?
If so, ask your employer (your manager or your HR person) why they haven’t contacted us for some FREE fare cards . Email us or use the contact form .
Do run a business?
Get your business on our interactive map . All you need to do is tell us what you plan to offer transit riders on June 20. We’ll actively promote your business on Facebook and Twitter and will help drive customers to you. Email us or use the sponsor form now.
You don’t sell anything? That’s ok. Ask us to give you some FREE fare cards for your employees to use. It’s too easy! Just email us or use the contact form .
Are you unemployed or independently wealthy?
Even YOU can help! We need volunteers to help us give away free prizes to transit riders on June 20. Email us or use the contact form and let us know you’d like to volunteer. You’ll get a free fare card, a free T-shirt, and you’ll make lots of people smile.
Add your business or organization to this growing list…
- 5LINX Enterprises, Inc.
- A Step Apart
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- Hegedorn’s Market
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- National Museum of Play at The Strong
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- Sarah Amelia Antiques & Giclee
- Shop Peppermint
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Julian Assange: a profile in courage
original article: https://philebersole.wordpress.com/2013/05/15/julian-assange-a-profile-i...
The United States and British governments treat Julian Assange like the ultimate terrorist threat.
Members of the London Metropolitan Police, wearing Kevlar vests, surround the Ecuadorian embassy, where Assange has taken refuge, 24 hours a day, seven days a week. They occupy the front steps and entrances, they occupy street corners nearby, one police officer occupies a room in a building adjoining Assange’s room. Chris Hedges, a journalist and former war correspondent, said the Metropolitan Police spent the equivalent of $4.5 million in surveillance of Julian Assange just through January 31.
Behind the United Kingdom government is the power of the U.S. government. A dozen government agencies are working on the Julian Assange case. They have waged economic warfare and cyberwarfare to try to shut down Assange’s WikiLeaks operation. They interrogate and try to recruit WikiLeaks supporters every time they pass through a U.S.-controlled airport. Assange’s lawyers believe that Bradley Manning, who leaked confidential government information to WikiLeaks, could plea bargain for a reduced sentence by testifying that Assange solicited the information.
A secret grand jury in Arlington, Va., reportedly has handed down a sealed indictment of Assange. Hedges reported that the Department of Justice is mounting a major effort on this. It spent $2 million this year alone for a computer system to handle Assange prosecution documents. The U.S. Congress in 1989 authorized the federal government to seize anyone, anywhere in the world, who is accused of a crime under U.S. law, even if this is done in violation of international law or the law of the country concerned.
I read a lot about the partisan divisions in the U.S. government, but Democrats and Republicans, the so-called liberals and the so-called conservatives, are united in their desire for the U.S. government to capture Julian Assange. If this happens, Julian Assange can look forward to spending the rest of his life in the equivalent of the Soviet Gulag.
What is Julian Assange’s crime? What makes him such a threat? What he has done is to break the wall of secrecy which makes possible the “disposition matrix,” “signature strikes,” “extraordinary renditions,” “enhanced interrogation” and all the other secret Orwellian activities of government. If he is guilty of revealing secret information to the enemy under the Espionage Act, it is only if the U.S. government regards the American people as its enemy.
The remarkable thing is that, with all this power arrayed against him, Julian Assange is not afraid. The powers-that-be are afraid of him. He is not afraid of them. Trapped in a corner, he continues his work, to make known what the world’s governments want to hide. To the extent that freedom and democracy survive the next few decades, he will be regarded as one of our era’s greatest heroes.
Click on The Death of Truth: Chris Hedges Interviews Julian Assange for Hedges’ full report and links to the interview.
One part of the interview I especially like was Assange’s comment on how the press emphasizes the fact that Bradley Manning is gay and comes from a broken home, implying that only an abnormal person would be outraged at cruelty and lies.
What do we know about Bradley Manning? We know that he won three science fairs. We know the guy is bright. We know that he was interested in politics early on. We know he’s very articulate and outspoken. We know he didn’t like lies. We know he was interested in politics. We know he was skilled at his job of being an intelligence analyst. If the media was looking for an explanation they could point to this combination of his abilities and motivations. They could point to his talents and virtues.
They should not point to him being gay, or from a broken home, except perhaps in passing. Ten percent of the U.S. military is gay. Well over 50 percent are from broken homes. Take those two factors together. That gets you down to, say, 5 percent—5 percent on the outside. There are 5 million people with active security clearances, so now you’re down to 250,000 people. You still have to get from 250,000 to one.
You can only explain Bradley Manning by his virtues. Virtues others can learn from.
Bradley Manning is another hero whose name will be remembered if freedom and democracy survive.
Click on The Julian Assange File for background on Assange and WikiLeaks.
Click on This Day in WikiLeaks for updates. This link is also on my Resources page.
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Hat tip to The Original Sinthesis for the motto.
Compost and Power
original article: https://mkgandhiinstitute.wordpress.com/2013/06/04/compost-and-power/
Late last summer, I had a wonderful conversation with a friend of mine visiting from Oakland, CA. He, like myself, is deeply committed to food justice/food sovereignty movement building, connecting the dots between food justice and human justice. While out bike riding, he explained a concept he and his organization had been defining: compost the empire. Quite simply, it refers to the unnatural concept of “waste,” that in so-called “developed,” especially Westernized places, the practice of discarding what is no longer useful has become a way of life. In fact, on this Mother Earth, “waste” does not exist. Everything that in the ecological system is used, recycled, and used again. It is a process of mutual support, where everything has its needs met, no more and no less. It is not greedy, it is not corrupt, it is not expendable. It is valued as a sacred part of natural cycle. The term compost the empire refers to the return of what has been discarded to the natural process of environmental cycle. This can refer to the actual process of turning organic material back into soil, but it can also refer to lovingly embracing ex-offenders who have been treated as social waste. It can refer to the reclaiming of land that was stolen to be turned into profit. It can refer to the healing process of traumas that have been dismissed as unnecessary surplus.
During this same bike ride, we were approached by a wonderful man, L, while waiting at a red light on the corner of Vernor and Mt. Elliott. L was very tall, largely built, and perhaps in his 50s. He might’ve been treated as unnecessary surplus anywhere else or by anyone else. Instead, he opened up his conversation about our bikes. He explained that he was too heavy to ride bikes, but when he sees “skinny people” out riding, he always pinches the tires to check the air pressure. While he was poking fun at himself, he also admitted a jealousy that he was unable to ride a bike, and instead had to navigate a horrible, deflated bus system that in no way met his needs. He spoke to the root of self-defeat, all the while expressing physical affection, sharing hugs as well as bumping our fists, all of us sharing support with one another.
L further acknowledged that he used to weigh 380 pounds, now weighing substantially less at 330. Attempting to congratulate his effort, he explained that his weight loss was a result of loss of appetite after his wife of 34 years passed away. From what he expressed, they shared a deep emotional bond, not to mention two children. He then shared that he had had very little time to grieve. His community, he said, did not recognize his need to mourn. Instead, he felt the need to mask his grief, his deepest pain from losing a life-long partner, a deep love that will unlikely be replaceable. Despite feeling trapped in his emotions due to the pressure to make them invisible, for whatever reason L took a risk to share his inner-most vulnerabilities with me and my friend, two men who very well might have returned his admission with apathy rather than compassion.