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Thursday, December 31, 2015

Same Old Song And Dance

by Richard Trotsky        
                      
           So next year is the presidential election, and while we may see some different names on both sides of the two party system that we have, do we actually believe that there will be any significant amount of change perpetuated from either group? Candidates have paid significant lip service to the people in the past simply to get elected, only to suffer a bout of amnesia when it came time to keep their word on the promises made. There may have been some form of reform or reforms enacted, but this is simply to appease the public, and not done due to any degree of hardship experienced by anyone.

           Take a moment to ponder this, when was the last time the people of this nation were actually asked our opinion on any form of legislation that was passed in government. I’m 38 and I simply cannot recall of one instance that the opinion of the people was ever taken into account. Yes, there were polls conducted by media organizations, but what about a vote? If this is truly a government “of the people, by the people, and for the people”, then why are the people not being asked what their stance is on matters?

Oh, that’s right, because that only applies in a Direct Democracy, and what we have here has been touted time and time again as a “form” of Democracy. But, which “form” is that. I have never heard of any Democracy where legislation was passed that was overly beneficial to financial institutions and corporations, that gradually altered the percentages for income tax values to disproportionate levels over the course of 60 years to allow the financial elite to amass even more disgustingly large stockpiles of wealth.

     I have never heard of any Democracy in which although the overwhelming majority of the population was not in favor of any conflict, it was still pursued anyhow, nor have I heard of any Democracy that would use fear mongering tactics to lull the population into sacrificing it’s civil liberties. Democracies simply don’t do that, a Democracy by definition according to Merriam-Webster is:
a :  government by the people; especially :  rule of the majority b :  a government in which the supreme power is vested in the people and exercised by them directly or indirectly through a system of representation usually involving periodically held free elections.

Therefore, although it states in a section of the definition that power is vested in the people and exercised by them indirectly, when was the last time we indirectly exercised our vested power? To be quite honest, I can’t recall a single time. What we have is closer in form to that of a Plutocracy, which, for those who are unfamiliar with that form, is a country(government) or society governed by the wealthy. This is the gradual evolution of our government, we have witnessed it transform over roughly the last 60 years right before our eyes and took no action to stop it.

Why, you may ask. Well that relates back to the lip service paid to the public by politicians come election season, people were lulled by false promises of a better tomorrow and gradually became apathetic. Is there a solution to the dilemma we now face? Indeed there is, however it doesn’t involve the politicians that we see on television. It involves us, the people of this country, the workers that drive the companies and corporations forward. Think of what would happen if the workers of this country established their own government. Workers could assume control of the large corporations, which would be an instant boost to morale in the workforce. Instead of the mega corporations executive staff reaping millions upon millions in annual salaries, that could be redistributed to the workers, with plenty left over to reinvest into the business.
            
     That is just the beginning, only the tip of the iceberg of possibilities that would be available if we made the decisions. Think about that for a moment or two, our voices actually being heard by our government. Hopefully, in my lifetime I will live to see that day, as until then, unfortunately I fear the conditions here will gradually deteriorate as they have slowly been doing.
          

OPEC fracks with US


There is a fracking problem in the US. A real fracking problem. Aside from the environmental damage that it causes, there are now the problems of capitalism.

When oil prices spiked to $100 a barrel (or more), fracking became very profitable. Wells went in everywhere and America became an oil exporter. OPEC didn't like that, so they put on their gloves and went to work over producing oil and driving prices down. Frackers responded in the way only a good capitalist can, by improving techniques and technology that allowed more fields to go in with fewer workers needed.

OPEC pulled the gloves off and oil is around $30 a barrel. Frackers can't compete at that level or lower. So now they have a problem – excess production and no demand for their oil.

That being said, OPEC is in the same pinch. Too low a price puts a pinch on their economies as oil sales are their main source of income.

So what are the frackers going to do? Given the glut in the oil market – the only thing they have to sell is natural gas and the only way to get it to market is in liquefied form. Frackers can make more money selling fracked gas to Asia than they can make in the US. For that matter, it will be more profitable because sending the liquefied natural gas to Asia will raise the price over here, so it's win-win for them, lose lose for us. They win by making more money all around. We lose because our environment gets wrecked by the frackers (air, land, and water) andwe wind up paying more for what they wrecked our environment to get.

How does this tie into WNY? I like to focus on WNY & issues of relevance to socialists and those sympathetic or curious about it.

Easy – Look to the Northern Access Pipeline that National Fuel Gas Supply Corporation is trying to build (actually modify the existing pipeline) to carry fracked gas from the Pennsylvania fields to Canada. Possibly for sale there or, more likely, for refinement so that it can be exported to Asia.

The communities of Pendleton and Wheatfield have been putting up a bold fight against the proposed pipeline and compressor stations. They have been fighting it on environmental grounds and other safety issues and concerns. In January there will be a meeting between National Fuel and the citizens of Pendleton about the pipeline and compressors in their community. It will be a bully session for National Fuel, as they will control the meeting and the way it will be handled.

We need to support them in any and every way that we can.

Environmentalists & socialists demand the following:

1. An end to fracking in Pennsylvania and a permanent ban on all fracking in NY.
2. An end to the modification of the Northern Access Pipeline.
3. An end to government subsidies of fossil fuel production with NO price increase from the suppliers.
4. More government support for the development of sustainable renewable energy sources in NY.

All out for Pendleton & Wheatfield,

We need to put an end to this fracking problem and move on while we still have a chance.

Sources used from the Buffalo News:
“Frackers fearful as prices keep falling.” Dec. 29, 2015 p. E1

“Big gain seen for Asia, small loss for US from liquefied natural gas exports.” Dec. 29, 2015 p. E4



January 01, 2016 LNG Update

Bloomberg doesn't seem to be able to get its news straight.

Yesterday (12/31/2015) Asia was the top destination for Liquid Natural Gas (LNG) exports.

Today's article says Europe.

And the first port that will be producing and pumping for export is down in Louisiana at the Sabine Pass terminal. The company that will be producing the LNG is Cheniere Energy Inc.

So fracked gas will be going from contaminating American land, water, and air to Europe where it will continue to contribute to global warming and the changes in the climate and its patterns.

On the bright side, on the adjacent page was an article on the growth of solar and wind energy in the US.

Did you know that Texas was the leading state for wind energy production?
Makes you wonder where all the hot air is coming from.

Wednesday, December 30, 2015

Elia Crashed Kriner In


A blizzard has hit Buffalo. Not the snow that we expect, but a bellowing blizzard in the Buffalo City School District. In both cases, they are snow jobs with no real benefit.

The Buffalo News reports today (12/30/2015) that Education Commissioner Elia has granted Buffalo Superintendent Kriner Cash receivership over 20 more schools, for a total of 25 schools.

What is receivership? It is a state law, that most likely violates the Taylor Law, that places control of a school (or a district) outside of the authority of the democratically elected school board and under the control of a state appointed receiver – in this case Superintendent Kriner Cash. This law allows the receiver to ignore (illegally) union contracts and set rules for seniority in favor of appointments that the receiver thinks might make a positive change in a school or district. The receiver has two (that's 2) years to show improvement or control over the school or district will be handed over to an outside private entity for control.

In simple terms – It is a way for the Education Commissioner to force a school or district to privatize.

The follies with this approach:

1. It takes almost five (that's 5) years for any educational change to show any effect, The Buffalo News and other organizations reported on this years ago when President (sic & sick) George W Bush implemented his “Co Child Left Behind” Act. The tests were rolled out and everyone did poorly for a few years and then things improved. NY demonstrated this recently when it changed the tests that were administered at the 3-8 and in Regents tests. Test scores dropped for a few years and then rose.

The two year window is designed to make the school//district look like a failure and force the privatization of the schools.

2. What changes will the Superintendent make? He hasn't announced anything. He can go for longer school days and a longer school year. The research on both are iffy, at best. Mandated professional development? OK. In what exactly? Each school is unique and there is no way for the Superintendent or his hand picked cronies to know what those schools need. The principals? More likely. The teachers? Absolutely. Power needs to be taken away from the Superintendent and be given to the teachers. They know their students and their needs more than anyone else.

3. What about outside factors? Many of the schools on the list serve poor and minority populations. Places where students may not know where home is going to be tonight. The only food they will have is what they eat in school. Medical care? Don't rely on the Affordable Care Act – the parents cant afford the premiums. They more likely receive medicare or other government health care, if they bother going to the doctor at all when they are sick. Most likely they go to the emergency room.

How will Commissioner Elia and Superintendent Cash deal with these issues that have a greater impact on learning than anything done in a classroom? Nobody wants to talk about this – and yet it is one of the most important things that needs to be discussed in the education of a child. Stability in the home life leads to stability elsewhere.

Buffalo Teachers Federation and NYSUT (New York State United Teachers) are correct in fighting against receivership using the Taylor Law as precedent. A competent court will rule in their favor. Moreover – parents need to get in the fight – these are their schools. Their taxes have paid for them and they deserve a say (big) in what happens. The Buffalo School Board needs to get in on this as well. Their authority and power as representatives of the people of Buffalo is being undermined from above.

And someone needs to bring this up – IF (big) privatized schools are so great, then give them the students that need the most help. No one from the top 20%. Give them the students from the bottom of the barrel. (Scrape it good for that matter.) Give them the students that lack stable and secure housing, food, good clothing, health care, etc. IF (big) their methods are so great, give them those students – the students most likely to fail out and wind up in prison or other problematic places and get them to improve their scores.

And no – they can not be kicked out for not meeting school rules and expectations. The goal is to help get them to following school rules and expectations. So they stay.  These are the students that need  the most help and improvement - so, improve them.

Not going to happen. That's not who they want. Pro-privatization advocates want the best and the brightest so that they can make their method look good.

Wrong – Make it look good by making those at the bottom improve.

That will never happen.

That's what those that fought to have Kriner Cash brought in as Superintendent wanted – someone that was going to help privatize the Buffalo City School District.

And, with Elia''s help, they will cash in on everything..

Socialists say NO to this.

We demand -
1. A return to community schools that students can walk to (K-8 Grade).
2. A maximum of 15 students to a classroom.
3. Public health clinics in all schools with a certified school nurse and an assistant in each
4. A fully staffed School Library and Media Center (Librarian & an Aide) in each school
5. Full funding from the state and federal government of all schools (take the money from the useless weapons systems that don't work. Like the F-35, Patriot Missile System, and other disasters)
6. Appropriate Guidance and Psychologist staffing in each school for the students to access
7. An end to standardized and other tests that are used to punish students and teachers

These are the minimums that a society that values its children and education must demand from those that desire to lead us in this new century.

Will we receive them or will those that bought Kriner in be able to cash out?

Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Housing Helps


The Buffalo News reported on Saturday (12/26) and in an editorial Op Ed today (12/28) about the success of “Housing First” - an initiative that takes the chronically homeless and most “at risk” homeless and places them in private housing at the public's expense.

First – the positive: Studies from Salt Lake City (see Mother Jones for a great expose on homelessness) and Los Angeles show the homeless are put into permanent housing, it helps them with all their other problems. To be clear on this – the people placed in the public/private housing have a social worker assigned to them to check up on them, see if they have any mental or physical needs that require assistance, receive counseling for drug or alcohol abuse or mental issues, etc. There is plenty of oversight to make sure that these people are doing OK.

The benefits: People that are given housing recover better. They “become more responsible” faster, clean their lives up, are able to get jobs, and become more stable and productive members of society.
Those that are mentally ill (or whatever the current euphemism for that is) receive the mental health care that they would have normally received in the mental health facilities that President Reagan shut down because it was going to save taxpayers money. (It never did . They wound up in prisons and at greater cost to the taxpayers.)

The criticisms.

Why are we using our tax dollars to pay for private housing? Why not provide better funding for public housing or re-open the mental health facilities that were closed back in the 1980's? Granted, the City of Buffalo is negotiating the rents down from the market value, but why are we dependent upon the private market for something that the government could do for less? And rather than having social workers running all over the place to take care of these people, they would be in a centralized place that would provide for more immediate care and needs.

I suppose this is because the private sector can not make a profit off of public housing. Fiscal conservatives see the government as a problem and the private sector as the solution. Sad to say, unemployment that leads to homelessness is caused more by the private sector and its drive for more profits than by the government.

Why are we targeting only the 25 most at risk at a time? The city claims that there are only 400 homeless in the area. Go to the Buffalo City Mission and St Luke's Mission of Mercy and see how many people they are serving. How many families they are providing shelter to. (Ed note – these are two great places to donate money and food to. They are non-sectarian and not for profit. I know these two off the top of my head. I am sure there are other organizations that help the homeless as well.)

To me, giving shelter to one person is good and needs to be praised. What of the families? Does a family of 4 or 5 count? How are they ranked? Homeless children are at high risk for drug abuse and exploitation in prostitution. City Mission and St Luke's are temporary solutions and fill up quickly. We (they) need bigger and more permanent solutions.

I will say that this is a good first step, we need to recognize that housing is a right. People have a right to the safety and stability that housing provides. As socialists we demand:
-better public housing to serve the needs of the poor
-better support for emergency services that can meet the needs of the homeless.

We can do this by seizing the houses that are currently unoccupied/ abandoned by the sub-prime loan crisis. The banks are neglecting to take care of the properties in many instances, so seize the properties, provide the materials to Habitat for Humanity and other similar programs and organizations to fix up the properties, and move the homeless in.

Who pays for these renovations? The banks. Let the CEOs, presidents, vice presidents, and board of directors take a pay cut. They created the crisis. They stayed out of jail. Let them pay for the crisis they paid out of their own pockets.

It's really simple math to me. Empty house + homeless people = full house. With the appropriate oversight and assistance, the people will be better off and able to stay off the streets and stay in the housing. This stabilizes the neighborhood.

That is something capitalism promises and true to its history, never delivers.

Thursday, December 24, 2015

On this night


2000 or so years ago, this night. Nothing happened.

Seriously. Nothing.

Jesus, known as Yeshua in Hebrew, and Isa in the Islamic faith, was not born in December. Shepherds would not keep sheep outside at night in the wintertime. They would freeze to death. It is more likely that he was born in Spring or summer. The Islamic tradition has him born around July or August.

This gets me in trouble with Christians. Especially at the school where I teach. The church that I attend isn't to keen on my ideas either. Nor are the conservatives in my family.

I am less concerned about celebrating his birth than I am with practicing his teachings and following his examples.

I was hungry, you fed me.

I was thirsty, you gave me something to drink.

I was naked you clothed me.

I was lonely and in prison, you visited me.

I was sick and you comforted me.

See Matthew 25 and other assorted parts of the gospels.

These lessons seem lost in a country that…..

-throws away enough food every day to feed the rest of the world and patents genes so that farmers can not grow the crops that they have grown for centuries
-contaminated water with chemicals (fracking) and works to privatize water supplies so that corporations can register a profit
-is the leading destination for human trafficking of women and children for the sex trade and slave labor
-has the highest percentage of its population in prison and the highest recidivism rate of any country in the world. It has also executed more innocent people (What was that? Do not murder?)
-has the world's most expensive health care system and doles out health care dependent upon people's wealth

And claims that it is a Christian nation.

Seriously?

Blessed are the peacemakers.
We named a nuclear armed missile the “Peacemaker.”
It was more about fear, I think.

American drones have blown how many innocent people into pieces?
Some one in leadership somewhere needs to check their spelling.

Jesus/Yeshua/Isa hung around with tax collectors, prostitutes, and other assorted sinners.
His twelve closest friends were fishermen (who are well known for their profanity), a tax collector, an anti-Roman militant, and who knows what else. All uneducated, every day peasants. Not someone that you would expect to change the world.

If he were walking around today, I see him hanging around with truckers, hookers, the homeless, prostitutes, homosexuals, drug pushers, and all the other “undesirables” of society.  OK - Fishermen too.

Somehow I don't think that the America we have today and the practices of Christians today are what he had in mind.

I'm reading through both the Jewish and Christian Testaments (Old & New) and I am surprised by the amount of times that the prophets of old railed against the wealthy and their behavior. The Torah has plenty to say about taking care of the poor and other social justice issues. (Remission of debt among other things.) The fall of Jerusalem (end of 2 Kings) is directly correlated to the Jews releasing their slaves and the poor and then seizing them back again, (Read Jeremiah.) Nehemiah blasts the Jews that returned from the exile because their behaviors were similar to the pre exile period. Even Daniel advises Nebuchadnezzar to take care of the poor after he is returned to power after his fall into insanity.

People ask me how can I go to church and be a socialist.
I ask them if they have read their Bible cover to cover? Most never have. The few that have I answer “How can I not be?” The Bible is loaded with teachings on social justice and responsibility.

And my freedom of religion is dependent upon other peoples' freedom to worship, or not, as they choose.  Check the First Amendment Donald Trump and everyone that follows him.

There are Christian organizations that do practice what Jesus/Yeshua/Isa taught. American Friends Service Committe comes to mind. Matthew 25 (I know of them from their work in Haiti). Inter-Faith Justice Coalition (I have to get this name correct). And others. I applaud them.

I had a friend say that if you “can't have a hot cocoa with a homo, you need to check your faith.” (He used to say something more profane that offended the religious and the LGBTQ communities simultaneously, I will not repeat it. Thankfully he took the hint and changed it. Still needs some work, but it's far better than what it was.)

But that is what religion is supposed to be about – treating others as you want to be treated.

It's about human dignity, respect, and friendship.

Nothing more.

If we can't practice that, are we really human?

As my associate from above asked me one time “Is the human race worth running?”

We'd better do more than think about it.

Our survival depends upon it.

Wednesday, December 23, 2015

I'm dreaming of a wet Christmas......



Just like the ones I never knew.

I lived in the country back in the 1970's and early 1980's. I remember snow drifts as high as my house. (And my brothers sledding off of the roof and onto the drifts. Crazy older brothers.)

I remember digging snow caves with rooms as big as my bathroom is right now.

I remember snow drifts so high that the snow thrower on our John Deer lawn tractor had no hope of even denting them.  We had to use shovels and the local farmers came by with front loaders on their tractors.

We are on track to be the warmest December in Buffalo history. Not by a degree or two. The National Weather Service is talking about almost/in the realm of five degrees.

That's not breaking a record.

That's shattering it.

And the conservative, climate change denying, anti global warming activists are blaming the El-Niño system off of the Pacific Coast.

I remember when they denied the existence of the El-Niño / El-Niña systems.

Anything to deflect the cause away from human behavior.

Anything to ignore all the garbage, chemicals, and other crap that we humans are dumping into the ocean, making it more acidic, and, therefore, warmer.

Anything to ignore all the smoke, exhaust, and other pollution that we humans are spewing into the air and creating toxic air to breathe (check out China now and LA back in the day) and doing other damage that heats up the atmosphere.

Anything to deny that there is a problem and that we humans have something to do with it.

Buffalo should have snow. A good foot or so of it. If it were not wet and rainy, I could have gone outside today and mowed my lawn.

Then we look at the weather that the rest of the country is getting.

And humans have nothing to do with what is going on.

Right.

Arctic ice is in decline according to NOAA satellite imagery.

Ships are sailing across the northern coast of Canada in summertime without icebreakers.

Iceland (and Greenland) are losing ice and glaciers at alarming rates.

Glacier National Park will soon have to be renamed. Its glaciers will be gone. Perhaps it will be called “The Park Formerly Known as Glacier National Park?”

Buffalo is set to smash the record for the warmest December on record.
It has broken two warmest daytime temperatures, and is likely to break another one tomorrow.
It has broken at least one warmest overnight temperature.
And, depending upon what happens next Monday and Tuesday, could break the record for the least snow in December record.

And Lake Erie is the warmest it has been, on the average if I am remembering what I heard on the news correctly.

And if we get a real winter cold front over it, Snowmageddon will look like an amateur's job.

Meanwhile, we need to get rewriting those old Christmas and holiday songs.

Future generations may not know what snow is.

So, what will Frosty be made of?


The "Unknown" Connection

by Richard Trotsky

Terrorist organizations such as Daesh (ISIS) are a serious threat as recent events in France, and here in the US have clearly shown, however there is considerable debate as to what facilitates the rise of these organizations. The reasons stated by many are various, however upon analysis a direct correlation can be attained that the most significant factor in the creation of these organizations is foreign policy.

However, there is another unknown variable in the establishment of these organizations, and that is the treatment of the civilian population at the hands of occupying military forces. Maltreatment and abuse of the civilian populations fosters feelings of animosity within them, and provides an effective catalyst in the growth of these groups.
 
Recently I read an article from an individual who has seen firsthand the atrocities and horrors that were undertaken by military forces in Iraq during its time of “liberation” at the hands of primarily US forces. This man has displayed a tremendous amount of courage to bring to light what most of the civilian population here in the US was, and is, completely ignorant to and just exactly why foreign policy needs to drastically change, lest conflict in the Middle East reach a dangerous crescendo.
I Helped Create ISIS
By Vincent Emanuele
After 14 years of War on Terror the West is great at fomenting barbarism and creating failed states.
For the last several years, people around the world have asked, "Where did ISIS come from?" Explanations vary, but largely focus on geopolitical (U.S. hegemony), religious (Sunni-Shia), ideological (Wahhabism) or ecological (climate refugees) origins. Many commentators and even former military officials correctly suggest that the war in Iraq is primarily responsible for unleashing the forces we now know as ISIS, ISIL, Daesh, etc. Here, hopefully I can add some useful reflections and anecdotes.

Mesopotamian Nightmares
When I was stationed in Iraq with the 1st Battalion, 7th Marines, 2003-2005, I didn't know what the repercussions of the war would be, but I knew there would be a reckoning. That retribution, otherwise known as blowback, is currently being experienced around the world (Iraq, Afghanistan, Yemen, Libya, Egypt, Lebanon, Syria, France, Tunisia, California, and so on), with no end in sight.
Back then, I routinely saw and participated in obscenities. Of course, the wickedness of the war was never properly recognized in the West. Without question, antiwar organizations attempted to articulate the horrors of the war in Iraq, but the mainstream media, academia and political-corporate forces in the West never allowed for a serious examination of the greatest war crime of the 21st century.
As we patrolled the vast region of Iraq's Al-Anbar Province, throwing MRE (Meal Ready to Eat) trash out of our vehicles, I never contemplated how we would be remembered in history books; I simply wanted to make some extra room in my HUMVEE. Years later, sitting in a Western Civilization history course at university, listening to my professor talk about the cradle of civilization, I thought of MRE garbage on the floor of the Mesopotamian desert.
Examining recent events in Syria and Iraq, I can't help but think of the small kids my fellow marines would pelt with Skittles from those MRE packages. Candies weren't the only objects thrown at the children: water bottles filled with urine, rocks, debris, and various other items were thrown as well. I often wonder how many members of ISIS and various other terrorist organizations recall such events?
Moreover, I think about the hundreds of prisoners we took captive and tortured in makeshift detention facilities staffed by teenagers from Tennessee, New York and Oregon. I never had the misfortune of working in the detention facility, but I remember the stories. I vividly remember the marines telling me about punching, slapping, kicking, elbowing, kneeing and head-butting Iraqis. I remember the tales of sexual torture: forcing Iraqi men to perform sexual acts on each other while marines held knives against their testicles, sometimes sodomizing them with batons.
However, before those abominations could take place, those of us in infantry units had the pleasure of rounding up Iraqis during night raids, zip-tying their hands, black-bagging their heads and throwing them in the back of HUMVEEs and trucks while their wives and kids collapsed to their knees and wailed. Sometimes, we would pick them up during the day. Most of the time they wouldn't resist. Some of them would hold hands while marines would butt-stroke the prisoners in the face. Once they arrived at the detention facility, they would be held for days, weeks, and even months at a time. Their families were never notified. And when they were released, we would drive them from the FOB (Forward Operating Base) to the middle of the desert and release them several miles from their homes.
After we cut their zip-ties and took the black bags off their heads, several of our more deranged marines would fire rounds from their AR-15s into their air or ground, scaring the recently released captives. Always for laughs. Most Iraqis would run, still crying from their long ordeal at the detention facility, hoping some level of freedom awaited them on the outside. Who knows how long they survived. After all, no one cared. We do know of one former U.S. prisoner who survived: Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the leader of ISIS.
Amazingly, the ability to dehumanize the Iraqi people reached a crescendo after the bullets and explosions concluded, as many marines spent their spare time taking pictures of the dead, often mutilating their corpses for fun or poking their bloated bodies with sticks for some cheap laughs. Because iPhones weren't available at the time, several marines came to Iraq with digital cameras. Those cameras contain an untold history of the war in Iraq, a history the West hopes the world forgets. That history and those cameras also contain footage of wanton massacres and numerous other war crimes, realities the Iraqis don't have the pleasure of forgetting.
Unfortunately, I could recall countless horrific anecdotes from my time in Iraq. Innocent people were not only routinely rounded-up, tortured and imprisoned, they were also incinerated by the hundreds of thousands, some studies suggest by the millions.
Only the Iraqis understand the pure evil that's been waged on their nation. They remember the West's role in the eight year war between Iraq and Iran; they remember Clinton's sanctions in the 1990s, policies which resulted in the deaths of well over 500,000 people, largely women and children. Then, 2003 came and the West finished the job. Today, Iraq is an utterly devastated nation. The people are poisoned and maimed, and the natural environment is toxic from bombs laced with depleted uranium. After fourteen years of the War on Terror, one thing is clear: the West is great at fomenting barbarism and creating failed states.

Living with Ghosts
The warm and glassy eyes of young Iraqi children perpetually haunt me, as they should. The faces of those I've killed, or at least those whose bodies were close enough to examine, will never escape my thoughts. My nightmares and daily reflections remind me of where ISIS comes from and why, exactly, they hate us. That hate, understandable yet regrettable, will be directed at the West for years and decades to come. How could it be otherwise?
Again, the scale of destruction the West has inflicted in the Middle East is absolutely unimaginable to the vast majority of people living in the developed world. This point can never be overstated as Westerners consistently and naively ask, "Why do they hate us?"
In the end, wars, revolutions and counterrevolutions take place and subsequent generations live with the results: civilizations, societies, cultures, nations and individuals survive or perish. That's how history works. In the future, how the West deals with terrorism will largely depend on whether or not the West continues their terroristic behavior. The obvious way to prevent future ISIS-style organizations from forming is to oppose Western militarism in all its dreadful forms: CIA coups, proxy wars, drone strikes, counterinsurgency campaigns, economic warfare, etc.
Meanwhile, those of us who directly participated in the genocidal military campaign in Iraq will live with the ghosts of war.


(Editor note:  Sometimes the corporate media is forced to cover issues like the torture centres in Abu Ghraib, Baghram, etc.  They make it a habit to minimize these as best as possible.  After all,  we're Americans.  We're the good guys.  We don't do things like torture.  Especially not in Guantanamo.) 

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Mascia said….. he meant…..



What?!?

The hearing on Joesph Mascia's use of the N-word just took a trip into weird land. 
Not Donald Trump weird, but pretty close.

Just some history: Mascia was talking about some of Buffalo's leadership while being secretly recorded by Paul Christopher, a friend of his. He used the N-word to describe Mayor Byron Brown, Council Woman Crystal Peoples-Stokes, other African Americans, and one white person in the City of Buffalo government.

He claims he is not a racist and that his use of the word was “political speech.”

I know people that do yoga. That's more twisted than some of the body positions they get into. Some of the pictures of the body positions that they are aspiring to achieve don't get that twisted.

Yes, his comments are vile. We get that.
He 's apologized. Repeatedly. We get the apologies.

We don't get the explanations. These go beyond Common Core math problems. (5x3 = 15. I really don't care how you got there.)

Somehow, Mascia meant “corrupt.”

Right. (Listen to the Bill Cosby “Noah” skit for how I mean to say that.)
(Note: Accusations about Bill aside, I still laugh at his early work. I wonder how many white entertainers have done exactly what he is accused of doing and are or have “got away with it.” And how can he get a fair trial with all the stories being splashed all over the media?)

Tangent over – Back to Mascia.

Now a word that has been used to mean: slow, stupid, ignorant, lazy, and a whole host of other negativity about African Americans now gets “corrupt” added as a definition or a synonym.

I don't want to ask either Mascia or his lawyer about that one. My mind is already twisted enough about this case as it it.

Evidently Mascia was complaining about a lack of transparency in the Buffalo Municipal Housing Authority. Then he should have talked about that. With specific examples.

He also says that his anger is rooted in fiduciary issues. Then talk specifically about the financial issues.

Can the name calling and inappropriate terms that address nothing and do nothing but throw gasoline on a burning fire. BHMA has had enough problems over the years. This is just one more piece of ammunition that Republicans and their ilk are going to use to eliminate public housing in the city and make it harder for those that need help with housing to get it.

Mascia, for all the good that he says he has done for the African American community all these years, seems not to have learned a thing about the community which he was selected to serve. Some words, terms and phrases are just off limits. No questions asked.

Mascia has a classic case of foot in mouth disease.

There's no questioning that.

What I want to know is: How does he heal the damage that's been done?

Medical Murder in Chautauqua



According to Chautauqua County Jail officials, Martellion J. Ham (aka Ham) died of an anxiety attack.  This in spite of the fact that he supposedly had taken asthma medication and used a rescue inhaler.  He had, according to family members, asked for help, but a jailhouse nurse said that he didn’t need to go to the hospital in her opinion.

I have a problem with this.

First, in the school where I work, I have students that have asthma.  They take medication and carry rescue inhalers.  When they use their rescue inhalers they have to report to the nurse and the nurse has to monitor them and, on occasion, send them to the hospital for further treatment.  This is rare, but treated very seriously.

What type of monitoring did the nurse give to Ham?  How much direct monitoring? 

According to the Buffalo News story, Ham was unconscious before he was sent to the hospital.  That was too late. 

To be clear – no police violence occurred.  This was a case of medical negligence. The jail lacked adequate trained and medically minded personnel to treat the conditions of the people it is responsible for.  Ham was seen in the jail video swaying and staggering.  Given that visually confirmed medical condition, this physical behavior indicates that something is physically wrong with Ham and that medical attention is needed immediately.

The nurse decided that it could wait until morning. 

Morning was too late.

Now, instead of dealing with a prisoner, they are dealing with an investigation and a lawsuit.

If he was uncooperative with taking his medication, that needed to be documented.  Was it? By the nurse? Immediately? Or is this something that was just “remembered” later and put into a report.  If he was low on his medication, as alleged, why was the family, doctor, or pharmacy not immediately notified so that it could be secured?

So many parts of this story just don’t flow.

Just like the air that Ham needed to be breathing so that he could live.



New York’s Prison Problem


New York has 54,000 (that’s thousand) prisoners in 53 prisons and, according to the Marshall Project, a host of problems that go along with it.  And NY is moving slowly to work out a solution to address it.  A system of electronically monitoring complaints is supposed to be completely set up by the end of 2016.  Given all the data tracking that is done on regular civilians, why this wasn’t set up earlier is beyond anyone’s logic.

Currently there are around, if not over, 4,000(!) open investigations of prison guard abuse against prisoners.  These include grievances and lawsuits.  Most of these are dismissed (to protect the guards?) but in 2010 the taxpayers paid out over $8.8 million in settlements and jury awards, according the Buffalo News

The thing is, according to the article, 207 guards names come up repeatedly.  And 30 names come up in 2 or more cases that result in jury awards.  Is someone asleep at the wheel?  I work in a school and if a student’s name comes up repeatedly for the same offense, the administration puts their foot down and fast.  Why not in prisons?

Sad to say, in many cases where a prisoner’s suit is found to be based in fact and reality, the guard is rarely prosecuted.  Rarely, if ever does a guard go to jail for committing an act of violence against an inmate.  They are there to provide security and instead, the guards become the security threat.

We need to remember why we have prisons- to control the population.  Capitalism cannot provide what it claims it can, so we have to do something with the excess population.  Prisons are one way of dealing with them. And especially the minorities. Numerous studies have shown that if 2 people – one black and one white – commit the same crime, the white will get a lesser punishment and the black person will get a harsher punishment.  Look at the sentencing of cocaine versus crack cocaine.  White versus black drug and, until recently, what was the sentencing disparity? 

My bigger problem is that the prison guards are rarely if ever tried, convicted, and sentenced.  The old line is that a DA/Grand Jury can indict a ham sandwich if it wants to.  It doesn’t seem to want to.  If I assaulted someone in public the same way some of the prison guards assault prisoners, I would be criminally charged (no question) and sentenced.  If a prison guard does the same thing in a prison setting, nothing would happen.

This is just wrong.

As socialists we demand justice for prisoners. 
-Prison guards that assault prisoners need to be criminally investigated, charged, and convicted.  They need to be sentenced the same as civilians and serve the same sentences.
-Inmates that are assaulted need just and timely justice and compensation.
-Inmates that are assaulted need to have their sentences reevaluated and possibly lessened.
-Inmates also will need counseling to deal with the trauma that was inflicted upon them.

New York also needs to change its criminal injustice system.
-Drug, alcohol, and other non-violent crimes need to be treated with social workers and counselling
-Issues of theft (depending upon the amount) are better dealt with restitution.  That better communicates value

Lastly, we need a new economic system.  One that give full and meaningful employment.  One that provides enough for people to live life to its fullest.

If we do not address this overarching problem, the Attica riots of 1971 will not just repeat themselves, they will become too commonplace. 

That will be a real tragedy.

Sunday, December 20, 2015

More Pipeline Problems


National Fuel is running into more problems with its WNY pipeline. The citizens of Pendleton and Wheatfield are gaining strength in their opposition to having a “drying station” in their neighborhood. A “drying station” is a gas dehydration station that removes the water form the fracked gas that National Fuel's will be pumping through the pipeline.

Opponents to the station are rightfully concerned about their local concerns – safety of the station with regards to explosion and what to do with the cancer causing chemicals that will result from the dehydration. They also need to focus on the safety of the pipeline – all pipelines leak – and how to clean up and mitigate the damage from the eventual leaks. They also need to look at the environmental damage that fracking is doing in Pennsylvania and its relationship to the wacky weather that we are having here in WNY. It's December 20 and the snow that we have will be melted by Christmas Day. Mostly by the rain in the forecast.

National Fuel, after much pressure, has agreed to a “public” hearing. I put the quotes in there because of the way in which the hearing will be held. Everything that is going to be done uses bullying tactics and is anti-democratic. The rights of the people are being voided in order to server the needs of the corporation.

First – Preregistration by e-mail which will be confirmed by a phone call. Seriously? Make it an open meeting, like a regular town board meeting, that anyone from Pendleton or Wheatfield can attend.

Second – Strict control over the conversation. The first part of the meeting will be one on one sessions between citizens and the representatives of National Fuel. This is a deliberate set up for the representatives of the corporation to pretend to listen to a citizen's concerns and then bully them into the NF line of thinking. Will couples be able to meet with a representative together? They should. It would be better, and more time efficient, for this first hour to be open to public discussion so that the power of the many can be heard, It's not about that. It's about psychologically undermining the confidence of an informed public – a public that is opposed to fracking- to the pipeline project.

Third – The second part of the meeting will be the public presentation of the proposed project. After the public has been cowed into silence, NF will present their pipeline and compressor project to a bullied and acquiescent public, where it will seem that NF will have met the public's concerns about the project and that everything is OK and safe.

This is bull.

This is nothing but a corporation's desire to control the conversation and bully the public into silence. The people of Pendleton and Wheatfield need to stand up against it. The citizens of Wheatfield that went through this bullying process need to get together with the citizens of Pendleton and help them prepare defences against this process.

One other thing of note: Where is 350.org? Where is Greenpeace? Where is the Sierra Club? Where is Food and Water Watch of New York? There was the protest a few weeks ago at Temple Beth Zion on Delaware Avenue. Where are they in opposing this pipeline project? I can't find anything on the web about it on their sites. (Perhaps I have missed it.)

I am especially concerned about Food & Water Watch of New York. I have received e-mails about the Constitution Pipeline in Eastern NY. This is the same exact type of project. It is closer to me than the Constitution Pipeline and matters more to the people of WNY, yet I found nothing on their site about it.

Socialists and environmentalists need to unite forces against this pipeline. We need to oppose it as it is a threat to our safety and the safety of the environment.

To use the adage: An injury against one is an injury against all. This is especially true when it comes to the environment. It's where we live. It's what we breathe. It's what we eat. It's all or nothing.

We need to be a problem to this pipeline.
As much, if not more, than this pipeline is to us.

Saturday, December 19, 2015

Mascia must Go.




Buffalo Mucicipal Housing Authority has a problem.

One with racism.

And it involves a commissioner and a recording of his comments.

Comments that he makes about Buffalo's leadership and how he intended to take them down.
Specific people.
Ones of African American descent.

Give them a little and evidently “they” want everything.
I love the impersonal “they.”
It's like African Americans aren't human.
Reminds me of an earlier time in US history.

I have a problem with that, as do many other people.

He may have done some good for people at some of the housing complexes. With an attitude like that, he needs to go.
Out.
Now.

Give his his hearing.
And then give him a boot.

The n-word is never appropriate to use against anyone.
It is derogatory and demeans the target and the user.

The BMHA serves many people of minority races – African Americans, Hispanics, and Asians.
They are all human beings and deserve respect.

I don't care that he was elected to the position by the people that live in the complexes.
He has an attitude that does not serve them.

He needs something more than an attitude change.

He needs an eviction notice form his office.