Friday, July 31, 2009


Robert Purvis, was a prominent Abolitionist during the 19th century. His father William Purvis was a "naturalised" American from England. Robert's mother, Harriet Judah was born from an affair between a wealthy German Jewish immigrant and Arab or "Moor" freed slave woman. Legally, Robert Purvis was three quarters European, despite the favorable ethnic make up Robert and his brothers chose to identify themselves as black men.

Born in Charleston, South Carolina, Robert received his post-secondary education at Amherst College. The untimely death of Roberts father and eldest brother, left Robert and his brother Joseph with the family inheritance. Robert Purvis would spend the rest of his life fighting against the injustices of slavery. Alongside William Lloyd Garrison, Robert was a founding member of the American-Anti-Slavery Society. Robert also served as the President of the Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society, and then as a chairman of the Vigilance committee's of Philadelphia and later the "national" Vigilance Committee. The purpose of the Vigilant Committee's were to allocate the necessary resources to assist runaway slaves.

Robert used his house and full financial resources to assist the Underground Railroad. His obituary in the New York Times (4/16/1898) read "He was the President of the 'Underground Railroad' and throughout that long period of peril his house was a well-known station where his horses and carriages and his personal attendance were ever at the service of the travelers upon that road." Purvis was an early supporter of the Womans Suffrage movement, he served as the first Vice-President of the Womans Suffrage Society.

Thursday, July 30, 2009


The Lotus Flower; rises out of the mud and muck of a pond, only to thrust forth a flower of unsullied and pristine beauty. But the Lotus Flower, in all its glory is still rooted to the muck and mud of the pond.
- Eastern Dhamma -

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

banksy




Palau to take Guantanamo Uighurs
04:37 GMT, Wednesday, 10 June 2009 05:37 UK



The US has 50 to 60 detainees whom it has been unable to repatriate
The Pacific nation of Palau says it has agreed to a US request to temporarily resettle up to 17 Chinese Muslims. The 17 men are ethnic Uighurs, now being held at the Guantanamo Bay detention centre on Cuba, and the US has asked for help to re-settle them. Their fate was problematic due to fears for their safety if they were repatriated to China. Palau, a former US trust territory, grants diplomatic recognition to Taiwan, not China. Palau President Johnson Toribiong said his government had "agreed to accommodate the United States of America's request to temporarily resettle in Palau up to 17 ethnic Uighur detainees ... subject to periodic review."

'Humanitarian'

In a statement, he said his tiny country is "honoured and proud" to resettle the detainees, who have been found not to be "enemy combatants."


FROM BBC WORLD SERVICE


More from BBC World Service
He said the agreement was a "humanitarian gesture", which had nothing to do with the upcoming review of the Compact of Free Association under which the US gives large sums to Palau. US officials asked Mr Toribiong on 4 June to accept some or all of the 17 Uighur detainees due to strong US congressional opposition to releasing them on US soil. Guantanamo Bay officials have been attempting to fulfil US President Barack Obama's order to close the detention facility by early next year.

Palau, with a population of about 20,000, is an archipelago of eight main islands plus more than 250 islets that is best known for diving and tourism and is located some 800 km (500 miles) east of the Philippines in the Pacific Ocean. The US will not send the Uighurs back to China for fear they will be tortured or executed. Beijing says Uighur insurgents are leading an Islamic separatist movement in China's far west and wants those held at Guantanamo to be returned to China. Analysts said the fact that Palau is an ally of Taiwan, not China, could have helped the negotiations. In 2006, Albania accepted five Uighur detainees from Guantanamo but has since balked at taking others, partly for fear of diplomatic repercussions from China. Australia has already twice rejected US appeals to resettle the Uighurs. Palau has retained close ties with the United States since independence in 1994 when it signed a Free Compact of Association with the US. It relies heavily on the US for aid and defence.

The Irish government has said it will allow two inmates being freed from the Guantanamo Bay prison camp to live in Ireland.

10:12 GMT, Wednesday, 29 July 2009 11:12 UK
bbc.co.uk

Justice Minister Dermot Ahern made the announcement on Wednesday after a meeting with US Ambassador Dan Rooney. Mr Ahern says Irish officials visited Washington and Guantanamo last week and identified two men who could be resettled in Ireland within the next two months. The men are Uzbekestanian.

It comes six months after President Barack Obama asked European countries to help find new homes for released inmates. So far, few countries have agreed to take ex-Guantanamo prisoners who say they cannot return safely to their homelands.


Persecution

Amnesty International in Ireland has been running a campaign for Uzbek national Oybek Jamoldinivich Jabbarov to be allowed to come to Ireland.

He has been cleared for release from Guantanamo, but cannot return to Uzbekistan for fear of torture and persecution. His lawyer, Michael Mone, told a US congressional committee hearing last year that Mr Jabbarov was living with his elderly mother and pregnant wife as refugees in northern Afghanistan when he was captured in 2001 and later transferred to the detention centre on Cuba. The Uzbek had not been involved in fighting between the Taliban and the Northern Alliance and was most likely handed over for a bounty, he said.

In June, Ireland's then Minister for Foreign Affairs Micheal Martin said they had told US authorities Ireland would accept two detainees to help close the detention facility, and two Uzbek nationals had been identified by the US. The men will probably be given "leave to remain" status in Ireland. Amnesty International said that Mr Jabbarov's wife and child were in a refugee camp in Pakistan and that he would be able to apply for them to join him. US President Barak Obama has said Guantanamo Bay prison will close by 22 January 2010. It was set up in January 2002 to hold suspects deemed to be "enemy combatants".

Confucious, Analects


8.6 Master Zeng said, "Consider someone who can both be entrusted with the care of a young orphan and charged with the command of a hundred- square-li-state, and who can be confronted with the great challenges without being shaken. Is this not the gentleman? Yes, this is the gentlemen."


8.7 Master Zeng said, "A scholar official must be strong and resolute for his burden is heavy and his way (dao) is long, He takes up Goodness as his own personal burden -- is it not heavy? His way ends only with death --is it not long?"


8.17 The Master said, "Learn as if you will never catch up, and as if you feared losing what you have already attained."



I recently had a response to a report I posted on Lou Dobbs' ignorant stance on immigration. This excerpt is a classic example of misinformation and rhetoric that the ignorant minded feed off "The testimonial of Robert Rector an outspoken analyst with the Heritage Foundation, that legalizing the lawbreakers will cost $2.5 Trillion dollars in escalating taxes, just to pay for retirement and pensions? Because of the decades of indifference of Washington, we are now stuck with a massive occupation of foreign nationals and their families."

my reply...

A wonderful example of how misinformation can disseminate into the most senile of minds. The use of illegal and legal is the key term here. By villanizeing the small portion of the physical working populous in the United States, that is here under labor conditions, Nativists are able to portray a United States that is teetering on the edge of overpopulation. This empirically fallacious statement falls miles short of the truth. The migrant worker moves to and from Mexico to the U.S. for work that demands their travel. We outsource jobs everyday because we know that the most basic of labor positions can be filled by the migrant be he or she legal or illegal. The ability for the Rhetorician to apply the term legal/illegal is a simple ploy to divert attention from an economy that relies whole hearted on the "physical" man-power of the migrant worker. The truth is that by painting the helpless migrant worker the villain, they are able to draw the attention away from the real evils, business and finance industries that care very little for the quality of life that their actions afford. To borrow a term from Lewis Mumford, we live in "a Pecuniary Economy", the desire for profit is the end and be all of our actions.

I will close with some words of wisdom from the Great Lewis Mumford, perhaps his wisdom may cast a clear picture on the realities of lies and how we villanize unnecessarily ".. for what is true of human beings in the mass is equally true of self-elected rulers and leaders: in any case, the problem is to increase the area of rational judgements and rational political activity, and to divert or sublimate those forces which are inimical to co-operation. To the extent that political power becomes rationally conditioned and successfully diffused by education, the individual citizen will be reluctant to sacrifice his own initiatives and his own judgements to the terroristic monopoly of dictatorship. The impotence of many is the power of the few-- and vice-versa.

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Monday, July 27, 2009




And this is a city
In name but in deed
It is a pack of people
They seek after meed
For officers and all
Do seek their own gain
But for the wealth of the commons
Not one taketh pain.
And hell without order
I may it well call
Where every man if for himself
And no man for all

Robert Crowley



Pièce de résistance

The seventeen hundreds ushered a volatile era in the history of Catholic populated Ireland. wiki"Ireland had chiefly been controlled by a Protestant Ascendancy constituting members of the established Church loyal to the British Crown". It governed the majority Irish Catholic population by a form of institutionalised sectarianism codified in the Penal Laws.

Wolfe Tone was a leading voice in the movement for the Republic of Ireland. His wiki"principles were drawn from the French Convention. Grattan's political philosophy was allied to that of Edmund Burke; Tone was a disciple of Georges Danton and Thomas Paine. Paine was a roommate of Tone's compatriot, "Citizen Lord" Edward FitzGerald, in Paris; and Paine's famous themes of the "rights of man" and "common sense" can be seen in the opening paragraph of the Declaration of the United Irishmen."


The closing lines from James Clarence Mangan's "Lament For Banba" may shed some light on the sentiment of all men and women in the face of oppression...

"But, no more! This our doom,
While our hearts yet are warm,
Let us not over weakly deplore!
For the hour soon may loom
When the Lord’s mighty hand
Shall be raised for our rescue once more!
And all our grief shall be turned into joy
For the still proud people of Banba!"

Russian Slavery

An ongoing problem for the Russian peoples since the days of Ottoman-Turk rule over Russian sovereignty. In the work titled "The Crimean Tatars and their Russian-Captive Slaves" Eizo Matsuki, of the Mediterranean Studies Group at Hitotsubashi University. Matsuki's research into the Legal Codes of the Russian nations aptly named "Law Code of Tsar Aleksei Mikhailovich". The specific Code of reference is a seven article piece, "The Redemption of Military Captives". The language calls for a tax to pay for the return of Russian captives. The Crimean Khanate, the Ottoman Empire, and various other slave traders some from Greek origins would receive the taxed income in return for Russian slaves.

Matsuki reveals a twisted history of slavery between the Western Kingdoms of France, Spain, Italy, Egypt, and throughout much of the Byzantine Empire, the victims all of Russian, Circassian, and Tatar origins. The span of Matsuki's essay covers the 11th through to 17th century. Matsuki, quotes S. Herbstein, an ambassador from the Emperor of Germany to the Russain throne describing a specific slave traders legendary number of captives "they say the number exceeded eight hundred thousand" (pg. 7 Matsuki). Whether the number was near millions of in the area of a few hundred means very little to the people involved in the horrific economies that condone slave trafficking. Regardless of the age, the Russian slave in the 12th century deserves the same mercy as the Russian slave in the 21st century.





As regular readers of this blog know, we’ve had a tangle or two with CNN’s in-house immigrant-basher, Lou Dobbs. In 2007, we had a major dustup with the host of “Lou Dobbs Tonight” over his wholly false claim that 7,000 new cases of leprosy had appeared in a recent three-year period in the United States, due at least in part to immigrants. (The reality was that about 400 new cases appeared during the period, and it’s not known if any of them were linked to immigrants.) The battle subjected Dobbs a series of humiliations, including being described by The New York Times as a man with “a somewhat flexible relationship with reality.”


To the surprise of very few familiar with Dobbs, the CNN host is at it again. Now, he’s joined with the conspiracy nuts pushing the wholly unsubstantiated claim that Barack Obama was not born in the United States, and therefore cannot legally hold the office of president. The fact that this claim has been disproved by CNN’s own reporters seems to mean nothing at all to Dobbs, who has come in for criticism in recent days from all kinds of quarters for joining hands with the “birthers.”


Today, Richard Cohen, president of the Southern Poverty Law Center, sent a letter to CNN President Jonathan Klein asking for action. “Respectable news organizations should not employ reporters willing to peddle racist conspiracy theories and false propaganda,” Cohen concludes in his letter. “It’s time for CNN to remove Mr. Dobbs from the airwaves.”

Cohen also wrote Klein in 2007 about Dobbs’ leprosy claims, but CNN took no action. Dobbs has also promoted a series of other falsehoods and conspiracy theories about immigrants.

Sunday, July 26, 2009

Johnny Clarke


The Sky
by Charles Baudelaire

Where'er he be, on water or on land,
Under pale suns or climes that flames enfold;
One of Christ's own, or of Cythera's band,
Shadowy beggar or Crœsus rich with gold;

Citizen, peasant, student, tramp; whate'er
His little brain may be, alive or dead;
Man knows the fear of mystery everywhere,
And peeps, with trembling glances, overhead.

The heaven above? A strangling cavern wall;
The lighted ceiling of a music-hall
Where every actor treads a bloody soil--

The hermit's hope; the terror of the sot;
The sky: the black lid of the mighty pot
Where the vast human generations boil!

Appeals court calls for Indian trust accounting
Friday, July 24, 2009
Filed Under: Cobell

The Interior Department must account for billions of dollars in Indian trust funds, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled today. In a unanimous decision, the court said the federal government remains in breach of trust for failing to account for the Individual Indian Money (IIM) trust. But a federal judge erred by concluding that the effort was "impossible," the D.C. Circuit said. "The statute gives the plaintiff class a right to an accounting," the court said, referring to the American Indian Trust Fund Management Reform Act of 1994. However, the accounting won't include accounts that were closed as of 1994, the D.C. Circuit said. And the effort won't have to be "theoretically perfect" and can include statistical sampling of certain transactions, the court noted. "The purpose of an equitable accounting, as we have tried to articulate, is for Interior to concentrate on picking the low-hanging fruit," the decision said. "We must not allow the theoretically perfect to render impossible the achievable good." The decision essentially gives Interior the approval to complete the accounting it started during the Bush administration. The department has limited the project in response to concerns from Congress about the cost and the benefits.

But Judge James Robertson, who has been handling the case since December 2006, will be tasked with the "equitable power to enforce the best accounting that Interior can provide, with the resources it receives, or expects to receive, from Congress," the D.C. Circuit said.

After a trial, Robertson in January 2008 said the accounting was "impossible." He cited Congressional budget restraints, along with limits Interior placed on the project. He then conducted another proceeding to determine how much money, if any, was owed to the plaintiffs in the Cobell lawsuit. In August 2008, he said the plaintiffs were owed $455.6 million. The D.C. Circuit vacated that final judgment, essentially taking dollar amounts out of the picture for now. The plaintiffs had sought billions of dollars, while the government said no money was owed. "We will continue to seek justice, no matter how long that takes," lead plaintiff Elouise Cobell, a member of the Blackfeet Nation of Montana, said in a statement." Tens of thousands of beneficiaries have died while this case has been pending without ever receiving an accounting of their trust assets." Cobell said the plaintiffs would renew their request to have a receiver appointed to make decisions affecting the IIM trust.
D.C. Circuit Decision:
Cobell v. Salazar (July 24, 2009)

An Amazon Culture Withers as Food Dries Up
By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL
Published: July 24, 2009


XINGU NATIONAL PARK, Brazil — As the naked, painted young men of the Kamayurá tribe prepare for the ritualized war games of a festival, they end their haunting fireside chant with a blowing sound — “whoosh, whoosh” — a symbolic attempt to eliminate the scent of fish so they will not be detected by enemies. For centuries, fish from jungle lakes and rivers have been a staple of the Kamayurá diet, the tribe’s primary source of protein. But fish smells are not a problem for the warriors anymore. Deforestation and, some scientists contend, global climate change are making the Amazon region drier and hotter, decimating fish stocks in this area and imperiling the Kamayurá’s very existence. Like other small indigenous cultures around the world with little money or capacity to move, they are struggling to adapt to the changes. “Us old monkeys can take the hunger, but the little ones suffer — they’re always asking for fish,” said Kotok, the tribe’s chief, who stood in front of a hut containing the tribe’s sacred flutes on a recent evening. He wore a white T-shirt over the tribe’s traditional dress, which is basically nothing.

Chief Kotok, who like all of the Kamayurá people goes by only one name, said that men can now fish all night without a bite in streams where fish used to be abundant; they safely swim in lakes previously teeming with piranhas. Responsible for 3 wives, 24 children and hundreds of other tribe members, he said his once-idyllic existence had turned into a kind of bad dream. “I’m stressed and anxious — this has all changed so quickly, and life has become very hard,” he said in Portuguese, speaking through an interpreter. “As a chief, I have to have vision and look down the road, but I don’t know what will happen to my children and grandchildren.” The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change says that up to 30 percent of animals and plants face an increased risk of extinction if global temperatures rise 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) in coming decades. But anthropologists also fear a wave of cultural extinction for dozens of small indigenous groups — the loss of their traditions, their arts, their languages. “In some places, people will have to move to preserve their culture,” said Gonzalo Oviedo, a senior adviser on social policy at the International Union for Conservation of Nature in Gland, Switzerland. “But some of those that are small and marginal will assimilate and disappear.” To make do without fish, Kamayurá children are eating ants on their traditional spongy flatbread, made from tropical cassava flour. “There aren’t as many around because the kids have eaten them,” Chief Kotok said of the ants. Sometimes members of the tribe kill monkeys for their meat, but, the chief said, “You have to eat 30 monkeys to fill your stomach.” Living deep in the forest with no transportation and little money, he noted, “We don’t have a way to go to the grocery store for rice and beans to supplement what is missing.” Tacuma, the tribe’s wizened senior shaman, said that the only threat he could remember rivaling climate change was a measles virus that arrived deep in the Amazon in 1954, killing more than 90 percent of the Kamayurá.

Cultures threatened by climate change span the globe. They include rainforest residents like the Kamayurá who face dwindling food supplies; remote Arctic communities where the only roads were frozen rivers that are now flowing most of the year; and residents of low-lying islands whose land is threatened by rising seas. Many indigenous people depend intimately on the cycles of nature and have had to adapt to climate variations — a season of drought, for example, or a hurricane that kills animals. But worldwide, the change is large, rapid and inexorable, heading in only one direction: warmer. Eskimo settlements like Kivalina and Shishmaref in Alaska are “literally being washed away,” said Thomas Thornton, an anthropologist who studies the region, because the sea ice that long protected their shores is melting and the seas around are rising. Without that hard ice, it becomes difficult, if not impossible, to hunt for seals, a mainstay of the traditional diet. Some Eskimo groups are suing polluters and developed nations, demanding compensation and help with adapting.

At climate negotiations in December in Poznan, Poland, the United Nations created an “adaptation fund” through which rich nations could in theory help poor nations adjust to climate change. But some of the money was expected to come from voluntary contributions, and there have been none so far, said Yvo De Boer, the executive secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. “It would help if rich countries could make financial commitments,” he said. Throughout history, the traditional final response for indigenous cultures threatened by untenable climate conditions or political strife was to move. But today, moving is often impossible. Land surrounding tribes is now usually occupied by an expanding global population, and once-nomadic groups have often settled down, building homes and schools and even declaring statehood. The Kamayurá live in the middle of Xingu National Park, a vast territory that was once deep in the Amazon but is now surrounded by farms and ranches. About 5,000 square miles of Amazon forest are being cut down annually in recent years, according to the Brazilian government. And with far less foliage, there is less moisture in the regional water cycle, lending unpredictability to seasonal rains and leaving the climate drier and hotter. That has upended the cycles of nature that long regulated Kamayurá life. They wake with the sun and have no set meals, eating whenever they are hungry.

Fish stocks began to dwindle in the 1990s and “have just collapsed” since 2006, said Chief Kotok, who is considering the possibility of fish farming, in which fish would be fed in a penned area of a lake. With hotter temperatures as well as less rain and humidity in the region, water levels in rivers are extremely low. Fish cannot get to their spawning grounds. Last year, for the first time, the beach on the lake that abuts the village was not covered by water in the rainy season, rendering useless the tribe’s method of catching turtles by putting food in holes that would fill up, luring the animals. The tribe’s agriculture has suffered, too. For centuries, the Kamayurá planted their summer crops when a certain star appeared on the horizon. “When it appeared, everyone celebrated because it was the sign to start planting cassava since the rain and wind would come,” Chief Kotok recalled. But starting seven or eight seasons ago, the star’s appearance was no longer followed by rain, an ominous divergence, forcing the tribe to adjust its schedule. It has been an ever-shifting game of trial and error since. Last year, families had to plant their cassava four times — it died in September, October and November because there was not enough moisture in the ground. It was not until December that the planting took. The corn also failed, said Mapulu, the chief’s sister. “It sprouted and withered away,” she said. A specialist in medicinal plants, Ms. Mapulu said that a root she used to treat diarrhea and other ailments had become nearly impossible to find because the forest flora had changed. The grass they use to bound together the essential beams of their huts has also become difficult to find.

But perhaps the Kamayurá’s greatest fear are the new summer forest fires. Once too moist to ignite, the forest here is now flammable because of the drier weather. In 2007, Xingu National Park burned for the first time, and thousands of acres were destroyed. “The whole Xingu was burning — it stung our lungs and our eyes,” Chief Kotok said. “We had nowhere to escape. We suffered along with the animals.”

Thursday, July 9, 2009


Paulo Freire (B.1921)

Apart from his academic and institutional life, Freire participated in movements for popular education in the early 1960s. The most important of these were the Movement for Popular Culture (MCP) in Recife, the Cultural Extension Service (SEC) at the University of Recife (now the Federal University of Pernambuco: UFPE) and the "Bare feet can also learn to read" campaign in the neighboring state of Rio Grande do Norte where Freire got his first chance to try out his method with three hundred sugarcane sharecroppers in the interior village of Angicos in 1963. When that experiment proved successful, he was invited by President Joao Belchior Goulart to implement a national literacy campaign. The program intended to make five million adults literate and politically progressive within the first year. According to the national law at the time, adults could only vote if they were functionally literate to some degree. For years this limiting of the Brazilian electoral college had worked in favor of the hegemonic oligarchy. Now the landowners were threatened by the possibility that the peasants would organize into leagues, become literate and swell the ranks of the voters. The coup d'etat of March 31, 1964 deposed the Goulart government and imposed military rule which lasted for over twenty years. Freire was arrested twice and imprisoned in Olinda and Recife for over two months before receiving political asylum in the Bolivian embassy in Rio and proceeding to La Paz where he found the altitude and uncertain politics contrary to his health and left for Santiago, Chile within a month.

Freire Institute, UCLA


MAMMON , a word of Aramaic origin meaning " riches"; or with the Hebrew "matmon, treasure". Occurs in the Sermon on the Mount "Ye can not serve God and mammon"(Matt . Vi . 24) and "the parable of the Unjust Steward" (Luke xvi . 9-13) . The Authorized Version keeps the Syriac word . Wycliffe uses " richessis." The New English Dictionary quotes Piers Plowman as containing the earliest personification of the name . Nicholaus de Lyra (commenting on the passage in Luke) says that Mammon "est nomen daemonis" . There is no trace, however, of any Syriac god of such a name, and the common identification of the name with a god of covetousness or avarice is chiefly due to Milton (Paradise Lost, i .678) . Milton's personification of the name—"Mammon, the least erected spirit that fell from heaven" ("Paradise Lost," i. 679)


Saint Ambrose (b. 337), Ambrose replied in a letter to Valentinian, arguing that the devoted worshipers of idols had often been forsaken by their deities; that the native valour of the Roman soldiers had gained their victories, and not the pretended influence of pagan priests; that these idolatrous worshipers requested for themselves what they refused to Christians; THAT VOLUNTARY CELIBACY WAS MORE HONORABLE THAN CONSTRAINED VIRGINITY; that as the Christian ministers declined to receive temporal emoluments, they should also be denied to pagan priests (pagan priests demanded (Vestal Virgins); that it was absurd to suppose that God would inflict a famine upon the empire for neglecting to support a religious system contrary to His will as revealed in the Holy Scriptures; that the whole process of nature encouraged innovations, and that all nations had permitted them even in religion; that heathen sacrifices were offensive to Christians; and that it was the duty of a Christian prince to suppress pagan ceremonies. In the epistles of Symmachus and of Ambrose both the petition and the reply are preserved.





This is a google-maps view of the Uros floating islands of Lake Titicaca. The Uros have lived and created these floating islands made of totora (a type of sedge) that are situated on Lake Titicaca, which is the largest lake in South America. Lake Titicaca is also one of the highest elevated lakes in the world, it borders Peru and Bolivia.

View Larger Map

Mass arrests over Peru protests
07:07 GMT, Thursday, 9 July 2009 08:07 UK bbc.co.uk

Peruvian police say they have arrested 156 people during a second day of nationwide protests against the government's free market policies. Some 30,000 police and 6,000 soldiers were deployed to keep order. The protests come just over a month after clashes over land rights in the Amazon left at least 33 people dead. On Tuesday, President Alan Garcia announced changes to his cabinet, amid sharp criticism of the government's handling of those protests. The latest demonstrations were called by the CGTP union, which is demanding wage increases for public sector workers and the cancellation of Peru's free trade agreement with the US. Police cleared highway blockades in four provinces on Wednesday, as transport workers and teachers led strikes and demonstrations. Peru's national police chief said 156 people were arrested across the country, including 127 in the capital Lima, where some 2,500 people staged a rally in the downtown area.

Pressure building
The government blamed the demonstrations on what they call communist groups supported by foreign governments such as Bolivia and Venezuela. But the social discord appears to be firmly rooted in Peru, where the pressure is building on President Garcia and his government, the BBC's Dan Collyns reports from Lima. On Tuesday, Mr Garcia said he would reshuffle his cabinet by the weekend. The announcement followed criticism over the way his government dealt with protests by indigenous groups last month. More than 30 police officers and protesters were killed as security forces tried to end a two-month-long blockade of roads and fuel pipelines by indigenous people. Opinion polls show President Garcia is increasingly unpopular and that most Peruvians blame his government for the escalation of tensions which led to the violence.

When the leapers cease to believe in god, they poisoned the wells.....


What is the revolution?.... no one know. But it arises from the fact that there is too much wretchedness, not merely lack of money, but rich people living their own lives while others can not.


Andre Malraux, The Conquerors

Wednesday, July 8, 2009



The Zimbabwean, using Zimbabwean notes to make billboard adverts, has won the top award in the outdoor category at the Cannes Lions International Advertising Festival.


A work by Abdel Hamid Baalbaki (b.1940), Road to Peace, 1976.


The Rebel Girl (1914-1915) by Joe Hill

There are women of many descriptions
In this queer world, as everyone knows.
Some are living in beautiful mansions,
And are wearing the finest of clothes.
There are blue blooded queens and princesses,
Who have charms made of diamonds and pearl;
But the only and thoroughbred lady
Is the Rebel Girl.

That's the Rebel Girl, that's the Rebel Girl!
To the working class she's a precious pearl.
She brings courage, pride and joy
To the fighting Rebel Boy.
We've had girls before, but we need some more
In the Industrial Workers of the World.
For it's great to fight for freedom
With a Rebel Girl.

Yes, her hands may be hardened from labor,
And her dress may not be very fine;
But a heart in her bosom is beating
That is true to her class and her kind.
And the grafters in terror are trembling
When her spite and defiance she'll hurl;
For the only and thoroughbred lady
Is the Rebel Girl.

I for one believe that if you give people a thorough understanding of what confronts them and the basic causes that reduce it, they will create their own program, and when people create a program, you get action.


Flat Earth Psychology from the Ghost in the Machine by Arthur Koestler

Flat earth psychology is a term used by Arthur Koestler to describe the school of thought known as Behaviourism. B.F. Skinner's work The operational analysis of psychological terms" published in Behavioral and Brain Sciences (Apr. 16. 1984) describes the idea of behaviorism that he inherited from his mentor John Broadus Watson. "The learning perspective (where any physical action is a behavior) is a philosophy of psychology based on the proposition that all things which organisms do — including acting, thinking and feeling—can and should be regarded as behaviors." J.B. Watson whose work preceded Skinner by thirty years essentially believed that psychology must reject any concept of consciousness and the mind. Or as Arthur Koestler so eloquently states "Behaviorists may only study objective, measure able aspects of human behavior." The irony of the quest of knowledge that is behaviorism is that all the clinical research was performed on rats and dogs, humans, let alone chimpanzees were too complex of creatures to get to the root of the "stimulus-response theory".

The idea that all living organisms may fall under this scope of reality, necessitates that we live in a theoretical world that is solely based on stimulus and reflex (reflex would later be replaced with response). B.F. Skinner writes in his book, Science and Human Behavior (NY, 1953), "(the) mind and ideas are non-existent entities, 'invented for the soul purpose of providing spurious explanations.... Since mental or psychic events are asserted to lack the dimensions of physical science, we have an additional reason for rejecting them" Koestler notes that Skinner like Watson, "asserted that psychology could be studied with the methods and concepts of classical physics."

To say that Skinner and Watson were anti-Platonist would be an understatement. At the same time, it is hard to argue with the empirical minds hell-bent on maintaining their social status based on their shallow fields of research. C.J. Herrick offers a compelling argument based on sound "scientific and empirical" theory in his book The Evolution of Human Nature (NY, 1961). "All the information we have about the embryology and phylogenetic development of behavior shows clearly that the local reflexes are not primary units of behavior. They are secondary acquisitions." Koestler also uses a quote from Sir Charles Sherrington's work "The Integrative Action of the Nervous System" ( NY, 1906) which further emphasises the absurdity of "simple reflexes". "The simple reflex is probably a purely abstract conception, because all parts of it is probably ever capable of reaction without affecting and being affected by various other parts... the simple reflex is a convenient, if not a probable, fiction."



If any other country were to capture a ship carrying humanitarian supplies, and assault and imprison a Nobel Prize-winner and a former U.S. Member of Congress under terrible conditions, surely the U.S. media and even the U.S. government would speak out. The Spirit of Humanity was boarded and seized, and all 21 human rights workers and crew were taken prisoner, on June 30th. But the pirates in this case operate under the flag of the I.D.F., the Israeli military, and the seizure of medical supplies, toys, and olive trees intended for the suffering people of Gaza appears to have the quiet approval of the United States government. Hardly a word has appeared in any of the billionaire-owned newspapers, the case is not mentioned on television, and no statement of condemnation or concern has issued from the White House.


Sadly, as activists for peace know all too well, the U.S. mass media cannot be trusted to tell the truth, or indeed anything at all if they can avoid it, about the actions of U.S. proxies and allies in the Middle East. The prison cells, torture chambers and secret police that prop up the utterly despised regime of Mubarak in Egypt are all financed by U.S. aid. The bombs and shells and bullets and tanks that killed so many, including so very many children and non-combatants, in Gaza in January, are financed by U.S. aid that was even increased during the massacre. And now the I.D.F., using U.S. aid again, has captured a humanitarian relief ship and its crew by violence off the coast of Gaza, where the I.D.F. has no legal and legitimate authority, and the brave aid volunteers are being treated abominably - with no outcry from the U.S., and the world-wide outcry not even reported to Americans.


Around the world, it has been reported that Nobel Peace Prize-winner Mairead Maguire of Northern Ireland, and former US Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney, along with 19 others, are being held prisoner while being told they must sign confessions (in Hebrew, a language they do not understand) before being deported. They have refused, and are still in jail. Around the world, millions are concerned as vital medicine is being withheld from Mairead Maguire by her jailers. But the White House is not concerned. In Congress, no one from either corporate party, the Democrats or the Republicans, has taken to the floor to demand their release. Imagine the uproar if the ship had been captured by Iran! But because the lawlessness is committed by the Israeli allies of those Democrats and Republicans, the silence is deafening.The Peace and Freedom Party joins in the demands of hundreds of millions of people around the world: that the aid workers be released unconditionally, with all their notes, recordings and personal belongings; that the ship, the Spirit of Humanity, be released after its dismantled navigation equipment is repaired; that the I.D.F. stand away and allow the cargo (that was security-checked at the dock in Cyprus before the voyage) to be offloaded in Gaza; and above all, that the cruel embargo of humanitarian aid to the suffering people of Gaza be lifted by the Israeli government. We further ask that all aid of any kind from the United States to Israel cease until the Israeli government agrees to these conditions. While this statement is being provided to the usual media, having no confidence in the willingness of the corporate media to tell the truth about the Middle East, we are also circulating it by other means.


Tuesday, July 7, 2009


Harvery Wish uses a quote from a "Lady of Charleston" circa 1822 to assist with his opening paragraph. The woman is speaking to an associate about the Denmark Vesey attempted slave revolt. The lady of Charleston writes "Last evening, twenty-five hundred of our citizens were under arms to guard our property and our lives. But it is a subject not to be mentioned; and unless you hear of it, elsewhere, say nothing about it." Mr. Wish acknowledges that the fear and trepidation that held most slave owners in perpetual fear, now have become an obstacle in the proper documentation of the historical slave insurrections. Mr. Vesey was a slave brought from the Caribbean to the United States, he was able to purchase his freedom. Knowing that no man was truly free as long as slavery existed, he began to form a plot for a slave insurrection that preceded Nat Turners ambitious rebellion by nine years.

The American Slave industry was no stranger to the horrors of the slave acting on his natural desire for freedom. The entire island of Haiti became the first slave free state in the Caribbean when Toussaint L'ouverture and Jean-Jacques Dessalines successfully lead their fellow enslaved men and women in the Haitian Revolution. The Hatian Revolution would be the tip of the iceberg for most slave run plantations. Virginia being one of the primary states for the slave trade industry saw more than any other state before the 1800's. By the time the United States outlawed the importation of news slaves in 1808, the South was in the full grips of slave rebellion paranoia.


Most plots and insurrections ended violently for the participants: poor whites, clergy, abolitionist and most unfortunate, the slaves themselves. By 1859, the United States was at the brink of Civil War and Slavery was a primary issue. John Browns raid on Harpers Ferry was the final straw. The relations between Northerners and Southerners on the issue of slavery was an all out war even prior to the Civil War itself.


It is interesting to note the irony of the situation that the white slave owners subjected themselves to. To say that the average slave owner became one hundred percent reliant on the slaves themselves is an understatement. Unfortunately the image that many southerners attempted to paint in regards to the character of the black man and woman are based on the same sociopath based fear that engulfed half of the United States land mass. We now know that African slaves and their offspring new freedom and justice from the very beginning. "No doubt many blacks made the adjustments to slavery but the romantic picture of careless abandon and contentment fails to be convincing". Mr Wish would add "The struggle of the black man and woman for liberty, beginning in those dark days on the slave ship, was far from sporadic in nature, but an ever-recurrent battle waged everywhere with desperate courage against the bonds of his and her master"


An interesting book to read on the idea of the slave rebellions is titled "The Confessions of Nat Turner" by William Syron.


American Slave Insurrections Before 1861 an essay by Harvey Wish. published in The Journal of Negro History (July 1937).


Canadian Indian residential school system

In 1909, Dr. Peter Bryce, general medical superintendent for the Department of Indian Affairs (DIA), reported to the department that between 1894 and 1908 mortality rates at residential schools in Western Canada ranged from 35% to 60% over five years (that is, five years after entry, 35% to 60% of students had died). These statistics did not become public until 1922, when Bryce, who was no longer working for the government, published The Story of a National Crime: Being a Record of the Health Conditions of the Indians of Canada from 1904 to 1921. In particular, he alleged that the high mortality rates were frequently deliberate, with healthy children being exposed to children with tuberculosis.

In 1920 and 1922, Dr. F. A. Corbett was commissioned to visit the schools in the west of the country, and found similar results to Bryce. At the Ermineskin school in Hobbema, Alberta, he found 50% of the children had tuberculosis. At Sarcee Boarding School near Calgary, all 33 students were "much below even a passable standard of health" and "[a]ll but four were infected with tuberculosis." When he entered a classroom there, he found sixteen of the children, many of them near death, were still being made to sit through lessons.


Murder at United Church Indian Residential School Described, killer Named, at Vancouver Press Conference
Vancouver, Canada:
May 27, 2009


The family of a child murdered at the United Church's Edmonton Indian residential school went public today at a downtown press conference in Vancouver, and named her killer. Eliza Charlotte Stewart described the murder, and played a recording from her sister Inez Beryl Spencer, who personally witnessed the attack on their sister Victoria that caused her death. Victoria, age nine, was struck on the head with a wooden two by four by a residential school staff member named Ann Knizky. Victoria died the next day.


"First I was hit on the back, and then Miss Knizky hit Vicky because she wasn't coming into school fast enough. She fell down some stairs" said Inez in her statement. "That night Vicky started complaining about head aches and she died the next day in the Camsell hospital. Miss Knizky never was tried for killing her." Eliza Stewart commented, "Vicky was shipped back to us in a burlap sack and her brain was missing, so we think they did an autopsy and removed her brain to hide the injury done to it. They never told us anything. And the church then claimed she died of TB, but she never had it." Eliza Stewart and her brother Moses called upon the United Church to identify the whereabouts of Ann Knizky so that she can be charged with murder, along with the church itself.


"They're not off the hook, just 'cause it happened years ago" said Moses Stewart. "Even if Miss Knizky is dead, we want the United Church to stand trial too for how they covered this all up and protected a murderer." The Stewart family will be issuing a formal Letter of Demand to the United Church of Canada and its officers this week, which will require them to surrender Ann Knizky and identify her accomplices, publicly admit its responsibility for the murder, erect a memorial for Victoria, and compensate the family for her loss. The Stewarts will also be calling on the police to open a criminal investigation into Victoria's death. The press conference was sparsely attended. Of sixteen media outlets contacted, only two reporters were present. Among the absent media was the so-called "Aboriginal Peoples' Television Network".


In a final statement approved by the Stewarts, Kevin Annett of The Friends and Relatives of the Disappeared said, "Thousands of children died in this manner in the Indian Residential Schools, and not one person in Canada has ever been charged for the death of a child there, or brought to trial. The government is even forbidding names of perpetrators to be named. We will not allow these churches to get away with murder. We call upon others to come forward and name those responsible for the death and torture of innocent children in the residential schools." Further updates will follow once the police and United Church respond to the Stewarts, or fail to.
For information contact: hiddenfromhistory@yahoo.ca or 1-250-753-3345.
Read Comments and Article from The Province Newspaper

Giovanni Pico della Mirandola-- In the Oration on the Dignity of Man (1486), Pico justified the importance of the human quest for knowledge within a neo-Platonic framework. He writes that after God had created all creatures, he conceived of the desire for another, sentient being who would appreciate all his works, but there was no longer any room in the chain of being; all the possible slots from angels to worms had been filled. So, God created man such that he had no specific slot in the chain. Instead, men were capable of learning from and imitating any existing creature. When man philosophizes, he ascends the chain of being towards the angels, and communion with God. When he fails to exercise his intellect, he vegetates. Pico did not fail to notice that this system made philosophers like himself among the most dignified human creatures. The idea that men could ascend the chain of being through the exercise of their intellectual capacities was a profound endorsement of the dignity of human existence in this earthly life. The root of this dignity lay in his assertion that only human beings could change themselves through their own free will, whereas all other changes in nature were the result of some outside force acting on whatever it is that undergoes change. He observed from history that philosophies and institutions were always in change, making man's capacity for self-transformation the only constant. Coupled with his belief that all of creation constitutes a symbolic reflection of the divinity of God, Pico's philosophies had a profound influence on the arts, helping to elevate writers and painters from their medieval role as mere artisans to the Renaissance ideal of the artist as genius.



1. To form a nucleus of the universal brotherhood of humanity without distinction of race, creed, sex, caste, or colour.
2. To encourage the study of comparative religion, philosophy, and science.
3. To investigate the unexplained laws of nature and the powers latent in man.
co-founders of the society and original members:

Monday, July 6, 2009


There are two different viewpoints on the relationship between asymmetric warfare and terrorism. In the modern context, asymmetric warfare is increasingly considered a component of fourth generation warfare. When practiced outside the laws of war, it is often defined as terrorism, though rarely by its practitioners or their supporters




beautiful artist, eric drooker

good work by the beehive design collective

The use of propaganda through the public mediums exposed the sons and daughters of the "information age" to a new world: music, film, art, print, radio, television. Anything labeled communication, grounded in "progress", instantly became real estate for potential mediums of politics and business.


One of the pious saw in a dream a king in heaven and an ascetic in hell. He asked, "What is the cause of the elevation of the one and the debasement of the other, contrary to the people's expectations?

A voice came, saying "This king is in heaven for following dervishes, and the ascetic is in hell from being near to kings"

Sunday, July 5, 2009



"He was a dedicated patriot: DIGNITY was his country, MANHOOD was his government, and FREEDOM was his land."


"Organization of Afro-American Unity: A Statement of Basic Aims and Objectives" New York, June 1964. quoting John Oliver Killens "Then We Heard The Thunder"





Honeybee hordes use two weapons - heat and carbon dioxide - to kill their natural enemies, giant hornets. Japanese honeybees form "bee balls" - mobbing and smothering the predators. This has previously been referred to as "heat-balling", but a study has now shown that carbon dioxide also plays a role in its lethal effectiveness. In the journal Naturwissenschaften, the scientists describe how hornets are killed within 10 minutes when they are trapped inside a ball of bees. Japanese giant hornets, which can be up to 5cm long, are voracious predators that can devastate bees' nests and consume their larvae. But, if the bees spot their attacker in time, they mount a powerful defence in the form of a bee ball. This study found that the heat inside the bee ball alone was not enough to reliably kill the hornets.


"They can survive for 10 minutes at a temperature up to 47C, and the temperature inside the bee balls does not rise higher than 46C," said Fumio Sakamoto, a researcher from Kyoto Gakuen University in Japan, and one of the authors of the study. His team recreated experimental bee balls and took direct measurements from inside them. They anaesthetised giant hornets and fixed them to the tip either of a thermometer probe, or the inlet of a gas detector. Once the hornets recovered from their anaesthesia, the probes were touched to the bees' nest. "The bee ball formed (around the hornet) immediately," said Dr Sakamoto. After 10 minutes the bees were packed solidly enough around the probe to be removed from the nest in a distinct ball. As the temperature inside the ball increased to more than 45C, the carbon dioxide level also rose sharply.


In a parallel experiment, the scientists found that in an atmosphere relatively high in carbon dioxide, the temperature at which hornets could survive for 10 minutes was lowered. "So we concluded that carbon dioxide produced inside the bee ball by the honeybees is a major factor, together with temperature, involved in the bees' defence." Dr Sakamoto is not sure, at this point, whether the bees were effectively "gassing" the hornets, or simply depriving them of oxygen. "Either way, the carbon dioxide increase and/or the oxygen decrease lowered the temperature that was lethal to the hornets, " he told BBC News. "We are going to do the additional experiments about this point using mixed air of various oxygen and carbon dioxide (concentrations)."


The mob of bees also appeared to operate in "two phases". "The hornet may be killed during the first 0-5 minute period, in which the highest level of heat production and carbon dioxide emissions take place," said Dr Sakamoto. This might suggest that the bees are aware of what physiological state the hornet is in. Dr Sakamoto said: "The latter 5-10 min period may be free running to ensure their victim's death."



William James Sidis was born April 1st 1898 and died July 17, 1944. A life long socialist and later, a confessed libertarian. Mr. Sidis was an American child prodigy who renounced his fame and fortune at a very young age. He would flee the overbearing personalities of his parents who were attempting to place William James (named after his godfather) in an insane asylum. The irony of the parents attempts stress the backwards thinking that accompanied the United States' perception of humanity in is earliest years during the 19th and 20th centurty, William James Sidis had an I.Q. bordering 300. The actual estimate was an I.Q. between 250-300. Regardless of the actual number, it is an alarming statistic when one compares the entrance to MENSA, which require at least a 160 scored I.Q. a "would be" member. Willaim would go on to write a countless number of volumes on Math, Philosophy, U.S. History, and even American Indian history. To say this young man, who graduated with a B.A. from Harvard at 16, lived a lonely life is an understatement. Born into affluence he had everything a child could wish for. Yet the material aspects of the "socialized" world interested him very little. Much of the trouble that he found with the law was directly related to his involvement in the Socialist Party. His histories on the U.S. and the original Native inhabitants are a timeless treasure that shows a mind driven to all that is humane and righteous.


Though labeled an outcast, his works will forever bear testament to the brilliance and love that exhorted from this true human of light.



Saturday, July 4, 2009


The utility of Spring is the renewal of life.
The utility of Summer is the growth of life.
The utility of Autumn is the harvest of life.
And the utility of Winter is the storage of life.

Lao Tze

Wasichu

The first people who lived on the northern plains of what today is the United States called themselves "Lakota," meaning "the people," a word which provides the semantic basis for Dakota. The first European people to meet the Lakota called them "Sioux," a contraction of Nadowessioux, a now-archaic French-Canadian word meaning "snake" or enemy.

The Lakota also used the metaphor to describe the newcomers. It was Wasi'chu, which means "takes the fat," or "greedy person." Within the modern Indian movement, Wasi'chu has come to mean those corporations and individuals, with their governmental accomplices, which continue to covet Indian lives, land, and resources for private profit.

Wasi'chu does not describe a race; it describes a state of mind.

Wasi'chu is also a human condition based on inhumanity, racism, and exploitation. It is a sickness, a seemingly incurable and contagious disease which begot the ever advancing society of the West. If we do not control it, this disease will surely be the basis for what may be the last of the continuing wars against the Native American people.

...excerpt from Wasi'chu, The Continuing Indian Wars,
Bruce Johansen and Robert Maestas
with an introduction by John Redhouse

Friday, July 3, 2009


"Power in defense of freedom is greater than power in behalf of tyranny and oppression, because power, real power, comes from conviction which produces action, uncompromising action."


Malik El Shabazz, "Prospects for freedom in 1965", Malcolm X Speaks