The Common Ills


Saturday, August 16, 2008
Jeremy

Jeremy

US citizen Jeremy Hinzman who fled to Canada to avoid military service in Iraq will appeal a deportation warrant from Canada’s Border Services Agency (CBSA).
Thestar.com web site quotes defense team member Alyssa Manning who warned of the shattering results for the wife and two children for if court martialled Hinzmans he may get five years in jail.


The above is from Prensa Latina's "US Deserter to Appeal Canada Eviction." And that's pretty much it because Ruth Conniff can act like it's a crime that Bill Clinton wasn't a war resister but can't write one damn word about war resisters. She's far from alone in useless Panhandle Media.
Meanwwhile Reuters tries to make sense out of northern Iraq's claims that theyw ill pull their Peshmerga forces out of Diyala Province but then they won't. The US military announces that 3 people were killed (eight more wounded) in a Baghdad bombing today. And they announced:

An Article 32 pretrial investigation for Staff Sgt. Hal M. Warner, original scheduled for Aug.15 will begin Sept. 5 at Contingency Operating Base Speicher, near Tikrit.
Warner has been charged with pre-meditated murder, accessory after the fact, assault, making a false official statement and obstruction of justice. He is assigned to D Company, 1st Battalion, 327th Infantry at Forward Operating Base Summerall, near Bayji.
The charges followed a criminal investigation into the death of Ali Mansur Mohamed, a detainee initially believed to have been released by Coalition forces on or about May 16, 2008.

Bully Boy is on yet another vacation and back in Crawford. Dana Perino said in the Thursday White House breifing that he would be working on his speech for the GOP convention (told those wanting to know what was in it to "hold their horses") but he won't be rehearsing it, according to Perino. (Translation, he's not working on it all.) Condi Rice is supposed to arrive this morning in Crawford for an NSC meeting with Bully Boy, Robert Gates (Sec of Defense) and Stephen Hadley (NSA). (Some of whom will be 'present' via video-link.) Iraq fell off the radar last week and if you're surprised by that, you missed all the press conferences and briefings where things such as convention speeches could be the topics of question but Iraq wasn't judged (by the press itself) worth asking about.

Back to Jeremy Hinzman, this from Courage to Resist:

Jeremy Hinzman ordered deported from Canada
By Courage to Resist and War Resisters Support Campaign (Canada). August 13, 2008The first U.S. war resister to apply for refuge in Canada has been ordered deported by September 23rd. Jeremy is in Canada with his wife Nga Nuyen, and their two young children. This decision flies in the face of the motion adopted by Parliament on June 3, 2008 which calls on the government to allow US war resisters to apply for Permanent Resident status in Canada. Supporters are calling on Hon. Diane Finley, Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, to intervene. Phone 613.996.4974 or email finley.d@parl.gc.ca

And this is the War Resisters Support Campaign:

Jeremy Hinzman ordered deported
The first U.S. war resister to apply for refuge in Canada has been ordered deported by September 23rd. Jeremy is in Canada with his wife Nga Nuyen, and their two young children.
This decision flies in the face of the motion adopted by Parliament on June 3, 2008 which calls on the government to allow US war resisters to apply for Permanent Resident status in Canada. It also rejects the will of Canadians who have demonstrated in various polls that they want war resisters to stay.
The War Resisters Support Campaign is calling on the federal government and the Hon. Diane Finley, Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, to intervene to prevent the Hinzman family from being sent to the U.S. to be punished.

And from Iraq Veterans Against the War:

US Iraq War resister ordered deported from Canada
US Iraq War resister Jeremy Hinzman was informed on August 13th that his application to stay in Canada has been rejected. Jeremy served a tour in Afghanistan in a non-combat role after applying for conscientious objector status. When his unit, the 82nd Airborne Division, was to be deployed to Iraq Jeremy and his family decided to come to Canada. Jeremy is the first U.S. war resister to apply for refuge in Canada. He has been ordered to be deported by September 23rd. Jeremy is in Canada with his wife Nga Nuyen, and their two young children.
The decision to deport Hinzman comes just two months after the Canadian Parliament passed a motion calling on the government to allow US war resisters to apply for Permanent Resident status in Canada.
To support Jeremy, call or email Hon. Diane Finley, Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, and ask her to intervene in this case. Phone: 613.996.4974 email:
finley.d@parl.gc.ca.Read more of this item-->
Click here for more IVAW Updates

Since yesterday morning, the following community websites have updated:

Rebecca's Sex and Politics and Screeds and Attitude;
Cedric's Cedric's Big Mix;
Kat's Kat's Korner;
Betty's Thomas Friedman is a Great Man;
Mike's Mikey Likes It!;
Elaine's Like Maria Said Paz;
Wally's The Daily Jot;
Trina's Trina's Kitchen;
Ruth's Ruth's Report;
and Marcia's SICKOFITRADLZ

[Mike note: C.I. wrote these this morning and held them for after everyone posted in the community. I'm posting this for C.I. Cedric says he and Wally post in a few hours.]

The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.

iraq
jeremy hinzman









Posted at 11:58 pm by thecommonills
 

Silences, lies and refusals

Silences, lies and refusals

A pickup truck exploded near the central bus station at Balad, a largely Shiite town in the overwhelmingly Sunni province of Salahuddin.
Witnesses speculated that the bomber had exploited a recent relaxation in security. “It is an attempt to blow up the atmosphere of reconciliation between the people of Balad and the other cities of Salahuddin and to make another wave of sectarian anger,” Col. Ali Saleh, a Salahuddin police spokesman, said.


The above is from Stephen Farrell and Suadad al-Salhy's "Truck Bomber Kills 9 as Shiite Pilgrims Travel Through Northern Iraq" in today's New York Times. And except for the wire services, that's pretty much it.

Community Member X (community members will know his name) asked that something be noted here. I'm calling him CMX because he usually sticks to the newsletter. As someone stationed in Korea who has only recently learned he deploys to Iraq next year, CMX wants it made very clear that he believes the press is doing "a s**t poor job and acting like the Iraq War ended." He notes that they are still on high alert (in Korea, over the perceived 'threat' of Iran) and that it's just started to sink in with others he's serving with that Barack's not just gotten a free pass, he's not going to do a damn thing to end the illegal war.

CMX is digsuted with the after-thought nature of the Iraq War and wants it noted "Katrina vanden Heuvel and all the beggars in indymedia and all the liars in corporate media are ensuring that a lot more people are going to die in that illegal war by their silences, their lies and their refusal to make ending this illegal war their top agenda. They have blood on their hands. They need to be called out and confronted. And the lies that Barack is planning to end the war need to be called out every damn day."

And that really says it all. Amanda notes this from Team Nader:

50 Dollars for 50 States
Posted by The Nader Team on Friday, August 15, 2008 at 10:04:00 AM
ShareThisShareThis
Ralph Nader is the only Presidential candidate who has promised to campaign in all 50 states this year.
In the age of the Internet, Ralph is a believer in taking it directly to the people.
State by state.
And whatever Ralph says goes.
So, we’ve put together a grueling fifty state schedule for him.
But the gas bill is starting to bite.
So, please, help us out.
Drop $50 now on Nader/Gonzalez, the only campaign that will take it to all fifty states.
Already, Ralph has campaigned in 27 states -- Washington, Oregon, California, Hawaii, Arizona, Utah, Nevada, Texas, Illinois, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine.
And coming up in the next couple of weeks, Ralph will be traveling to:
Colorado -- for our Open the Debates Super Rally August 27 at the University of Denver Magness Arena.
Minnesota -- for our Open the Debates Super Rally September 4 at Orchestra Hall in Minneapolis.
And before and after those rallies to New Mexico, Wisconsin, Illinois, Michigan and Ohio. (That will put us at 34 states by September 8.)
Check the complete schedule
here.
And come out and see and hear Ralph lay out the Nader/Gonzalez platform of shifting the power from the corporations back into the hands of the people.
Remember, if you
donate $100 or more now, we will ship to you two DVDs -- a copy of the Patti Smith and Ralph Nader DVD -- Awake from Your Slumber -- autographed by Ralph -- and a copy of the best argument for a single payer health care plan -- Michael Moore’s Sicko. (Deadline for this offer: Wednesday August 20 at 11:59 p.m.)

So, give to your heart’s content -- up to the legal limit of $4,600.
Help power Ralph on his 50 state tour of the United States.
And help us reach our new fundraising goal of $50,000 by Wednesday August 20.
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investing in Nader/Gonzalez.
For a bright and just future.
Onward to November.
The Nader Team
ShareThisShareThis

The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.


iraq
the new york times
stephen farrell
suadad al-salhy

Posted at 10:59 pm by thecommonills
 

Friday, August 15, 2008
Iraq snapshot

Iraq snapshot

Friday, August 15, 2008.  Chaos and violence continue, the US military announces more deaths, Ralph Nader keeps issues on the table and more.
 
 
JEREMY HINZMAN: Well, essentially, it turns our lives upside down. We, as you said, just had a baby [daughter Megahn]. Our son [Liam]  knows nothing else aside from Canada. And if we do go back, which it's looking like, I will undoubtedly be court-martialed and serve some time in jail.

 
JUAN GONZALEZ: Is there any appeal process left to you yet that might delay the September 23rd deadline?

 
JEREMY HINZMAN: There is. It's not guaranteed that we'll be granted leave to appeal, but if my lawyer can find errors in the compassionate and humanitarian decision that the Canadian Border Services rendered, then we can--we can appeal. But there's no guarantee that the court will grant us leave.  
JUAN GONZALEZ: And what were the arguments the court used in rejecting your appeal?

 
JEREMY HINZMAN: Well, in a compassionate and humanitarian case, you need to show that there would be undue hardship if you returned to your country of origin, and we--and you also need to show that you've been established in Canada and can live independently. And we did that. In the decision, the officer said we've established ourselves well in Canada. We haven't been a hindrance to the social assistance programs. But he said that wasn't enough for us to stay. He said the US has a fair justice system. My First Amendment right to free speech is protected. And they also mentioned that--for whatever reason, I don't know--they mentioned George Bush's No School Left Behind program to say that our son would be able to get a good education. I found that kind of humorous.
 
[. . .]
 
JUAN GONZALEZ: Have you maintained ties with other US war resisters who are in Canada, who have gone there in recent years?

 
JEREMY HINZMAN: There are a number of us in Toronto, and I am acquainted with them. There's a movement called the War Resisters Support Campaign that's been active pretty much since we got here, and we have meetings, and there's been a lot of lobbying in support of us. And on June 3rd, the Canadian parliament passed a nonbinding motion by a vote of 137-to-110 saying that US war resisters should be able to remain in Canada. However, the conservative government is refusing to enact the legislation.

 
JUAN GONZALEZ: Now, Canada, of course, has a long history of giving refugee status to resisters from American wars. Obviously, during the Vietnam War, there were many who went there. How would you characterize the difference between this government's treatment of war resisters and what you know of past times?

 
JEREMY HINZMAN: Well, during the Vietnam era, of course, Pierre Trudeau, who was a liberal, was in power, and he famously stated--at least up here--that Canada should be a haven from militarism, and that kind of opened the floodgates for American soldiers to come to Canada. I think 50,000 eventually settled here.  Right now, there's a conservative minority government. Canada has a parliamentary system, and they hold the balance of power. And I wouldn't say they're lapdogs to the US, but they share many of the same values of the Bush administration and aren't really sympathetic to what we're doing.
 
 AP files another story where they quote Jeremy stating, "I went through all the training.  I served honorably in my unit.  I used army provisions to try become a noncombatant and remain in the army as a medic or something, but I still would be subject to going on combat missions as a medic.  I can't bring myself to shoot another person.  If people want to criticize me for that, then I'm honored to be criticized because I'm not a killer."

Jeremy Hinzman and other war resisters in Canada need support and to pressure the Stephen Harper government to honor the House of Commons vote, Gerry Condon, War Resisters Support Campaign and Courage to Resist all encourage contacting the Diane Finley (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration -- 613.996.4974, phone; 613.996.9749, fax; e-mail finley.d@parl.gc.ca -- that's "finley.d" at "parl.gc.ca") and Stephen Harper (Prime Minister, 613.992.4211, phone; 613.941.6900, fax; e-mail pm@pm.gc.ca -- that's "pm" at "pm.gc.ca"). Courage to Resist collected more than 10,000 letters to send before the vote. Now they've started a new letter you can use online here. The War Resisters Support Campaign's petition can be found here. Long expulsion does not change the need for action and the War Resisters Support Campaign explains: "The War Resisters Support Campaign is calling on supporters across Canada to urgently continue to put pressure on the minority conservative government to immediately cease deportation proceedings against other US war resisters and to respect the will of Canadians and their elected representatives by implementing the motion adopted by Parliament on June 3rd. Please see the take action page for what you can do."  The War Resisters Support Campaign has called an "Emergency Meeting to Stop the Deportation of Jeremy Hinzman and his family, Wednesday August 20 at 7 p.m. at the Steelworkers Hall, 25, Cecil Street" (Toronto) and encourages everyone to "Read the War Resisters Support Campaign press release and circulate it widely
 
James Burmeister is a US war resister.  He is the whistle blower who went to Canada and told the world (or those who would listen) about the kill teams. Last month, Dee Knight's "Army court-martials resister for blowing whistle on 'bait-and-kill'" (Workers World) offered an overview of Burmeister's court-martial providing the context and why the US military brass wanted to silence him.  Today Evan Kornfeld (US Socialist Worker) also offers a look at James court-martial (James was not deported or extradited, he returned to the US from Canada of his own accord earlier this year and was court-martialed July 16th):
 
The Eugene Weekly has pointed out that of the 4,698 soldiers who have been charged with desertion in 2007, only 108 have been convicted. [Erich] Burmeister, James' father, believes that his son was prosecuted as punishment for speaking out about the bait and kill teams.
After the trial, at which he testified on his son's behalf, he said, "I obviously now believe that James has been made an example to the rest of the soldiers and to the rest of those who dare think about what James did, that the punishment can be quite severe."
 
Courage to Resist has noted that "The PFC James Burmeister Support Campaign can be reached at letjamesbefree@gmail.com" and that he can receive mail at this address:
 
James Burmeister 
Box A 
Fort Knox, KY 40121 
 
There is a growing movement of resistance within the US military which includes Yovany Rivero, William Shearer, Michael Thurman, Andrei Hurancyk, Megan Bean, Chris Bean, Matthis Chiroux, Richard Droste, Michael Barnes, Matt Mishler, Josh Randall, Robby Keller, Justiniano Rodrigues, Chuck Wiley, James Stepp, Rodney Watson, Michael Espinal, Matthew Lowell, Derek Hess, Diedra Cobb, Brad McCall, Justin Cliburn, Timothy Richard, Robert Weiss, Phil McDowell, Steve Yoczik, Ross Spears, Peter Brown, Bethany "Skylar" James, Zamesha Dominique, Chrisopther Scott Magaoay, Jared Hood, James Burmeister, Jose Vasquez, Eli Israel, Joshua Key, Ehren Watada, Terri Johnson, Clara Gomez, Luke Kamunen, Leif Kamunen, Leo Kamunen, Camilo Mejia, Kimberly Rivera, Dean Walcott, Linjamin Mull, Agustin Aguayo, Justin Colby, Marc Train, Abdullah Webster, Robert Zabala, Darrell Anderson, Kyle Snyder, Corey Glass, Jeremy Hinzman, Kevin Lee, Mark Wilkerson, Patrick Hart, Ricky Clousing, Ivan Brobeck, Aidan Delgado, Pablo Paredes, Carl Webb, Stephen Funk, Blake LeMoine, Clifton Hicks, David Sanders, Dan Felushko, Brandon Hughey, Logan Laituri, Jason Marek, Clifford Cornell, Joshua Despain, Joshua Casteel, Katherine Jashinski, Dale Bartell, Chris Teske, Matt Lowell, Jimmy Massey, Chris Capps, Tim Richard, Hart Viges, Michael Blake, Christopher Mogwai, Christian Kjar, Kyle Huwer, Wilfredo Torres, Michael Sudbury, Ghanim Khalil, Vincent La Volpa, DeShawn Reed and Kevin Benderman. In total, at least fifty US war resisters in Canada have applied for asylum.

Information on war resistance within the military can be found at The Objector, The G.I. Rights Hotline [(877) 447-4487], Iraq Veterans Against the War and the War Resisters Support Campaign. Courage to Resist offers information on all public war resisters. In addition, VETWOW is an organization that assists those suffering from MST (Military Sexual Trauma).
 
Turning to Iraq.  Tina Susman (Los Angeles Times) reports that the death toll for yesterday's bombing attack on pilgrims is 20 "and it raised the specter of more bloodshed as the pilgrimage route becomes crowded before the event Saturday." Sami al-Jumaili (Reuters) explains that "Despite the [security] precautions, Kerbala is bracing for the worst.  Local health director Alaa Hammoudi said that 40 medical units were standing by, and that extra hospital beds were made ready. Near the mosque, makeshift clinics were set up in tents and trailers.  Some pilgrims donated blood."  Campbell Robertson and Riyadh Muhammed (New York Times) quote an eye witness to yesterday's bombing, Ali, who explains, "I saw smoke, and I smelled the very bad smell of burned flesh and blood.  The reactions were a little less than at the last blast maybe because they already have been shocked."  Sudarsan Raghavan and Saad Sarhan (Washington Post) cite Iskandariyah police chief Ali al-Zahawi insisting there is "a shortage of female police officers in the town".  And why is that?  Hey, remember when women were being purged? Remember when female police officers were informed they could not carry fire arms? And remember how the pig and thug and puppet Nouri al-Maliki was pleased as punch with all of that and shocked when a few (very few reports) objections were raised? The puppet needs the illegal war to stay in power. And the White House doesn't give a damn about the rights of Iraqi women. So it was the perfect blend for pigs everywhere.  Anna Badkhen (Salon) reports that, even in the crack-downed Baghdad, "women here still feel threatened.  One can't yet see a pervasive shift in the way women dress.  They continue to wear the conservative clothing that the militias began compelling them to wear after the U.S. invasion.  Most women remain cocooned in shapeless, black abaya dresses and hijab scarves that covered their hair. . . . Before the war, Tammy says, she could walk down the streets of her hometown, the southern and heavily Shia Iraqi port city of Basra, dressed like most teenagers in the United States -- in jeans and no head scarf.  Saddam Hussein's regime was one of the world's most despotic, but it was secular and allowed Iraqi women personal rights and freedoms unparalleled in the Persian Gulf.  Women, who make up more than half of the country's populartion, could drive, travel abroad alone, serve in Iraqi security forces and work side-by-side with men.  They chose whom to marry and whether to marry at all, and were among the most educated in the region. . . .  After the U.S. invasion in 2003, conservative Muslim clerics called for Iraq to become an Islamic state.  In the name of Islamic values, they eroded the liberties women here enjoyed even under Saddam's oppressive regime.  Schools, once coed, became segregated by gender; women were afraid to go outside without a head scarf.  As sectarian violence engulfed Baghdad and other parts of the country in 2006, it brought in its wake even more constraints on women's freedoms."  And the White House didn't just let it happen, they encouraged and, in fact, still encourage it.  At a time when female bombers are said to be the biggest threat to stability in Iraq (foreign forces on the ground in Iraq are the biggest threat to the country's stability), the US military actively recruits women into their "Awakening" Councils and yet -- despite a supposed need which should be driving the market forces -- they pay these women 20% less than their male counterparts.  No one objects.  No one calls it out.  And it reinforces the message to those installed into power in Iraq (by the US) that women are not equal and that their worth is less than that of a man's.
 
Helen Benedict (In These Times) reports on the increased number of sexual assaults in the US military -- women serving assaulted and abused by their "comrades-in-arms" -- and notes that "the attention always focuses on the women: where they were when assaulted, their relations with the assailant, the effects on their mental health and careers, whether they are being adequately helped, and so on.  That discussion, as valuable as it is, misses a fundamental point.  To understand military sexual assault, let alone know how to stop it, we must focus on the perpetrators.  We need to ask: Why do soldiers rape?"  It's the culture of the institution (which includes looking the other way) and that institution has had a bigger impact than any other US institution in Iraq.   
 
Institutions, organizations.  How does the peace movement ever plan to be effective in the US with such sorry-ass 'leaders.'  Tom Hayden shows up to soil his own name at The Nation this week with "The Defunding of the Peace Movement."  He pretends to be talking straight (no doubt inflicting howls of laughter from all who know Tom-Tom) and pretends like Barack has pledged to end the illegal war.  Barack has pledged no such thing.  He might reduce the number of US forces in Iraq (to send them to Afghanistan) but he has not called for all US troops out of Iraq -- and long ago refused to promise in a televised debate that, if elected president, all US troops would be out of Iraq by 2012.  Tom-Tom's heart-heart races for Barack so he lies and lies.  The problem, as Tom-Tom sees it, is that people aren't giving money to peace organizations.  Or 527s.  527s?  No, those are not peace organizations but Tom was never a peace leader.  Not now, not back then.  He was always someone lusting after a political career and that motivated him then and does so now.  It's always been about setting Tom's end up.  He talks to Leslie Cagan of UPFJ and she's wondering what her organization could do with $100,000?  More of the same, Leslie, absolutely nothing.  Say it again.
 
When UPFJ (not one of the worst offenders in my opinion) had more money it didn't change the way they operated.  At best, they were silent on John Kerry.  Other orgs and 'leaders' made it their life's work to shill for his 2004 election.  If UPFJ is facing fund shortages it goes to the lousy leadership they've shown since the start of the illegal war.  Engaging in their sniping with A.N.S.W.E.R. which is fine if it's just an open debate but is not fine when it prevents actions from taking place.  There has not been a huge peace rally since January 2007.  No one's in the mood to give one damn dime to any of these useless organizations.  (IVAW remains the only organization that is working at ending the illegal war.)  They all go rushing off to "War With Iran Tomorrow!" or "Saint Bhutto Has Died!" or one hundred and one other causes while they abandon Iraq.  (Again, my opinion, UPFJ has not been the worst offender there.  CODESTINK has been the worst and the most hypocritical.  UPFJ has tended to go for silence as opposed to hawking non-peace events/candidates.)  Barack's greedy.  How surprising that people are just now grasping that.  How pathetic that Leslie's going to whine to Tom-Tom instead of taking to the UPFJ website to state, "We are an organization trying to end the illegal war.  We are not endorsing any candidate.  We are endorsing the end of the Iraq War.  If you are with us on that, we could use some donations to continue this struggle."  Tom-Tom lies as well and claims, "The Obama finance committee is under more pressure, literally, to pay Hillary Clinton's debt to Mark Penn than to fund any messages on war, recession and global warming."  Tom Hayden, you sexist pig, drop the Bash The Bitch games.  At your age, it only makes you look older, uglier and more pathetic.  Barack hasn't done a damn thing to retire Clinton's debt (and Hillary has stated that she's paying off small vendors first).  That joint-appearance where he gave the speech and 'forgot' to ask people to donate to Hillary and only returned to the stage when reporters questioned him on it?  He's done nothing to help her with her debt and shame on you, a man who'd be living on the streets were it not for his divorce settlement, for pretending otherwise and yet again trying to make it all about Hillary.  Your Lover Man has failed you Tom.  Your limp and inactive and it has nothing to do with Hillary.  You fell in love with Barack and he broke your heart.  Those are the breaks, grow the hell up before senility sets in.
 
Or has that already happened.  Tom-Tom was one of the signers of that ridiculous ass-kiss to Barack from The NationAs we observed at Third:
 
Because The Nation is run by the brain dead and the socially stunted today, they decide to copy that with an open letter. (They only know how to do what was done before, no visionaries or dreamers they.) The open letter is called "Change *We* Can Believe In" and if the starring of "We" didn't indicate to you there was a lot of ego tripping going down, you only had to read the names of those who signed on to the garbage -- including non-Democrat Frances Fox Piven (billed as Francis Piven -- what happened, she looked in a mirror?), The Ego Of Us All's Red Buddy who pimped her hard to The New York Times and did more to lie for Friedan than even she herself did, Democratic Groupie (in the worst sense of "groupie" in the rock world) Norm Solomon, Tom-Tom Hayden (still fretting about the 1969 violence we pointed out recently), Red Billy Fletcher, Take Me To My Divorce Pay Day! Jodie Evans, Emma Goldman lookalike Barbara Ehrenreich, Does-Marlo-Know-You-Signed-That-Garbage Phil Donahue, School Girl Katrina vanden Heuvel (who reportedly came up with the embarrassing phrase "the long night of greed" -- to which C.I. responded, "Oh, she's turned her hand to autobigoraphy?") and, yes, Howard Zinn.
 
 
The letter is also frankly dishonest when it says that Obama is simply moving to a more "centrist stance" In what sense "centrist"? The war is wildly unpopular and close to 70% of Americans want the U.S. out of Iraq asap. What is "centrist" about moving away from a landslide majoritarian position? And what is the "peace" candidate doing when he calls for 100,000 more active duty army and marines, when he calls for more military spending, when he calls for stepping up the war on Afghanistan, when he talks belligerently about Iran, and when he equivocates on how many tens of thousands of troops are to be left in Iraq? All these are positions that the "peace" candidate took during the primary. They are not new.
 
[. . .]
 
What is awfully irritating is that Katrina Vanden Heuval and the rest of the "liberal" elite criticize supporters of McKinney/Clemente and Nader/Gonzalez for "wishful thinking." Compared to the sentiments and views of the supplicants' letter, supporters of third party candidates are hard core realists. And it is very sad to see some of the signatories of this letter who in better times would have been men and women who put principle over "lesser evil" politics. Read the letter carefully. Look at the signatories. It may bring tears.
 
 
Turning to some of today's reported violence . . .
 
Bombings?
 
Hussein Kadhim (McClatchy Newspapers) reports pilgrims continue to be targeted with a Baghdad roadside bombing claimed the life of 1 (nine more wounded), a Baghdad mortar attack left two people wounded, another Baghdad roadside bombing left six people wounded, and a Salahudding car bombing that claimed 5 lives (twenty more wounded).
 
Shootings?
 
Hussein Kadhim (McClatchy Newspapers) reports an armed clash in Kirkuk that resulted in 1 death and an Al Anbar Province assassination attempt on "Sheikh Kahmees Al-Dulaimi, the Imam of one of the mosques in Falluja" who was taken to the hospital for medical care
 
 
 
Today the US military announced: "A Multi-National Force -- West Marine was killed Aug. 14 when his unit received small-arms fire during security operations approximately 1 km east of Fallujah." And they announced: "A Multi-National Corps-Iraq Soldier died of non-battle related causes Aug. 15 in Baghdad. An investigation into the cause of death is under way."  That brings the total number of US service members killed in Iraq since the start of the illegal war to 4143 and the death toll for the month thus far is 16 -- which is 3 more than the July total that all the news outlets thought was news.
 
Neil Conan: We're talking with independent presidential candidate Ralph Nader here at the Newseum.  I'm Neil Conan along with NPR Political Junkie Ken Rudin.  If you'd like to join us, 800-989-8255 e-mail talk@npr.org.  This is Talk of the Nation from NPR News.  And let's get a question from here in the Newseum. 
 
Patty: Hi, good afternoon.  I'm Patty from San Francisco, California and as a retired public school principal I'd like to know your views on No Child Left Behind.  And I'd also like to know what your education platform is. 
 
Ralph Nader: Well the way No Child Left Behind has been implemented is not good.  First of all, there are too many tests.  It ruptures the relationship between teachers and students --  they've got to have a test Tuesday and a test Thursday.  They're the wrong kind of tests in my opinion: A, B, C, D, "None of the above."  That's not the assessment test that I think are better evaluators They make teachers teach to the test.  It's this frantic test mania.  It creates unnecessary anxiety among children.  So I'm against it. Teachers are against it too.  A lot of people think it was underfunded and I think the key thing in environmental agenda for a presidential candidate is more decent facilities -- I mean a lot of these inner-city schools are crumbling, we have gleaming stadiums funded by you the tax payer in the same cities the schools, and clinics and libraries are crumbling.  The second thing is decent pay for competent teachers.  They should be assessed too.  And the third is citizen skills, civic skills.  We should teach students connecting the classroom with their town with their community so they can learn about the history, the geography, economics, government of their town and in the process learn citizen skills.  How to use the Freedom of Information Act in your state, how to build coalitions, how to get information from City Hall.  How to do comparative price analysis of staples in supermarket.  That's what makes student learn indirectly reading, writing and arithmetic. I hope a lot of teachers will . . .  push to replace No Child Left Behind with this kind or practical and down to earth and very exciting educational process.
 
Neil Conan: Thanks for the question.  Let's go the phones, line six, and Mike is with us from Boca Raton in Florida.
 
Mike: Good morning or good afternoon.  Mister candidate, considering what's happened since the year 2000, don't you think that your candidacy creates too much of a risk of unintended consequences based on your past performance?
 
 
Ralph Nader: Well the social scientists who studied that say that [Al] Gore won the election, he won the popular vote.  The electoral college stood in his way and the press investigations and others in Florida indicate, and Gore believes this, that he won Florida but it was taken from him before, during and after election day in all kinds of tricky ways that have been subject to documentaries and investigations, to the five Republicans in the Supreme Court who selected George Bush.  I keep saying to Democrats  "Look in the mirror Go after the thieves because they might do it again and there was a lot of shenanigans in Ohio -- the swing state that left Kerry behind --
 
Mike: You obviously can't win.  Which of the two candidates would you prefer to be president.   The other two candidates.
 
Ralph Nader: The ones that are closer to the agenda of Nader - Gonzalez and we don't have time to go through a checklist but if you want to look at VoteNader.org we have a sheet which says these are the issues on the table for Nader - Gonzalez -- like full health insurance -- and they're off the table for McCain and Obama.  It's quite remarkable how similar they are on about 15 major re-directions for country and  the reason is they've been dialing too much for corporate dollars and they're too close to these corporate interests.
 
Mike: Well you know, I'm all for anyone being able to run but candidly we can't stand another eight years of George Bush, McCain and that crowd.
 
Ralph Nader: Nor can we.  In fact if Al Gore picked up my withering criticism in detail of Bush's record in Texas when he was governor, he'd have won even over the obstacles that these Republican illegally put in his way.
 
Team Nader has set up  Ralph's Daily Audio  to leave audio commentaries and the one that went up today is entitled "Impeachment:"
 
 
This is Ralph Nader.  George W. Bush and Dick Cheney are the most impeachable president and vice president in the history of the United States.  The Constitution of the United States structures our democracy within the rule of law.  Democratic Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, Senator Barack Obama and their Republican associates are seriously subverting the rule of law by blocking the impeachment of George W. Bush and Dick Cheney.  
Bill Clinton must be shaking his head in wonderment.  High Crimes and Misdemeanors are what get a president impeached.  That's in Article II, Section IV of our Constitution.  Let's consider the case of Mr. Bush and Mr. Cheney.
High crimes and misdemeanor number one: The criminal war, invasion and occupation of Iraq in violation of our Constitution, federal statutes and international treaties that our country belongs to.  The second is systemic torture condoned at the top of our government. That even violates the US Army Field Manual as well as FBI procedures. High crimes and misdemeanor number three: the arrests and imprisonment of thousands of Americans without charges, denying ha beaus corpus the fundamental requirement for a restraining power to show why the liberty of a person is being restrained.  High crimes and misdemeanor number four: spying on millions of Americans without a judicial warrant.  This one violates the FISA Act which provides for a five-year jail term.  High crimes and misdemeanor number five are all those signing statements that George W. Bush declared when he signed one bill after another from Congress saying that it would be up to him to decide whether or not to obey the law. I guess one could call him King George IV.
The American Bar Association, the largest barre association in the world, quite conservative, has sent three major reports to President George W. Bush outlining his serious violations of provisions in our Constitution.  I stood in front of the White House for 45 minutes a few weeks ago and declared the reasons for the impeachment or resignation or subsequent prosecution of Bush and Cheney for the five categories of High Crimes and Misdemeanors.
If we allow rampant, recidivist criminal activity in the White House -- as Speaker Pelosi, Senators Barack Obama and John McCain have done week after week, month after month -- that'll simply set the stage for future presidents to think that they too can break the law with impunity and run our civil liberties, our civil rights, our safety, our freedoms, our status before the world into the ground.  I'm Ralph Nader.  
 
 
Friday (in most markets, check local listings), Bill Moyers sits down with Andrew Bacevich to discuss the imperial impresidency.  PBS tonight (and throughout the weekend depending on when your local station airs it) will also feature Washington Week. Janine Zacharia (Bloomberg News) will be among the guests. She's been doing a ton of research on refugees so she should be able to pull that into her topic (the positions of Barack and McCain), Todd S. Purdum (Vanity Fair) will discuss the upcoming Democratic National Convention (will Gwen or anyone mention the Nadar Super Rally that will take place in Denver August 27th?), and Jeffrey Birnbaum (Washington Post) will be among the guests (Birnbuam will be addressing campaign monies and laws). And NOW on PBS explores the US and Mexican border.
 

Posted at 04:02 pm by thecommonills
 

Jeremy Hinzman and James Burmeister

Jeremy Hinzman and James Burmeister

An American who deserted the U.S. Army to protest the Iraq War and who has been ordered deported back home will file a new appeal in Federal Court. Jeremy Hinzman is the first U.S. deserter in recent years to apply for refugee status in Canada. Immigration authorities determined that he did not face persecution or hardship if he were returned to the United States and told him on Wednesday he had until Sept. 23 to leave the country. He faces a possible court martial and up to five years in prison.

The above is from "Canada in Brief" (24 Hours Vancouver) and AP files another story where they quote Jeremy:

"I went through all the training. I served honorably in my unit. I used army provisions to try become a noncombatant and remain in the army as a medic or something, but I still would be subject to going on combat missions as a medic," Hinzman said.
"I can't bring myself to shoot another person. If people want to criticize me for that, then I'm honored to be criticized because I'm not a killer."



We'll again note this from Courage to Resist:

Jeremy Hinzman ordered deported from Canada PDF Print E-mail

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By Courage to Resist and War Resisters Support Campaign (Canada). August 13, 2008

The first U.S. war resister to apply for refuge in Canada has been ordered deported by September 23rd. Jeremy is in Canada with his wife Nga Nuyen, and their two young children. This decision flies in the face of the motion adopted by Parliament on June 3, 2008 which calls on the government to allow US war resisters to apply for Permanent Resident status in Canada. Supporters are calling on Hon. Diane Finley, Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, to intervene. Phone 613.996.4974 or email finley.d@parl.gc.ca

And this is the War Resisters Support Campaign:

Jeremy Hinzman ordered deported

The first U.S. war resister to apply for refuge in Canada has been ordered deported by September 23rd. Jeremy is in Canada with his wife Nga Nuyen, and their two young children.

This decision flies in the face of the motion adopted by Parliament on June 3, 2008 which calls on the government to allow US war resisters to apply for Permanent Resident status in Canada. It also rejects the will of Canadians who have demonstrated in various polls that they want war resisters to stay.

The War Resisters Support Campaign is calling on the federal government and the Hon. Diane Finley, Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, to intervene to prevent the Hinzman family from being sent to the U.S. to be punished.


And this from Iraq Veterans Against the War:
  • US Iraq War resister ordered deported from Canada

    hinzman.jpg

    US Iraq War resister Jeremy Hinzman was informed on August 13th that his application to stay in Canada has been rejected. Jeremy served a tour in Afghanistan in a non-combat role after applying for conscientious objector status. When his unit, the 82nd Airborne Division, was to be deployed to Iraq Jeremy and his family decided to come to Canada. Jeremy is the first U.S. war resister to apply for refuge in Canada. He has been ordered to be deported by September 23rd. Jeremy is in Canada with his wife Nga Nuyen, and their two young children.

    The decision to deport Hinzman comes just two months after the Canadian Parliament passed a motion calling on the government to allow US war resisters to apply for Permanent Resident status in Canada.

    To support Jeremy, call or email Hon. Diane Finley, Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, and ask her to intervene in this case. Phone: 613.996.4974 email: finley.d@parl.gc.ca.


    Read more of this item

Hinzman appears today on Democracy Now! and, in reply to a question about where he goes next, states that "if my lawyer can find errors in the . . . decision that the Canadian Border Services rendered than we can appeal"; however, he is preparing for what may be the return to the US. Amy Goodman wrongly states Robin Long was deported last month (he was extradited) and then asserts that he "is now serving a jail term in Colorado". Really? I must have missed Robin's court-martial -- which everyone says will take part in September.

In other DUMB ASS news, don't miss Janine Jackson's fact-free 'commentary' in CounterSpin this week. Remember, you just have to laugh. FAIR went off the rails some time ago (probably when they decided a few years back that a gala was just the thing to throw in the midst of a war? Bette Davis would have slapped their slack-jawed faces), so just laugh as Jackson sports Extreme Stupidity (and cites Village Idiot Air of The Nation). (We covered the reality of Mrytle Beach Tuesday.)

Jeremy Hinzman and Robin Long are two US war resisters who went to Canada. They are not the only ones. Darrell Anderson went to Canada and was the first to publicly return to the US. James Burmeister made the decision to return this year.


Evan Kornfeldt "Sentenced for resisting war" (US Socialist Worker):

On July 17, a military court sentenced James Burmeister to six months in prison for going AWOL. Burmeister, who fled to Canada last year rather than return to Iraq, suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
Burmeister, originally from Eugene, Ore., went to Iraq in September of 2006 as a gunner in Unit 118 First Infantry Division. Burmeister took part in "small kill teams" that used "bait and kill" tactics.
[. . .]
The Eugene Weekly has pointed out that of the 4,698 soldiers who have been charged with desertion in 2007, only 108 have been convicted. Eric Burmeister, James' father, believes that his son was prosecuted as punishment for speaking out about the bait and kill teams.
After the trial, at which he testified on his son's behalf, he said, "I obviously now believe that James has been made an example to the rest of the soldiers and to the rest of those who dare think about what James did, that the punishment can be quite severe."
Eric Burmeister and his wife Helen have been speaking out about James' case and about the Iraq war. Eric told the Eugene Weekly, "I can never be quiet until they all come home. It seems like they are all my children now."


PBS notes. Tonight (in most markets, check local listings), Bill Moyers Journal addresses the imperial presidency with guest Andrew J. Bacevich. The Journal's Michael Winship notes:

Bacevich speaks truth to power, no matter who's in power, which may be why those of both the left and right are eager to hear his views. Perhaps it's also because when he challenges American myths and illusions, he does so from a genuine patriotism forged in the fire of his experiences as a soldier in Vietnam and the death a year ago of his son, an Army lieutenant in Iraq. The Limits of Power is dedicated to the young man but the senior Bacevich, a man of quiet, solid gravitas, holds his grief privately between himself and his family.
"Our foreign policy is something that is concocted in Washington, D.C., but it reflects the perceptions of our political elite about what we the people want," he told Moyers. "And what we want, by and large is... this continuing flow of very cheap consumer goods. We want to be able to pump gas into our cars regardless of how big they may happen to be... And we want to be able to do these things without having to think about whether or not the books are balanced at the end of the month, or the end of the fiscal year."
To that end, he says, "One of the ways we avoid confronting our refusal to balance the books is to rely increasingly on the projection of American military power around the world to try to maintain this dysfunctional system or set of arrangements that have evolved over the last 30 or 40 years."
"... I think historians a hundred years from now will puzzle over how it could be that the United States of America, the most powerful nation in the world, as far back as the early 1970’s came to recognize that dependence on foreign oil was a problem, posed a threat, compromised our freedom of action. How every president from Richard Nixon down... declared, 'We’re going to fix the problem.' [But] none of them did."
He continued, "The clearest statement of what I value is found in the Preamble to the Constitution. There is nothing in the Preamble to the Constitution which defines the purpose of the United States of America as remaking the world in our image, which I view as a fool's errand... I believe that the framers of the Constitution were primarily concerned with focusing on the way we live here, the way we order our affairs. To try to ensure that as individuals, we can have an opportunity to pursue our, perhaps, differing definitions of freedom, but also so that, as a community, we could live together in some kind of harmony. And that future generations would also be able to share in those same opportunities... With the current crisis in American foreign policy, unless we do change our ways, the likelihood that our children, our grandchildren, the next generation is going to enjoy the opportunities that we've had is very slight because we're squandering our power. We are squandering our wealth."
Bacevich believes, "The Congress, especially with regard to matters related to national security policy, has thrust power and authority to the executive branch. We have created an imperial presidency. The Congress no longer is able to articulate a vision of what is the common good. The Congress exists primarily to ensure the reelection of members of Congress."


PBS tonight (and throughout the weekend depending on when your local station airs it) will also feature Washington Week. Janine Zacharia (Bloomberg News) will be among the guests. She's been doing a ton of research on refugees so she should be able to pull that into her topic (the positions of Barack and McCain), Todd S. Purdum (Vanity Fair) will discuss the upcoming Democratic National Convention (will Gwen or anyone mention the Nadar Super Rally that will take place in Denver August 27th?), and Jeffrey Birnbaum (Washington Post) will be among the guests (Birnbuam will be addressing campaign monies and laws). And NOW on PBS explores the US and Mexican border.

Ralph's Daily Audio is the web page for the Nader-Gonzalez campaign featuring audio. Marci asked that we again note "Outsourcing:"

This is Ralph Nader. You know how often these big corporate executives, when they're shipping jobs of American workers to fascist or communist dictators abroad who know how to keep their workers in their place . Do you know how often they say "Well we have to do this to keep up with the global competition"? But one thing they don't do to keep up with the global competition is to outsource themselves, outsource their own CEO jobs or their own faluting commentators and editors jobs.
Let's start with the New York Times editorial page. It would be hard to replace Maureen Dowd, no doubt. But Thomas Friedman? He of the rah-rah, pro-corporate, globalization, cheesy metaphors? Well he could easily be replaced by a hard working Indian or Chinese bi-lingual columnist at a much lower rate. And how about Wall Street? All those investment bank executives, the executives of Citigroup or Merrill Lynch. Imagine how many first rate Indian or Chinese executives could have done a much better job than Bob Rubin who helped drive the giant Citibank into the ground. I'm sure good executives from India or China could replace Rick Wagoner as CEO of General Motors at a much, much lower salary. That's the way to meet the global competition: Outsouce CEOS.
"What's good for the worker," says the CEO, "is not good for the CEO." The shareholders know better thye've got to demand outsourcing CEOS for a new fresh. energetic start for the management of their country. I'm Ralph Nader.


Along with the audio and the Nader Super Rally, the independent presidental campaign has a great deal of activity and movement. Sam notes this from Team Nader:

Health Care Politics

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Health Care Politics .

One of my favorite monthly publications is Registered Nurse – the journal of the fast growing, progressive California Nurses Association (CNA) – a union that stands up for patients rights and well-being.

The June 2008 issue contains stories that illustrate how this nurses group takes stands. On June 19, the CNA sponsored street rallies for its Medicare for all (single-payer with free choice of doctor and hospital) in San Francisco and a dozen other major cities around the nation. For over a decade these nurses have made full Medicare for all their major goal. They have run voter initiatives, lobbied legislatures and have opposed sweetheart labor-management deals like those embraced by the Service Employees International Union – SEIU. (SEIU also opposes single-payer health insurance which is supported by a majority of physicians and the American people.)

The June magazine describes the autocratic native of SEIU toward its members and how its leader, Andy Stern, cuts labor deals with large corporate employers that shockingly deprive workers of normal union rights.

Here is an example of what CNA says:

"In exchange for access to more dues units, SEIU gave California nursing home operators the 'exclusive right' to set all pay rates, working conditions, speed up and reassign work, eliminate jobs at will, and outsource union work."

"SEIU also agreed to support legislation limiting patient’s right to sue over care abuses, to oppose reforms to require better staffing for patients safety, and to never report health care code violations."

Stern rejected single-payer health insurance at his recent union convention. Senator Barack Obama has declined to propose single-payer as well. SEIU is pouring tens of millions of dollars to elect Senator Obama President. CNA works to eliminate "the insurance nightmare through establishing a high-quality, single payer healthcare system. (See: http://www.guaranteedhealthcare.org/blog)

The current health care industry is a wasteful, redundant, defrauding mess costing Americans over 2.2 trillion this year and hundreds of thousands of avoidable injuries, fatalities and serious infections a year. The honest, competent caregivers are on the edge of despair, unable to do their best work due to the domination and control of commercial-profit priorities which include denial of care by these corporations.

People die or get sicker sometimes when they are denied health care. People die when they cannot afford health insurance -- 18,000 Americans a year according to the Institute of Medicine

Corporate billing fraud and abuse costs over $200 billion a year. Ask Malcolm Sparrow of the Kennedy School at Harvard University or read his book License to Steal.

Do you ever hear John McCain or Barack Obama focus public attention on these tragedies and rip-offs of consumers and taxpayers?

The employers of health insurance companies, hospital chains and drug industry are pouring money into the coffers of these two men and their parties.

Strange as it many seem, on June 26, 2008 even the principled, independent California Nurses Association fell in line with the AFL-CIO. The CNA endorsed Senator Barack Obama.

Well, Senator Obama doesn't have to worry a minute about CNA's nurses putting up one of their famous critical demonstrations at his events. He can continue dialing for corporate dollars.

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Added: Kimberly Wilder encourages people to check out this video of Asa Gordon "explaining his electoral college lawsuits" which is about "proportional apportionment of presidential electors."



The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.















Posted at 04:02 pm by thecommonills
 

The bombing, Talabani's heart surgery

The bombing, Talabani's heart surgery

A woman pretending to be a Shiite Muslim pilgrim en route to a religious festival blew herself up Thursday at a rest house catering to pilgrims and killed at least 20 other people, most of them women.
It was the worst of several attacks on Shiites walking to Karbala, 50 miles south of Baghdad, and it raised the specter of more bloodshed as the pilgrimage route becomes crowded before the event Saturday.


The above is from Tina Susman's "In Iraq, female suicide bomber kills 20 Shiite Muslims" (Los Angeles Times) and we'll stay on the bombing for a bit with some reported reactions. From Campbell Robertson and Riyadh Muhammed's "Bomber Kills 18 on Shiite Pilgrimage in Iraq" (New York Times):


"I saw smoke, and I smelled the very bad smell of burned flesh and blood," said Ali, an 18-year-old who lives at the apartment complex and gave only his first name.
"The reactions were a little less than at the last blast," Ali added, referring to the February attack, "maybe because they already have been shocked."
Local security officials had been concerned about attacks on pilgrims, particularly in the so-called triangle of death, a largely Sunni area south of Baghdad that has been the site of intense violence since 2003. Shiite pilgrims must march along a highway through Sunni towns in the area on the way to Karbala.

Sudarsan Raghavan and Saad Sarhan's "Suicide Bomber Kills 18 In Iraq" (Washington Post) contains a passage that should find many nodding along:

Col. Ali al-Zahawi, Iskandariyah's police chief, said a shortage of female police officers in the town helped the assailant go undetected. He said three policemen became suspicious when they noticed the bomber's thick clothes on a brutally hot evening. When they approached her, she detonated her explosives, killing the three policemen and several pilgrims. A female suicide bomber struck at nearly the same location during last year's pilgrimage, he said.
"The army will replace the police in Iskandariyah after this security violation," said Capt. Muthanna Ahmad, a spokesman for the Babil province police. "The police are not capable to deal with the suicide attacks. They don't have detectors and the necessary equipment for these kind of attacks."

Wow. Not enough female police officers. Hey, remember when women were being purged? Remember when female police officers were informed they could not carry fire arms? And remember how the pig and thug and puppet Nouri al-Maliki was pleased as punch with all of that and shocked when a few (very few reports) objections were raised? The puppet needs the illegal war to stay in power. And the White House doesn't give a damn about the rights of Iraqi women. So it was the perfect blend for pigs everywhere.

Yesterday Iraqi president Jalal Talabani had heart surgery in the US. The Times of New York and Los Angeles mention that detail in passing and buried at the end. Yesterday's snapshot included:

Moving on to Iraq and file it under "No surprise." October 21, 2007 we noted: "In today's New York Times, Andrew E. Kramer tells you that Iraq's president, Jalal Talabani, is upset with Syria for publicly endorsing the Turkish parliament's vote to approve the Turkish military being sent into Iraq to fight the PKK. 'Usually I refrain from commening on Syrian positions to maintain our historical good relations,' Talabani (who stuffed his face with fatty foods` on his recent trip to the US to visit the Mayo Clinic, just FYI -- the heart trouble is not going to be cured by pigging out in hotel rooms)." Talabani's face stuffing (of fatty foods) never made the press but it's all anyone could talk about. It should have made the news. We returned to that topic over and over. (And he reportedly visited a book store on that trip and staggered, nearly passing out. It took the support of several men for him to make out of the bookstore.) June 16th we were 'harping again' (as one drive-by e-mailed) with: "Meanwhile AP notes that the president of Iraq, Jalal Talabani, is in the US and will receive treatment at the Mayo Clinic. A brief mention is made of the fact that this is not his first visit or that moments after leaving last time, he was spotted gorging on fatty foods in public. (And 'gorging' is putting it mildly.) He's 73-years-old and really can eat whatever he wants -- if he steps down as president. But while he's president (or 'president') of an occupied country, there's really no point in treating him if he's going to completely ignore doctors' orders and it's not as if the average Iraqi is going to be flown to the Mayo Clinic." Deborah Haynes (Times of London) reports that the Iraqi president is "said to be in 'good health' today after undergoing heart surgery in the United States, an operation that left some Iraqis wondering whether he is still fit for the job." Peter Graff (Reuters) points out that, prior to today, the press was told he was in the US for "a knee operation." CBS and AP state: "A statement by the presidential press office said Talabani entered the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota on Aug. 2 for knee surgery but 'the medical team found out that he suffers from a problem in one of the heart valves'." That's a sweet way to put "We thought we could lie but Reuters found out the truth, broke the story and now we have to admit to the heart surgery." "I think he's too old to continue as President," Fadel Dawish tells Deborah Haynes in Baghdad while "Nassar al-Rubaie, a senior Shia politician, said the medical reports from the hospital would determine whether the heart operation would affect Mr Talabani's ability to work."

In terms of what I have written here, it was never a secret. The press has always known that Talabani had heart problems and that he refused to watch his diet. The man's 74-years-old and doesn't need to be eating cheese steaks to begin with but certainly not hours after leaving the hospital where he was strongly warned to improve his diet immediately. Within the US State Dept, Talabani's health has always been an issue on the horizon. (That may have been where I first heard of it.) In terms of the bookstore incident, that was raised in a group Ava and I spoke to about the illegal war. It was right after Talabani's check up. When it was raised, I called friends in the press and the State Dept and it was confirmed. (The student raising it witnessed it -- and worked in that bookstore.) None of this has ever been a secret from the press.

Here's what the State Dept's currently worrying about: succession.

If Talabani has to step down for health reasons or because he passes, who takes over as president? Article 69, Section C of the Iraqi Constition: "If the position of president of the republic is vacant, for whatever reason, a new president will be elected in order to fill the vacancy for the remaining period of that president's term."

The Iraqi people do not elect their president. If Talabani should step down before the end of his term or if he should pass away before his term expires, the Iraqi Constitution requires that the Council of Representatives hold an election as they did with Talabani. (The same rules would apply, 2/3 of the Representatives must vote and the winner is whomever gets the majority -- no majority means the two highest vote getters compete in a second election.)

What would it mean if Talabani left office? The White House wanted the provincial elections (to put on a show and pretend 'democracy' was in Iraq). The resolution made it through the Iraqi Parliament -- despite the walk-out of the Kurdish bloc. It then went to the Presidential Council -- composed of Talabani (Kurd), Adil Abd al-Mahdi (Shi'ite) and Tariq al-Hashimi (Sunni). Talabani killed it. Talabani out would not necessarily mean a change on that issue because the council is supposed to be composed of a Shia, a Sunni and a Kurd. Talabani's position was one held by Kurds. It is also questionable whether, when the Iraqi Parliament returns from it break, MPs would attempt to push through the same bill regarding elections. With no alterations, the fate of it would seem fairly clear ahead of time.

But there is talk about what would happen (talk in the State Dept) if Talabani left office and what effects that might have.

Turning to the US presidential race,Team Nader is releasing daily audio of Ralph Nader (with Matt Gonzalez expected to participate as well). Ralph's Daily Audio is the web page and below is the transcript to Ralph's "Corporate Tax Cheats:"
A report just out by the well regarded US Government Accountability Office concludes that about two-thirds of corporations operating in the United States did not pay taxes annually from 1998 to 2005. Imagine that. Senator Byron Dorgan, the Democrat of North Dakota, called the findings "A shocking indictment of the current tax system."
He continues, "It's shameful that so many corporations make big profits and pay nothing to support our country. The tax system that allows this whole sale tax avoidance is an embarrassment and unfair to hard working Americans who pay their fair share of taxes. We need to plug these tax loopholes and put these corporations back on the tax rolls."
Senator Carl Levin says, "This report makes clear that too many corporations are using tax trickery to send their profits overseas and to avoid paying their fare share in the United States."
The GAO report said that 28% of large corporations paid no taxes during that period between 1998 to 2005. It's suspected that a lot of these global corporations were using transfer pricing to reduce their tax bills. This allows these multi-national corporations to transfer their goods and assets between their internal subsidiaries so they can record in the jurisdiction with low tax rates like the Bahamas.
David Cay Johnston, in his great book Perfectly Legal concluded, and I paraphrase him, he said, "These global companies have now reached a point of power and manipulation where they can decide how much taxes they're going to pay, where they're going to pay these taxes, and when they're going to pay these taxes."
That's the leading tax reporter for the New York Times, a Pulitzer Prize winner, David Cay Johnston. It's something to think about when we ponder the double standard between working people on the one hand under our tax system and those tax escapees the global corporations on the other. This is Ralph Nader.

Marci asked if we could note that one again (and another that will be in the next entry) and Domingo notes this from Team Nader:


Two DVDs from Ralph Nader to You

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Two DVDs from Ralph Nader to You .

Are you a crazy Nader voter?

If yes, prove it.

Drop $100 here right now.

Michael Moore yesterday called you "crazy" for supporting and voting for Ralph Nader for President.

Michael Moore says we're all crazy.

For supporting a life long crusader for justice who stands with us against corporate control of our society?

Last year, in his movie Sicko, Michael Moore made a passionate argument for a single-payer, Medicare for all health care system.

As he points out, the majority of doctors, nurses and the American people support single payer.

Michael Moore supports single payer.

Ralph Nader supports single payer.

But Obama opposes single payer.

And Michael Moore supports Obama?

And he calls Nader's voters crazy?

No, what's crazy is supporting someone opposed to what you believe in.

(What about the third party voters who supported abolition of slavery and women's suffrage? Were they crazy too?)

In honor of Michael Moore calling all of us crazy, here's what we are going to do.

For a donation of $100 or more now to our campaign (must be received by 11:59 p.m. Wednesday August 20), we will send you a copy of Michael's classic DVD -- Sicko.

The DVD includes a whole bunch of great extras including:

  • SICKO Goes to Washington
  • This Country Beats France
  • Uniquely American
  • What if you worked for G.E. in France?
  • Sister Mary Fidel
  • Who Would Jesus Deny?
  • More with Mike & Tony Benn
  • A Different Kind of Hollywood Premiere
  • 'Alone Without You' Music Video Performed By The Nightwatchman and Interview Gallery

You'll be getting a copy of the best argument yet for single payer.

And you'll be supporting the most viable single payer campaign in the nation.

Plus, we'll send you a copy of the classic anti-war DVD -- Awake from Your Slumber -- featuring Ralph Nader and Patti Smith -- autographed by Ralph Nader.

The DVD features a sweeping 2005 anti-war speech by Nader plus an opening poem by Patti Smith titled Shock and Awe about the bombing of Baghdad.

It ends with Patti's rousing anthem -- People Have the Power.

In addition the 28-minute video, the DVD includes three additional songs performed by Patti Smith and an interview of Ralph Nader by Amy Goodman on corporate power.

So, that's two powerful DVDs -- Awake from Your Slumber autographed by Ralph Nader and Sicko -- for a $100 or more contribution to our campaign now.

Today, let's all of us crazy ones band together.

And push the Nader/Gonzalez campaign into the debates.

And into a possible three-way race.

For Medicare for all.

And against the corporate Democrats and their ongoing spinelessness that will lose another election --- a la Dukakis, Mondale, Kerry, and Gore.

We need 480 of you to donate $100 or more now.

To reach our goal of $50,000 by August 20.

And we'll send to you -- crazy Nader voter -- a copy of Sicko. (Even if you already have it or have seen it, get another copy and pass it on to a friend. Tell them you are a crazy Nader voter for single payer.)

Plus a copy of Awake from Your Slumber.

Join the legion of crazy Nader voters.

Together, we are making a difference.

Onward to November

The Nader Team

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The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.










 deborah haynes

Posted at 04:00 pm by thecommonills
 

Thursday, August 14, 2008
I Hate The War

I Hate The War

This afternoon Jess spoke with Junue Millan who's part of the team working at Ralph Nader's just opened Denver office. The office's primary focus is the Super Nader Rally in Denver (August 27th, 7:oo pm) at the Magness Arena and they are very excited planning for a huge rally that they are expecting 5,000 to 7,000 people to turn out for. A rally of that sixe is not easy to plan and organize in such a short time and they need volunteers. If you're in the Denver area (or plan to be) and would like to volunteer the office is at 1155 Sherman Street, Suite 111. Walk-ins are fine. You can also call the office (303) 832-2509 or e-mail junue@votenader.org.

This is the first Nader Super Rally and will take place while the Democratic Party is holding their national convention in Denver as well. [ September 4th, a Nader Super Rally will be held at Orchestra Hall in Minneapolis, during the GOP convention.] Ralph Nader and Matt Gonzalez will be at the Super Rally in Denver and there will also be guest speakers. The plan is to release the names of the guest speakers as the event approaches and the first name released is artist, activist and rocker Jello Biafra.

The point of both Nader Supper Rallies is to let the people put the issues on the table. Noting corporte crime, the Iraq War, singel-payer universal health care and other very real issues, Ralph Nader explained to Neal Conan yesterday on NPR's Talk of the Nation, "That's what we're saying to the American people: If you don't take it over, if you don't win your government back, if you don't vote for people you believe in who have a record of accomplishment and a good platform, which you can see on VoteNader.org, what's left for you to decide? I mean, these two parties don't represent you in area after area. Their drum is beaten by the big corporations." It's about putting the real issues on the table and confronting the two-party duopoloy which is attempting to limit the debate -- both in terms of candidates (just the Republican nominee and the Democratic nominee) and in terms of what can be discussed. You're not going to get issues with the debates being limited to two candidates. You're going to get safe blah-blah and every now and then someone will shake it up, like John Edwards in 2004 raising the issue of sex in the vice presidential debate. (And acting as if Dick Cheney's stance on gay Americans was so hideous -- the same John Edwards who declared in the YouTube/CNN Democratic presidential candidate debates this go-round that his high morals and Bible meant he couldn't support same-sex marriage. But in 2004, he was trying to play Mr. Englightened.) That's what you'll get with the two main parties. Blah-blah and easy attempts at hits and smears.

On Talk of the Nation, Ralph asked the very apt question, "Why do we want to ration the debates?" And we don't. America doesn't want to. The two major parties want to and they will get away with it until enough people start objecting. They will shut out Ralph and Bob Barr and Cynthia McKinney. They will use America's presidential debate as an informercial for the Republican and Democratic parties and cheapen the discourse. The best we'll be able to hope for -- as in 2004 -- is bloggers who fact check because the candidates aren't going to bother. That's why Dick Cheney could (and did) claim in the 2004 debate that he'd never met John Edwards before. John Edwards didn't correct him. It was the bloggers who questioned him, it was the bloggers who hunted down photos and posted them. If there's a better example of just how for-show the debates are when the Dems and Repubes limit who is invited, think of it. But if John Edwards isn't smart enough to know whether or not he's met Dick Cheney before, this idea that two major political parties are so wise and so informed flies right out the window.

As Ralph pointed out to Neil Conan about John McCain and Barack Obama, "And they really don't have a plan to get out of Iraq and they want to expand the Afghanistan War. " They don't. But how are people supposed to grasp that when actual presidential candidates (Bob, Cynthia and Ralph) calling for an end to the illegal war aren't allowed on stage? Oh sure, we'll have hacks like Katrina vanden Heuvel insist John McCain is the root of all evil while Barack pees rainbows, that we have to 'trust' our 'hearts' and just know that, despite what Barack's actually saying, if he's elected there will be some miracle transformation that will make Barack want to end the illegal war. Yeah, and maybe that miracle will spread and Katrina will be gifted with a functioning brain? I wouldn't advise that you bet money on either option.

What we'll have is Blah-Blah and, the day after, the likes of Katrina will show up to insist something amazing took place. They'll spin. The hideous Rachel Maddow will spin like crazy. John Edwards clearly lost the debate with Dick Cheney in 2004. The day after, Mike Papantonio noted that reality, noted how disappointing Edwards was, pointed out that the v.p. candidates are always supposed to hit hard, that Edwards was a lawyer and didn't hit hard. And Rachel had an on air tear-fest and began badgering Papantonio to change his opinion. At the end he was offering a very weak okay-okay.

Outside of his own family, it's doubtful anyone's rooted for Dick Cheney in many, many years. But if the reality is that Edwards lost to the Black Hole, that's the reality. Maddow couldn't handle it. War Hawk Maddow (she spent years on Air America Radio arguing against withdrawal and offering the false analogy of the Pottery Barn -- even after it was known to be false -- as her 'reasoning') is now being cheered by The Nation (Hillary Hatred pays off!). That's your indication of the 'level' of discourse 'alternative' media is going to be serving up.

To have a real discussion about the Iraq War or any other issue, we need to have all the presidential candidates up on stage.

As Ron Jacobs (Dissident Voice) points out, "Good thing there’s an election coming up. Once Bush is gone, the world will get better. Won’t it? At least one of the candidates has to be against all this war and threats of war, right? Maybe Obama is just playing the game when he promises fealty to Tel Aviv. Maybe he doesn’t mean it when he sounds like Bush in regards to Iran. Maybe he’ll listen to the American people (and not the generals) after he gets elected and bring the troops back from Iraq by the end of 2009." That's the candidate who's going to represent the 'anti-war' position on stage?

No. And that's insane. The American people turned on the illegal war in 2005. The majority is still agains the illegal war. In American democracy we are supposed to recognize and foster the minority viewpoints. But we are not supposed to render majority opinion invisible. That's what's going to happen if the duopoly is not broken in the upcoming debates. The majority of Americans will be rendered voiceless.

As a sidebar, Ron brings up the payment issue in his article. The puppet government should be paying and no reperations need to be made to it. It is not a government of the people. Nouri al-Maliki is the DC puppet. He's installed. He sits on millions of Iraqi monies and refuses to spend it to help the Iraqi people. Making him pay is what should happen right now because his government is illegitimate. He wants to be a puppet, let him pay. It's not taking money from the Iraqi people because he's not spending it on them. While he can't use the funds for reconstruction or improving the people's lives, he can (and did last month) go on a huge weapons shopping spree. Joe Biden pointed out reality in April: The US is spending a ton of money to prop up a government that is not legitimate in the eyes of the Iraqi people and we're supporting their war on the Iraqi people.

Reperations need to be made by the US government. No question. But to a real government, a legitimate one that represents the Iraqi people, not the interests of the White House. The US needs to withdraw from Iraq immediately. But neither presumed candidate John McCain or Barack Obama supports that. As long as the installed puppet is kept in power, the puppet should have to pay for it. It's not taking money that would be spent on the Iraqi people because al-Maliki's refusal to spend that money did not start this year. It's been characteristic of his entire term.

Robert Fisk gets right to the point in "New actor on the same old stage" (Independent of London):

But this dreary old stage play doesn't end there. No one follows the narrative any more because it is so repetitive. Take Nouri al-Maliki, the PMIGZ -- Prime Minister of the Iraqi Green Zone -- who's suddenly gone from being the Democrats' favourite target to being their election buddy-buddy, as Max Boot sagely noted in The Washington Post. Maliki suggested to Obama that Iraq will be ready to assume responsibility for its own security by 2010. Bingo. This chimes in perfectly with Obama's promises.
But wait a minute. In May, 2006, Maliki announced that "our forces are capable of taking over the security in all Iraqi provinces within a year and a half". Five months later, the PMIGZ said that it would be "only a matter of months" before Iraqi security forces "take over the security portfolio entirely and keep some (sic) multinational forces only in a supporting role". Then in January, 2007, Maliki boasted that "within three to six months our need for the American troops will dramatically go down".
Four months later, he was at it again, claiming that Iraqi forces would control all security "in every province" within eight months. Quite apart from the idea that there is a security "portfolio" in Iraq, his own military chums don't agree with any of this bumph. The PMIGZ's own defence minister claims his forces can't assume responsibility until 2012, while the Iraqi commander in Basra wants US troops to stay until 2020!
Even if we ignore all this drivel, what does Obama want to do with his soldiers once he withdraws them from Iraq? He's going to send the poor devils back to Afghanistan, that graveyard of foreign armies where the Taliban were so utterly defeated in 2001 that they are now stronger than ever. I would recommend that Obama glance through Appendix XXIV of the official British account of the 1878-80 Second Afghan War where he will find the British announcing victory over a massed Afghan force which included a fierce group of fighters known as "talibs". These men would choose a particular soldier in the British ranks and make a suicidal attack to seize him and cut his throat in front of his comrades.


Now maybe if Robert Fisk was moderating the debates, some light of truth could shine in. But he's not moderating. And if we all we have is McCain and Obama, we don't have much of a debate. (Though Barack will no doubt continue his stammering and fumbling uh-uh-uh speech pattern.) America deserves better and democracy deserves better. The people have a right to see all the candidates up on stage, to hear what they stand for and what they don't. The people have a right to make an informed decision. Hype doesn't end the illegal war.

It's over, I'm done writing songs about love
There's a war going on
So I'm holding my gun with a strap and a glove
And I'm writing a song about war
And it goes
Na na na na na na na
I hate the war
Na na na na na na na
I hate the war
Na na na na na na na
I hate the war
Oh oh oh oh
-- "I Hate The War" (written by Greg Goldberg, on The Ballet's Mattachine!)

Last Thursday, ICCC's number of US troops killed in Iraq since the start of the illegal war was 4134. Tonight? 4141. That's seven more and, yes, M-NF only released four death announcements (they let DoD 'make the announcements' for the others). Just Foreign Policy lists 1,252,595 as the number of Iraqis killed up from 1,251,944 last week.

Michael Winship's latest essay is entitled "America and the World" (Bill Moyers Journal):

In a letter written in 1648, the Swedish statesman, Axel Oxenstierna, chancellor to both King Gustavus Adolphus and Queen Christina, counseled, "Know, my son, with how little wisdom the world is governed."
The fighting between Russia and the former Soviet republic of Georgia is an unnerving reminder of that, and of how quickly the balance of global power can be tilted from unexpected directions with barely a warning.
Some hawks and neo-cons called for NATO intervention or even suggested we send in Stinger missiles or the 82nd Airborne as a peacekeeping force. President Bush warned, "Russia has invaded a sovereign neighboring state and threatens a democratic government elected by its people. Such an action is unacceptable in the 21st century."
Perhaps, but the reality of the early 21st century is that, in the short run, at least, the president’s words ring hollow. In spite of past promises of support to Georgia, Russia is key to our efforts in the Middle East and our European allies are dependent on Russia for energy. The invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq have both our military strength and our international credibility stretched perilously thin at a time when oil-rich Russia is reemerging as a superpower. We’ve boxed ourselves in.
It was in that light that I came upon the Oxenstierna quote the other night, while re-reading the late historian Barbara Tuchman’s The March of Folly, a knowing compendium, from ancient Troy to Vietnam, of the ways in which, given half a chance, those in power will steer their ships of state straight into the rocks. In the first chapter, she also quotes American President John Adams: "While all other sciences have advanced" -- you can almost hear him sighing -- "government is at a stand; little better practiced now than three or four thousand years ago."
Andrew J. Bacevich probably would agree with all of the above. The retired Army colonel, a West Point graduate, teaches history and international relations at Boston University. His latest book, The Limits of Power: The End of American Exceptionalism, explores our nation’s current predicament, not just on the world stage but here at home as well. He spoke with my colleague Bill Moyers on this week's edition of the PBS series Bill Moyers Journal.
Bacevich speaks truth to power, no matter who's in power, which may be why those of both the left and right are eager to hear his views. Perhaps it's also because when he challenges American myths and illusions, he does so from a genuine patriotism forged in the fire of his experiences as a soldier in Vietnam and the death a year ago of his son, an Army lieutenant in Iraq. The Limits of Power is dedicated to the young man but the senior Bacevich, a man of quiet, solid gravitas, holds his grief privately between himself and his family.
"Our foreign policy is something that is concocted in Washington, D.C., but it reflects the perceptions of our political elite about what we the people want," he told Moyers. "And what we want, by and large is... this continuing flow of very cheap consumer goods. We want to be able to pump gas into our cars regardless of how big they may happen to be... And we want to be able to do these things without having to think about whether or not the books are balanced at the end of the month, or the end of the fiscal year."
To that end, he says, "One of the ways we avoid confronting our refusal to balance the books is to rely increasingly on the projection of American military power around the world to try to maintain this dysfunctional system or set of arrangements that have evolved over the last 30 or 40 years."
"... I think historians a hundred years from now will puzzle over how it could be that the United States of America, the most powerful nation in the world, as far back as the early 1970’s came to recognize that dependence on foreign oil was a problem, posed a threat, compromised our freedom of action. How every president from Richard Nixon down... declared, 'We’re going to fix the problem.' [But] none of them did."
He continued, "The clearest statement of what I value is found in the Preamble to the Constitution. There is nothing in the Preamble to the Constitution which defines the purpose of the United States of America as remaking the world in our image, which I view as a fool's errand... I believe that the framers of the Constitution were primarily concerned with focusing on the way we live here, the way we order our affairs. To try to ensure that as individuals, we can have an opportunity to pursue our, perhaps, differing definitions of freedom, but also so that, as a community, we could live together in some kind of harmony. And that future generations would also be able to share in those same opportunities... With the current crisis in American foreign policy, unless we do change our ways, the likelihood that our children, our grandchildren, the next generation is going to enjoy the opportunities that we've had is very slight because we're squandering our power. We are squandering our wealth."
Bacevich believes, "The Congress, especially with regard to matters related to national security policy, has thrust power and authority to the executive branch. We have created an imperial presidency. The Congress no longer is able to articulate a vision of what is the common good. The Congress exists primarily to ensure the reelection of members of Congress."
That imperial presidency, he says, "has made our democracy a false one. We're going through the motions of a democratic political system. But the fabric of democracy, I think, really has worn very thin."
Iraq, Bacevich concludes, "was a fundamental mistake. It never should have been undertaken. And we're never going to do this kind of thing again." This might, he thinks, "be the moment when we look ourselves in the mirror [and]... see what we have become. And perhaps undertake an effort to make those changes in the American way of life that will enable us to preserve for future generations that which we value most about the American way of life."
Andrew Bacevich's words should echo down the corridors of Congress and the halls of the White House, no matter who becomes our next President.


Friday (in most markets, check local listings), Bill Moyers sits down with Andrew Bacevich to discuss the imperial impresidency. And I think Billie's local station is no longer in pledge drive mode but somewhere some PBS may be. If it is, you can always stream video or audio or read transcripts (or podcast) at Bill Moyers Journal online.


The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.




robert fisk
ron jacobs



Posted at 09:19 pm by thecommonills
 

Iraq snapshot

Iraq snapshot

Thursday, August 14, 2008. Chaos and violence continue, US war resister Jeremy Hinzman mounts an appeal, a president learns stay away from all those fatty foods or face heart surgery, the Ralph Nader campaign gears up for this month's Nader Super Rally by opening their Denver headquarters today, and more.
 
Starting with war resistance.  Yesterday, US war resister Jeremy Hinzman was informed that he and his family must leave Canada by September 23rd.  He and his wife Nga Nguyen went with their son Liam to Canada and Jeremy became the first US war resister in Canada to publicly seek safe harbor.  July 21st Jeremy and Nga added daughter Meghan to their family.  Ian Austen contributes a paragraph for today's New York Times.  The Los Angeles Times also reduces it to World Briefing. Utah's Daily Herald includes it in briefings as does Tulsa World. Radio Netherlands files a brief as well. All Headline News joins the brief squad while BBC teases out a brief with padding but Canwest News Services settles for a briefMichael Futch (Fayetteville Observer) speaks with Jeremy who explains, "I don't regret what we've done.  I've had the opportunity to speak out against the war.  No offense to the soldiers over there -- I have respect for them as soldiers -- but it was a bogus war based on false pretenses . . . and I'm happy to have not taken part in it."  Don Jorgensen (South Dakota's KELOLAND TV) notes that Jeremy is "a graduate from Rapid City Stevens High School" in South Dakota and that Jeremy told the KEOLAND News that he expects if he is forced out of Canada he will be sentenced to prison. Sindh Today quotes him stating, "We're disappointed. Life goes on and we'll make the most of it wherever we end up."  Brett Clarkson (Edmonton Sun) quotes Jeremy stating, "Iraq was an unjust war based on false pretences, and every soldier who refused to fight probably saved a lot of lives."  Hinzman was outside the Canada Border Services Agency in Toronto and Jessica McDiarmid (Canadian Press) continues, "The 29-year-old was stoic as he walked out, holding the glass door open for his son Liam, 6, and his wife Nga Nguyen, who cradled a newborn daughter in her arms."  CBC notes, "Federal NDP citizenship and immigration critic Olivia Chow, who put forward the June motion, called Wednesday's decision "mean-spirited," and called on Citizenship and Immigration Minister Diane Finley to halt the deportation of Hinzman and other war resisters immediately."  The War Resisters Support Campaign's Dale Landry ("himself a deserter of the U.S. Air Force") tells Liam Lahey (Inside Toronto), "We're going to try everything we can do legally to keep him in the country.  If Jeremy is sent back, his wife is left as a single mom raising two small children and that's not an easy thing to do while he's in jail for God knows how long."  Meghan is a Canadian citizen and before the Canadian government moves further, they might want to check their own policies regarding the parents of Canadian citizens.
 
Reuters reports Alyssa Manning (Jeremy's attorney) is filing "a new appeal in Canada's Federal Court" and arguing that the ruling/order "did not take into account the effect on his family if he ended up in prison".  Iraq Veterans Against the War issued this statement:
 
US Iraq War resister Jeremy Hinzman was informed on August 13th that his application to stay in Canada has been rejected. Jeremy served a tour in Afghanistan in a non-combat role after applying for conscientious objector status. When his unit, the 82nd Airborne Division, was to be deployed to Iraq Jeremy and his family decided to come to Canada. Jeremy is the first U.S. war resister to apply for refuge in Canada. He has been ordered to be deported by September 23rd. Jeremy is in Canada with his wife Nga Nuyen, and their two young children.
The decision to deport Hinzman comes just two months after the Canadian Parliament passed a motion calling on the government to allow US war resisters to apply for Permanent Resident status in Canada.  
To support Jeremy, call or email Hon. Diane Finley, Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, and ask her to intervene in this case. Phone: 613.996.4974 email: finley.d@parl.gc.ca.
 
 
Jeremy Hinzman and other war resisters in Canada need support and to pressure the Stephen Harper government to honor the House of Commons vote, Gerry Condon, War Resisters Support Campaign and Courage to Resist all encourage contacting the Diane Finley (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration -- 613.996.4974, phone; 613.996.9749, fax; e-mail finley.d@parl.gc.ca -- that's "finley.d" at "parl.gc.ca") and Stephen Harper (Prime Minister, 613.992.4211, phone; 613.941.6900, fax; e-mail pm@pm.gc.ca -- that's "pm" at "pm.gc.ca"). Courage to Resist collected more than 10,000 letters to send before the vote. Now they've started a new letter you can use online here. The War Resisters Support Campaign's petition can be found here. Long expulsion does not change the need for action and the War Resisters Support Campaign explains: "The War Resisters Support Campaign is calling on supporters across Canada to urgently continue to put pressure on the minority conservative government to immediately cease deportation proceedings against other US war resisters and to respect the will of Canadians and their elected representatives by implementing the motion adopted by Parliament on June 3rd. Please see the take action page for what you can do."
 
There is a growing movement of resistance within the US military which includes Yovany Rivero, William Shearer, Michael Thurman, Andrei Hurancyk, Megan Bean, Chris Bean, Matthis Chiroux, Richard Droste, Michael Barnes, Matt Mishler, Josh Randall, Robby Keller, Justiniano Rodrigues, Chuck Wiley, James Stepp, Rodney Watson, Michael Espinal, Matthew Lowell, Derek Hess, Diedra Cobb, Brad McCall, Justin Cliburn, Timothy Richard, Robert Weiss, Phil McDowell, Steve Yoczik, Ross Spears, Peter Brown, Bethany "Skylar" James, Zamesha Dominique, Chrisopther Scott Magaoay, Jared Hood, James Burmeister, Jose Vasquez, Eli Israel, Joshua Key, Ehren Watada, Terri Johnson, Clara Gomez, Luke Kamunen, Leif Kamunen, Leo Kamunen, Camilo Mejia, Kimberly Rivera, Dean Walcott, Linjamin Mull, Agustin Aguayo, Justin Colby, Marc Train, Abdullah Webster, Robert Zabala, Darrell Anderson, Kyle Snyder, Corey Glass, Jeremy Hinzman, Kevin Lee, Mark Wilkerson, Patrick Hart, Ricky Clousing, Ivan Brobeck, Aidan Delgado, Pablo Paredes, Carl Webb, Stephen Funk, Blake LeMoine, Clifton Hicks, David Sanders, Dan Felushko, Brandon Hughey, Logan Laituri, Jason Marek, Clifford Cornell, Joshua Despain, Joshua Casteel, Katherine Jashinski, Dale Bartell, Chris Teske, Matt Lowell, Jimmy Massey, Chris Capps, Tim Richard, Hart Viges, Michael Blake, Christopher Mogwai, Christian Kjar, Kyle Huwer, Wilfredo Torres, Michael Sudbury, Ghanim Khalil, Vincent La Volpa, DeShawn Reed and Kevin Benderman. In total, at least fifty US war resisters in Canada have applied for asylum.

Information on war resistance within the military can be found at The Objector, The G.I. Rights Hotline [(877) 447-4487], Iraq Veterans Against the War and the War Resisters Support Campaign. Courage to Resist offers information on all public war resisters. In addition, VETWOW is an organization that assists those suffering from MST (Military Sexual Trauma).
 
Moving on to Iraq and file it under "No surprise."  October 21, 2007 we noted: "In today's New York Times, Andrew E. Kramer tells you that Iraq's president, Jalal Talabani, is upset with Syria for publicly endorsing the Turkish parliament's vote to approve the Turkish military being sent into Iraq to fight the PKK. 'Usually I refrain from commening on Syrian positions to maintain our historical good relations,' Talabani (who stuffed his face with fatty foods` on his recent trip to the US to visit the Mayo Clinic, just FYI -- the heart trouble is not going to be cured by pigging out in hotel rooms)."  Talabani's face stuffing (of fatty foods) never made the press but it's all anyone could talk about.  It should have made the news. We returned to that topic over and over.  (And he reportedly visited a book store on that trip and staggered, nearly passing out.  It took the support of several men for him to make out of the bookstore.) June 16th we were 'harping again' (as one drive-by e-mailed) with: "Meanwhile AP notes that the president of Iraq, Jalal Talabani, is in the US and will receive treatment at the Mayo Clinic. A brief mention is made of the fact that this is not his first visit or that moments after leaving last time, he was spotted gorging on fatty foods in public. (And 'gorging' is putting it mildly.) He's 73-years-old and really can eat whatever he wants -- if he steps down as president. But while he's president (or 'president') of an occupied country, there's really no point in treating him if he's going to completely ignore doctors' orders and it's not as if the average Iraqi is going to be flown to the Mayo Clinic."  Deborah Haynes (Times of London) reports that the Iraqi president is "said to be in 'good health' today after undergoing heart surgery in the United States, an operation that left some Iraqis wondering whether he is still fit for the job."  Peter Graff (Reuters) points out that, prior to today, the press was told he was in the US for "a knee operation."  CBS and AP state: "A statement by the presidential press office said Talabani entered the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota on Aug. 2 for knee surgery but 'the medical team found out that he suffers from a problem in one of the heart valves'."  That's a sweet way to put "We thought we could lie but Reuters found out the truth, broke the story and now we have to admit to the heart surgery."  "I think he's too old to continue as President," Fadel Dawish tells Deborah Haynes in Baghdad while "Nassar al-Rubaie, a senior Shia politician, said the medical reports from the hospital would determine whether the heart operation would affect Mr Talabani's ability to work." 
 
In Iraq today, religous pilgrims were among those targeted repeadly.  The Shabaniyah festival has repeatedly been plagued with violenct attacks on pilgirms each year (since the illegal war started).  The festival is honoring the birth of Mohammed al-Mahdi who was the twelth iman and also the last Shi'ite to be an imam -- one who is predicted to come back to the world and bring peace with him.  AFP explains, "Tens of thousands of Shiites are expected to flock to Karbala to venerate Imam Mahdi, an eighth century imam who vanished as a boy and whom Shiites believe will return to bring justice to the world."  Peter Graff (Reuters) adds that the Shi'ite pilgrimages and festivals "have become an annual ritual show of strength for Iraq's Shi'ite majority since the fall of Saddam Hussein, a Sunni Arab who restricted some Shi'ite religious practices." In the attack with the largest number of known deaths, CBS and AP report that a bomber (apparently female) in Iskandariya took her own life as well as the lives of "at least 26 people and wounding dozens" in "the deadliest in a series of attacks" on the pilgrims.  The Telegraph of London quotes eye witness Ahmed al-Saadi explaining, "I heard a big explosion.  I turned my head back and saw big flames.  We rushed to the site and saw charred bodies, while wounded people were crying for help. Pots and burnt prayer rugs were scattered all the place."  Tina Susman (Los Angeles Times) observes, "So far this year, there have been about 30 female suicide bombing attacks, according to the U.S. military. Last year, there were just seven."
 
In other reported violence today . . .
 
Bombings?
 
Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) reports a Baghdad roadside bombing claimed the life of 1 police officer (and five pilgrims were wounded), another claimed the life of 1 pilgrim (seven more wounded), a Diyala Province roadside bombing claimed the life of 1 8-year-old girl and left her sister and mother wounded and a Baquba roadside bombing claimed the lives of 2 police officers (and left three more wounded).  Reuters notes "five employees of Baiji oil refinery" were injured in a Baiji roadside bombing.
 
Shootings?
 
Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) reports 1 police officer shot dead in Mosul.  Reuters drops back to yesterday today and notes a Mosul home invasion in which 1 man was killed and his son was injured.
 
Corpses?

Sahar Issa (McClatchy Newspapers) reports 1 corpse discovered in Baghdad. Reuters notes that the corpse "of a murder policeman" was discovered in Kirkuk.
 
Meanwhile Peter Graff (Reuters) reports that six sailors who served at Camp Bucca in Iraq are now looking at a court-martial "for abusing detainees" and that the court-martials are expected to commence "within the next 30 days."
 
Turning to the US presidential race.  As they prepare to rock Denver, the Ralph Nader - Matt Gonzalez campaign opened up their Denver headquarters today.  The office is located in Suite 111 on 1155 Sherman Street, a tree-lined street whose intersection with East 12th Avenue makes it very accessible becuase East 12th is a bus route.  The office is wheel chair accessible.  Jess spoke with Junue Millan this afternoon about the opening and the news confernce which was attended by at least five media people including Univision.  The office was "specifically created" for the Super Rally that will be held in Denver (at the Magness Arena) on August 27th. They are expecting between 5,000 and 7,000 people to attend and are currently working on a website just for the Denver office.
 
The Denver event will take place as the Democratic Party stages there convention and  there is a great deal of excitement for the Super Rally and volunteers are needed to help with fliers and getting the word out.  Those interested in assisting can e-mail Junue Millan at junue@votenader.org as well as call the office (303) 832-2509 or walk in.  They intend to be open from nine in the morning until nine in the evening Monday through Friday as they work to pull together this large project.  Both Ralph and Matt will be speaking at the event and, as the event gets closer, they will begin announcing some of the guest speakers they've already confirmed.  Artist, activist and rocker Jello Biafra is among those who will be participating.
 
The Super Rally in Denver (September 4th, a Nader Super Rally will be held at Orchestra Hall in Minneapolis, during the GOP convention) will start at seven o'clock p.m and will PUT ON THE TABLE the issues that the two major parties refuse to address -- the Iraq War, single-payer universal health care, corporate crime, impeachment and more.  It will also challenge the two-party duopoly by insisting that the presidential debates be opened.  As Kat noted last night, " I really find it offensive that Ralph Nader, Bob Barr and Cynthia McKinney (or Chuck Baldwin for that matter) have to fight to get into the debates. They are presidential candidates and should be in the debates. What are the Democrats and Republicans so scared of? Are their candidates so weak that they can't hold their own against Ralph, Bob, Cynthia and Chuck? Do John McCain and Barack Obama get the night sweats just thinking about being on stage with the other candidates? In a real democracy, debates would be open to all on the ballots. This nonsense that you have to meet X% would be called out. It's not a popularity contest. It's supposed to be a race for the presidency."
 
Yesterday, Ralph was a guest on NPR's Talk of the Nation.  Below is some of the exchange:
 
Neal Conan: Back in February Ralph Nader announced that he was running for president as an independent candidate.  The longtime consumer advocate's third consecutive run for the White House.  If you'd like to talk with him about his campaign, why he's running, our phone number is 800-989-8255, e-mail again is talk@npr.org and, of course, political junkie Ken Rudin is with us, he's NPR's political editor and you can read his political junkie column at nrp.org.  And, Ralph Nader, nice to have you with us on the program today.  Why are you running for president, remind us?
 
Ralph Nader: This campaign stands for a whole number of changes and redirections that are supported by a majority of the American people.  We're the only ones who are standing for full Medicare for all, for  a living wage, for cutting the bloated, wasteful military budgets full of so much contracting fraud that's offending tax payers.  We want to cut down tax payer coherced subsidies to corporations, you know  the hand outs giveaways bailouts of crooked Wall Street firms.  We want to open up the presidential debates.  Why are we rationing debates?  We don't ration weather reports, do we?
 
Neil Conan: No.
 
Ralph Nader: Or entertainment or sports.  And we want to shift the tax burden more to things that society likes the least or dislikes the most like security derivative speculation  pollution, gambling, addictive industries before you first tax human labor.  And we want to crack down on corporate crime, fraud and abuse.  And, you know, public radio's reported that -- repeatedly stealing people's pensions, ripping off their savings, their mutal funds -- all of this has been reported  and the major party candidates, McCain and Obama, are taking these issues off the table.  They don't have a corporate crime crackdown, law and order, against these crooks.  They don't have a decent tax reform.  They don't want to open up the presidential debates.  They don't want full Medicare for all which even a majority of doctors want in a recent poll and a majority of the American people giving you free choice of doctor and hospital cutting out a lot of wasteful bureacratic expenses.  And they really don't have a plan to get out of Iraq and they want to expand the Afghanistan War. So we really have a very broad agenda for people to sink their teeth in and say, "What's left for us to decide as the people?  Is there anything left for us to decide as these corporations have hijacked our government and control about every department and agency?"  That's what we're saying to the American people: If you don't take it over, if you don't win your government back, if you don't vote for people you believe in who have a record of  accomplishment and a good platform which you can see on VoteNader.org, what's left for you to decide?  I mean, these two parties don't represent you in area after area.  Their drum is beaten by the big corporations. 
 
Neal Conan: Could we have some time for callers to ask some questions?  800-898-255 e-mails us talk@npr.org and let's see if we can get a caller on the line.  Let's go to, this is line 6, Peter, Peter with us from Pennelton, is that right, in Oregon?  Pendleton, it must be. 
 
Peter: Hello?
 
Neil Conan: Yes go ahead.
 
Peter: Hi.
 
Neil Conan: Go you're on the air.
 
Peter: Mr. Nader?
 
Ralph Nader: Yes.
 
Peter: Hi.  In 2004, I voted for John Kerry and I actually have regretted it ever since. And I really wish that I had written your name in. Of course, I don't believe that you were on the ballot in Oregon.  But --
 
Ralph Nader: The Democrats pushed us off.
 
Peter: I'm sorry?
 
Ralph Nader: The Democrats pushed us off state ballots with frivilous litigation, partisan judges.  You're right, we weren't on the ballot even though we got a lot of signatures, more than necessary.
 
Peter: It was pretty dirty.  But this year, it seems just so easy to just get behind Barack Obama but, at the same time, there are people like me who are pretty liberal and see you as a more progressive candidate.  What is one way that Barack Obama could become more progressive?
 
Ralph Nader: Well, he could be the  Barack Obama, who knows what the score is rather than having  antenna out for political advantage.  He would reflect what he believes, what he said privately believes we should have full Medicare for all, he prefers the single-payer system.  He certainly knows about the exploitation -- commercial and otherwise --  of the lower 100 million Americans on the income scale but he doesn't associate himself with any comprehensive reform plan there. He's taking actually more corporate interest money than John McCain as of June 30 of this year.  And he wants to have a bigger military budget.  His plan for getting out of Iraq  according to his military adviser would leave 50,000 soldiers, American soldiers, there with all  these bases.  That's not really getting out of Iraq. I think he's making a strategic mistake that Mondale, Dukakis, Kerry and others have made by moving toward the Republican position on area after area, by not drawing a bright line between the two as these issues I mentioned earlier he's going to lose votes, he's not going to gain votes.
 
Neil Conan: And let me ask you, Senator Obama, of course, the Democratic nominee this time around, you're on the ballot in 35 states is the Democratic Party this year continuing to work to keep you off the ballots elsewhere?
 
Ralph Nader: No, not so far.  We're going to be on about 45 state ballots.  We sued the Democratic Party last November for their abusive legal process  in violating our civil rights in '04 -- places like Pennsylvania.  And, in answer to your question, what's keeping them from doing what they did in '04 is the state Attorney General of Pennsylvania has brought indictments against 12 Democrats, two state legislatures and 10 legislative aides for using government money, government space, government resources to get us off the ballot in 2004 in Pennsylvania and they also gave them a $188,000 tay payer bonus and this is criminal stuff.  So I don't think they're going to do it again this year.
 
Team Nader is releasing daily audio of Ralph Nader (with Matt Gonzalez expected to participate as well).  Ralph's Daily Audio  is the web page and we noted "Open the Debates!" in yesterday's snapshot.  Below is the transcript to Ralph's "Corporate Tax Cheats:"
 
 
 
A report just out by the well regarded US Government Accountability Office concludes that about two-thirds of corporations operating in the United States did not pay taxes annually from 1998 to 2005.  Imagine that.  Senator Byron Dorgan, the Democrat of North Dakota, called the findings "A shocking indictment of the current tax system."
He continues, "It's shameful that so many corporations make big profits and pay nothing to support our country.  The tax system that allows this whole sale tax avoidance is an embarrassment and unfair to hard working Americans who pay their  fair share of taxes.  We need to plug these tax loopholes and put these corporations back on the tax rolls."
Senator Carl Levin says, "This report makes clear that too many corporations are using tax trickery to send their profits overseas and to avoid paying their fare share in the United States."
The GAO report said that 28% of large corporations paid no taxes during that period between 1998 to 2005.  It's suspected that a lot of these global corporations were using transfer pricing to reduce their tax bills.  This allows these multi-national corporations to transfer their goods and assets between their internal subsidiaries so they can record in the jurisdiction with low tax rates like the Bahamas.
David Cay Johnston, in his great book Perfectly Legal concluded, and I paraphrase him, he said, "These global companies have now reached a point of power and manipulation where they can decide how much taxes they're going to pay, where they're going to pay these taxes, and when they're going to pay these taxes."
That's the leading tax reporter for the New York Times, a Pulitzer Prize winner, David Cay Johnston.  It's something to think about when we ponder the double standard between working people on the one hand under our tax system and those tax escapees the global corporations on the other.  This is Ralph Nader.  
 
That was released today.  Yesterday's was Ralph's "Outsourcing" and it appears below: 
 
 
This is Ralph Nader.  You know how often these big corporate executives, when they're shipping jobs of American workers to fascist or communist dictators abroad who know how to keep their workers in their place .  Do you know how often they say "Well we have to do this to keep up with the global competition"? But one thing they don't do to keep up with the global competition is to outsource themselves, outsource their own CEO jobs or their own faluting commentators and editors jobs. 
Let's start with the New York Times editorial page.  It would be hard to replace Maureen Dowd, no doubt.  But Thomas Friedman?   He of the rah-rah, pro-corporate, globalization, cheesy metaphors?  Well he could easily be replaced by a hard working Indian or Chinese bi-lingual columnist at a much lower rate.  And how about Wall Street?  All those investment bank executives, the executives of Citigroup or Merrill Lynch.  Imagine how many first rate Indian or Chinese executives could have done a much better job than Bob Rubin who helped drive the giant Citibank into the ground.  I'm sure good executives from India or China could replace Rick Wagoner as CEO of General Motors at a much, much lower salary.  That's the way to meet the global competition: Outsouce  CEOS. 
"What's good for the worker," says the CEO, "is not good for the CEO."  The shareholders know better thye've got to demand outsourcing CEOS for a new fresh. energetic start for the management of their country.  I'm Ralph Nader.
 
At Dissident Voice, Ron Jacobs has another must-read, this one explaining when 'withdrawal' isn't really withdrawal. (I'm out of time, we'll quote Ron tonight in "I Hate The War.")  Robert Fisk (Independent of London) also dares to tell the truth about the 'withdrawal' Barack and Iraqi puppets are trying to sell.  And, community note, last night Rebecca offered "breakfast club," Ruth went with "Betrayed," Kat offered "Pretty in Pink and Reckless," Marcia explored "Outrageous Fortune," Elaine examined "Broadway Danny Rose" and Mike went with "Die Hard and Baby Boom." Cedric's "The battered syndrome is what Bambi works" and Wally's "THIS JUST IN! BARACK SPITS ON WOMEN AGAIN!" covered the latest disgusting insult to women from Team Obama. And if you missed Betty's "Testing out The Obama Playbook" and Trina's "Garlic Pasta in the Kitchen" over the weekend, please check them out.
 
 

Posted at 03:32 pm by thecommonills
 

Jeremy Hinzman

Jeremy Hinzman

Jeremy Hinzman, a deserter from the United States Army, was ordered Wednesday to leave Canada by Sept. 23. Mr. Hinzman, a member of the 82nd Airborne Division, left the Army for Canada in January 2004 and later became the first deserter to formally seek refuge there from the war in Iraq. He has been unable to obtain permanent immigrant status, and in November, the Supreme Court of Canada declined to hear an appeal of his case. Vanessa Barrasa, a spokeswoman for the Canada Border Services Agency, said Mr. Hinzman, above, had been ordered to leave voluntarily. In July, another American deserter was removed from Canada by border officials after being arrested. Although the Conservative government of Prime Minister Stephen Harper has not backed the Iraq war, it has shown little sympathy for American deserters, a significant change from the Vietnam War era.

That's Ian Austen buried inside the New York Times and in "World Briefing." Nothing on Iraq in the paper. You learn Sabrina Tavernise is now in Georgia (and filing two stories -- one front page and co-written) and you learn that Carlotta Gall remains a one-woman news division (she produces two stories from Afghanistan). You learn nothing on Iraq and the above is buried in the paper's "briefs." Garbage. The Los Angeles Times also reduces it to World Briefing. Utah's Daily Herald includes it in briefings as does Tulsa World. Radio Netherlands files a brief as well. All Headline News also presents a brief while BBC teases out a brief with padding and Canwest News Services settles for a brief. Sindh Today's "American war resister told to leave Canada" actually goes beyond brief:

Hinzman, who fled to Toronto with his wife Nga Nguyen and his son Liam (now six), sought refugee status in Canada on grounds of his conscientious objection to the Iraq war.
But the Canadian immigration and refugee board rejected his plea in March 2005 despite pressure from the War Resisters Support Campaign.
Later when the federal court of appeal also upheld the decision of the refugee board, Hinzman moved the supreme court of Canada.
But the country's apex court refused to entertain his petition.
After this, he filed a petition with the refugee board for permanent residence on compassionate grounds, citing that he could face torture if sent back to the US. But the board was not moved by his plea.
Reacting to the Canadian government's decision to throw him and his family out of the country, the American said: "We're disappointed. Life goes on and we'll make the most of it wherever we end up."
Hinzman, whose wife gave birth to their daughter Meghan three weeks ago, made light of his predicament by saying that he could be back in Canada when his daughter (being a Canadian because of her birth here) grew up.

Sarah notes this from Courage to Resist:

Jeremy Hinzman ordered deported from Canada PDF Print E-mail

Image

By Courage to Resist and War Resisters Support Campaign (Canada). August 13, 2008

The first U.S. war resister to apply for refuge in Canada has been ordered deported by September 23rd. Jeremy is in Canada with his wife Nga Nuyen, and their two young children. This decision flies in the face of the motion adopted by Parliament on June 3, 2008 which calls on the government to allow US war resisters to apply for Permanent Resident status in Canada. Supporters are calling on Hon. Diane Finley, Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, to intervene. Phone 613.996.4974 or email finley.d@parl.gc.ca

And this is the War Resisters Support Campaign:

Jeremy Hinzman ordered deported

The first U.S. war resister to apply for refuge in Canada has been ordered deported by September 23rd. Jeremy is in Canada with his wife Nga Nuyen, and their two young children.

This decision flies in the face of the motion adopted by Parliament on June 3, 2008 which calls on the government to allow US war resisters to apply for Permanent Resident status in Canada. It also rejects the will of Canadians who have demonstrated in various polls that they want war resisters to stay.

The War Resisters Support Campaign is calling on the federal government and the Hon. Diane Finley, Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, to intervene to prevent the Hinzman family from being sent to the U.S. to be punished.


Both organizations are calling for action. Jeremy Hinzman and other war resisters in Canada need support and to pressure the Stephen Harper government to honor the House of Commons vote, Gerry Condon, War Resisters Support Campaign and Courage to Resist all encourage contacting the Diane Finley (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration -- 613.996.4974, phone; 613.996.9749, fax; e-mail finley.d@parl.gc.ca -- that's "finley.d" at "parl.gc.ca") and Stephen Harper (Prime Minister, 613.992.4211, phone; 613.941.6900, fax; e-mail pm@pm.gc.ca -- that's "pm" at "pm.gc.ca"). Courage to Resist collected more than 10,000 letters to send before the vote. Now they've started a new letter you can use online here. The War Resisters Support Campaign's petition can be found here. Long expulsion does not change the need for action and the War Resisters Support Campaign explains: "The War Resisters Support Campaign is calling on supporters across Canada to urgently continue to put pressure on the minority conservative government to immediately cease deportation proceedings against other US war resisters and to respect the will of Canadians and their elected representatives by implementing the motion adopted by Parliament on June 3rd. Please see the take action page for what you can do."

Michael Futch continues his reporting on the news with "Canada deports deserter" (Fayetteville Observer):

In a telephone interview from his Toronto apartment, Hinzman said he was tremendously disappointed in the decision. "In June, the Canadian Parliament had passed a motion that (war resisters) should be able to stay in Canada. It was a non-binding motion, but it expressed the will of parliament and the Canadian people."
"I don't regret what we've done," he said. "I've had the opportunity to speak out against the war. No offense to the soldiers over there -- I have respect for them as soldiers -- but it was a bogus war based on false pretenses ... and I'm happy to have not taken part in it."
Hinzman has talked to his lawyer about other legal steps, but he is prepared to be sent back to the United States.
"We don't have any other option," he said. "That's fine. I'll end up with whatever they want to give me."

Don Jorgensen's "South Dakota Army Deserter Ordered To Return Home" (South Dakota's KELOLAND TV):

That deserter is Jeremy Hinzman, a graduate from Rapid City Stevens High School. He went A.W.O.L. in 2004 when he learned his unit was to go to Iraq. He sought refugee status in Canada.
But today the Canadian Border Services agency ordered him out of the country by September 23rd. KEOLAND News talked with Hinzman by phone today at his home in Toronto, Canada and he told me he'll likely go to prison now.


Canada's CBC notes, "Federal NDP citizenship and immigration critic Olivia Chow, who put forward the June motion, called Wednesday's decision "mean-spirited," and called on Citizenship and Immigration Minister Diane Finley to halt the deportation of Hinzman and other war resisters immediately." Liam Lahey's "PARKDALE: Resident ordered out of Canada" (Inside Toronto) is an actual article:

Dale Landry, spokesperson for the Toronto-based War Resisters Support Campaign and himself a deserter of the U.S. Air Force, said action is being planned nationwide to try to sway the federal Conservative government from deporting Hinzman next month.
"We're going to try everything we can do legally to keep him in the country," he said. "If Jeremy is sent back, his wife is left as a single mom raising two small children and that's not an easy thing to do while he's in jail for God knows how long."
Landry acknowledged Hinzman's deportation order has sent shock waves through the hearts of other American war resisters residing in Toronto – many of whom chose to come to Canada after reading about Hinzman's situation on various websites.
"It definitely is a cage-rattler," Landry said. "Jeremy has lived here for the last four years. This is his home now."
NDP MP Peggy Nash (Parkdale-High Park) told insidetoronto.com the war resisters ought to be welcomed into Canada.
"There's a lot of support (for the war resisters) in the Parkdale area," she said. "We need to keep the pressure on to get an indefinite postponement (of all deportation orders against U.S. military personnel) so Jeremy and his family can stay."


Others doing actual reporting include Brett Clarkson and this is from "Canada orders U.S. deserter to leave" (Edmonton Sun) notes:

Outside the CBSA offices near Pearson International Airport yesterday, Hinzman said he still believes he and other deserters did the right thing by coming to Canada rather than fighting in Iraq.
"Iraq was an unjust war based on false pretences, and every soldier who refused to fight probably saved a lot of lives," said Hinzman, who was joined by his wife Nga Nguyen, son Liam, 6, and the couple's newborn daughter.

Jessica McDiarmid (Canadian Press) continues, "The 29-year-old was stoic as he walked out, holding the glass door open for his son Liam, 6, and his wife Nga Nguyen, who cradled a newborn daughter in her arms." And David Hutton (Globe and Mail) observes:

The decision also puts at risk similar applications filed by other U.S. deserters, which will be decided in the coming weeks, said Gordon Maynard, a prominent Vancouver immigration lawyer. Each appeal is decided on a case-by-case basis, and this isn't precedent-setting, but the decision sends a message that U.S. deserters are going to find it impossible to stay without political support, he said. "There's not a whole lot of options left for these guys," Mr. Maynard said. "There are clearly political considerations here. ... The law doesn't offer protection to these guys. It will take a discretionary political decision to save them."

Independent presidential candidate Ralph Nader posted another audio message yesterday and we will note it in full in today's snapshot.

Last night was 'movie night' for many community sites. Rebecca offered "breakfast club," Ruth went with "Betrayed," Kat offered "Pretty in Pink and Reckless," Marcia explored "Outrageous Fortune," Elaine examined "Broadway Danny Rose" and Mike went with "Die Hard and Baby Boom." Cedric's "The battered syndrome is what Bambi works" and Wally's "THIS JUST IN! BARACK SPITS ON WOMEN AGAIN!" covered the latest disgusting insult to women from Team Obama. And if you missed Betty's "Testing out The Obama Playbook" and Trina's "Garlic Pasta in the Kitchen" over the weekend, please check them out.


The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.

iraq











thomas friedman is a great man






Posted at 07:46 am by thecommonills
 

Jeremy Hinzman

Jeremy Hinzman

Jeremy Hinzman, a deserter from the United States Army, was ordered Wednesday to leave Canada by Sept. 23. Mr. Hinzman, a member of the 82nd Airborne Division, left the Army for Canada in January 2004 and later became the first deserter to formally seek refuge there from the war in Iraq. He has been unable to obtain permanent immigrant status, and in November, the Supreme Court of Canada declined to hear an appeal of his case. Vanessa Barrasa, a spokeswoman for the Canada Border Services Agency, said Mr. Hinzman, above, had been ordered to leave voluntarily. In July, another American deserter was removed from Canada by border officials after being arrested. Although the Conservative government of Prime Minister Stephen Harper has not backed the Iraq war, it has shown little sympathy for American deserters, a significant change from the Vietnam War era.

That's Ian Austen buried inside the New York Times and in "World Briefing." Nothing on Iraq in the paper. You learn Sabrina Tavernise is now in Georgia (and filing two stories -- one front page and co-written) and you learn that Carlotta Gall remains a one-woman news division (she produces two stories from Afghanistan). You learn nothing on Iraq and the above is buried in the paper's "briefs." Garbage. The Los Angeles Times also reduces it to World Briefing. Utah's Daily Herald includes it in briefings as does Tulsa World. Radio Netherlands files a brief as well. All Headline News also presents a brief while BBC teases out a brief with padding and Canwest News Services settles for a brief. Sindh Today's "American war resister told to leave Canada" actually goes beyond brief:

Hinzman, who fled to Toronto with his wife Nga Nguyen and his son Liam (now six), sought refugee status in Canada on grounds of his conscientious objection to the Iraq war.
But the Canadian immigration and refugee board rejected his plea in March 2005 despite pressure from the War Resisters Support Campaign.
Later when the federal court of appeal also upheld the decision of the refugee board, Hinzman moved the supreme court of Canada.
But the country's apex court refused to entertain his petition.
After this, he filed a petition with the refugee board for permanent residence on compassionate grounds, citing that he could face torture if sent back to the US. But the board was not moved by his plea.
Reacting to the Canadian government's decision to throw him and his family out of the country, the American said: "We're disappointed. Life goes on and we'll make the most of it wherever we end up."
Hinzman, whose wife gave birth to their daughter Meghan three weeks ago, made light of his predicament by saying that he could be back in Canada when his daughter (being a Canadian because of her birth here) grew up.

Sarah notes this from Courage to Resist:

Jeremy Hinzman ordered deported from Canada PDF Print E-mail

Image

By Courage to Resist and War Resisters Support Campaign (Canada). August 13, 2008

The first U.S. war resister to apply for refuge in Canada has been ordered deported by September 23rd. Jeremy is in Canada with his wife Nga Nuyen, and their two young children. This decision flies in the face of the motion adopted by Parliament on June 3, 2008 which calls on the government to allow US war resisters to apply for Permanent Resident status in Canada. Supporters are calling on Hon. Diane Finley, Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, to intervene. Phone 613.996.4974 or email finley.d@parl.gc.ca

And this is the War Resisters Support Campaign:

Jeremy Hinzman ordered deported

The first U.S. war resister to apply for refuge in Canada has been ordered deported by September 23rd. Jeremy is in Canada with his wife Nga Nuyen, and their two young children.

This decision flies in the face of the motion adopted by Parliament on June 3, 2008 which calls on the government to allow US war resisters to apply for Permanent Resident status in Canada. It also rejects the will of Canadians who have demonstrated in various polls that they want war resisters to stay.

The War Resisters Support Campaign is calling on the federal government and the Hon. Diane Finley, Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, to intervene to prevent the Hinzman family from being sent to the U.S. to be punished.


Both organizations are calling for action. Jeremy Hinzman and other war resisters in Canada need support and to pressure the Stephen Harper government to honor the House of Commons vote, Gerry Condon, War Resisters Support Campaign and Courage to Resist all encourage contacting the Diane Finley (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration -- 613.996.4974, phone; 613.996.9749, fax; e-mail finley.d@parl.gc.ca -- that's "finley.d" at "parl.gc.ca") and Stephen Harper (Prime Minister, 613.992.4211, phone; 613.941.6900, fax; e-mail pm@pm.gc.ca -- that's "pm" at "pm.gc.ca"). Courage to Resist collected more than 10,000 letters to send before the vote. Now they've started a new letter you can use online here. The War Resisters Support Campaign's petition can be found here. Long expulsion does not change the need for action and the War Resisters Support Campaign explains: "The War Resisters Support Campaign is calling on supporters across Canada to urgently continue to put pressure on the minority conservative government to immediately cease deportation proceedings against other US war resisters and to respect the will of Canadians and their elected representatives by implementing the motion adopted by Parliament on June 3rd. Please see the take action page for what you can do."

Michael Futch continues his reporting on the news with "Canada deports deserter" (Fayetteville Observer):

In a telephone interview from his Toronto apartment, Hinzman said he was tremendously disappointed in the decision. "In June, the Canadian Parliament had passed a motion that (war resisters) should be able to stay in Canada. It was a non-binding motion, but it expressed the will of parliament and the Canadian people."
"I don't regret what we've done," he said. "I've had the opportunity to speak out against the war. No offense to the soldiers over there -- I have respect for them as soldiers -- but it was a bogus war based on false pretenses ... and I'm happy to have not taken part in it."
Hinzman has talked to his lawyer about other legal steps, but he is prepared to be sent back to the United States.
"We don't have any other option," he said. "That's fine. I'll end up with whatever they want to give me."

Don Jorgensen's "South Dakota Army Deserter Ordered To Return Home" (South Dakota's KELOLAND TV):

That deserter is Jeremy Hinzman, a graduate from Rapid City Stevens High School. He went A.W.O.L. in 2004 when he learned his unit was to go to Iraq. He sought refugee status in Canada.
But today the Canadian Border Services agency ordered him out of the country by September 23rd. KEOLAND News talked with Hinzman by phone today at his home in Toronto, Canada and he told me he'll likely go to prison now.


Canada's CBC notes, "Federal NDP citizenship and immigration critic Olivia Chow, who put forward the June motion, called Wednesday's decision "mean-spirited," and called on Citizenship and Immigration Minister Diane Finley to halt the deportation of Hinzman and other war resisters immediately." Liam Lahey's "PARKDALE: Resident ordered out of Canada" (Inside Toronto) is an actual article:

Dale Landry, spokesperson for the Toronto-based War Resisters Support Campaign and himself a deserter of the U.S. Air Force, said action is being planned nationwide to try to sway the federal Conservative government from deporting Hinzman next month.
"We're going to try everything we can do legally to keep him in the country," he said. "If Jeremy is sent back, his wife is left as a single mom raising two small children and that's not an easy thing to do while he's in jail for God knows how long."
Landry acknowledged Hinzman's deportation order has sent shock waves through the hearts of other American war resisters residing in Toronto – many of whom chose to come to Canada after reading about Hinzman's situation on various websites.
"It definitely is a cage-rattler," Landry said. "Jeremy has lived here for the last four years. This is his home now."
NDP MP Peggy Nash (Parkdale-High Park) told insidetoronto.com the war resisters ought to be welcomed into Canada.
"There's a lot of support (for the war resisters) in the Parkdale area," she said. "We need to keep the pressure on to get an indefinite postponement (of all deportation orders against U.S. military personnel) so Jeremy and his family can stay."


Others doing actual reporting include Brett Clarkson and this is from "Canada orders U.S. deserter to leave" (Edmonton Sun) notes:

Outside the CBSA offices near Pearson International Airport yesterday, Hinzman said he still believes he and other deserters did the right thing by coming to Canada rather than fighting in Iraq.
"Iraq was an unjust war based on false pretences, and every soldier who refused to fight probably saved a lot of lives," said Hinzman, who was joined by his wife Nga Nguyen, son Liam, 6, and the couple's newborn daughter.

Jessica McDiarmid (Canadian Press) continues, "The 29-year-old was stoic as he walked out, holding the glass door open for his son Liam, 6, and his wife Nga Nguyen, who cradled a newborn daughter in her arms." And David Hutton (Globe and Mail) observes:

The decision also puts at risk similar applications filed by other U.S. deserters, which will be decided in the coming weeks, said Gordon Maynard, a prominent Vancouver immigration lawyer. Each appeal is decided on a case-by-case basis, and this isn't precedent-setting, but the decision sends a message that U.S. deserters are going to find it impossible to stay without political support, he said. "There's not a whole lot of options left for these guys," Mr. Maynard said. "There are clearly political considerations here. ... The law doesn't offer protection to these guys. It will take a discretionary political decision to save them."

Independent presidential candidate Ralph Nader posted another audio message yesterday and we will note it in full in today's snapshot.

Last night was 'movie night' for many community sites. Rebecca offered "breakfast club," Ruth went with "Betrayed," Kat offered "Pretty in Pink and Reckless," Elaine examined "Broadway Danny Rose" and Mike went with "Die Hard and Baby Boom." Cedric's "The battered syndrome is what Bambi works" and Wally's "THIS JUST IN! BARACK SPITS ON WOMEN AGAIN!" covered the latest disgusting insult to women from Team Obama. And if you missed Betty's "Testing out The Obama Playbook" and Trina's "Garlic Pasta in the Kitchen" over the weekend, please check them out.


The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.

iraq

















Posted at 07:01 am by thecommonills
 

14 US service members dead in Iraq so far this month

14 US service members dead in Iraq so far this month

Let's start with something from yesterday's snapshot:


Today the US military announced: "A Multi-National Division - Baghdad Soldier and an Iraqi interpreter were killed when the vehicle they were riding in was struck by an improvised-explosive device in northwest Baghdad at approximately 10:10 a.m. Aug. 13." With that announced death, the month of August (not even half over) has already passed the month of July for most US fatalities. The monthly toll thus far is 14 with 4141 the number killed since the start of the illegal war.

As July wound down and August began, you couldn't get away from the waves of Operation Happy Talk: Only 13 US service members killed in Iraq! August isn't at the half-way point. It is now August 14th and, not only have 14 US service members been announced dead thus far, it has now surpassed July's death toll. But no one's got time to cover that or to notice it apparently.
It's really embarrassing and pathetic. So is the absence of coverage on Iraq in today's papers.

At Babylon & Beyond (the Los Angeles Times' Iraq blog), Tony Perry filed "IRAQ: High hopes for Hit stymied by corruption" yesterday:

Hope was in the air in February when the U.S. Marines turned security responsibility for the city of Hit back to the Iraqis.
The Marines and the Iraqi security forces had wrested control of the Euphrates River Valley community away from insurgents. Now the local government, backed with advice and money from the U.S., could begin improving the lives of Hit residents, repairing damage done by decades of neglect under Saddam Hussein and then months of bloody fighting with insurgents.
The optimism has proved misplaced.
Instead, according to Marine and State Department officials, the Americans have gotten a lesson in the tangled alliances between local officials, Sunni sheiks, oil smugglers and remnants of the insurgency movement.

While the New York Times print readers search in vain through today's sorry ass edition for any news of Iraq, Campbell Robertson filed "Bloody Blessing Goes Unnoticed" at the paper's Baghdad Bureau yesterday:

The ritual killing of sheep at an official dedication ceremony isn’t particularly noteworthy in the Middle East, but for a Westerner it adds an element of drama to what would otherwise be a dull official press event. There isn’t much along those lines at dull official press events in the United States; we do have an odd thing with the president and a turkey, but the turkey gets let off the hook.
On Sunday morning, Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki was the honored guest (or respected guest, or excellent guest, depending on which welcome sign you were looking at) at a ceremony for the opening of the future meeting place of Parliament, which is also the former meeting place of Parliament during the Saddam era.
The positive takeaway of the day was that this building is outside the Green Zone: just outside, completely surrounded by blast walls and closely guarded by Iraqi police, but outside nonetheless. It was a symbolic toe in the water for the Iraqi state.

At Baghdad Life, one of the Wall St. Journal's Iraqi correspondent files "An Iraqi Family’s Disillusions with the Past, Present:"

In early 2003 just before the war began, Sadiq's father and mother were very happy about the pending U.S. invasion, although they hoped it wouldn't be a big war. They prayed for salvation from Saddam, as U.S. President George Bush had promised.
Sadiq's family called April 9, 2003, the day that Baghdad fell, "liberation day" and refused to call it other names as others did, such as the "occupation era" or "the day of the fall." They started to see the light at the end of the tunnel and they were very happy that their son could witness those days.
They started to make plans for their son's future. Even though his son was too young at 2 years old to understand, Sadiq's father told him that he was free from Saddam and he would never be forced to serve in the army. He would be able to travel out of Iraq and go to America and Europe. "You will have a good education, a better life, better food and even better toys," Sadiq's father told him.
But these dreams never came true, and as the years passed, those hopes began to fade day by day. Sadiq's mother began to feel sorry for her son and thought she had brought him into a world that was more horrible than before.

And there's also Gina Chon's "Coalition's Face-Off Against al Qaeda Enters Rocky Phase" on yesterday's press conference for the for-show action:

Major General Mohammed al-Askari, spokesman for the Iraqi Ministry of Defense, said during a press conference today that the orchards and palm groves in Diyala gave insurgents, criminals and others that the government is hunting down a lot of places to hide. Diyala lies northeast of Baghdad and borders Iran.

All of the above appears to exist to serve notice on how worthless the print editions of papers currently are and how management doesn't give a damn and actually wants to drive away their print audience. That's probably not the case but when they next whine about cutbacks and about circulation figures and ad revenues, remember they are the ones making themselves useless.

Joan notes this from Team Nader:

Denver, Minneapolis, Here We Come

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Denver, Minneapolis, Here We Come .

Are you ready to rumble?

If yes, make a contribution now to help fund our protest rallies in Denver (August 27) and Minneapolis (September 4).

Thousands of Americans will be in Denver and Minneapolis to protest the pro-war corporate controlled Democrats and Republicans.

Nader/Gonzalez has rented arenas in both cities to rally Americans opposed to the Iraq and Afghanistan wars and corporate control over all aspects of our lives.

And to lay down one simple demand - open the Presidential debates.

As Ralph put it the other day, if we are allowed into the debates - and reach tens of millions of Americans with our message - it will be a three-way race.

Thanks to your help, we are on track to be on 45 states ballots by September 20 (Currently, we are on 31.)

If we get into the debates, our six percent in the polls will jump to 15 percent or more.

And the American people will sense a three-way race.

Then everything is possible.

But first, we have to pay for our up front costs in Denver and Minneapolis.

And we need to raise $50,000 before August 20.

To pay for sound, lights, office, arena, phone lines, staff, lodging, 100,000 handbills.

We've taken some of our best road-trippers and flown them into Denver to promote the rally. We have also opened an office in downtown Denver. (See today's Denver Post article here.)

Our staff is lining everything up to make them memorable rallies.

But we've got bills to pay now.

So, drop $10, $20, $50, $100 or whatever you can -- give to your heart's content -- but not more than the legal limit of $4,600.

Then watch your name go up in lights on our new super rallies widget.

And see us move toward our goal of $50,000.

Let's crank it up.

And get it done.

Thank you in advance.

See you in Denver and Minneapolis.

Onward to November

The Nader Team

PS: Here's our most recent Open the Debates video. Please pass it around to friends and family. Thanks.

PPS: Ralph will be on NPR's Talk of the Nation between 2 p.m. and 3 p.m. EST today.


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The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.

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Posted at 07:00 am by thecommonills
 


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