Rhode Islanders stand up, say no to Walmart


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DSC_8066Members of Occupy Providence, supported by the International Union of Painters and Allied Trades, along with representatives from a wide range of progressive groups such as DARE, the Progressive Democrats of Rhode Island and others, gathered at the entrance to the Walmart on 51 Silver Spring St in Providence to demand living wages for workers and to encourage customers to shop locally. The protest was held in consort with 1,500 similar protests across the United States.

DSC_8059Over 800,000 Walmart “associates” work for wages that keep them well below the poverty line. Walmart, like many other national retail and fast food corporations, encourages their employees to make up their wage gap by applying for public assistance, meaning that taxpayers to help subsidize these corporations through SNAP and other government assistance programs. The money Walmart saves in underpaying their employees is used, as part of a vicious cycle, to directly lobby Congress to pass laws that benefit Walmart, at the expense of everyone else.

Walmart made $17 billion in profit last year, but it is estimated that each 300-employee Walmart superstore coasts taxpayers about $1,000,000 in public assistance programs. With 4,135 stores in the United States, and more opening seemingly every week, well, you do the math.

What is clear is that Walmart could more than afford to pay it’s employees a living wage, not raise prices by so much as a penny and still make billions in profits.

walmartIn addition to advocating for fair wages, the protesters also wanted to remind shoppers that shopping locally, at small businesses, is better for our local economy. Occupy Providence calls this a Solidarity Economy, and the concept is simple: “By refusing to shop at Walmart and shopping locally, Rhode Islanders’ money can stay here in Rhode Island, growing our local economy with better jobs that can help feed and support Rhode Island families.”

walmartAbsent from today’s protest were any current Walmart employees. Given that current employee protesters across the country may face harassment and arrest, never mind the prospect of losing out on wages, desirable shifts or even their jobs, this is not surprising. One man, a Rhode Island College student and former Walmart employee, did arrive at the protest. Not only did he agree with all the goals of the protesters, he assured those in attendance that every Walmart employee he knows feels the same way.

The employees at Walmart know they are getting a raw deal, and if they had options, they would take them. Unfortunately, the game is rigged against them, and its up to all of us to change the rules.

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Thomas Whall, civil disobedience and freedom of conscience


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Thomas Whall with Goblet and Medals
Thomas Whall with Goblet and Medals

A young student in New England stands up against a long held tradition in a public school for reasons of religious liberty and freedom of conscience. His example leads to a student uprising that is a model of non-violent civil disobedience. The actions of the student(s) polarizes the community, gains national attention and is used as an example of the encroachment of strange ideas infiltrating the American way of life by conservatives (and some liberals).

I’m not talking about my niece, 16-year-old Jessica Ahlquist of Cranston West High School in Rhode Island, 2011, I’m taking about 10-year-old Thomas J. Whall of the Eliot School in Boston, Massachusetts, 1859. What Whall did in 1859 and the public reaction to it provides an interesting comparison not only to the prayer banner case, but also to the recent controversy over the demonstrators who shouted down Police Commissioner Ray Kelly in a polarizing example of civil disobedience.

John T. McGreevy gives an excellent distillation of what has come to be known as  the Eliot School rebellion in his book, Catholicism and American Freedom: A History (2003). Most of the information for this post come from McGreevy’s book, but a quick and dirty article on Wikipedia also has most of the salient details.

On March 7, 1859, Thomas Whall refused to recite the ten commandments because he was a Catholic, forbidden by his religion and his conscience to read aloud from a Protestant King James Bible. It should be noted that in Massachusetts at that time, such readings were required by law. At first, Whall’s father, the school principal and some school committee members attempted to work out some sort of compromise, but a school committee member, Micah Dyer, formerly of the anti-Catholic and appropriately named Know-Nothing Party, “insisted on adherence to the letter of the law.”

Poor Thomas Whall was in a terrible pickle. A priest, Father Bernardine Wiget, had warned the boy and several hundred of his classmates that reading aloud from the King James Bible brought the children into the damnable realm of “infidelity and heresy.” When called upon to read from the wrong book, Wiget insisted that the children instead bless themselves and recite the Catholic Bible versions from memory. Wiget even threatened to read aloud from the pulpit the names of any boys who failed in their Catholic duties.

Emboldened, and perhaps more fearful of being named in church as a sinner than actually suffering eternal damnation, Whall stuck to his guns in school, and for his troubles an assistant principal, McLaurin F. Cooke, beat the boy’s hands with a rattan stick for thirty minutes, “until they were cut and bleeding.”

Such was Whall’s punishment for his civil disobedience. In solidarity, first 100 and then 300 boys were sent home from the school for refusing to follow their lessons. Some even ripped the offending Protestant passages from their schoolbooks in a fit of wanton public vandalism.

Whall and his father sued Cooke for “excessive force.” Cooke’s defense attorney asked, during the trial, “Who is this priest who comes here from a foreign land to instruct us in our laws?” and added, “the real objection is to the Bible itself, for, while that is read daily in our schools, America can never be Catholic.”

Whall became a hero to the Catholic community throughout the United States. Just as Jessica Ahlquist received a scholarship from grateful atheists and humanists from all over the world, so did Whall receive tributes, such as “…a goblet from the Cathedral schools of Covington, Kentucky, and gold medals from nativity in New York City and St. Mary’s in Alexandria, Virginia.”

Conservative Republican newspapers were less impressed, comparing Catholicism to the “monster institution of human slavery.” A leading Boston abolitionist claimed that if Protestant Christianity is removed from our nation’s schools, “…we shall convert the schools of the Puritans into heathen temples…” In other words, chaos, and a complete collapse of everything we in America hold dear.

Given that there are large differences between the situation Whall found himself in and the Ray Kelly talk at Brown University, was Whall’s civil disobedience the correct response? Should Whall have, as so many people have said concerning the protesters at Brown University, simply advocated for change within the rules established by the school and the government?

Further, given the hard won history of Catholic religious freedom in the United States why do so many conservative and Catholic commentators so strenuously argue, even today, against the righteousness of Jessica Ahlquist’s lawsuit? Bloggers Justin Katz and Travis Rowley and radio show shock jock John DePetro, all Catholics, have come out against both Jessica Ahlquist and the protesters at Brown. I am sure they will see no resemblance between three cases I am citing, but that’s my point: Is it intellectually and morally honest to pick and choose what instances of conscience and protest are good and proper based only on our pre-established prejudices?

DePetro and others love to spread the lie that Jessica Ahlquist only did what she did for the money, as if the scholarship money was the ultimate goal. Would these people be as willing to claim that Thomas Whall protested and endured punishment simply to receive golden goblets and medals? Such a charge is ridiculous, yet prejudices we should all be familiar with from our history still cloud the perceptions of some.

How easily those opposed, for political and religious reasons, forget the lessons of our past. Compare, for instance, the term “Catholic aggression” to the oft used “atheist agitator.”

“We are opposed to Romanism, but not to Romanists,” said Reverend Fuller back in 1857, intimating that good Catholics, like silent atheists and Humanists today, knew their place. The lie back then was that America was a Protestant country, with no room for Catholics or other religious minorities, unless they were silent and willing to settle for second class citizenship. A similar lie is being perpetrated today, that America is a Christian country.

It is not.

America was founded by white people, but we are not a nation of white people.

America was founded by men, but we are not a nation of men.

America was founded by Christians and deists, but we are not a nation of Christians and deists.

10-year-old Thomas Whall is a classic American hero. He practiced non-violent civil disobedience, and fought for freedom of conscience. His sacrifice and his victories went a small way towards making our country more true to its essential ideals and his efforts should be remembered by Catholics and non-Catholics alike, but more importantly, we should not be so quick to dismiss those who carry on the tradition of Thomas Whall today.

We need them now as much as we ever did.

RI Amnesty International meets with Senator Jack Reed


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Informal PortraitsOn Friday, November 1, three members of Group 49, Marcia Lieberman, Steven Kuada, Esq. and I, met met with Senator Jack Reed to discuss the long overdue closing of Guantanamo Bay and the passage of I-VAWA, the International Violence Against Women Act.

Senator Reed, while not committing to specific legislation, assured us that he would look into and seriously consider both issues. He was extremely knowledgeable about the issues and the work Amnesty International does, as one would expect of a Senator on the Armed Services Committee. He understands that the lives of American soldiers are at greater risk when the United states is not seen as a leader in human rights.

For nearly 40 years Amnesty International Group 49 has been meeting in Providence, Rhode Island, writing letters, holding vigils and working passionately for the release of prisoners of conscience held in terrible conditions around the world. Amnesty International defines a prisoner of conscience as “people who have been jailed because of their political, religious or other conscientiously-held beliefs, ethnic origin, sex, color, language, national or social origin, economic status, birth, sexual orientation or other status, provided that they have neither used nor advocated violence.”

Group 49 is made up entirely of unpaid volunteers. Marcia Lieberman, who leads the group, has been volunteering for 37 years, and due in part to the group’s efforts, many who faced certain death in dank, oppressive prisons have found freedom and been reunited with their families.

To my mind, Amnesty International Group 49 is following in the truest tradition of Rhode Island’s founder, Roger Williams. Williams helped to establish, here in Rhode Island, the first government, anywhere in the world, that recognized the essential human right of freedom of conscience and all that follows from this understanding, such as freedom of speech, freedom of religion and freedom of assembly. The best and truest expression of this can be found in working to extend these rights and protections throughout the world.

Zmitser DashkevichRecently Group 49 celebrated the release of Zmitser Dashkevich, a thirty two year old Belarusian politician convicted of “illegal political activity” (he was marching in a pro-democracy parade, maybe) and trumped up assault charges. In prison Dashkevich “was being subjected to routine prison abuse, including verbal abuse, arbitrary punishments, and threats of torture, rape, and murder,” according to Human Rights Watch. Dashkevich’s release came as a surprise, because the last time he was due to be released his sentence was arbitrarily extended, and there were fears this would happen again.

Arzhang DavoodiGroup 49’s other prisoner of conscience, Arzhang Davoodi, who needs urgent medical care as he sits in an Iranian prison,  has been less fortunate. Davoodi was arrested for criticizing Iran’s human rights record in the documentary Forbidden Iran. Group 49 has been working for the release of Davoodi for over seven years, but there seems little that can be said in a letter that can move the heart of Iranian authorities. Even as Dashkevich was being released from his cell Davoodi was was facing a new charge of “enmity against God” which put him at risk of the death penalty. His original sentence of fifteen years was for “spreading propaganda against the system” and “establishing and directing an organization opposed to the government.” He was also sentenced to seventy-five lashes, a form of cruel punishment that would certainly break the 65 year old’s precarious health.

The work of Group 49 never ends. As soon as the group learned of the release of Zmitser Dashkevich they voted unanimously to work on the behalf of Ales Bialiatski, another prisoner of conscience in Belarus jailed on trumped up tax evasion charges.

On December 15th Group 49 will hold their annual write-a-thon at First Unitarian Church on Benefit St in Providence. The public is invited to participate. Come in, write a letter (or ten) urging the release of prisoners of conscience, enjoy free snacks and maybe even win a prize.

Amnesty International Group 49 is Rhode Island’s ambassador to the world at large as regards human rights and freedoms. Every small victory Group 49 earns and every letter and postcard mailed is a credit to our great state. To hundreds of prisoners throughout the world who have sat in cells inside countries where human rights are little more than petty distractions to totalitarian ideologies, letters from Rhode Island, through Group 49, are tiny lights of hope from distant stars where freedom and dignity are the norm, not the exception.

Group 49 meets at the First Unitarian Church on Benefit St on the first Tuesday of each month, and can be contacted at amnesty49@googlegroups.com.

Brown, Paxson create ‘Committee on the Events of Oct. 29’


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Christina Paxson

Christina Paxson

The shout down at Brown has led to the creation of the “Committee on the Events of October 29,” said Brown President Christine Paxson today.

The committee will “identify issues that may have contributed to the disruption” and “address the broader issues of campus climate, free expression, and dialogue across difference,” she wrote.

Paxson authored a critical letter on the night of the incident. In this one she writes, “Making an exception to the principle of open expression jeopardizes the right of every person on this campus to speak freely and engage in open discussion. We must develop and adhere to norms of behavior that recognize the value of protest and acknowledge the imperative of the free exchange of ideas within a university.”

Conversely, Martha Yager of the the American Friends Service Committee, a Quaker organization that promotes “peace with justice … through active nonviolence” wrote an impassioned defense of the activists who shouted down Ray Kelly last week in today’s print edition of the Providence Journal (online version here).

“The students and members of the Providence community refused to be devalued. They refused to accept business as usual,” she wrote. “That act of refusal has forced conversation within Brown, and indeed in the larger community, that has the potential of being life changing and profoundly educational for the community.”

Andrew Tillett-Saks writes that social change only happens when civil discourse and civil disobedience work in tandem.

“The implication that masterful debate is the engine of social progress could not be more historically unfounded,” he writes in this post. “The free flow of ideas and dialogue, by itself, has rarely been enough to generate social progress. It is not that ideas entirely lack social power, but they have never been sufficient in winning concessions from those in power to the oppressed. The eight-hour workday is not a product of an incisive question-and-answer session with American robber barons.”

Neoliberal myths and why Ray Kelly protestors did the right thing


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ray kelly protestEvery few years, protestors shout down a conservative speaker at an American University. Every few years, rancorous debate ensues. Yet every few years, the warring sides simply yell past one another; the opponents of the ‘shout-down’ uphold the sanctity of ‘free speech’ while the protestors decry the awful ‘real world impact’ of the conservative speaker’s message.

In the wake of the Brown University shout-down of Ray Kelly, champion of the NYPD’s racist stop-and-frisk policy and racial profiling in general, the debate has resurfaced. Rather than talking past the anti-protestors’ arguments, they need to be addressed directly. The prototypical argument in denouncing the protestors is not a defense of Ray Kelly’s racism. It is twofold: First, that a free-flowing discourse on the matter will allow all viewpoints to be weighed and justice to inevitably emerge victorious on its merits. Second, that stopping a bigot from speaking in the name of freedom is self-defeating as it devolves our democratic society into tyranny.

The twofold argument against the protestors stems from two central myths of neoliberalism.

The argument for free discourse as the enlightened path to justice ignores that direct action protest is primarily responsible for most of the achievements we would consider ‘progress’ historically (think civil rights, workers’ rights, suffrage, etc.), not the free exchange of ideas. The claim that silencing speech in the name of freedom is self-defeating indulges in the myth of the pre-existence of a free society in which freedom of speech must be preciously safeguarded, while ignoring the woeful shortcomings of freedom of speech in our society which must be addressed before there is anything worth protecting.

Critics of the protest repeatedly denounced direct action in favor of ideological debate as the path to social justice. “It would have been more effective to take part in a discussion rather than flat out refuse to have him speak,” declared one horrified student to the Brown Daily Herald. Similarly, Brown University President Christina Paxson labeled the protest a detrimental “affront to democratic civil society,” and instead advocated “intellectual rigor, careful analysis, and…respectful dialogue and discussion.”

Yet the implication that masterful debate is the engine of social progress could not be more historically unfounded. Only in the fairy tale histories of those interested in discouraging social resistance does ‘respectful dialogue’ play a decisive role in struggles against injustice.

The eight-hour workday is not a product of an incisive question-and-answer session with American robber barons. Rather, hundreds of thousands of workers conducted general strikes during the nineteenth century, marched in the face of military gunfire at Haymarket Square in 1886, and occupied scores of factories in the 1930’s before the eight-hour work day became American law.

Jim Crow was not defeated with the moral suasion of Martin Luther King, Jr.’s speeches. Rather, hundreds of thousands marched on Washington, suffered through imprisonment by racist Southern law enforcement, and repeatedly staged disruptive protests to win basic civil rights.

On a more international scale, Colonialism, that somehow-oft-forgotten tyranny that plagued most of the globe for centuries, did not cease thanks to open academic dialogue. Bloody resistance, from Algeria to Vietnam to Panama to Cuba to Egypt to the Philippines to Cameroon and to many other countries, was the necessary tool that unlocked colonial shackles.

Different specific tactics have worked in different contexts, but one aspect remains constant: The free flow of ideas and dialogue, by itself, has rarely been enough to generate social progress. It is not that ideas entirely lack social power, but they have never been sufficient in winning concessions from those in power to the oppressed. Herein lies neoliberal myth number one—that a liberal free-market society will inexorably and inherently march towards greater freedom. To the contrary, direct action has always proved necessary.

Yet there are many critics of the protestors who do not claim Ray Kelly’s policies can be defeated with sharp debate. Instead, they argue that any protest in the name of freedom which blocks the speech of another is self-defeating, causing more damage to a free society by ‘silencing’ another than any potential positive effect of the protest. The protestors, the argument goes, tack society back to totalitarian days of censorship rather than forward to greater freedom. The protestors, however well intentioned, have pedantically thwarted our cherished liberal democracy by imposing their will on others.

The premise of this argument is neoliberal myth number two—that we live in a society with ‘freedom of speech’ so great it must be protected at all costs. This premise stems from an extremely limited conception of ‘freedom of speech.’ Free speech should not be considered the mere ability to speak freely and inconsequentially in a vacuum, but rather the ability to have one’s voice heard equally. Due to the nature of private media and campaign finance in American society, this ability is woefully lopsided as political and economic barriers abound. Those with money easily have their voices heard through media and politics, those without have no such freedom. There is a certain irony (and garish privilege) of upper-class Ivy Leaguers proclaiming the sanctity of a freedom of speech so contingent upon wealth and political power.

There is an even greater irony that the fight for true freedom of speech, if history is any indicator, must entail more direct action against defenders of the status quo such as Ray Kelly. To denounce such action out of indulgence in the neoliberal myth of a sacrosanct, already existing, freedom of speech is to condemn the millions in this country with no meaningful voice to eternal silence.

Every few years, an advocate of oppression is shouted down. Every few years, the protestors are denounced. They are asked to trust open, ‘civil’ dialogue to stop oppression, despite a historical record of struggle and progress that speaks overwhelmingly to the contrary. They are asked to restrain their protest for freedom so to protect American freedom of speech, despite the undeniable fact that our private media and post-Citizens United political system hear only dollars, not the voices of the masses. Some will claim that both sides have the same goal, freedom, but merely differ on tactics. Yet the historical record is too clear and the growing dysfunctions in our democracy too gross to take any such claims as sincere. In a few years, when protestors shout down another oppressive conservative, we will be forced to lucidly choose which side we are on: The oppressors or the protestors. The status quo or progress.

Amnesty International USA has a new exec director


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Steve Hawkins-jpeg
AIUSA Executive Director Steve Hawkins

Last Wednesday I was in Boston to meet the new executive director of Amnesty International USA, Steven Hawkins. Hawkins is a lawyer with a lifetime worth of experience working for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund where he “represented African-American men facing the death penalty throughout the deep south.” From the NAACP he worked as the executive director of the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty before landing at AIUSA. When I met the man, he had been on the job for about six days, having already met people throughout the Amnesty International USA network in something like eight cities. He really hit the ground running.

The death penalty is not something we give much thought to here in Rhode Island, given our state’s proud history of having abolished the practice in 1852. Though our state had a death penalty statute “on the books” from 1872-1984, we haven’t executed anyone since 1845. Recently Governor Chafee took a stand against a federal death penalty case being brought against the murderer Jason Pleau, for which he faced some hard criticism. Occasionally some member of the General Assembly introduces a bill to bring the death penalty back, but the reality is that the death penalty is gone from Rhode Island, and in this way, as in others throughout our history, our state is a national leader.

Executive Director Hawkins was very direct about the challenges facing Amnesty International USA. The organization has gone through some hard times in recent years but it is hoped that new leadership can instill renewed vigor. Hawkins believes in AIUSA’s ability to fight for Human Rights both here in the United States and internationally, writing,

Amnesty International USA is uniquely positioned to connect discrimination against the LGBT community here in the United States to the discrimination and the LGBT community in Russia, Uganda, and Honduras experiences. We can connect police torture and illegal surveillance that occurs in the United States to similar abuses occurring in China, Egypt and elsewhere. We can connect a young woman in the U.S. fighting for reproductive freedom to women in El Salvador, Ireland and other countries who are fighting for the same rights.

I have been a proud supporter of Amnesty International for many years, and have participated in the annual Global Write-a-Thons, which take place in December, sponsored by the local Amnesty International Group 49 out of Providence, which was founded in 1976! This group has work tirelessly for the release and fair treatment of prisoners on conscience for over thirty-five years, with active members who have been there from the beginning.

In the meantime, consider spending $30 to participate in AIUSA’s Northeast Regional Conference, to be held at Boston University on November 9th.

Throughout the day you will learn about human rights violations taking place throughout the world and what we can do to stop these violations. Participants will learn new organizing skills, how to take actions and will ultimately be inspired by many of our featured speakers and workshops.

Some of this year’s focus will be on human tracking, human rights in Russia and what we can do in the lead up to the 2014 Olympics, and US Security Issues.

Nichols, McChesney talk ‘Dollarocracy’ at Brown


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There’s a great free event at Brown next Wednesday, about the biggest threat to American democracy — and how we can fix it.  It’s cosponsored by a number of great orgs, including mine: Demand Progress.
Join Nation magazine DC correspondent/MSNBC contributor John Nichols and renowned communications scholar Robert McChesney for a discussion of their new book:
Where: Smith-Buonanno Hall, Brown University, Room 106
95 Cushing St. (corner of Cushing and Brown)
Admission: FREE
When President Barack Obama was reelected, some pundits argued that, despite unbridled campaign spending, here was proof that big money couldn’t buy elections. The exact opposite was the case. The 2012 election was a quantum leap: it was America’s first $10 billion election campaign. And it solidified the power of a new class in American politics: the fabulously wealthy individuals and corporations who are radically redefining our politics in a way that, failing a dramatic intervention, signals the end of our democracy. It is the world of Dollarocracy.
Event cosponsored by Brown Democracy Matters, DemandProgress.org, and RI Progressive Democrats of America.

An alternative to war: Syrian Refugee Relief


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Syrian ReliefThe Humanists of Rhode Island (HRI) learned last week that our group has won 2012’s Heart of Humanism Rookie of the Year Award for Best Team Added in 2012.  This is an award given annually by the Foundation Beyond Belief, a “a 501(c)(3) charitable foundation created to focus, encourage and demonstrate humanist generosity and compassion.”

HRI was recognized because of our monthly work with Habitat for Humanity, where we help build houses on the second Saturday of every month, (feel free to join us, whatever your philosophical orientation might be) our participation in Light the Night, a walk to generate money to combat Lymphoma and Leukemia, (you can contribute to our cause here), our four time a year highway clean-ups in Cranston and our infrequent blood drives, among other things we do.

The Heart of Humanism award came with $50 in prize money, which the group has decided to donate to the International Rescue Committee’s efforts to aid Syrian Refugees, and we’re sweetening the deal by raising more funds for that effort. Don’t be surprised if you see a couple of Humanists with buckets collecting money at Saturday’s “No War on Syria” rally at Burnside Park from 1-3 pm as well. (But if you can’t make it there you can always contribute to our efforts by clicking on the photo that accompanies this piece or following this link.)

Too often, when big things are happening on the national and international scene, we can feel hopeless and small. When that happens we have to look to ourselves and work together to make the world a better place. A few dollars given today may help change the life of a child thousands of miles away tomorrow.

Cicilline still on fence re: Syria, advises caution


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photo-CicDC-20130910-1-akuWASHINGTON, DC — I am in Washington, representing both RIPDA and myself, arguing against a military response to the recent horrific use of chemical weapons in Syria.

I had the good fortune to talk to Rep. Cicilline staff members in his DC office today about his position on such a strike. The staffers indicated that the Representative is listening to his constituents carefully and intently. This was borne out by their careful consideration of our anti-war thoughts on the Syrian situation. The Representative has yet to make a final decision on a possible US response.

However, Rep. Cicilline’s current thinking is that all possibilities should be explored before any military action is taken, and that such a decision be made with great care and deliberation. Note that in his capacity as a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee he has current knowledge on the deliberations in the House, as well as influence on the outcome.

I say “current thinking” with a grain of salt. The situation is quite fluid. Things were developing as we talked. Due to no fault of their own,  and understandably so, I seemed to have more current info than the staffers did, the latest New York Times posting having occurred 4 minutes before our 11:30 AM meeting.

More and more nations and diplomats are lining up behind Russia’s Sec’y Kerry-derived proposal for international monitoring and destruction of Bashar Assad’s chemical weapons. This includes a high-ranking Syrian official; according to an earlier New York Times post:

BEIRUT, Lebanon — The Syrian prime minister, Wael al-Halki, said Tuesday that his country supported a Russian proposal for the Syrian government to give up chemical weapons to avoid a possible military strike by the United States.

Syrian state television quoted Mr. Halki as saying that the government backed the initiative “to spare Syrian blood.”

(Emphasis is mine.)

Right now, 1:30 PM, diplomatic developments are still happening fast and furiously, at the UN, the Congress, and the White House.

I’ll post again later today, as I am able to.

Gus Uht

 

The Peace Flag Project and the Month of Peace


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Month of PeaceLost among the headlines surrounding potential U.S. involvement in the ongoing and tragic Syrian Civil War is that the month of September 2013 is the month of peace, and a series of activities and events have been planned around September 21st, the United Nations International Day of Peace.

Ginny Fox is the Director of the Peace Flag Project, and is instrumental is raising awareness about the promise and possibility of peace. The Peace Flag Project is inspired by Tibetan Prayer Flags, (a short history can be seen here) when it was “suggested by contemporary Tibetans that we create our own prayer flags by imprinting them with poems, prayers and symbols from the great faiths of the world in hopes of uniting them in a spirit of peace and harmony.”

For the past several years the Peace Flag Project has celebrated the UN International Day of Peace with a Peace Walk at India Point Park and this year is no exception. In addition, there are at least ten other events planned including Peace Flag workshops, an art exhibit, festivals, films and concerts. (See the schedule below)

If advertisers can talk about the number of impressions an advertising campaign can generate towards building brand identification and awareness then perhaps Peace Flags, vigils and other events can make a similar impression in our minds regarding Peace. The first thing we have to do, of course, is believe such a thing as an end to War is possible.

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Peace work in RI: The East Bay Citizens for Peace


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1006364_594478320595414_1639023835_nToday I am going to write about the end of war.

I’m not just talking about the end of the two or three wars the United States currently find themselves embroiled in, but the end of all war, everywhere on earth.  This is not an impossible, utopian dream, but a very real possibility.

With the Obama Administration strongly making the case for a unilateral strike against Syria, the anti-war movement in the United States is starting to heat up. This is a national and international movement, but it has grassroots right here in Rhode Island.

Over the next few days I’m going to talk about these anti-War efforts, starting with the East Bay Citizens for Peace (EBCP).  According to their website “The East Bay Citizens for Peace was formed in February, 2003 by a group of Rhode Islanders from Bristol, Warren, Barrington and East Providence, concerned with the imminent war with Iraq and the Constitutional freedoms threatened under the Patriot Act.” Over the last decade this dynamic and plucky group has organized dozens of events that present an alternative to the never-ending War posture of the United States.

I attended a presentation put on by the group last year featuring West Point graduate, Iraq War Veteran, author and peace activist, Paul K. Chappell on the subject of “Why World Peace Is Possible.” It was eye opening and instructive to learn that there are actual paths towards the cessation of war, without compromising our national security. For instance, Chappell pointed out that the United States Navy presently maintains eleven carrier groups. No other country seems to have more than one each.

Perhaps our attitude towards war is shaped in part by our defense expenditures. This is only one of many reasons why the EBCP endorses the 25% solution, which would “cut U.S. military spending by 25% without endangering the country’s security.”

The EBCP holds an ongoing peace vigil from 11am to noon on the second Saturday of every month in Bristol, Rhode Island, in front of the Post Office. I asked a woman at a recent vigil why the library was chosen, assuming that the Post Office represented a convenient federal target for the group’s message, but was assured that the Post Office was chosen because it was centrally located and got a lot of foot traffic.

As I spent time chatting with the group members I observed quite a few people who seemed happy to receive the group’s anti-War literature and say a few good words about peace. This is a dedicated, wonderful group of concerned citizens trying to have an impact on the world, by making small impressions and spreading the word that peace is not only desirable, but completely possible.

Upcoming events include:

Monthly Vigil for Peace & Justice
September 14 at 11:00am
Bristol Customshouse and Post Office in Bristol, Rhode Island

Guns: Public Policy, Politics & Law
September 17 at 7:00pm
Barrington Public Library in Barrington, Rhode Island

Democracy Now!: The War & Peace Report (segments on Syria)
September 23 at 7:00pm
Rogers Free Library in Bristol, Rhode Island

The EBCP is asking us to call our representatives and SAY NO TO US MILITARY INTERVENTION IN SYRIA.

RI SENATOR JACK REED 401-943-3100

RI SENATOR SHELDON WHITEHOUSE 401-453-5294

RI CONGRESSMAN DAVID CICILLINE 401-729-5600

RI CONGRESSMAN JIM LANGEVIN (202) 225-2735

MA SENATOR ELIZABETH WARREN 617-565-3170

MA SENATOR EDWARD MARKEY 617-565-8519

Here are photos from Saturday’s Emergency Vigil in Opposition to US Military Intervention in Syria.

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Happy Labor Day: A history of working class music


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Happy Labor Day, Rhode Island. Enjoy your day off, and thank a union member that you get them. Here are some of my favorite working class songs to help you celebrate.

While all such lists much start with Dust Bowl Poet Woody Guthrie, the godfather of the modern working class song and a real life folk hero himself, he certainly wasn’t the first one to sing about labor struggles.

That dubious distinction belongs to the early American slaves.

Blues guitarists like Leadbelly took it from there.

And then artists like Johnny Cash took over.

Joan Baez was one of the folk singers to follow in Woodie Guthrie’s footsteps by singing about folk heroes like Joe Hill, most famous for saying, “Don’t mourn. Organize.”

All of a sudden, the working class was a meme in pop music once again.

Reggae legend Bob Marley wrote many songs about the struggles of black people. This one is my favorite.

Once John Lennon shed Paul and Ringo, he joined in too:

But no one since Woodie Guthrie has better portrayed the working class struggle than Bruce Springsteen. This song is called “Factory”

Through the mansions of fear, through the mansions of pain
I see my daddy walking through the factory gate in the rain
Factory takes his hearing, but he understands
He’s just a working, a working a working man

End of the day, factory whistle cries
Men walk through the gates with death in their eyes
And you just better believe boy somebody’s gonna get hurt tonight
It’s the work, the working, just the working life

The eighties, for reasons related to Ronald Reagan, wasn’t the best era for working class anthems, but punk bands kept the tradition alive.

So did country music, and to some extent Hollywood:

Here’s another of my favorite working class songs that come from the stage. “Annie” is one of America’s great examples of anti-government propaganda – the poor kids are mistreated in the public orphanage until Daddy Warbucks comes and rescues the lucky ones. The American dream, indeed.

In the 1990’s rap acts like Public Enemy kept alive the tradition of creating music about the struggles of the poor.

And today, artists like Steve Earle are keeping the tradition alive.

Teachers, hotel workers unite for Labor Day


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Working Rhode Islanders from across the economic spectrum (well the lower 99% of that spectrum, anyways) will unite this Labor Day as Jobs for Justice and the the Coalition to Defend Public Education will be marching together through downtown Providence Monday.

Jobs for Justice will be calling attention to the struggles of the staff at the Renaissance Hotel, who have long been fighting the poor conditions imposed by the multinational management company that owns the hotel. The Coalition to Defend Public Education does much of the grassroots organizing among teachers.

This could be a powerful coalition if these two groups figure out more ways to work together. The teachers begin their protest at 3 pm in front of City Hall in Providence. The hotel workers begin at 4:30 on Francis St, across from the Providence Place Mall.

Members of Local 217 gather outside the Renaissance Hotel for an Informational Picket.
Members of Local 217 gather outside the Renaissance Hotel for an Informational Picket.

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Arson is an extreme reaction to a 10 cent toll


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Location of fire at Sakonnet River BridgeA ten cent user fee on the new Sakonnet River Bridge has seemingly inspired political sabotage as authorities say an arsonist targeted the tolls Saturday morning.

The alleged act of extremism hopefully says less about how opposed community members are about paying a dime to cross the new bridge than about the consequences – good, bad or indifferent and intended or not – of radical rhetoric in political debate.

“Rhode Island’s government is now engendering such hopelessness and distrust of the system that people are resorting to criminal activity to push back against it,” writes Justin Katz, in response, this morning. Or someone got a little over-inspired by the grandiose tactics implemented by a vocal minority of influential conservatives who have exploited this issue to further their ideological assault on Rhode Island.

In either case, the right should be cautious of crying wolf. Paying a dime to be able to drive over Narragansett Bay is a flimsy reason to declare a revolution.

Providence students sit in at Ed Dept., wait for Gist


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Members of the Providence Student Union are staging a sit in at the Department of Education until they get a meeting with Commissioner Deborah Gist, according to Aaron Regunberg.

UPDATE: The students saw Gist and they scheduled a meeting for Thursday, said Regunberg.

Here’s the full release:

Around forty Providence students have sat down in the front office of the Rhode Island Department of Education, saying they are willing to wait as long as necessary until Commissioner Gist will come down to talk with them. They have been waiting close to two hours. “We’ve come here today to share with the Commissioner some new information regarding the economic impact of the NECAP graduation requirement on students,” said Tim Shea, a Providence high school student. “We only wanted a few minutes of her time. But when she refused to come down and even speak with the students she’s supposed to be representing, we decided to just sit down and wait for her.” Students, members of the youth group the Providence Student Union, say they have asked for the Deputy Commissioner, the RIDE Chief of Staff, and other RIDE officers and none are willing to give even a few minutes of their time.

Developing….

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Kristina Fox elected president of YDRI


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Providence Mayor Angel Taveras confers with Kristina Fox, who is flanked by Young Dems Alex Morash and Aaron Regunberg.
Providence Mayor Angel Taveras confers with Kristina Fox, who is flanked by Young Dems Alex Morash and Aaron Regunberg.

Kristina Fox, erstwhile of Ocean State Action and a champion for so many progressive causes, is the newly elected president of the Young Democrats of Rhode Island. I caught up with her on Facebook earlier today as she was waiting at TF Green to fly to the Young Democrats national conference in San Antonio, Texas.

Here’s most of our conversation:

Hi Kristina, and congrats on being elected president of the Young Democrats of Rhode Island!
Thank you, Bob! I’m quite excited and honored to be the new President of YDRI
I’m excited for you and the Young Dems! Can you tell me a little bit about your organization? What do you do, and why?
I’m happy to! YDRI is an organization made up of young folks (young defined as less than 36 yrs old) who work to improve and empower our RI community in keeping with the principles of the Democratic party: equality, diversity and inclusiveness. All of us became involved with YDRI because we care deeply about RI, and want to ensure that we get back on the path to success. As wonderful as our home is, there’s a lot of unjust things happening. We want to change that.
So, why limit your group to those under 36 years old (says the 39-yr-old)? why do young Democrats caucus like this without us old folks?
The age limit is set by the national YDA charter. Age is no barrier to being part of the movement though! As I’m fond of saying, we mean “young at heart” as well.
So what do the YDRI do? Other than meet and talk politics…
Right now our top priority is building building building up our membership! We want young dems from Woonsocket to Westerly involved in our work. To that effect, we’ll be having an event at the Galilee Beach Club in Narragansett on Monday August 19th. It kicks off at 6:30pm. I’m really looking forward to it
Me too … I love Galilee! What a nice place for young Democrats to converge! Did I see there is a South County chapter now, too?
We’re working on starting a SoCo chapter. This event at GBC is a kick off for that. A great group of women have been instrumental in organizing this: Abby Godino, Danielle Dirocco and Ann Little. Ann is also the YDRI Women’s Caucus Chair
I look forward to meeting up with you liberal whippersnappers at the beach! How do you plan to make a difference politically?
I’m glad that you’ll be joining us!
Most importantly we want to empower and involve young folks in the political process. Unemployment, affordable housing, access to quality affordable health care, work supports, education, civil rights: these issues, and a whole host of others, deeply impact young Rhode Islanders. Yet, for the most part, we aren’t at the table when decisions are made. That needs to change. When we make our voices heard, we have a better RI.
Your group seems not only young but also pretty progressive?
Young people overall tend to be more politically progressive. YDRI is proud to be a deep shade of blue
Do you have many centrist Dems in your ranks? Or, let me propose this hypothetical: what if a 28-year-old Doc Corvese-type wanted to be a member of the YDRI … would he or she be welcome?
Like the general Dem party, we’re a big tent. If a person identifies as a Democrat, that person is 100% welcome in YDRI. A twentysomething self-identified Democrat who doesn’t believe in marriage equality, a woman’s reproductive rights or tax equity? I’d love to have tea with this person and understand where they’re coming from.
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Then she had to board her plane. Congrats Kristina and have fun in San Antonio … here’s hoping next year’s Young Democrats convention is held in Providence or Newport (or both).

Apples to Twinkies: Cicilline on subsidy reform

DSC04357The Rhode Island Public Interest Research Group (RI PERG) released a report this morning during a press conference at Hope Market in Lippitt Park in Providence revealing that agricultural subsidies pay for twenty Twinkies, but only half an apple, per taxpayer. The report, entitled “” finds that since 1995, $19 billion in tax money has subsidized junk food ingredients versus only $688 million for apples. According to RI PIRG canvasser Corinne Winter, most fruits and vegetables grown in Rhode Island are considered “specialty crops” by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) meaning that Rhode Island is eligible for only a tiny fraction of taxpayer funded farm subsidies.

This kind of tax subsidy has a direct impact on issues like obesity, especially considering that nearly $17 billion has been spent since 1995, on “,” according to Winter.

Congressman David Cicilline was at the press conference to speak to a sizable crowd (and woefully inadequate press) on the subject. He pointed to a Republican congress more beholden to corporate welfare through farm subsidies than to supporting important programs like SNAP that help feed people across the nation.

“If you are looking for an example of congressional disfunction” the Congressman said, “the Farm Bill is a very good place to start.”

For decades the Farm Bill has lead to a set of distorted incentives in food production.

It could not be clearer: Our nation’s agricultural policies are explicitly subsidizing the production and purchasing of unhealthy foods instead of fruits and vegetables.

This year, says Cicilline, Republicans in Congress have “doubled down on this strategy and made it even worse.”

The first version of the Republican’s proposed Farm Bill increased these unhealthy subsidies, and to pay for them they proposed defunding the essential SNAP program by $20 billion and wanted to cut what few subsidies actually exist for healthy fruits and vegetables. This bill failed, but Republican leadership are now forwarding another bill that cuts programs designed to provide low-income families with access to nutritious foods completely.

So much for family values.

Jesse Rye, managing director of Farm Fresh Rhode Island said that the SNAP program “is such an important program to so many Rhode Island citizens and it’s really critical to the health and well being of our state. [Farm Fresh RI] pilot[s] a program at farmer’s markets that incentivizes SNAP benefits usage at farmer’s markets so that when someone comes to a market like this, and takes their SNAP benefit cards, they get 40% of a bonus on top of whatever the value of their card is.”

“People are happy,” continued Rye, “to go to a farmer’s market and get healthy, fresh food right from their farmers.”

You can watch the press conference in its entirety below:

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Hate groups not welcome


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DSC04172There’s been a lot written on this site and elsewhere about what makes Rhode Island so great. The Rhode Island Foundation has even launched It’s All In Our Backyard, “an internal marketing campaign designed to change the way Rhode Islanders talk about their state” because, they say, the “state has a self-esteem problem.”

In this spirit I’d like to share an observation that occurred to me yesterday as I covered various marriage equality celebrations throughout the state:

Rhode Island is great, because we don’t have hard-core hate groups, they have to be imported.

Think back to the marriage equality hearings that took place at the State House earlier this year. Many people spoke passionately for and against the marriage equality bills. Those opposed to the bills on deeply religious grounds, whether we agree with their theology or not, were for the most part not motivated by hate, but by faith.

When the Faith Alliance, a coalition of various religious groups, was formed to oppose marriage equality here in our state, only one member organization had the distinct “honor” of being cited by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) as an actual, certified hate group: MassResistance. As their name implies, MassResistance is from Massachusetts. Sure, the Faith Alliance was organized by the National Organization for Marriage, but that’s also an out of town organization. Other members, including local chapters of the Knights of Columbus, the Hispanic Coalition of Pastors and Ministers and even the Catholic Church might have hateful members, but their primary mission is not one of hate.

Mark Potok, senior fellow with the SPLC confirmed this for me when he said, “it is highly unusual for the Catholic Church to work with groups like MassResistance.”

Yesterday the Westboro Baptist Church (WBC), a crazed religious cult best known for picketing the funerals of soldiers killed in our foreign wars, came to Rhode Island to protest the first day same-sex marriages licenses were to be issued.

They came from Kansas. All four of them.

In response to yet another visit from an out of town hate group, Rhode Islanders responded the best way they could: they partied. Hundreds of Rhode Islanders, united in the spirit of tolerance, acceptance and equality, sent the WBC back to Kansas with their tail between their legs by singing, dancing, dressing in costumes and displaying humorous and mocking signs. Our message was clear: In Rhode Island, expressing intolerance and hate makes you an object of ridicule.

The WBC did our state a favor by coming to town yesterday. There are some people in this state who might have wanted to protest the arrival of marriage equality, but to do so they would have had to stand side by side with the WBC. As I tried to point out in my posts concerning the Faith Alliance and MassResistance, we are, rightly or wrongly, measured in part by the company we keep. As long as the WBC clown car was in town, unintentionally mocking those opposed to marriage equality, our local anti-marriage equality response had to be muted. Even our most vocal and local purveyors of hate (and they are out there, as you know) knew better than to appear to be aligned with the WBC.

Perhaps the WBC’s appearance here in Rhode Island even gave some marriage equality opponents something to think about regarding their attitudes towards the LGBTQ community. (Perhaps not.)

Groups like MassResistance and the Westboro Baptist Church, when they do come to Rhode Island to spread their noxious filth, should not be ignored by reasonable and responsible people. The Rhode Island Council of Churches (RICC) issued a statement to the press on Tuesday appealing “to the media to ignore the Westboro protests as the tangential and irrelevant phenomena that they are.” I could not agree more with the spirit of the RICC’s statement, but in practical terms, when reasonable and responsible people fail to counter and cover the WBC, only the unreasonable and irresponsible are left.

In yesterday’s celebrations and counter-protests, people of good character modeled decent behaviors for those who might be less inclined to act responsibly in reaction to the WBC’s presence. Large groups of people can sometimes become unwieldy and dangerous things, but one factor that can minimize the risk of a crowd becoming a mob is the presence of strong leaders and responsible participants. Another factor that tends to reign in bad behavior is cameras. People act and speak differently if they suspect their behaviors might be broadcast to the world. Yesterday’s counter actions in response to the WBC were the height of civility and peace because the people participating were at their core civil and peaceful, but also because those who might have more sinister motivations found their ideas lost in the crowd.

Hate needs to be actively countered and exposed to sunlight, lest it fester and grow.

We in Rhode Island should be proud because yesterday we as a people demonstrated decency in the face of indecency, love in the face of hate and laughter in the face of insult.

Good job, Rhode Island.

Climate activists protest Brayton Point power plant


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hljkhjh Hundreds of climate activists, (including members of Keepers of the Mountains, Fossil Free RI, and 350.org), marched on the Brayton Point Coal Plant yesterday; I counted myself lucky to be among them. The action began with Saturday’s 6 hour long training, and resulted in 44 arrests on Sunday afternoon- (and more than a few sunburned faces).

Louis Alstadt, (former Vice President of ExxonMobil), recently told the world: “It will take masses of people demanding action from politicians to offset the huge amount of money that the fossil fuel industry is using to influence lawmakers.”  This statement reflects our reasons for taking to the streets, demonstrating passion and perseverance, in such great numbers.  The shared beliefs which brought us together were summarized by one of the rally’s first speakers: “Their vision of profit by coal or petrol is wrong.”  The industry has abused Appalachian workers, leveled mountains, and impacted our environment from West Virginia to Massachusetts, and remains the largest single source of global warming pollution in the world.

brayton point“We believe that climate change is an absolutely urgent and pressing threat that will kill people,” said Craig Altemose, director of the Better Future Project.  Yet he also noted that this isn’t really just “climate change” – it is, more specifically, “global warming.”   We must call it what it is.  He described Russia’s heat wave in 2010, which claimed the lives of 15,000, and discussed the global impact of that season.  With coal comprising one-third of all CO2 emissions, we have no choice but to end our consumption within the next 30-40 years.  To ignore this fact (or to buy the myth of ‘carbon-free coal’) is what one speaker jokingly called “wicked stupid.”

ResizedImage_1375045185756Dominion Energy, the owner of Brayton Point, has invested $1 billion to make the plant more “environmentally friendly.”  This is laughable when it contributes to higher rates of asthma and cancer, and tops the EPA’s list of “most toxic emissions” in Massachusetts.

And what did we face, as peaceful protestors looking to gain Gov. Deval Patrick’s attention?

One hundred law enforcement officials from the Somerset Police Department, Massachusetts State Police, the Massachusetts Environmental Police, the Southeastern Massachusetts Law Enforcement Council, and members of the Bristol County sheriff’s office. Those arrested were taken to a makeshift jail set up by the sheriff’s office at a National Guard armory in Fall River.  However, our criminal (in)justice system is not enough to stop many folks who see this as an urgent life-or-death matter.

ResizedImage_13750451849348According to the FB page of 350 Massachusetts, Turner Bledsoe (79 years old) had this to say, regarding his arrest: “This is the most important thing we can do at this time. We’re on the tipping point. Emissions must go down. If we don’t do something about it, we’re in the soup.”

One protestor I spoke with said she appreciated everyone shouting “Thank you, We love you!” at the arrestees.  The gratitude and beauty was indeed palpable, and I left with a renewed sense of purpose.  It isn’t that we “should” do more; we must do more.  When lives and ecosystems are at stake, it is an obligation- to the earth and to each other.

Activists: More than 40 arrested at Brayton Point


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Activists say about 40 people were arrested today outside of Brayton Point power plant in near Fall River as a protest against the major Massachusetts polluter’s contributions to climate change drew almost 400 people.

“Arrests took place quickly and peacefully around noon,” said Katrina Chaves. She will post a more detailed report later tonight.

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Occupy Fall River recorded this really sweet video from 9:30 in the morning.


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