Jason Collins

“I’m a 34 year old NBA center. I’m black. And I’m gay.” With these simple words, Jason Collins made history as the first actively playing out athlete in the NBA, NHL, MLB or NFL.

The overwhelming reaction to Collins’ important moment was positive. NBA Commissioner David Stern said that he was “proud he has assumed the leadership mantle on this very important issue.”

More notable among the myriad positive statements from athletes was the words of Kobe Bryant since he had once been caught using a homophobic slur on camera. Kobe tweeted that Collins should not “suffocate who u r because of the ignorance of others” and also spoke out against those using homophobic language.

Supportive statements of solidarity flooded in from across the globe as current athletes, retired players and fans sent their good will to the journeyman center as he bravely made history.

But not all the feedback was positive. Retired player Larry Johnson typified concerns about the locker room by stating that a person attracted to the same sex doesn’t “belong in a man’s locker room.”

It is ignorant to think that Johnson and other players never had a gay teammate or that players today don’t have a gay teammate and yet, there has been no locker room issue. Hall of Famer Charles Barkley took issue with the line of thought exemplified by Johnson and noted that “Everybody played with a gay teammate…and it’s no big deal. First of all, I think it’s an insult to gay people to think they’re trying to pick up on their teammates.” Albeit mixing sports here, NFL free agent punter and LGBT ally Chris Kluwe wrote to possible teammates concerned about being hit on/checked out: “Grow the f*** up. This is our job, we are adults, so would you kindly act like one? There are millions of people across America who work with gay co-workers every day, and they handle their business without riotous orgies consuming the work environment.”

Other criticisms were coated in Christian fundamentalism but had a core of media opportunism. On the day of Collins’ announcement, ESPN brought sportswriters Chris Broussard, a conservative evangelical, and LZ Granderson, a gay man, on the show Outside the Lines to discuss the news of Collins’ coming out.

After being fed a question from the ESPN moderator/host about whether or not Collins could be both gay and a Christian, Broussard said that Collins and others were “walking an open rebellion to God, to Jesus Christ.” Though, to his credit, even Broussard stated that “Collins displayed bravery with his announcement” and welcomed him to continue playing in the league.

ESPN quickly distanced themselves from the home brewed controversy and apologized for becoming a “distraction.” Yet, that was precisely what they intended to be. After all, it was the anchor who broached the topic of Collins’ religiosity. It is also well known that multiple ESPN shows have a history of making controversial statements that often overshadow the real news story. This has been a hallmark of corporate media and has had an increasing presence on ESPN programming as there is a greater push for higher ratings and publicity.

The last category of Collins critics were those of privilege. Radio show host Mike Francesa announced it meant “less than nothing” to him that “there is a gay player now out in the NBA.” He was joined by NFL player Asante Samuel who asked “Straight people are not announcing they’re straight, so why does everybody have to announce their sexuality or whatever?”

Such thinking as typified by Francesa and Samuel is heteronormativity. It fails to see that coming out of the closet is a brave choice, especially in a world where they face bullying, harassment, violence and possibly being kicked out of their home, where they can be legally fired from their jobs in many states and that laws still prevent them from having full rights. It fails to see that holding hands/kissing/being affectionate with an opposite sex partner is an open announcement of one’s heterosexuality.

The coverage of Jason Collins coming out has caused some legitimate criticism about the state of media coverage. Much of the reason his coming out has received so much more attention is that male sports, especially the NBA/NFL/MLB/NHL, often receive the vast majority of print and TV media coverage, especially compared to women’s sports.

There have been a multitude of athletes that have come out, especially in the women’s games. Yet, when women’s athletes come out, it often only reinforces the oft-used stereotype that female athletes are ‘mannish’ or ‘lesbians.’ When paired with a lack of substantive media coverage, the issue is even more compounded. Hence, stories like the recent announcement that  dominant college player and #1 WNBA draft pick Brittney Griner was a lesbian was barely a blip on the radar.

Jason Collins’ Sports Illustrated announcement garnered so much attention because his admission directly undercuts the ‘macho real man’ ideology that permeates much of major professional sport and because of the substantive media attention already given to professional basketball.

The Jason Collins story is a sports story, but it is also a reflection of our society. It is a mirror of the decades of strong willed activism by the LGBT communities and their allies. It reflects the state of the world in which we live where the overwhelming majority of responses are pushing for inclusivity and acceptance, yet there remain some critics and naysayers. Even the media coverage about Collins from a perspective critical of male privilege is a reflection of the imperfect world in which we live.
The huge shift in having the first out athlete has struck a major blow against the stereotypical ideas about masculinity and shown that sport has become a much more inclusive space. As Collins admitted, other athletes paved the way for him. He has joined the pantheon of important figures that will help pave the way for future generations of athletes and how fans perceive/accept them.

Posted in African Americans, LGBTQA, Media, News, Politics | Comments Off on Jason Collins

C-U Marches for Immigration Reform

(Compiled from C-U Immigration Forum materials)

On Wednesday, April 10th, over 200 students and community members braved steady rain and cold to support comprehensive immigration reform (CIR). Families, students, community and church leaders marched in solidarity from the University Y to the Unitarian Universalist Church, heard speakers and then continued on to a candlelight vigil at the federal courthouse in Urbana. The streets echoed with chants of “What do we want? Citizenship! When do we want it? Now!” and “Tell me what democracy sounds like! This is what democracy sounds like!”

CIRprotestThe event, “Light the Pathway to Citizenship—Don’t Block It,” sponsored by more than two dozen local organizations and congregations, was just one of dozens of events taking place as part of a National Day of Action to build support for CIR in communities throughout the nation. “We want to demonstrate to our elected officials that there is broad community support for Comprehensive Immigration Reform,” explained Ricardo Diaz, a member of the Steering Committee of the C-U Immigration Forum who organized the event. “There is growing consensus in our country that the time has come to fix our broken immigration system and provide a pathway to citizenship to the many undocumented immigrants living in and contributing to the vitality of our community.”

CIRprotest2With a proposal in discussion at the White House and in Congress, the Champaign-Urbana Immigration Forum counters with a stance we believe to be more humane and just to the millions of Americans living with an undocumented status today. The November elections reset the national debate on immigration reform, forcing even the most ardent opponents of immigration reform to reconsider their position. As a result, there is a narrow window of opportunity to make CIR a reality and provide a pathway to citizenship for millions of our family, friends and neighbors. Learn more about our stance at the C-U Immigration Forum’s website: http://immigration-forum.blogspot.com/

C-U Immigration Forum meets at the University Y every second Tuesday of the month at 5 p.m.

 

 

Posted in Human Rights, Immigration, Politics, Voices of Color | Comments Off on C-U Marches for Immigration Reform

Mobilization in Al Ma’sarah: “We Will Keep Coming Back”

“You must refuse to be in the army. Look into my eyes, we are all human,” declared Mahmoud Zwahre, popular committee leader in the West Bank Bethlehem district village of Al Ma’sarah, addressing dozens of M4 toting Israeli soldiers. “We are here to condemn what the Israeli government does against the Palestinian people. You must let us through.”

He was standing at the 3152 road that winds from his small village to the towering Efrat settlement, joined by 40 Al Ma’sarah villagers, Israeli, and international activists. The group had attempted to march to the settlement to protest the expropriation of Al Ma’sarah’s agricultural lands and flooding of their fields from settlement water drainage, but they were blocked by lines of soldiers wielding shields and weapons in front of parked IDF personnel carriers.

This march fell on Palestinian Children’s Day, an especially pertinent commemoration just two weeks after more than two dozen children between ages 7 and 15 were mass arrested by Israeli soldiers while they were en route to school in the West Bank town of Hebron/Al Khalil, an incident captured on video.

A handful of children from Al Ma’sarah peppered the demonstration as IDF snipers surveyed the crowd from a villager’s rooftop.

The Efrat settlement, built in 1983 on Palestinian agricultural lands, has swelled to a population of over 8,500. Efrat has been declared illegal under international law, like all Israeli settlements built on the Palestinian side of the Green Line, yet in 2011 the Israeli government granted this settlement permission for further expansion.

This is one of over 120 settlements officially recognized by the Israeli government, outposts of occupation that slice through the West Bank, isolating villages and farmlands, constricting movement, and aiding Israeli surveillance of Palestinians. When East Jerusalem is included, the Israeli settlers number over 650,000, according to the Israeli interior ministry.

Al Ma’sarah villagers have staged weekly protests since 2006 against this settlement, part of protests coordinated by Palestinian popular committees throughout the West Bank—mobilizations that have been growing since 2005. The Israeli Army sends soldiers into Al Ma’sarah to “protect” the settlements, as during this nonviolent demonstration.

At this children’s day mobilization, protesters chanted ‘Occupation No More’ and ‘Refuse’ standing face-to-face with soldiers, at a mobilization known for the close proximity that protesters have to Israeli Army forces sent to block their movement.

When protesters attempted to nonviolently walk through the line of soldiers, Palestinians in the crowd were shoved by large riot shields, although some Israelis were allowed to pass. “They are blocking us 12 kilometers from the Green Line,” shouted Al Ma’sarah villager Hasan Briatya. “They will not let us go to the settlement because we are not Jewish. If we want to build there, we cannot, because we are Palestinian. We are different humans from their point of view. This is discrimination.”

Villagers raised their hands, in a show of nonviolence, and called for the crowd to sit on the ground in front of the soldiers.

“I come from South Africa,” said activist Colin Curkey addressing the sitting protesters. “I see injustices that were in South Africa, and my heart cries for the injustice.”

“It is an honor to stand with this struggle,” said Aaron Hughes, member of U.S.-based Iraq Veterans Against the War, who participated in the march. “I see a direct relationship between these people living in occupation and the absurdity of the occupation I participated in. This left me sad because I could not communicate that to the Israeli soldiers.”

During his recent visit to Israel, President Obama reaffirmed the U.S. friendship with Israel, with the largest overall recipient of U.S. aid since World War II according to congressional research service, with military financing hovering at $3 billion a year. Palestinians protested his visit by setting up tent encampments near Jerusalem.

“The purpose of the Al Ma’sarah mobilization is to exist,” says Sahar Vardi, Israeli anti-occupation activist and 2008 conscientious objector who went to prison for resisting the Army draft. “The show of resistance is important.”

As the Al Ma’sarah protest neared its end, the crowd held a moment of silence for all of the Palestinian children who have fallen at Israeli hands.

“You see the violence. You see this injustice,” said one villager gesturing towards the soldiers, his voice hoarse from chanting. “We don’t have anything. This is for the children who have been killed.”

“We will keep coming back.”

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 United States License. It was originally published in Common Dreams here.

Sarah Lazare is an independent journalist and co-editor of the book About Face: Military Resisters Turn Against War. She is an organizer in the U.S. anti-war veteran and GI resistance movement, as a member of the Civilian-Soldier Alliance and an ally to Iraq Veterans Against the War. Sarah is interested in connecting local struggles for racial, social, and economic justice with international movements for justice and liberation.

Posted in Human Rights, International, Politics | Comments Off on Mobilization in Al Ma’sarah: “We Will Keep Coming Back”

U.S. Seeks to Get Rid of Left Governments in Latin America

 

By Mark Weisbrot

This article was published in Folha de São Paulo, Brazil’s largest circulation newspaper, on April 20, 2013.

Recent events indicate that the Obama administration has stepped up its strategy of “regime change” against the left-of-center governments in Latin America, promoting conflict in ways not seen since the military coup that Washington supported in Venezuela in 2002.  The most high-profile example is in Venezuela itself.  As this goes to press, Washington has grown increasingly isolated in its efforts to destabilize the newly elected government of Nicolas Maduro.

But Venezuela is not the only country to fall prey to Washington’s efforts to reverse the electoral results of the past 15 years in Latin America.  It is now clear that last year’s ouster of President Fernando Lugo of Paraguay was also aided and abetted by the United States government. In a brilliant investigative work for Agência Pública, journalist Natalia Viana shows that the Obama administration funded the principal actors involved in the “parliamentary coup” against Lugo.  Washington then helped organize international support for the coup.

The U.S. role in Paraguay is similar to its role in the military overthrow of democratically elected President Manuel Zelaya of Honduras in 2009, where Washington hijacked the Organization of American States (OAS) and used it to fight the efforts of South American governments who wanted to restore democracy.  Zelaya later testified that Washington was also involved in the coup itself.

In Venezuela, Washington could not hijack the OAS but only its Secretary General, José Miguel Insulza, who supported the White House (and Venezuela opposition) demand for a “100 percent recount.”  But Insulza had to back down, as did Spain, the United States’ only other significant ally in this nefarious enterprise – because they had no support.

The demand for a “recount” in Venezuela was absurd, since there had already been a recount of the paper ballots for a random sample of 54 percent of the voting machines.  The machine totals were compared with a hand count of the paper ballots in front of witnesses from all sides.  Statistically, there was no practical difference between this enormous audit that had already happened, and the 100 percent audit that the opposition demanded.  Jimmy Carter called Venezuela’s electoral system “the best in the world,” and there was no doubt about the accuracy of the vote count, even among many in the Venezuelan opposition.

It is good to see former Brazilian President Lula denouncing the U.S. for its interference and current President Dilma joining the rest of South America to defend Venezuela’s right to a free election.  But it is not just Venezuela and the weaker democracies that are threatened by the United States.  As reported in the pages of this newspaper [Folha de Sao Paulo], in 2005 the U.S. government funded and organized efforts to change the laws in Brazil in order to weaken the Workers’ Party.  This information was discovered in U.S. government documents obtained under the U.S. Freedom of Information Act. Most likely Washington has done much more in Brazil that remains secret.

It is clear that Washington did not see the mildly reformist Fernando Lugo, the ousted Paraguayan president, as threatening or even radical. It’s just that he was too friendly with the other left governments.  The Obama administration, like that of President Bush, does not accept that the region has changed.  Their goal is to get rid of all of the left-of-center governments, partly because they tend to be more independent from Washington.  Brazil, too, must be vigilant in the face of this threat to the region.

Posted in International, Politics | Comments Off on U.S. Seeks to Get Rid of Left Governments in Latin America

Frances Friedman’s Passing; A Deep Loss to This Community

Frances Friedman 1932-2013

Frances Friedman 1932-2013

On February 28, this community lost a woman who made enormous contributions to the quality of life of so many in Champaign-Urbana.  Originally from Chicago’s West Side, Frances came to Champaign-Urbana and graduated in nursing from Mercy Hospital School of Nursing and the U of I.

Like her husband Stanley, who was one of the early members of the U of I faculty union (now called the Campus Faculty Association), Frances believed in the dignity of work and workers and in the struggle to attain and maintain that dignity.  She was a major figure in the 1970 strike of nurses who were working in the former Burnham City Hospital, the last public hospital in this community.

But Frances made many contributions to the community aside from nursing hospital patients and fighting for the well-being of those who nursed them.  She was a co-founder of A Woman’s Place and the Prairie Aids Foundation, and served for many years on the board of the Greater Community Aids Project. For ten years, she was the Executive Director of the Frances Nelson Health Center, which provides health care exclusively to low or no income people. She was an active member of the Champaign County Health Care Consumers.  She also taught, and was a counselor, at Urbana Adult Education.

When provoked by social injustice or political ineptitude, her reactions sometimes had a very long reach.  Repelled by the choices the two parties offered in the 2002 gubernatorial election, Frances threw her hat in the race as a write-in candidate.

When not working in her profession or on her social activism, Frances was an artist, sailor, bowler, and Mah Jongg player.  She and Stanley loved classical music, and in recent years I would most often see and chat briefly with them at Krannert concerts.

This community won’t be the same without this woman who was interested in so many things and who made so many contributions to its well-being.  But her accomplishments live on for the betterment of our lives.

Posted in Healthcare, LGBTQA, Women | Comments Off on Frances Friedman’s Passing; A Deep Loss to This Community

SEIU Holds 3-Day Strike on U of I Campus

After 9 months of negotiating at UIUC, Building Service and Food Service Workers pulled off an enormously successful strike with 97 percent of the workforce walking off the job and 2/3 picketing over the three days. Garbage overflowed, food was undercooked or inedible, supervisors and managers struggled to keep the campus somewhat functional. Building Trades stayed home and refused to do their work. The strike was so severe that the UI declared a state of “emergent or catastrophic” conditions!

 

SEIUdaythree 082SEIUpiccrowdpub

 

SEIU bike picket

Posted in Labor/Economics, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign | Comments Off on SEIU Holds 3-Day Strike on U of I Campus

Rosa Parks Turns 100

Jason Patterson 'Drawing Of Rosa Parks, 100 Years After Her Birth' Fixed chalk pastel on raw canvas Under clear acrylic & polymer varnish 9x14in, 2013 jasonpattersonart.com

Jason Patterson
“Drawing Of Rosa Parks, 100 Years After Her Birth”
Fixed chalk pastel on raw canvas
Under clear acrylic & polymer varnish
9x14in, 2013
jasonpattersonart.com

Born February 4, 1913, Rosa Parks would have been 100 years old this year. A statue of Parks was recently unveiled in the U.S. Congress, the first black woman to be so honored.

A in a new book titled The Rebellious Life of Mrs. Rosa Parks, historian Jeanne Theoharis describes the long record of activism by this civil rights icon. As Theoharis recently told Democracy Now, “Here we have, in many ways, one of the most famous Americans of the 20th century, and yet treated just like a sort of children’s book hero…. We diminish her legacy by making it about a single day, a single act, as opposed to the rich and lifelong history of resistance that was actually who Rosa Parks was.”

Few know that Parks’s grandfather was a follower of Marcus Garvey, the famous black nationalist. Her husband, Raymond Parks, protested the charges against the Scottsboro boys, nine young black men accused of raping two white women in the 1930s. In 1943, more than a decade before being arrested on a bus, Rosa Parks went to work for the NAACP. For a period she worked with the Montgomery chapter of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters. She attended a workshop at the Highlander Folk School, where many civil rights leaders received their training in nonviolence. Shortly after, on December 1, 1955, she was arrested in Montgomery for refusing to give up her seat on a bus to a white passenger.

After “taking a stand by sitting down,” Parks maintained her activism. In 1957, she moved to Detroit and became involved in issues of housing, jobs, and police brutality. She worked on the campaign of John Conyers, African American U.S. Representative from Michigan.

Parks was one of the earliest civil rights activists to oppose the war in Vietnam. She supported campaigns to free black political prisoners the Wilmington 10, Joan Little, and Angela Davis. In 1972, she attended the important National Black Political Convention in Gary, Indiana. Even into the 1980s, Parks picketed against South African apartheid.

Rosa Parks 2In 2005, Parks died in Detroit. This year, on her 100th Birthday, the U.S. Postal Service dedicated a Forever stamp to this courageous civil rights pioneer.

Rosa Parks stamp2

Posted in African Americans, Women | Comments Off on Rosa Parks Turns 100

BTP Poetry

soccer mom

by raisheme worlds

insects curdle my hysteria

except the bumble-bee.

fuzzy, black and yellow skin

an outfit of my intrigue.

the shiny shells of 6 leg’d things

may speed the heart and yield my breath—

spiraling webs of arachnids

drapping ‘neath an attic attic step.

but the bumble-bee in lethargic flight,

unlike the slip and slime of worms or worse,

dazzles my intelligence

of kamikaze war-jets and women that curse.

“The Love of S”
by Patrice Lumumba Daniels, September 2011

American corporate crony capitalism is rife with greed, monopolization, and economic exploitation. (1% owns 70% of the economy.) It also seeks to reinforce the de facto effective permanence of marginalizing the poor and working class citizenry. The disenfranchisement of millions is indeed the offspring of diehard capitalism in its rawest form, where the rich get richer and the poor get poorer.
The question that I repeatedly pose is, “What’s so bad about communalism?” Since when did words like shared wealth or equality become blasphemous?
Any objective economist without an ideological ax to grind or philosophical point of view to advance would have to concede, if they are honest, that capitalism in its 21st century form is doomed to fail. There’s no future in the almighty dollar. It even continues to depreciate as I write this essay or commentary.
The film Wall Street got it wrong Greed IS NOT good, and before I am cast as a Marxist socialist, let me say this: I am not a fan of Karl Marx. I am a champion of common sense. Common sense says that monopolizing wealth and resources under the umbrella of corporate capitalism and “free market” economics means that those not able to compete equally with those interests, will undeniably suffer as a result. The vast majority of this planet’s population falls into the suffering category—and it is no their behalf that I espouse the views I do.

Imaginary Friend
by RaKahna Latrice, July 7, 2012

I never thought to copyright you.
People don’t even know that you exist.
You are a land between the earth
And purple-blue skies within a mist.
You are lightning struck on parched streams.
You are a smile with subtle kiss—
A no one but someone who
Knows no thing but what’s amiss.
And though my vain wisdom imperfects you
And edit what scribbles permit—
I know that you come upon me pure.
You are my mother’s little kid.

(no title)
by RaKahna Latrice, May 5, 2012

My sleep evades my wanting grasp—
Thoughts tonight multiply themselves
and dreams evade my wanting grasp

The round lit little orbs peek at
the nothings of deep space and time—

My thoughts I wish were nothings too
then sleep I would with nothing to do.

(no title)
by RaKahna Latrice

I built my love atop sand dunes
Beneath a whirling acrid sky.
I mixed with mortar deep regret
And raised the walls with stone set high.
My tears storm forth like raging seas—
Its waves crash and enclose my love
And perched above a failing moat
That led to walls almost afloat.

 

oh, well
by John Grant

Seems like I had everything going. Just before everything went.
I must’ve made a wrong turn: this was not my intended destiny . . . oh, well!!
oh, well, my favorite phrase, simple to hide the hurt.
oh, well, I say, and nothing gets through.
I think I used a different word as a child. But it didn’t raise the wall as quickly,
oh, well!!
Some of the sounds slipped through the child’s ears. Like when the old Mexican lady who used to babysit me for months and months, told me time after time, “Sorry, boy, your mama can’t make it this week-end.”
(Damn those words!) Or when the Judge decided it’s best for me to be placed in the custody of the authorities!! (Wham! That one caught me right on the chin.)
Yeah, I had definitely had to find a better word to keep my guard up.
Sometimes I can hear that boy’s tears as they hit the pillow.
But what the hell, why trip it? Like when the Judge said,”26 years.”
I handled it fine, simply saying “oh, well.”
“What a perfect phrase.”

(no title)

by RaKahna Latrice

 

I built my love atop sand dunes

Beneath a whirling acrid sky.

I mixed with mortar deep regret

And raised the walls with stone set high.

My tears storm forth like raging seas—

Its waves crash and enclose my love

And perched above a failing moat

That led to walls almost afloat.

“My Invisible Touch”
by John Grant

Five fingers emerge from the well that is my soul.
Move through the red reservoir of my open heart to become a gentle hand mirrored to produce a pair that sprout dragonfly wings at midnight and set out to find you sleeping like a cloud dreaming of me in a place where I am not . . don’t be alarmed!
The touch you feel is mine the three fingers slipping inside you are mine,
It’s not a dream your hips move in response to my invisible touch
Two hands touch you like ten million butterflies beating their wings in every corner of the room, your breath quickens I am with you feel me in your open mouth; in your hair.
Passing lightly across your breasts painting your areolas the color of your favorite fantasy
The night is long the smile you wake with is real and so is that empty place beside you.

Posted in Voices of Color | Comments Off on BTP Poetry

Hugo Chavez and Yewri Guillen

Hugo Chavez and Yewri Guillen are two dead Latin Americans who, although they never knew each other and came from different countries, are deeply connected.

Yewri Guillen was an 18-year-old Dominican who died in April 2011, just as he was to be sent to the US minor leagues. He was signed as a prospect by Major League Baseball’s Washington Nationals franchise for $30,000. While this is certainly a significant amount of money, it pales in comparison to what the Nationals paid to US born prospect Bryce Harper at about the same time — a cool $6 million. Upon signing at 16, Guillen was whisked away to one of the baseball academies affiliated with Major League Baseball and their franchises that dot the Dominican landscape. Prospects ate, slept and breathed baseball as there were no schools or academic classes made available by the teams.

Then, Yewri began suffering painful headaches, for which he was given tea and aspirin by academy personnel. During his time at the Nationals’ Dominican facility, he never saw a doctor or a certified trainer because none were employed at the premises.

When the symptoms worsened, Guillen’s family could not afford the fee to enter him at the best local private hospital because his MLB contract wasn’t finalized. As his sickness progressed, the Nationals franchise chose not to cover his hospital costs. He was diagnosed with bacterial meningitis but it had progressed too significantly for anything to be done.

After his death, the family had to sign an agreement pledging not to sue over the lack of certified trainers or doctors that likely could have diagnosed his illness when it was treatable. In exchange, the team finally released Guillen’s signing bonus and insurance money to the family.

The tragic story of Yewri Guillen is an example of what the Chavez government sought to eradicate in the recruitment of Venezuelan ballplayers.

Venezuela is home to much top baseball talent including Miguel Cabrera – the first Latin American to win the Triple Crown, 2012 World Series MVP Pablo Sandoval and seven others that appeared in the 2012 World Series.

Yet for all of the top tier talent available, only five teams have set up academies in Venezuela. This is primarily due to the safeguards instituted by Chavez’s government. In Venezuela, if a player is signed before age 18, the government must approve the contract to ensure the youth is receiving a fair deal. Signing bonuses are taxed at a 10% rate to compensate Venezuela for producing such elite talent that will make American baseball owners fabulously wealthy. The Chavez initiatives also require schooling/education for prospects in a meaningful way and a guarantee for health care if a player is injured. These rules reflect Venezuela’s (and Chavez’s) desire to keep the worst aspects of MLB recruitment from infecting the country, recognizing the deeply rampant exploitation taking place in areas like the Dominican Republic, where MLB teams play on the financial desperation, the lack of government regulation, and the precarity of workers to ensure a steady pipeline of cheap talent.

After all, 97% of the players recruited in the Dominican Republic never make it as a professional, which makes their lack of educational opportunities even more problematic. Twenty-one of the 30 MLB teams that have academies in the Dominican Republic do not have certified trainers or doctors on staff. The lucky few prospects who make it through often receive significantly smaller signing bonuses than their American counterparts who are recruited by the same MLB teams.

Major League Baseball publicly proclaims that it abhors the politicizing of sport, and criticized Chavez on that basis during his lifetime. However, it would be much more accurate to say that MLB only dislikes politics that inhibit their laissez faire ability to make huge profits on the cheap in Latin American countries like the Dominican Republic.

Guillen’s and Chavez’s deaths highlight important issues. For Guillen, it shows the need for substantive and meaningful protects for MLB prospects in places like the Dominican Republic. Chavez’s death demonstrates the imperative need for fighting back against any policies that would weaken or dismantle the regulations that currently safeguard prospects from MLB greed in Venezuela.

As players take the field both in the games and in the uncertainly contentious politics of the post-Chavez world of Venezuela, it is important for those who stand for justice get ready to play ball.

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Chávez’s Death, Like His Life, Shows the World’s Divisions

By Mark Weisbrot

This article was published by Al Jazeera English on March 17, 2013.

The unprecedented worldwide response to the death of President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela, and especially in the Western Hemisphere, has brought into stark relief the “multi-polar” world that Chávez fought for. Fifty-five countries were represented at his funeral on March 7th, 33 (including all of Latin America) by heads of state. Fourteen Latin American countries decreed official days of mourning – including the right-wing government of Chile. In contrast to the emotional outpourings, and the honor and respect that came from Latin American heads of state, the White House put out a cold and unfriendly statement that – to the horror of many Latin Americans – didn’t even offer condolences.

It seems that the most demonized democratically elected president in world history had a lot of friends and admirers – and not just the “enemy states” like Iran or Syria that get first mention in U.S. news reports. Now we are told that the outpouring of sympathy is all about Venezuela’s oil, but no Saudi Arabian royal ever got this kind of love, while alive or dead.

Readers of the New York Times were probably surprised to learn from a recent op-ed by Lula da Silva, Brazil’s popular former president, that he and Chávez were quite close and shared the same vision for Latin America. It was always true: in 2006, after Lula was re-elected, the first trip he took was to Venezuela to help Chávez campaign for his own re-election.

Let’s face it: what Chávez said about Washington’s role in the world was what all the left presidents – now the vast majority of South America – were thinking. And Chávez didn’t just talk the talk: as Lula noted, he played a crucial role in the formation of UNASUR (the Union of South American Nations), CELAC (the Community of Latin American and Caribbean Nations), and other efforts at regional integration.

“Perhaps his ideas will come to inspire young people in the future, much as the life of Simón Bolívar, the great liberator of Latin America, inspired Mr. Chávez himself,” wrote Lula.

Chávez was the first of what became a long line of democratically-elected left presidents that have transformed Latin America, and especially South America over the last 15 years, including Nestor and Cristina Kirchner in Argentina, Lula da Silva and then Dilma Rousseff in Brazil, Evo Morales in Bolivia, Daniel Ortega in Nicaragua, Fernando Lugo in Paraguay , José “Pepe” Mujica in Uruguay, and Mauricio Funes in El Salvador. Before Chávez, democratically elected leftist presidents tended to end up like Salvador Allende of Chile – overthrown in a CIA-backed coup in 1973. Much of the Latin American left, including Chávez himself, was still skeptical of the electoral route to social change more than 20 years later, since the local elites, backed by Washington, had an extra-legal veto when they needed it.

Chávez was able to play a vital role in the “second independence” of South America because he was different from other heads of state in a number of important ways. I noticed this when I met him for the first time in April of 2003. He seemed to treat everyone the same – from the people who served him lunch at the presidential palace to visitors whom he respected and admired. He talked a lot, but he was also a good listener. I remember a dinner a few years later with more than 100 representatives of civil society groups throughout the Americas – activists working on debt cancellation, land reform, and other struggles. Chavez sat and listened patiently, taking notes for an hour as the guests took turns describing their efforts. Then he went through his notes, and said: “OK, here’s where I think we might be able to help you.” I couldn’t imagine any other president doing that.

It wasn’t fake – there wasn’t anything fake about the man. He said what he was thinking, and of course that wasn’t always appropriate for a head of state. But most Venezuelans loved his sincerity because it made him more real than other politicians, and therefore someone they could trust.

His attitude towards other governments was similar. Although he had big public fights with some governments, he almost never criticized another head of state unless they attacked him first. He successfully pursued good relations even with the right-wing Álvaro Uribe of Colombia for several years, until Uribe turned on him, which he saw (probably correctly) as Uribe acting on behalf of the United States. When Manuel Santos, who had been Uribe’s defense minister, became president of Colombia in August 2010 and decided to pursue good relations with Chávez, he was pushing on an open door [PDF]. Relations were repaired immediately. Chávez was friendly to anyone who was friendly to him.

But it was more than his personality or search for alliances – which he needed in order to survive, after the Bush administration made clear its intention to overthrow him in 2002. (Although it was almost never reported in the U.S. media, the documentary evidence of Washington’s involvement in the 2002 military coup against Chávez is quite strong.) Chávez had a very solidaristic view of the world. He and his government had many policies that were not driven by the principle that “nations don’t have friends, but only interests.” He saw the injustices in the international economic and political order the same way he saw the social injustices within Venezuela – as a social evil and something that could be successfully fought against. Why should the United States and a handful of rich allies control the IMF and the World Bank? Or write the rules of commerce in the WTO, or in the Free Trade Area of the Americas (which Chavez helped defeat)? Venezuela didn’t have any national interest in these struggles, since it is an oil exporter.

But Chávez thought they were important, and his ideas happened to coincide with what was happening in the world: it was rapidly become more multi-polar economically. For example, China is now, by the best economic estimates of its (purchasing power parity) exchange rate, already the largest economy in the world, yet it has very little voice in these most important multilateral institutions. Other developing countries have even less. Chávez’s ideas therefore resonated increasingly in much of the world, and especially in Latin America.

On the other hand, his tenure also shows the enormous power of the media in shaping public opinion. Most governments are quite familiar with his accomplishments, but because the Latin American and U.S. media reported almost exclusively negative news on Venezuela for 14 years – sometimes grossly exaggerated as well — most people in the Western Hemisphere never learned even the basic facts about Venezuela or what Chávez was doing.

They do not know that, once Chávez got control over the oil industry, Venezuela’s economy grew very well and poverty was reduced by half and extreme poverty by 70 percent. They don’t know that most of these gains came from increased employment in the private sector, not “government handouts.” They don’t know that millions of Venezuelans got access to basic health care for the first time, and that education increased at all levels, with college enrollment doubling; or that public pensions rose from 500,000 to over two million. The western media has mostly reported Venezuela as an economic and political failure. And most people don’t know that Venezuela bears no resemblance to an “authoritarian state,” and that most of the Venezuelan media is still opposed to the government.

They don’t know what Chávez did for the hemisphere – not only the billions of dollars of aid distributed through Venezuela’s Petrocaribe program and other foreign aid, but also – as Lula explained – the role that he played in bringing about the unity and second independence of Latin America.

This independence is much more than a matter of national or regional pride, or one of the biggest geopolitical changes so far in the 21st century. It has had huge consequences for the people of Latin America, where the poverty rate fell from 42 percent at the beginning of the decade to 27 percent by 2009. It is difficult to imagine this kind of social and economic progress while the region was still under IMF/Washington tutelage; indeed the region as a whole barely had any per capita GDP growth at all from 1980-2000.

Most people in the Western Hemisphere have gotten a “Tea Party” view of Venezuela, with little difference between the liberal and right-wing media depiction of the country and its government. It is practically as one-sided as the view of the United States that Soviet citizens got on state TV in the 1980s – people in unemployment lines and soup kitchens, poverty and policy brutality. They had to find external news sources to know that most Americans still had a middle-class existence and a job, and among the highest living standards in the world.

So now there is a battle over defining Chávez’s legacy – and there are many people trying to protect the hard-won gains that they made in demonizing Chávez. For them the outpouring of sympathy and respect for Chávez is a real problem.

It is fitting that the aftermath of Chávez’s death should reflect not only the battles that he fought but also the relations that he helped change. During his 14 years in office, the United States lost most of its influence in Latin America, and especially South America. So it can be said with some certainty that in his battle with Washington, Chávez won. And with him, so did the region and the world. For that he will be forever remembered, honored, and respected – as he was on March 7th by most of the world.

 

 

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Illinois goes to DC to Fight Climate Change

BDSCF2097

by Stuart Levy

This February 17th, a coalition of groups, including 350.org, the Sierra Club, and Hip Hop Caucus, held a rally and march in Washington, DC to raise the urgent issue of climate change.

The Sierra Club organized a bus from Chicago – two buses in fact, since the first soon filled. A hundred or so of us, including at least eight from Champaign-Urbana, squeezed onto them and joined thousands of others from around the country heading for DC.

Why did over 35,000 people attend the Climate Forward rally in DC?  Well, why did I decide to go?

I’ve long felt that addressing climate change is an essential part of our struggles against war and for social justice. It promises to shift their material basis – making food scarcer, exacerbating inequality, increasing competition for water and livable space and arable land. And the burdens will fall far more heavily, and inequitably, on future generations than addressing the problems now will on ours.

Further, seeing the Sierra Club’s recent decisions to countenance civil disobedience in the name of opposing climate change, and now to promote the February 17th rally, brought a sort of hope.  The Club leadership is politically canny. Putting their reputation on the line this way means, I think, that they see the issue as critical, and that they see the politics as changeable – that such a gesture, dramatically showing public support for climate action, might shift the situation.

Anyway, a great rally can be a blast. I had to go. So did half a dozen U of I students from the Stand Up To Coal and Stand Up To Oil campaigns. And a woman with a guitar who tried to lead our bus in song (great fun if you were close enough to hear); Gary, a blind man from Joliet whose guide dog Cuddles bore a Code Pink “Make Out Not War” sign; and my seatmate Idriss, a Sudanese man who spoke among other things about an aspect of changing climate which Sudan has seen for decades: desertification.

As we drove east into the snow, the organizers invited anyone on the bus to come up and tell about what had brought them there. One young woman had been working with the 8th Day Center for Justice in Chicago. Her mother saw it: whenever she went to do something with those nuns, she’d get herself arrested.

The rally (permitted, no civil disobedience today) assembled near the Washington Monument. We soon couldn’t see the edge of the crowd – a broad mix of ages, many students and many in late middle age, a few babies on shoulders, mostly white and Latino and a few black faces. Groups had come from Colorado, Florida, Michigan. We carried all sorts of signs – some mass-produced, many hearteningly home made. Lots opposed the Keystone XL pipeline (“#NOKXL”), or fracking, or supported solar and wind energy, or said simply, “My grandchildren deserve a bright future.” A pair of jeans went further, naming the problems: “Central Authority, Dominance, Monoculture, Exploitation, War, Debt.”

Thumping music shook us, the emcee led us in a chant. Were we part of an elaborate photo-op? I stopped thinking so once the main speakers began. Bill McKibben: “People in Texas blocking the pipeline with their bodies … 256 campuses … [involved in fossil fuel] divestment, the biggest student movement in decades. … You are the antibodies kicking in as the planet tries to fight its fever. … Above all, stop the Keystone Oil Pipeline. The President can do that with a single stroke of his pen. And if he does, he will be the first world leader to veto a big project because it’s bad for the climate. …  Though we’re never going to outspend the oil industry, we’ll find other currencies to work with. Action. Spirit.  Creativity. …  I don’t know whether we’re going to win.  But I waited a quarter century, working on this, to see whether we were going to fight. And today, at the largest climate rally by far, by far, by far, in US history, the battle – the most fateful battle in human history – is finally joined, and we will fight it together.”

I was most glad to hear from two First Nations tribal leaders from northern Canada. Both opened by thanking the Piscataway, the DC area’s original native group. Jackie Thomas, of the northern British Columbia Yinka Dene Alliance – whose lands would be crossed by a pipeline to the Pacific Coast – talked about cooperative action between groups on both sides of the border unifying opposition to the oil pipelines. “Because oil will spill. … Never in my life have I seen white and native work together until now. Thank you, Enbridge [tar sands company], for doing this work for me. … The Yinka Dene Alliance have never ceded our territories in BC and we never will. … We have not given our consent to this project.”

Hedge fund manager Tom Steyer, who’s managed billions for decades: “The Keystone pipeline is not a good investment. … The time for business as usual has passed.”

A sour note for me: several speakers, including Michael Brune of the Sierra Club, called on President Obama to lead us. We should know by now not to expect politicians to lead us – it is we, the people, who must lead them.

Following the rally came a lively march through the blustery afternoon past the White House, passing a mosh pit with a wolf and polar bear, and the Rosendale, NY Improvement Association Brass Band.

Much more happened that day which I couldn’t see. A group of Alberta First Nations people gave a of presentation that evening, while our bus drivers were carrying us, exhausted and chilled but elated, back to Chicago. Many thanks to our bus organizers, Tony Fuller and Ryan Baker, who took good care of us throughout the trip.

We didn’t expect President Obama to be in the White House as we marched by that Sunday. We later learned that he’d been in Florida, golfing … with executives from the oil and gas industry. Sure enough, we have to fight.

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“What’s in a Name? Two C-U Buildings Named After African American Women”

As a new building on campus is being named after Maudelle Bousfield, the first African American woman to graduate from the University of Illinois, a public housing complex named after Joann Dorsey, black community activist in Champaign during the 1960s, 70s, and 80s, has been torn down. One woman came from the black upper class, the other from the working class, yet they both should be recognized for their contributions.

Portrait of Maudelle Brown Bousfield Charcoal and pastel on raw canvas under polymer glaze and varnish 14x20in, 2010-11

Portrait of Maudelle Brown Bousfield by Jason Patterson
Charcoal and pastel on raw canvas
under polymer glaze and varnish
14x20in, 2010-11

Pioneer Educator, Maudelle Bousfield   
The University of Illinois’ Board of Trustees recently voted to designate a new residence hall, “Bousfield Hall,” bearing the name of Maudelle Tanner Brown Bousfield, who graduated from the University of Illinois in 1906. Bousfield was born June 1, 1885 in St. Louis to parents who were public school teachers. She was related to Henry Ossawa Tanner, the first major African American painter who gained a reputation while living in Paris. Also possessing an artist’s inclination, Bousfield took to the piano at an early age and attended the Charles Kunkel Conservatory of Music.

In 1903, Bousfield entered the University of Illinois. “There were four colored boys at the university,” she recalled, “and I was the only colored girl.” She first wanted to become an astronomer, but a professor discouraged her from pursuing a career in a profession that largely excluded women and African Americans. Instead, she studied to become a math teacher.

To pay for school, Bousfield tutored math students and played piano at sock hops. In the Chicago Defender she described life as one of five black students on campus: “On Sunday the five of us would go to one of the two black churches in Champaign and sit in the back; listen to the music and watch the services. There wasn’t anything else to do” (3/5/70).

She spent a period as a teacher before marrying a doctor, Midian Bousfield, and moving to Chicago in 1914. She took time off to start a family, and later returned to teaching in the Chicago public schools. This was a time when Chicago’s South Side was turning from white to black, as thousands of black migrants poured into the city from the South. In 1935, Bousfield was teaching at Douglass Grammar School, where there was a growing number of black teachers among the white faculty. “Colored teachers are an inspiration to students,” she said at the time, and “they exert a positive influence over the white staff.”

In 1939, Bousfield was named the first African American principal of a high school, presiding over Wendell Phillips High School on the South Side. When it was founded in 1904, Wendell Phillips was all-white, but during the 1920s it became the first high school in Chicago to become predominantly black. In 1935, the old building mysteriously burned down and the new Wendell Phillips High School was opened at 49th and Wabash Ave., where it still stands today. It was here that Bousfield was principal from 1939 until she retired in 1950.

Maudelle Bousfield and her husband, Midian Bousfield, were a prominent couple among Chicago’s black bourgeoisie. They were friends of Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt. Midian Bousfield was a doctor at Provident Hospital which served black clients on the South Side. At this time, the health care system in the United States was Jim Crowed, with most white patients refusing to be treated by black doctors and nurses.

During World War II, Dr. Bousfield advocated for the formation of the Tuskegee airmen, the celebrated black fighter pilots. In 1942, he was appointed to oversee an all-black medical unit at Fort Huachuca, Arizona. At the time, black Communist Ishmael Flory criticized Dr. Bousfield as an “Uncle Tom” for taking charge of a Jim Crow unit. Yet, due in part to the service of men like Bousfield, Army medical units were integrated in 1945. In 1948, he would die of a heart attack, leaving Maudelle Bousfield to pursue new interests.

In 1950, Maudelle Bousfield retired from the Chicago public schools, but she remained an active volunteer. An avid gardener, for three years she wrote a column for the Chicago Defender called “Let’s Grow a Garden.” In the first article dated March 8, 1958, she explained, “I’d like to pass on to you, thru these weekly articles, information I know will save you many mistakes, save money and labor, and give you joy and beauty in your home and your community.”

Maudelle Bousfield died in 1971 at the age of 86. In what was to be one of her last interviews she addressed the children: “I would like to say to every child to try and realize that education is the most important task they can engage in. Without an education, there will only be a few job opportunities open to them after they become adults.”

Joann Dorsey works with at-risk youth.

Joann Dorsey worked with at-risk youth.

Joann Dorsey, “A Little Rosa Parks”
Joann Dorsey also loved children. She had a total of 12 children, nine sons and three daughters. To those who remember her, Joann Dorsey was an advocate for the black community in areas of housing, jobs, and health care. After she passed away in 1990, members of the black community lobbied to have the public housing units at Bradley and McKinley Ave. named after her.

Joann Valentine Dorsey was born October 17, 1932 in Chicago. Her family moved to Champaign in 1937 where she attended Lawhead Elementary School, located in the Douglass Park neighborhood, a school that was built for children of European immigrants, predominantly Germans and Italians, but by the 1930s was segregated for blacks. She attended Central High School, before moving to New York in 1948.

There is little known about Dorsey during the 1950s and 1960s, years when she was raising children. In 1969, she was working with the Department of Mental Health in Champaign. She helped to establish a not-for-profit housing development. She was a founding member of the Community Advocacy Depot, among those who initiated the Martin Luther King subdivision, and a member of the local Urban League. In 1974 she was appointed to head a program at the juvenile detention center targeted at preventing youth from ending up in corrections. “The major thing,” she said, “is that the kids know you care about them.”

She worked with the Frances Nelson Health Center, a Jail-Courts Complex advisory committee, the Gemini House (now the Prairie Center), and the Welfare Rights Organization.

Dorsey is perhaps best known as chair of the Concerned Citizens Committee (CCC), a group made up of John Lee Johnson, Terry Townsend, Ted Atkinson, and others.

Working with the CCC, she spearheaded food drives during Thanksgiving and Christmas. As Ted Atkinson remembered, whenever people had problems, they would come to her. “She was a little Rosa Parks,” he said.

After she died on September 7, 1990, a successful effort was led by Terry Townsend and the CCC to have the public housing units at Bradley and McKinley named after Dorsey. To local residents, they became known as the “Dorsey homes.” However, due to years of neglect, and a shortage of affordable housing in Champaign-Urbana, poverty became concentrated in the apartments.

In the summer of 2012, the Housing Authority leveled the buildings. They are to be replaced by mixed-income townhouses and renamed “Providence at Sycamore Hills.” As developer Torian Priestly told the News-Gazette, “it looks nothing like affordable housing, it has a market-rate feel.”

I asked Terry Townsend what he thought about the name change. “It’s a terrible thing they’re doing,” he said. “It’s insulting, I think.”

The stories of these equally inspiring black women―Maudelle Bousfield and Joann Dorsey―should be remembered. While buildings can be built and torn down, stories can live on.

Thanks to Michael Burns, Noah Lenstra, and the librarians at the Champaign County Historical Archives for help researching Joann Dorsey.

 

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Women Singing Not to Forget in Post-war Ivory Coast

KorhogoWomenSingersDefeated at the polls in November 2010, former president of Ivory Coast Laurent Gbagbo refused to step down and held onto power by force for over four months. About three thousand people died in the post-electoral violence. Gbagbo was arrested in April 2011. From April to the end of  November 2011 he was under house arrest in northern Côte d’Ivoire, in the town of Korhogo. Gbagbo is now in detention at the International Criminal Court in The Hague, Netherlands, charged with crimes against humanity. The ICC is supposed to announce its verdict by the end of April 2013. In his statement to the court on February 28, 2013, Gbagbo still insisted that he had won the election.  A group of Korhogo women, urban gardeners who grow vegetables to sell in Korhogo’s markets, commemorated Gbagbo’s capture and his detention in their town in a complex and beautiful song.

The market town of Korhogo in the center north of Côte d’Ivoire is surrounded by the wide skies of the savanna, and by fields of cotton, rice, and corn, and orchards of cashews and mangoes. The Senufo people, the largest ethnic group in northern Côte d’Ivoire, are proud of their identity as successful farmers and as Korhogo’s founders. They are also proud of their reputation for hospitality. When an outsider arrives, he is taken in by a local host. This relationship transforms the visitor from a stranger, an outsider, into an authorized guest.

From April until the end of November 2011, the stranger in their midst, who was both sheltered and imprisoned in Korhogo, was Laurent Gbagbo, the country’s former president. He was being held in preventive detention by the government he used to head for economic crimes, including aggravated robbery and embezzlement.

When they walked past the high walls of the presidential compound in Korhogo, passersby knew that Gbagbo was trapped inside, stripped of his power, while the candidate they supported, Alassane Ouattara, was in the presidential palace in Abidjan. They didn’t gloat. That would have been unseemly, for Gbagbo was a stranger under their protection, a guest in their territory.

But they couldn’t forget that Gbagbo’s appointees on the high court threw out their votes, nor that during the post-electoral violence, Gbagbo’s militias targeted their relatives, northerners living in Abidjan. Nor have they forgotten the fighter jets Gbagbo sent to bomb Korhogo when he tried to retake the north in November 2004.

At the time, Gbagbo boasted that he would destroy Korhogo and plant coffee and cocoa where the town had stood. Did Gbagbo actually say this? Probably not, but it is widely accepted in Korhogo that he did and, apocryphal or not, his threat has entered the oral history of the war. Once he was their guest and powerless, the women of Korhogo had a pointed question for the former president. Had he come to harvest that cocoa he wanted to plant? They posed the question in a song they sang among themselves.

Ask Gbagbo…

Is the cocoa ready to harvest?

Ask Gbagbo…

The day the warplane came, what did Gbagbo say?

He said he would kill us all, even the children

And plant coffee and cocoa.

Ask Gbagbo…

Is the cocoa ready to harvest?

Is the cocoa ready to harvest?

The words to this song were written by Mariam Silué and Téné Coulibaly. They sing it, with their friends, in call and response form, when they gather for weddings and other social events. Although the words are simple, the meaning is complex. Cocoa, as the women know, is at the bitter heart of the conflict. Côte d’Ivoire is the world’s largest producer and grows forty percent of the world’s supply of cocoa beans. It would be impossible to grow cocoa in the northern savanna where Korhogo is located, and both Gbagbo and the women know that. It can only be grown in the humid forest in the south and west. The question of who has the land rights to farm the lucrative cocoa-producing land is one of the fundamental issues dividing Ivorians. The women also know that it was the cocoa money that bought the fighter jets that bombed their town and the cocoa money that paid for the arms and the mercenaries that Gbagbo used to wage war on his compatriots, especially northerners living in Abidjan, during the post-electoral crisis.

Nawa, Nafini, TenebaThe women told me they are ready to forgive so their country can reconcile and move on, but not to forget. Their “guest” has been taken away to face trial, but they intend to keep on singing their side of the story.

To hear the women sing their song and to see their photo, go to the Afropop Worldwide Blog where this piece was originally published: http://blog.afropop.org/2012/01/womens-songs-in-post-crisis-cote.html or type Afropop Spindel into a search engine. This piece was re-published in Cultural Anthropology’s “Hot Spot: Côte d’Ivoire IS Cooling Down? Reflections One Year After the Battle for Abidjan.”

 

 carol portrait villageWriter Carol Spindel teaches nonfiction writing at the University of Illinois and the Iowa Summer Writing Festival. See more about her work at carolspindel.com.

 

 

 

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Education Justice Project Poets (First Installment)

The mission of the Education Justice project is to build a model college-in-prison program that demonstrates the positive impacts of higher education upon incarcerated people, their families, the communities from which they come, and society as a whole.  We  provide upper-division college courses and a variety of academic resources to incarcerated individuals at Danville Correctional Center, host activities for their family members in Chicago, and produce critical scholarship about our work.
When The Public i informed us it was seeking submissions, EJP students began writing feverishly excited to share their voices in the wider community. After many weeks of reflection and revision, EJP students submitted moving narratives on enduring themes: the joys and challenges of parenthood; finding and sustaining faith; strengthening family relationships; and the creative power of song and reflection. We hope you enjoy this opportunity to learn and gain an alternative artistic perspective – we know our students cherish the opportunity to share their voices with you.
Please visit educationjustice.net to learn more about our students and the work we do.
R.B. Swami
“TranscenDance”
Time is a finite construction and a boundless source.
My cell window frames the morning sun’s arc announcing another 24 hour load for me to bear until Morpheus relives me of my burden.
In quiescent contemplation, imbibing the immensity of the Un-manifested, I can escape the constraints of linear time.
I shun the labor of assembling the component minutes into hours and hours into days and days into years of my sentence.
After all, I am powerless to affect the tempo of the pendulum swings.
I can, however, choose to dance with their rhythm.
I have this singular lifetime of opportunity to whirl with abandon beginning in this present moment right now,
And now,
And now.
Emmett K. Sanders
UntitledIt is no small feat
to feel each stone distinctly
as it is turned from the earth
to soften seedbeds.Displaced by Agriculture.
Cast from fresh furrows
by this upstart usurper
–geologically speaking—
to make way for wheat.As if this hole had not been home,
had not from its creation cradled
this sleepy little stone
as it dreamt itself a mountain
waiting to born.Or a robin’s egg.

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Guns and the Second Amendment

GUN VIOLENCE: A FORM OF AMERICAN EXCEPTIONALISM

Mass killings are the events that grab our attention. The media broadcasts them throughout the nation; they can occur anywhere, in schools and universities, in movie theaters, churches, military bases, and on city streets and sidewalks. And we fear that they could happen to us and to our children. While they may occur in any country, they happen most often here, in the United States. A partial list includes:  1999 – Columbine High School, Colorado (13 dead) and Atlanta, Georgia (12 dead); 2002 – Washington D.C. sniper (10 dead, 3 wounded) and Omaha, Nebraska (9 dead, 5 wounded); 2008 – Chicago (5 dead, 1 wounded) and Northern Illinois University (6 killed, 16 wounded); 2009 – Alabama (10 dead), Binghamton, New York (13 dead) and Fort Hood, Texas (13 killed, 42 wounded); 2011 – Tucson (6 killed, 12 wounded); 2012 – Aurora, Colorado (12 killed, 58 wounded) and Newtown, Connecticut (26 dead, 1 wounded).

As dreadful as these numbers are they pale before the relentless killings that take place every day, one by one or two by two in bars, in the inner city, in homes and on the streets of the United States. Since 1968, the year Robert Kennedy was assassinated by a modest-sized handgun, over 1,384,171 people have died by firearms in the United States, more than the 1,171,177 soldiers killed in all the major wars since the revolution.  It takes about thirty years worth of traffic fatalities to reach that number, and by 2105 yearly gun deaths are projected to outpace traffic deaths.  Since Newtown, guns have killed over 1300 people.  On an average day guns are used to kill 85 people. This is the equivalent of three Newtown tragedies every single day.

No other so-called “developed” country has this kind of toll.  Of course, even if there were such a thing as a gun-free societies murders and suicides would still occur. And it is true that citizens in some countries—Switzerland is the poster child—have many guns and few murders.  Yet when struck by mass murders, most other countries take action. After a 1996 mass shooting at Port Arthur, Tasmania where 35 people were killed and 23 wounded, Australia prohibited gun ownership except for hunting, animal control and a few other reasons.  Many countries do not go this far and they still are able to reduce the body count. They place reasonable controls on gun ownership—better screening, training and licensing—and limit the number of rounds a gun can fire. The mixture of inadequate mental health services, easy access to an abundance of high powered-assault weapons and handguns, and pockets of severe poverty amidst plenty makes for a deadly combination.

REASONABLE APPROACHES TO GUNS AND THE SECOND AMENDMENT

There are many possible steps that could be taken to lower the killing rate. We could improve mental health services, require strong background checks, reduce the number of weapons, require training and licensing, moderate the killing power of existing weapons, and reduce poverty and provide everyone with a right to a decent life.

Few would deny that, even without the shield of the Second Amendment, guns do have a legitimate place in American society. Hunting is not my cup of tea, but many people get great pleasure and comradeship out of it and it is morally preferable to factory farming that produces most people’s protein (my own included). It is easy to understand why people who live in isolated rural communities would have a legitimate need for a gun to protect home and family.  But there is no sport in killing a deer with a Bushmaster .223 semi-automatic rifle, and a simple shotgun should keep intruders at bay.

Sensible limits on guns are consistent with any reasonable interpretation of the Second Amendment.  Even legal originalists who believe that they can decipher the intent of the Founding Fathers, and that in this intent is the answer to every modern problem, should pause in seeking the meaning of the Second Amendment.  Why, they might ask, of all Ten Amendments to the Bill of Rights, is the Second the only one that begins with an explanation, i.e. “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State.” Why did the Founders not just say:  “the right of the people to keep and bear Arms shall not be infringed”? Clearly, some of them must have believed that this was a right that was attached to membership in a militia—otherwise why explain it?  And some must have believed too that this right belonged to us as individuals, not just as members of a collective.  Without these differences it should have been very easy to say that the right of people to keep and bear Arms shall not be infringed.  But this is not what they said. Instead they said the right of “the people.

Most likely there was not uniform agreement on what the wording should mean and what the restrictions should be, just as there is not agreement now.  “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State” could just be taken as a random comment, or it could be taken as a modification of the right. Certainly at the time of the country’s founding, when police forces did not yet exist in any number, the right as a member of a militia to keep and bear arms made a lot of sense. But it was not the only sense that might have been made in a largely rural society where many people hunted for their own food.  Unfortunately the originalists on the Court insist on crystallizing meaning and pretending that there was total agreement among those most disputatious of men. This kind of agreement was not even known to the Gods.

Any sound interpretation will consider what might have been said but was in fact not. The founders might have left out the militia clause, making it clear that this was an unqualified, individual right. Or they might have said that the right belongs to people (not “the people”), or better to individual citizens, but they did not do this. They said instead that the right belongs to “the people”! They could have said that people have a right to own arms, not just to “keep” and “bear” them. They surely understood the word “own” but they avoided using it. Instead they used the words “bear” and “keep,” words that can apply either to members of militias or to individuals. In other words they left us with a legacy of an open future with regards to “arms.”

One might correctly assume that individual founders had differences on this issue and that the wording was intentionally open to get something passed, and to allow future legislators to consider new conditions as they added flesh to the skeletal meaning to these 27 words.  They probably could not image a world with the Bushmaster .223, but they very well may have understood that the smoothbore musket and the flintlock pistol, would not always be the weapons of choice. Contrary to the implications of the views of rigid originalists, the Founders were men of intelligence. They knew that there would be a future after they passed away; they understood that this future would differ from their own present and they left room, especially in the Second Amendment, for new legal interpretations to grow.

 

Walter Feinberg is a Professor Emeritus of Educational Policy Studies at the University of Illinois, Urbana. 

Posted in Politics | Comments Off on Guns and the Second Amendment

Inmate Poetry

These poems were written by Illinois prison inmates and collected by Urbana Champaign Books to Prisoners. The Public i thanks Books to Prisoners for making them available. We will be publishing more inmate poetry in upcoming issues. For more information, go to < www.books2prisoners.org>.

(no title)
by RaKahna Latrice

I am the man Raisheme.
I am a man.
A nimbus soul.

I prayed for luck when I was death.
I pitched a penny wishing
on untolds.

O’ my God what have I done!
I’ve denied!
I broke our truce!
(A covenant bound to heaven.)
In all my doubt
I’ve doubted You.

I am the worm raisheme
I am a worm
latched upon a hook.

I tell you I’m a son of God—
You pretend I’m not a crook.

 

had I learned a newer language

by raisheme worlds

Had I learned a newer language—
Scarcely known the english one.
Had not understood my rhythm
For God’s wisdom is the sun.

Will not know the mass of oceans,
Nor seeth the mountain range.
My eyes whistle ungraceful ballets
For all I see is prison chains.

Can not comprehend my demise—
An enterprise I shall not know?
Although riches of quietus
My life has never shown.

There is purpose for my being
That my soul can’t bear to shame.
I curse the man that wishes death
As I wish myself the same.

I asked God, why do you hate me.
She responded, hate you why?
You should know you are my son,
I dwell in child,
not the sky.

Lord, should mother love me dearly . . .
Father left us long ago?
Nostalgia paints a picture
Of his presents wrapped in snow.

Son, all learned through misventure,
And through all your pains of grief
You should discover nothing new
Except what you used to be.

Posted in Arts, Prisoners, Section, Voices, Voices of Color | Tagged | Comments Off on Inmate Poetry

Service Employees Fight Back at UIUC

“The … administration has followed a reverse policy of hiring incompetent leadership at the highest prices. If it were up to the university no hourly person would make much more than minimum wage. How are we going to support your local businesses with tens of thousands of people making unlivable wages? People who own businesses are not job creators, their paying customers are.” – Anonymous service employee commenting online on a News-Gazette story (January 12, 2013)

Pulling off the main street onto a weather-beaten side road, we see a plain boxy brick building featuring a rusty fire escape foregrounded by a weedy three-car concrete lot.  Avoiding the potholes, we climb over the natural speed bumps into the lot, park, step over to the door beneath the fire escape and knock.  One of the house numbers is missing.  The doorbell dangles lifelessly from a couple of wires.  When the worker comes to the door he apologizes and asks us to wait while he gets his coat.  Through the door we glimpse a jumble of old furniture crammed into the tiny space.  The smell even outside suggests a dead animal.

The slim African American resident of this apartment is an employee of the multi-billion-dollar University of Illinois in Urbana, the same institution that three years ago hired former president Michael Hogan at $620,000, a 37 percent increase over his predecessor.  That predecessor had just been forced to resign in scandal but remains at UI today, making $300,000, while the former chancellor of the Urbana campus, forced to resign in the same scandal, makes $250,000.  Hogan himself was soon forced to resign in another scandal, but also remains on the UI payroll, at $285,000.  Taken together, these three disgraced administrators alone are paid enough to hire twenty-six building service workers (BSWs) or forty-nine food service workers (FSWs) at UIUC.

Yet when these BSWs and FSWs seek a raise, the University claims it cannot afford it.  This fight for a living wage and economic justice is just one reason passersby will often see service employees picketing in front of a University building, or filing into the building shouting and chanting, surrounded by police cars―and why service employees at UIUC voted by over 91 percent to authorize their elected bargaining committees to call a strike if progress in contract negotiations is not forthcoming.

Essential Employees

The almost 800 service employees at UIUC belong to SEIU Local 73 Chapter 119.  They cook, clean, sweep and mop floors, wash soiled laundry for handicapped students, set up tables and chairs for events, move heavy furniture and files, strip and wax floors, shovel snow and ice, wash dishes, deliver campus mail, and do “other duties as assigned.”  These are the workers who are called in to work in the middle of the night or forced to stay at the end of their shift when there is a heavy snowfall or a flood inside one of the UIUC buildings, while top-paid administrators are home safe and warm in their beds.  BSWs and FSWs are essential workers, until the time rolls around to talk about pay.

Like other US workers, these employees have experienced years of declining real wages.  In fact, most BSWs and FSWs are now taking home less money than they did six years ago, even before adjusting for inflation.  Why?  University spokespersons are fond of pointing out that the institution’s state appropriation has been declining for many years, now below an appalling 14 percent of the UI budget.  Yet the University has been able to grow in spite of declining state funds, through tuition increases―9.5 percent for Fall 2010, 6.9 percent for 2011, 4.8 percent for 2012―and record-breaking donations totaling $2.5 billion since 2007.  As a result, the UI’s overall operating budget has grown steadily, from $3.9 billion in 2008, right through the worst years of recession to $5.4 billion approved this year.  That’s an increase of more than 38 percent, during a period of belt-tightening for the UI workforce in which the “Campus Wage” increased a total of seven percent for civil service employees, and mandated “furlough days” subtracted a few days’ pay from faculty and some others.

Yet such belt-tightening does not affect all UI personnel the same way.  Two years ago the Campus Faculty Association (CFA) at UIUC released a study showing that the number of UI administrators had increased by half over a ten-year period, and administrative salaries have mushroomed right along with numbers.  In fact, the Graduate Employees Organization (GEO) recently released a list of just twenty-eight administrators whose total raise this year amounted to over $5 million.  This amount is more than triple the total cost of the contract proposed by the Service Employees―for twenty-eight times as many people.

Unfair Labor Practices

But it is not all about pay.  In fact, most of the biggest conflicts have been non-wage issues.  Managers at UIUC, for example, attempted to unilaterally take away five holidays including Christmas Day from mail messengers, who deliver campus mail.  The Service Employees blocked this change, but the University now insists on the holiday grab in contract negotiations.

Likewise managers have contracted out BSWs’ floor maintenance work on over 30 occasions, in violation of labor law and the SEIU contract.  Each time the Administration promised it would never happen again.  Yet in response to an unrelated union proposal that members be allowed to rotate assignments involving heavy moving work, UI negotiators proposed contract language that would allow unlimited contracting out, saying that underpaid BSWs are “pricing themselves out of the market.”  But are they?   The University Facilities and Services department (where the BSWs work) charges $1.05 per square foot for the floor work, while the University paid the private contractors $1.25 per square foot―almost 20 percent more.  BSWs have often been called in to re-do the contractor’s work due to poor quality.

In food service, when contract talks became heated, managers decided to retaliate against workers serving on the union bargaining committee.  Out of six food service employees serving on the committee, two have been fired for allegedly arguing in the hallway, three have been docked a day’s pay for attending scheduled negotiations, and one is serving a year’s probation, allegedly for allowing a union representative into the break room to talk to employees on break.  None of these activists received any warning, and one has never even been written up for any offence in 14 years at UIUC.  The activist on probation was in line for a promotion, but since receiving the discipline her test scores have been deleted, and she is no longer on the promotion list.

SEIU has filed grievances and Unfair Labor Practice charges in the above and other matters.  Regular pickets continue.  And as a possible strike looms, UI negotiators recently tried unimpressively to convince the union to drop all charges in exchange for an additional six cents pay raise for a handful of the union’s newest members.  The union would also have to accept whatever the Provost decrees as the “Campus Wage” for everyone else.  This “Campus Wage” is the same unilateral determination that two out of the last four years has amounted to precisely zero.  With job security and union rights on the line, and health care and other costs set to spike again this year, Service Employees have just one answer to such an offer: get serious or we walk.

Ricky Baldwin is a Senior Field Organizer for SEIU Local 73, activist with Jobs With Justice, and occasional contributor to Labor Notes, Z Magazine and Dollars & Sense.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Mass Extinction to Mass Abundance

By George M. F. Hardebeck

George M. F. Hardebeck is the director of Arts Restoring Culture for Healing Earth (ARCHE). He recently moved to Urbana from Cincinnati and he works on eco-cultural restoration and cultural reconciliation.

We are running wildly toward the cliff, herding as many species ahead and lassoing as many to us as possible, hoping to turn around at the last minute with enough of Life’s web to keep us alive―and Earth? How many of our counterparts in Life is that? What cruel experiment, what fool game is this? Wake up!

Many have heard of mass extinction events. Some say we are in the middle of one such event, and call the one we are in the Holocene Extinction Event. While earlier peoples eliminated some species, these losses were more gradual. They seem to have learned their lessons about exhausting systems. Loss called them to more sustainable native ways. Our current patterns of annihilation of life have compounded dramatically, beginning with the Homogenesis―the homogenization Charles Mann notes in his book, 1493: Uncovering the New World Columbus Created, when we introduced plant and animal species convenient and familiar to European ways. Alfred Crosby refers to this as the Neo-European landscape in his book, Ecological Imperialism.

Around the turn of this century, the UN began to look at our phenomenon of diminishing species and made a conservative estimate that we are losing 50-55,000 species per year. Experiencing some extinctions is considered to be normal; however, this rate is about one thousand times the normal rate. Others place the numbers higher, at maybe 140,000 species per year; with a rate of 3,000 times the norm.

The UN rate breaks down to one to three species lost every ten minutes. By the end of an eight-hour workday,  our consuming culture is responsible for the complete elimination of about 50 to 150 entire life forms: hundreds of members per day of Life’s community―all given in our charge, and with whom to share Life. Despite this, when do we see official economic reviews that take these costs into consideration? Are we above it―‘lords over’ Life, in cultural and ecological imperialism, forgetting to be meek ‘children of’ Life―‘native to’ Life? When we run into each other in the community, say at market after a week’s work, while we pat ourselves on the back for buying local, driving a hybrid, walking, cycling, using cloth bags and taking other actions toward carbon reduction, we have still lost about 1000 to 3000 species.

Can we talk? We might begin by asking: “how many beautiful fellow creatures will we lose by the time a child born today goes to college, gets tenure or has grandchildren?” If 30 million species currently populate the planet, at this rate we’ll make zero in 214 to 600 years. This doesn’t account for the fact that our population may be doubling every 35 years; and global warming seems likely to up the ante, dramatically. Within species we lose local genotypes, or cultures, before we know or understand them. Renowned ecologist E. O. Wilson tells us that we know about 10% of our species, and have studied about 1% to some degree. Are we part of our ecology? If so, are human losses part of our mass extinction? What diversity among humanity are we losing?

Native Elder Mad Razor Ray tells us, First Peoples of the Americas went from 60 million to 800,000; that’s a decline of almost 99%. Our Native languages of love for Life disappear at two per month, globally. Native Peoples, in their cultures and languages held, and still hold, the values and arts that stand in the way of ‘more modern’ consuming ways. Our shameful holocaust continues in the Amazon, and everywhere those hoarding power colonize to exploit. In the popular book Ishmael, Daniel Quinn’s gorilla character, who remarkably  began sharing his wisdom in 1977, tells how we ‘Takers’ waged war on all indigenous species and ‘Leaver’ peoples, inconvenient to conqueror ways.

Many have shared the observation that we ended a major cycle of the Mayan Calendar this past Winter Solstice. In a statement released by the Maya alliance, Oxlaljuj Ajpop, the end of this great cycle simply “means there will be big changes on the personal, family and community level, so that there is harmony and balance between mankind and nature.” If a new year is a great time for resolutions, what of this shift into another world? What might be our finest resolution, culturally, for moving into this time ahead?
While Winter Solstice was considered the pivotal moment of shift, the state of our planet calls on us now, today, this month, year and time ahead to muster forth great change for great healing.

Mass extinctions have been caused by various forces beyond our control: meteors, ice- ages, and mega- volcanoes. We don’t control those things. Hollywood sells us images of solving our problems through glorious global collaborations in which we shoot down gargantuan projectiles of doom or realign our Earth’s core by travelling deep within her with super explosives. However, it is not the sensational high-tech mega-tonnage we need. We merely need to turn our awareness, understanding, and powerful creativity into responsible arts realigned in Life―turning our allegiance from apartheid to great solidarity. We have made some motions toward this. Cities like Cincinnati, my family’s home before moving to Urbana last May, have passed resolutions to turn back global warming, and resist policies like fracking. These are only part of our mass extinction crisis. What holds us back from facing the bigger picture, overwhelming hopelessness? David Suzuki, in his recent documentary A Force of Nature offers a two-part way for thinking out our situation via the two Chinese characters for ‘crisis’: one means ‘danger’ and the other, ‘opportunity.’ While we need to acknowledge our failing ways and the disasters in our wake, we also need to focus on our potential solution or re-solution―to proactively reintegrate ourselves as a species into the solvent movement of Life. We have an opportunity to return to the mass abundance Life has given all.

Ironically, our intellect lit the fuse of our current debacle―our dynamic minds, disconnected from heart and gut, held prominence. Rather than seeing ourselves as victims of wild Nature, whom we must overpower as enemy, we are her lost children turned alien―imperial zombies amassing a consumer plague. No gory blockbuster here, just our cast call home, to our roots, to being boldly meek with Life who bore us, re-turning to our once long-held commitment.

Some interpreted the Mayan Calendar as stating that the Earth was to spin on her axis in 2012 . . . Not a moment too soon. Let’s turn our world on its axis, culturally, realigning with Earth, and Life on her terms, place to planet, culturally to bio-regionally, ethnosphere to ecosphere.

Be the tipping point! Statements and resolutions to re-solve Mass Extinction are welcome, at our Facebook group page for: ARCHE – Arts Restoring Culture for Healing Earth.

Posted in Environment | Comments Off on Mass Extinction to Mass Abundance

Media Hate Fiesta for Venezuela Keeps on Keepen’ On

By Mark Weisbrot

(This article was first published in Al Jazeera English on January 29, 2013)

Last week there was a real media hate-fest for Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez, with some of the more influential publications on both sides of the Atlantic really hating on the guy.  Even by the hate-filled standards to which we have become accustomed, it was impressive.

It’s interesting, since this is one of the only countries in the world where the reporting of the more liberal media – NPR or even the New Yorker – is hardly different from that of Fox News or other right-wing media (more on that below).

The funniest episode came from El País, which on Thursday ran a front page picture of a man that they claimed was Chávez, lying on his back in a hospital bed, looking pretty messed-up with tubes in his mouth.  The picture was soon revealed to be a complete fake.  Oops!  The paper, which is Spain’s most influential publication (and with a lot of clout in Latin America, too), had to pull its newspapers from the stands and issue a public apology.  Although, as the Venezuelans complained, there was no apology to Chávez or his family.  Not surprisingly, since El País really hates Chávez.

The New York Times, for its part, ran yet another hate pieceon its op-ed page.  Dog bites man.  Nothing new here, they have been doing this for almost fourteen years – most recently just three months ago.  This one was remarkably unoriginal, comparing the Chávez government to a Latin American magical realist novel. It contained very little information – but being fact-free allowed the authors to claim that the country had “dwindling productivity” and “an enormous foreign debt load.”  Productivity has not “dwindled” under Chávez; in fact real GDP per capita, which is mostly driven by productivity growth, expanded by 24 percent since 2004.  In the 20 years prior to Chávez, real GDP per person actually fell. As for the “enormous foreign debt load,” Venezuela’s foreign public debt is about 28 percent of GDP, and the interest on it is about 2 percent of GDP.  If this is enormous – well, let’s just say these people don’t have a good sense of quantity.

The authors were probably just following a general rule, which is that you can say almost anything you want about Venezuela, so long as it is bad – and it usually goes unquestioned. Statistics and data count for very little when the media is presenting its ugly picture.

This is especially true for Jon Lee Anderson, writing in the January 28 issue of the New Yorker (Slumlord: What Has Hugo Chavez Wrought in Venezuela?)He mentions in passing that “the poorest Venezuelans are marginally better off these days.”  Marginally?  From 2004-2011, extreme poverty was reducedby about two-thirds.  Poverty was reduced by about one-half, and this measures only cash income.  It does not count the access to health care that millions now have, or the doubling of college enrollment – with free tuition for many. Access to public pensions tripled. Unemployment is half of what it was when Chávez took office.

I shouldn’t have to emphasize that Venezuela’s poverty reduction, real (inflation-adjusted) income growth, and other basic data in the Chávez era are not in dispute among experts, including international statistical agencies such as the World Bank or U.N. Even opposition economists use the same data in making their case against the government.  It is only journalists like Anderson who avoid letting commonly agreed upon facts and numbers get in the way of their story.

Anderson devotes many thousands of words, in one of America’s leading literary magazines, to portraying the dark underside of life in Venezuela — ex-cons and squatters, horrible prisons: “A thick black line of human excrement ran down an exterior wall, and in the yard below was a sea of sludge and garbage several feet deep.” He draws on more than a decade of visits to Venezuela to shower the reader with his most foul memories of the society and the government. The article is accompanied by a series of grim, depressing black-and-white photos of unhappy-looking people in ugly surroundings.  (I couldn’t help thinking of all those international surveys that keep finding Venezuelans to be among the happiest people in Latin America and the world – did Anderson never meet even one of these Venezuelans?)

I am all in favor of journalism that exposes the worst aspects of any society.  But what makes this piece just another cheap political hack job is the conclusions that the author draws from his narrow, intentionally chosen slice of Venezuelan reality.  For example:

They [Venezuelans] are the victims of their affection for a charismatic man . . . After nearly a generation, Chávez leaves his countrymen with many unanswered questions, but only one certainty: the revolution that he tried to bring about never really took place.  It began with Chávez, and with him, most likely it will end.

Really?  It sure doesn’t look that way.  Even Chávez’s opponent in the October presidential election, Henrique Capriles, had to promise voters that he would preserve and actually expand the Chávez-era social programs that had increased Venezuelans’ access to health care and education.  And after Chávez beat him by a wide margin of 11 percentage points, Chávez’s party increased its share of governorships from 15 to 20 of 23 states, in the December elections that followed.  During nearly all of the campaign ahead of those elections, Chávez was not even in the country.

But it’s the one-sidedness of the New Yorker’s reporting that is most overwhelming. Imagine, for example, writing an article about the United States at the end of President Clinton’s eight years  – interviewing the homeless and the destitute, the people tortured in our prisons, the unemployed and the poor single mothers struggling to feed their children.   Could you get away with pretending that this is all of “What Clinton has wrought in America?”  Without mentioning that unemployment hit record lows not seen since the 1960s, that poverty was sharply reduced, that it was the longest-running business cycle expansion in U.S. history?

This is an imperfect analogy, since many people outside the U.S. know something about the country, and wouldn’t buy such a one-sided story line.  And also because the improvements of the Clinton years didn’t last that long:  the stock market bubble burst and caused a recession in 2001; the gains from the recovery that followed went mostly to the richest 1 percent of the population; and then the housing bubble burst, causing the worst recession since the Great Depression — from which we are still recovering.  Unemployment today is considerably above the level of Clinton’s first year in office, and poverty has rebounded dramatically; and we could take another decade to get back to full employment.   Whereas in Venezuela, progress has not been reversed;  there really is no going back, now that the majority of the country has gotten used to sharing in the country’s oil wealth – not just through government programs but primarily through a higher level of employment and income in the private sector.  Maybe that’s not “revolutionary” enough for Anderson, but it’s enough for Venezuelans to keep re-electing their president and his party.

As for the media, it is a remarkable phenomenon, this outpouring of animosity toward Chávez and his government, from across the Western media spectrum.  How is it that this democratically elected president who hasn’t killed anyone or invaded any countries gets more bad press than Saddam Hussein did (aside from the months immediately preceding invasions of Iraq)?  Even when he is fighting for his own life?

The Western media reporting has been effective. It has convinced most people outside of Venezuela that the country is run by some kind of dictatorship that has ruined it.  Fortunately for Venezuelans, they have access to more information about their country than the foreigners who are relying on one-sided and often inaccurate media.  So they keep re-electing the president and the party that has improved their lives — much to the annoyance of the major media and its friends.


 

Posted in International, Media, Politics | Comments Off on Media Hate Fiesta for Venezuela Keeps on Keepen’ On

The Negative Impact of the War on Drugs in Our Community

Two Community Dialogues

Thursday, Feb. 28, Levis Faculty Center (919 W. Illinois St., Urbana)
Friday night, March 1, Salem Baptist Church (500 E. Park St., Champaign)

5:30-8:30 p.m. both nights

Keynote Speakers:

Neill Franklin, former narcotics officer and executive director of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP).

Clifford Thornton, anti-Drug War activist and co-founder of Efficacy.

Organized by Citizens with Conviction (CWC), and Champaign-Urbana Citizens for Peace and Justice (CUCPJ).

Co-sponsors: Salem Baptist Church, Urbana Human Relations Committee, MAS (Muslim American Society), UC Friends Meeting, ACLU, Breakfast Club, GEO, Planners Network, Educations Justice Project, U of I Department of African American Studies.

This community conversation is to raise awareness about mass incarceration in the United States, what Michelle Alexander calls “The New Jim Crow.” This series of talks has the aim of finding solutions to what even the Obama administration has admitted is a failed Drug War. It is also part of our local campaign to oppose a proposal for an expanded jail in Champaign County that could cost up to $20 million.


Posted in Community Forum, Policing | Comments Off on The Negative Impact of the War on Drugs in Our Community