Obama’s Victory Never Much in Doubt

By Mark Weisbrot


This article was published in The Guardian (UK) on November 7, 2012.


President Obama’s re-election was never much in doubt, except perhaps briefly when he took a plunge after the first debate and we didn’t know where the bottom was. But by the end of the campaign, Sam Wang of the Princeton Election Consortium was giving Obama a better than 99 percent chance of winning. Nate Silver of the New York Times, more cautious, put the odds yesterday at about 90-10 in favor of Obama.

Those who point to the popular vote as evidence of a very tight contest, as much of the media did before the election, should consider two things: first, that is not the way the game is played here (unfortunately).

If the popular vote determined the presidency, the Obama team would have put more resources into big states like California and New York to ensure that Obama would win the popular vote by a wider margin.”. Instead, the resources went into swing states, in order to ensure a victory in the electoral vote.

Second, the country is nowhere near as closely divided as the popular vote indicates. That’s because non-voters, who were about 43 percent of the electorate in 2008, favor Obama by a margin of about 2.5 to one.

Indeed, the resources and political power that Republicans mobilized to deny millions of Americans their right to vote, and to suppress voter turnout, raise serious questions about their legitimacy as a political party. A legitimate political party does not rely on preventing citizens from voting, in order to prevail at the polls, any more than a legitimate government relies on repressing freedom of speech or assembly in order to remain in power.

How did Obama win? In this election, as in almost every presidential election for decades the biggest block of swing voters has been white working-class voters (however defined, e.g. without college education). No Democratic candidate has won a majority of white voters for decades, since the Republicans adopted their “southern strategy” in the wake of historic civil rights legislation, and became the “White People’s Party.” (In fact, Obama did better among white voters in 2008 than John Kerry did in 2004 – his race was not a handicap because most voters who wouldn’t vote for an African-American don’t vote for Democrats.) But in this contest he had to win enough of the white working class voters in battleground states to win the election, while winning about 95 percent of African-American voters and a large majority of Latino voters.

This he did primarily by making a populist appeal to working class voters, more populist than any major party presidential nominee in decades. In his last debate, which was supposedly about foreign policy, he repeatedly referred to Romney as someone who wants “to make sure that folks at the top play by a different set of rules” as everyone else. Throughout the campaign, his team attacked Romney for being a rich, unscrupulous politician who didn’t care about working people. Of course it helped that Romney fit the stereotype – a rich corporate raider, a private equity fund C.E.O who said he “like[s] being able to fire people,” and paid less of his income in taxes than millions of working Americans. His infamous remark dismissing 47 percent of Americans as moochers – “my job is not to worry about those people,” was a gift from God, and became one of the Obama campaign’s most effective TV ads.

But for those who have followed Obama’s political career, his re-election was always extremely likely – and indeed it would hardly have been in jeopardy if he had actually debated in the first debate. We knew that he would be as populist as he needed to be in order to win. Even with 23 million still unemployed or under-employed (as Romney repeated endlessly), it’s not that hard to convince a lot of working-class voters that Romney and his party don’t have their interests at heart, if you are willing to make the kind of economic populist appeal that Obama ultimately made. The downside risk, for a candidate, is the potential loss of rich campaign contributors and media; but Obama was willing to take these risks in order to win. This was a historic difference from previous presidential campaigns; Democratic candidates such as Michael Dukakis and Al Gore flirted briefly with economic populist appeals, but backed off in the face of media pressure.

The media are a huge factor in most elections here, and outside of Fox News and the right-wing press, most of the major news outlets were more sympathetic to Obama than to Romney. However they still helped Romney quite a bit, especially with swing voters, with bad reporting on key economic issues. Most Americans didn’t know that the federal stimulus had created an estimated 3 million jobs [PDF]; in fact they didn’t even distinguish the stimulus from the unpopular federal bank bailout. They didn’t understand the benefits that they would derive from Obama’s health care legislation. They didn’t know that they had their taxes cut under Obama. And millions believed the hype that federal deficit spending and the U.S. public debt were major problems (for the record: the U.S. currently pays less than one percent of GDP in net interest annually on the federal debt, less than it has paid during the past 60 years).

The confusion on economic issues was probably the most important influence on swing voters who supported Romney against their own economic interests, thinking that the economy might improve if he were elected.

For this and other misunderstandings we can thank the major media, although we should also include the public relations blunders made by the Obama team. Perhaps the biggest strategic error was President Obama’s refusal to go after Romney’s proposal to cut Social Security, thereby losing the majority of senior citizens’ votes (a big vote in swing states like Virginia and Florida), which he could potentially have won by defending America’s most popular anti-poverty program.

Obama’s silence on Social Security is a bad omen for the future, where political, media, and business leaders will be pressing for a “grand bargain” on budget issues that will screw the vast majority of Americans. It will take a lot of grass-roots pressure to prevent the worst outcomes. Ditto to get us out of Afghanistan and to prevent another disastrous war, this time with Iran; Obama’s foreign policy has been mostly atrocious and the never-ending “war on terror” continues to expand, while most Americans’ living standards have been declining. It’s going to be an uphill fight for progress, but – it could have been a lot worse.


 

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Photos of GEO’s “Let Us Work” Rally

On November 8, a “Let Us Work: Work With Us” rally was held by the GEO on the plaza of the Undergraduate Library.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Campus Support Grows for GEO’s Efforts to Protect Public Education

The Graduate Employees Organization (GEO) at the University of Illinois is in the midst of an important fight to protect access to public higher-education. On campus support has been growing for the GEO in this struggle.

The GEO represents about 2,400 Teaching Assistants (TAs) and Graduate Assistants (GAs). These TAs teach about 20 percent of the course hours on campus. They develop syllabi and lesson plans, grade papers and exams, and write letters of recommendation for undergraduate students applying to get into graduate school or study-abroad opportunities. The GAs work in campus libraries and for essential services like the Office Minority Student Affairs. In other words, these graduate student workers are vital to the quality public education provided at the University of Illinois.

As I wrote in the last issue of the Public i, since April the GEO has been negotiating a new contract with the administration. During these negotiations the union has proposed reasonable improvements to health care and access and equality for graduate student workers. We have asked for fair wage increases that will keep up with inflation and provide the minimum living wage the administration itself says it costs to live in Champaign-Urbana. Finally, we want to keep existing contract language that secures tuition waivers for our members. Tuition Waivers are how universities, like Illinois, are able to hire affordable graduate student labor and compete for high quality students.

Collectively, these proposals will provide working conditions that will make it possible for graduate students, including working class, minority, and international students, to continue to learn and work at the University of Illinois.

To date we have not reached agreement on many of these issues, including health care, wages and tuition waivers.

The administration’s failure to prioritize fair treatment of these essential educators is part of an alarming de-prioritization of instruction at the University of Illinois. Since 2007 the percentage of the University’s budget dedicated to instruction has fallen by 4.5 percent. Going even farther back, since 2001 the student enrollment has grown by nearly thirteen percent, while the number of instructors has not kept pace. Class sizes on campus are on the rise, and the quality of education is suffering because of it—even as students pay more and more in tuition each year.

The GEO’s commitment to ensuring the security of tuition waivers is part of the union’s firm commitment to providing quality instruction on campus.

But in order for the GEO to reach this goal, we need a partner at the bargaining table. When this story goes to print, the GEO will have been working without a contract for nearly three months. That means for one quarter of a year hardworking TAs and GAs have been going to work each day without certainty about the affordability of their health care, their future compensation, or the assurance of their tuition waivers.

Across campus multiple groups and individuals have noticed this mounting uncertainty. They have added their voices to a growing chorus demanding the University administration meet the GEO at the bargaining table with a commitment to talking through these issues and reaching a fair agreement.

This includes a growing, vocal support amongst faculty. The Campus Faculty Association issued a clear statement, “We support the GEO position on tuition waivers. The broad issue is the transparency and collegiality of decision-making on campus.”

Dr. Cary Neslon, Professor Emeritus of  English and past president of the national American Association for University Professors also sees the GEO’s struggle to protect tuition waivers as important for the campus at large, issuing a statement that  the “economic viability of our graduate programs is very much at stake in this debate.”

Dr. Belden Fields, Professor Emeritus of Political Science and frequent Public i contributor wrote a letter to the News Gazette in support of the GEO, noting “The campus administration has for many years claimed that it strives for inclusion.  Its waivers position goes in the exact opposite direction.”

While remaining neutral on the issues, the Urbana-Champaign campus Faculty Senate has passed a resolution urging the negotiations “to advance to a timely and fair resolution.”

Many undergrads have also taken notice of the contract negotiations.  The Student Senate passed a resolution urging resolution to the negotiations and recognizing that “graduate employees contribute significantly to the high quality of education at this University.”

Dozens of undergraduates from multiple Registered Student Organizations have signed up to attend a meeting to learn more about the GEO contract negotiations and how their organizations can support their TAs.

One undergraduate student and guest columnist for the campus newspaper the Daily Illini recently dedicated her column to the topic. She wrote, “Having a TA also allows students to receive personal attention and develop relationships with instructors. They aim to break down large lecture concepts, allowing students to become more engaged in the material, which in turn leads students to do better in the course.” She continued “As a top-ranked university with numerous renowned programs, the University should want to do whatever it takes to upkeep their prestigious programs, starting with paying and protecting the people who help teach them.”

The editorial staff at the Daily Illini offered their support in an editorial published on October 16. The editorial explained, “Tuition waivers in higher education should be a given, especially at a research university like this one. To expect that this University can maintain its high quality while its workers are struggling to provide food for themselves, and sometimes their families, is an irresponsible oversight.”

Voice after voice has been added to an ongoing campus discussion about GEO tuition waivers. These voices have expressed their support and an understanding that tuition waivers are essential compensation for Teaching Assistants, and that Teaching Assistants are essential instructors for the University.

The GEO hopes that the administration listens to these voices.

We also hope that more people from campus and the community will add their voices to this effort to protect access to higher education at the University of Illinois. Visit http://www.uigeo.org/action to find out more and to send a letter to the Board of Trustees and Governor’s Office asking them to encourage a fair contract settlement.

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Real Citizens Against “Citizens United”

By: Colan Holmes & Marya Burke

Voters have amplified the chants and signs of street protesters with the power of their pens. Seventy-two percent of the electorate in both Champaign and Urbana townships filled in the bubble to approve the referendum calling for overturning Citizens United and corporate “personhood.”

Here’s a recap of just what we passed:

The U.S. Supreme Court held, in ‘Citizens United v. FEC’, that corporations have the rights of real human citizens and are entitled to spend unlimited amounts of money in support of political campaigns. To undo that decision, the people of the City of Champaign Township/Cunningham Township support an Amendment to the United States Constitution to establish that:

1. A corporation does not have the same rights as an actual person, and

2. Money is not speech and, therefore, regulating political spending is not equivalent to limiting political speech.

We further request that our city, state and federal representatives enact resolutions and legislation to advance the two positions proposed as part of the Amendment, with reference to the need for an Amendment.

To turn up the volume, we can push further, pressing our City Councils, County, and state level government to enact similar referenda. We would be in good company. There is a growing trend in our state and across the country. Many groups, including Move To Amend, which Occupy CU affiliated with, are pushing for government at all levels to reject the personhood of corporations. This past summer, the Chicago City Council passed its own resolution against Citizens United. Colorado and Montana passed statewide initiatives supported by over 70% of their respective voters calling for a reconsideration of the Supreme Court’s ruling. Nationally, 11 states have passed similar resolutions including: the California, Hawaii, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New Mexico, Rhode Island and Vermont legislatures. Legislators in Connecticut and Maryland sent formal requests to Congress calling for a constitutional amendment.

Even without such an amendment, I see signs for hope. Despite the millions upon millions of dollars spent by Super PACS and various shades of funders (from Adelson to Rove, to “Dark” sources), their successes were somewhat ambiguous. Many of the candidates who were direct or indirect recipients failed to win their seats. Arguably, the public may well have resented and rejected the efforts of big money to bully its way into the Whitehouse and Congress. If nothing else, there was surely more light shed on the dealings than big donors would have wished. Further, corporations were banned from donating to PACs, which is no longer the case.

One thing seems clear, this powerful threat to democracy is answered, in part, by our choice to employ democracy.

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Message to the Community from the UCIMC Board of Directors

Message to the C-U Community from the UCIMC Board of Directors

Dear Community Members:

The purpose of this communication is, first, to provide information about an incident that allegedly occurred at the Independent Media Center where one of our staff members was arrested and charged with criminal sexual assault and, second, to assure all users of the IMC (renters, volunteers, participants in meeting and events scheduled there, and others) that our Board and staff are undertaking actions to guarantee your health and safety.  The IMC has long been and will continue to be a safe and welcoming place.

One year ago the Urbana-Champaign Independent Media Center underwent a major reorganization, reforming both its governance documents and its institutional structures and processes.  At that time, the membership voted to strengthen the role of the Board of Directors, and ten largely new board members were elected. Our officers are Gary Storm (President), Deloris Henry (Vice-President), David Green (Secretary), and Durl Kruse (Treasurer). Other board members include Danielle Chynoweth, Ricardo Diaz, Belden Fields, Martel Miller, Chris Ritzo, and Ken Salo.  The Board established five (5) standing committees, all chaired by Board members: Finance, Personnel, Building/Facilities, Fund Raising, and Programming.  These committees include and are open to IMC members.

Our Board supervises a half-time bookkeeper and the IMC’s only full-time staff member, Carol Ammons, who serves the AmeriCorps Supervisor and the IMC’s Operations Manager.  Carol supervised eight (8) AmeriCorps volunteers working both inside and outside the IMC. The IMC AmeriCorps volunteers took responsibility for coordinating events housed at the IMC, conducting community outreach, managing the building/facilities, and implementing the award-winning Book-to-Prisoners project.

The new organizational structure and the people making it function—staff, Board members, and volunteers—had a highly productive year in 2012.  Fiscal, administrative, and personnel policies and procedures were developed and/or clarified, and new program initiatives were undertaken. Highlights of the year included hosting the national Grassroots Radio Conference, becoming an anchor for the new community broadband network (UC2B), and establishing a new tower for the WRFU radio station that will expand its range significantly.

As you may have read in the News Gazette, in September our building coordinator was charged with sexual assault for alleged behavior at the IMC. Right after the incident, the Board informed all IMC renters and working groups about the incident. The accused remains in jail.  We are currently examining our own policies and practices with the goal of making any changes required to ensure safety inside the building and on the grounds surrounding it.

Several Board members are currently engaged in this process and plan to propose, at the November Board meeting, an ombudsperson committee composed of at least two Board members to which renters and others using the IMC can register concerns or make recommendations. We are also reviewing our personnel policies and practices to see where problems might exist and how they can be avoided and/or dealt with in the future. Lock policies, lighting, and movement within the IMC are also being reviewed.

We invite any and all who may have concerns about this incident, suggestions for safety and communication, or other matters pertaining to the IMC to participate in any of our monthly board meetings, which are typically held at the IMC on the third Tuesday of each month at 6:00 p.m. This month, due to the Thanksgiving holiday, our next board meeting is scheduled for Tuesday, November 13, at 6pm at the IMC. You are also invited to attend our annual General Membership Meeting that is scheduled at the IMC on Sunday, November 18, at 2:00 p.m.

In closing, let those of us on the Board also extend an invitation to any of you to meet with us personally. We are all eager to receive and evaluate any suggestions people have to protect the health and safety of everyone affiliated with or using the resources of the IMC. Thank you.

The UCIMC Board of Directors: Danielle Chynoweth, Ricardo Diaz, Belden Fields, David Green, Deloris Henry, Durl Kruse, Martel Miller, Chris Ritzo, Ken Salo, and Gary Storm.

 

 

 

 

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Section 20 of the UCIMC Personnel Policy, adopted March 20, 2012

“UC-IMC is committed to creating and maintaining a work place free of sexual harassment.  Improper conduct in the workplace is inappropriate and will not be tolerated.  This conduct includes:

–Express or implied requests for sexual favors as a condition of job retention, promotion, or other benefit of employment.

–Unwelcome physical contact.

–Harassment of other behavior (such as the telling of sexually explicit jokes, improper suggestions, graphic or descriptive comments or discussions about an individual’s body or physical appearance, degrading verbal comments, offensive sexual flirtations, and intimidation).

Offensive behavior directed at a person’s race, color, religion, sex, age, national or ethnic origin, or marital status is also prohibited.  The UC-IMC’s policy on sexual harassment and other offensive behavior applies to staff, its Board of Directors, donors, and volunteers.

Any complaints of harassment should be referred immediately to the Operations Manager or the Board. All investigations will be conducted on a confidential basis, and at no time will the complainant be retaliated against.  Appropriate disciplinary action will be taken when warranted.  False complaints will not be tolerated and may lead to disciplinary action against the false accuser.”

 

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“Expert” Opinions and the News Gazette

Some time back I received an email response from John Foreman, editor of the News-Gazette mildly taking me to task for a piece I wrote that appeared in the Public Eye. His problem stemmed from the fact that mention was made that it had been rejected for publication in the News-Gazette but failed to give the reason for the rejection.  Foreman’s objection was that my commentary dealt with American foreign policy and “while you are a smart, thoughtful guy you have no particular expertise” in that area.   That struck me as strange, they had printed several commentaries I had written previously that dealt with matters well beyond the local issues of which I supposedly have some “expertise.”

It would appear that to now qualify to offer a publishable opinion piece in the News-Gazette I would be advised to stay within the confines of Champaign County and limit myself to local history, local government or conservation. In contrast, should Henry Kissinger offer an opinion piece on foreign policy, given his “expertise,” the News-Gazette would jump over the fence to print it. But what makes an opinion legitimate, and who can be considered a valid “expert?” When Kissinger worked in foreign policy, he often got it wrong. As chief foreign policy adviser to Richard Nixon, he supported the Administration’s policy to continue the war in Vietnam in a so-called search for an “honorable” settlement. The result was an end to the violence with terms tantamount to defeat that cost the needless loss of the lives of thousands of American servicemen. Is Kissinger more of an expert than I about the Vietnam War when I am on record as opposing the war as a mistake and wrong from the outset? Arguably, I was also right in my opinions about the inadvisability of the illegal and ultimately tragic invasion of Iraq, in contrast to foreign policy expert, Gen. Colin Powell.  Again, who is the expert?

The commentary published in the Public i and rejected by the News Gazette, “Who Want’s War With Iran?” was regarding the seriousness of a potential armed conflict with Iran over its nuclear program. If my track record is any indication, I believe my analysis is valid. I have followed national and international affairs for more than a half a century, and as a teacher who taught American History, I have been trained in thoughtful analysis that applies across disciplines and geography. My letters to the editor over the years are proof not only of my interest but of my background and knowledge. While I found John Foreman’s decision disappointing, will continue to subscribe to the News-Gazette despite the bias in the editorial policy that leans to the right of the political spectrum.

I have argued with some of my liberal friends regarding the value of our local newspaper. Unfortunately the bias in the editorial policies certainly goes beyond the oped page. However, to stay reasonably informed on local affairs, in which I am also quite interested, the print news media is essential.  No other source has the capability of in-depth and investigative coverage that local newspapers offer.  But in recognizing the current restrictions I face with the News-Gazette, my commentaries must now be offered only to the Public Eye.  There will be no need for any further mention of a rejection by the News-Gazette.

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Graduate Employee Tuition Waivers, Protecting Public Education, and Boxed Coffee

 

 

 

As I write this, the Graduate Employees Organization, or GEO, at the University of Illinois is engaged in an effort to protect access to quality public higher education here in Champaign-Urbana. The GEO is a union that represents over 2,200 Teaching Assistants and Graduate Assistants on campus. GEO instructors provide more than 20% of all class hours taught at U of I, and more than 35% of freshman course hours. GEO Teaching Assistants are vital to the education and research of the University. Currently, the GEO is negotiating a new contract to ensure the best graduate students and teachers can continue to work here at the University.

The most important issue in the GEO contract negotiation is guaranteeing tuition waivers. Most GEO members could not afford to attend the U of I without tuition waivers. They are a fundamental part of graduate education at every major university. Waivers are how universities, like Illinois, are able to hire graduate student labor so cheaply and compete for high quality students. Despite this the University is refusing to sign language to protect tuition waivers in the contract.

Sound familiar?  In November 2009 the GEO went to strike over this very issue. We won. We got tuition waiver protection in our contract. Now the administration wants to remove this protection and has also violated our existing contract language in several departments in the Fine and Applied Arts.

Back in 2009, my friend David and I spent those two rainy strike days walking up and down picket lines serving about 1,000 people cups of coffee out of cardboard box containers. We met lots of cold, wet people.

We met graduate student teachers and undergraduates who were picketing because they care deeply that working class and under-represented students are less and less able to attend the U of I. Since 2001 the tuition has gone up about $6,000 per student per year, and the administration argues that this increase is needed because of a reduction in State funding. But here’s the thing, State funding has only dropped about $3,000 per student per year. This means the University has made more than $100 million in additional revenue through increased tuition.

Where has that money gone? Not to providing instruction. In 2009, we also met many faculty members who joined the GEO picket lines because of their concerns over increasing class sizes, declining numbers of tenure track faculty, and a general erosion of the quality of education. Since 2005, administrative positions at the U of I have increased by nearly 20% while instruction positions have not even increased 1%. Since 2001, student enrollment has increased 13%! This means fewer professors and more students.

In 2009, we also met university employees who clean the buildings, work in offices and labs across campus, and serve food to students in the dining halls. These hard-working employees were walking the line with GEO, because they also take pride in our University and want it to be a fair work place for all employees.

Finally, we met community members who were walking with the GEO because our union is committed to being a partner in building just and equitable Champaign-Urbana.

The GEO tuition waiver negotiations are connected to all of these concerns—and central to continuing a robust, diverse graduate student body population on campus.

Three years ago I spent two days pouring coffee to long lines of singing, chanting, teeth-chattering people who genuinely believe that public education is something worth protecting. The GEO is continuing to bargain for tuition waivers and remains committed to securing this protection in our contract.

And we’ll have a cup of coffee ready for anyone who wants to join us in the fight.

For more information about the GEO and our contract negotiations follow us on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/uigeo  and Twitter http://twitter.com/ui_geo or email geo@uigeo.org with questions.

 

 

 

Stephanie Seawell is a PhD candidate in the Department of History, where she studies Civil Rights and Black Power activism around sites of Public Recreation in Cleveland Ohio.  She is also a member and former co-president of the GEO.

 

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To Eat or Not to Eat GE Foods: Let Me Decide!

I moved here last month as the Champaign-Urbana field organizer for Food & Water Watch, the national consumer advocacy organization working to protect our food and water resources. We are working to return the power of choice to consumers by getting genetically engineered (GE) foods labeled in Illinois. At the kickoff meeting for our “Let Me Decide: Make GE Labels the Law” campaign here in Urbana on September 19, approximately 50 community members gathered to join the fight to take back control of our food system and our basic right to know what we eat.

The food system is not working for most Americans. At the heart of it all, we don’t know what we’re eating because corporations are hiding information from consumers. Without consumers’ consent, biotech companies use genetic engineering – inserting genes from one plant, animal, or microorganism into the DNA of an entirely different species – to patent life and grow their profits. The vast majority of corn and soy in America—which are the key ingredients in most processed foods—is genetically engineered, and we eat these foods every day.

From a consumer advocacy perspective, the key problem is that there are not enough long-term studies indicating whether or not GE foods are safe for human consumption, and yet the Food and Drug Administration does not require labeling of these potentially unsafe foods. We are a living experiment. In a world where corporate profits triumph over the consumer right to know, we have lost our core American value of having the right to choose for ourselves.

I want a world where I can walk down the grocery aisle and know whether the cereal for my breakfast, the papaya for my lunch, and the sweet corn for my dinner are grown naturally, or whether their DNA was engineered in a laboratory. I want a world where farmers do not have to choose between growing natural food and making a profit, and a world where farmers can engage in the timeless, life-sustaining practice of saving seeds without getting sued for violating patent laws. I want a world where parents can choose what to feed their children, a world where friends can choose what to feed each other, a world where we can all choose what to feed ourselves. I want a world where policy makers do not have to choose between keeping their constituents safe and having the money to get re-elected.

I lived in England for a year, which ignited my interest in this issue. There I noticed that supermarket products were labeled as genetically engineered or not. Over 50 countries require similar labeling of GE foods, and yet the United States does not. Just as consumers can choose products based on fat or calorie content, consumers have the right to know whether a product contains potentially unsafe GE ingredients. We deserve labeling here in America, here in Illinois, and here in Champaign-Urbana.

As we speak, biotech companies are dumping millions of dollars into a misinformation campaign to defeat a grassroots ballot initiative in California that would make GE labeling mandatory. In the advocacy organizing world, we often speak of “organized money versus organized people,” a concept that applies particularly well to this issue. Organized money wants to keep us in the dark about our food. Yet I believe that organized people can overcome organized money. Moreover, the power of organized people is the strongest, and perhaps the only, force that can.

This is the perfect time for organized people to take a stand on GE food. There is never-before-seen national momentum for this issue with Proposition 37, California’s ballot initiative, and the Food & Water Watch “Let Me Decide” campaign across the country. Citizens everywhere are becoming more aware of what they are eating and are beginning to speak out: we have the right to know what’s in our food! Here in Illinois, this is also the perfect time to act. Just this September, Representative Deborah Mell committed to introducing an Illinois House bill that would require the labeling of all GE foods in Illinois. We need to get a companion bill introduced in the Illinois State Senate before the start of the next legislative session in January 2013. This means that we need a commitment from our elected officials here in Champaign-Urbana before the end of this year

Within the first six weeks of this campaign, over 700 C-U residents signed petitions in support of a statewide bill requiring the labeling of GE foods in Illinois. With enough pressure from local residents like you, we will win. We must build a groundswell of public support to take back our right to know what we are eating.

Come get involved! Our “Let Me Decide” campaign uses a variety of tactics and events, both to win this campaign and to build a sustainable food community here in Champaign-Urbana. In the past month, we held a kickoff meeting to strategize about the campaign, a call-in day of action, a documentary screening at Tiny Greens Organic Farm, petitioning events, socials in downtown Urbana, and two campaign strategy meetings. The people involved in this campaign bring diverse backgrounds, passions and reasons for caring about this issue. Join us to learn more, to discuss why you care, to share your creativity, to meet other people in this community, and to take action.

Join us at these exciting upcoming events:

Film screening and letter-writing party: Thursday, Oct. 11, 6:00-8:00PM, Lincoln Square Mall (Space 114). At this event co-sponsored by Food & Water Watch, Strawberry Fields, and Common Ground Co-Op, come watch the new documentary “The World According to Monsanto” while eating non-GE food! After the film, we will write handwritten letters to our local representatives, showing our support for GE labeling.

Campaign Strategy Meeting: Wednesday, Oct. 24, 7:30-8:30 PM, Urbana Free Library lower level conference room. Come learn more about the campaign, meet people involved, and help us to strategize about upcoming events and long-term goals. We’ll have non-GE baked goods!

Want to learn more or ready to volunteer today? We also have frequent volunteer opportunities, where you can make a difference while learning how to do various grassroots organizing techniques! Contact me at hsaltzman@fwwlocal.org. For more information, please see www.foodandwaterwatch.org, and watch for our events on Facebook at www.facebook.com/FWWillinois.

 

 

 

Hanna is the Champaign-Urbana field organizer for Food & Water Watch, the national consumer advocacy non-profit. She graduated in anthropology from Williams College in Massachusetts.

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The Cheesemonger: Common Ground Food Co-op Hires Cheese Expert

By Billy LeGrand

“Who cut the cheese?”  “So you’re the cheese whiz?”  “You call that a job?!”

As a cheesemonger, I’ve heard more than my fair share of “cheesy” puns – they are irresistibly delicious.  I’ve also heard plenty of doubt about the existence of such a thing as a cheesemonger in today’s world.  “Honestly, I haven’t heard of anyone ‘mongering’ anything for years (except for politicians)” they tell me.

Enter the small-scale, local seller who takes pride in their products, knows the farmers and artisans behind the food, and knows customers’ names and food preferences by heart.  A monger is a storyteller, an expert, a manual laborer, a trusted ally.  Today, though, the most important aspect of mongering is advocacy – getting the word out about great food, family farmers, artisan traditions, supporting local economies, and much more.  A world without mongers is not the world I want!

Earlier this summer, Common Ground Food Co-op hired me to be their first full-time cheesemonger as a part of the great expansion currently underway.  If you haven’t visited the store recently, you’d be surprised to see the changes.  The kitchen has moved upstairs into a full production facility, the produce section is growing, and more cash registers have been installed.  Beer and wine are on their way here soon, as is an espresso bar, hot deli foods prepared to order, and fresh meats.  In my opinion, though, the most important change at Common Ground certainly happened on September 5th, when the cheese selection doubled in size!

 

 

 

 

 

Which brings me to the cheese, and that means it’s mongering time.  To so many people, cheese is a commodity product: a mass-produced rectangle in various shades of white and orange, a melted topping on nearly every popular convenience food, a rather mysterious ingredient in packaged convenience foods.  It dominates so much of our food landscape because it is cheap and easy.  Whether it’s burgers, pasta, salad, or so much else, everyone knows to top it with a little cheese to bring the flavor out.

But I spend my days with an altogether different product.  I work with delicate cheeses that need coddling, stinky cheeses that shout from the treetops, aged cheeses that want to be left alone, oozing cheeses that change from day to day, and so many more.  These cheeses are living, breathing creations from the hands of skilled artisans.  From Mike Gingrich’s intensively managed pasturing system at Uplands Cheese Company in Dodgeville, WI, to 20 year-old wunderkind Galen Musser from Milton, IA, whose Prairie Breeze Cheddar from hand-milked cows has been named Best Cheddar by the American Cheese Society not once but twice, these cheeses represent the efforts, time, and craftsmanship of tremendously hard-working people.  For lack of a better term, I call this cheese “real cheese.”

Real cheese is more than something you grab at the store and melt on a hot dog (although it would definitely make for a much better hot dog).  Real cheese has a story, it has a personality.  It has parents and caretakers, friends and enemies.  Tony and Julie Hook of Mineral Point, WI, age their cheddars up to fifteen years before releasing them to the public – their cheese is nearly old enough to vote before it leaves home!  Why do they do this?  Because the cheese that develops is unlike anything else, with assertive, broad, deep flavors, lingering cream and salt, and a slow roastiness as it fades.  When you taste it, you know what I mean by “real cheese.”  You can taste that farm, that milk, that cheesemaker’s skill.  It takes you somewhere.

As a cheesemonger, my job is to track down these tremendous cheeses, to talk to the cheesemakers and farmers, to provide feedback both good and bad, and to provide them with a convenient and reliable source of income.  Then, I turn around and tell the public about these cheeses.  I talk about the flavors, the animals, the people.  And I listen to their responses – “you know Billy, that cheese last time was a bit too strong (or not enough, or just right) for my taste.”  I learn the customers’ stories – their jobs, their skills, their interests.  I know when they are hosting a party, when family is in town, what dietary issues they have, and the history of cheeses they’ve enjoyed.  Ultimately, I connect one group of incredible people with another group of incredible people, via real cheese.

So then, let’s get down to business and talk a little cheese, people.

Do you know Prairie Fruits Farm on N. Lincoln Ave., just past I-74?  Leslie and Wes have built something incredible up there, raising their own goats to make astounding cheese, buying sheep’s milk from Eldon Plank in Arthur, IL, to make even more cheese, hosting all kinds of events on the farm, taking action in the community, and still winning the prestigious first place award for Best Sheep’s Milk Cheese at this year’s American Cheese Society conference with their incredible Black Sheep.

Do you know Ludwig Farmstead Creamery in Fithian?  With his chemistry degree and cheesemaking apprenticeship in hand, young Jake Ludwig was all set to make cheese with milk from his father’s blue ribbon cows on the family farm, which dates back to 1866.  Sadly, Jake was killed in a car accident before cheese production began.  However, Jake’s recipe has been taken up in Jake’s facility by Fons Smits, an experienced cheesemaker working with the Ludwig family to make Jake’s dream a reality. Happily, the community’s support for Ludwig has been immense.  I literally cannot keep Ludwig Farmstead Creamery fresh mozzarella in the store, it is certainly a far cry from bland factory mozzarella.

My mission at Common Ground is different from a traditional specialty store or specialty selection in a grocery store with a large selection of well-known cheeses.  Though I do carry a few European cheeses on a rotating basis, I am entirely here to tell the stories of small-scale American cheesemakers.  You won’t recognize many of the cheeses in the case here at Common Ground, and that makes my bosses nervous.  But I am a cheesemonger and I am serious about this stuff.  I stake my name on these cheeses and on the great people behind them.  I hope you’ll give them a chance, I know you’ll be happy you did.

Billy LeGrand is Specialty Cheese Buyer at Common Ground Food Co-op.  He has worked with cheese on and off since 2004, specializing in artisanal American producers.  He is also a certified Alexander Technique teacher, assisting courses at UI and working privately from his studio in downtown Champaign.  He holds a master’s degree in music and tries to keep up on the guitar in his spare time.  He is a passionate advocate for well-being and the good life – in food, body, mind, art, family, and friends.

Posted in Food | Comments Off on The Cheesemonger: Common Ground Food Co-op Hires Cheese Expert

Who Wants War with Iran?

By Dannel McCollum,

Dannel McCollum, a former Champaign mayor and a Democratic candidate for the state Senate in 2002, is a historian and a freelance writer.

 

 

Increasingly, it looks like the neo-cons who gave us the Iraq and Afghanistan wars are now at work to give us a war with Iran.  Such a war would be a disaster not only for the already war-weary American people, but could set off a new conflagration that would make those two wars pale by comparison.  The United Nations Security Council would certainly not authorize such military action.  Thus an attack on the Iranian nuclear facilities either by Israel or the United States would mirror the Iraq debacle with the exception that there would be few, if any, countries joining the so-called “willing.”

All this is coming down in a very bad time for the Obama administration.  With an election just months off, the President cannot afford to appear weak with respect to Iran and its nuclear endeavors.  That was clear when the Israeli prime minister appeared before Congress and received a standing ovation with his tough stance on Iran.  Under such circumstances, no American politician, members of Congress, especially an incumbent president, can afford to offend the Israel lobby.  So, the administration continues to state that all options including military action remain on the table with respect to Iran and its nuclear ambitions.

An immediate threat is that Israel will unilaterally strike the Iranian nuclear facilities.  It would do so enabled by aircraft and bunker buster munitions supplied by the United States.  Iran, with more than reasonable justification would treat such an attack as facilitated by the United States. The Israelis are in no position to sustain any extended war with Iran and would surely expect that United States would bail them out.

Even if the U. S. did not intervene in support of Israel, an immediate Iranian response would be to close down the Gulf of Hormuz, a vital shipping corridor for oil from the Middle East.  Given the narrowness of the waterway, this is well within the capability of the Iranians to accomplish.  The United States would certainly move to reopen the strait and thus become involved in a ruinous war with Iran if it were not already otherwise involved.

All indications are that the Obama administration does not want a war with Iran.  I am sure that the war-weary American public is not excited about the prospect either. A Security Council in support of the United States in a war against Iran almost certainly will not happen.  Our allies in the Afghanistan war, war weary and faced with serious economic problems of their own, cannot be counted upon for help and strong opposition can be expected from other major world powers including China and Russia.

Of course, the Israelis would like the United States to unilaterally to undertake a take down of the Iranian nuclear facilities.  The consequences would at the very least be equal and likely much worse than that of Israel acting alone.  Thus the verbal militancy on the part of the Obama administration, desperately hoping to keep the lid on until after the election, after which rationality might prevail.  Romney’s recent trip abroad, after he offended the Brits, moved on to Israel where he seemed to say that he would back the Israelis in whatever they decided to do–the proverbial blank check.  It certainly does not help to have Republican Mitt Romney, striking a militant stance in hopes of more money from the likes of Sheldon Adelson and votes from the “Israel right or wrong” lobby.

 

 

 

Posted in International, Politics | Comments Off on Who Wants War with Iran?

Talk About the Immokalee Workers

One of the most inspiring contemporary examples of how immigrant rights and worker rights intersect is the story of the Immokalee Workers.

Learn about the heroic story of a small group of migrant workers who successfully overcame modern-day slavery in the agricultural fields of the U. S. by taking on major fast-food restaurant and food service chains.  Join them in their ongoing efforts to pressure major supermarket chains to enforce codes of conduct with their suppliers that will extend protections to agricultural workers in the Southeast.

Ricky Baldwin, Field Staff and Organizer, SEIU Local 73, and longtime social justice activist in the Champaign-Urbana area, will facilitate a multi-media presentation on the Immokalee workers.

Where: Channing Murray Foundation; 1209 W. Oregon; Urbana
When: Oct. 27th, 2012; 2 to 4 pm

This event is organized by Central Illinois Jobs with Justice.

Co-sponsors include: C-U Immigration Forum, Channing Murray Foundation, University YMCA, Social Action Committee of the Unitarian Universalist Church.

Posted in Immigration | Comments Off on Talk About the Immokalee Workers

Moody’s Shows It Has Political Agenda for U.S. Fiscal Policy

By Mark Weisbrot


This article was first published in The Guardian (UK) on September 13, 2012, www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/sept/13/moodys. If anyone wants to reprint it, please include a link to the original.


Moody’s threat Wednesday to downgrade the U.S. government’s credit rating says a whole lot more about the credit rating agency than it does about the U.S. debt situation. It is really a way of telling the world that Moody’s is making a political statement, rather than an assessment of risk for investors who want actual information about U.S. Treasury securities. This is really an embarrassment for Moody’s – since they are supposed to be evaluating risk — although most of the media didn’t seem to notice.

If you had to pick any sovereign bond in the world that has the least risk of default, it would have to be a U.S. Treasury bond. Anyone who is holding bonds issued by the U.S. government can be pretty sure that they will get their full interest payments and principal, if they hold it to maturity, unless there is something like a gigantic nuclear war. One reason is that the U.S. has its own central bank and can simply create the money to pay bondholders, if necessary.

That is the main reason why, for example, the U.K. government is paying just 1.8 percent interest on its ten-year bonds right now, while Spain is paying 5.6 percent – even though the U.K. has a larger net government debt than Spain has. The U.K. has its own central bank and currency, so U.K. bondholders can be pretty sure that they will be paid. Spain, however, is at the mercy of the European Central Bank, an alien and sometimes hostile entity – one that, as we have seen in the case of Greece, may be more willing to drive a country into depression and default than to guarantee its debt. The European Central Bank could push down Spanish borrowing costs simply by making the appropriate guarantees, but it has so far refused to do so.

The United States also has an advantage that no other country has, which is that its currency is the world’s main reserve currency. More than 60 percent of the world’s central bank reserves are held in dollars, and most of the world’s foreign currency transactions involve dollars. The dollar may lose its status as a reserve currency someday, but not any time soon. So this is another reason why nobody holding U.S. debt has to worry about default.

Moody’s – like Standard and Poors, which lowered the United States government’s credit rating from AAA to AA+ in August 2011 – is making a meaningless statement, in economic terms. What does it mean to say that the risk of default on U.S. Treasury bonds will increase if Congress does not make progress on reducing U.S. debt? What financial asset would you prefer to be holding if the world economy reaches the point where default on U.S. Treasuries is imminent? Even your federally insured checking account would not be safe. Or the cash in your wallet for that matter.

It is clear that these credit rating agencies have a political agenda. Like most of Wall Street and the politicians that they can buy, they want the U.S. government to cut spending and reduce its deficit. They are not particularly concerned about the more than 22 million Americans who are unemployed, involuntarily working part-time, or have given up looking for work altogether. They would prefer a “grand bargain” on spending that cuts senior citizens’ Social Security benefits. Today’s statement is a form of political corruption on the part of the credit rating agencies.

It’s perhaps different from the corruption that led Moody’s to give AAA ratings to more than 46,000 residential mortgage-backed securities between 2000 and 2007, many of which turned out to be worthless. Or the investment grade rating that the agencies gave to Enron until four days before its bankruptcy, or to Lehman Brothers until a few days before its collapse. Many of these ratings were likely influenced by the fees that the credit ratings agencies earned from the institutions whose securities they were rating. And did I mention that Moody’s, S & P, and Fitch get about 90 percent of the revenue that the multi-billion dollar ratings industry generates? Or that they make about 98 percent of the ratings? There is nothing like a lucrative oligopoly to encourage all kinds of corruption.

In the real world, the U.S. doesn’t even have a debt problem – net interest payments on the public debt are less than 1 percent of America’s national income, or as low as it has been for more than 60 years. And the long-term deficit projections are a result of our health care system: if you substitute the health care costs of any other high-income country (or any country with a life expectancy as high as ours) into our budget, the long-term deficit turns into a surplus.

But Moody’s wants us to be scared of the federal debt, so as to advance a right-wing agenda. They are making a good case for serious reform of the ratings agencies.

Posted in Labor/Economics | Comments Off on Moody’s Shows It Has Political Agenda for U.S. Fiscal Policy

LEARN ABOUT THE INTERSECTION OF IMMIGRANT AND WORKER RIGHTS

Immigrant rights, worker rights―what’s the connection? The East Central Illinois Jobs with Justice (ECIJWJ) Chapter is hosting a multi-media presentation on the Coalition of Immokalee Workers that will address this question. Part of a month-long examination of the problems and concerns faced by immigrant populations in the U. S., this event is being organized under the auspices of the local Immigration Forum. The ECIJWJ presentation is scheduled for on Oct. 27, 2012 from 2 to 4 p.m. at the Channing Murray Foundation (1209 W. Oregon, Urbana). The event is free and open to the general public.

Ricky Baldwin, Field Staff and Organizer, SEIU Local 73, and longtime social justice activist in the Champaign-Urbana area, will facilitate the presentation. He will describe the heroic struggle of a small group of migrant workers who successfully overcame modern-day slavery in the agricultural fields of the U. S. by taking on major fast-food restaurant and food service chains. Additional topics will include ongoing efforts to pressure major supermarket chains to enforce codes of conduct with their suppliers that can extend protections for agricultural workers.

This event is co-sponsored by: C-U Immigration Forum, Channing Murray Foundation, University YMCA, Social Action Committee of the Unitarian Universalist Church.

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CU Smiles Promotes Local Currency

A local currency, called UC Smiles, will be introduced to the
Urbana-Champaign area on November !st of this year.  Locally owned and
operated stores will be accepting the currency and most of the member
stores are offering discounts to those who come carrying Smiles.

Why local currency?  Shopping locally helps take care of the social,
economic and environmental needs of the community.  Shopping at non-local
chains and big box stores has many effects on a community that are not
obvious right away.  When these stores move in, the local stores that
provide similar goods are often put out of business.  It often seems that
new jobs are being created, but in actuality, many jobs are lost.  When one
Super Walmart moves into a community 150-180 jobs are lost within the
surrounding county.  Local downtowns become ghost towns, taking with
them the local flavor as they die.  (Who would go to another community and
buy something at Target as a souvenir?)  In local stores, you can meet the
owner, get personal service and voice your opinions about how they can
provide what you need.  Good store owners listen to their customers and try
to accommodate because they know it is good for themselves as well.  In
addition, community connections are made and concern for others in the
community is increased.

Besides the loss of jobs from the community, corporate chains also require
money for those at the top of their organization–LOTS OF MONEY!
Approximately 25% more of your dollars spent at non-local stores goes out
of the community–much of it to the headquarters of the big
business, whereas the money gained by local owners is spent in the
community adding more to the economy and jobs.  Additionally, local
businesses purchase more locally made products and locally grown foods to
resell–again stimulating the local economy.

Looking at this from an environmental point of view, big box stores buy
more goods from outside the community.  Products travelling long distances
require a great deal more fuel and packaging materials.  A carrot typically
travels over 1800 miles before ending up on your plate!  Product is often
damaged due to travel and is unusable or of lower quality.  Foods produced
to travel distances are designed for travel, and often taste and quality
are compromised.

OK, we understand why we need to shop locally, but why the currency?  Local
currencies offer an opportunity for local stores to offer incentives while
reminding customers that they are a locally owned and operated store.
Having these unusual bills in hand remind people to be conscious of where
they are spending their money and why.  Once dollars are converted into
Smiles, they can only be spent at local stores, but remember–using them
helps stimulate the local economy, and often a discount applies!

In addition to the currency, UC Smiles is dedicated to bringing new
customers to the downtown areas through a downtown tour program during
which new people to the community can be introduced to the local
businesses, meet the owners of some of these stores and learn some of the
history and culture of our community.

Two “Exchange Stores” have been established: International Galleries in
Lincoln Square and Strawberry Fields on Main Street in Urbana. These stores
will convert your dollars into UC Smiles starting November 1st.  If you
would like to get your Smiles ahead of time you can purchase them by
sending a message to UCSmilesforyou@gmail.com   You can also get more
information and see the businesses enrolled as members by going to
UCSmiles.org .

A party for distribution of Smiles will be held at the IMC
on October 27th from 4-6pm.  Come meet the others involved and join the fun!

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on CU Smiles Promotes Local Currency

Two Referenda on November Ballot

Occupy CU Referendum on Citizens United and Corporate Personhood to Appear on Champaign and Urbana Ballots

Occupy CU demonstrated near the Federal Courthouse in Urbana as part of the national call to “occupy the courts” in opposition to the Citizens United Supreme Court decision on January 20, 2012. The group of 50, braving an outdoor temperature not nearly equal that number, symbolically took their message a block north of the Courthouse to Main Street.

Due to that organization’s efforts, the call to overturn Citizens United and end corporate personhood are now issues “Main Street” can share their opinion regarding on the November ballot. And Main Street has plenty of reason to challenge the Court’s decision.

In comparison to 2008, the 2012 election has seen more than four times as much money spent by outside groups on political campaigns. This is due to the Citizens United decision, which essentially claimed corporate campaign donations were free speech, eliminating a $5,000 limit on donations made by political action committees (PACs). This is when Super PACs were born.

While before Citizens United individuals could spend unlimited amounts of money in support or opposition to political campaigns, they often refrained from doing so because they had to disclose their name on the advertisments and materials the donation generated. Because of this, they donated to PACs, yet those often reached their $5,000 limit. The limit, and challenge of operating multiple PACs, effectively operated as an obstacle.

Further, corporations were banned from donating to PACs, which is no longer the case.

Thus, you see the quadrupling of political spending.

Even though donors do not have to be disclosed, there is further reason to believe this is a coup by the 1%. To give an idea of who is spending this money, 72 percent of political advertising spending by outside groups in our last federal election, in 2010, came from sources that were prohibited from spending money in 2006, and the total amount spent by groups which do not have to disclose their donors rose from 1 percent to 47 percent in those years.

To counter this coup, Occupy CU affiliated with the national Move to Amend campaign, bringing a referendum question that challenges the very notion of corporate personhood to successful passage at the City of Champaign and Cunningham township meetings in April.

The Supreme Court’s reasoning in Citizens United v the FEC rested on the idea that corporations have the same rights as people, and that their money is a form of protected free speech. This is based on a much older Supreme Court decision, Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad, that stated corporations had legal rights like those of an individual.

That ruling, made in 1886, is open to interpretation, but it would require a much more progressive Supreme Court and an organized people’s movement to overturn it. It can also be challenged with an amendment. Organizing for an anti-corporate personhood amendment and building knowledge of the issue of corporate personhood within a people’s movement can be done simultaneously, as Occupy has demonstrated.

With pressure from the grassroots, Galesburg, IL passed a resolution against Citizens United, Northfield, IL has passed a citizens initiative, and even Chicago has passed a resolution in oppostion to the decision. There are more votes to come this November.

Be sure to get out and vote “yes” here in Champaign-Urbana. The more victories we have on the local level, the greater our ability to have the state of Illinois join in challenging corporate control of our democracy.

If you support the referendum item, please contact your senator and representative and let them know to pay attention to the vote. The few minutes it takes to do so will likely save you from many more times the minutes lost having to listen to rhetoric-based ads brought to you by political operatives or billionaire brothers in the future.

The referendum:

The U.S. Supreme Court held, in ‘Citizens United v. FEC’, that corporations have the rights of real human citizens and are entitled to spend unlimited amounts of money in support of political campaigns. To undo that decision, the people of the City of Champaign Township/Cunningham Township support an Amendment to the United States Constitution to establish that:

1. A corporation does not have the same rights as an actual person, and

2. Money is not speech and, therefore, regulating political spending is not equivalent to limiting political speech.

We further request that our city, state and federal representatives enact resolutions and legislation to advance the two positions proposed as part of the Amendment, with reference to the need for an Amendment.

(A “Yes” vote denotes agreement).

Local Free Speech

In the last issue we wrote about how political speech is facing a squeeze. On the one hand we’re swamped by mindless attack ads, mostly paid for by the ultra-rich. On the other hand, simple low-cost person-to-person communication channels such as petitioning and leafleting are becoming less practical. The main reason is that people stay in their cars until they’re in the parking lots of big stores and malls, so it’s hard to reach many pedestrians  on public space. Although dealing with the huge superpacs requires a national effort, we can do a lot to fix the barriers to free speech locally.

Consider a typical situation. Perhaps a war is about to start, based on false claims. You’d like to hand out some leaflets exposing the lies. Perhaps you can do so on the sidewalks outside the Urbana Civic Center. Unfortunately almost no one comes by. Meanwhile you can see a steady flow of people through the parking lot with Schnucks and other retailers. You can’t leaflet there because the parking lot is nominally private property, regardless of how many public incentives were used to get it built. In Champaign, the situation at Market Place Mall is more extreme.

We can fix that. California (and some other states) have shown that it’s perfectly possible to require large stores and malls to allow non-disruptive political petitioning and leafleting. Needless to say, such commercial institutions continue to thrive there. In California, that free-speech rule is due to a longstanding court decision (“Pruneyard”)  based on the state constitution. Here, we could accomplish the same thing via local legislation.

One objection I’ve heard is that the Web allows a lot of easy communication, so the old person-to-person methods aren’t needed. In practice, we know that most Web communications don’t cross barriers between different groups, or typically do so via crude insults.  There’s no substitute for face-to-face contact, which promotes a little more mutual respect and some real exchange of views both ways. In part, that’s precisely because it takes effort to go out in public, unlike adding another 1000 names to a spam list.

The bigger concern we’ve heard is that merchants would have to put up with obnoxious behavior that could hurt their businesses. That hasn’t been a problem in other places with similar rules. The key point is that the detailed rules would be written by the city councils. Those councils are not going to ignore legitimate concerns from the affected businesses. Blocking passages, yelling, repeatedly bugging people who don’t want to talk, etc. would obviously not be allowed in these privately-owned spaces. Simple petitioning and leafleting, standing near but not in the flow of people, would be allowed.

Some libertarians have offered more abstract arguments about the absolute sanctity of private property. In practice, the big developments usually get special tax breaks and other government assistance. It seems hypocritical to then claim to have no obligations to general public concerns, such as maintaining the same level of free-speech that we had when separate stores directly facing public sidewalks.

We should be prepared, of course, for the likelihood that people using there free-speech rights will often not agree with us. Sometimes we’ll hate what they have to say. That’s part of building a lively political community.

Addendum: A possible complication has arisen, in that the County Clerk says that referenda are to be phrased as questions starting with “shall”, and ours aren’t. We’re hoping that this gets treated as a simple matter of democracy, not as a tricky game with rules from Jeopardy. As we go to press, it appears likely that the referenda will appear, perhaps prefaced with “Shall the following referendum be adopted?”, but we aren’t sure yet. A “Yes” vote will still be pro-referendum.

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Two Referenda on November Ballot

Nov. 18: ACCESS Initiative “Think Tank”

The ACCESS Initiative is currently involved in planning a community wide 3-day “Think Tank “ event for November 8-10th at Eastland Suites.
ACCESS Initiative is a new System of Care in Champaign County to help youth (ages 10-18) function better at home, in school, in the community, and throughout life.
Our hope for this event is the creation or refinement of a plan that will guide and prioritize our work in the community.  We want to identify new commitments, become more aware of collaborative opportunities, have a clearer understanding of what’s still missing, and celebrate successes.We have been listening carefully to various stakeholders in the community and gathering their input to help us shape the event.
We want this experience to be unlike others of its kind and want the Think-Tank to produce information we all need and outcomes that are universally shared.
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SPEAK Cafe

October 18th, 7-9pm
SANKOFA; HONORING THE LEGACY OF BOB MARLEY
and of course
FREE SWEET POTATO PIE for the 1st twenty people
Posted in Arts | Comments Off on SPEAK Cafe

“Black Cultural Politics in a Color Blind Nation” Lecture by Tricia Rose

“Black Cultural Politics in a Color Blind Nation”

Lecture by Tricia Rose (Africana Studies, Brown University)

Date: November 1, 2012
Time:
4:00 p.m.
Location:
Knight Auditorium, Spurlock Museum

Co-Sponsored by IPRH and the Spurlock Museum.

David R. Roediger, Kendrick C. Babcock Professor of History and African American Studies will moderate.

A reception will follow the lecture.

This event is free and open to the public.

 

About this event:
This lecture explores some facets of the strange co-existence of the idea of “color blindness” as a social ideal in the context of a social reality in which race heavily determines economic and social outcomes, racially-coded political narratives fuel national belonging, and the entertainment industry regularly profits from mass consumption of narrow visions of “blackness.” What kinds of alternatives do these conditions generate?

About the speaker:
Tricia Rose was born and raised in New York City. She spent her childhood in Harlem and the Bronx. She graduated from Yale University where she received a BA in Sociology and then received her PhD from Brown University in American Studies. She recently returned to Brown, where she is Professor of Africana Studies.

Professor Rose is most well-known for her ground-breaking book on the emergence of hip hop culture. Black Noise: Rap Music and Black Culture in Contemporary America won several awards and is considered a defining and foundational text for the study of hip hop. She is also the co-editor of the youth music and youth culture collection: Microphone Fiends, and in 2003 published a rare history of black women’s sexual life stories, called Longing To Tell: Black Women Talk About Sexuality and Intimacy. In 2008, Professor Rose returned to hip hop with: THE HIP HOP WARS: What We Talk About When We Talk About Hip Hop—And Why It Matters.

Posted in University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign | Comments Off on “Black Cultural Politics in a Color Blind Nation” Lecture by Tricia Rose

Political Memory at Work in Latin America

My recent trip to El Salvador and Argentina focused heavily on ‘sites of memory,’ locations where events of massive political violence had occurred and where attempts to learn from them are underway. These two countries have experienced extreme social conflict—military dictatorship, widespread repression, massacres and ‘disappearances.’ The recent practices of (relatively) free and fair elections, civilian government and reconciliation have led to a modicum of social peace and political cooperation. However, the scars of past trauma and perceptions of injustice, coupled with current instances of actual injustice haunt Salvadoran and Argentinean citizens.

El Salvador

After a long trip we arrived at Perquin. In this zone, once host to intense rebel activity, demobilized guerrillas founded the Museum of the Salvadoran Revolution. Carlos, our guide, was one of the former fighters who had, with their own hands, built the museum to commemorate the sacrifice of fallen comrades, which stands as a part of the continuing struggle for justice. Knowing nothing about museums, they had used traditional construction methods ill-suited to hanging frames and cases. The simple rooms showcased guerrilla leaders, especially women; the weapons and equipment they used, many of them homemade; and a replica of Radio Venceremos, the rebels’ main means of communication and propaganda. Outside a crater marked one of the many indiscriminate 500-pound bombs dropped by the Army.

The prize exhibit: remains of a helicopter brought down by guerrilla forces. The crash killed Lieut. Col. Monterrosa, commander of Atlacatl Battalion implicated in the El Mozote massacre. The massacre took place in December 1981 when the military’s US-trained forces slaughtered around 1000 civilians, including over three hundred children. Eyewitness reports in the US press were denied by the Reagan administration to secure Congressional approval of continued military aid to the killers.

noname

(Caption: Commemorative mural in El Mozote)

In El Mozote the next day, we stood in front of the main memorial, a simple stone wall adorned with the names of the victims. Our guide, Catalina, was 12 at the time of the massacre. When the Army was ordering the population of the surrounding area to concentrate itself in El Mozote—ostensibly for ‘its own protection’ during coming military operations—she and her family had hidden elsewhere because she had a deformed foot and was unable to walk that far. Her deformity saved their lives.

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(Caption: El Mozote victims’ names in memorial)

Catalina and other volunteers are part of the local historical committee trained by Rufina Amaya, the only known adult survivor of El Mozote. She had run away after her husband and four of her five children were killed. She has her own monument on the site honoring her as the keeper and transmitter of memory.

In San Salvador we visited the University of Central America. On November 16, 1989 army soldiers killed six Jesuit priests teaching at the University, and their housekeeper and her daughter. On my visit in 1990 I had seen the rooms where the murders took place and some simple displays. The Oscar Romero Center and Martyrs Museum added powerful exhibits about the killings of religious figures during the war. Most memorable was the display of the clothes of the priest-professors hanging side by side—including a bathrobe and slippers. Their ghostly presence served as vivid evidence, bullet holes and bloodstains, of a crime initially denied, as so many others were. They evoked the individuality and humanity of the victims and highlighted a religious tradition of memorializing martyrs through relics. In the library, I asked a professor if groups of soldiers or recruits are brought to the museum. This seemed likely as the Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (FMLN), transformed from guerrilla force to political party, controls the Presidency. He chided me for my naiveté, telling me that, although much has changed, the military is still the military.

Argentina

In Buenos Aires, I was most interested in meeting the Madres de la Plaza de Mayo (MPM), who have marched weekly since 1977 seeking information about ‘disappeared’ sons and daughters. The majority of disappearances occurred during the 1976-83 military dictatorship. I talked to Mirta Baravalle, one of the 14 founding Madres. Her pregnant daughter Ana Maria, and son-in-law, Julio Cesar Gallizi, had been kidnapped August 17, 1976. Mirta wore a white scarf with the names of her loved ones written on it. This ‘uniform’ of the MPM is stenciled in a circle around the square (historically, the capital’s most important political gathering place). The MPM believe it is necessary to have commemorations to support the cause of justice and human rights everywhere. The MPM was joined by a lively contingent of the Teresa Rodríguez Movement for Work, Dignity and Social Change, who appeared to be largely indigenous. Their spokesperson, Osvaldo Vazquez, said they were unemployed people that had been supporting the MPM for several years. He also said that the Kirchner government is doing little or nothing for the downtrodden and is co-opting the symbolism of the MPM for their own gain. This was evidenced by the arrival of another group (with mass-produced scarves) who drove up chanting pro-government slogans.

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(Caption: A Madre de la Plaza de Mayo never forgets. Mirta Baravalle’s sign asks: “Where are they?”)

I also visited several other sites of memory in the city, including several cement memorials made by the families of demonstrators who had been killed by police. These were affixed to the sidewalk in the exact spots where they had been killed. The protests, which ultimately helped bring down the government, took place in December 2001 at the height of the Argentine economic crisis. The stark rectangles, like flat gravestones, with colorful pieces of ceramics inlaid around them, appeared within days of the deaths, and reappeared even when police smashed them. Over a decade later, they are an everyday reminder of the potential costs of political action. Another site recently uncovered during freeway construction where many of the desaparecidos had been secretly imprisoned and tortured is now preserved as a memorial. A wall stands with dozens of photographs of some of the 1500 believed to have been held there. This is one of hundreds of such sites that are thought to exist in and around the capital. Several others are being excavated and turned into memorials.

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(Caption: A plaque for a piquetero slain in the 2001 revolt. To the left are the remains of the original plaque, destroyed by police upon being laid; it was replaced within a few days.)

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(Caption: A torture and detention site in the neighborhood of San Telmo, Buenos Aires. The inscriptions read “San Telmo remembers,” “We have 30,000 reasons to continue the struggle,” and “No forgetting, no forgiving.”)

Two phenomena emerged that confounded my idea of ‘progressive’ Argentina: the ubiquity of ‘Evita’ Peron, wife of authoritarian leader Juan Peron, and popular sentiments regarding the Malvinas (Falkland) islands, subject of the 1982 war with Great Britain. My forthrightly leftist guides maintained that Evita was a sacred figure for the ‘descamisados,’ or ‘shirtless ones’—the underclass—who she had almost single-handedly elevated from “animals” to citizens. The rooms at the central trade union federation where her embalmed body had lain for three years are now stuffed with shrines and mementos, a concentrated version of what I found around the city. To mark the 60th anniversary of her death, the government chose her image for the 100-peso bill. As to the Malvinas, the visual landscape sported widespread graffiti declaring “The Malvinas are ours!” Multiple official monuments and an encampment on the Plaza de Mayo, of veterans who have been denied combat benefits, makes sure the war—such a fiasco it brought down the military regime—maintains a firm presence in collective memory.

The Power of Memory

The Salvadoran civil war cost around 75,000 lives; the Argentine ‘dirty war’ (my guides insisted on the term ‘state terrorism’) at least 13,000—compare these to our trauma of 9/11 with less than 3,000 dead. Survivors like Mirta still don’t know the exact fate of their loved ones. The Salvadoran and Argentine perpetrators (and US sponsors), with the exception of a few low-level soldiers, have escaped justice. Yet the people do not forget. Organizations like the Instituto Espacio para la Memoria (Institute Space for Memory) are working to illuminate and preserve sites of memory across South and Central America. Though survival issues are pressing in these countries, it became clear to me that issues of memory and justice are essential as well.

Posted in Human Rights, International, Latino/a, Politics | Comments Off on Political Memory at Work in Latin America