While Tikkun and the Network of Spiritual Progressives believes that the only real way to fix Wall Street is to adopt the ESRA–Environmental and Social Responsibility Amendments to the US Constitution, which we invite you to read and endorse at www.spiritualprogressives.org/ESRA, we also want to empower the Occupy Wall Street Crowd with some more immediate concrete steps that could be taken to show the cynical media that the demonstrators know what could actually be done if anyone cared to listen. So we present here one such set of first narrowly reformist steps, though we know that what is really needed is the larger transformation called for in the ESRA:
50 Proposals for Reform and Reclamation
In Solidarity with the Wall Street Protesters and the 99 Percenters
Dr. David E. McClean
David McClean is a lecturer in Philosophy and Business Ethics Rutgers University & Molloy College, and Principal, The DMA Consulting Group.
Editorials & Actions
On Abbas at the UN–a perspective rarely heard
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[Rabbi Lerner’s note: Dr. Saree Makdisi, in the address below which he gave to the Palestine Center in early October, gives an important window into the minds of Palestinian diaspora thinkers as they watch the current reality unfold. For some, his words will be an incentive to get Israel to return to negotiations quickly, and in good faith, lest the perspective he articulates becomes the mainstream in Palestine. For others, his words will be used a proof that a two-state solution will alway be impossible and that Israel has no choice but to either continue the Occupation or lose its existence as a homeland for Jews. For still others, his words will encourage a new sense of self-respect for Palestinians and a challenge to those who portray them simply as powerless victims. For some West Bank Palestinians, seeking a solution in the short run that might allow them to be freed of Israeli occupation, roadblocks, taxes, home demolitions and targeted assassinations, this perspective will feel like an obstacle to peace, restimulating among Israelis the fears that keep them from making the compromises needed to end the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza. And of course, there will be many other possible ways to read this article.
Editorials & Actions
Occupy Wall St–It’s Everywhere where Corporate Power Shapes our Lives, So You Can Occupy it in Your Hometown too!
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The prophet Isaiah stood outside the ancient Israelite Temple and denounced those fasting on Yom Kippur who nevertheless were participating in an immoral society. Said Isaiah (in a statement that is now read in synagogues around the world on Yom Kippur morning though its message mostly ignored when it applies to some Jews’ participation in some of the most exploitative practices of Western capitalism or in support for the current right-wing government of Israel even as it engages in oppression of Palestinians):
Look! On the very day you fast you keep scrabbling for wealth; On the very day you fast you keep oppressing all your workers. Look! You fast in strife and contention.
Editorials & Actions
Obama’s Speech About Palestinian Statehood at the U.N.–A Critique
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Stephen Zunes is a contributing editor to Tikkun Magazine
Answering Obama’s UN Address
By Stephen Zunes, September 30, 2011
During the Bush administration, I wrote more than a dozen annotated critiques of presidential speeches. I have refrained from doing so under President Barack Obama, however, because – despite a number of disappointments with his administration’s policies — I found his speeches to be relatively reasonable. Although his September 21 address before the UN General Assembly contained a number of positive elements, in many ways it also contained many of the same kind of duplicitous and misleading statements one would have expected from his predecessor. Below are some excerpts, followed by my comments. War and conflict have been with us since the beginning of civilizations.
Editorials & Actions
Should Progressives Challenge Obama in the Democratic Primaries?
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Editor’s note: Subscribers to Tikkun and Members of NSP are mostly united in strong criticism of Obama’s failures–failures due NOT solely to the obstruction of Republicans and his own conservatives in the Democratic Party, but to his failure to articulate and fight for a larger vision. Had he done so, a growing number of liberals and progressives agree, the American people might have responded enthusiastically. They don’t blame him for failing to produce, they blame him for failing to fight for what he claimed to believe in. Last week, for example, with the nation hoping to hear a visionary economic plan, instead heard a wimpy and ineffective one–instead of the New New Deal for a Caring Society that we and many others have been advocating. Of course it would be blocked by the Republicans, but imagine how different people in the US would have felt if they felt that there was someone championing a New New Deal that would among other things spend enough money to put everyone back to work who wants to work!!! Just having that alternative as someting to fight for would have electrified the country and finally defined Obama in a winnable way.
The latest wishy-washy-ness came at the UN where Obama, who a year ago called for a Palestinian state, now announces he will use the US veto to make sure it doesn’t happen except on conditions acceptable to the most right-wing government Israel has ever had. No Republican or Democrat could have prevented the US from going along with the majority of people of the world in supporting UN membership,just as last December no Republican or Democrat could have prevented Obama from letting the Bush-years’ tax reductions on the rich from expiring, or for that matter, from declairing VICTORY and the ENDING THE WAR ON TERROR once his troops had killed Osama Bin Laden (and he could have coupled that with an announcement of ending the war in Afghanistan and brining all troops and independent contractors home once and for all). Lose the Jewish vote? No way. Most Jews would still prefer Obama to Republicans who would take away their social security and destroy the advances in health care and further destroy our educational system and social support network–Israel would be a major issue for the 20% who already vote Republican and possibly for another 10-15%, but not enough to change the electoral outcome or keep a solid majority of Jews in his camp (most of whom are closer to Tikkun than to the Jewish establishment on most issues).
So, now what? On that Tikkun subscribers and NSP members are very much divided. Many fear the disaster they believe would happen should any of the current Republican candidates become the next President of the U.S.–and therefore feel that they have no alternative but to support Obama. Others, a very small minority I’ve learned from some of your emails, support the very unlikely to win the nomination candidate (and principled libertarian and hence against our military adventures for sustaining the US Empire) Republican Ron Paul, arguing that he, unlike Obama and unlike any other Republican, he would end the wars and dismantle much of our military spending, and that differentiates him from all the rest who will likely continue the wars and do as much damage as he would do to destroying the social support network as the spineless Dems and anti-government Repubs are going to do anyway (or that’s what they claim). Still others support the idea of a progressive slate of candidates ( a slate, so that no one person is seen as ego-tripping or looking for power, since the point of the challenge is to raise issues that would otherwise not be heard if it boils down to questions of ‘is this particular person the right one?’) challenging Obama in the primaries while supporting him in the general elections. I’m enclosing the letter from the latter group so that you can see if their reasoning appeals to you. I signed it along with many, many others, and on condition that it be made clear that organizations listed were for identification purposes only and did not reflect an organizational support for this letter (and that is true of all the other signatories and the organizations listed). Tikkun can comment on the issues in the campaigns ahead and we can provide space for those whose voices get least attention in the media, as we’ve done for the past twenty-five years. AND WE’D LOVE TO KNOW WHAT YOU THINK AFTER YOU’VE READ THE LETTER BELOW IFF YOU ARE A SUBSCRIBER OR NSP MEMBER (there are over 150,000 people readng our emails, so we cannot give equal attention to those who read but do not help us financially to survive either by becoming members of the NSP at https://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/525/t/3999/shop/custom.jsp?donate_page_KEY=3793
or by subscribing to Tikkun (and/or buying others a gift subscription for chanukah, christmas, or some other special occasion) at
https://www.tikkun.org/newsite/purchase-or-renew-a-subscription-to-tikkun ).
And what if you have no faith in the whole electoral process? Well you can support our ESRA–Enviornmental and Social Responsiiblity Amendment to the U.S. Constitution and help us get your local congressional rep to endores House Res. 156C and/or our Global Marshall Plan at House Resolution 157. Want something more inthe way of non-violent civil disobedience? Then come to Washington D.C. for the non-violent civil disobedience being sponsored by the October 6 Coalition (info at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MdKPXwXVQlg).
THE INVITATION TO CHALLENGE OBAMA IN THE DEMOCRATIC PRIMARIES
September 17, 2011
Dear Colleague,
We write to you in light of recent deteriorating events in Washington, D.C. Misguided negotiations by the Obama Administration over increasing the debt ceiling willingly put our nation’s vital social services on the chopping block while Bush-era tax cuts remain untouched. Clearly the situation has reached crisis proportions. In response, an innovative plan has been announced to reintroduce a progressive agenda back into the political discussion during the 2012 election season.
Consider for a moment two very different scenarios for the 2012 Democratic presidential primaries.
The First scenario, President Obama advances without contest to a unanimous nomination. There is no recognizable Democratic challenger, no meaningful debate on key progressive issues or past broken promises, just a seamless, self-contained operation on its way to raising one billion dollars in campaign funds.
This scenario is what most observers expect. Mr. Obama will face neither opposition nor debate. He will have no need to clarify or defend his own polices or address the promises, kept and unkept, of his 2008 campaign. The president will not have to explain to his supporters why he directly escalated the war in Afghanistan and broadened America’s covert war in Pakistan, why he chose to engage in a military intervention in Libya, or why he has maintained the Bush Administration’s national security apparatus that allows for the suspension and abuse of constitutionally protected civil liberties–dismissing Congress all the way.
In an uncontested Democratic primary, President Obama will never have to justify his decision to bail out Wall Street’s most profitable firms while failing to push for effective prosecution of the criminal behavior that triggered the recession, or his failure to push for real financial reform. He will not have to defend his decision to extend the Bush era tax cuts nor justify his acquiescence to Republican extortion during the debt ceiling negotiations. He will not have to answer questions on how his Administration completely failed to protect homeowner’s losing their homes to predatory banks, or even mention the word “poverty,” as he failed to do in his most recent State of the Union Address, even as more and more Americas sink into financial despair.
He will never be challenged to fulfill his pledge to actively pursue a Labor-supported card check, or his promise to increase the federal minimum wage or why he took single payer off the table after he said he believes in it. The American labor movement, facing an unprecedented onslaught by the Right will not have the opportunity to voice its concerns and rally around a supportive candidate.
The president will not be pressed to answer how he spent four years in office without addressing the ongoing destabilization of our climate or advocating a coherent and ecologically sound energy policy including defending his position on nuclear power and so called clean coal. Nor will he discuss regulatory agency deficiencies in enforcing corporate law and order in an era marked by a corporate crime wave having devastating economic consequences on workers and taxpayers and their savings and pensions. There will be no opportunity for the Hispanic and other relevant communities to speak out on immigration reform even as the Republicans continue to use it as a weapon of political demagoguery.
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Add your own concerns, disappointments, and frustrated hopes to this list of what will surely be left off the table during an express-lane primary. The valid disagreements within the Democratic Party, let alone the goals of progressives, will be completely overlooked. The media will gleefully cover the media circus that is sure to be the Republican primaries, magnifying every minor gaffe and carefully cataloguing every iteration and argument of the radical right. The cameras will cover the Democratic side only for orchestrated events, the whiff of scandal, and to offer commentary on how the campaign is positioning itself for the general election.
The summation of this process will be a tediously scripted National Convention, deprived of robust exchange and well-wrought policy. And here the danger is clear: not only will progressive principles past and present be betrayed but large sections of voters will feel bored with and alienated from the democratic candidate. This would not serve the president’s campaign, our goals, or the nation’s needs.
Thankfully, there is another option. This second scenario would allow for robust and exciting discussion and debate during the primary season while posing little risk to the president other than to encourage him take more progressive stands. It would also accomplish the critical task of energizing the Progressive base to turn out on Election Day.
Imagine: A slate of six candidates announces its decision to run in the Democratic primaries. Each of the candidates is recognizable, articulate, and a person of acknowledged achievement. These contenders would each represent a field in which Obama has never clearly staked a progressive claim or where he has drifted toward the corporatist right. These fields would include: labor, poverty, military and foreign policy, health insurance and care, the environment, financial regulation, civil and political rights/empowerment, and consumer protection.
Without primary challengers, President Obama will never have to seriously articulate and defend his beliefs to his own party. Given the dangers our nation faces, that option is unacceptable. The slate is the best method for challenging the president for a number of reasons:
The slate can indicate that its intention is not to defeat the president (a credible assertion given their number of voting columns) but to rigorously debate his policy stands.
The slate will collectively give voice to the fundamental principles and agendas that represent the soul of the Democratic Party, which has increasingly been deeply tarnished by corporate influence.
The slate will force Mr. Obama to pay attention to many more issues affecting many more Americans. He will be compelled to develop powerful, organic, and fresh language as opposed to stale poll-driven “themes.”
The slate will exercise a pull on Obama toward his liberal/progressive base (in the face of the countervailing pressure from “centrists” and corporatists) and leave that base with a feeling of positive empowerment.
The slate will excite the Democratic Party faithful and essential small-scale donors, who (despite the assertions of cable punditry) are essentially liberal and progressive.
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A slate that is serious, experienced, and well-versed in policy will display a sobering contrast with the alarmingly weak, hysterical, and untested field taking shape on the right.
The slate will command more media attention for the Democratic primaries and the positive progressive discussions within the party as opposed to what will certainly be an increasingly extremist display on the right.
The slate makes it more difficult for party professionals to induce challengers to drop out of the race and more difficult for Mr. Obama to refuse or sidestep debates in early primaries.
The slate, if announced, will receive free legal advice and adequate contributions for all prudent expenses in moving about the country. The paperwork is far simpler than what confronts ballot-access- blocked third party and independent candidates. For the slate will be composed of registered Democrats campaigning inside the Party Primaries.
This opportunity to revive and restore the progressive infrastructure of the Democratic Party must not be missed. A slate of Democratic candidates challenging the president’s substance and record is an historic opportunity. Certainly, President Obama will not be pleased to face a list of primary challengers, but the comfort of the incumbent is far less important than the vitality and strength of his party’s Progressive ideas and ideals. President Obama should emerge from the primary a stronger candidate as a result.
This letter is sent to several dozen accomplished persons known to identify with the Democratic Party voting line for a variety of reasons. We ask that you consider several requests. First, would you consider being a slate candidate after due reflection beyond what may be an immediate no? History has illustrated greater discomforts, material sacrifices and other profiles of courage in our country’s past for a perceived major common good.
Second, if you are not interested in joining as a candidate, would you add your name as an official endorsee of the slate proposal. All endorsements are made as individuals and organizational or institutional affiliations are for identification purposes only. Your endorsement will be a vital signal of support and will help in compiling the strongest slate of candidates possible when we send out the letter to the candidate list, yet to be finalized.
Third, can you suggest accomplished people to contact who may be interested in joining the slate as a candidate in one of the following fields: labor, poverty, military and foreign policy, health insurance and care, the environment, financial regulation, civil and political rights/empowerment, and consumer protection. This can be yourself if you feel it would be appropriate.
Candidates and endorsements will be accepted on a rolling basis. All submissions or additional questions and comments can be directed to Colin O’Neil at colinoneil@gmail.com or 703-599-3474. We appreciate your response.
Thank you.
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Partial List of Endorsees
All endorsements are in alphabetical order are made as individuals, organizational/institutional affiliations are for identification purposes only.
Norman Birnbaum
Professor Emeritus, Georgetown University Law Center
Dr. Brent Blackwelder
President Emeritus of Friends of the Earth
Charles Cray Peter Coyote
Actor, Author and Director
Charles Derber
Professor, Boston College
Ronnie Dugger
Founder, Alliance for Democracy
James Abourezk
Former U.S. Senator, South Dakota
Gar Alperovitz
Professor University of Maryland
Co-Founder Democracy Collaborative
Ellen H. Brown
Lawyer and Author of Web of Debt
Edgar Stuart Cahn
Professor of Law, University of the District of Columbia
Co-founder Legal Services for the Poor
Pat Choate
1996 Reform Party Vice President Candidate
Director of the Center for Corporate Policy
Ronnie Cummins
Executive Director, Organic Consumers Association
John Fullerton
President, Capital Institute
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Rebecca and James Goodman
Northwood Farm
Randy Hayes
Director, Foundation Earth Rainforest Action Network Founder
Chris Hedges
Pulitzer Prize Winning Journalist of the New York Times and Author
Hazel Henderson,
Author of Ethical Markets: Growing the Green Economy President, Ethical Markets Media, LLC.
Alan F. Kay
Author of Spot the Spin and Locating Consensus for Democracy Harry Kelber
The Labor Educator
Andrew Kimbrell
Executive Director, Center for Food Safety & International Center for Technology Assessment (ICTA)
Jonathan Kozol
Educator, Author of Savage Inequalities Lewis Lapham
Former Editor, Harper’s Magazine
Rabbi Michael Lerner
Editor, Tikkun Magazine Chair, Network of Spiritual Progressives
Jean Houston
Psychologist, Anthropologist and Author of The Possible Human and The Possible Society
Nicholas Johnson
Former Commissioner, Federal Communications Commission
Former Administrator, U.S. Maritime Administration
Leland Lehrman
Partner, Fund Balance
Dr. Richard Lippin, MD
Physician Forecaster, Board Certified in Preventive Medicine and Advocate for both Individual and
Institutional Prevention
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Robert D. Manning
Founder and CEO, Responsible Debt Relief Institute
Author of Credit Card Nation
Dr. Samuel Metz, MD
Mad As Hell Doctors, founding member
Physicians for a National Health Program, member of Portland chapter
Carol Miller
Community Activist, New Mexico
E. Ethelbert Miller
Board Chair Institute for Policy Studies
Ralph Nader
Citizen Advocate
Michael Parenti
Author
John Passacantando
Former Executive Director, Greenpeace USA
Vijay Prashad
Author and Professor, Trinity College
Marcus Raskin
Author of The Common Good and former White House Advisor Andy Shallal
“Democracy’s Restauranteur” and Owner of Bus Boys & Poets
Michelle Shocked
Musician
Gore Vidal
Erich Pica
President of Friends of the Earth
Nomi Prins
Author and former Managing Director at Goldman Sachs
David Swanson
Author, War is a Lie
Chris Townsend
Political Action Director, United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America (UE)
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Author and Political Activist
Rabbi Arthur Waskow
Chair, The Shalom Center
Cornel West
Professor and Author of Race Matters
National Coordinator, Physicians for a National Health Program
Harvey Wasserman
Author of Solartopia! Our Green-Powered Earth
Quentin D. Young MD
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Feel free to post this on your website or send out to your list-serve. Share it with your friends.And if you like this kind of unconventional thinking, please subscribe to Tikkun at www.tikkun.org NOW!
Editorials & Actions
Ali Abunimah says the effort for Palestinian recognition at the UN is a mistake
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We are at this very moment collecting signatures for UN recognition of Palestine. But given our commitment to open debate, we are posting this article from a Palestinian activist whose words run counter to our position in content, and also in its failure to express compassion for both sides, which we believe to be the single most-important ingredient in unfreezing Israeli rejection of a Palestinian state whenever it seem possible to create it. “A Formal Funeral for the Two-State Solution”
By Ali Abunimah
The Palestinian Authority’s bid to the United Nations for Palestinian statehood is, at least in theory, supposed to circumvent the failed peace process. But in two crucial respects, the ill-conceived gambit actually makes things worse, amplifying the flaws of the process it seeks to replace. First, it excludes the Palestinian people from the decision-making process.
Editorials & Actions
Responses to the Potential UN Recognition of Palestine
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Here are some responses to the UN Recognition of Palestine discussion, including an article by The Israel Project strongly against the Tikkun position–part of our function to provide peace-oriented people with an understanding of some of the views we don’t normally encounter and that we need to understand. Our views are set forward in the petition to recognize Palestine and re-affirm Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state with ironclad guarantees for both Israel and Palestine to grant equal rights to all the minorities living within their boundaries without any imposition of religion and with full human rights to all of the residents living within those states. Click here to view and sign the petition. Obama’s Unique Opportunity
by Gideon Levy
What is the American president going to say to his citizens? What will he say to the citizens of the world?
Editorials & Actions
Recognize Palestine AND Re-Affirm Israel as a Jewish State
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Obama and UN: Recognize Palestine AND Re-affirm Israel’s Right to Exist as a Jewish State
American and Israeli diplomats acknowledge that they do not have the votes to prevent the General Assembly of the United Nations from recognizing Palestine and granting it some of the rights of member states. The U.S. can block full membership only by exercising its veto in the Security Council, an act likely to intensify hatred of the U.S. in many countries around the world. A far wiser strategy is for the U.S. (even better, with Israel) to introduce a resolution to the Security Council providing full membership in the U.N. to Palestine while simultaneously reaffirming Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state. Both sides win. Israel will feel less isolated, and Palestinians will get full instead of the only partial and largely symbolic membership in the U.N. it could get from the General Assembly once the U.S. vetoes membership in a Security Council resolution.
Economy/Poverty/Wealth
Obama’s Economic Plan–what do you think?
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First, I want to congratulate the President of having said some important things to challenge the “free market fundamentalists” and pointing out that the kinds of problems we are facing requires a community to share its resources to take care of the weakest and most vulnerable. Had he been speaking this way consistently and based his programs on the ideas he articulated tonight, he and the social programs to which he refers would be in much better shape today. Second, what he has proposed is way too little to make a difference, and way too late to help shape public opinion. What we need is a New New Deal program, spending $2 trillion, and including the kind of WPA (Work Progress Administration) that FDR (Franklin Delano Roosevelt) use to employ hundreds of thousands of people during the Depression of the 1930s. So his speech tonight was like an elephant giving birth…to a chicken.
Economy/Poverty/Wealth
The Global Economy Undermined by Austerity Programs
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Published in the New York Times by Niel MacFarquhar:
UNITED NATIONS — The global economy faces a decade-long
stagnation because governments are pursuing deficit cuts
and other austerity measures rather than providing the
needed stimulus packages, said a United Nations economic
report released Tuesday. Instead of new regulation of the financial system to
address the problems that helped bring on the recession in
2007-8, governments in the United States and Europe are
trying to woo the very speculators who helped cause the
problem, said the report by the Geneva-based United
Nations Conference on Trade and Development, which is
known by its acronym, Unctad. “Those who support fiscal tightening argue that it is
indispensable for restoring the confidence of financial
markets, which is perceived as key to economic recovery,”
the report said. “This is despite the almost universal recognition that the
crisis was the result of financial market failure in the
first place.” Read the rest of the article here.
Editorials & Actions
Stephen Zunes on Lessons from the Libyan Revolution
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Tuesday 30 August 2011
Lessons and False Lessons From Libya
by Stephen Zunes, Truthout | News Analysis
Rebels celebrate outside Col. Moammar Qaddafi’s Bab al-Aziziya compound in Tripoli, Libya, August 29, 2011. Residents returning to their homes have found that many have been heavily damaged by gunfire after they were used as fighting positions during the rebellion. (Photo: Tyler Hicks/The New York Times)
The downfall of Muammar Qaddafi’s regime is very good news, particularly for the people of Libya. However, it is critically important that the world not learn the wrong lessons from the dictator’s overthrow.
Editorials & Actions
Libya and Syria: violence or non-violence (the debate over which strategy is best) with perspectives from Uri Avnery and Michael Nagler
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This is a critical debate which evokes significant differences among secular and spiritual progressives. I hope you’ll let me know your reactions to it. I’m a huge fan of Avnery, whose articles regularly appear on our Tikkun web magazine site www.tikkun.org. And a dear friend of Michael Nagler whose writings have been an inspiration to me and many others. I can easily understand the power of Avnery’s argument, though personally I’m on the side of non-violence.
Editorials & Actions
Who Funds all the Muslim-Baiting?
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Who Funds All The Muslim-Baiting? by M.J.Rosenberg
It has been just about a decade since Islamophobia exploded in this country. That was of moment that the World Trade Center and Pentagon were hit by al Qaeda terrorists. It existed prior to 9/11, but the losses that day and the general terror it inflicted upon this country made many, many Americans much more wary of Arabs and, fairly quickly, fearful of the religion the terrorists professed. The first sign that 9/11 would be exploited to advance various agendas came from Binyamin Netanyahu, who was quoted in the New York Times as saying the attacks would be good for Israel:
Asked tonight [September 11, 2001] what the attack meant for relations between the United States and Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu, the former prime minister, replied, ”It’s very good.” Then he edited himself: ”Well, not very good, but it will generate immediate sympathy.” He predicted that the attack would ”strengthen the bond between our two peoples, because we’ve experienced terror over so many decades, but the United States has now experienced a massive hemorrhaging of terror.”
Editorials & Actions
The Libyan Revolution
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While Juan Cole’s article (below) may be a bit too quick to declare that the Libyan revolution has succeeded, given the ongoing fighting in Tripoli and the possibility that there still might be an ongoing civil war for months or longer, and even though it plays down tribal rivalries and tensions that have always been part of the Libyan scene in the past hundred or more years, Cole does provide us with a very useful analysis as well as a critique of those in the liberal or progressive world who dismissed the whole struggle as nothing but another example of Western imperialism. Sometimes even the Western powers can do good things, and a sophisticated spiritual progressive always seeks to understand the complexities rather than embracing one dimensional analyses. And this one could be wrong also! That’s how we have to approach the world–with open heart, genuine caring about the well-being for others, and modesty about how much we know about the details of any given situation and how best to be helpful. That’s why, in calling for the overthrow of another dictator, Asad of Syria, I placed that call within the framework of a commitment to non-violence, hoping that there could be in Syria a less violent resolution to the conflict than has happened so far in Libya, and Libya is not over yet!
Editorials & Actions
The Meaning of the Israeli Uprising: a Variety of Israeli Perspectives
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Sushi, social justice and self-respect
This uprising is about social justice. And yes, it is driven by the middle class. And it’s time to say something about the middle class’s right to a decent life without being apologetic. By Carlo Strenger
The current government of Israel has tried a number of times to delegitimize the social uprising. First by dismissing it as a conspiracy of the “radical left” to topple the government; then by saying that the protesters are a bunch of sushi-eaters with nargilas (Arab water pipes); and then Avigdor Lieberman noted that since he couldn’t find a seat in a Tel Aviv restaurant, the situation couldn’t be that bad.