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Monday, March 07, 2011
Iraq snapshot
Protests continue in Baghdad
Al Sabaah notes that Nouri al-Maliki met yesterday with a delegation of tribal leaders and officials from Nineveh and that Nouri insists issues with the ration cards program are being dealt with, that the government is listening to the demands of the people and that meeting these demands are everyone's job. Of course, he's also given lip service in recent days to the need for a free press -- while cracking down on the press. And he held his meeting and made his announcement about the ration card system at the same time that, Al Mada reports, MP Mona Amiri (National Alliance) held a press conference explaining that many of the trations in Diyala Province have been allowed to sit -- instead of being distributed -- and have now one bad. Amiri stated that 124 tons of fat were discovered, 400 tons of tea and an unspecified number of tons of beans. If they'd been distributed, the items would have helped the people. Now they've gone bad. Al Sabbah notes that Nouri a session of Parliament on Thursday about "achieving" reforms. Meanwhile the Speaker of Parliament Osama al-Nujaifi is itemizing the demands according to the most pressing.
Bonnie notes that Isaiah's The World Today Just Nuts "Mary Pops Back" went up yesterday. Today on Law and Disorder Radio (begins broadcasting at 9:00 am EST on WBAI and around the country throughout the week), Michael Ratner, Heidi Boghosian and Michael S. Smith speak address Palestine with Ali Abunimah and the MidEast and North Africa with Professor Zachary Lockman. Last week, Chris Hedges was a guest on the program. We try to highlight Hedges and I would have loved to have had an excerpt of that discussion.
But.
But we attended multiple hearings in Congress, two of which we covered. Plus, there's very little US coverage of Iraq so I've now got to read Arabic publications. Plus, a lot of things. If I don't have time for things I'd like us to note (Chris Hedges), why am I supposed to make time for things I wouldn't note?
Two excerpts from David Swanson's "Manchurian Senators" (War Is A Crime) -- and, look, you got your link:
People are doing journalism and the Washington Post is pissed. How to respond? Apparently the answer arrived at by Post editors is to just give up on any Americans who have been informing themselves and target those Americans who believe anything that super important people say. How else to explain an op-ed full of documented lies and published last Friday over the byline of two Democratic senators, Carl Levin and Jack Reed?
What the hell is that? In what way is the Post "pissed" about anyone doing journalism? Because they printed a column written by two senators? (Op-Ed refers to Opinion and Editorial pages. You really don't write an op-ed and the stupidity on this -- going far beyond Swanson is really starting to piss me off.) News flash, Carl Levin is the Chair of the Senate Armed Services Committee. Anytime he writes or co-writes a column, the Washington Post will gladly run it because their readers (of the print edition) will follow a Levin column closely (due to the implications for the defense industries). "Over the byline"? A byline is under. That may seem like splitting hairs and someone may say, "You make millions of mistakes yourself." Yes, I do. But I don't do mass e-mailings of my writing and try to get them highlighted. In fact, in the seven or so years of this site, I have never, ever asked anyone to highlight or link to anything I've written or co-written. If you're sending out your writing to get others to highlight it, presumably, you think it has something worth saying in it.
Is David just now learning that Jack Reed -- with a Democratic in the White House -- is a War Hawk? Wally covered that in "It's a bi-partisan hole (Wally)" last month. Maybe Wally should have e-mailed people asking them to highlight his report?
Back to Swanson:
The Congress and the President, the study groups and think tanks had all been setting "benchmarks" by which to measure success in Iraq since 2005. The President was expected by Congress to meet its benchmarks by January 2007. He did not meet them by that deadline, by the end of the "surge," or by the time he left office in January 2009. Nor has his replacement met them. There is no oil law to benefit the big oil corporations, no de-baathification law, and no constitutional review. In fact, there is no improvement in electricity, water, or other basic measures of recovery in Iraq. And protesters have the right to be shot. The "surge" was to advance these "benchmarks" and to create the "space" to allow political reconciliation and stability. Whether or not that is understood as code for U.S. control of Iraqi governance, even cheerleaders for the surge admit it did not achieve any political progress.
George W. Bush (unlike Swanson, I have never used the "p" word with W. Bush) was not supposed to meet any benchmarks. How stupid. He's not an Iraqi. Nor were the benchmarks supposed to be met by January 2007. How could they have been? Does Swanson get what he's written? I don't know. But this isn't a column we endorse. He did, however, get his link.
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
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Death by prescriptions, homless -- veterans issues
But he couldn't survive the onslaught of medications that military, Veterans Affairs and civilian doctors prescribed to treat his resulting post-traumatic stress disorder and back pain.
Five months after being medically discharged, the former member of Kirtland Air Force Base's 377th Security Forces Squadron died in his sleep — the result of a lethal mix of nine prescribed medications, including antidepressants, pain killers, tranquilizers and muscle relaxers.
Above is the opening to Charles D. Brunt's "Family of NM soldier who died of prescribed drugs hope to raise awareness" (Albuquerque Journal via The Republic). You can go through all the needed steps to try to get help and still be failed by the system. The parents of Iraq War vetern Jeffrey Lucey, Joyce and Kevin Lucey, found that as well. PTSD didn't start yesterday, it didn't even just spring up in the '00s. Two wars were started by the US government, you'd think they'd have taken the time to ensure that those serving would be able to get the help they needed when they returned. Apparently that wasn't a priority. There was no plan for health care, which is how you get the growing homeless population among the veterans of the ongoing wars. From Maria Cuomo Cole's "Prosecution Those Who Served" (Huffington Post):
In the short-term budget agreement reached last week by Congress and the White House, $75 million in housing aid for 10,000 homeless veterans was cut. At a time when we're pushing American soldiers to the limit of endurance, we just pushed 10,000 of them out of safe homes.
This mistake must be corrected in the longer-term agreement now being negotiated.
For the last few years, as troops have been returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, advocates and nonprofit providers have leveraged resources to address an alarming increase of veterans who are without stable housing, including the chronically homeless and a significant increase in the number of women. Marginal living conditions, scarce employment opportunities, physical injuries and mental health issues have made veterans more at risk of becoming homeless. For female veterans, family reunification challenges and experiences of abuse during their service exacerbate that risk.
Also covering the topic of homeless veterans is Marisa Agha (Sacramento Bee) who focuses on the largest growing percentage of homeless veterans: women. American Women Veterans' Genevieve Chase notes one of the many problems facing homeless women veterans, "A lot of homeless shelters for veterans do not accept women, much less women with children. They've just been falling through the cracks." Current veterans, regardless of gender, face a bad economy, a national housing crisis and vultures ready to pounce. US Senator Kay Hagan of North Carolina issued the following on Friday:
WASHINGTON, D.C. - United States Senator Kay R. Hagan (D-NC) yesterday cosponsored a bill to increase foreclosure protections for military personnel serving overseas and their families. Hagan is a member of the Senate Armed Services and Banking committees.
"This bill will ensure our servicemembers do not return home from war to find a foreclosure sign in their yard," Hagan said. "North Carolina is the most military-friendly state in the nation, and it is our duty to protect our heroes and their families from wrongful foreclosures. I will work with my colleagues to advance this important bill in Congress this year."
The Protecting Servicemembers from Mortgage Abuses Act of 2011 would incentivize financial institutions to comply with the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA). Enacted in 2003, SCRA is intended to prevent active duty military from certain financial and legal hardships as a result of their absence due to military service. Unfortunately, financial institutions have repeatedly failed to comply with the SCRA. Major loan servicers have been responsible for mistakes that led to thousands of mortgage overcharges and a number of unlawful foreclosures and evictions.
During testimony in the House of Representatives earlier this month, an executive from J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. testified that the company "failed to comply with aspects of the law" in overcharging 4,500 servicemembers and improperly foreclosing on 18.
The bill would double the maximum criminal penalties for violations of its foreclosure and eviction protections. It would also double civil penalties in cases where the Attorney General has commenced a civil action. In addition, the bill will give servicemembers the time they need after returning from deployment to regain solid financial footing.
The bill was sponsored by Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, and in addition to Hagan, it was cosponsored by Senators Jack Reed (D-RI), Jeff Merkley (D-OR), Bernie Sanders (I-VT) and Jon Tester (D-MT).
The House testimony by JPMorgan Chase was to the House Veterans Affairs Commitee. You can read about that in Third's "The Lawbreaking JPMorgan Chase," here with "Iraq snapshot," Ava covered it at Trina's site with "The crooks get away with it (Ava)," Wally covered it at Rebecca's site with "JP Morgan Chase's song and dance" and Kat covered it with
"Grading the new Chair of the House Veterans Affairs Committee." In terms of employment, Senator Hagan is proposing Hire A Hero:
WASHINGTON, D.C. - U.S. Senator Kay R. Hagan (D-NC) today commented on national February unemployment numbers and the number of unemployed veterans. The national unemployment rate dropped to 8.9 percent in February. Despite progress on overall unemployment, unemployment among returning veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan still exceeds national unemployment. In February 2011, unemployment among these veterans was 12.5 percent, and among males, it was even higher: 13.3 percent.
"The unemployment numbers for our returning heroes from Afghanistan and Iraq are particularly troubling," Hagan said. "I have cosponsored the Hire a Hero Act, which would make a tax credit for businesses that hire veterans permanent and extend the credit to members of the Guard and Reserve. North Carolina is the most military-friendly state in the nation, and as a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, I am continuing to look for additional ways to help connect our veterans to employment opportunities."
The Hire a Hero Act, introduced last month by Hagan and Scott Brown (R-MA), extends the Work Opportunity Tax Credit to include members of the Guard and Reserve and makes the credit permanent for veterans.
We're happy to note the Hagan press releases which do fall under what we cover here. We're not happy to note other things. For example, Bradley Manning? We support him. We do not repeat the gossip of convicted felon and government snitch Adrian Llamo. We've never done that, we never will. And that means I can't link to you when you do. Is that not clear? In February, we refused to link to a bad Australian documentary. Now World Can't Wait wants me to link to their rah-rah about that month old documentary.
Can we grow a brain? Llamo is a star of the documentary -- problem one. The documentary states Bradley Manning did what the US government has accused him of -- problem two. So why the hell would anyone want to link to that piece of s**t documentary? I have no idea. But think about what you're asking for before you ask for a link. We've been very vocal about Adrian Llamo from the start. We've also argued from the start that the peace movement does not make the US government's case against Bradley for them. I have no idea why World Can't Wait wants to link to that bad Four Corners documentary. But they can be stupid if they want. We have better things to do.
Isaiah's The World Today Just Nuts "Mary Pops Back" went up yesterday. Today on Law and Disorder Radio (begins broadcasting at 9:00 am EST on WBAI and around the country throughout the week), Michael Ratner, Heidi Boghosian and Michael S. Smith speak address Palestine with Ali Abunimah and the MidEast and North Africa with Professor Zachary Lockman.
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
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Sunday, March 06, 2011
Isaiah's The World Today Just Nuts "Mary Pops Back"

Isaiah's latest The World Today Just Nuts "Mary Pops Back." She's back. And this time she's pissed. Mary Poppins declares, "Forget spoonful of sugar. This time I'm bringing cans of whoopass." Isaiah archives his comics at The World Today Just Nuts.
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mary pops back
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the common ills
And the war drags on . . .
The Communist Party's efforts to organize protests have not gone unnoticed. And in "free" Iraq, that means you make Nouri's hit list. Dar Addustour reports that the Communist Party headquarters in Baghdad -- where the party produces their newspaper, among other things -- were forcibly evacuated early Sunday morning (midnight) with Iraqi troops surrounded the bulding and insisting they required no judicial orders to do what they were doing. The Communist Party's Jassim Hilfi states that Iraqi police and Iraqi military took part in the operation. Hilfi notes that they have paperwork demonstrating they have the right to be there -- real estate documents. Al Mada reports on the forced evacuation and notes the Communist Party was provided with no reasons as to why they were being thrown out or why the Iraqi military was involved in the operation. Again, the Communist Party produces their newspaper there. On Friday, at least five journalists were attacked in Basra by security forces. There are ongoing attacks on the press. With what's known at present, it would appear likely that the Communist Party is being punished both for their role in organizing the (legitimate) protest and for attempting to exercise their free press rights via their newspaper. On the journalism aspect, Suha Sheikhly (Al Mada) adds that the Friday protests are leading people to ask if Iraq needs a national stop the violence campaign in order to protect journalists from Iraq's security forces? Ahmed al-Khafaji, Undersecretary for the Ministry of the Interior, issued a statement declaring that Iraq cannot succeed without a strong fourth estate (press) and that a free press is necessary and must be protected if Iraq is going to be a democracy and leave the era of dictatorships in the past. He called for the development of a "culture of human rights" among the people. Academic Dr. Kazem Mikdadi is quoted calling for a national campaign and stating that Article 38 of the country's Constitution must be respected (their free press clause) and he said that, too often, Iraqi police and Iraqi military do not see their job as protecting the protesters -- or their role as protectors of the people -- but instead they see themselves as protectors of those in power. And that is "free" Iraq via the illegal war, the US government and their installed puppets.
They're just there to try and make the people free,
But the way that they're doing it, it don't seem like that to me.
Just more blood-letting and misery and tears
That this poor country's known for the last twenty years,
And the war drags on.
-- words and lyrics by Mick Softly (available on Donovan's Fairytale)
Last Sunday, the number of US military people killed in the Iraq War since the start of the illegal war was 4442. Tonight? PDF format warning, DoD still lists the the number of Americans killed serving in Iraq at 4442.
Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) reports a Basra roadside bombing resulted in multiple deaths today and cites Ali al-Maliki (Basra security head) as the source for the statement that a US military convoy may have been "the intended target." DPA counts 8 dead and twelve injured. Reuters notes 2 students were shot dead in Baghdad, 1 man was shot dead in Mosul in front of his home, 2 corpses were discovered in Mosul, 1 corpse (high school student) discovered in Sinjar, a Baghdad roadside bombing injured one police officer and one civilian, a Mosul grenade attack injured six people, a second Mosul grenade attack injured five people, 1 police officer was shot dead not far from his Mosul home and, dropping back to Saturday for the rest, a Baghdad sticky bombing claimed the life of 1 man and left his wife injured, a Hilla roadside bombing claimed 4 lives and 1 man was shot dead in Iskandariya.
Meanwhile protests continued in the Kurdish region and Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) reports that overnight (Saturday night/Sunday morning) "masked" assailants set fire to the tents protesters were using in Sulaimaniya but that did not deter hundreds from protesting today and, in yet another attack on the press, Dank Radio was attacked and equipment stolen or destroyed.
New content at Third:
Isaiah's latest went up earlier tonight. I'm switching the time on his comic (after this goes up) so that it will be at the top of the site until the morning entries for tomorrow. Pru notes this from Great Britain's Socialist Worker:
International Women's Day: Celebrating the struggle against oppression
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by Sarah Ensor
International Women’s Day, which marks its 100th anniversary this year, is now celebrated across the world on 8 March.
Some use it to emphasise sisterhood against women’s oppression. For others it is a chance to celebrate women’s achievements.
There will be events to celebrate women in business and politics, and raise awareness of women as survivors of domestic violence, rape and war.
The best will see discussions about the struggles of working class women for equality, and of the idea of International Women’s Day as an event to celebrate the struggle of women workers.
Everyone agrees that women have come a very long way since the first International Women’s Day in 1911. Its history is one of working women joining with working men to fight oppressive employers and the system.
Clara Zetkin, a revolutionary socialist in the German Social Democratic Party, first proposed it in 1910. Zetkin had been elected leader of the Women’s Bureau and had won the argument that socialists must campaign for the vote for working class men and women.
Zetkin chose 8 March because on that day in 1908 some 15,000 women workers in the needle trades in New York marched. They were demanding the vote, better pay and a life worth living.
Declared
The Socialist Party of America then declared the first ever National Woman’s Day, celebrated in the US on 28 February 1909.
Later that year the New York Shirtwaist workers went out on strike in “the uprising of the 20,000”. Some of the very young immigrant women had voted to start a union and were immediately sacked.
When their jobs were advertised other workers walked out. They picketed the company for five weeks facing down attacks from the company’s hired thugs and police harassment.
Union officials tried to bring out other workers but then Clara Lemlich, a young worker, addressed a mass meeting crowd in Yiddish, the language most of them spoke.
She called for a general strike against the long hours, insulting bosses and disgusting conditions. This inspired a walk out by 20,000 garment workers across New York.
The strike saw a debate between wealthy reformers who supported the action and socialists, who intervened in the dispute. Socialists argued that the women garment workers had the same concerns as their male co-workers.
This meant that a united fight involving working class men and women was the only way to win real change.
Terrified that they would lose a fortune in the next fashion season, the employers finally agreed to a shorter week, paid holidays and to pay for all the workers’ tools.
It was a fantastic victory.
Disaster
It was these struggles that socialists wanted to celebrate when Zetkin proposed International Women’s Day at a conference of socialist women in Copenhagen in 1910.
The disaster of the First World War wrecked the workers’ movement as social democratic parties across Europe sided with their own ruling class against other rulers.
But it was working class women and men who marched during the war for “bread and peace”.
Then in Russia in 1917 women again demanded bread and peace in demonstrations that began the February revolution, leading to the overthrow of the dictator, the Tsar.
When International Women’s Day was raised again in the 1970s it came out of the struggles against all forms of oppression—racism, sexism, women’s oppression and homophobia—and against imperialism and the Vietnam war.
Now the revolutions across the Middle East have seen women and men striking and protesting together against crushing poverty and brutal dictators.
The women who have played a key role in Western governments over the last three decades—such as Margaret Thatcher, Hillary Clinton, Condoleezza Rice and Angela Merkel—were happy to do business with these tyrants.
The struggles of today mean that International Women’s Day can again be an event when we learn from the struggles of the past.
This can help us organise for women’s liberation from capitalism—and the ruling class men and women who benefit from our oppression.
For Socialist Worker meetings on International Women’s Day see page 12
© Socialist Worker (unless otherwise stated). You may republish if you include an active link to the original.
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
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Saturday, March 05, 2011
Joe Biden's worst case scenario comes true (press doesn't notice)
Al Jazeera's Jane Arraf reported from Baghdad that the situation was heading towards a stand-off, as security forces demanded the protesters leave, blocking their route across a bridge leading to the Green Zone, where the government has its base.
Concrete blocks were set up by authorities on all of Baghdad's bridges ahead of the protests.
"What we're seeing here is a bit of a test, of how the government will respond when these people clearly want their demands to be heard," Arraf said.
The above is from the Tehran Times' "Protesters converge on Iraq capital" about yesterday's protests in Iraq. Protests took place across the country. Aswat al-Iraq reports that al-Nasseriya saw "hundreds" of protesters -- male except for one lone female, Shaza al-Qaysi who states, "I protest with the others here to support their legitimate demands that are no longer confined to local boundaries but rather became national." She also notes the high rate of illiteracy among women in her region and literacy is among the calls she's making. While women outnumber men in al-Nasseriya, activist Hussein al-Ghozzi notes that the placards with demands contained no calls "for women's or children's rights". Michael Hoffman (Army Times) reports on another protest, one visible from the US Contingency Operating Base Delta:
U.S. Army officers watched protesters in nearby Al Kut burn down the provincial governor's home during unrest that turned violent Feb. 17. The officers watched via drone feeds broadcast into the tactical operations center on base.
Reports rolled in that three protesters died and more than 50 were injured. U.S. Army leaders here couldn't do much more than watch. That shouldn't be misconstrued as callousness, said Lt. Col. J. Bryan Mullins, commander of 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment's 2nd Squadron. U.S. soldiers deployed to Iraq live under a new set of rules since the start of Operation New Dawn and the end of the combat mission in August.
Now put that on hold for just one second, we will come back to it. At Global Research, a report on the various protests can be found and this is the intro to it (intro written by Dirk Adriaensens):
The second day of “National Rage” in Iraq produced again big demonstrations in all major cities in Iraq. The relevance of these protest movements cannot be underestimated. These protest are nationwide, not sectarian. The Iraqi youth, main instigators of this movement, are challenging the sectarian Iraqi Quisling government and counter American and Iranian plans for the country: no partitioning of Iraq, but electricity, jobs, clean water, free healthcare and education. No to corruption, no to summary executions and death squads. No to state-sponsored terror. These Iraqi demonstrators want a unified Iraq and want the money of their oil being used for public services. I’ve been following the events today with great admiration and hope, hope for change, hope that the Iraqi people can reverse - as one nation - the deadly spiral of ethnic cleansing, sectarianism, despair and the culture of death, imported by the US horsemen of the apocalypse.
Underneath are a reflection from an Iraqi activist: Asma Al Haidari and an account of our Spanish friends from SCOSI (Spanish Campaign against the Occupation and for the Sovereignty of Iraq).
Once again the Western media are strikingly absent, probably following instructions from His Master’s Voice.
And that is really true. We've noted the exceptions before of US outlets. (In terms of print, it's really just the Washington Post.) But here's reality, what Michael Hoffman's describing? That's what Joe Biden described. In 2008. As the worst-case scenario for Iraq. Anyone in the press note that? If they did, they didn't do so publicly.
Iraq is now reaching Joe Biden's worst case scenario. And the US is still there (with the plans to offer an excuse to the public in a few more months about why the US will remain in Iraq). Who's noting his worse case scenario?
We'll go into it in detail in Monday's Iraq snapshot. That'll give the US media a little more time to see if they can find public statements made by sitting US senators in a year when they run for their party's presidential nomination. Point being, it was made publicly. Where the hell's the media? As usual, where the hell is the US media?
As noted before, the Washington Post has done all the heavy lifting on Iraq for two weeks now (of US outlets -- Iraqi outlets have done their own heavy lifting). In tomorrow's paper, the editorial board notes, "Some worry that is where Mr. Maliki is headed. As The Post's Stephanie McCrummen reported , some of the repression has been carried out by black-suited special forces under his command. Thanks to a favorable court decision, the prime minister has been moving to take control of electoral authorities and other previously independent bodies. Mr. Allawi announced that he was withdrawing from a national policy council because Mr. Maliki had not followed through on promises to give it real authority." Again, we've pretty much arrived at Joe Biden's worst case scenario. Joe's no longer a senator, he's now the Vice President of the United States. You'd think that would attract some attention from the press.
Journalists were beaten in Basra (at least five) for attempting to do their job. Alsumaria TV notes, "Basra journalists decided to boycott all the activities of Basra Police until dismissing anti-riot Forces Chief after five of them were beaten during demonstrations. The administrative committee of Journalists Syndicate in Basra called on Basra Police Forces to compensate for journalists. "
In other news, Wael Grace (Al Mada) reports that Baghdad vendors and shopkeepers joke about suing Facebook as a result of the lack of business resulting from the curfew imposed by Nouri over the protest. (Facebook was one of the tools used to get the word out on yesterday's rallies.) David Ali (Al Mada) adds that Osama al-Nujaifi, Speaker of Parliament, held a news conference today announcing that the Parliament had received reports back from the protests as a result of various MPs being present in their own provinces Friday. He's calling for investigations and committees. Meanwhile, Aswat al-Iraq informs, Moqtada al-Sadr says he'll protest . . . if nothing changes . . . in six months. Was Moqtada al-Sadr sent back to Iraq by his Iranian handlers solely to tamp down on the protests? It would appear so. Government can't clean up the streets but al-Sadr's turned his followers into sanitation workers. New Sabah reports that in Karbala, al-Sadr's followers took to the streets, on his orders, to clean up the streets. Next up, he'll have them out at Baghdad Airport selling flowers and serving up recruitment literature.
Turning to news of violence, Aswat al-Iraq reports 2 people were shot dead and three left injured outside Baquba when theyw ere attacked by unknown assailants, a Baquba sticky bombing claimed 1 life, that the Iraqi military stormed a Mosul home and shot dead a man they suspected of plotting a suicide bombing. Deng Shasha (Xinhua) adds, Sahwa member Jasim Zayd was shot dead in Baquba, a Tuz-Kurmato roadside bombing hit Police Chief Col Ali al-Baiyati's convory injuing six bodyguards and an Anbar Province roadsidee bombing left five police officers injured.
March 19 is the 8th anniversary of the invasion and occupation of Iraq. Iraq today remains occupied by 50,000 U.S. soldiers and tens of thousands of foreign mercenaries.
The war in Afghanistan is raging. The U.S. is invading and bombing Pakistan. The U.S. is financing endless atrocities against the people of Palestine, relentlessly threatening Iran and bringing Korea to the brink of a new war.
While the United States will spend $1 trillion for war, occupation and weapons in 2011, 30 million people in the United States remain unemployed or severely underemployed, and cuts in education, housing and healthcare are imposing a huge toll on the people.
Actions of civil resistance are spreading.
On Dec. 16, 2010, a veterans-led civil resistance at the White House played an important role in bringing the anti-war movement from protest to resistance. Enduring hours of heavy snow, 131 veterans and other anti-war activists lined the White House fence and were arrested. Some of those arrested will be going to trial, which will be scheduled soon in Washington, D.C.
Saturday, March 19, 2011, the anniversary of the invasion of Iraq, will be an international day of action against the war machine.
Protest and resistance actions will take place in cities and towns across the United States. Scores of organizations are coming together. Demonstrations are scheduled for San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington, D.C., and more.
The e-mail address for this site is common_ills@yahoo.com.
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