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Today's Stories

November 13, 2006

Kathleen and Bill Christison
Screw the Palestinians, Full Steam Ahead

Weekend Edition
November 11 / 12, 2006

John Walsh
Rahm's Losers

Barucha Calamity Peller
Oaxaca at Any Cost

Al Krebs
Be Careful What You Wish For

Niall Meehan
Ireland's Freedom Struggle and the Foster School of Historical Falsification

Conn Hallinan
The Ills of War: Shafting the Vets

Patrick Cockburn
"We Worry About Staying Alive, Not the U.S. Elections"

Gary Leupp
Democrats Can Be NeoCons, Too

P. Sainath
India High and Low: the Anatomy of a Tiger

Nikolas Kozloff
The Return of Tom Lantos: Beware Venezuela, Here Come the Democratic Hawks

Lawrence R. Velvel
Throwing Rumsfeld Under the Bus

Fred Gardner
Marijuana, the Anti-Drug

Ralph Nader
Taking on the Boss: Claybrook vs. the Chamber

Ben Terrall / John Miller
East Timor: 15 Years After the Massacre

Mike Whitney
Cheney in a Box

Joshua Frank
Post-Electoral Deliriums

Mukul Dube
The Death Penalty Case of Mohd. Afzal

Jason Hribal
Jesse: Eulogy for a Working Dog

Daniel Wolff
The Unseen Springsteen

Michael Donnelly
Red Rock Blues: the Moab Folk Festival

Lord Montague
A Dissenting Note on the Balfour Declaration of November 2, 1917

Poets' Basement
Davies, Louise, Buknatski and Orloski

 

November 10, 2006

Alexander Cockburn
Lame Duck

Marjorie Cohn
The War Crimes Case Against Rumsfeld

Jorge Mariscal
What Veterans See

Gregory Elich
The Trial of Saddam: Who Will Pass Judgment on the Judges?

Joshua Frank
Blue Dog Group: Bye-Bye Coke, Hello Pepsi

Megan Boler
The Joke is On Us: How "Borat" Lowers the Bar of Political Satire

Ramzy Baroud
The Treacherous Road to Oslo Begins Here

Farzana Versey
An Iraqi in India

Roberto Rodriguez
A Thumpin' or a Whippin'?

Cartoon of the Day
Splat!

 

November 9, 2006

Jennifer Loewenstein
How Gaza Offends Us All

Patrick Cockburn
War of the Snipers

Paul Craig Roberts
Will Democrats Become Part of the Problem?

Manuel Garcia, Jr.
The Roots of Corruption

Mike Whitney
Bush's Chernobyl Economy

Alan Maass
The Repudiation of One-Party Rule

Robert Jensen
Blood on the Tracks: the Elections and the Coming Train Wreck

Nicola Nasser
Saddam's Trial in Context

John Chuckman
As I Lay Dying: Watching the US Elections from Canada

Jamal Juma
Between Resistance and Deception in Palestine

Felice Pace
Can the Klamath be Restored?

Website of the Day
The Robert Gates Files

 

November 8, 2006

Alexander Cockburn / Jeffrey St. Clair
Count Your Blessings: NeoCons and NeoLibs Take Big Hit as Voters Say No to Bush, War and Free Trade

Lawrence E. Walsh
Robert Gates and Iran/Contra: Lies, Cover Ups and Slanted Intelligence

Bruce K. Gagnon
What's Next for the Peace Movement?: Confront the Democrats, Now!

Neve Gordon
Anti-Semitism? Mr. Dershowitz, You Just Don't Like What I Say

Dave Lindorff
Election Post-Mortem: What's Next?

Arthur Neslen
Another Tragic Day in Palestine

Joshua Frank
An Election Hangover: Thank God It's Over

James Goodman
The Corporate Food System is Broken

Charles Sullivan
Voting in the Absence of Choice

David Swanson
Subpoena Envy: The Dems Have the Power, But Will They Use It?

Missy Beattie
The Electorate Speaks and Barney Barks!

Dr. Susan Block
American Voters Say, "Bush Sucks!"

Website of the Day
Stealing Olive Groves from Palestinians

 

November 7, 2006

Michael Neumann
Cut and Run from Iraq: Sooner Rather Than Later

Paul Wolf
Saddam Must Die: A Pre-Ordained Verdict

Nikolas Kozloff
In Nicaragua, a Chavez Wave?

Eliza Ernshire
The Women of Beit Hanoun

William S. Lind
The Smile on Saddam's Face: He's Tan, Rested and Ready

Mike Ferner
Pick a Number: Greater Than 47,615

Felice Pace
Pumping the Klamath Dry

Chris Genovali
The Problem with PBDEs: Why Canada's Proposed Ban Won't Protect People or Wildlife

Gilad Atzmon
Watching Borat

Dick J. Reavis
Going to Class War with the Proletariat We Got ...

Elizabeth Weill-Greenberg
Lives (and Votes) Lost: the Ordeal of Larry Peterson

Website of the Day
Magic Sam: a Sure Cure for the Election Day Blues

Question of the Day
Is Bush Gay?

 

November 6, 2006

Alexander Cockburn
The Message of Campaign 2006

Norman Solomon
Saddam's Unindicted Co-Conspirator: Donald Rumsfeld

Robert Fisk
A Guilty Verdict on America, as Well

Marjorie Cohn
The Banana Election: From Hanging Chads to Hanging Saddam

Paul Craig Roberts
The Goose and the Gander: Is Bush Next?

Nikolas Kozloff
Election Eve Jitters: the Chavez Factor

Newton Garver
The Progress in Bolivia: Morales' Stunning Victory Over Big Oil

Mike Whitney
Bush's Carnival of Blood

Jesse Hagopian
From the Black Panthers to the Green Party: an Interview with Aaron Dixon

Dr. Peter Rost, MD
The Genocide Election: When a Life Saving Industry Cheats, People Die

Website of the Day
Robert Pollin vs. Rick Wolff: Is Pomo Marxism Marxism?

 

November 4 / 5, 2006

Dave Zirin
Political Players: Where Athletes Give Their Money

Patrick Cockburn
When Does Incompetence Become a Crime?

Sanho Tree
War Timing and Opportunism

Ralph Nader
Failure Across All Fronts

Lee Sustar
The Obama Myth

Dr. Shepherd Bliss
Torture Memories

Adam Elkus
Babies and Banks: Celebrity Colonialism in Africa

Seth Sandronsky
Is Another Recession Looming?

Fred Gardner
10 Years of Medical Pot in California: Dr. Mikuriya's Observations

Joshua Sperber
How the US Lost Latin America

Evelyn Pringle
Ohio Redux: Mr. Blackwell and the Henhouse

Mitchel Cohen
The Left and the Environment: Notes on the Ecological Dimension

Missy Beattie
The Medium is the Massage

Michael Dickinson
Watching the Guards: a Prison Diary

John Holt
The Silk Road to Ruin

Dr. Susan Block
The Beastly Bombing

Poets' Basement
LaMorticella, Engel, Orloski and Davies


November 3, 2006

Laura Carlsen
Day of the Dead in Oaxaca

Stephan Said
Honoring Bradley Will

John Stauber
"Victory in Iraq:" The PR Machine Behind Bush's Favorite Slogan

Mike Whitney
Baghdad is Surrounded

Joshua Frank
DNC Deja Vu

Victoria Furio
More Than Timetables

Tammara~85,441
They Say He is Coming Home

Stuart Croswaithe
Beatings and Sugar Plums: New Labor's War on the Kurds

Missy Beattie
Bush Shock

Website of the Day
Howlin' Wolf


November 2, 2006

Winslow T. Wheeler
The US Body Count in Iraq: an Analysis of Who is Dying and How

Paul Craig Roberts
Evil is as Evil Does

Dave Lindorff
Kerry Out: the Joke's Still on Us

Uri Avnery
The Lovable Man? Lieberman and the Decline of Israeli Democracy

Jeff Birkenstein
Smearing Harold Ford in Black Face

John Ross
Slave Labor in Private Prisons

Zoltan Grossman
Recharging the Anti-War Movement

Eveyln Pringle
The SEC's Probe of Halliburton: Is Cheney Being Fitted for a Striped Jumpsuit?

Christopher Brauchli
Drug Profits and PACs: Why Big Pharma Pushes the GOP

 

November 1, 2006

Alan Dershowitz v. Bruce Jackson
On Torture

Brian Tokar
Running on Hype: the Real Scoop on Biofuels

Fred Leonhardt
Democrats, Sex Crimes and the Press: the Goldschmidt Affair

Richard W. Behan
Triumph of the Petropublicans: Bush's Other Civil War

Brenda Norrell
Indigenous Opposition to the Border Wall

Charles Sullivan
Spoils of Corruption: Who Will Stand Up When America Goes Wrong?

Ron Jacobs
Hell is Rising in Oaxaca: interview with a Oaxacan Rebel

Mike Knapp
Green Stench in Minnesota: the Commissioner and the Hog Lot

Moshe Adler
The Temptations of a Union Boss: the Case of Brian McLaughlin

Walden Bello
Chain Gang Economics

Lee Ballinger
The Collapse of Hip Capitalism: How Tower Records Committed Suicide

Joshua Frank
Party in a Cage: Snake Oil and the Midterm Elections

Carl Gelderloos
Cheerleading the Massacre in Oaxaca: an Open Letter to the Washington Post

Peter Rost, MD
Panic in Big Pharma

Saul Landau
Bush's Anti-Terrorism Record: Don't Look Too Close

Website of the Day
The Meatrix


October 31, 2006

William S. Lind
The Third and Final Act: Iran

Stephen S. Pearcy
Dem Candidate's Wife Urges Cindy Sheehan Not to Protest Iraq War

Uri Avnery
Who's Afraid of an Iranian Bomb?

Michael Colby
Corporations Win Again!: Bush Opens National Parks to Bio-Prospecting

Sunsara Taylor
A No-Win Election for Women

Ben Beachy
Targeting Nicaraguans' Stomachs: 11th Hour Election Meddling by the US

Edward Humes
Nine Words: America's Disservice to Veterans

Roger Burbach
The Meaning of Lula's Victory in Brazil

Subcomandante Marcos
A Communique from the EZLN on Oaxaca

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
Funny Business in the Booth: Vote for James H. 'Jim'

Sharon Smith
Those Damned Democrats

Website of the Day
Parks Not for Sale

 

October 30, 2006

Robert Fisk
Dirty Bombs Over Lebanon: Did Israel Use Uranium Weapons?

Bruce Jackson
Normalizing Torture

Norman Solomon
I Was Wrong About Thomas Friedman, the World's Wealthiest Pundit

Lance Selfa
Liberal Doormats: Tread on Us

Ali Khan
The Veil and the British Male Elite

Lee Sustar
European Islamophobia: Fanning the Flames of Hate

Robert Jensen
The Death of Empathy

Akiva Eldar
Lieberman: Making Haider Look Good

Tim Montague
The Natural Step to Eco-Villages

Brian M. Downing
Evil in the Valley: Civilian Massacres, From Vietnam to Iraq

Website of the Day
Alien Impeachment


October 27 / 29, 2006
Weekend Edition

Jeffrey St. Clair
Hogwash: Fecal Factories in the Heartland

Maher Arar
The Horrors of Extraordinary Rendition: a Personal Account

David Rosen
Perversions of Power: Mark Foley and the Bush Administration

Gregory Elich
"A Bursting Boiler at Russia's Doorstep:" Why Bush is Seeking Confrontation with N. Korea

Tom Barry
Fear and Loathing in the North: an Apartheid Fence in America?

Jeff Taylor
Democrats By Default?

Dave Lindorff
Why Nancy Pelosi is Wrong

Ron Jacobs
The General Who Called Out the Devil: the Politics of Hugo Chavez

Maurus Chino
Hauba Hanu: Oppression Affects All People

Christopher Brauchli
Veiled Threats: the Global War on Fashion

Sherwood Ross
The Wages of Whistleblowing: Why Bunny Greenhouse Sits in a Corner

Rev. William Alberts
In Search of a Real Inter-Religious Dialogue on War and Justice

Aseem Shrivastava
Pushing India Toward a "Dollar Democracy"

Saul Landau / Farrah Hassen
Bush's Mea Culpa Speech, First Draft

Russ Fine / Dee Fine
Of Peters and Principles: Learning About Sex and Hypocrisy from the GOP

Seth Sandronsky
Social Security: the Distortions of Sebastian Mallaby

Michael Carmichael
Rogue President: Midterm Meltdown

Joe Allen
The Legacy of Gillo Pontecorvo: a Maker of Revolutionary Films

David Vest
Playlist: What I'm Listening to This Week

Poets' Basement
Landau, Engel and Buknatski

Website of the Weekend
Safely Home

 

October 26, 2006

Ismael Hossein-zadeh
Islamic Fascism?: Inflammatory Ironies

Carlos Zorrilla
The Police Raid on My House: Trumped Up Charges and Collusion Between a Mining Company and the Government of Ecuador

Paul Craig Roberts
The Crimes of Greed vs. the Crimes of Government: If Enron's Skilling Gets 24 Years in Prison, How Many Should Bush and Cheney Get?

Mike Whitney
The Charnel House of Baghdad

Lily Hughes
A Cruel and Unusual Reality: Inside the Texas Death House

Jennifer Matsui
Madonna's African Safari: The Great White Baby Hunter

Tim Matson
How to Save Vermont

Stephen Fleischman
Like a Soldier: Benchmarks, Timelines and Lies

Missy Beattie
The Blood of October: Are We Sure Barney Still Supports This War?

Patrick Cockburn
From "Mission Accomplished" to "Mission Impossible" in Iraq

Website of the Day
Open Letter to The Nation

 

October 25, 2006

Michael Donnelly
Ethnicity and Baseball

John Stanton
The Vindication of Sibel Edmonds

John Ross
Upheaval from the Bottom

Conn Hallinan
Hunting Hugo: When It's About Oil Nothing is Off the Table--Not Even Assassination

Robert Jensen
Academic Freedom on the Rocks

Johnny Barber
Drinking Tea with Hizbullah

Bruce K. Gagnon
Space Cowboy: Bush's War on Heaven

Daniel McGowan
Elie Wiesel for Israeli President?

James J. Brittain
Uribe's Failure to Learn from Colombia's Past

Peter Harley
Afghanistan in 3-D

Jonathan Cook
Israel's Minister of Strategic Threats

Shepherd Bliss
The Bioneers and the New York Times

Website of the Day
The Price of Staying the Course

 

October 24, 2006

John Walsh
The Book of Rahm: Emanuel's War Plan for Democrats

M. Shahid Alam
Not All Terrorists Are Muslim: the Latest Falsehood from the Advocates of Civilizational War

Dr. Trudy Bond
The Silence at Home, as America Eats Her Young

Michael Phillips
The Story of My Kidnapping in Nablus: "I Never Feared for My Life"

Dave Lindorff
Truth and Consequences on Iraq: Bush's Latest Cut-and-Paste War Plan

David Phinney
A US Fortress Rises in Baghdad: Asian Labor Trafficking Used to Build World's Largest Embassy

Laura Carlsen
Food Insecurity: the World Needs Its Small Farmers

Pierre Tristam
The American Way of Gore

Marguerite Rose Jimenez
"About That Trip to Cuba:" When the FBI Came Calling

Website of the Day
Tampon Terrorists

 

October 23, 2006

Saree Makdisi
Israel's Cluster Bomb War: "What We Did Was Insane and Monstrous"

Joshua Frank
The Antiwar Movement and Independent Politics: an Interview with Cindy Sheehan

Fred Gardner
What Have California Doctors Learned About Cannabis?

Ralph Nader
The End of Habeas Corpus and the Belligerent Despot-in-Chief

Ron Jacobs
Bush's Clark Clifford: James Baker Wants a Kinder, Gentler War

Norman Solomon
Punditry Without Consequences: Channeling Thomas Friedman

Richard Manning
Outside the Market: We Need and Owe Rural People

Neil Kitson
Canadians in Afghanistan: Bloody, Unbowed, Stoned?

William MacDougall
The Socialist, the Columnist, His Wife and the Prostitute

Gilad Atzmon
Surviving the Board of Deputies

Werther
The Evening of Empire

Website of the Day
Different Drummer: Internet Coffeehouse Movement

 

October 20 / 22, 2006

Alexander Cockburn
The Myth of Microloans

Gary Leupp
How the US Declared War on North Korea

Brian Cloughley
What Are They Dying For?

Dave Zirin
Pat Tillman's Brother Breaks His Silence

William Blum
Don't Look Back: Who Said Clinton Didn't Kill Anybody?

Christopher Brauchli
The Cronies' War

Winslow Wheeler
The Mad Logic of Pentagon Spending: As Costs Rise, Readiness Declines

Michael Donnelly
GOP Death Slide: Is the Party Really Over?

Fred Gardner
Corporate Drugs Useless Against Alzheimer's

Susie Day
How to Stay Out of Gitmo

Lucinda Marshall
Behind Closed Doors: the Invisibility of Domestic Violence

Fred Wilcox
The Second Palestinian Intifada: History of a Struggle for Survival

Alan Maass
Standing Up Against Racism at Columbia: a Wake Up Call to the Passive Left

Lee Sustar
A Bipartisan Border Wall: New Phases in the Crackdown on Immigrants

Ariadna Theokopoulos
Shame on You, Dr. Warf: Hail the Epidemiologist in Chief

Missy Beattie
Surges: the Dow and the Death Count

CP News Wire
Bush's Paraguay Land Grab: Hideout or Water Raid?

CP News Services
Sexually Repressed Republicans: Robert Bork, Riveted

Poets' Basement
Davies, Engel, Buknatski and Orloski

Website of the Weekend
Scenes from Oaxaca

 

October 19, 2006

Elaine Cassel
The Bush Administration's Assault on Defense Lawyers

Col. Dan Smith
Breaking Up That Old Gang of Mine: Cracks in the Bush / Blair Axis

Manuel Garcia, Jr.
North Korea's Nuclear Test: a Q & A

Josh Gryniewicz
Wal-Mart Tightens the Squeeze on Workers

Amira Hass
What is 20 Tons of Explosives?

Eric Holt-Gimenez
Poison and Famine in the Fields: How the Agri-Food Industry's Deadly Cycle Feeds Immigration

Jesse Hagopian
Arrested Democracy: On Trying to Ignore Aaron Dixon

Sam Husseini
How Third Parties Can Solve the "Spoiler" Problem and Win Elections

John Weisheit
A Gathering of Water Buffaloes: Feds Celebrate Death of the Colorado River

CP News Service
A Plea to U2 From Africa's Children: Stop Bono Before He Kills Again

Website of the Day
George W. Bush: Hollywood Producer

Art Gallery of the Day
Botero's Abu Ghraib Paintings in Manhattan

 

October 18, 2006

Joshua Frank
Cindy Sheehan's Lesser Evilism: Democrats or Bust?

Dr. Curran Warf, MD
Slandering Sound Science: Bush's Attack on the Lancet Iraq War Death Study

Saul Landau
Bush's Foley: Will the Dems Blow It?

Tom Barry
The Politics of Fear

Bruce Jackson
Thundersnow: a Report from Buffalo

Dave Lindorff
Loveless Among the Ruins: Even Repubs Flee Bush's Failed Middle East Policy

Frederico Fuentes
When Cochabamba Said "Enough": Bolivia's Blow to Neoliberalism

Michael Simmons
Greetings from Echo Park: an Open Letter to Rolling Stone's Jann Wenner

Daryll E. Ray
The Root Problems in American Agriculture

Kate Doyle
The Dead of Tlatelolco

Website of the Day
The Lynne Stewart Defense Committee

 


October 17, 2006

Michael Neumann
Hit and Run: Guerrilla Reviewing

Manuel Garcia, Jr.
Nuclear Test, Political Flare: Interpreting the Physics and Politics of N. Korea's Nuclear Test

Stephen S. Pearcy
The Interrogation of Julia Wilson: Secret Service Grills 14 Year-Old Artist

Sharon Smith
Afghanistan Reconsidered: The Taliban Aren't Gone, Women Haven't Been Liberated

Al Krebs
The Corporate Assault on Zoning

David Underhill
Politicus Interruptus: Come Back, Jo Bonner

Daniel Wolff
NY's Iraq Veterans Against the War Needs Your Help ... Now

James Brooks
Desirable Duds: Israeli / US Cluster Bombs Litter Lebanon

Website of the Day
Stop Torture Now

 

October 16, 2006

Gary Leupp
North Korea as a Religious State

Patrick Cockburn
General Mutinies Against Blair

David Wilson
Where Have All the Doctors Gone?: the Collapse of Iraq's Health Care Services

Robert Fisk
Confronting Turkey's Armenian Genocide

Robert Jensen
Racism and Cheap Thrills at U. of Texas Law School

Ingmar Lee / Krista Roessingh
An Appeal for S. India's Wild Elephants

Mike Whitney
America's Other War Party

Jake Whitney
The Courageous Dr. Rost

Sanho Tree
Sugar Daddy Politics: Was Foley Blackmailed to Secure His Vote on CAFTA?

Website of the Day
Best War Ever

 


October 14/15, 2006
Weekend Edition

Uri Avnery
Gaza as Laboratory: the Great Experiment

John Walsh
How Rahm Emmanuel Has Rigged a Pro-War Congress

Jean Bricmont
A Fable About Palestine

Jennifer Van Bergen
Bush's Military Commissions Act and the Future of America

Ralph Nader
Wilted Yankees: the Fruits of Checkbook Baseball

Floyd Rudmin
The Logic of Proliferation: How Bush's Belligerence Prompted N. Korea to Pursue Nuclear Weapons

Mark Weisbrot
Correcting the Facts on US/Venezuela Relations

Laura Carlsen
Building a Future in the Mixteca

Hani Shukrallah
A Stroll Through the Cairo Mall: Shopping as Cultural Pursuit

Dr. Susan Block
The Spent Milk of Human Foley

John Chuckman
North Korea's Bomb: Still 1,126 Nuke Tests Behind the US

Lucinda Marshall
Is Betty Ugly?: the Profits of Denigration

Don Monkerud
The Case Against Depleted Uranium

Missy Comley Beattie
What Bush Means By Tolerable Violence in Iraq

Ron Jacobs
Shouting "No One is Illegal" in a Crowded Theater

Website of the Weekend
Ratfink Raunchfest

 

October 13, 2006

Jorge Mariscal
PowerPoint Racism: How Military Recruiters Pitch to Latinos

Stephen Philion
The Myth of the Spat Upon Vets: an Interview with Jerry Lembcke

John Blair
Strip Mining Wildlife Preserves: Black Beauty's Filthy Lucre

Col. Dan Smith
Oil, Atoms and War

Alastair Crooke / Mark Perry
How Hezbollah Defeated Israel: Part Two, Winning the Ground War

Stephen Fleischman
Journalism Then and Now

Charles Perroud
The Death Penalty's Invisible Victims

Anne E. Brodsky
Return to Afghanistan: Where the Rhetoric Doesn't Match the Reality

Website of the Day
Underwater Nuke Test

 

October 12, 2006

Jonathan Cook
Israel's Plan for a Military Strike on Iran

Norman Solomon
The Pundit Path to Death in Iraq

M. Shahid Alam
On Colonialism and Colleagues

Paul Craig Roberts
Can We Call It Genocide Now?

Meredith Schafer / Chris Kutalik
Is a General Transportation Strike Looming for 2008? Can Labor Seize the Moment?

Carl Gelderloos
Images of Occupation: Teaching in Nablus

Alastair Crooke / Mark Perry
How Hezbollah Defeated Israel: Part One, Winning the Intelligence War

Charles Sullivan
Assassins of Truth

William S. Lind
Why Do We Still Fight a Lost War?

CP News Service
The South Turns Against the War

Website of the Day
There's a Riot Goin' On

 

October 11, 2006

John Feffer
Pyongyang 1, Bush 0

Dave Lindorff
A Killing Occupation

Jackson Katz
Gunning Down Women: Coverage of "School Shootings" Misses Central Issue

April Howard / Ben Dangl
The Tin War in Bolivia

Michael Carmichael
World War W

Ken Couesbouc
The New Witchcraft: Marvin Harris on the War on Terror

Gregory Afghani
Sleepless on Skid Row: Guilty of Being Homeless in America

Alexander Cockburn
600,000 Dead in Iraq: Chortles in the New Yorker for Slaughter's Cheerleader, C. Hitchens

Website of the Day
Petition: Defend Columbia Students Who Confronted the Minutemen

 

October 10, 2006

Paul Craig Roberts
Lost Wars and a Lost Economy

Robert Robideau
The Myth Keepers of Columbus

Joshua Frank
The Democrats and the War on Civil Liberties

Dave Lindorff
Free the Press Free Linda Greenhouse

Dave Zirin
Brother of the Fist

Heather Gray
Where Votes Matter: My Experience in South Africa

James Knotwell
Big Ag in the Heartland: the Future of Nebraska's Family Farms

Missy Beattie
The Return of James Baker, III

Mike Whitney
Bush and North Korea: Bumbling Toward Disaster

David Rosen
Sex Panic on Capitol Hill: Mark Foley and the Politics of Sex in America

Website of the Day
Eno / Byrne: Music to Enjoy the Foley Scandal By

 


October 9. 2006

Robert Fisk
The Age of Terror

Norman Solomon
Welcome to the Nuclear Club

Ron Jacobs
The Boom Heard Around the World

Gideon Levy
The Mystery of America

Walter Brasch
Their Back Pages: Sex, Lies and Family Values

Mickey Z.
Who Killed Michael Moore?

John Holt
Grizzlies in Our Midst: Can Humans and Bears Coexist?

Lucinda Marshall
Not So Pretty in Pink: Profits and Breast Cancer

Saul Landau
Post-Castro Cuba

Website of the Day
War, Inc.

 

 

October 7 / 8, 2006
Weekend Edition

Alexander Cockburn
Wargasms and Orgasms

Peter Kwong
The Chinese Face of Neoliberalism

Ralph Nader
Revolt of the Generals

Mark Donham
What Cynthia McKinney Means to Me

Dave Lindorff
Philly's Police Snoops

Peter Bosshard
World Bank Shuts Out Dissident Voices: Big Dams, Huge Profits & Political Corruption

Ron Jacobs
Evil Hour in Colombia

Lawrence R. Velvel
Governmental Derelicts: Moral Meltdown in America

Fred Gardner
Arnold Vetoes Hemp Bill

David Green
The US, Israel and the Invasion of Lebanon

Jim B.
Activism, Incorporated: Outsourcing Grassroots Politics?

Missy Beattie
Prayers for Peace at the Edge of the Abyss

Michael Donnelly
Blame the Page: Grand Old Perverts Go on Offensive

Jackson Thoreau
Enter Newt

Jon Hung
Revisiting Korematsu: Denying Civil Rights Based on National Origin

CounterPunch News Service
Why We Confronted the Minutemen at Columbia

Tom D'Antoni
Playlist

Poets' Basement
Orloski, Davies, Tirado, Gaffney and Ford

Website of the Weekend
Reagan Gone Wild

 


October 6, 2006

Alison Weir
Just Another Mother Murdered

Tiffany Ten Eyck / Mark Brenner
Made in (DeUnionized) America

Corporate Crime Reporter
Look Who's Behind "37 Reasons" to Vote for Big Business: Former Clinton PR Flak Mike McCurry

Juan Antonio Montecino
Cleaving a False Divide in Latin America

Walden Bello
A Siamese Tragedy

Christopher Brauchli
Rank Invitations: Dining with Bush

Brynne Keith-Jennings
Dan Burton in Nicaragua: the Congressman, His Stick and the Elections

Jonathan Cook
The Struggle for Palestine's Soul

Website of the Day
Fighting Hog Farms and Clearcuts in the Heartland

 


October 5, 2006

John Walsh
Turn the Page

Carol Norris
The Radical Right, the Myth of the Gay Child Abuser and You: a Psychotherapist on the Hysteria Over Foley

Paul Craig Roberts
Will November Bring Hope or Another Stolen Election?

Ricardo Alarcón
The Truth About the Embargo of Cuba

James Abourezk
Waterboarding the Constitution: After Torture, What's Next?

Nicola Nasser
Removing Hamas: Brinksmanship or Coup d'Etat?

Kirkpatrick Sale
Breaking Away: the First North American Secessionist Conference

Uri Avnery
Peace with Syria: Lunch in Damascus

Website of the Day
More Naughty GOP Messages


October 4, 2006

Elizabeth Terzakis
The Walls That Racism Built: Blood Revenge, the Death Penalty and Kevin Cooper

Paul Wolf
The Mushy Rebellion: Pakistan Under Musharraf

Sean Penn
The Arrogant, the Misguided and the Cowards

Dave Lindorff
Outrage as Misdirection: The Real Scandal isn't Foley

Diane Farsetta
For Sale: Iraqi Kurdistan

Sharon Smith
Democrats: Yes to War, No to Pedophilia

Felice Pace
Revoking 1776

Sara Roy
The Economy of Gaza

Website of the Day
Alexander Cockburn: the Video Interview (Part Two)


October 3, 2006

Jennifer Van Bergen
Compassionate Conservative Pedophiles

Greg Moses
The Infallible Empire: Junking Habeas Corpus

Stan Cox
Real Bad ID: a National Driver's License and the Fading Right of Anonymity

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
How Empires Die

Evelyn Pringle
Big Pharma Takes a Hit: Alaska's Supreme Court Outlaws Forced Drugging

Fred Wilhelms
SoundExchange and Unpaid Music Artists: Help Us Find These Musicians and Get Them Paid

Michael Abelman
Know Your Farmer, Know Your Food: the Risks of Convenience and Consolidation

Gary Leupp
The Foley Follies

Website of the Day
Bush and Blair: Endless Love

 

October 2, 2006

Eric Hazan
Roadmap to Nowhere: an Interview with Tanya Reinhart on Israel/Palestine Since 2003

Mike Whitney
Bloodbath on 60 Minutes: Court Stenographer Finally Comes Clean

Norman Solomon
American Narcissism and Iraq

Assaf Kfoury
Meeting Nasrallah

Missy Beattie
The Meaning of "ummmm": Speaker Hasert and the Over-Friendly Congressman

Arthur Neslen
Lie Less in Gaza

Paula J. Caplan
How the Supreme Court Mangled My Research

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November 13, 2006

Nicaragua Redux

The Strange Return of Daniel Ortega

By JOE DeRAYMOND

On November 5, the United States held an election in Nicaragua, and the candidate of El Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional (FSLN), Daniel Ortega, became the President of Nicaragua. It was the fifth consecutive time Ortega was the Sandinista candidate, from the 1984 slam dunk victory of the revolution when no Sandinista candidate could lose, through the electoral defeats of 1990, 1996, and 2001. This year, in a five party race, Ortega won the Presidency with 38% of the vote, despite the best efforts of the United States.

I observed the final week of the election with the Witness for Peace election delegation. Our 20 accredited observers in 8 municipalities joined over 11,000 Nicaraguan observers, and hundreds of international observers who were all certified by the Nicaraguan Supreme Electoral Council (Consejo Supemo Electoral, or CSE) to watch the voting on election day. The Carter Center, the Organization of American States, the Procuraduria de Derechos Humanos (PDDH, a Nicaraguan human rights ombudsman group) all were watching. Rodrigo Boneto, the Chief of Staff of the CSE, estimated that there were, on average, 1.7 observers at each of the 11,243 voting stations (Juntas Receptoras de Votos or JRV's) in Nicaragua.

The United States financed the vast majority of these observers to guard against electoral fraud by the FSLN, through the Nicaraguan organization Ética y Transparencia, which placed over 11,000 Nicaraguans at the polling places. Ética y Transparencia did a "quick count" of results, in order to have a check on any possible fraud during the counting. All of this observation proved unnecessary. 65% of registered voters turned out in a peaceful and orderly fashion to make their choice. The Sandinistas had no need to try any illegal maneuvers. The US observer effort would be better directed to Ohio and Florida, where results are much more suspect than in a process where each political party watches every vote as it is hand counted.

Further, the United States trained the Nicaraguan CSE in the voting process. They also trained 48,000 poll officials from two political parties who were challenging Ortega in this race, the Movimiento Renovador Sandinisata (MRS) and the Alianza Liberal Nicarag_ense (ALN) after they requested assistance. In total, the United States Agency for International Develoopment (USAID), through the National Democratic Institute, the International Republican Institute, and the International Foundation for Elections Systems spent about $15 million on this election. The US promoted the vote, published the lists of registered voters, paid for OAS observation, coordinated donors, and assisted the CSE. To place this spending in perspective, our group estimated that the Nicaraguan political parties spent, in total, $17 million on the campaign.

Before the election, United States officials and political players also intervened energetically in the campaign. Otto Reich, Jean Kirkpatrick, Jeb Bush, Oliver North, Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemispheric Affairs Tom Shannon, U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick, and US Ambassador to Nicaragua Paul Trivelli weighed in publicly on the elections. Trivelli offered to fund a primary among the right parties in order to identify one candidate to oppose Ortega, and thereby not split the vote. Congressmen Dan Burton and Dana Rohrabacher threatened to embargo the over $500 million a year in remittances that Nicaraguans send back to Nicaragua from the US. The US Embassy spokesperson, Kristin Stewart, linked Ortega and the Sandinistas to international terrorism. USAID official Adolfo Franco and US Secretary of Commerce Carlos Gutierrez threatened a loss of jobs and aid if Nicaraguans chose Ortega.

On Thursday, November 2, our delegation visited the US Embassy in Managua for an off-the-record "Election Briefing for American Citizens in Nicaragua". (Of course, they meant "United States Citizens".) We passed into the gated compound, through a construction site that will soon be a series of concrete walls. The Embassy is a mansion on a hill overlooking Managua. To our surprise, Paul Trivelli and a group of State Department and USAID decision-makers were present. Trivelli's short talk was instantly forgettable.

The USAID official present, however, laid it all out for us: the money spent, the groups used, the regrets. At one point he stated"If we had wanted to throw the elections, we could have invested about $2 million and probably done that." The fact that Nicaragua was totally dependent on the United States for this election process did not seem the least bit objectionable to him. When I tried to reach him with my "Red Dawn" analogy, which runs along the lines of "How would you like it if your country were invaded for the purposes of establishing a political system that suited someone else?" The official responded, "We would never allow that."

Nicaraguans do not have a choice. The United States owns the store, owns the customers, and all serve the needs of the Empire. When the OAS filed a complaint that the US should "respect the decision of Nicaraguans", it was simply shrugged off. As our election delegation coordinator, Brynne Keith-Jennings, noted, "the very least Trivelli could do is to demonstrate due respect for the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations, which states that 'it is the duty of all persons enjoying such privileges and immunities not to interfere in the internal affairs of that State'."

So it is no surprise that when Ortega accepted the concession of his closest rival, Eduardo Montealegre, on November 7, he was not smiling. He had returned to the Presidency after 16 years, but the challenge ahead is daunting. His party is compromised by the deals necessary to attain the office, and his nation has immense and immediate needs.

Nicaragua today is the second poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, after Haiti. Three fourths of the population of 5.6 million receive less than the minimum level of nutrition, and half receive "critically deficient" nutrition. One million school-aged children do not attend school. 55% do not have access to basic medicine. 45% live on less than $1 a day. Literacy has decreased 20% from 1990, to 67.5%. An increasing number are emigrating to Costa Rica and the United States to work. The United States waged the Contra War that claimed 50,000 Nicaraguan lives in the 1980's in order to defeat the Sandinistas, and in the years of our influence, the country has declined with disastrous effects on the population.

Not that the country was in good condition in 1990, when Nicaragua was enduring a huge inflation rate, an 11 billion dollar debt, an infrastructure damaged by the contra, the shock of the war, a hated compulsory military service program, and the United States government. The United States not only kept the Contra War active throughout the 80's, but also held out a well-publicized carrot during the 1989 ­ 1990 election period. They offered the candidacy of Violeta Chamorro to run against Daniel Ortega of the FSLN. She was the wife of the newspaper publisher Pedro Chamorro, whose assasssination in 1979 united Nicaragua against Somoza. In a well-funded billboard and newpaper campaign, the voters were told the war would end with the election of Violeta. The Nicaraguan voters rejected Ortega and achieved a dearly bought "peace". After the election, Ortega and the Sandinistas accepted the results, but carried out a desperate pillaging of assets for personal gain, known in Nicaragua as the "piñata".

Violeta promptly placed Nicaragua squarely under the neoliberal thumb of the US and the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and The Interamerican Development Bank. She released the US from the 17 billion dollar judgment levied in favor of Nicaragua by the World Court. The assets and people of Nicaragua were literally sold at bargain prices. Since 1990, Nicaragua has gone through various "structural adjustment" fire sales of public assets and constrictions of public services at the insistence of the international predators.

In 1996, the US tilted, again, toward a unity candidate of the right, Arnoldo Alemán of the Partido Liberal Constitucionalista (PLC), who defeated Daniel Ortega of the FSLN. Arnoldo raised the art of political corruption to new heights, and increased the family fortunes to over $250,000,000, of which an estimated $100,000,000 came directly from government coffers. While Arnoldo was enriching himself at the expense of an impoverished population, Daniel was fighting off accusations that he had been sexually abusing his stepdaughter for years. The two men found common interest in uniting their parties, not in ideology, but in political control of the government and treasury. Thus was born a pact between the PLC of the right and the FSLN of the revolutionary left, known in Nicaragua as "El Pacto". It divided the spoils of government, and also provided both Ortega and Aleman automatic Assembly seats, which carry with them immunity from criminal prosecution.

In 2001, the candidate of the united right under the banner of the PLC was Enrique Bolaños, Aleman's Vice-President. Daniel Ortega, again, gained the nomination of the FSLN. By now, both parties had developed factions that opposed the leadership. Sandinistas such as Doña Maria Tellez, Sergio Ramirez and Ernesto Cardenal had been falling away from the Ortega-led party for years. They formed a party reform movement called Movimiento Renovador Sandinista (MRS). However, the power of patronage and El Pacto were used by both Alemán and Ortega, and the dissident factions were marginalized. Daniel had real chances to win in 2001, which were dashed with the attack on the Twin Towers. After 9/11, the US financed a campaign in Nicaragua that linked the Sandinistas to international terror, and Bolaños won.

After the 2001 elections, the US position began to twist back in a knot of contradiction, as both the US and Nicaragua brought criminal charges against Alemán and officials in his government. Bolaños was forced to strip Alemán of immunity, and oppose his own party in order to do so. Alemán was convicted of stealing government funds, and sentenced to prison. He continued to maintain his control over the PLC, however, even from prison. He is currently under "house arrest", allowed to travel within the large area of the Department of Managua. His PLC candidate this year is José Rizo, and his daughter, Maria Dolores Alemán, is an Assembly candidate who figures prominently on campaign billboards around Managua.

The PLC had developed a faction that wanted to end the grip of Alemán. A group of rightwing parties formed under the banner of the Alianza Liberación Nicarag_ense (ALN), and presented a slate of candidates led by Presidential candidate Eduardo Montealegre. This candidate and party gained the favor of the US, which was clearly embarassed by the continued presence of Alemán in a position of political power. Our delegation met with ALN campaign leaders Commandante Henry Zelaya and Javier Llanes, ex-contra fighters. According to Commandante Henry, "We lost democracy 26 years ago." He went on to extoll the virtues of life under Somoza, when the debt was less and the country, in general, better off than during the Sandinista years. These fervent anti-communists are reliving the cold war, and were the political darlings of the US government in this election.

In 2005, the popular FSLN ex-mayor of Managua, Herty Lewites, made a bid to become the presidential candidate of the Frente in 2006. Ortega would not allow a primary, and, when Herty would not back down, Ortega and the FSLN leadership expelled him from the party, along with other longtime Sandinistas such as Hugo Tinoco. This dispute led, finally, to the split of the MRS from the FSLN, with a ticket led by Herty as a Presidential candidate, Edmundo Jarquin, a banker and economist, Vice-President. In July, Herty died of a heart attack, and Edmundo became the MRS Presidential candidate, joined on the ticket by Carlos Mejía Godoy, the poet, musician and singer.

Thus it came to be that the Nicaraguan voter had four serious choices for President and Assembly, the established PLC of the right, its breakoff the ALN, and the FSLN of the former revolutionary left, with its breakoff MRS. It was analogous to a United States election in which the Republicans and Democrats each developed rump factions that ran candidates to return the parties to their roots, against the fattened-at-the-trough corporate parties.

There was a fifth choice as well, another blast from the past, Eden Pastora, the candidate for Alternativa por el Cambio (AC, or Alternative for Change). He was Commandante Zero in the FSLN during the years of the revolution, and became a popular hero for such exploits as the taking of the National Assembly. When I was in Nicaragua in 1983, he was sardonically referred to as "Commandante Kodak", for his propensity for jumping in front of any camera. His inability to achieve leadership status within the Sandinista government led him to form his own counter-revolutionary force in Costa Rica, from which he would attack. He was back this year as a Presidential Candidate, with his chiseled features on billboards, for Zero Corruption, Zero Pact, etc: alas, also a zero vote, a quarter of a percent.

As the election aproached, it became clear that the FSLN and Daniel Ortega were running in the lead. Daniel could count on a base 40% vote in this five candidate race. He would never get more than that base, however, as his history of corruption since 1990, and bad memories of a 1980's war give him high negatives. He would never win a runoff, in a one on one race, which was what the Constitution demanded through the 2001 election if no one gained a majority on the first ballot. The solution for Ortega had been to mobilize El Pacto to change the constitution, to allow a President to win with 35% of the vote, as long as he was 5% ahead of the next challenger. As long as both a PLC and ALN candidate remained in the race, he had a good chance to reach the Presidency. Indeed, Ortega's 38% was just enough compared to 29% for the ALN, 26% for the PLC and 6% for the MRS.

Daniel and the Sandinistas also made concessions to the right. On a personal level, Daniel "confessed" publicly of his sins of the 80's to the conservative cleric Obando y Bravo. The Sandinista Party allied itself with the conservative Catholic Church to outlaw all abortion, in the weeks before the election. Nicaragua has had a law on the books for a century that allowed a woman to obtain an abortion in cases of rape, incest, or when her life was in danger. The law passed by the Nicaraguan Assembly in October, 52-0, outlaws all abortion. Already, a well-publicized case of a woman who died while attempting to receive care for a dangerous pregnancy has hit the papers, which ran a photo of her in her casket, with her dead fetus on her stomach. It was difficult to listen to Sandinista militants trying to justify their party's support for this law.

The Sandinistas support an environmentally disastrous canal that would run in the San Juan River and through Lake Nicaragua. The Sandinista Vice-President, Jaime Morales Carazo, was a contra spokesperson during the war, and is a close associate of Alemán, godfather to his children. One of the leading forces in the FSLN is Rosario Murillo, Daniel Ortega's wife and campaign manager. (They were married after years of co'habitation during the campaign by Obando y Bravo.) She fashioned a campaign that included John Lennon's song "Give Peace a Chance" (in Spanish, "Lo que queremos, paz y amor, queremos la paz"), and a change in the FSLN colors to a hideous shocking pink and yellow, instead of the traditional red and black.

All of which is to highlight the clumsiness, the hypocrisy and inutility of US foreign policy in Nicaragua. The heavy-handed opposition to Ortega is simply not necessary. Luis Carrión, the chief of the MRS campaign, noted that it seems to be the policy makers of the Reagan years that still control the US government have an irrational hatred of Ortega ­ it is an impulse, not a policy. Ortega is not an ideologically driven foe, but a leader of a highly impoverished, small nation, just trying to survive. In his brief and sombre acceptance speech, Daniel spoke of opening up the country for investment, not of opening the country to the South. The Assembly will make him a weak President, as the seats will break down to 37 for the Sandinistas, 30 for the ALN, 18 for the PLC and 6 for the MRS, giving a clear majority to the rightwing parties.

One factor raised often by US leaders is the spectre of Chavez. In the war of words, Chavez is never a "democratic" force. He is accused of intervening in the elections. The Venezuelan oil and fertilizer aid was used to justify US intervention by USAID officials. There is no substance to this argument, or in the charges that the FSLN has links to terror groups. Venezuela, Cuba, the FSLN, a Hamas government in Palestine, are attacked by US policy makers because they have a capacity for sovereignty, which cannot be tolerated in the ever-expanding sphere of influence of the Empire.

Our delegation heard the hopes of people working among the poor and in civil society, perhaps to get a Cuban doctor in their community, to have real solidarity aid from Chavez and Venezuela. They have no illusions about any quick fixes. They expressed to our delegation their understanding that the Nicaraguan government, including Daniel Ortega and the Sandinistas, has abandoned them for 16 years. They will continue their work, and do not look for big changes with any election. Ortega's seemingly impossible task is to balance the demands of the US, the bankers and the polarized domestic political landscape with the need of his people for a change.

Joe DeRaymond lives in Freemansburg, PA. He can be reached at: jderaymond@enter.net


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