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Sunday, 17 August 2008
Gates is not truth talking, only telling us what he wants us to know.
Topic: Wise Governance
"Russia is showing signs of returning to its authoritarian past and its
invasion of Georgia will require the U.S. to re-evaluate the strategic
relationship between the superpowers, Defense Secretary Robert Gates
said Sunday."

The AP writes,

"Shadows of the Cold War emerged as the Bush administration struggled
for the appropriate response to Russia's aggression against its smaller
U.S.-backed neighbor
, which Moscow ruled for most of the two centuries
before the 1991 breakup of the Soviet Union."

 

If you take that statement at its face value then you must vote for John McCain. He needs it all to be exactly the way it's portrayed.Otherwise, how can he replace the war president?

I'm not at all convinced that the small neighbor was not egged on byit's Bushco backers and led to believe that it would get away withusing violence to achieve its means.

After all, such has been the foreign policy approach of the U.S.going back to the last months of WWII. That was of course when Japanwas already suing for peace and offering to stop hostilities prior toan American president's inability to resist the temptation to show offmilitary might at the expense of civilians who need not have beenatomically destroyed.

The Georgian attack on the Ossetian capital smells like poor strategic thinking but driven by Bush and Cheney nonsense.

Writers are saying Putin was maneuvered into a mistake, the Georgian president was maneuvered into a mistake, everybody was maneuvered into a mistake but the wide-eyed self-righteously indignant American manipulators.

James Rubin on Huffpo explains it this way:

"But there are still important questions that remain to be debated. Did the Bush administration mislead the Georgian government into thinking support for membership in NATO meant military support in a crisis? What should U.S. policy be toward Russia? And will John McCain be able to score political points out of this tragedy?

Complete answers to these questions may take months. But some conclusions can already be drawn. First and foremost, Georgia has become yet another example of stunning incompetence by the Bush administration. Let's remember it was Chancellor Merkel of Germany who became the power broker when leaders at the NATO summit debated the subject of Georgia this spring. The United States, which has traditionally led NATO on such subjects, failed to push through a so-called Membership Action Plan for Georgia. That failure, as much as anything, gave Moscow a crucial signal that the West could not muster a serious response should it crack down on its troublesome neighbor. And while we don't know exactly what was said by Washington to Georgia's President Saakashvilli, clearly he was not deterred from acting."

Gates' remarks are mis-information start to finish.

Current national broadcast networks besides False News Network continue to think we are all stupid and are not giving us the facts with this one. Gates and Rice are trying to paint paper tiger images on the looking glass and hoping we'll be scared.


Posted SwanDeer Project at 8:57 AM PDT
Updated: Sunday, 17 August 2008 10:45 AM PDT
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Tuesday, 15 July 2008
Torture: "some of the most irresponsible and short-sighted legal analysis ever provided."
Now Playing: VReal News Network Video
Topic: Wise Governance
Watch as Bush admin lawyers admit the truth over and over again.

 

The Real News Network. 

Ten Lessons From Recent Torture Hearings

 click on link above to watch video

American News Project: Reporter's Notebook: Ten Lessons from Recent Torture Hearings - The "enhanced interrogation tactics, " used in Guantanamo under orders from the Pentagon and the White House have been the subject of numerous hearings on Capitol Hill recently. The lawyers who approved the policies--which many call torture--are under increasing pressure to explain how it was possible for such methods to be ordered by the United States government. More hearings are on the way.

1-    Americans were abusing prisoners at Guantanamo. Did precisely the same things at Guantanamo that those supposed renegade bad apples on the night shift were doing at Abu Ghraib.

2-    Donald Rumsfeld approved the "enhanced" techniques. These were    not the actions of "bad apples on the night shift."

3-    FBI agents thought the treatment was wrong but did nothing to stop it.

4-   The Bush Administration's "policy of cruelty" [their words] was a mistake. A mistake of massive proporttions. Damaged and continues to damage our nation. Net effect has been to weaken our nation, not strengthen it.

5-   Torture gets you bad, inaccurate or false information.

6-   Torturing detainees makes us less safe. Revenge in the form of a catastrophic attack on the homeland is coming.

7-   Administration lawyers who approved the harsh tactics are now under fire. They used bizarre legal theories to justify harsh techniques. [Legal] Guidance provided will go down in history as some of the most irresponsible and short-sighted legal analysis ever provided.

8-   Jim Haynes, Donald Rumsfeld's top lawyer at the Department of Defense, was one of those who justified the Harsh Tactics.

9-   Haynes and his fellow administration lawyers are increasingly being challenged by others.

10-   Never lecture a West Point graduate about military honor while trying to justify your own actions. 

 

 


Posted SwanDeer Project at 8:52 PM PDT
Updated: Tuesday, 15 July 2008 9:07 PM PDT
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Monday, 28 January 2008
What if he gave a SOTU and nobody came?
Now Playing: Going DOWN in history no matter what he says.
Topic: Wise Governance
Sherffius gives me enough reason to find something else to watch ... maybe survivor paint scraping or Bible-thumping for dollars

 


Posted SwanDeer Project at 2:16 PM PST
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exactly the ones who would spend rather than stockpile the cash
Now Playing: Stimulating Packages
Topic: Wise Governance

From the Institute for Public Accuracy:

Monday, January 28, 2008
      Stimulus Package
 
AVIS JONES-DeWEEVER, avis.inciteresearch@gmail.com 

 Director of the Research, Public Policy, and Information Center for
African American Women

Jones-DeWeever said today:
"The recently nnounced House stimulus package can be summed up in one phrase, 'too little, too late.'
History tells us that effective stimulus plans have three qualities: they're quick, they're temporary, and they're targeted o the people who need help most.
Focusing assistance to those at the bottom isn't just the right thing to do, it's the economically sound thing to do since they're the ones most likely to act in the way such plans seek to encourage.
The House plan is flawed because those who will benefit from it the most are not the ones who are most needy. As currently crafted, the proposed tax rebates are significantly reduced
for working poor families -- exactly the ones who would spend rather than stockpile the cash."


HEIDI HARTMANN, via Elisabeth Crum, crum@iwpr.org, http://www.iwpr.org

   President of the Institute for Women's Policy Research,

Hartmann aid today:

"The compromise stimulus package between the House and the White House leaves a lot to be desired.

Those who have been out of work - and the number with more than 26 weeks of unemployment has increased by more than 250,000 workers since one year ago -- really need extended unemployment benefits.

Many low-income people whether working or not would truly benefit from food stamps to increase their spending power. These needs, coupled with the fact that everyone seems to agree that these benefits would get to people much more quickly than the tax cuts and thus would really serve as an immediate stimulus, make the actions the Democrats in the House all the more mysterious.

For women who head families on their own, unemployment is always bad news. They have an unemployment rate of 6.9 percent compared with 3.1 percent for married women and 4.9 percent for all women."


ALICE O'CONNOR,

aoconnor@history.ucsb.edu,
http://www.history.ucsb.edu/faculty/oconnor.htm

   Author of "Poverty Knowledge: Social Science, Social Policy and the
Poor in Twentieth Century U.S. History,
"O'Connor is professor of history at the University of California atSanta Barbara.

 

O'Connor said today:

"With rare bipartisan agreement on the need for economic stimulus, Congress has an opportunity to break the stranglehold of conservative economic rthodoxy:

by reviving such progressive fiscal policy tools as extended unemployment benefits, aid to states and localities to meet rising Medicaid and infrastructure costs, and targeted social welfare spending; and by using these tools to channel funds where they are needed most.

Thus far, Congress has failed to meet the challenge.

In the stimulus ackage agreed to on January 24th, House leaders dropped these proven and widely-supported spending measures in favor of an estimated $150 billion in individual tax rebates and business tax cuts -- basically adhering to the narrow logic of tax 'relief' at the expense of an approach that would make working and middle-class security and public
investment the leading edge of economic recovery.

As the Senate, and the broader public weigh in on the still-pending proposal, they will have a chance to restore progressivity to the stimulus package -- and to the broader debate about what economic priorities for the future should be."



For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy:
Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020; or David Zupan, (541) 484-9167


Posted SwanDeer Project at 11:29 AM PST
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Saturday, 26 January 2008
Says it all
Now Playing: Cartoonists Mike Luckovich & Ann Telnaes
Topic: Wise Governance


Posted SwanDeer Project at 9:26 PM PST
Updated: Saturday, 26 January 2008 9:30 PM PST
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Wednesday, 5 September 2007
Next time the little man shouts, "September 11th!"
Now Playing: Remember who we are
Topic: Wise Governance
This dream of our Founders
- fashioned and forged
by rebellion's hot zeal;
and  fire born of need stoked
by courage, our Fathers
laid groundwork where many
feared even venture;
confronted a king
with fear overcome and birthed
a nation meant for a people
whose courage
could always be summoned.

Terror and national doubt
warn of danger
lurking in shadow  
and challenge silence
to reign
with barely a whisper.
If silence dared, the sound
would ring more loudly;
would move us beyond
a life of worry by terror.

Where ashes remain
after towers are gone
and our bitterest dust
is grey smoke,
it’s the whisper of dreams
held by patriots past
that binds us with hope,
and not the repeated fearful
clarion reminders
of a limited president.
... not that little man’s will,
but our will to win.

We, not the little man and
his vice president of torture,
must cope with mongering of fear
shouted to scare our strong blood
and our spirit.
We who dare
stand strong and united;
side by side,
shedding tears
and giving honor to those
who have died.

In our moments of silence
-  heads bowed in prayer -
it’s that whisper of freedom
that rings in our air.
We're a spiritual nation with all sorts
of clothes and a myriad of faiths.
When we gather for worship
or patriotism, we hold together
- whatever the price.

We belong to stout-hearted heroes
of our true past. We are the people
whose actions have sewn
the fabric of caring and mourning.
Those lost are our loss
- not someone's alone.
Hate does not honor them.

Religious extremists
on both sides of the water
who think that their God harbors hate
must be answered
by our collective courage.

A God who is good
doesn’t discern between souls
but hears only the goodness
that each human sings.
Any god who is pleased
at destruction of life
is a god full of falsehood
a father of lies
and a tyrant whose face shows
the evil intent
of liars
who desire fear
of the sword
in the name of a falsehood
who's nobody's lord.

Posted SwanDeer Project at 7:25 AM PDT
Updated: Saturday, 8 September 2007 11:32 AM PDT
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Thursday, 19 July 2007
The truest declaration you will hear this year
Now Playing: Keith Olbermann ... more courage than all 100 current U.S. Senators combined!
Topic: Wise Governance

Keith Olbermann's special comment

 

Transcript courtesy Crooks & Liars:

 

Good evening from Los Angeles.

And we begin with a Special Comment, on this day’s ominous, almost indescribable events.

It is one of the great, dark, evil lessons, of history.

A country — a government — a military machine — can screw up a war seven-ways-to-Sunday… it can get thousands of its people killed… it can risk the safety of its citizens… it can destroy the fabric of its nation.

But as long as it can identify a scapegoat, it can regain… or even gain power.

The Bush Administration has, tonight, opened this Pandora’s Box, about Iraq.

It has found its scapegoats — Hillary Clinton — and us.

The lies and terror-tactics with which it deluded this country into war — they had nothing to do with the abomination that Iraq has become — it isn’t Mr. Bush’s fault.

The selection of the wrong war, in the wrong time, in the wrong place — the most disastrous a geo-political tactic since Austria-Hungary attacked Serbia in 1914 and destroyed itself in the process — that had nothing to do with the overwhelming crisis Iraq has become — it isn’t Mr. Bush’s fault.

The criminal lack of planning for the war — the total “jump-off-a-bridge-and-hope-you-can-fly” tone to the failure to anticipate what would follow the deposing of Saddam Hussein — that had nothing to do with the chaos in which Iraq has been enveloped — it isn’t Mr. Bush’s fault.

The utter, blinkered idiocy of “staying the course” — of sending Americans to Iraq, and sending them a second time, and a third, and a fourth, until they get killed or maimed — the utter de-prioritization of human life, simply so a politician can avoid having to admit a mistake — that had nothing to do with the tens of thousand individual tragedies darkening the lives of American families, forever — it isn’t Mr. Bush’s fault.

The continuing, relentless, remorseless, corrupt and cynical insistence that this conflict somehow is defeating, or containing, or just engaging the people who attacked us on 9/11 — the total “Alice Through The Looking Glass” quality that ignores that in Iraq, we have made the world safer for Al-Qaeda — it isn’t Mr. Bush’s fault!

The fault, brought down — as if a sermon from this mount of hypocrisy and slaughter, by a nearly anonymous Under-Secretary of Defense — the fault has tonight been laid on the doorstep of Senator Hillary Clinton and, by extension, at the doorstep of every American — the now vast majority of us — who have dared to criticize this war, or protest it, or merely ask questions about it, or simply, plaintively, innocently, honestly, plead, “don’t take my son; don’t take my daughter.”

Senator Clinton has been sent — and someone has leaked to the Associated Press — a letter, sent in reply to hers, asking if there exists, an actual plan for evacuating U.S. troops from Iraq.

This extraordinary document was written by an Under-Secretary of Defense named Eric Edelman.

“Premature and public discussion of the withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq,” Edelman writes, “reinforces enemy propaganda that the United States will abandon its allies in Iraq, much as we are perceived to have done in Vietnam, Lebanon and Somalia.” Edelman adds: “such talk understandably unnerves the very same Iraqi allies we are asking to assume enormous personal risks.”

A spokesman for the senator says Mr. Edelman’s remarks are “at once both outrageous and dangerous” and those terms are entirely appropriate and may in fact understate the risk the Edelman letter poses to our way of life, and all that our fighting men and women are risking, have risked, and have lost, in Iraq.

After the South was defeated in our Civil War, the scapegoat was Confederate President Jefferson Davis, and the ideas of the “Lost Cause” and “Jim Crow” were born.

After the French were beaten by the Prussians in 1870 and 1871 — it was the imaginary “Jewish influence” in the French Army General Staff, and there was born 30 years of self-destructive anti-Semitism, culminating in the horrific Dreyfus case.

After the Germans lost the First World War, it was the “back-stabbers and profiteers” at home, on whose lives the National Socialists rose to prominence in the succeeding decades, and whose accused membership eventually wound up in torture chambers and death camps.

And after the generation before ours, and leaders of both political parties, escalated and re-escalated, and carpet bombed and re-carpet bombed, Vietnam, it was the protest movement and Jane Fonda and as late as just three years ago Senator John Kerry, who were assigned the kind of blame with which no rational human being could concur, and yet which still, across vast sections of our political landscape, resonates, unchallenged, and accepted.

And now Mr. Bush, you have picked out your own Jefferson Davis, your own Dreyfus, your own “profiteer” — your own scapegoat.

Not for the sake of this country…

Not for the sake of Iraq…

Not even for the sake of your own political party…

But for the sake of your own personal place in history.

But in reaching for that place, you have guaranteed yourself tonight, not honor, but infamy.

In fact, you have condemned yourself to a place among that remarkably small group of Americans whom Americans cannot forgive. Those who have sold this country out, and who have willingly declared their enmity to the people at whose pleasure they supposedly serve.

A scapegoat, sir, might be forgivable, if you hadn’t just happened to choose a prospective presidential nominee of the opposition party. And the accusation of spreading “enemy propaganda that the United States will abandon its allies in Iraq, much as we are perceived to have done in Vietnam, Lebanon and Somalia,” might be some day atoned for, if we all didn’t know — you included, and your generals, and the Iraqis — that we are leaving Iraq, and sooner rather than later — and we are doing it, even if to do so requires first, that you must be impeached and removed as President of the United States, sooner, rather than later.

You have set this government at war against its own people, and then blamed those very people when they say, “enough.”

And thus it crystallizes, Mr. Bush.

When Civil War General Ambrose Burnside ordered a disastrous attack on Fredericksburg in which 12,000 of his men were killed, he had to be physically restrained from leading the next charge himself.

After the First Lord of the British Admiralty, Winston Churchill, authored and enabled the disastrous Gallipoli campaign that saw a quarter million Allied Soldiers cut down in the First World War, Churchill resigned his office and took a commisson as a front-line officer in the trenches of France.

Those are your new role models, Mr. Bush.

Let your minions try to spread the blame to the real patriots here, who have sought only to undo the horrors you have wrought since 2002.

Let them try it, until the end of time.

Though the words might be erased from a million books and a billion memories, though the world be covered knee-deep in your lies, the truth shall prevail.

This, sir, is your war.

Senator Clinton has reinforced enemy propaganda? Made it impossible for you to get your ego-driven, blood-steeped win in Iraq?

Then take it into your own hands, Mr. Bush.

Go to Baghdad now and fulfill, finally, your military service obligations.

Go there and fight, your war…yourself.

 


Posted SwanDeer Project at 10:17 PM PDT
Updated: Thursday, 19 July 2007 10:33 PM PDT
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Tuesday, 19 June 2007
These deeds shall they memorial be ....
Now Playing: If they're just doing their job, why ain't they willing to correct a mistake?
Topic: Wise Governance
What, is ICE on a quota system?
Gotta keep their numbers up?
I'd like a thorough make-sense explanation why they don't create a team specifically to right the wrong and act American about it rather than Jack Bauer about it. 
 

Mom says disabled son illegally deported

 

By LUIS PEREZ, Associated Press Writer Mon Jun 18, 1:47 AM ET

TIJUANA, Mexico - Clutching a photo of her son, Maria Carvajal walks Tijuana's sweltering streets searching for the mentally disabled man she says was deported more than a month ago despite being a U.S. citizen and then disappeared in this chaotic border city.

Carvajal says she has searched hospitals, shelters and jails here looking for her 29-year-old son, Pedro Guzman of Lancaster, California, who was jailed for a misdemeanor trespassing violation, then sent to Mexico on May 11.

Guzman's relatives sued the Department of Homeland Security and the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department last week in federal court, claiming Guzman was a U.S. citizen and had been wrongfully deported and demanding that U.S. authorities help find him.

"I'm searching for him because he's my son.  But it should be (U.S. authorities) searching for him,"

 Carvajal, a 49-year-old fast-food restaurant worker from Lancaster, said Sunday in Tijuana. "They made the mistake. Not me."

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement confirmed Guzman had been deported and said the agency had done so correctly. "ICE has no reason to believe that it improperly removed Pedro Guzman," read a statement.

Officials at the U.S. consulate in Tijuana say they have made calls to help search for Guzman and asked other consulates in Mexico if they have information.

"We are doing things to help that we are not obliged to do," said consulate spokeswoman Lorena Blanco.

Carvajal, a brown-haired woman with glasses who carries a piece of paper bearing a photo of her son, said he called the family on May 11 to say he was deported but the phone cut off before she could find out where he was.

She said she never thought she would end up having to search Tijuana's hospital and morgues for her son, but vowed to keep on doing it because "I have to." She is not carrying her son's birth certificate with her, saying her main concern is finding him.

Guzman can't read or write and has trouble processing information. Carvajal fears he could be an easy victim for robbers.

The lawsuit says Guzman was asked about his immigration status in jail and responded that he was born in California of Mexican parents.

Sometime after that, the Sheriff's Department identified him as a non-citizen, obtained his signature for voluntary removal from the United States and turned him over to Customs and Immigration Enforcement, a division of the Homeland Security Department, for deportation.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California, which helped file the lawsuit, says it has Guzman's birth certificate showing he was born at Los Angeles County-USC Medical Center.

It also says that Guzman had previously done jail time for drug possession, so he had a record that could have been cross-checked before a deportation decision was made.

The Sheriff's Department has said it followed procedures correctly.

In California, Guzman's brother, Michael Guzman, said last week that during a phone call to the family the 29-year-old said he had been deported and asked a passer-by where he was. The family could hear the person respond: "Tijuana."

Michael Guzman said his parents were from Mexico, but seven children, including Pedro, were born in California. Pedro, who takes the surname of his father, speaks both English and Spanish.

Carvajal said she keeps seeing glimpses of people on the Tijuana streets that she thinks are her son and runs toward them. But each time she finds she is mistaken.

"I have to fight for my son," she said.


Posted SwanDeer Project at 6:36 AM PDT
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Saturday, 16 June 2007
every other descendent of immigrants who came here uninvited all the way back to Plymouth Rock and Jamestown
Now Playing: Big Bust at Del Monte in Portland. Guys waving guns and shipping families into detention - the New American Way
Topic: Wise Governance
Bushco's advocacy of immigration reform in terms that raise the ire of many conservatives and talking heads- folks who know stuff like Lou Dobbs - has in some ways seemed a departure from the bottom line corporate capitalistist politics. These are the bottom-line captains of industry who routinely sell American labor down the river, bottom-line the working class into poverty and pulls the stunts the Fool-in-Chief pulled by suspending the minimum wage in post-Katrina Louisiana.

Reason is, them there corporate capitalists NEED the immigrants to do the kind of work lazy Americans seem to find demeaning. The need a SOURCE of cheap labor when U.S. Citizens refuse to be baptized into their God-is-the-Market Church of the Holy Shopping Mall.

Locally, the canneries around Willapa Bay would go out of business if they had to rely on citizens only to open oysters. It's tedious and smelly work and there's always the danger of clumsy and inexperienced workers stabbing holes in their hands trying to get the dang shells open.

There's a significant Hispanic community in Pacific County - real people with families who have real lives that look just like ours; remove them entirely and we lose local employers.
 
Then all that rhetorical cow pie crap whining about how them folks are taking jobs away from willing American citizens becomes foolisher and foolisher.
 
Deport all the willing and we are left with the few needy patriotic and civic-minded citizens willing to work the canneries. They won't be enough to keep the business afloat.

If the parents are illegal, their kids born here ain't. They're citizens just like me ... and you ... and every other descendent of immigrants who came here uninvited all the way back to Plymouth Rock and Jamestown.
 [Excerpts only] Click on link to read entire article at Oregonlive.com you don't have to subscribe but to read the entire article you'll need to enter your zip code and age.
 
Immigration raid pushes Oregon into thick of fight

Work - As President Bush presses for reforms, agents arrest 167 at a Portland plant, escalating the national debate

Wednesday, June 13, 2007
BRYAN DENSON and BRENT HUNSBERGER

A federal raid on a large North Portland food processing plant Tuesday ended in the arrests of 167 workers, intensifying Oregon's immigration debate, tearing apart families, unnerving employers and sparking new calls for U.S. leaders to rewrite the nation's immigration laws.

An estimated 160 federal agents swept into Fresh Del Monte Produce Inc. and the firm that supplied its workers, American Staffing Resources, arresting three managers and locking up most of the arrested workers in a federal detention facility, where they face possible deportation.

The action was part of a six-month criminal investigation into the North Carolina-based employment agency, which U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement accuses of conspiring with Fresh Del Monte to hire and employ undocumented workers. Federal authorities allege that nine out of 10 employees hired by the staffing company used Social Security numbers that were fictitious or belonged to other people.

Government officials said it was the largest immigration raid on an Oregon workplace in recent memory.

The arrests sparked criticism from immigration reform supporters and workers rights advocates and Portland Mayor Tom Potter, who said the events underscore failures in federal immigration policies. At the same time, immigrants rights, religious and Latino activists moved to support those arrested and find housing and care for their family members.

... On a given day, about 600 employees work at the Fresh Del Monte plant in Portland in two separate shifts. They cut fruits and vegetables for grocers, restaurants and other retailers.

They were recruited and hired by American Staffing Resources, owned by North Carolina-based Staffco Management Group Inc., mostly to work for the state's minimum wage, $7.80 an hour.

Informant plays key role

The criminal case began shortly after Christmas, when immigration agents, operating on tips from the public, sent an informant to apply for work at Fresh Del Monte's plant on North Rivergate Boulevard.

The informant told a produce manager that he was born in Mexico and had no legal documentation to work in the United States. The manager pointed him to the nearby office of American Staffing Resources, according to a federal search warrant affidavit. There, wearing an audio recording device, the informant began gathering information that culminated in Tuesday's arrests.

In the early months of this year, according to the affidavit, managers told the informant he could find phony identification on the streets of Woodburn. One manager eventually sold the informant a Social Security card, the government alleges.

... Of those arrested, 32 were released for humanitarian reasons, said Marc A. Raimondi, a Washington, D.C.-based spokesman for ICE. Those released, he said, were either single parents or sole caregivers of dependent children or ill family members but would be required to appear in front of an immigration judge.

The detainees were scheduled to be taken to an ICE processing center in Tukwila, Wash., before being moved to the Northwest Detention Center in Tacoma.

... Mayor criticizes action

Potter expressed anger that families were swept up in the arrests, saying the raid stemmed from a failure of Bush and Congress to craft reforms that are fair and workable for employees and business.

"I certainly understand why federal officials executed criminal warrants against three individuals who stole and sold Social Security numbers," Potter said in a statement. "But to go after local workers who are here to support their families while filling the demands of local businesses for their labor is bad policy."


[Excerpts only] from Willamette Weekly. Read the entire article on line.
Chop Shop 

 In a town that cares about food and human rights, WW finds a hidden world of illegal immigrants. On this May Day, something's rotten in St. Johns.

 BY BETH SLOVIC | bslovic at wweek dot com

[May 2nd, 2007]

The knives cut through the air like paper fans on a hot day. Chop, chop, chop, chop, chop. Pause. Chop, chop, chop, chop, chop. Pause. Chop, chop, chop, chop, chop.

One after another, gleaming green heads of broccoli are held out in sacrifice. Suspended above stainless-steel worktables, they look like wedding bouquets about to be tossed ceremoniously into the air.

Instead, they are briskly trimmed into precise one-and-a-quarter-inch pieces. The florets drop. The piles build. In a matter of hours, more than 2,000 pounds of broccoli will meet this fate.

Chop, chop, chop, chop, chop. Pause. Chop, chop, chop, chop, chop.

No one speaks.

Across this cavernous warehouse, which sits in an isolated industrial section of North Portland's St. Johns neighborhood, another two dozen workers hack at pineapples, cantaloupes, honeydew and watermelons. Using swift repetitive motions, workers diligently shave the rinds off the fruit. Mixed together and tossed in a bin the size of a hot tub, the rinds smell like a fruit smoothie. Naked, the watermelons resemble giant pink lungs.

Like the other fruit, the watermelons are soon reduced to bite-sized chunks. Uniform. Rindless. Convenient. Contextless. Within days, these chunks will sit on the shelves of Oregon's Wal-Marts, Costcos and Fred Meyers�on party platters bound for Cinco de Mayo celebrations, 40th-birthday parties and corporate meetings across Portland, the state and beyond.

It's been a long journey from the farm to this Del Monte Fresh Produce plant in North Portland, where raw produce arrives on trucks in 600- to 1,000-pound boxes and leaves in plastic containers stacked into new boxes. On one recent afternoon, the broccoli was from California, the fruit from Costa Rica, Guatemala and Mexico.

Curiously enough, the workers were from equally distant locations: Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala and Mexico. Men and women, they included teenagers and those in their twilight years, people who had traveled thousands of miles to end up here.

Some might call their journeys decisions born of courage and limited economic options at home. Others would call them illegal aliens, lawbreakers exploiting a shattered immigration policy in their adopted land.

However you categorize them, it's undeniable that the forces that draw them here are as real as they are invisible. And those forces can be summed up in three simple words: the global economy.

The phrase may ooze sex appeal. Yet there's nothing sexy about this particular outpost of the new international order. This isn't a Las Vegas-style casino in Macau, drawing tourists and their money from Dubuque to Dubai. Nor is this the Portland arm of Intel, where New Delhi-trained engineers develop products that are made in China and sold in S�o Paulo. Nonetheless, this North Portland plant is as much an expression of the global economy as other more vaunted enterprises.

But here, on the tip of the peninsula formed by the Columbia and Willamette rivers, the plant reveals a grittier side of that economy, one that depends on breaking laws to sustain the rules created by others.

... Less than 10 miles north of downtown Portland, the Del Monte plant is an illustration of this peculiar cycle and a little-noticed reminder that Portland is not built on the backs of the creative class alone.

... It's close to freezing cold inside this football-field-sized warehouse in North Portland. I know because I've spent three days working at the plant, and on a recent Friday at 8 am the thermometer registers 36 degrees Fahrenheit. I'm regretting not having brought a hat to wear under my green hairnet. I can see my own breath and the respiration of the other 24 workers beginning their eight-hour shifts.

... Two weeks ago I was hired as a quality assurance supervisor at Del Monte, which means I'm monitoring the size, sweetness and expected shelf-life of the chunks of fruit taking shape on the plant's production floor. I'm also watching to make sure there's enough chlorine in the water to kill any potentially dangerous microbes when the produce is washed in the large tanks that run across the production floor.

For some of the workers, though, this salary is enough to support relatives in the United States and send money to family at home. One laborer, a man in his 20s, tells me he has worked at Del Monte for three years. He says he earns about $600 every two weeks and that he and his wife, who works as a waitress, send $500 back to Mexico every 15 days. He, too, volunteers that he doesn't have papeles.

To make it through their shifts in the cold, the workers are all wearing winter hats under their hairnets. They have warm liners on under their blue rubber gloves. Under their white lab coats, they're wearing bulky sweatshirts, winter jackets and multiple layers of pants and socks.

...I got a job at the plant by filling out an application with the staffing agency that hires workers for Del Monte in St. Johns. I used my real name but I didn't tell them I was a reporter.

... In one [training] video, a man with a striking resemblance to a young-looking Jerry Seinfeld instructs me in proper hand washing. I'm left to my own devices to figure out how to wipe the snot running down my face without contaminating the rubber gloves I've just cleaned with soap and water.

... Still, the allegations seemed to point to the fact that there was a sweatshop albeit a cold one operating in Portland, a city that professes to care both about its food and liberal causes such as worker rights.

My three-day experience suggests that the work at Del Monte is mindless, boring and repetitive. It requires standing largely in one place for eight hours a day. And it clearly depends on the compliance of a large group of relatively powerless workers.

... As if to make sure no one is ever late to the floor after a break, the clock in the lunch room is five minutes faster than the clock on the production floor.

Del Monte, whose corporate headquarters are in Coral Gables, Fla., owns 10 fruit and vegetable processing plants across the U.S., according to its website. But the company's plant in North Portland, situated several hundred feet off Lombard Street and surrounded by trees on a four-acre lot, is the biggest. It also processes the widest variety of products, my supervisor tells me.

It has operated 24 hours a day, seven days a week since 2000. Its sliced green peppers are shipped to Pizza Hut. Chopped onions, lettuce and tomatoes are sent to Taco Bell. Fruit cups from Del Monte appear on the menus of local Jack in the Box restaurants, and its sliced tomatoes garnish sandwiches at KFCs.

... Occasionally, I'm told, workers do cut themselves and the production lines have to stop to clean up blood spills. Bits of slimy fruit that fall on the production floor prove to be slip hazards. But many workers' greatest fear of seems to be getting run over by the forklifts whizzing across the production floor as they bring in 1,000-pound boxes of raw cabbage and haul out equally heavy containers of diced onions and other products. One woman recently broke a toe when her foot was run over by one such forklift, another worker tells me.

Despite these conditions, the female workers at least try to maintain some feminine dignity; hanging over the quarter-inch slits in the stalls in the women's bathroom are carefully folded strips of plastic bags, which shield from view the women using the toilets behind the peach-colored doors.

... Del Monte Fresh Produce is not the only food processing plant in Portland. A similar business, Duck Delivery, operates in Northeast Portland.

And finally this from Mark Fiore via Mother Jones
If you must download the Flash Player, do it! It's worth it.
 

Say No to Immigrants


Posted SwanDeer Project at 8:38 AM PDT
Updated: Saturday, 16 June 2007 12:29 PM PDT
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Sunday, 20 May 2007
... fewer people ready to respond to forest fires.
Now Playing: Foolish Reflublican Fiscal Responsibility Decisions
Topic: Wise Governance

Forest Service money is drying up

Without timber sales, agency struggles to pay for firefighting, operations

By Rocky Barker -

excerpts from the Idaho Statesman online

(Photo: http://www.expressnews.ualberta.ca)


05/13/07
The money for fighting forest fires is coming from the very program needed to thin the fuels that increase the size and cost of fires.

The Bush administration's decision to force the U.S. Forest Service to pay to fight forest fires out of its budget has created a funding crisis. It has brought back attention to how to pay for the agency that manages 193 million acres of national forest, including 20 million in Idaho.

In the past decade, Congress has cut more than 5,000 employees from the Forest Service, more than half. This year, the Bush administration has proposed cutting $64 million out of the agency's $4.1 billion budget and another 2,100 jobs.

The last five chiefs of the Forest Service have written Congress warning that the current status is not sustainable. And former warriors in the timber wars that all but ended logging — the major source of funding — on the national forests are talking about remarkably similar ideas for carrying out the restoration both sides say is necessary.

The radical new ways of thinking are a departure from long held views on how best to spend money on managing our national forests.

...   FORESTS, FUNDS DRY UP

A decade ago, the Forest Service, was caught in a ideological battle between the timber industry, which wanted it to produce wood and fiber, and environmentalists, who wanted it to protect endangered species and ecosystems. The environmentalists, using the Endangered Species Act and the Clean Water Act, won.

 ...

Historically, the agency paid for firefighting by borrowing from the pool of money that came from timber sales, paying back into that pool in low fire years or with additional funding from Congress.

The money is gone, and the agency has been forced to shift money from other programs to pay for firefighting. This has forced managers to look for ways to cut firefighting spending. That has resulted in managers, with the support of the Bush administration, allowing more fires in backcountry areas to burn — an inexpensive way to manage these areas.

But the program is not sustainable, said the last five retired chiefs of the Forest Service, R. Max Peterson, F. Dale Robertson, Jack Ward Thomas, Michael P. Dombeck and Dale N. Bosworth, in a joint letter.

"If you want an efficient and effective Forest Service that Congress and the Administration can count on to carry out its statutory mission and congressionally approved and financed programs, this problem must be fixed by providing the flexibility to finance emergency firefighting outside the FS discretionary budget," the chiefs wrote.

Read the entire article at the  Idaho Statesman online 

 

 


Posted SwanDeer Project at 7:55 AM PDT
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Tuesday, 15 May 2007
Washington Legislature Does the RIght Thing
Now Playing: What else can we push for from our wise governancers?
Topic: Wise Governance

 via PNW Portal

State to waive tuition for fallen GIs' kin

OLYMPIA — The state's public universities and colleges will waive tuition and fees for spouses and children of fallen soldiers, under a measure signed into law Monday.

"Helping these children and spouses succeed in education is the least we could do," Gov. Christine Gregoire said before signing the bill.

The legislation, sponsored by Sen. Mike Hewitt, R-Walla Walla, takes effect in July. It will cover spouses and children of active-duty and National Guard members killed, disabled, captured or missing in action.

After losing so much, "this will ensure they can move forward and get an education," Hewitt said.

The bill unanimously passed the House and Senate.

Washington's colleges and universities already had the option of waiving all or part of tuition and fees for the survivors of eligible veterans or National Guard members.

Copyright © 2007 The Seattle Times Company


Posted SwanDeer Project at 6:58 AM PDT
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Monday, 7 May 2007
Republicans on the back peddle
Mood:  cheeky
Now Playing: Putting the country, no wait ... PARTY ahead of the president
Topic: Wise Governance

Now they are in the stampede mode, like just before the lightning strike sets off the whole herd in a race of panic.

Boehner telling Bushco to put up or shut up

Lott telling Bushco to put up or shut up

Blue Oregon: Gordon Smith says they are all spooky and ready to bolt 

  


Elephant Stampede 
The Presidential Prayer Team Ambassador
 

Posted SwanDeer Project at 8:41 PM PDT
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Saturday, 5 May 2007
The President's Approval Rating is 28%
Now Playing: Led by a man most do not believe
Topic: Wise Governance

Part of me hopes that the next president will also be a baby boomer of my generation.

 

 


 www.greenpeace.org


We cannot have the legacy of post- WWII baby boomers to America and the World be George Armstrong Custer Walker Bush.


Posted SwanDeer Project at 5:17 PM PDT
Updated: Sunday, 6 May 2007 8:52 AM PDT
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Saturday, 28 April 2007
President continues insistence that he is the king of America
Now Playing: President and Congress in showdown at Not-Ok Corral
Topic: Wise Governance
President continues insistence that he is the king of America


The Congress of the United States of America today continued its fight  with a President bent on eliminating any significant check and balance on the Executive Branch of our government.

This is an extremely important struggle between two branches of our government who were wisely installed constituionally by founders much wiser than those leaders who believe they prevail today.

Regardless of stubborn blowhard insistence by Mr. Bush that he should be totally unfettered and unchecked in his role as President, the House of Representatives and The Senate are asserting their own authority and right to participate in a major way in leading the nation's efforts to deal with consequences of the President's failed invasion and occupation of Iraq.

On the one hand, the Congress is striving to preserve and protect not only the United States of America, but it's image and tradition as portrayed by the Declaration of Independence and our Constitution.

On the other hand, driven by a foolish foreign policy notion that the toughest nation in the world should become the world's mightiest and meanest cop, forcing the rest of the globe into submission to America's pretended civic, military and economic self-righteousness.

On the one hand Congress is trying to portray and honorable American.




On the other hand, the President, his Vice President are presenting The Ugly American all over the world,  pursuing a false ideal of absolute executive authority while using deceipt, manipulation and outright condescending contempt for the wisdom and intelligence of the American electorate.

The Congress is taking steps to move America back from the shameful gutter of being the global agressor and bully, abusing and insulting every other nation and culture in the world.

The Bush/Cheney administration on the other hand, thinks that we have a right to plunder, abuse and steal what has never been ours to claim.

America blushes this week as the ignorant arrogance of its repudiated leadership continues bringing shame on all of us.

Posted SwanDeer Project at 10:37 AM PDT
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What does it mean to be Christian in America?
Arthur's blog on religion & Spirituality

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Published by SwanDeer Productions
Arthur and Lietta Ruger, Bay Center, Willapa Bay in Pacific County Washington

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