Congressman John Conyers, head of the House Judiciary Committee, will finally hold a hearing in response to Congressman Kucinich’s article of impeachment resubmitted to Congress. This is the first, tentative step of the Congress towards impeachment or otherwise holding President Bush accountable for high crimes and misdemeanors. KPFA will carry the hearing live - from 6am - 10am pacific time; I will host along with Larry Bensky. I just saw this video from 2006 from Keith Olberman’s show - a special message to Bush on the first day that the Military Tribunal Act became law, eliminating habeus corpus. It’s fierce and we do well to honor the words now. Below, an update from David Swanson.

Executive Power and Its Constitutional Limitations

http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/34943

By David Swanson

That’s the latest title that Chairman John Conyers has given the hearing his House Judiciary Committee will hold on Friday, July 25th. The previous title had been “The Imperial Presidency of George W. Bush and Possible Legal Responses.” The idea that had preceded that one was to hold a hearing on Congressman Dennis Kucinich’s latest article of impeachment: “DECEIVING CONGRESS WITH FABRICATED THREATS OF IRAQ WMDs TO FRAUDULENTLY OBTAIN SUPPORT FOR AN AUTHORIZATION OF THE USE OF MILITARY FORCE AGAINST IRAQ.”

The problem with that initial idea, of course, was that impeachment is opposed by Nancy Pelosi who recently explained that she’s against it because she’s “bipartisan”, and by Barack Obama, who says it should be “reserved for exceptional circumstances”, and by John Conyers who claims that if he upheld the Constitution Fox News would call him mean names, not to mention Harold Ford who alleges that “The Constitution doesn’t poll well,” and Cass Sunstein who argues against ever holding Bush or Cheney to account for anything, and Chuck Schumer who insists that voters don’t care about detentions and torture and such things.

On top of that problem with impeachment, there was the problem of the war. The Congress that was elected in 2006 to end the war, expose the truth of its origin, and hold people accountable for it has very carefully avoided holding any hearings on the topic. During the previous Congress, Barbara Lee led a push along with Kucinich to investigate the White House Iraq Group. I asked her early in 2007 why she wouldn’t do the same in the majority, and she claimed, rather half-heartedly, that she would do so, but never has.

The problem with the second name for the hearing was perhaps what I pointed out last week: it’s oxymoronic. If you’re going to have an imperial presidency, why not a presidential emperor? And since when has it become acceptable to acknowledge the empire in the halls of Congress? People could begin questioning why we pay to maintain a half million soldiers in 1,000 bases in 150 countries at great expense and to the serious endangerment of ourselves, generating resentment and hatred around the globe.

So the third title was arrived at: “Executive Power and Its Constitutional Limitations.” This handily avoids any reference to Bush or Cheney or impeachment or war or empire. And yet it’s that much more absurd, since we have no executive and really do have an imperial co-presidency. And then there’s the Constitution problem. The Constitution brings up impeachment in six places but never once mentions censure. Never does the Constitution propose a remedy of redundantly recriminalizing crimes once a criminal president is out of office. Never does the Constitution mention political parties or loyalty to them. Never does the Constitution place the election of an excutive ahead of the importance of maintaining an executive rather than a king. It’s very hard to imagine how several of the speakers Conyers hopes to have on Friday, on the topics he wants them to discuss, are going to be able to fit the Constitution into their remarks.

Here’s the lineup, give or take:

Rumor has it there are two (maybe three) panels being planned for the hearing, one consisting of Kucinich and four other members of Congress (Jane Harman, Walter Jones, Brad Miller, and Maurice Hinchey), and the other consisting of non-Congress Members (Elizabeth Holtzman, Bruce Fein, Frederick Schwartz, John Dean, Bob Barr, Ralph Nader, Rocky Anderson).

These speakers can be expected to favor impeachment:
Dennis Kucinich
Elizabeth Holtzman
Ralph Nader
Maybe Bruce Fein

These speakers can be expected to favor impeachment and other supposed solutions:
Maurice Hinchey
Rocky Anderson
Maybe Walter Jones

These speakers can be expected to spit on the Constitution:
Jane Harman
Brad Miller
Frederick Schwartz
John Dean
Bob Barr

These members of the House Judiciary Committee can be expected to speak for impeachment:
Robert Wexler
Sheila Jackson-Lee
Tammy Baldwin
Keith Ellison
Steve Cohen
Hank Johnson
Maxine Waters
Luis Gutierrez
Anthony Weiner
Maybe Zoe Lofgren

But, all of the above is subject to change and subject to public pressure as well as pressure from Pelosi-Conyers. If you know any of the scheduled speakers, please urge them to renounce good-Germanism, please urge them to read the Constitution on which they are being asked to testify.

And please contact the members of the Judiciary Committee and insist that they be there on Friday the 25th and that they speak up for impeachment:
http://afterdowningstreet.org/judiciarycommittee

And please get in line very early Friday morning to attend the hearing! (Rayburn Room 2141, 10 a.m) or join us in front of the Rayburn Building at 9 a.m. Bring impeachment shirts and posters! For more information contact ningroup@gmail.com

If you can’t be there on Friday, please freeway blog the word IMPEACH everywhere you can that day:
http://www.freewayblogger.com

When I interviewed V.V. Ganeshananthan, a journalist and novelist, author of “Love Marriage” I was struck by her raw honestly, and commitment to telling the story of the Sri Lankan-American family caught in the struggle of identity and war and love. In Sunday’s Washington Post, she told more about how my interview along with others force her to be a bridge between her parents’ home country and her own.

V.V. Ganeshananthan writes in the Outlook section on the struggle to discuss all of Sri Lanka’s complex history while talking about her novel, a story of one family’s experience. Hear her read an excerpt from her book “Love Marriage.”
By V.V. Ganeshananthan

Sunday, July 13, 2008; Page B02

Yalini, the protagonist of my novel “Love Marriage,” turns 25 this month. “I was born in the early hours of the morning, on a day in late July,” she says in the book. “And as I entered this new world, my parents’ old one was being destroyed.” Moments after she is born, her Sri Lankan father watches on television as the country he left erupts into violence — the anti-Tamil riots known as “Black July.” With the anniversary of those 1983 riots, Sri Lanka’s war also turns a quarter-century old this month — and I find myself still debating how to describe it.

In practically every interview I give about the book, I am asked an unanswerable question. This morning, in San Francisco, the interviewer is Aimee Allison of radio station KPFA. We’re live, talking about Sri Lanka.

“Can you lay out what the landscape is there, and what is the source of the conflict?” she asks.

I never have more than a few minutes to capture decades — centuries? — of labyrinthine history. In recent years, especially following the 2004 tsunami and the collapse several months ago of a tattered cease-fire between the government and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, a separatist militant group, Sri Lanka has appeared in the news slightly more than usual. But even this isn’t very much, so I can understand why the question is asked. Who’s willing to give it more than those few minutes?

I’m never sure, and so I find myself wrestling to construct responsible boilerplate that at least suggests Sri Lanka’s historical and political complexity. Of course, when I wrote the book, this was not a job I aimed to do. More…

It’s almost a year since Oakland Post editor Chauncey Bailey was assassinated on his way to work in Oakland. Today I did an hour-long special on the ongoing murder investigation on KPFA. Our discussion focused on the fact that just a few weeks ago, reporters with the Chauncey Bailey Project revealed a police video that seemed to suggest that Yusuf Bey IV had knowledge or involvement in Chauncey’s murder. So why isn’t the DA expanding the investigation? For one, the head investigator with the Oakland Police Department has a prior friendship with Bey. But that’s just the start of it. Listen to the latest on the KPFA Morning Show with guests Robert Rosenthal, Bob Butler and Thomas Peele.

Chauncey Bailey - iconoclastic, caring, involved - was working on two stories when he was murdered. One was on the misdeeds of Your Black Muslim Bakery and the other was corruption in the police department. Those stories cannot die, because Chancey’s life meant more than that. In fact, the last time I saw him was at my house, when I was holding a large event for the organization Silence the Violence (that is trying to cure the street violence that is tearing Oakland apart). I was in Mexico studying Spanish when I got the email that he’d been killed - and fell to the floor of the computer room with shock. Thanks to a small group of local investigative reporters, the story continues and pressure is mounting to continue the investigation. So, my small contribution is to have the story on my show on KPFA.

On my way out of the studio this morning, the reporters commented to me that many news outlets aren’t continuing to cover this investigation. They thought maybe racism has gotten in the way of the story getting out. Well, let’s all stay on this.

For Chauncey.

ROTC is an effective military recruitment tool - in large part because it is often institutionalized as a physical education class and students across the country are often assigned to ROTC involuntarily. But ROTC is much more than physical fitness. The uniforms, wooden rifles and study of war are part and parcel of this program that promotes military and war in the curriculum. It’s been an issue in the San Francisco public schools, and this story gives the latest. The school board divorced PE credits from the ROTC program, which is fitting. Read on: http://www.beyondchron.org/news/index.php?itemid=5818#more School Board Removes P.E. Credit for JROTC Students can no longer get physical education credit for service in JROTC – after a vote last night at the San Francisco School Board last night. More than 18 months after the Board voted to phase out the military program from public schools, and under duress of a lawsuit that cited a clear conflict in state law, the action upset cadets in the audience – but satisfied others who say it is long overdue. The Board had deadlocked 3-3 on this action at last week’s meeting, but with Commissioner Jane Kim back in town had the votes last night to get it through. But while progressives celebrated last night’s victory, pro-JROTC forces are gathering signatures for a November proposition – keeping this issue in the spotlight. For progressives to sustain this victory and keep their majority on the School Board, the District must make sure that alternatives to JROTC are available – or else suffer political consequences at the ballot box. More

Join me Thursday, June 26th at 7pm at USF’s McLaren Hall with the accomplished poets, novelists and essayist of this year’s Voices of Our Nation Foundation summer writers’ workshop. I have the honor of hosting this evening, which features Faith Adiele, Ruth Forman, Thomas Glave, Gregory Allen Howard, Diem Jones, Elmaz Abinader with musician Tony Kalife. More info at www.voicesatvona.org.

…a wonderful group of 4th and 5th graders from Joaquin Miller Elementary School in Oakland, CA had a field trip to the KPFA studios this week. I stopped my pre-production scurrying to describe to the students all the action behind the scenes during our live morning shows. These kids are radio producers and personalities in their own right already, thanks to an innovative program the school offers. You can hear their work on their website.

Aimee Allison headshot 2

Aimee Allison’s voiceover scripted and recorded for Homeowner Rescue Alliance’s promotional video.

Aimee Allison, Craigslist Foundation Bootcamp Keynote Speech 2007 where she muses about “retooling” for the long haul and the importance of people who work for change.

Download this episode (right click and save)

Aimee Allison’s revealing conversation with bestselling author William Poy Lee who wrote The Eighth Promise about his family secrets, his run-in with Jimi Hendrix, and teaching China a thing or two.

Download this episode (right click and save)

Some of the best TV isn’t even on TV. My good friend, a professor from UC Riverside, just hipped me to the freshest YouTube channel I’ve seen. It’s called News In Color, and the commentary is just brilliant. Here’s just one episode in which Contributor Addison Crenshaw gives us his literary take on the significance of Obama’s recent rejection of his former pastor.. I recommend subscribing…

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Craigslist Nonprofit Bootcamp Keynote

Craigslist Nonprofit Bootcamp Keynote

Aimee Allison, Craigslist Foundation Bootcamp Keynote Speech 2007 where she muses about "retooling" for the long haul and the importance of people who work for change. Download this episode (right click and save)

Winter Soldier Coverage Wins Project Censored Award

Winter Soldier Coverage Wins Project Censored Award

I'm so honored to receive a Project Censored Award along with Aaron Glantz for our coverage of Winter Soldier 2008. We'll be in the annual publication and may have some local speaking events in the Fall. Here's part of the letter they sent: Your hosting of the live broadcast “Winter Soldier 2008: Eyewitness Accounts of the Occupations” on War Comes Home, by KPFA, March 14-16, 2008, ...

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The Book

An activist’s guide to combating military recruitment.
http://myspace.com/armyofnonebook

Uniformed U.S. Army Officers lunch with students in elementary school cafeterias. Army training programs including rifle and pistol instruction replace physical education in middle schools. Like never before, military recruiters are entering the halls of U.S. schools with unchecked access in an attempt to bolster a military in crisis.

However, even as these destructive efforts to militarize youth accelerate, so do the creative and powerful efforts of students, community members, and veterans to challenge them. Today, the counter recruitment movement—from counseling to poetry slams to citywide lobbying efforts—has become one of the most practical ways to tangibly resist U.S. policy that cuts funding for education and social programs while promoting war and occupation. Without enough soldiers, the U.S. cannot sustain its empire.

Army of None exposes the real story behind the military-recruitment complex, and offers guides, tools, and resources for education and action, and people power strategies to win.