One Brilliant Evening with BARBARA EHRENREICH

Hosted by Aimee Allison, Producer/Host of the KPFA Morning Show

Tuesday, July 15, 7:30 pm in Oakland

The bestselling author of Nickel and Dimed, Bait and Switch, and Global Woman, (and brilliant feminist member of Progressives for Obama) discusses her new book This Land Is Their Land—and clarifies the Obama phenomenon and the onrushing tide of change. 

First Congregational Church of Oakland, 2501 Harrison St (at 27th St), Oakland (free parking, wheelchair access)

Benefit: KPFA Radio 94.1FM

Tickets: $10 at supportive bookstores & on line: www.kpfa.org, $13 door

Information: 510.848.6767×609

As evidenced by her bestsellers Nickel and Dimed and Bait and Switch, journalist and cultural historian Barbara Ehrenreich has consistently and effectively been an advocate for the poor and the middle class. In her latest book, THIS LAND IS THEIR LAND: Reports from a Divided Nation (Metropolitan) she masterfully articulates the hardships and hypocrisies facing the suffocating majority of the population.   Through a compilation of essays and blog entries on a myriad of issues including health care, employment, stem cells, and finances, THIS LAND IS THEIR LAND provides readers with cutting and provocative social commentary on the Bush years. As Ehrenreich says, “The looting of America has gone on too long, and the average American is too maxed out, overworked and overspent to have anything left… We need a new deal, a new distribution of power and wealth, if we want to restore the beautiful idea that was ‘America.’   The author of the more than one-million-copy bestseller Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America and the New York Times bestseller Bait and Switch: The (Futile) Pursuit of the American Dream, Ehrenreich is a frequent contributor to Harper’s and The Nation. She has been a columnist at The New York Times and Time magazine. Her articles, reviews, essays, and humor pieces have appeared in a range of national publications, including The New York Times Magazine, The Washington Post, and newspapers throughout the world. Incisive, definitive…Her scorn withers, her humor stings, and her radical light shines on.”The Boston Globe

I’ll be co-hosting a four-hour special with election returns and analysis from key bay area local and state races, and the latest about the Democratic Presidential primary. Will Clinton concede? Superdelegates are falling for Obama by the hour here.

In Oakland and the Bay Area, there are several races that pit progressive candidates against each other, like in Assembly District 14 and State Senate District 9. Think it might not matter? Well, these folks will be crafting the next budget with the looming deficit. More taxes, more potholes, closed schools? What will it be? We have field reporters throughout the bay - at the campaign headquarters of leading candidates and at San Francisco City Hall.

Tune in starting at 7pm pst at KPFA 94.1 or kpfa.org.

IAVA GI BillThe fight on Capitol Hill to expand GI benefits continues. Senator Webb has proposed legislation to bring veteran’s educational benefits to World War II levels - when the Servicemembers’ Readjustment Act helped hundreds of thousands get degrees and get on with their life. Nowadays, according to the veterans’ group IAVA, Iraq War vets don’t receive enough to cover a degree, even living expenses at the community college level. I spoke with three experts today. Here’s the audio of today’s show. It’s the first interview.

Catherine Morris, Veterans Counselor at Sierra College - a community college in Sacramento. Sierra College is one of the few community colleges with special programs for returning veterans. In my interview with her, she comments that vets say they’re more afraid of the college class than Iraq. Something about the isolation and lack of support makes that so. She’s holding an upcoming Road Home event on September 19th at American River College. This event is an orientation to help veterans be successful. Catherine, a 15-year veteran herself, is doing the hard work of helping veterans find their way back - commendable, difficult work when you consider how many vets struggle with PTSD and repeated deployments. She’s at (916) 789-2879 if you need more information or want to start a similar program at your school.

I also interviewed Tom Tarantino with Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America (IAVA). Tom is from the North Bay, an Iraq Veteran, and is working hard to pass the legislation to give GI’s their due. Tom spoke of the bi-partisan support the bill is receiving and of the ridiculousness of McCain opposing a measure that’s only giving vets what is promised.

Paul Sullivan, with Veterans for Common Sense brought the sharpest criticism about Bush and McCain. He has been an tireless advocate for vets’ rights and benefits, including the recent legal effort to force the Veterans Administration to provide timely and adequate healthcare for veterans. We covered the lawsuit and the archives are at www.warcomeshome.org.

I will continue to cover these issues. Just today at the gym, the CNN newschannel scrolled a few words about the highest suicide numbers among vets - but I don’t think this fact is registering with most Americans. The desolation and desparation and pain comes home to our communities. We must continue to tell the truth about the reality of vets’ experiences and their treatment at home.

I live in the state senate district where WIlma Chan and Loni Hancock are battling it out for the Democratic nomination on June 3rd. I received a total of 7 mailers and have seen commercials on the cable stations I watch in the evening. The Indian Gambling tribes are funding attacks on Hancock and the California Nurses Association are attacking Chan. Well, Monday at 8am pacific on KPFA we find out what this is all about. I’ll be joined by both candidates. If you have specific questions or issues, feel free to suggest them here and I’ll do my best to ask them next Monday.

Project Censored BookI’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, has been selected as a finalist for the Project Censored “Most Censored” News Stories of 2007-08 Awards. Hundreds of news stories were nominated this year and your story has been ranked in the top twenty-five most important under-covered of the year.
We would like to include an update on your story as part of Chapter 1. This is intended to give readers additional information and suggest possible ways to become proactive on the issues presented in your story.
On behalf of the Project Censored staff, faculty and students, we thank you for your courage and professionalism in investigative reporting. Congratulations and welcome to the Year 2008 Project Censored program.

This morning, I interviewed all three candidates this morning for the State Senate District 3 race incumbant State Senator Carole Migden, Assemblymember Mark Leno and former Assemblymember Joe Nation. The race is a hot one for many reasons. First, District 3 runs from San Francisco where the bulk of voters are, north to Marin County and Sonoma County. It’s long been a Democratic Party sure thing, which makes the June 3rd primary the most important. But this race pits candidates who share some of the same policy position against each other. There are differences though. In this interview, Migden points out that Leno voted for expanding state prison spending, Nation points out loss of education funding under Migden and Leno clearly stands for the single payer solution to the healthcare crisis. There are indications that this race could lead to an upset, if you believe the latest polls. I asked some tough questions toward the end of this interview, too - Migden and the election violations, Leno and splitting the LGBT vote and Nation exploiting the split base to take the seat. What are your thoughts?

KPFA Morning Show archive of entire show here.

Weekdays Mondays through Friday from 7am - 9am pacific time. Politics and culture from around the Bay and around the world. 94.1 FM in the SF Bay Area. On-line live and archived at www.kpfa.org.

Soldier appeals to be conscientious objector

FORT RICH: Paratrooper says Christian faith precludes war; government doubts his sincerity.  Original story published here.

A Fort Richardson-based paratrooper who had his request for conscientious objector status denied by the U.S. Army while serving in Iraq last year appealed that decision in an Anchorage federal court on Monday.

A decision on whether to allow the appeal to proceed to a civilian hearing in U.S. District Court is expected to be issued this week by federal Magistrate John D. Roberts.

Barnes, 26, didn’t testify during the hourlong hearing while sitting alongside Anchorage attorney Sam Fortier. But in paperwork filed with the court, he declared that his Christian faith — which crystallized and evolved as he watched events in Iraq unfold — now prohibits him from waging war.

“Spending my time on this earth killing or supporting killing others is unacceptable to me,” Barnes wrote. “Serving Jesus is doing the opposite of participating in war. It is loving your enemy, avoiding conflict, being humble and living peacefully. I am unable to serve the Lord and support war.”

Born and raised in Portland, Ore., Barnes was baptized at New Hope Community Church in Portland in 2001.

INCONSISTENT BEHAVIOR

In denying his request — along with Barnes’ petition to be honorably discharged by the military — the Army Conscientious Objector Review Board in Alexandria, Va., in September ruled that he failed to make a convincing case.

 

“I do not believe that Pfc. Barnes … is sincerely opposed to participating in war, in any form, due to his religious faith,” wrote the staff judge advocate in recommending the request be denied.

 

Neither U.S. Attorney Richard Pomeroy nor Maj. Josh Toman, both of whom represented the U.S. government, were present at the hearing. But both testified by telephone in opposition to the appeal. Toman reiterated the board’s rationale for turning down the request for conscientious objector status:

• That it was at odds with Barnes’ previous stated desire to serve in Iraq.

• That the timing of his request for CO status was suspect, coming three months after his deployment to Iraq rather than earlier.

• That officers in his chain of command were never made aware of his objections to the war until he was reassigned in December 2006 to serve as a gunner.

“Persons around him were surprised by his decision to become a conscientious objector,” Toman said.

GRADUAL CHANGE OF HEART

But Barnes’ lead attorney, Steven Collier, addressing the court by telephone from San Francisco, noted that his client did in fact share his misgivings with fellow soldiers as well as an Army doctor, who treated him for clinical depression, and an Army chaplain, who testified on his behalf.Conscientious objection

“Three people testified that his Christian religious faith was growing at that time,” Collier said.

The purpose of the hearing wasn’t to argue the merits of the case but to determine whether the government may have erred procedurally or whether important facts were omitted. Collier said the Army misconstrued the evidence.

“What we’ve allowed in the record are assumptions and opinions,” Collier said. “Facts must be in their record.”

Toman questioned why Barnes didn’t formally request conscientious objector status sooner than he did, since early on in Iraq he observed soldiers mistreating Iraqis and boasting about taking vengeance. He also noted that Barnes didn’t regularly attend chapel services.

Collier said his client’s realization that he was morally opposed to warfare came one experience at a time, over the course of three months, and that his faith was a private affair — he spent much of his time reading the Bible — which the military tribunal failed to fully credit.

Watching the proceedings in the courtroom were a half dozen representatives of the Alaskans for Peace and Justice organization as well as the soldier’s wife, Pearl Barnes, and the couple’s two children, Noah, 4, and Kylee, 1.

If the request for a full hearing in a civilian courtroom is upheld, the case will go before U.S. District Court Judge John Sedwick in Anchorage federal court. A final decision is expected by June.

 

A sincere opposition, because of religious or deeply held moral or ethical belief, to participating in war in any form, or to participating as a combatant.

If the objection is to war, the applicant can be released from military service. If the objection is to being a combatant, the applicant can be assigned noncombat duties.

It looks like Edwards’ endorsement of Obama for President came in exchange for his support of policies to end poverty.  The effort is to halve poverty in the next 10 years.  Bold. 

For those in Oakland that shook their heads in disgust when our Mayor Ron Dellums endorsed Clinton, I wonder if they’ll be calls for him to reconsider.  He’s not a super delegate, but other cities are holding their electeds accountable.  Oh well, Dellums pulled back from campaigning for Clinton a couple months ago so that may be a sign in and of itself.  Long before her comment this weekend about Obama not being able to win “hard-working white America” which supporter Rep. Charlie Rangal called, “the dumbest statement ever” over the weekend.  She agreed in with him yesterday and is likely stewing in her juices about Edwards endorsement today.  Not because it brings a huge number of delegates (18) although each one counts, but because it seems to put him higher in vice-presidential consideration.

Edwards freaked me out with his Israel policy when he was running for VP last time, but his anti-poverty campaign is inspired.  Just what our country needs.

Here’s a newly release report that documents what we are seeing everyday in schools. Military recruiters are targeting children and thus are breaking international law. Here’s the report:

WASHINGTON, May 13 (IPS) - Pressed by the demands of the “global war on terrorism”, the United States is violating an international protocol that forbids the recruitment of children under the age of 18 for military service, according to a new report released Tuesday by a major civil rights group that charged that recruitment practices target children as young as 11 years old.

Full article here.

Featured

Allison Awarded Safe Clean Air Leadership Award

Allison Awarded Safe Clean Air Leadership Award

I was honored to receive this award today (August 12, 2008) from the Carmel-based organization Helping Our Peninsula's Environment "for providing the first San Francisco Bay Area News Coverage on December 12, 2007 of the aerial spraying of secret, untested pesticides on our California communities which lead to the halt of the pesticide spraying in 2008".  More information at http://www.1hope.org/hope.htm

Craigslist Nonprofit Bootcamp Keynote

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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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KPFA Morning Show

KPFA Morning Show

Weekdays Mondays through Friday from 7am - 9am pacific time. Politics and culture from around the Bay and around the world. 94.1 FM in the SF Bay Area. On-line live and archived at www.kpfa.org.

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.