With Michael Bloomberg running for president it’s time to remind people what kind of mayor he was.
In 2013, when Bloomberg was mayor of New York, Citizens Defending Libraries formed immediately issuing our “Save New York City Libraries From Bloomberg Developer Destruction” petition.
We formed Citizens Defending Libraries and issued our petition to oppose Bloomberg’s program of deliberately defunding New York City libraries at a time of increasing public use, population growth and increased city wealth, shrinking our library system to create real estate deals for wealthy real estate developers. He launched an unjust and shortsighted plan that was particularly unfair in a time of cutbacks in education and escalating disparities in opportunity.
With Michael Bloomberg now running for president, it looks like it’s time to resurrect and republish our petition. Actually, it can still be signed. We are still working to oppose the sale and defunding of libraries, the elimination of books and librarians. We are still sending out periodic emails to the signers of our petition to keep people up to date about defending libraries and the threats they face. And there is so much for people to know. . .
The plans Bloomberg launched to sell New York City go back until at least 2004 or 2005. In the Summer of 2007 the Mayor Bloomberg and First Deputy Mayor Patti Harris expressed enthusiasm for the NYPL’s plans to sell and redevelop major central destination Manhattan Libraries. That included the shrink-and-sink sale of the beloved central destination Donnell Library in midtown Manhattan, which was sold in what was essentially a no-bid deal that shortchanged the public and provided a windfall that enriched Trump son-in-law Jared Kushner with a $30 million windfall.
The first library sold, the 97,000-square foot, five-story central destination Donnell Library on what was
documented to be the most valuable block in Manhattan at the time, was
sold to net the NYPL less than $25,000 million. The penthouse in the luxury tower that replaced it in the 50-story luxury tower replacing Donnell went on the market for $60 million. Another single lower-level condo unit in the luxury building, 43A, sold for $20,110,437.50.
There is also a 114 guest room luxury hotel in the tower. According to the Wall
Street Journal, Chinese investors made that hotel,“the most highly valued hotel in the U.S.” after agreeing to buy it for “more than $230 million. . . .more than $2 million a room.” . .
. . In the luxury restaurants in the luxury hotel in the tower that now claims to the once publicly owned site, you can get $1,500 Ice Cream Sundaes and $500 Cocktails while you luxuriate on coyote pelts.
Bloomberg who was to leave office January 31, 2013, made the very expensive consolidating shrinkage Central Library Plan, which involved the sale of the Manhattan libraries, a stated priority to achieve by his term's end. Similarly, it was his goal to achieve the shrink-and-sink sale of Brooklyn's second biggest library, the Business, Career, Education and federal depository library in downtown Brooklyn on the edge of Brooklyn Heights by the end of his term. He didn't meet these time frames and his plans were somewhat derailed through work of Citizens Defending Libraries and other activist we teamed up with. When other, better uses were proposed for the funds to be plowed into vastly expensive Manhattan library sale plans, those plans were unacceptable to Bloomberg. Scott Sherman says in his book (“Patience and Fortitude- Power, Real Estate, and the Fight to Save a Public Library”) on the subject, "It seems that for Bloomberg, it was all or nothing."
It's important to pay attention to who, along with Bloomberg, is selling off NYC libraries. Bloomberg cared enough about implementing these plans to have many of his administration high-ups on the city's three library boards. His counsel became the chair of the Brooklyn Public Library board of trustees. Bloomberg's official representative on the New York Public Library board was his very own sister, Marjorie Tiven. At the press March 11, 2008 press conference announcing launch of the plans for the consolidating shrinkage of the Manhattan libraries Bloomberg praised his "friend" Stephen A. Schwarzman, one of the main people pushing NYPL libraries in sales out the door to benefit people like Jared Kushner. Schwarzman is one of Trumps top economic advisors. He's a remarkable piece of work involved in arranging for the wholesale sale and privatization of American Public assets, proud to describe himself as a good friend of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (“MBS”- You know the dismemberment killing of Jamal Khashoggi and Yemen war). . . . Not surprisingly, Bloomberg also hobnobs with MBS.
People should remember what Bloomberg did when was entrusted with New York City's libraries as Bloomberg now asks to be entrusted with the U.S. presidency.
Monday, March 2, 2020
Friday, February 28, 2020
Exile of Another Journalist From Corporate Mainstream Media, David Wright Suspended By ABC– This Time It’s Not For Being Anti-war, It’s Just For Being Honest About How Corporate Media News Doesn’t Serve The Public
Here’s a striking news story. ABC has suspended veteran journalist David Wright because of secretly recorded remarks in which we described with frankness his opinion that mainstream corporate media, doesn’t properly serve the public. . . It means we’ll have to add another journalist to our list of journalists exiled from corporate mainstream media. (See: List of Journalists Fired or Self-exiled From Mainstream Media Outlets Because They Expressed or Wanted to Express Views (Like Being Critical of U.S. Wars) Unacceptable to the Outlets They Were Working For.)
We’ll also have to note how Wright’s suspension breaks the typical pattern of so many other exiled journalists on our list: Wright was not fired for expressing any antiwar sentiments, only for expressing his misgivings about the overall corporate media news system. And maybe for saying he personally favors a national health insurance, or thinks that there are too many billionaires?
What’s wrong overall with the corporate media news system may explain why the corporate media so often encourages us to go to war, but Wright’s secretly recorded remarks didn’t connect any of those dots.
ABC suspended its veteran correspondent despite David Wright’s history and credentials:
The incongruity that Wright was suspended for these remarks constituting news and insight about corporate media news that's probably more important and valuable than much of ABC News' own standard fare, is what is and what should be the main story here, although the story comes with a footnote important to pass along: The secrete recording was made by Project Veritas, typically described as a "far-right activist" group that often unreliably edits what it publishes after setting up entrapments. It's unclear what Veritas thought it was proving about bias in the media when it recorded Wright and published what he said. As you can read above, Wright's criticisms include that media doesn't, in his opinion give Trump credit when credit is due; his views are considered, not one-sided.
Here is the Project Veritas video:
We’ll also have to note how Wright’s suspension breaks the typical pattern of so many other exiled journalists on our list: Wright was not fired for expressing any antiwar sentiments, only for expressing his misgivings about the overall corporate media news system. And maybe for saying he personally favors a national health insurance, or thinks that there are too many billionaires?
What’s wrong overall with the corporate media news system may explain why the corporate media so often encourages us to go to war, but Wright’s secretly recorded remarks didn’t connect any of those dots.
ABC suspended its veteran correspondent despite David Wright’s history and credentials:
• Emmy Award-winning ABC News correspondent.It’s remarkable that Wright was suspended for the remarks he privately shared given what he said. His remarks, which actually seem wise and perceptive, were:
• Joined the network nearly 20 years ago.
• He has covered the White House and was "Nightline's" lead political reporter during the 2016 presidential campaign.
I feel terrible about it. I feel that the truth suffers, the voters are poorly informed…In the secret recording Wright also exchanges views with his colleague Andy Feis that the media is screwing up in presidential campaign coverage by covering just the "horse race" aspect of things, not giving candidates their due, just wanting to do "flavor of the month, flavor of the week," wanting to emphasize conflict and keep moving on.
And so, it's like there's no upside in — or our bosses don't see an upside in — doing the job we're supposed to do, which is to speak truth to power and hold people to account.
* * *
I don’t think we are terribly interested in the voters
* * *
The fake news abounds. There are problems with the truth these days.
* * *
The commercial imperative is incompatible with news. …
It became a profit center, a promotion center. Like now, you can't watch "Good Morning America" without there being a Disney princess or a Marvel Avenger appearing. It's all self-promotion. And promotion of the company and also promotion of individuals within the company. As opposed to, kind of, the dedication to the story and a commitment to stories that we need to tell but that are maybe hard to tell.
* * *
I think some of that, at least in the places where I work and the places like it, is that with Trump, we're interested in three things. We're interested in the outrage of the day, the investigation, and the palace intrigue of who's stabbing who. Beyond that, we don't really cover the guy. …
We don't hold him to account. We also don't give him credit for what things he does do. …
And we're in this awkward moment where — and created by this awkward moment — where we have this f**king president. And we can't figure out how to challenge him.
* * *
I'd consider myself a socialist. Like I think there should be national health insurance. I'm totally fine with reining in corporations. I think there are too many billionaires, and I think that there's a wealth gap. That's a problem.
* * *
So you know, real people talk about practical issues, when they’re thinking about a a candidate, “I want to get back n the workforce,” or “I need medical care for whatever.” Those things aren’t TV friendly things. You know, we want to focus on impeachment, we want to focus on the big sh*t going on, but the things that help people make up their mind are little shit.
* * *
I think that we don’t have the bandwidth to give everybody a fair shot . And we should.
**
We are all guilty of the same thing. I think all these big news organizations- I’m speaking about broadcast television. That’s all Im speaking about: ABC, CBS, NBC. And we recognize that we are dinosaurs and we’re in danger of dying.
The incongruity that Wright was suspended for these remarks constituting news and insight about corporate media news that's probably more important and valuable than much of ABC News' own standard fare, is what is and what should be the main story here, although the story comes with a footnote important to pass along: The secrete recording was made by Project Veritas, typically described as a "far-right activist" group that often unreliably edits what it publishes after setting up entrapments. It's unclear what Veritas thought it was proving about bias in the media when it recorded Wright and published what he said. As you can read above, Wright's criticisms include that media doesn't, in his opinion give Trump credit when credit is due; his views are considered, not one-sided.
Here is the Project Veritas video:
‘Socialist’ ABC Reporter Admits Bosses Spike News Important to Voters, 'Don’t Give Trump Credit', February 26, 2020The story was covered as a headline by Democracy Now, "ABC Suspends David Wright over Remarks Secretly Recorded by Far-Right Group," February 27, 2020, and the Salon coverage with worthwhile, "ABC's David Wright told the truth about network news and Trump — and paid the price," Dan Froomkin, February 27, 2020.
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| "ABC Suspends David Wright over Remarks Secretly Recorded by Far-Right Group," |
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| "ABC's David Wright told the truth about network news and Trump — and paid the price," |
Wednesday, February 19, 2020
Privatization of History: Scary Information About What Is Happening At Our National Archives and Records Administration
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| "Erasing" history or "privatizing" it? Churchill, a man whose flaws you may be unfamiliar with said: “History will be kind to me, for I intend to write it.”-- And he did. |
On February 6th, Democracy Now had a story about how millions of documents are being expunged from the National Archives. This was right after the National Archives delivered an altered version of history concerning the 2017 Women’s March by doctoring a photograph of the March that the Archives used as a main feature for a new exhibit, The doctoring removed criticisms of President Trump. See: Erasing History: The National Archives Is Destroying Records About Victims of Trump’s ICE Policies.
Our National Archives is a form library intended to be a repository for the protection of our country’s history, as well as a form of watchdog for its protection. Let’s note again: It’s a form of library. Matthew Connelly, professor of history at Columbia University and principal investigator at History Lab, interviewed for the Democracy Now story about the expungements said that:
a lot of what’s happening at the National Archives is happening because they are being starved of resources. They have a smaller budget now than they had back in 2008. That budget has been cut every year for the last three years.That sounds exactly like our New York City libraries. And we will remind you that there is no excuse for starving our New York City libraries of resources the way we are being starved, because libraries are an almost infinitesimal portion of our city budget, especially in terms of the benefits they deliver.
Mr. Connelly was on Democracy Now, having written a recent piece for The New York Times on the Archive expungements headlined “Why You May Never Learn the Truth About ICE.”
While the hook that was used for both the Democracy Now interview and Mr. Connelly’s New York Times op-ed was the destruction of information about the recent and ongoing atrocities being committed by ICE under Trump, the violations of “immigrant rights” involved, and how ICE may be “destroying records from Trump’s first year, including the detainees’ complaints about civil rights violations and shoddy medical care,” Mr. Connally ventured further in his concerns. He expressed his worries about our government’s “long history of destroying records related to the overthrow of democratically elected governments, mind control experiments and torture,” and he noted how our country has “destroyed all of the records of the deliberations of the Joint Chiefs of Staff [he didn’t get to finish his sentence].” He noted that the “Department of the Interior and the National Archives have decided to delete files on endangered species, offshore drilling inspections and the safety of drinking water.”
The Democracy Now headline for its segment with Mr. Connelly refers to “Erasing History,” but is this characterization directly on target? Isn’t this instead, a likely “privatization” of history?
In his New York Times op-ed Mr. Connelly mentions how now when things go into the National Archives, “Everything must be digital, or the departments and agencies must use their own resources to scan them.”
We are currently in an age when there is unprecedented private storage of data. Everything is saved. Data storage is insanely cheap, and keeps getting cheaper. Much of that data storage is done by companies like Amazon, private companies that have strong ties to the CIA and the military industrial complex.
With private data collection running rampant for every conceivable purpose, is it reasonable to think that any anything that ever exists in digital form, even if that digital existence is brief, is ever truly expunged, that it truly ever vanishes? Is it reasonable to believe that just because we starve our libraries and public national archive, that the information they made available, however briefly, especially if it was made available digitally, will not continue to exist in private hands? Probably not.
When information exists digitally, it is easy to suck it out on into private databases a wholesale basis. . . It is instructive to remember that, before his premature and extremely disheartening death, Aaron Swartz, the young activist who was, among other things, a fan of libraries and an advocate for democratic empowerment through publicly available information (plus an open internet with net neutrality), was legally persecuted by our government for sucking out digital information on a wholesale basis to do exactly the opposite: He downloaded 4.8 million academic journal articles from a from a private database with the probable intent of making them more publicly accessible. A number of years before, Swartz downloaded and made more freely available to the public 2.7 million federal court documents (essentially the law) from a federal database, documents which were technically already public, but were somehow not actually readily accessible to the public unless they paid to go through private channels, except through private channels. Prosecuted for his download of the academic journal articles, Swartz faced a potential 90 years in prison and his father accused the government of hounding him and bringing about his death.
It is therefore important to understand that what we are talking about is the privatization of history and information, not its erasure.
The control of history and its narratives has been going on for a long time with those who are powerful thinking a lot about it. Winston Churchill famously said, “history will be kind to me, for I intend to write it.” Our more liberal friends from the United Kingdom, who are better and more knowledgeably acquainted with Churchill, tell us they have very mixed feelings about “Winnie.” Their feelings toward him are probably less favorable than ours, as we on this side of the pond, have likely been subjected to more unadulterated myth-making propaganda about the man. There is much that was simply appalling about Churchill, but the fact that Churchill did, indeed, actually write a lot of the history about himself counteracts much of that.
Interviewed on On The Media, journalist Madhusree Mukerjee explained that after World War II, Churchill:
had complete access to all United Kingdom documents and an entire team of researchers and writers who helped him actually write six volumes or so of his World War II memoirs. And these volumes put Churchill at the center of the war, whereas historians have filled out some of the detail, which is that it was the Soviets who defeated the Nazis and the Americans who defeated the Japanese.(See: Churchill's Forgotten, Ruthless Past, March 16, 2018)
Mukerjee also notes that “when his political career was in shards after the First World War, he wrote a history then, as well,” and that he wrote several histories, including “something called The History of the English-Speaking Peoples.”
Putting the resources of the British government at Churchill’s disposal to write is one way of letting history be written by those that command the reins of power. . . But pulling back on our public resources to put all of our history in the hands of private corporate monopolies that do not have the best interests of the public assuredly at heart is probably an even more serious surrender of the custodianship of truth and memory. Global warming anyone? How about perpetual wars?
. . Privatizing history is probably far worse than just trying to erase it.
Our last thought on this: You may have already observed for yourself that, whether its studying to understand history or just trying to follow the news, the most vital key to comprehension is most certainly a careful focus on what the powerful don’t want you to know.
PS: (added February 29, 2020)– On February 21, On The Media caught up to run a segment, “The Vanishing National Archives," about Matthew Connelly, his New York Times op-ed and the expungements from the National Archives.
It mostly tracked the story above:
by the end of this year, they're [the archive is] going to be able to start destroying records from the first year of the Trump administration when it first began to crack down on undocumented immigration.However, it ends using a nice quote from Churchill’s counterpart in the United States, Franklin Roosevelt:
* *
[On the chopping block] . . everything from aviation safety to the takeover of American firms by foreign nationals. All of those records are slated for destruction in the Department of Interior, records related to protection of drinking water, enforcement of laws on endangered species, the management of the mismanagement of native lands, native assets, all that stuff's gonna get deleted, too.
“A nation must believe in three things. It must believe in the past. It must believe in the future. It must, above all, believe in the capacity of its own people.” So to learn from the past that they can gain in judgment in creating their own future.
Wednesday, January 8, 2020
Stephen A. Schwarzman Is Specifically Cited By New York Magazine’s Frank Rich As He Asks: What Will Happen to The Trump Toadies?- And Then Rich Compares Schwarzman To The American Industrialists Who Collaborated With Hitler
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| In New York Magazine NYPL trustee Stephen A. Schwarzman is rounded up as part of a rogues gallery of "toadies" compared to the wealthy American's who supported Hitler's fascism in Germany. |
Nevertheless, some of these polemics against Trump also, on occasion, describe those problems that exist institutionally in this country and point out things that are wrong with the political and power infrastructure of our country. Frank Rich has a new “Intellgencier” article in New York Magazine this week that we think falls into that category: What Will Happen to The Trump Toadies? Look to Nixon’s defenders, and the Vichy collaborators, for clues, January 7, 2020.
The article is also of particular interest to us as library defenders because the article chooses several times to cite NYPL trustee Stephen A. Schwarzman as a particular and prime example of the people in power that Mr. Rich sees as facilitating the rise of fascism in the United States, in much the same way that American businessmen supported Hitler’s fascism in Germany.
And while Schwarzman, much like Trump, may be viewed as a symptom of problems with our country extending to the way that our New York City libraries are run, Schwarzman is also a very visible symbol of those problems. Just the way that Trump has made himself extra conspicuous by putting his name ubiquitously on so many buildings and projects (even when he had scant involvement in bringing them about), so too has Schwarzman made himself extra conspicuous when it comes to libraries by insisting that his name be plastered with repetitive excessiveness on the NYPL’s 24nd Street Central reference library. . . . Something the NYPL trustees did for Schwarzman because Schwarzman transfered a paltry $100 million to the NYPL on the understanding that the NYPL would initiate the Central Library Plan (and probably Donnell) real estate deal sell-offs of libraries.
People are now, with embarrassment, busy ripping the name of Trump off various edifices. Maybe, due to similar embarrassment, we'll also soon see the Schwarzman name ripped off the 42nd Street Central Reference Library.
Schwarzman has a knack for being on the wrong side of things. As Rich argues, that may be because he is amoral and will do anything for money. So relatively recently, we wrote about Schwarzman again in connection with his hob nobbing praise for Saudi Crown prince Mohammed bin Salman (you know . . . the dismemberment killing of Jamal Khashoggi). We wrote when the NYPL was going to turn over space to the Crown Prince to teach young people how to enhance their reputations. See: Stopped!! NYPL's Plan To Turn Over Its 42nd Street Central Reference Library Grand Celeste Bartos Ballroom For Event Honoring The Infamous Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (Good Friend of Stephen Schwarzman?)
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| Schwarzman with Ghislaine Maxwell |
Soon after, we came back with much more bad news about Schwarzman when he was featured (and on the cover) in a new book about the maneuvers that transferred an extraordinarily vast amount of middle and lower income American wealth, what people had invested in their homes, to people like Schwarzman. See: New Book “Home Wreckers” Identifies NYPL Trustee (And 42nd Street Library Namesake) Stephen A. Schwarzman As Key Culprit (Along With His Friends and Neighbors) In The Huge Theft That’s Responsible For Depleting Wealth of Other Americans.
Schwarzman is the man who thinks that taxes on the poor should be raised while the loopholes that cause him, the highest paid CEO, over $1 billion in a single year, to pay far lower taxes than anyone else.
We agree with Matt Taibbi that the American media is far too focused on engendering counterproductive and artificial hatreds. We agree with Taibbi also cheap that ramping up to histrionic Hitler and Nazi comparisons is rarely constructive and tends to tamp down rational thinking, but Schwarzman himself has indulged in this kind of thing. It was Schwarzman who, perceiving himself to be involved in a class war, said that, when it come to protecting the preferential tax breaks he receives, the rest of us are like Hitler.
In using Stephen Schwarzman as a key cited example, Frank Rich’s article makes the case that the greedy self interest of such wealthy people as Schwarzman makes them amoral, as if they don’t care whether fascism will triumph. There is another interpretation others have offered that Rich doesn’t put forth. That is the argument that, for many of the wealthy looking to preserve their wealth in the run up and time of to World War II, those individuals actually preferred fascism to the possibly alternatives, particularly communism or socialism or any forms of wealth redistributions.
Here is some of what Rich wrote about Schwarzman and Schwarzman’s comrades whom he describes as “Trump toadies.” Note that Trump son-in-law Jared Kushner also gets mentioned and that Schwarzman and Kushner were both involved in the NYPL’s sell-off the beloved Donnell Library, the first major NYC library sale real estate deal. (Emphasis supplied below)
You don’t have to be a card-carrying fascist to collaborate with fascists and help them seize power; you just have to be morally bankrupt and self-serving. As the authoritative American historian of Vichy France, Robert O. Paxton, has pointed out, it was only “a rather small minority” of France’s wartime collaborators who were motivated by an actual “ideological sympathy with Nazism and Fascism” to go along with the Nazi puppet regime fronted by Marshal Philippe Pétain in Vichy. A more widespread incentive was “personal gain.” Others rationalized their complicity by persuading themselves they were acting in the “national interest.” It would be no surprise if that distribution of motivations persists among Trump collaborators today. Such backers as the financier Stephen Schwarzman and New York real-estate titans like Stephen Ross of Hudson Yards no doubt congratulate themselves on acting in the “national interest” while pocketing personal gains measured in either political influence or on a profit-and-loss statement.Mr. Rich ends, or nearly ends with the observation about all of the Trump “enablers and collaborators” he has singled out for the opprobrium of his article that: “It is too late for them to save their reputations.”
In France, such ostensible moral distinctions among collaborators were rendered moot in the long-delayed and gruesome postwar reckoning.
* * *
The antecedents for Trumpist enablers from the tycoon sector both within and outside the White House — Cohn, Schwarzman, Steven Mnuchin, Wilbur Ross, et al. — can be found in those now-vilified captains of 1930s American industry who were prime movers in various back-channel schemes to appease Hitler. The America First Committee’s members included Henry Ford, an unabashed anti-Semite who was name-checked admiringly in Mein Kampf, and Avery Brundage, an Illinois construction magnate and president of the U.S. Olympic Committee who bent to Hitler’s will by yanking the only two Jewish competitors on an American team in the 1936 Summer Games in Berlin. . . .
These businessmen’s machinations did not bring about peace in their time but did bring financial quid pro quos that fattened their bottom lines.
. . . Alfred P. Sloan, the longtime GM chairman, explained his philosophy: “An international business operating throughout the world should conduct its operations in strictly business terms, without regard to the political beliefs of its management, or the political beliefs of the countries in which it is operating.” Surely Jared Kushner, Mnuchin, and Schwarzman couldn’t have put it any better as they cavorted with Mohammed bin Salman at his investment conference in Riyadh in October, a year after the murder and dismemberment of Jamal Khashoggi. As with Ford, Brundage, Mooney, and the rest, any loot they accrued in exchange for their pact with the Devil will be unearthed in good time.
What Rich doesn’t ever bring into the conversation is that the powerful working with Nazi’s didn’t end with World War II, even that war’s conclusion. After World War II, many Nazi’s were brought into this country, and it wasn’t just the rocket expert Wernher von Braun. Many escaped anything like a prosecution at Nuremberg. The name of one major U.S. government classified program to bring Nazis to the United States was “Operation Paperclip.” With luck, its something you can read about in the libraries if. . .
Tuesday, December 24, 2019
An Open Letter To Reverend Ana Levy-Lyons of The First Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Brooklyn Requesting A Sermon About Peace
There is now a many year tradition at Noticing New York (about real estate development in New York and associated
politics), written by Citizens Defending Libraries co-founder Michael D. D. White. Each year on Christmas Eve, Noticing New York publishes a seasonal reflection. (More about the Noticing New York tradition here.) There is something a little bit different up at Noticing New York as a seasonal reflection this Christmas Eve. It's a letter Michael White wrote to Reverend
Ana Levy-Lyons, minister at his First Unitarian Universalist
Congregation in Brooklyn, requesting that she deliver a sermon about peace. There is a more about his decision at Noticing New York.
Because the censorship and information control subjects of this letter are so important, we are also publishing it here at Citizens Defending libraries. It is also being published at National Notice, also written by Mr. White.
December 19, 2019
Re: An Open Letter Requesting A Sermon About Peace
Dear Reverend Ana,
Last spring my wife Carolyn and I invested heavily in our congregation’s fund raising lottery trying to win the prize of choosing a topic for a sermon you would give. We didn’t win. Had we won, we would have challenged you with what you might not have found an easy subject, speaking about Julian Assange, American war crimes, and the U.S. pursuit of empire. Our choice of subject would not have been be to vex you with its difficulty, but to ask you to speak to what could be such a simple concept: Peace. If, these days, conversations about peace are avoided as difficult, what better than address that difficulty in a sermon?
Giving it some consideration, I think that making a worthy case for a sermon topic is a good a way to gain the prize of having you speak on a topic we care about, as good a way as investing in fund raising lottery tickets. Therefore I will try.
Is peace a spiritual thing? Is talk about our common humanity, our common bonds, and about surmounting the blindness that fractures our relationships a proper thing to address in religious terms? I acknowledge I’m being obvious here. What I just referred to is supposed to be basic and elemental to the great faiths.
I grew up in the Vietnam War era and I remember churches and church people taking the lead in saying that the wars we waged in Indochina were wrong. These days we, as country, are more military extended than ever. My oldest daughter is now about to be twenty-nine years old. We had already started bombing Iraq when she was born in January. The war in Iraq is just one of the perpetual wars that has continued essentially for the entirety of her life. All of our wars are long now. As formally measured by some, the War in Afghanistan, with its later beginning, has surpassed the Vietnam War as our country’s longest war.
These days the United States has been bombing nine countries, ten if you include, as we should, all of the U.S. participation in the bombing of Yemen, the other nine countries being: Mali, Niger, Somalia, Libya, and then, in the Middle East, it’s Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria. We have 800 military bases in other countries. With practically no comment or attention from us, President Obama opened new military bases across Africa.
A peace symbol hangs prominently in our Unitarian Universalist congregation’s sanctuary where our sermons are given. We begin every Sunday service singing the words: “let peace, good will on earth be sung through every land, by every tongue.” Christmas comes every year, and every year we evoke and extol, as is customary in the Christian tradition, the image of Jesus as the “Prince of Peace.” In our congregation’s Weaving Social Justice Committee we have discussed the prospect of rededicating the side chapel within the sanctuary that is known as the “Peace Chapel” to that cause. In our list of candidate films for the social justice film series we are working on we have films about the injustice of war. . .
. . . But, by and large, we hardly ever actually say anything about peace or the need to end the perpetual wars for which our country is now responsible. Has there been any sermon in our sanctuary on the subject of peace? I can’t recall one.
I was not at the Unitarian Universalist General Assembly in June this summer, but I talked with people who went, and I looked over the multi-day program. I was told and I saw that there were no sessions on the subject of peace. Nor was anything said about the antithesis thereof, war, although we are deeply embroiled in wars to the point that they are inescapably always in the background our daily American lives.
Our congregation through its leaders including members of the social justice committee is now reaching out to other congregations in our city and to their social justice actors to coordinate collective activism on the issues important to all of us. The importance of peace activism has not been mentioned in those discussions no matter that it is integrally related to virtually every other issue that is being discussed of common interest. Has the subject of peace somehow been tagged as off-limits? Is peace now too controversial to be discussed by and among religious communities?
Other social issues have attracted the attention of organizing Unitarians and have been the subject of multiple sermons. I understand and support that and among them are issues like the climate change chaos catastrophe emergency. The climate emergency is an existential threat to all of humanity. When the Democratic National Committee ordered that there be no debate focused on the single issue of climate change– the DNC actually forbade Democrats from participating in any such debate organized by anyone else– the case was made that the existential issue of climate is so fundamental that it is intertwines with and underlies virtually every other issue that’s important. There are other issues like that; issues that are inextricably related to society’s other major issues.
Our American wars together with the rest of our military interventions that stoke conflict in other countries are far too often wars which are very much about the extraction of oil and fossil fuels. Moreover, overall our wars help keep in place the systems that continue to vandalize our planet, exterminating its ecosystems. Further, the US military is one of the largest polluters in history, “the single-largest producer of greenhouse gases (GHG) in the world,” and that the Pentagon is responsible for between “77% and 80% of all US government energy consumption” since 2001. The US military is consuming more liquid fuels and emitting more climate-changing gases than most medium-sized countries, polluting more than 140 countries. Obscuring the reporting on this, the United States, which exempts its military from environmental laws, insisted on exemptions from reporting of the military emissions of all countries from climate agreements. The U.S., has itself escaped such reporting by exiting the Paris Climate Accord.
It is not clear, but these staggering figures about fossil fuel use probably don’t include the fossil fuel consumption related to the initial manufacture of weapons. Consider also that replacement, or nonreplacement, of what is bombed, burned and incinerated also must entail substantial additional environmental costs.
It is not just greenhouse gas emission pollution that the military produces: In 2010, a major story that went largely unreported was that the U.S. Department of Defense, as the largest polluter in the world, was producing more hazardous waste than the five largest US chemical companies combined, and that just some of the pollutants with which it was contaminating the environment were depleted uranium, petroleum, oil, pesticides, defoliant agents such as Agent Orange, and lead, along with vast amounts of radiation. Following our bombings, birth defects reported in Iraq are soaring. A World Health Organization survey tells us that in Fallujah half of all babies were born with a birth defect between 2007 and 2010 with 45 per cent of all pregnancies ending in miscarriage in the two years after 2004.
Another thing we face that has been deadening to the human spirit has been the increasing “othering” of people who we are made to think are different from us. Frequently now that’s immigrants from other countries who are black or brown. Often that “othering,” as with Muslims, is stoked in ways that may cause us to support or tolerate wars in which those others suffer most and towards whom hostilities are often officially directed. We may also forget how our wars and military activity push the flow of populations forcing people to migrate across boarders, as, for instance, with those leaving Honduras after our country helped bring about the military coup that replaced the government there.
Also basic and underlying so many of our problems are racial, income and wealth inequality with concomitant inequality in power and influence. These are things that Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr., who practiced ministry through activism and activism through ministry, labored to eliminate. Not long before he was assassinated, King also began to speak out against the Vietnam war saying the great challenge facing mankind is to get rid of war. Before he did so, he carefully weighed cautions urged on him that as a civil rights leader he shouldn’t do so, that it would undermine support for his civil rights work, split his coalition, and that these issues should not be joined together. But King concluded that the issues were tied together and decided that he would address them on that basis.
When King expressed his opposition to the war in his very famous “Beyond Vietnam -- A Time to Break Silence,” delivered in this city’s Riverside Church, New York City, April 4, 1967, one year to the day before his assassination, he said he was “increasingly compelled to see the war as an enemy of the poor and to attack it as such.” He spoke of the disproportionate toll that waging war exacted on the poor and spoke of the poisoning of America’s soul. . . So it is today.
War is profitable business. It busies packs of lobbyists who know a great deal more about often secret budgets than we, as the public, will ever learn. But that profit drains the resources of our society enfeebling our ability to accomplish so much else. The Pentagon and military budget is about 57% of the nation’s discretionary budget. If all of the unknowable black box spending that goes into the Military-Industrial-Surveillance Complex were included, that percentage could well bump up higher. We spend more on military spending than the next ten countries combined (or seven, depending on the year and who calculates), and we spend much more than all the rest of the countries in the world left over after that. Of course, much of that spending by other countries is on arms we supply making the world dangerous.
We may not fully know about or have a complete accounting of all the dollars we spend in these areas, but, in May of 2011 after the U.S. announced that it had killed Osama Bin Laden, the National Priorities Project calculated that, as of that time, “in all, the U.S. government has spent more than $7.6 trillion on defense and homeland security since the 9/11 attacks.” Point of reference: a “trillion” is one million millions.
Just the increase in the military spending in the last two years since Trump came in is as much as Russia spends on its entire military budget ($66 billion). Similarly just that increase is greater than the entire military budgets of Britain ($55 billion) or France ($51 billion).
Our fixated disposition to keep spending more is entrenched: Even Elizabeth Warren, a senator from Massachusetts who promotes herself as a left wing progressive, voted in 2017 to increase the defense budget by $80 billion, surpassing the $54 billion increase requested by President Trump. 60% Of House Democrats voted for a defense budget far bigger than Trump requested.
Perhaps most disquieting and insidiously corrupting to our morality and our souls are the pretexts we adopt to justify going to war and to abide its horrors, particularly when we leave those pretexts dishonestly unexamined. The public flailed and many among us continue in their confusion, unable to sort out that Iraq did not attack the United States or have weapons of mass destruction before the second war that we unilaterally and "preemptively" launched to invade that country. Before our first Gulf War attack on that country there were no slaughtered `incubator babies’: That was just a brazen, cynically staged public relations scam. Similarly, how few of us know and recognize that Afghanistan did not attack the United States on 9/11– We precipitously invaded that country because the government there was at that time asking that procedures be followed and proof furnished before it would assist in finding and turning Osama Bin Laden over to the United States.
The foreign country that was most involved in 9/11, and from where almost all of the men identified as the alleged 9/11 hijackers came, is Saudi Arabia. Saudi Arabia is the country to which we are selling massive amounts of weapons (making it that world’s third biggest military spender) and it is the country with which we are deeply involved perpetrating war crimes against Yemen.
In the Vietnam War, our second longest war, it was the Gulf of Tonkin incident that, not being what it seemed nor reported to be, was the pretext for war.
Perhaps hardest and most challenging to our susceptibilities as caring people striving to be spiritual and attentive to justice are the pretextual manipulations to which we are subject in regard to what Noam Chomsky and Edward Herman spotlighted as the selective distinguishing between “worthy” versus “unworthy” victims. “Worthy” victims are those who, whatever their number, deserve our outrage and are a basis for calls for the international community to mobilize toward war. “Unworthy victims” are those who can die en mass without attention or recognition like the tens of thousands of Yemeni children who have died for lack of food, water and medicine because of Saudi Arabia’s blockade assisted by the U.S.. Often, as with Palestinians removed from their homelands, these victims are blamed for their own victimhood.
Additional layers of pretext pile up when we encounter journalists and whistleblowers willing to be the messengers of war crimes. We punish those messengers while, concurrently, there is no consequence for those who perpetrate the war crimes. Often the perpetrators are promoted to higher office. That includes those who illegally torture others to coerce useless, undependable, and likely false “confessions.” Thus we punish and torture Julian Assange and Chelsea Manning for exemplifying what Daniel Ellsberg called “civil courage.” Thus we vindictively send CIA whistleblower John Kiriakou to prison for disclosing his agency’s torture program.
Wikileaks, Julian Assange’s organization has published much that is embarrassing to the United States and those in power, much of it is particularly embarrassing to the U.S. military. Wikileaks has never published anything that was untrue, but the truth of what it has published is disruptive to the official narratives of the war establishment. That establishment has been seeking vengeance against and to neutralize Assange since events in 2010 when in April Wikileaks published documenting gunsight video footage, under the title of “Collateral Murder,” of a US drone strike on civilians in Bagdad provided by Chelsea Manning. The New York Times and Washington Post did not respond to Manning’s attempts to publish that same footage through them or other evidence of U.S. war crime in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Anyone who wants proof of the pretextual nature of the United States’ persecution of Julian Assange and of the ghastly and sometimes illegal, abuse of inordinate power against Assange should watch or listen to Chris Hedges June 8, 1019 “On Contact” interview with UN Special Rapporteur on Torture Nils Melzer (“On Contact: Julian Assange w/UN Special Rapporteur on Torture”- Chris Hedges is an ordained minister in the Presbyterian Church). The attacks against Assange began with a highly orchestrated campaign of character assassination. They have progressed to things far worse. Both Assange and Manning (who was pardoned from a 35-year sentence after seven years of confinement that included the torture of Manning) are now being held in prison, no end in sight, for no crimes of which they have been convicted. I think we have to agree with the criticism of this as psychological torture. The continued torture of Manning is an effort to get at Assange even if that were to involve forcing Manning to lie.
The United States wants Assange extradited to the Unites States to be tried for the crime of practicing journalism that was unflattering to the United States government. Somehow we have the highhandedness to conceptualize this journalism to be treason although Assange is a foreign national. Assange faces no other charges. Under the laws pursuant to which the U.S. would try him, Assange, like the exiled Edward Snowden, would not be permitted to introduce any evidence or argument that disclosing illegal U.S. activity or war crimes benefits the public. It’s said that the United States wants nothing more than a show trial and I think that must be considered obvious.
When Assange sensed in 2012 that trumped up charges in Sweden would be used as a subterfuge to transfer him to United States custody for such a show trial he obtained political asylum in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London. For this, a British judge sentenced Assange and had him serve 50 weeks in a high security prison for “bail jumping”; that’s just fourteen days short of the maximum possible sentence, although the obviously trumped up charges for which Assange had posted bail were withdrawn, negating the original bail terms as a result. A normal, typical sentence for bail jumping would have entailed only a fine, in a grave case, a much shorter prison sentence.
Britain was able to send police officers into enter the Ecuadoran Embassy to arrest Assange for “bail jumping” and then later hold him, without other charge for pending extradition to the United States, because of a change in the Ecuadoran government that was evidently CIA assisted, and as the United States was dangling financial aid for that country. Assange’s eviction from the embassy, along with his being simultaneously stripped of Ecuadoran citizenship, was done without due process.
The persecution of Assange casts a long shadow to intimidate other journalists, whistleblowers and activists as they themselves are being intimidated about disrupting the preferred narrative concerning America’s militarily asserted empire. Other providers of news simply lay low not reporting things. As neither the New York Times nor the Washington Post reported it, you may not have heard about the recent scary SWAT style arrest of journalist Max Blumenthal by Washington D. C. police hours after he reported about the United States government funding of the Venezuela Juan Guaidó coup team. Blumenthal was shackled and held incommunicado for an extended period. Not long after that the D.C. police went out to similarly arrest activist and journalist Medea Benjamin when she publicized the U.S. backing of coups in Venezuela and Bolivia.
With silenced journalists, will we, based on unchallenged pretexts, send our military into to change the government of Venezuela as there is talk of doing? In Bolivia the coup we sponsored has been successful without that. Meanwhile, there is talk of pretexts for military actions against Iran, Russia, North Korea.
Journalists who still show courage, are subject to exile, sometimes self exile, from their journalistic homes, to alternative media outlets, where, like Assange, they are likely to be less heard and will be more vulnerable. Journalist Tareq Haddad just announced that he resigned from Newsweek because that publication has been suppressing a story of his. His story was about the whistleblower revelations of buried evidence that the supposed 2018 Duoma chemical attacks by Syrian president Assad on his own people was fairly obviously a concocted fabrication when it was used as a justification for the U.S. to bomb Syria. Remember our bombings of Syria? The was another in 2017. It was for such bombings of Syria the press declared that Trump was finally `presidential,' and, as the cruise Tomahawk missiles launched, MSNBC’s Brian Williams spoke of being “guided by the beauty of our weapons” using the word “beautiful” three times in 30 seconds.
The strenuous suppression of these voices like Assange's that would disrupt official narratives shows how the conduct of war has a tight moral link to the choices we make to speak out against war and against the suppression of the voices that oppose war. In his sermon against war at Riverside Church that day one year to the day before he was killed, Reverend Martin Luther Kings Jr. said that, “men do not easily assume the task of opposing their government's policy, especially in time of war.”
King also said that, when assuming the task of such opposition, it was difficult to break free of the “conformist thought” of the surrounding world. Indeed, with the complicity of a much more conglomerately owned corporate media than in King’s time, it seems as if there is a secularly consecrated catechism of what we know we as Americans are not supposed to say, what we must veer away from and avoid. We subscribe with almost religious ferocity to the belief that American exceptionalism justifies all our actions in the world. It feels, as if in our bones, that we know that to violate this proposition and say something else would create a rumbling disturbance in the force (you know, “Star Wars”). Or is our silence, merely something less profound than that, just the equivalent of what we think would be an exceptionally super-rude topic to bring up at a family Thanksgiving or holiday diner?
Dr. King correctly foresaw that there would be significant prices he would have to pay for speaking out against our country’s war. He concluded that he had to do so, that he had to `break the silence,’ despite the prices he knew he would have to pay. He felt that doing so was the only thing he could do and remain true to himself and his causes.
Ana, I have no doubt that there would be prices you would have to pay if you spoke out for peace; if you spoke out against war. I also acknowledge that there are prices our congregation could face. Relatively recently the FBI has raided the homes of public nonviolent peace activists who have long, distinguished careers in public service. (And the FBI has also been investigating nonviolent climate activists and Black Lives Matters activists.) But I urge you to deliver a sermon about peace because it would be the right thing to do. Perhaps it could go along with a rededication of our sanctuary’s Peace Chapel. And, perhaps, if you would give a sermon like Dr. King gave against our wars, it might do more than just be a good thing in its own right: It might serve as a model for the ministers of other congregations who would follow suit.
Maybe, as in Martin Luther King Jr.’s day, there can again be a time when people see the call for peace as a spiritual issue and our church’s, temples and congregations again take a lead role in calling for peace and an end to our wars.
Have I made the subject of peace sound as if it is complicated? If so, I am sorry. That can be a problem in itself. At bottom, shouldn’t this all be so simple? Peace, supporting peace, speaking out for peace. . Something very simple.
Last night I had the strangest dream
I never dreamed before.
I dreamed the world had all agreed
To put an end to war.*
* From “Last Night I Had the Strangest Dream,” by Ed McCurdy- 1950,
a precursor of sorts to “Imagine” by John Lennon and Yoko Ono- 1971
Sincerely,
Michael D. D. White
Because the censorship and information control subjects of this letter are so important, we are also publishing it here at Citizens Defending libraries. It is also being published at National Notice, also written by Mr. White.
December 19, 2019
Re: An Open Letter Requesting A Sermon About Peace
Dear Reverend Ana,
Last spring my wife Carolyn and I invested heavily in our congregation’s fund raising lottery trying to win the prize of choosing a topic for a sermon you would give. We didn’t win. Had we won, we would have challenged you with what you might not have found an easy subject, speaking about Julian Assange, American war crimes, and the U.S. pursuit of empire. Our choice of subject would not have been be to vex you with its difficulty, but to ask you to speak to what could be such a simple concept: Peace. If, these days, conversations about peace are avoided as difficult, what better than address that difficulty in a sermon?
Giving it some consideration, I think that making a worthy case for a sermon topic is a good a way to gain the prize of having you speak on a topic we care about, as good a way as investing in fund raising lottery tickets. Therefore I will try.
Is peace a spiritual thing? Is talk about our common humanity, our common bonds, and about surmounting the blindness that fractures our relationships a proper thing to address in religious terms? I acknowledge I’m being obvious here. What I just referred to is supposed to be basic and elemental to the great faiths.
I grew up in the Vietnam War era and I remember churches and church people taking the lead in saying that the wars we waged in Indochina were wrong. These days we, as country, are more military extended than ever. My oldest daughter is now about to be twenty-nine years old. We had already started bombing Iraq when she was born in January. The war in Iraq is just one of the perpetual wars that has continued essentially for the entirety of her life. All of our wars are long now. As formally measured by some, the War in Afghanistan, with its later beginning, has surpassed the Vietnam War as our country’s longest war.
These days the United States has been bombing nine countries, ten if you include, as we should, all of the U.S. participation in the bombing of Yemen, the other nine countries being: Mali, Niger, Somalia, Libya, and then, in the Middle East, it’s Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria. We have 800 military bases in other countries. With practically no comment or attention from us, President Obama opened new military bases across Africa.
A peace symbol hangs prominently in our Unitarian Universalist congregation’s sanctuary where our sermons are given. We begin every Sunday service singing the words: “let peace, good will on earth be sung through every land, by every tongue.” Christmas comes every year, and every year we evoke and extol, as is customary in the Christian tradition, the image of Jesus as the “Prince of Peace.” In our congregation’s Weaving Social Justice Committee we have discussed the prospect of rededicating the side chapel within the sanctuary that is known as the “Peace Chapel” to that cause. In our list of candidate films for the social justice film series we are working on we have films about the injustice of war. . .
. . . But, by and large, we hardly ever actually say anything about peace or the need to end the perpetual wars for which our country is now responsible. Has there been any sermon in our sanctuary on the subject of peace? I can’t recall one.
I was not at the Unitarian Universalist General Assembly in June this summer, but I talked with people who went, and I looked over the multi-day program. I was told and I saw that there were no sessions on the subject of peace. Nor was anything said about the antithesis thereof, war, although we are deeply embroiled in wars to the point that they are inescapably always in the background our daily American lives.
Our congregation through its leaders including members of the social justice committee is now reaching out to other congregations in our city and to their social justice actors to coordinate collective activism on the issues important to all of us. The importance of peace activism has not been mentioned in those discussions no matter that it is integrally related to virtually every other issue that is being discussed of common interest. Has the subject of peace somehow been tagged as off-limits? Is peace now too controversial to be discussed by and among religious communities?
Other social issues have attracted the attention of organizing Unitarians and have been the subject of multiple sermons. I understand and support that and among them are issues like the climate change chaos catastrophe emergency. The climate emergency is an existential threat to all of humanity. When the Democratic National Committee ordered that there be no debate focused on the single issue of climate change– the DNC actually forbade Democrats from participating in any such debate organized by anyone else– the case was made that the existential issue of climate is so fundamental that it is intertwines with and underlies virtually every other issue that’s important. There are other issues like that; issues that are inextricably related to society’s other major issues.
Our American wars together with the rest of our military interventions that stoke conflict in other countries are far too often wars which are very much about the extraction of oil and fossil fuels. Moreover, overall our wars help keep in place the systems that continue to vandalize our planet, exterminating its ecosystems. Further, the US military is one of the largest polluters in history, “the single-largest producer of greenhouse gases (GHG) in the world,” and that the Pentagon is responsible for between “77% and 80% of all US government energy consumption” since 2001. The US military is consuming more liquid fuels and emitting more climate-changing gases than most medium-sized countries, polluting more than 140 countries. Obscuring the reporting on this, the United States, which exempts its military from environmental laws, insisted on exemptions from reporting of the military emissions of all countries from climate agreements. The U.S., has itself escaped such reporting by exiting the Paris Climate Accord.
It is not clear, but these staggering figures about fossil fuel use probably don’t include the fossil fuel consumption related to the initial manufacture of weapons. Consider also that replacement, or nonreplacement, of what is bombed, burned and incinerated also must entail substantial additional environmental costs.
It is not just greenhouse gas emission pollution that the military produces: In 2010, a major story that went largely unreported was that the U.S. Department of Defense, as the largest polluter in the world, was producing more hazardous waste than the five largest US chemical companies combined, and that just some of the pollutants with which it was contaminating the environment were depleted uranium, petroleum, oil, pesticides, defoliant agents such as Agent Orange, and lead, along with vast amounts of radiation. Following our bombings, birth defects reported in Iraq are soaring. A World Health Organization survey tells us that in Fallujah half of all babies were born with a birth defect between 2007 and 2010 with 45 per cent of all pregnancies ending in miscarriage in the two years after 2004.
Another thing we face that has been deadening to the human spirit has been the increasing “othering” of people who we are made to think are different from us. Frequently now that’s immigrants from other countries who are black or brown. Often that “othering,” as with Muslims, is stoked in ways that may cause us to support or tolerate wars in which those others suffer most and towards whom hostilities are often officially directed. We may also forget how our wars and military activity push the flow of populations forcing people to migrate across boarders, as, for instance, with those leaving Honduras after our country helped bring about the military coup that replaced the government there.
Also basic and underlying so many of our problems are racial, income and wealth inequality with concomitant inequality in power and influence. These are things that Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr., who practiced ministry through activism and activism through ministry, labored to eliminate. Not long before he was assassinated, King also began to speak out against the Vietnam war saying the great challenge facing mankind is to get rid of war. Before he did so, he carefully weighed cautions urged on him that as a civil rights leader he shouldn’t do so, that it would undermine support for his civil rights work, split his coalition, and that these issues should not be joined together. But King concluded that the issues were tied together and decided that he would address them on that basis.
When King expressed his opposition to the war in his very famous “Beyond Vietnam -- A Time to Break Silence,” delivered in this city’s Riverside Church, New York City, April 4, 1967, one year to the day before his assassination, he said he was “increasingly compelled to see the war as an enemy of the poor and to attack it as such.” He spoke of the disproportionate toll that waging war exacted on the poor and spoke of the poisoning of America’s soul. . . So it is today.
War is profitable business. It busies packs of lobbyists who know a great deal more about often secret budgets than we, as the public, will ever learn. But that profit drains the resources of our society enfeebling our ability to accomplish so much else. The Pentagon and military budget is about 57% of the nation’s discretionary budget. If all of the unknowable black box spending that goes into the Military-Industrial-Surveillance Complex were included, that percentage could well bump up higher. We spend more on military spending than the next ten countries combined (or seven, depending on the year and who calculates), and we spend much more than all the rest of the countries in the world left over after that. Of course, much of that spending by other countries is on arms we supply making the world dangerous.
We may not fully know about or have a complete accounting of all the dollars we spend in these areas, but, in May of 2011 after the U.S. announced that it had killed Osama Bin Laden, the National Priorities Project calculated that, as of that time, “in all, the U.S. government has spent more than $7.6 trillion on defense and homeland security since the 9/11 attacks.” Point of reference: a “trillion” is one million millions.
Just the increase in the military spending in the last two years since Trump came in is as much as Russia spends on its entire military budget ($66 billion). Similarly just that increase is greater than the entire military budgets of Britain ($55 billion) or France ($51 billion).
Our fixated disposition to keep spending more is entrenched: Even Elizabeth Warren, a senator from Massachusetts who promotes herself as a left wing progressive, voted in 2017 to increase the defense budget by $80 billion, surpassing the $54 billion increase requested by President Trump. 60% Of House Democrats voted for a defense budget far bigger than Trump requested.
Perhaps most disquieting and insidiously corrupting to our morality and our souls are the pretexts we adopt to justify going to war and to abide its horrors, particularly when we leave those pretexts dishonestly unexamined. The public flailed and many among us continue in their confusion, unable to sort out that Iraq did not attack the United States or have weapons of mass destruction before the second war that we unilaterally and "preemptively" launched to invade that country. Before our first Gulf War attack on that country there were no slaughtered `incubator babies’: That was just a brazen, cynically staged public relations scam. Similarly, how few of us know and recognize that Afghanistan did not attack the United States on 9/11– We precipitously invaded that country because the government there was at that time asking that procedures be followed and proof furnished before it would assist in finding and turning Osama Bin Laden over to the United States.
The foreign country that was most involved in 9/11, and from where almost all of the men identified as the alleged 9/11 hijackers came, is Saudi Arabia. Saudi Arabia is the country to which we are selling massive amounts of weapons (making it that world’s third biggest military spender) and it is the country with which we are deeply involved perpetrating war crimes against Yemen.
In the Vietnam War, our second longest war, it was the Gulf of Tonkin incident that, not being what it seemed nor reported to be, was the pretext for war.
Perhaps hardest and most challenging to our susceptibilities as caring people striving to be spiritual and attentive to justice are the pretextual manipulations to which we are subject in regard to what Noam Chomsky and Edward Herman spotlighted as the selective distinguishing between “worthy” versus “unworthy” victims. “Worthy” victims are those who, whatever their number, deserve our outrage and are a basis for calls for the international community to mobilize toward war. “Unworthy victims” are those who can die en mass without attention or recognition like the tens of thousands of Yemeni children who have died for lack of food, water and medicine because of Saudi Arabia’s blockade assisted by the U.S.. Often, as with Palestinians removed from their homelands, these victims are blamed for their own victimhood.
Additional layers of pretext pile up when we encounter journalists and whistleblowers willing to be the messengers of war crimes. We punish those messengers while, concurrently, there is no consequence for those who perpetrate the war crimes. Often the perpetrators are promoted to higher office. That includes those who illegally torture others to coerce useless, undependable, and likely false “confessions.” Thus we punish and torture Julian Assange and Chelsea Manning for exemplifying what Daniel Ellsberg called “civil courage.” Thus we vindictively send CIA whistleblower John Kiriakou to prison for disclosing his agency’s torture program.
Wikileaks, Julian Assange’s organization has published much that is embarrassing to the United States and those in power, much of it is particularly embarrassing to the U.S. military. Wikileaks has never published anything that was untrue, but the truth of what it has published is disruptive to the official narratives of the war establishment. That establishment has been seeking vengeance against and to neutralize Assange since events in 2010 when in April Wikileaks published documenting gunsight video footage, under the title of “Collateral Murder,” of a US drone strike on civilians in Bagdad provided by Chelsea Manning. The New York Times and Washington Post did not respond to Manning’s attempts to publish that same footage through them or other evidence of U.S. war crime in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Anyone who wants proof of the pretextual nature of the United States’ persecution of Julian Assange and of the ghastly and sometimes illegal, abuse of inordinate power against Assange should watch or listen to Chris Hedges June 8, 1019 “On Contact” interview with UN Special Rapporteur on Torture Nils Melzer (“On Contact: Julian Assange w/UN Special Rapporteur on Torture”- Chris Hedges is an ordained minister in the Presbyterian Church). The attacks against Assange began with a highly orchestrated campaign of character assassination. They have progressed to things far worse. Both Assange and Manning (who was pardoned from a 35-year sentence after seven years of confinement that included the torture of Manning) are now being held in prison, no end in sight, for no crimes of which they have been convicted. I think we have to agree with the criticism of this as psychological torture. The continued torture of Manning is an effort to get at Assange even if that were to involve forcing Manning to lie.
The United States wants Assange extradited to the Unites States to be tried for the crime of practicing journalism that was unflattering to the United States government. Somehow we have the highhandedness to conceptualize this journalism to be treason although Assange is a foreign national. Assange faces no other charges. Under the laws pursuant to which the U.S. would try him, Assange, like the exiled Edward Snowden, would not be permitted to introduce any evidence or argument that disclosing illegal U.S. activity or war crimes benefits the public. It’s said that the United States wants nothing more than a show trial and I think that must be considered obvious.
When Assange sensed in 2012 that trumped up charges in Sweden would be used as a subterfuge to transfer him to United States custody for such a show trial he obtained political asylum in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London. For this, a British judge sentenced Assange and had him serve 50 weeks in a high security prison for “bail jumping”; that’s just fourteen days short of the maximum possible sentence, although the obviously trumped up charges for which Assange had posted bail were withdrawn, negating the original bail terms as a result. A normal, typical sentence for bail jumping would have entailed only a fine, in a grave case, a much shorter prison sentence.
Britain was able to send police officers into enter the Ecuadoran Embassy to arrest Assange for “bail jumping” and then later hold him, without other charge for pending extradition to the United States, because of a change in the Ecuadoran government that was evidently CIA assisted, and as the United States was dangling financial aid for that country. Assange’s eviction from the embassy, along with his being simultaneously stripped of Ecuadoran citizenship, was done without due process.
The persecution of Assange casts a long shadow to intimidate other journalists, whistleblowers and activists as they themselves are being intimidated about disrupting the preferred narrative concerning America’s militarily asserted empire. Other providers of news simply lay low not reporting things. As neither the New York Times nor the Washington Post reported it, you may not have heard about the recent scary SWAT style arrest of journalist Max Blumenthal by Washington D. C. police hours after he reported about the United States government funding of the Venezuela Juan Guaidó coup team. Blumenthal was shackled and held incommunicado for an extended period. Not long after that the D.C. police went out to similarly arrest activist and journalist Medea Benjamin when she publicized the U.S. backing of coups in Venezuela and Bolivia.
With silenced journalists, will we, based on unchallenged pretexts, send our military into to change the government of Venezuela as there is talk of doing? In Bolivia the coup we sponsored has been successful without that. Meanwhile, there is talk of pretexts for military actions against Iran, Russia, North Korea.
Journalists who still show courage, are subject to exile, sometimes self exile, from their journalistic homes, to alternative media outlets, where, like Assange, they are likely to be less heard and will be more vulnerable. Journalist Tareq Haddad just announced that he resigned from Newsweek because that publication has been suppressing a story of his. His story was about the whistleblower revelations of buried evidence that the supposed 2018 Duoma chemical attacks by Syrian president Assad on his own people was fairly obviously a concocted fabrication when it was used as a justification for the U.S. to bomb Syria. Remember our bombings of Syria? The was another in 2017. It was for such bombings of Syria the press declared that Trump was finally `presidential,' and, as the cruise Tomahawk missiles launched, MSNBC’s Brian Williams spoke of being “guided by the beauty of our weapons” using the word “beautiful” three times in 30 seconds.
The strenuous suppression of these voices like Assange's that would disrupt official narratives shows how the conduct of war has a tight moral link to the choices we make to speak out against war and against the suppression of the voices that oppose war. In his sermon against war at Riverside Church that day one year to the day before he was killed, Reverend Martin Luther Kings Jr. said that, “men do not easily assume the task of opposing their government's policy, especially in time of war.”
King also said that, when assuming the task of such opposition, it was difficult to break free of the “conformist thought” of the surrounding world. Indeed, with the complicity of a much more conglomerately owned corporate media than in King’s time, it seems as if there is a secularly consecrated catechism of what we know we as Americans are not supposed to say, what we must veer away from and avoid. We subscribe with almost religious ferocity to the belief that American exceptionalism justifies all our actions in the world. It feels, as if in our bones, that we know that to violate this proposition and say something else would create a rumbling disturbance in the force (you know, “Star Wars”). Or is our silence, merely something less profound than that, just the equivalent of what we think would be an exceptionally super-rude topic to bring up at a family Thanksgiving or holiday diner?
Dr. King correctly foresaw that there would be significant prices he would have to pay for speaking out against our country’s war. He concluded that he had to do so, that he had to `break the silence,’ despite the prices he knew he would have to pay. He felt that doing so was the only thing he could do and remain true to himself and his causes.
Ana, I have no doubt that there would be prices you would have to pay if you spoke out for peace; if you spoke out against war. I also acknowledge that there are prices our congregation could face. Relatively recently the FBI has raided the homes of public nonviolent peace activists who have long, distinguished careers in public service. (And the FBI has also been investigating nonviolent climate activists and Black Lives Matters activists.) But I urge you to deliver a sermon about peace because it would be the right thing to do. Perhaps it could go along with a rededication of our sanctuary’s Peace Chapel. And, perhaps, if you would give a sermon like Dr. King gave against our wars, it might do more than just be a good thing in its own right: It might serve as a model for the ministers of other congregations who would follow suit.
Maybe, as in Martin Luther King Jr.’s day, there can again be a time when people see the call for peace as a spiritual issue and our church’s, temples and congregations again take a lead role in calling for peace and an end to our wars.
Have I made the subject of peace sound as if it is complicated? If so, I am sorry. That can be a problem in itself. At bottom, shouldn’t this all be so simple? Peace, supporting peace, speaking out for peace. . Something very simple.
Last night I had the strangest dream
I never dreamed before.
I dreamed the world had all agreed
To put an end to war.*
* From “Last Night I Had the Strangest Dream,” by Ed McCurdy- 1950,
a precursor of sorts to “Imagine” by John Lennon and Yoko Ono- 1971
Sincerely,
Michael D. D. White
Friday, December 20, 2019
The Resignation of Tareq Haddad From Newsweek Adds One More Journalist To Our List Of Those Fired or Self-exiled From Mainstream Media Outlets Because They Expressed or Wanted to Express Views (Like Being Critical of U.S. Wars) Unacceptable to the Outlets They Were Working For- Newsweek Was Burying A Scandal
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| Former Newsweek reporter Tareq Haddad who resigned |
List of Journalists Fired or Self-exiled From Mainstream Media Outlets Because They Expressed or Wanted to Express Views (Like Being Critical of U.S. Wars) Unacceptable to the Outlets They Were Working ForThe story of is Tareq Haddad’s resignation from Newsweek is a spectacular one. He left because Newsweek was burying a scandal. The scandal was about the covering up of evidence, now with an every greater number of whistleblowers coming forward, that a supposed chemical attack in Duoma, Syria, supposedly by the Assad regime, was faked to provoke the United States to escalate military actions in the country. The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), which had plenty of evidence, apparently a preponderance of evidence, that the attack was faked, but whistleblowers from the organization have come forward to say that, due to improper pressure, when the OPCW officially reported about what happened that evidence was withheld so that a report with what appeared to be an opposite conclusion could be published.
This was the story that senior people at Newsweek worked extra hard to suppress when Haddad sought to report it. It is all quite spectacular. The details of what happened to Haddad, the way he was treated at Newsweek, when he pressed to make the rational case that this was an important story that needed to be reported are harrowing. They are harrowing, and extremely telling about how suppression of information works.
Haddad has now said of his choice:
. . On one hand, I could continue to be employed by the company, stay in their chic London offices and earn a steady salary—only if I adhered to what could or could not be reported and suppressed vital facts. Alternatively, I could leave the company and tell the truth.Caitlin Johnstone was one of the first reporting the story. See- Journalist: Newsweek Suppressed OPCW Scandal And Threatened Me With Legal Action, by Caitlin Johnstone, December 8, 2019
In the end, that decision was rather simple, all be it I understand the cost to me will be undesirable. I will be unemployed, struggle to finance myself and will likely not find another position in the industry I care about so passionately. If I am a little lucky, I will be smeared as a conspiracy theorist, maybe an Assad apologist or even a Russian asset—the latest farcical slur of the day.
You can find a later report here: Inside Journalist Tareq Haddad’s Spectacular Departure from Newsweek- Tareq Haddad’s exposé of the corruption and collusion at the heart of modern journalism is something long-discussed by academics, but rarely does such a clear example present itself. By Alan Macleod, December 20, 2019.
That later report emphasizes something else that Haddad stressed about suppression of information by mainstream corporate media quoting Haddad thus:
The U.S. government, in an ugly alliance with those the profit the most from war, has its tentacles in every part of the media — imposters, with ties to the U.S. State Department, sit in newsrooms all over the world. Editors, with no apparent connections to the member’s club, have done nothing to resist. Together, they filter out what can or cannot be reported. Inconvenient stories are completely blocked.That report links through to Tareq Haddad’s own very detailed account, complete with screen shots of emails from his senior editors, of how his story was suppressed and how Newsweek mobilized with not so subtle efforts to communicate without saying so that he was out of line to think these kinds of stories should get published. See: Lies, Newsweek and Control of the Media Narrative: First-Hand Account, by Tareq Haddad, December 14, 2019.
https://tareqhaddad.com/2019/12/14/lies-newsweek-and-control-of-the-media-narrative-first-hand-account/
Read Haddad's own report to learn about his documentation on the "imposters" in the media who sit in Newsrooms "with ties to the U.S. State Department."
If you want to absorb something more recent that shows just how reasonable, and sensibly grounded Haddad is, there is Aaron Maté’s interview of Haddad. Haddad does not come across as a grandstander, not in the least. See: Newsweek reporter quits after editors block coverage of OPCW Syria scandal- Journalist Tareq Haddad explains his decision to resign from Newsweek over its refusal to cover the OPCW’s unfolding Syria scandal, by Aaron Maté, December 19, 2019
For the video of Aaron Maté’s interview of Haddad see: Newsweek reporter quits after editors block coverage of OPCW Syria scandal, December 19, 2019.
Friday, November 15, 2019
After Scary SWAT Team arrest of Journalist Max Blumenthal By D.C. Police, A Similar Incident As Officers Go Out To Arrest Medea Benjamin: In Each Case It Was Apparently In Response To Their Publication Of U.S. Involvement In Coups, Venezuela and Bolivia
Here is more that is truly frightening about the threat to journalistic freedoms.
We posted previously about how in October Journalist Max Blumenthal published a Grayzone article about United States funding of lobbying by the Juan Guaidó team with which the U.S. tried to replace the Venezuelan government via a coup. . . And then, shortly thereafter, literally hours later, Blumenthal was arrested in a SWAT team style raid by Washington D.C. police (apparently coordinating with feds?), shackled and held incommunicado. See:
We posted previously about how in October Journalist Max Blumenthal published a Grayzone article about United States funding of lobbying by the Juan Guaidó team with which the U.S. tried to replace the Venezuelan government via a coup. . . And then, shortly thereafter, literally hours later, Blumenthal was arrested in a SWAT team style raid by Washington D.C. police (apparently coordinating with feds?), shackled and held incommunicado. See:
Scary SWAT Team arrest of Journalist Max Blumenthal After He Reports United States Government Funding of Venezuela Juan Guaidó Coup TeamHard of the heels of that incident, the Washington D.C. police similarly went out to arrest activist and journalist, CodePink Founder Medea Benjamin. And its alarming how similar their reason was, like messages are being very intentionally sent: Medea Benjamin was publicizing the U.S. backing of coups in Venezuela and Bolivia. Again, the ostensible reason for the police to go out and arrest Ms. Benjamin was a supposed “assault” that didn’t happen. In the end, Benjamin was not arrested. More about it from Democracy Now with an interview of Ms. Benjamin here:
CodePink Founder Medea Benjamin Threatened with Arrest After Protesting U.S. Foreign Interventions, November 14, 2019In each case, if you delve into it, you’ll find that the real thugs, are on the other side. That is not a reference to the Washington D.C. police, although their conduct and involvement in these matters is problematic. It’s a reference to the people supporting these coups seeking to trump up charges that were used to send those police out.
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