sust-mar: Six items from events to articles for your interest - Happy New Year!

From: "Tamara Lorincz" <tlorincz@dal.ca>
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Date: Fri, 2 Jan 2004 00:09:43 -0400
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Happy New Year Sust-Martians!

Six things for your interest...



1. "Crimes Against Nature"
Bush is sabotaging the laws that have protected America's environment
for more than thirty years - An Article By Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
http://www.rollingstone.com/features/nationalaffairs/featuregen.asp?pid=
2154

*This is a long read, but it is a well-written, eye-opening, thorough
account of the Bush administration's record on the environment.



2. "Call to All Nova Scotians" to comment on the PROPOSED AMENDMENTS TO
THE ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT REGUALTIONS. Comments are due by January
19, 2004. To see proposed changes, visit:
http://www.gov.ns.ca/enla/ess/ea/new.htm

You can also contact the Nova Scotia Department of Environment and
Labour at: 902-424-0575 or by email at policy@gov.ns.ca.



3. Mark Your Calendars for Jan. 17
"Resisting Empire - Building for Peace
From Iraq to Star Wars"
Thursday, January 15, 7:00 pm
Weldon Law Building, Room 105
Dalhousie University, 6061 University Ave.

This two part event consists of a free public discussion with Steven
Staples, Director of the Corporate-Securtity State Project of the
Polaris Institute, and author of "Breaking Rank: A Citizen's Review of
Canada's Military Spending" and a screening of acclaimed documentary
"Star Wars Dreams." Organized by the Halifax Peace Coalition, for more
info: please email Tamara Lorincz at tlorincz@dal.ca 



4. Mark Your Calendars for Jan. 21 and 22
"Days of Action for Fish and Fish Habitat"
On Weds, Jan. 21 at 12:00 pm (noon) we are meeting at the Nova Scotia
Community College on the corner of Bell and Quinpool for our parade to
let the fish/coral/ocean know we love them and to stop those draggers.
We will have a short rally at 12:45 pm at the Spring Garden Public
Library.

On Thursday, Jan. 22 at 6:30 pm we are having a panel discussion with
political and marine big wigs and a screening of "Empty Oceans Empty
Nets" in the Ondaatje Auditorium, FASS/McCain Building, Dalhousie
University. 

To help organize these events, please come to our next meeting on
Thursday, Jan. 8 at the Ecology Action Centre, 1568 Argyle at 5:30 PM.
For more info, please email Tamara Lorincz at tlorincz@dal.ca or phone
Mark Butler at the EAC at 429-2202.



5. There are still ways to get involved with the HRM Regional Planning
Process to ensure that our city is green, check out: 
http://www.region.halifax.ns.ca/regionalplanning/index.html



6. The last two paragraphs of this article by Geov Parrish, American
journalist, are very good! Plus, this is a good web site: 
http://www.workingforchange.com/index.cfm

Geov Parrish 
WorkingForChange.com
12.31.03   

2003 Media Follies!
Annual survey of the year's most overhyped and underreported stories

 This is the eighth year that I've looked at the most overhyped and
under- reported stories of the year. I began compiling the list in 1996
with the perception that the U.S. public, instead of getting the
information it needed to make informed decisions in a democracy, was
being distracted with an endless barrage of feel-good trivia and
official spin. 
Every year since, it's gotten worse, and the gulf between what people in
this country and those elsewhere in the world are told about the same
events has continued to widen. But the year 2004 will be a particularly
critical one in our nation's, and world's, modern history. The chain of
events set in motion by the U.S. invasion of Iraq is likely to take a
definitive turn; beyond that, the American public will be asked to pass
judgment on four years' performance of one of the most radical regimes
in our country's history. Understanding what's actually happening has
never been more important -- and spinmeisters' efforts to obscure what's
actually happening will be stronger and more technologically savvy than
ever. It's time to get smart. 

To that end, enter 2004 with our annual list of the past year's most
overhyped and underreported -- and misreported -- stories. Remember,
they told us they'd lie to us. They were telling the truth. 

Most Overrated Stories of the Year 

Saving Jessica Lynch On the basis of its subsequent media saturation --
books and TV instamovie included -- the bogus story of Jessica Lynch's
"rescue" narrowly outpolls the toppling of Saddam's statue as the most
sickening episode of government lying for political gain in recent
memory. (The "official" story of Saddam's capture may yet prove to join
this elite company.) 

Both the statue and Lynch stories were easily and quickly discredited in
foreign media -- and, eventually, in U.S. media as well -- but remain
iconic markers of the "heroic" Iraq invasion in the minds of many
Americans. In the case of the statue, what was presented as the joyous,
spontaneous post-victory celebration of a huge Baghdad crowd was quickly
revealed by non-network witnesses and wide-angle lenses to be a group of
at most 150 Iraqis -- probably paid by the Americans -- who with the
help of U.S. troops on site pulled down a statue of Saddam for waiting
TV cameras in an otherwise nearly empty plaza. 

The Lynch episode was even more cynical, particularly for its crass
exploitation of a young soldier who had gone through the undeniably
harrowing ordeal of being a POW. But she was captured after being
injured in a vehicular accident -- not, as the first Pentagon claimed,
after a heroic firefight. And the videotape of her "rescue" from an
unguarded hospital that she could freely walk away from involved the
filming of an elaborate Hollywood-style commando raid against an
off-camera foe that turned out to be completely fictitious. Both
episodes were important reminders that sometimes the camera does lie --
depending on who's holding it. 

Other lowlights of the year: 

Arnold Schwarzenegger runs for governor. Never before has a political
neophyte gained high political office by waging a campaign through
appearances on E! and Jay Leno. Let's hope it never happens again. (But
it probably will.) 

Michael Jackson and Kobe Bryant. Which is worse -- a sports superstar,
on trial for felony rape, who gets huge ovations in arenas across the
country because of the charges against him, or the dare-you-not-to-look
spectacle of a trial examining the alleged perversions of an
over-the-hill music superstar who is now longer barely recognizably
human, let alone black or male? 

The economic recovery. Also on the 2002 list. This year, it moved from
the realm of projecting a fictitious recovery from a highly selective
(and dubious) reading of economic tea leaves, to projecting a fictitious
permanent recovery from a highly selective (and dubious) reading of the
tea leaves of what is at best a temporary respite from misery. And what
the hell is the point of a "jobless recovery," anyway? 

And, of course, there are the perennials: bleeding that leads, overhyped
weather, and our secular religions: sports and shopping. Bread and
circuses, sans bread. 

The Year's Most Important Underreported Stories 

The Bush tax cuts have flopped. The flip side of the "recovery" stories.
This has also been on the list the last two years. But it's worth a
return engagement because most of the administration's economic claims
-- and assumptions for future planning -- are grossly fictional. Never
has an administration been so greedy for its own economic interests, or
lied so much about it. We'll be stuck with the bill for decades. 

Corporate corruption continues to run amok. Bush's 2002 "reforms" were a
farce. The problem isn't just the lack of regulatory enforcement -- it's
the entire system. 

Health care in America is in crisis. Bush's Medicare bill largely served
to make wealthy drug companies richer still; the so-called "Patient's
Bill of Rights" was a meaningless farce. Meanwhile, even a relatively
minor health problem can destroy the life savings of the nearly 50
million uninsured, and the far larger numbers whose insurance works
great so long as we don't get sick. The real story here is the countless
parasites unnecessarily making money in our health care system, and how
politicians would rather cater to them than help solve a crisis that,
sooner or later, affects each of us. 

Dennis Kucinich and Al Sharpton. Neither man has a chance for the
Democratic nomination. Yet both Kucinich and Sharpton have generated
fiercely loyal followings as the only two candidates in a crowded field
with the clarity and guts to challenge fundamental assumptions of the
Bush domestic and foreign policy agendas. Howard Dean's successful
candidacy wouldn't be possible without this pair on his flank, making
him look "more reasonable" even as corporate media ignores or ridicules
their campaigns. 

The Taliban is making a comeback. Bush's pledges to not abandon
Afghanistan turned out to be a cruel joke. Sure, our troops are still
there -- they're the only thing keeping CIA man Hamid Karzai in "power,"
albeit only in the capital city of Kabul and only during daylight hours.
Elsewhere, the same old brutal warlords are running the show, stealing,
murdering, and getting rich from record poppy harvests. The Americans
have so little influence they've resorted to quietly working with
"moderate" elements of the Taliban -- who, with the patience of any
society that has a history of several thousand years, are quietly
getting stronger again in the mountains. 

The peace movement was right -- and still is -- about Iraq. The fact
that the Bush Administration was lying about virtually every
justification for invading Iraq was something any inquiring reporter
could have exposed months before, not after, the invasion began. No ties
to Al-Qaeda. No weapons of mass destruction. No danger to U.S. security.
Dated, wildly exaggerated, or simply forged "intelligence." An invasion
that was illegal under any and every conceivable legal authority. And
peaceniks have continued to be right: the anonymous (and, in the U.S.,
almost entirely unreported) death of thousands of Iraqi civilians. Many
thousands more, including U.S. soldiers, will die from the radioactive
munitions. And now the country's being looted by the same bullies who
overran it. Saddam isn't the only government leader who deserves to
stand trial. 

The catastrophe that has been the U.S. administration of Iraq. Iraq's
guerrilla resistance is not the work of Saddam Hussein, or foreign
fighters recruited by Al-Qaeda and the like. It's the work of the
Americans -- specifically, it wouldn't exist except for the widespread
and steadily rising popular anger over the Americans' ongoing, utter
failure to provide any of the services normally associated with
government. Eight months into U.S. rule, looting is still so bad most
Iraqis won't leave home after dark. Usually there's no electricity to
see by, anyway, especially outside Baghdad. The U.S. occupiers have been
censoring Arab media, repressing the political parties they don't like
-- especially Shi'a fundamentalists -- making widespread mass arrests
with no semblance of a judicial system or due process (and widespread
torture allegations), and murdering civilians seemingly at will and with
no fear of consequence. Far from instilling democratic values,
Washington has done ev erything possible to avoid them -- from canceling
promised free elections to blocking the use of U.N. and other
technocrats with experience in building and nurturing civil society to
not doing that work itself. Hiding in their heavily fortified compounds
and armored convoys, the Americans remind many Iraqis of nothing so much
as the thugs they replaced. 

Privatization and corporate looting of Iraq. Meanwhile, the serious
looting isn't on the street -- not that Americans tried to stop that,
either, even at the invasion's height. It's in a privatization scheme
more sweeping than has ever been adopted in any poor country anywhere
else in the world. Iraq is literally being auctioned off, mostly to
well-connected American companies like Halliburton and Bechtel. Few
Iraqis have any of the new currency, let alone jobs -- those are all
going to Americans or to Kuwaitis, Saudis, or Southeast Asian nationals.
By the time Iraq is given the chance (albeit heavily rigged in D.C.'s
favor) to "rule itself," the country will look a lot like those houses
the Grinch visited before Christmas -- except that these Grinches will
never, ever get bigger hearts and give the stuff back. 

Israel's apartheid wall. Longer and taller than Berlin's, it's a
flagrantly illegal gambit to reduce Palestine to Bantustans; meanwhile,
the routine brutalization and humiliation of ordinary Palestinians
continues to grow. This, not Iraq, is the conflict upon which future
world peace depends, and Washington's role in worsening it has been
critical. Why so little attention? 

Africa, Africa, Africa. So much is flying under U.S. media radar, it's
hard to know where to start -- from Mugabe's terrorizing of Zimbabwe to
AIDS to the renewed national and regional depredations of Nigeria, a
country effectively run by the likes of Shell and Chevron, and whichever
local generals have the franchise this week. But as always the place to
start is Central Africa -- where a brutal, decade-long war has now
killed a staggering four million or more people, replete with
atrocities, civilian massacres, torture, sexual slavery, and lots and
lots of U.S.-made weaponry. The war's raison d'etre? The mineral wealth
of the eastern Congo, which includes several rare minerals used in the
production of computer screens, keyboards, and chips. Prominent among
the numerous American companies getting rich by paying "rebel" armies to
take over mining regions are -- surprise -- Halliburton and Bechtel.
This should be a scandal rocking the globe -- but it's sub-Saharan
Africa, whe re they don't value life the way we do [sic]. 

The collapse of the "Washington consensus." U.S. media has given a bit
of attention to the hypocrisy of the Bush Administration pushing a free
trade agenda while blithely continuing its price supports for domestic
steel and agribusiness. (Somehow, the arms trade never makes this list.)
But the bigger story is that despite Washington's enormous fiscal and
military clout, and the sobering example of Iraq for any who dare step
out of line, fewer and fewer countries are buying that "free trade"
bullshit. Since 2000, popular movements in nearly every country in South
America have determined who governs the country; this year, protesters
forced Bolivia's president into exile over a natural gas export scheme.
Lula, Brazil's newly elected, left-leaning president, has formed (along
with India and, increasingly, China) a caucus that is standing up to
Bush demands for the right to loot the global South. Both the WTO talks
in Cancun and FTAA talks in Miami broke down this fall. Popular outrage
over decades of destroyed economies isn't letting the elites who run
these countries acquiesce to Washington. Now that's democracy in action.


Bush v. Constitution There have been no, repeat, no publicly revealed
terror attacks foiled on U.S. soil since 9/11 -- only the trumped-up
cases of a few homegrown Muslim fantasy warriors. But state power and
erosion of civil liberties and the Bill of Rights continues to expand,
in the name of 9/11 and "terrorism". A leaked draft of a proposed
"PATRIOT II" bill caused a public uproar early in the year. A major
provision was then snuck through Congress anyway -- the right to seize
and examine any business's records, no warrant, judge, or jury needed.
Guantanamo's prisons continue to expand, allegations of torture and
border brutalizations keep cropping up in foreign media, and John
Ashcroft still has a job. The good news: increasingly, courts are
telling Bush to back off. The bad news: if reelected, Bush will likely
get to pick two or three new Supreme Court judges. 

The U.S. remains the biggest terrorist nation in the world. We're the
largest arms exporter. We're funding the next generation of Saddams in
places like Pakistan and Uzbekistan, we give Israel money and diplomatic
cover, we ignore international treaties and laws whenever we like. For
years, it was all done with an implied threat: our military will crush
any regime that strays too far out of line. With Iraq, the threat is no
longer implied; it's right out there for all to see. 

No combination of world powers has been able or willing to hold this
rogue state accountable for its transgressions. The only force that can
is the American public itself. In 2004, we'll have the chance. The
essential first steps: Educating ourselves, seeking out multiple
alternative news sources, and making up our own minds. The essential
next steps: use that knowledge, spread that knowledge, and get busy!!
--Geov Parrish 

***

Best wishes for 2004!

Tamara

Tamara Lorincz
BA, BComm, MBA, LLB
55 Willowbend Court
Halifax, NS CANADA B3M 3L3
(902) 443-2423
tlorincz@dal.ca
CESR: http://is2.dal.ca/~cesr/ 
EAC: http://www.ecologyaction.ca
HPC: http://hfxpeace.chebucto.org/
"A better world is possible"


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