Tag Archives: human rights

Omer Goldman and the Israeli Military

Ed Asner on Huffington Post

I’ve been around this world for awhile, and it’s pretty hard to leave me speechless. But when I learned about Omer Goldman – well, her story got me.

If you haven’t heard the name Omer Goldman yet, have a seat and grab your Kleenex. Her courage, and the courage of the other "Shministim" in Israel is utterly humbling. And amazing. I don’t use those words lightly.

As you can see from the photo, she’s young and lovely. 19 years old. She’s already served two terms in an Israeli military jail, where she had to wear an American military uniform (a gift to the Israelis) or face solitary confinement. Now, she’s out of jail for medical reasons. But as you read this, many of her young friends are in an Israeli prison for refusing to serve in the military there.

This new generation of young Israeli kids is standing up to the government – they call ’em "Shministim." The Shministim- all about ages 17, 18, 19 and in the 12th grade – are taking a stand. They believe in a better, more peaceful future for themselves and for Israelis and Palestinians, and they are refusing to join the Israeli army. They’re in jail, holding strong against immense pressure from family, friends and the Israeli government. They need our support and they need it today.

In her own words:

Send a letter to the
Israeli Minister of Defense.

I am Omer Goldman.
I am one of the Shministim.
I need your help.

I first went to prison on September 23 and served 35 days. I am lucky, after 2 times in jail, I got a medical discharge, but I’m the only one. By the time you read this, many of my friends will be in prison too: in for three weeks, out for one, and then back in, over and over, until they are 21. The reason? We refuse to do military service for the Israeli army because of the occupation.

I grew up with the army. My father was deputy head of Mossad and I saw my sister, who is eight years older than me, do her military service. As a young girl, I wanted to be a soldier. The military was such a part of my life that I never even questioned it.

Earlier this year, I went to a peace demonstration in Palestine. I had always been told that the Israeli army was there to defend me, but during that demonstration Israeli soldiers opened fire on me and my friends with rubber bullets and tear-gas grenades. I was shocked and scared. I saw the truth. I saw the reality. I saw for the first time that the most dangerous thing in Palestine is the Israeli soldiers, the very people who are supposed to be on my side.

When I came back to Israel, I knew I had changed. And so, I have joined with a number of other young people who are refusing to serve – they call us the Shministim. On December 18th, we are holding a Day of Action in Israel, and we are determined to show Israelis and the world that there is wide support for stopping a culture of war. Will you join us? Please, just sign a letter. That’s all it takes.
 

So, there you go. Omer Goldman. Now that you’ve met her, I’ll bet you won’t forget her. Better yet, damn it, do something for her, for the Shministim, for peace. Jewish Voice for Peace is the U.S. group heading things up for them. Here’s the link.

One more thing – I know that this can be a tough subject for many of us Jews. But, I find it hard to believe than anyone can look Omer in the eye and tell her that she has to risk her life and her future for Israel whether she wants to or not. It’s just not right. Especially during this time of year, when many of us are getting ready to celebrate a holiday about freedom- well, take a good long look at that photo. You’re celebrating her.

Thanks for reading and send your letter here.

Ed Asner

Cynthia McKinney: Dispatch from an International Conference Being Held in Cuba

Source:  On the Wilder Side

On the morning of December 10, 2008, Cindy Sheehan, Nelson Valdes, Saul Landau, and I signed a declaration as the U.S. delegates to an international conference assessing sixty years of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights sponsored by the Network of Networks in Defense of Humanity.  Here is our declaration:
We celebrate sixty years of failure.  Human rights have been converted from a noble goal into an instrument of foreign policy used by rich and powerful nations against the poorest and weakest people of the world.
In 2008, almost three billion people throughout the world suffer the most basic privations.
After sixty years of empty human rights rhetoric, we demand that governments focus their attention on fulfilling the promises of 1948.  We write this document on the parchment of environment, which everyone shares, and has warned us all to drastically change the ways in which mass production and consumption take place.
The United States is a member of the commonwealth of nations;
Benefits accrue to those who cooperate with the global community and view other countries as potential partners for the upliftment of humankind;
Unfortunately, the leadership of the United States Government has consistently been a disappointment to those of us who value the tenets and the possibilities for humankind embodied in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights;
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights affirms the rights of self-determination, the rights of women, the indigenous, and the rights of association, expression, and resistance to protect and preserve these precious rights;
Poverty, severe income inequality on one hand and greed and over-consumption by a few, on the other hand, deny for far too many on the planet universal application of the Universal Declaration;
Climate change, unsustainable agriculture, unbridled militarism, terrorism with impunity, nuclear proliferation represent threats to our planet and threats to humankind;
The current implosion of the engine of U.S. imperialism and global capitalism contains the seeds of a new global order in which the rights of humankind and the Universal Declaration can find universal application;
The incoming Barack Obama Administration has a unique opportunity to make a clean break with the policies of the past, including installation of dictatorships, campaigns of invasion, terror, and slander, torture, and occupation, and can build bridges of peace and justice with dignity and respect to Africa, Latin America, and Europe;
Therefore, we call on the President-elect to put the United States on a clear course of global fraternity by

a) invoking the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
b)  rejecting torture and terror and demonstrating this by closing and vacating Guantanamo  and
ceding to Cuba its rightful patrimony,

c)  ending the U.S. embargo,
d)  releasing the Cuban Five, and
e)  extraditing Luis Posada Cariles;
10. While this list is not exhaustive, it represents a much’needed down payment on hope   and change.
11.  We will disseminate this document through our respective networks.
Signed:  Saul Landau, Cindy Sheehan, Nelson Valdes, Cynthia McKinney

50th Human Rights Day – these documents say it all

Click the images to open a pdf of these documents (Adobe Acrobat needed)
                   

Other Resources
The Human Rights Education Center of Utah
First Steps – a Manual for Starting Human Rights Education
Electronic Resource Centre for Human Rights Education
The No-Nonsense Guide to Human Rights

Human Rights Day

Petition to Close the School of the Americas

Sign the petition to our new President
Barack Obama on-line.

to issue an executive order to Close Down the School of the
Americas

(renamed the Western Hemisphere Insititute for Security Cooperation).

Go to www.SOAW.org/petition

This petition will be presented to the new president in person
following his inauguration.

Cynthia McKinney: A Funny Thing Happened to Me on My Way to the Damascus Conference

Today, November 23rd, I was slated to give remarks in Damascus, Syria at a
Conference being held to commemorate the 60th Anniversary of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights and, sadly, the 60th year that the Palestinian
people have been denied their Right of Return enshrined in that Universal
Declaration.  But a funny thing happened to me while at the Atlanta airport
on my way to the Conference:  I was not allowed to exit the country.

I do believe that it was just a misunderstanding.  But the insecurity
experienced on a daily basis by innocent Palestinians is not.  Innocent
Palestinians are trapped in a violent, stateless twilight zone imposed on
them by an international order that favors a country reported to have
completed its nuclear triad as many as eight years ago, although Israel has
remained ambiguous on the subject.  President Jimmy Carter informed us that
Israel had as many as 150 nuclear weapons, and Israel’s allies are among the
most militarily sophisticated on the planet.  Military engagement, then, is
untenable.  Therefore the exigency of diplomacy and international law.

The Palestinians should at least be able to count on the protections of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights.  What is happening to Palestinians in
Gaza right now, subjected to an Israeli-imposed blockade, has drawn the
attention of the United Nations Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon, who noted
that over half of the civilians in Gaza are children.  Even The Los Angeles
Times criticized Israel’s lockdown of Gaza that is keeping food, fuel, and
medicine from civilians.  Even so, Israel stood fast by its decision to seal
Gaza’s openings.  But where are the voices of concern coming from the
corridors of power inside the United States?  Is the subject of Palestinian
human rights taboo inside the United States Government and its
government-to-be?  I hope not.  Following is the speech I would have given
today had I been able to attend the Damascus Conference.

Cynthia McKinney
Right of Return Congregation
Damascus, Syria
November 23, 2008

Thank you to our hosts for inviting me to participate in this most important
and timely First Arab-International Congregation for the Right of Return.
Words are an insufficient expression of my appreciation for being remembered
as one willing to stand for justice in Washington, D.C., even in the face of
tremendously difficult pressures.
Continue reading

Campaign to Elect Malik Rahim News

I and many others have personally contributed money to this campaign.

Pat LaMarche, 2004 Green Party Vice Presidential Candidate and Maine Green Party Member writes from NOLA:

Please tell everyone we love them and we have a campaign that actually could win.

please tell them that i was at the common ground collective today and met a woman returning to her home in the ninth ward tomorrow for the first time in three years.  tell them that she was so happy and it was malik and common ground that made it possible.  then tell them that after malik got her some lunch because her life is so hectic today… that she told me about her brother dying … drowning as he helped her save their children’s lives.

please tell everyone that this is a man they can help new orleans send to congress and we are doing the best we can… but we need the international leverage… money.

help!!!!!  anyone thinking of coming here to hellp….. donate the amount you would have paid for  your plane ticket.  he has such a great organization here… it only needs fuel for the engine and unfortuantely that’s money.

we can do this.

And from Cynthia McKinney:

Hello!

I’ve been busy contemplating so many questions from so many of you about where do we go from here. It is clear that many understand the challenges that we now face and what is becoming even clearer is that far more who didn’t vote for us are now looking to us for leadership on issues that we raised during the campaign like, for example, the bailout. I do have some concrete, solution-oriented ideas and will explore them with you in the days ahead. But I wanted to do something now that is important to all of us, because we still have one more Congressional election within our grasp.

We all know the importance of having someone of conscience in the United States Congress, someone of unbending commitment to our values and not just another representative of "business-as-usual" politics. Malik Rahim proved his mettle when we all watched in horror as events unfolded in New Orleans and the Gulf States. What a shame that African-American Hurricane Katrina survivors have had to file a discrimination lawsuit against Louisiana’s Road Home program in order to earn their right of return. With Malik in Washington, our own internally displaced population can finally see justice–and not just abundant hot air–delivered from the halls of the U.S. Capitol. We need Malik now and now Malik needs us. Bill Jefferson, the incumbent, has been indicted on 16 counts of corruption charges. We need Malik in that seat! For those of you who are close to Louisiana, please consider giving Malik a weekend to knock on doors and make important voter contact in the lead-up to the December 6 Louisiana General Election. Please visit http://www.votemalik.com/ and make a contribution today!

Here’s an article on Malik:

A Conversation with Malik Rahim
BY ADAM FLEMING
Pittsburgh City Paper, November 13, 2008
http://www.pittsburghcitypaper.ws/gyrobase/Content?oid=oid%3A55307

Malik Rahim has been many things. He’s been a Black Panther, an armed robber and a social activist. He is currently a Green Party congressional candidate in New Orleans; the election cycle for some Louisiana districts was delayed because of Hurricane Gustav. In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, Rahim co-founded the Common Ground Collective to provide assistance to low-income residents. This week, the Thomas Merton Center honors Rahim at its annual award dinner, on Wed., Nov. 12.

[Q] What was your reaction to Barack Obama’s victory?

None, other than to say that history was made. And now it’s: How we can really come up with a plan to clean our environment, and then second, do something to save our economy without just giving bailouts to the rich?

[Q] Are you upset that New Orleans wasn’t mentioned during the debates?

I don’t fault [Obama]. I fault our city’s administration for not really pushing that we are still really in dire need of assistance. The Saints are winning and Mardi Gras was a success, then hey, you’re going to have a lack of enthusiasm from any politician. It’s a city that’s based upon tourism, and they believe that telling the truth would be bad for tourists. [But people need] to see our school system and the deplorable situation that they’re in. To see the health-care agencies, and how in dire need the city is for hospital beds. If you look at the lack of opportunity in the midst of a construction boom. The tough questions that need to be asked aren’t asked.

We can’t talk about just building levy walls. We’ve got to talk about, how can we restore our wetlands? We’ve got to talk about some alternatives for when we have to evacuate. We need to constantly teach and train the residents of New Orleans about disaster-preparedness. We can’t go on living in New Orleans as if we’re living in Arizona.

[Q] What needs to change in the reconstruction of New Orleans?

We have to move into a clear direction of hope: How can we assure people that, hey, you can come back. You will be able to rebuild. That we’re not just concerned about the French Quarter or the Superdome. That every citizen in this city is important. Once we start doing this, then we will get the people’s involvement. Right now, if we had just the resources that we are spending on incarcerating non-violent offenders, the Ninth Ward would be rebuilt.

[Q] Do you consider yourself a radical?

Yes, indeed, I consider myself a radical. It pushes those who are not about peace and justice away, but for those who truly have made a stand for environmental peace and justice, I believe they gravitate towards the ideas that I have shown. It’s not like something that I’m saying is wrong. People have [come] and seen this.

[Q] You say the Common Ground Collective has organized thousands of volunteers in New Orleans. Are you upset that New Orleans wasn’t mentioned during the debates?

I don’t fault [Obama]. I fault our city’s administration for not really pushing that we are still really in dire need of assistance. … The Saints are winning and Mardi Gras was a success, then hey, you’re going to have a lack of enthusiasm from any politician. … It’s a city that’s based upon tourism, and they believe that telling the truth would be bad for tourists. … [But people need] to see our school system and the deplorable situation that they’re in. To see the health-care agencies, and how in dire need the city is for hospital beds. … If you look at the lack of opportunity in the midst of a construction boom. … The tough questions that need to be asked aren’t asked.

We can’t talk about just building levy walls. We’ve got to talk about, how can we restore our wetlands? … We’ve got to talk about some alternatives for when we have to evacuate. … We need to constantly teach and train the residents of New Orleans about disaster-preparedness. We can’t go on living in New Orleans as if we’re living in Arizona.

[Q] What needs to change in the reconstruction of New Orleans?

We have to move into a clear direction of hope: How can we assure people that, hey, you can come back. You will be able to rebuild. That we’re not just concerned about the French Quarter or the Superdome. That every citizen in this city is important. Once we start doing this, then we will get the people’s involvement. … Right now, if we had just the resources that we are spending on incarcerating non-violent offenders, the Ninth Ward would be rebuilt.

[Q] Do you consider yourself a radical?

Yes, indeed, I consider myself a radical. … It pushes those who are not about peace and justice away, but for those who truly have made a stand for environmental peace and justice, I believe they gravitate towards the ideas that I have shown. … It’s not like something that I’m saying is wrong. People have [come] and seen this.

[Q] You say the Common Ground Collective has organized thousands of volunteers in New Orleans. What’s so radical about people flocking to save a city in need?

Because of the fact that it has never been done: In the history of America, never have you had 18,000 predominantly whites come into an African-American community in solidarity. Not as exploiters or oppressors. This is the first time this has been done. And they have lived in those communities and have helped to rebuild. … Yeah, some people might call it radical, but there are people who classify Christ as being radical. Mohammad was a radical. I’m in good company.

[Q] What do you think of people calling Obama a radical for associating with Rev. Jeremiah Wright and former Weatherman Bill Ayers?

I believe it would take a small-minded person to tell anyone that has met with those individuals that "You are a radical." … This is a nation that was made by radicals. It came into existence by radicals. What’s the difference between Obama meeting with those individuals or someone meeting with George Washington? Who could be more radical than the founding fathers of this country?

[Q] After leaving New Orleans in the 1970s, you were arrested for armed robbery in California. What happened?

That’s what it took to save my life and to change the direction I was heading. At that time, just like most young black men, I was full of rage and felt like the movement had abandoned us, and we did some things that we are no longer proud of. … I didn’t come out of prison asking anyone for any hand. But I had a support mechanism, I had a family.

[Q] How did your time in prison shape your role as a prison-rights activist?

I know the plight. I know what is needed to turn people around. I know what is needed to do to build a better tomorrow. … We have to understand, we cannot jail everyone. It’s not the idea that people are born criminals. I’m a firm believer that that’s folly. I believe in conditions. We have to talk about cause and effect. What causes a person to resort to crime?

[Q] From your perspective in New Orleans, what’s missing from the current national political dialogue?

How can we transform this nation into the nation that it once was? At one time America was a great nation, and it wasn’t great because we were the most powerful or the richest, it was our ability to reach out and help people in need. And I believe we can do it again.

Lation Radio Talk Show Host Speaks on Latino Vote on Prop 8

I find it interesting what communities have supported to take away the rights of other human beings. Below is a commentary by a latino radio talk show host on the Latino vote for Proposition 8.

Commentary: Latinos should see gay marriage a civil right

By Fernando Espuelas
Special to CNN
Editor’s Note: Fernando Espuelas is the host and managing editor of Café Espuelas, a Los Angeles Spanish-language radio talk show and a media entrepreneur.


In spite of what seems to be sweeping approval for a progressive agenda, Latino support of Prop. 8  has exposed an entrenched bias against homosexuality at once profound and confounding.

A marginalized minority — Latinos — voting to take away the rights of another marginalized group — gays and lesbians — is like the kid who’s picked on in the third grade and only makes some headway when a punier kid comes along to take the punches instead.

Espuelas comments on the blitz of advertising swaying voters to vote against Prop 8 for really insane reasons:

Throughout this campaign, in an avalanche of Spanish-language commercials, Latinos were exhorted to vote "Yes" on Prop 8. A calm voice — a voice that could be selling baby wipes or low-fat cookies — told us that we should check yes "for the good of our families," that we must save everything that is good and decent about America.

Take away the civil rights of gays and lesbians so that we can be safe. But safe from what? The low-fat cookie voice of the radio commercial did not really say.

Latinos were asked not just to look away as these rights would be withdrawn, but to actively vote for the demolition of someone else’s family. We were implored to look at "them" as the unredeemable "aliens" that must be expurgated from our society. And we did.

Once you start the process of taking away other peoples’ fundamental rights — like food and water in a jail cell, or the right to drive and listen to whatever music you like — you must ask yourself where to draw the line, and who will draw it? What — and whose — rights will be next on the chopping block?

As Martin Luther King Jr. said, "Injustice anywhere is injustice everywhere." You’d think that as Latinos, proud and strong and willing to fight for our own rights,- we’d refuse to turn against the "punier kid," wouldn’t you?

That we might in fact stand up for that kid, tell the bullies to back off, the same way we told the bullies of racism and "the real America" to take a hike — and in the process carried Obama to triumph.

 


To District 10 West Jordan Voters: Defeat Butt-arse

Today’s Deseret News has a piece on the Utah Senate race in West Jordan in which incumbent Butt-arse (my pet name for Chris Buttars)  is fighting to retain.  According to the article, A Dan Jones poll reveals that the race is statistically a tie.

Butt-arse has demonstrated, through his words and actions over the years, that he is against anything that involves people making choices for themselves.  His mission is to have as much government interference in peoples’ private lives as possible.

Butt-arse’s past positions resulting in proposed legislation include anti-gay clubs in schools, anti-gay marriage or gay rights, and anti-evolution and pro-creationism theory ("Intelligent Design" – an attempt to refute evolution), as well as tuition tax credits (the precursor to vouchers).

Here’s a quote by Butt-arse that I found on the website linked below:

“Well, there’s a lot of things we vote on that we don’t understand, but I would rather stand on the principle of ‘let’s go for it.’ “ — Salt Lake Tribune quotes Chris Buttars

Be sure to check out this site and encourage everyone in District 10 to vote against Chris Butt-arse!

Save Me From My Senator – Chris Buttars Scares Me.

It was started as a result of dire frustration by a constituent of his. It’s chock full of really useful information, including
101 Reasons to Get Rid of Chris Buttars, Tools for Citizens to use in the Fight, news and blog articles, and lots more.

See my past posts on this candidate: Continue reading

Thou Shalt Not Lie: Tell Mormon Church President-Prophet Thomas Monson to stop funding Prop 8

Fight back against the lies and protect the fundamental rights of Californians
It’s time for Californians to fight back against the dishonest attacks of the “Yes on 8” campaign funded
by the Mormon Church. On Tuesday, we will deliver a letter to President-Prophet Thomas Monson at the Los Angeles Mormon Temple, demanding that his church stop funding the blatant lies of the “Yes on 8” campaign.

UPDATE WITH CBS NEWS VIDEO: ProtectMarriage.com — the organization leading the “Yes
on 8” campaign — is now embroiled in a shocking new scandal involving a blackmail letter to California businesses that donated to Equality for All, the organization leading the “No on 8” campaign.

Mark Jansson, a “Yes on 8” Executive Committee member and self-described member of
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, was one of four signers to this blackmail letter.

Although the CBS News video here does not address Jansson’s involvement, it does describe
the Prop 8 campaign’s scheme to shake down California businesses. This latest episode is yet another example of intimidation by the Mormon Church to pass Prop 8 and dictate public policy
to Californians.

Sign on to the petition to President-Prophet Thomas Monson demanding that his church cease funding the “Yes on 8” campaign.

Cynthia McKinney addresses “No tycoon left behind act”

Stole this from Green Party Watch which “stole that line from the national party mailing I got earlier today”.