In These New Times

“In these new times, in spite of the dangers, the most brutal force, the most fearful night, we are engaged in the fight to survive.” No Novo Tempo-Ivan Lins, Vitor Martins

Archive for April, 2009

Police attempt to recruit spy (recordings). Plane Stupid

Posted by smeddum on April 26, 2009

The recordings are here.

 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/audio/2009/apr/24/police-surveillance-intelligence-1

Posted in "War on Terror" | Leave a Comment »

Guilty of Being Poor

Posted by seumasach on April 26, 2009

The jailers of the 19th century — even in the pre-Civil War South — largely abandoned the practice of imprisoning people for falling into debt as counterproductive and ultimately barbaric. In the 1970s and ’80s, the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed that incarcerating people who can’t pay fines because of poverty violates the U.S. Constitution.

Apparently, though, some states and county jails never got the memo. Welcome to the debtors’ prisons of the 21st century.

“Edwina Nowlin, a poor Michigan resident, was ordered to reimburse a juvenile detention center $104 a month for holding her 16-year-old son,” the New York Times wrote in an editorial.

“When she explained to the court that she could not afford to pay, Ms. Nowlin was sent to prison. The American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan, which helped get her out last week after she spent 28 days behind bars, says it is seeing more people being sent to jail because they cannot make various court-ordered payments. That is both barbaric and unconstitutional.”

The details of Nowlin’s case are even more alarming than the Times editorial suggests. Not only was Nowlin under orders to pay a fine stemming from someone else’s actions, but she had been laid off from work and lost her home at the time she was ordered to “reimburse” the county for her son’s detention.

Despite her inability to pay, she was held in contempt of court and ordered to serve a 30-day sentence. On March 6, three days after she was incarcerated, she was released for one day to work. She also picked up her paycheck, in the amount of $178.53. This, she thought, could be used to pay the $104, and she would be released from jail.

But when she got back to the jail, the sheriff told her to sign her check over to the county — to pay $120 for her own room and board, and $22 for a drug test and booking fee.

Even more absurd, Nowlin requested but was denied a court-appointed lawyer. So because she was too poor to afford a lawyer and denied her constitutional right to have the court provide one for her, she couldn’t fight the contempt charge that stemmed from her poverty. And her contempt conviction only added to her poverty, as the fines and fees she was obligated to pay now multiplied.

“Like many people in these desperate economic times, Ms. Nowlin was laid off from work, lost her home and is destitute,” said Michael Steinberg, legal director of the Michigan ACLU. “Jailing her because of her poverty is not only unconstitutional, it’s unconscionable and a shameful waste of resources. It is not a crime to be poor in this country, and the government must stop resurrecting debtor’s prisons from the dustbin of history.”

Michigan isn’t the only place where you can be imprisoned for the crime of involuntary poverty. The same Catch-22 ensnares poor defendants daily in courtrooms across the country.

In 2006, the Southern Center for Human Rights (SCHR) filed a suit on behalf of Ora Lee Hurley, who couldn’t get out of prison until she had enough money to pay a $705 fine. But she couldn’t pay the fine because she had to pay the Georgia Department of Corrections $600 a month for room and board, and spend $76 a month on public transportation, laundry and food.

She was released five days a week to work at the K&K Soul Food restaurant, where she earned $6.50 an hour, which netted her about $700 a month after taxes. Hurley was trapped in prison for eight months beyond her initial 120-day sentence until the Southern Center intervened. Over the course of her incarceration, she earned about $7,000, but she never had enough at one time to pay off her $705 fine.

“This is a situation where if this woman was able to write a check for the amount of the fine, she would be out of there,” Sarah Geraghty, a SCHR lawyer, told the Atlanta Journal Constitution while Hurley was still imprisoned. “And because she can’t, she’s still in custody. It’s as simple as that.”

Georgia also lets for-profit probation companies prey on people too poor to pay their traffic violations and court fees. According to a 2008 SCHR report entitled “Profiting from the poor”:

In courts around Georgia, people who are charged with misdemeanors and cannot pay their fines that day in court are placed on probation under the supervision of private, for-profit companies until they pay off their fines. On probation, they must pay these companies substantial monthly “supervision fees” that may double or triple the amount that a person of means would pay for the same offense.

For example, a person of means may pay $200 for a traffic ticket on the day of court and be done with it, while a person too poor to pay that day is placed on probation and ends up paying $500 or more for the same offense.

The privatization of misdemeanor probation has placed unprecedented law enforcement authority in the hands of for-profit companies that act essentially as collection agencies. These companies, focused on profit rather than public safety or rehabilitation, are not designed to supervise people or connect them to services and jobs. Rather, they charge exorbitant monthly fees and use the threat of imprisonment and a variety of bullying tactics to squeeze money out of the men and women under their supervision.

For too many poor people convicted of misdemeanors, our state is not living up to the constitutional promise of equal justice under law.

In Gulfport, Miss., the municipal court started a “fine collection task force” to crack down on people who owed fees for misdemeanors. According to the SCHR Web site:

The task force trolled through predominantly African American neighborhoods, rounding up people who had outstanding court fines. After arresting and jailing them, the City of Gulfport processed these people through a court proceeding at which no defense attorney was present or even offered.

Many people were jailed for months after hearings lasting just seconds. While the city collected money, it also packed the jail with hundreds of people who couldn’t pay, including people who were sick, physically disabled and/or limited by mental disabilities.

The disregard of the justice system for the rights of poor people to equal protection and due process is cause for outrage. But it shouldn’t come as a surprise in an era when the government spends billions bailing out banks while letting foreclosures and unemployment ruin the lives of working people.

We need to build a movement, like the working-class struggles of the 1930s, that can demand an end to the inhuman practice of incarcerating people for no other crime than finding themselves at the bottom of the social ladder.

Eric Ruder writes for Socialist Worker where this article first appeared. Thanks to Alan Maass. Read other articles by Eric, or visit Eric’s website.

Posted in Financial crisis | Tagged: , , | Leave a Comment »

Is Iceland on Its Way into the EU?

Posted by seumasach on April 26, 2009

 

Iceland Review

26th April. 2009

The election on Saturday could be historical in more than one way. The left wing parties, that form the current coalition government, won a clear majority. Both parties strengthened their position in Althingi, Iceland’s Parliament. This would seem to be a clear indicator that the two parties would continue their cooperation into the new term. However, there are some issues on which they disagree profoundly. This was not a big problem in the care-taking government that was formed in February. Now the parties have to agree on a plan for reconstructing the economy and in some way Icelandic society. Here real differences arise.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Revolution in Iceland | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

Notice of Upcoming Public Forum and Inquiry into RCMP, church and state complicity in the death and disappearance of aboriginal people

Posted by seumasach on April 26, 2009

April 23, 2009
Occupied Squamish Nation Territory
Vancouver:

Hidden From History

Hidden from History, the popular public affairs program at Vancouver Co-op Radio that is now in its ninth year of broadcasting, plans to sponsor a public forum and inquiry into the evidence of RCMP, church and state complicity in the death and disappearance of aboriginal people, both presently and historically.

This forum will be broadcast and filmed live in the downtown eastside of Vancouver, where many native people have died, disappeared and been assaulted and tortured by the police and other agencies.

Eyewitnesses to the alleged complicity of these forces in the ongoing genocide of native people will speak at the event and present their evidence. The RCMP, government and church officials alleged to be implicated in this genocide will be invited to attend, present their defense, and engage in this public debate and inquiry.

The evidence and statements made at this forum will be recorded and sent to international human rights and indigenous groups that are monitoring these matters. International observers will be present at this forum for security and monitoring purposes.

Of primary interest at this forum and inquiry will be the alleged existence on Canada’s west coast of police and state-protected pedophile, “snuff” film and human organ blackmarket networks which prey on aboriginal women and children, the homeless and other marginal groups.

This event is the first in a series of public inquiries being organized by The Friends and Relatives of the Disappeared, aboriginal elders and residential school survivors, under the auspices of the non-governmental body, The International Human Rights Tribunal into Genocide in Canada.

The event is expected to commence during the summer months and will extend into the fall.

To take part in this forum in any way, please contact the organizers at this email address. All correspondence will be conducted in strict confidence.

Respectfully,

The Friends and Relatives of the Disappeared (Vancouver)
www.hiddenfromhistory.org

Emergency Contact Number: 1-888-265-1007 (messages)

Please contact the RCMP for their comments on these allegations, and whether they will be participating in the forum, c/o:
Cpl. Sabrina Mill, E Division Major Crimes Unit
email: sabrina.mill@rcmp-grc.gc.ca

Posted in Rights of indigenous peoples | Leave a Comment »

RCMP want to question Kevin Annett about his website and writings concerning Missing Women

Posted by seumasach on April 26, 2009

April 18, 2009
Vancouver, Canada:

Hidden From History

On April 14, Cpl. Sabrina Mill of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police’s “E” Division Major Crime Section wrote to Rev. Kevin Annett and asked to meet with him regarding evidence Kevin has compiled and published concerning the disappearance of women in Vancouver’sdowntown eastside and the alleged involvement of RCMP officers in their abduction.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Rights of indigenous peoples | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Gold – The Yuan Goes Global – Consequences

Posted by smeddum on April 26, 2009

 

Gold – The Yuan Goes Global – Consequences!

By: Julian D. W. Phillips, Gold/Silver Forecaster – Global Watch -GoldForecaster.com 


 


– Posted Sunday, 26 April 2009 |  Source: GoldSeek.com 

For years now we have been warning of the decline of the $ as the globe’s reserve currency.   The threat is not so much that the monetary policies of the U.S. are cheapening the worth of the $, but that these are pressing so many other nations to search for ways to avoid the US $ in international dealings.  China has now taken a momentous, structurally adjusting step to change matters in their favor.  

 

The bulk of international trade transactions have nothing to do with the U.S. except through the use of the $ to denominate their trade.   Approximately 75% of global trade is denominated in the U.S. $ in this way.   But the volatility of the U.S. $ has distorted and damaged, this aspect of global trade.   Thus has been created an ideal environment for gold to rise as its importance in the changing global monetary system grows again. Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Financial crisis, Multipolar world | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

‘We have to assume’ swine flu is in Ontario, health official warns

Posted by alfied on April 25, 2009

Healthzone.ca

A new strain of never-before-seen influenza that has surfaced in Mexico and in parts of the U.S. has international health authorities on guard and sparked fears of a worldwide flu pandemic. Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Ecological and Public Health Crisis | Leave a Comment »

German FM to US: Remove Nukes

Posted by alfied on April 25, 2009

Antiwar.com

German FM to US: Remove Nukes
Making Europe a Nuclear Free Zone Means Taking US Nukes From Germany
by Jason Ditz, April 24, 2009

In the lower house of the Bundestag, German Foreign Minister and Vice-Chancellor Frank-Walter Steinmeier today called for the United States to remove its nuclear arsenal from German soil. Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Drive to Global War | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

The disappearing bees: CCD and electromagnetic radiation

Posted by seumasach on April 25, 2009

By Cailean Bochanan

17 February 2008

Timeline

1973

“In 1973 Karl von Frisch won the Nobel prize for a series of studies done in the 1940′s on the navigational ability of the honeybee. He found that they utilized both a sun angle compass and a polarized light system for navigation. Perhaps more amazing was their ability to communicate the vector and distance of a food source to other workers in the hive by means of a “dance” that used both the sun angle and the gravitational vector. While the sun angle and polarized light were quite efficient they would be absent on cloudy days. However, the bees were still able to navigate with the same precision under those conditions. There obviously had to be a back-up system of some kind available to these animals that was totally independent of these two cues.”

Electromagnetism and Life
http://www.ortho.lsuhsc.edu/Faculty/Marino/EL/EL3/Positional.html

1974

“In 1974, the Russian researchers Eskov and Sapozhnikov found that bees generate electromagnetic signals with a modulation frequency between 180 and 250 Hz when they do their communications dances.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Colony Collapse Disorder, Ecological and Public Health Crisis | Tagged: , , | 11 Comments »

Fidel Castro: Trapped by history

Posted by smeddum on April 24, 2009

REFLECTIONS OF FIDEL
Trapped by history

(Taken from CubaDebate)

 

 

Granma       

Fidel Castro Ruz
April 23, 2009

DANIEL’s appearance on National Television’s “Roundtable” was exactly as I had expected. He spoke with eloquence; he was persuasive, serene, irrefutable.

He did not offend, nor did he wish to offend any other Latin American country, but sticking to the truth in every minute of his appearance: Venezuela, Bolivia and Nicaragua, as spokespersons for the ALBA, expressly rejected the idea of the Final Declaration being presented as a consensus agreement. Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Multipolar world | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

Borrowing puts UK’s AAA rating in danger after Budget 2009

Posted by smeddum on April 24, 2009

 

The prospect of the UK losing its AAA sovereign credit rating, resulting in higher interest rates for companies and households, moved a step closer after ratings agencies voiced fears about the UK’s vast public debt burden.

Borrowing puts UK's AAA rating in danger after Budget 2009 

The Chancellor revealed in the Budget that the national debt will reach £1.4 trillion over the next five years Photo: EPA

Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s are reviewing the UK’s rating in light of the Chancellor’s revelation in the Budget that national debt will reach £1.4 trillion over the next five years. Spain, Ireland, Greece and Portugal have already been downgraded. Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Financial crisis | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

 
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