Oct
24

Elderly Facing Poverty Crisis

Martin Feldstein, Top Reagan Adviser: Elderly Facing Poverty Crisis
Posted: 10/24/2012 7:37 pm EDT Updated: 10/24/2012 11:38 pm EDT

Link to Article in Huffington Post

NEW YORK — Martin Feldstein, a former top economic adviser to President Ronald Reagan, said too many elderly Americans are trapped in poverty.

“I think it’s really shocking that we spend about $500 billion a year on Social Security, and yet we have many, many old people in poverty,” said Feldstein, a Harvard economist, at The Economist’s Buttonwood Gathering on Wednesday. “Something’s wrong with that system.”

Feldstein said that the Social Security system especially fails women who aren’t in the workforce. He said that young and middle-aged women who lose husbands to death or divorce and don’t have enough work experience get left out in the cold.
“If they don’t have an income history of their own, the Social Security system fails them,” he said.

Feldstein served as chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers under Reagan from 1982 to 1984, when the poverty rate fell. But the poverty rate when Reagan left office was higher than it was when he took office.

Feldstein also said the government is failing to encourage Americans to save.
“We don’t encourage wealth accumulation,” Feldstein said. “We don’t encourage people to have personal retirement accounts, personal savings accounts that they can use when there are medical emergencies or unemployment emergencies, and I think we ought to both encourage and tax facilitate for middle- and lower-income people to accumulate liquid wealth.”

There is data that backs up Feldstein’s point. Nearly one in three middle-class Americans say they plan to work into their 80s because they cannot afford to retire earlier, according to a recent Wells Fargo survey. Roughly one in two Americans are not saving for retirement at all. And one in two Americans do not have enough emergency savings to cover three months of expenses, according to Bankrate.com.

Link to Video Regarding Social Security

Oct
24

Nasty and Disgusting

October 24-25, 2012 — Update 1x. Another institution engulfed in pedophilia scandal

First it was the Catholic Church, then Penn State, followed by the Boy Scouts that were swamped in major pedophilia scandals. Now, it is the venerable British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) — the Beeb — that finds itself at the center of a major pedophile scandal involving the late children’s and teen show star Jimmy Savile.

Savile, who entertained children and teens as the host of the BBC teen music program “Top of the Pops” and the children’s “make a wish come true” program, “Jim’ll Fix It,” is believed by police to have sexually abused some 200 male and female underage children and teens. After the BBC’s rival, ITV, recently ran an expose on Savile’s sexual abuse activities at the BBC, it emerged that last year the BBC spiked a similar documentary that was to run on its Newsnight program due to pressure from senior BBC officials.

The interference of senior network officials in spiking stories on pedophilia involving the network or its parent company is nothing new. In 1998, ABC killed a 20/20 story about pedophiles employed by Disney World because of pressure exerted by Michael Eisner, the CEO of Disney Corporation, which owned and continues to own ABC. The U.S. news media has been strangely quiet on the unfolding BBC pedophilia story. However, the connections between the BBC scandal and the U.S. media are only beginning to emerge. Mark Thompson, who was the Director General of the BBC when the Newsnight story was spiked, is slated to become the CEO of The New York Times Company next month. Thompson is already dodging questions about his role in spiking the Newsnight story. Another BBC director general, Greg Dyke, said mistakes were made in handling the Savile case.

The involvement of The New York Times in the emerging scandal may be one reason why the U.S. corporate media has been downplaying the Savile story. U.S. coverage of the BBC scandal is disproportionately less than the coverage the British media gave to the Jerry Sandusky/Penn State pedophile story.

BBC Director General George Entwistle has asked Newsnight editor Peter Rippon to step aside as the investigation of the spiking incident takes place. Tory MP Ann Main has tabled a motion before the House of Commons that would have the Leveson Inquiry, which is investigating the phone hacking scandal involving Rupert Murdoch’s Newscorp news entities being extended to the BBC. If the soft ball questions lobbed by Lord Leveson to Prime Minister David Cameron, and former Prime Minister Tony Blair and Gordon Brown are any indication, Leveson will sure to avoid anything that could be embarrassing to former Tory Prime Minsters like Heath and Thatcher.

There is also emerging evidence that Savile could not have gotten away with his serial predatory activities had he not had the assistance of others, including senior BBC personnel, as well as senior government officials, in perpetrating his crimes for such a long period of time. Savile had not only been knighted by the Queen but he was closely linked politically to a number of Tory political leaders, including Prime Ministers Ted Heath and Margaret Thatcher. It is being alleged that a former British Prime Minister set the ground for child pornography from abroad to be smuggled into Britain for the use of a powerful pedophile ring of which the Prime Minister, Savile, Glitter, and others were members.

Lord Patten, the former chairman of the Conservative Party, as well as the last Governor of Hong Kong and the one-time EU Commissioner for External Relations, is the chairman of the BBC. Patten is already coming under fire for having a major conflict-of-interest in covering up the possible involvement of a former Tory Prime Minister, said to be Heath, in a major pedophile ring.

Savile’s BBC programs ran on the network from 1959 through the 1980s and some of the sexual abuse reportedly took place at BBC studios and corporate offices. Savile, who was knighted by the Queen for his charitable work for children, openly sympathized with British rock star Gary Glitter, aka Paul Gadd, who was convicted in Britain in 1999 for possession of child pornography and convicted and jailed in Vietnam in 2006 for engaging in sexual acts with minors.

It has now been alleged by a former pupil of a boarding school for emotionally-distressed children in Surrey, where Savile is said to have procured young girls for sex, that Savile sexually molested a 14-year old girl in his BBC dressing room while Glitter raped a 13-year old girl. A third well-known BBC celebrity was said to have been present during the activity.

In 2007, Savile was interviewed “under caution” by police who were involving a 1970s sexual assault of a minor at the Duncroft Approved School for Girls in Surrey, which is now closed. The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said there was insufficient evidence in the case and no charges against Savile or anyone else were brought.

Savile is said to have preyed on children, particularly boys, at the Haut de La Garenne orphanage on the island of Jersey and at the children’s wards of Mandeville Hospital near Aylesbury, Broadmoor Hospital in Berkshire, and Leeds General Infirmary in Leeds. Police are following more than 400 leads in their multi-jurisdictional investigation of Savile that has already identified over 200 witnesses, many of them abused children who are now adults.

However, there are also a belief that the British police and other law enforcement agencies cannot be fully trusted to investigate the growing pedophile scandal that is said to reach into the upper echelons of the Conservative Party, the media, and even Buckingham Palace. U.S. journalist Leah McGrath Goodman was recently barred from entering the United Kingdom and Jersey because of her investigation of sexual abuse at the Haut de La Garenne children’s home in Jersey. Jersey official barred Goodman because she did not possess a valid “writer’s visa.” However, such visas do not even exist in Jersey.

BBC Jersey took part in the cover-up of the pedophile scandal on the island that was said to involve sex tourists like Savile and high-level government officials on the island. In 2008, the States of Jersey Police dropped an investigation of an indecent sexual assault by Savile at the Jersey home in the 1970s due to “lack of evidence.”

In 2009, the CPS dropped another investigation against Savile. Victims of Savile are now stating that the BBC pedophile was very organized.

Demands that Savile be stripped of his Order of the British Empire (OBE) knighthood have fell on deaf ears at Buckingham Palace, which maintains that upon death, a knighthood merely ceases to exist and no formal stripping of the honors is necessary.

Update 1x. The Independent reported on October 24, 2012, that Savile’s pedophilia also extended into pedo-necrophilia. Paul Gambaccini, who worked with Savile as a DJ on BBC Radio 1 in 1983, alleges that Savile had sex with the corpses of deceased minors. Gambaccini termed the corpses “underaged subnormals.” The mere fact that The New York Times would hire as its CEO someone who may have covered up such grotesque behavior by the BBC calls into question the judgment of the newspaper and its qualifications to honestly and inependently report on the news.

Oct
23

Hillary Told the Truth on Benghazi

(CBS News) It was six weeks ago on Tuesday that terrorists attacked the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya.

Now, CBS News has obtained email alerts that were put out by the State Department as the attack unfolded. Four Americans were killed in the attack, including Ambassador Christopher Stevens.

These emails contain the earliest description so far of what happened at Benghazi the night of the attack.

Read the emails (PDF)
Ambassador warned Libya was “volatile and violent”
Why no one has been right about Libya
CIA saw possible terror ties day after Libya hit: AP

At 4:05 p.m. Eastern time, on September 11, an alert from the State Department Operations Center was issued to a number government and intelligence agencies. Included were the White House Situation Room, the office of the Director of National Intelligence, and the FBI.

“US Diplomatic Mission in Benghazi Under Attack” — “approximately 20 armed people fired shots; explosions have been heard as well. Ambassador Stevens, who is currently in Benghazi, and four COM (Chief of Mission/embassy) personnel are in the compound safe haven.”

At 4:54 p.m., less than an hour later, another alert: “the firing… in Benghazi…has stopped…A response team is on site attempting to locate COM (embassy) personnel.”

Then, at 6:07 p.m., State sent out another alert saying the embassy in Tripoli reported the Islamic military group “Ansar al-Sharia Claims Responsibilty for Benghazi Attack”… “on Facebook and Twitter and has called for an attack on Embassy Tripoli.”

The emails are just a few in what are likely a large number traded throughout the night. They are likely to become part of the ongoing political debate over whether the administration attempted to mislead in saying the assault was an outgrowth of a protest, rather than a planned attack by terrorists.

Fourteen hours after the attack, President Obama sat down with Steve Kroft of “60 Minutes” for a previously scheduled interview and said he did not believe it was simply due to mob violence.

“You’re right that this is not a situation that was — exactly the same as what happened in Egypt and my suspicion is that there are folks involved in this who were looking to target Americans from the start,” Mr. Obama said.

The White House and State Department declined comment on the email alerts. The House Oversight Committee told CBS News the information in the emails will be part of their ongoing investigation into the Benghazi attack.

Oct
23

Organizers of Free and Equal Debates are Just as Exclusionary

In allowing only four minor-party candidates to share the stage, the organizers of tonight’s Free & Equal debate are being as exclusionary as the Commission on Presidential Debates (CPD) was in limiting the three nationally-televised debates to President Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney. It’s shameful, especially since two of tonight’s participants — the Constitution Party’s Virgil Goode and Rocky Anderson of the fledgling Justice Party — aren’t on the ballot in enough states to theoretically win on November 6th.

On the other hand, I represent a party with a much longer history than any of tonight’s participants. Unlike former Congressman Goode and ex-Salt Lake City Mayor Anderson, I am on the ballot in the most populous state in the country and, in addition to vote-rich Florida and Colorado, will have write-in status in enough states to “mathematically” Occupy the White House on November 6th.

Oct
23

The Twenty (20) States Where Voters can Cast a Write-in Vote for Me

These First Three States I’m actually on the Ballot

California, Colorado and Florida

Write-in Ballot Access in the Following States and working on more

Alabama
Alaska
Delaware
Idaho
Iowa
Kansas
Minnesota
Montana
Nebraska
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
Utah
Vermont
Washington
West Virginia
Wyoming

Oct
23

Emergency Labor Network

EMERGENCY LABOR NETWORK
Jobs * Social Security * Labor Rights
Medicare and Medicaid * Peace and Justice
emergencylabor@aol.com
www.laborfightback.org
———-

[Please excuse duplicate postings and please forward widely.]

WHICH SIDE ARE YOU ON?

With the four 2012 presidential and vice presidential debates now history, what is particularly striking is that no questions were asked or answers given with regard to labor’s rights. The irony is that the Democratic Party is heavily dependent on trade unionists to do the heavy lifting in order to win the election: organizing millions of home calls, staffing the phone lines, contributing a fortune, etc.

What has labor received in return?

We got no support for the Employee Free Choice Act (card check), nothing in relation to labor reform legislation, imposition of the “Free Trade” agreements over labor’s vehement opposition, cuts in federal workers’ pensions to pay for the payroll tax holiday, and the list goes on.

It is indisputable that labor’s relationship to the Democratic Party is a one-way street: we give and they take. After elections are over, things go back to normal: our needs are ignored or — after a superficial effort to get some legislative remedy — abandoned.

[Note: In the presidential debates, the word "union" was never uttered, except in the last debate when Mitt Romney denounced the Teachers Union. President Barack Obama sat silent, declining to come to the union's defense.]

But what about the big battles that labor has waged over the past couple of years? In Wisconsin, Tom Barrett, characterized by Wisconsin trade unionists as anti-labor, won the Democratic primary and immediately promised that if elected, he would retain the austerity takeaways that Walker had imposed on public employees. Meanwhile, Obama took no position in support of the workers.

In Ohio, labor was fighting for its life after the state’s General Assembly passed legislation gutting public employees’ bargaining rights. The whole country was transfixed on the referendum to repeal the legislation, which passed handily. But Obama was a neutral.

Then there was the action taken in Indiana when that state’s legislature enacted the misnamed “right to work” law. Again the president declined to come to the support of the state’s trade union movement in its struggle to prevent adoption of the law.

Then there was the Chicago teachers’ strike. The president’s former chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, led the fight to cut teachers’ pay and benefits, while attempting to undermine the union’s power and privatize public education. The president refused to take a stand in support of the teachers.

Finally there was the Machinists’ strike against Caterpillar in Joliet, Illinois. Although the company was making record profits of several billion dollars a year, it demanded substantial cuts in workers’ benefits. After a three-and-a-half-month strike, the company prevailed. Again the president was only a silent spectator.

The question may be asked: Why should the president take a stand on these “local issues”? There are three reasons why he should have done so. The first is that when he ran for president, he promised to walk picket lines with striking workers, a promise not kept.

The second is that each of these battles had significant repercussions going beyond city or state boundaries. Repressive legislation passed on a state or city level opens the door wider for similar legislation being adopted by other governmental entities. Cuts in pay and benefits by both public and private employers also are likely to get replicated elsewhere.

The third is that the escalating attacks against labor in this age of austerity are part and parcel of the strategy to put the burden on the working class and the poor to pay for the debt and deficits, while the rich and powerful laugh all the way to the bank. Meanwhile purchasing power plunges, impoverishing more and more people, while making a bad economy worse.

This is not just a presidential problem. It cuts across party lines, as witness the fact that Democratic Governor Jerry Brown of California and Democratic Governor Andrew Cuomo of New York, like other Democratic and Republican governors across the country, are leading the charge to cut workers’ pay, benefits, and working conditions, while attempting to weaken the power of unions to fight back.

The Democratic Party’s National Convention

On Labor Day, the Democratic Party convened its national convention in Charlotte, North Carolina, one of the 22 states where the Taft-Hartley Act (“right to work” for less) was enacted to undermine and prevent the national growth and consolidation of the trade union movement. While North Carolina is one of the 11 southern states originally hamstrung by Taft-Hartley, it is also notorious for its legislative ban on collective bargaining rights for public-sector workers.

Even so, the Democratic Party Convention steamed ahead, despite the fact that Charlotte city workers had waged a month-long campaign leading up to a Labor Day of picketing, rallies, and protests outside of City Hall citing problems faced by city workers and calling for the right to collective bargaining, to meet and confer with city managers on the job, for dues check-off, and for a “Municipal Worker’s Bill of Rights.” An “Open Letter” was sent to President Obama and Democratic National Committee leaders at the local, state, and national levels calling for the president to take action in support of solving these problems. There was no response.

The millions of Black and Latino workers, both male and female across the U.S., suffer the sharpest edge of the attacks on labor and trade union rights and the brunt of the economic crisis. But even though Obama cannot win — in what is shaping up to be an extremely close election — without organized labor, women, Black and Latino support, he has not reached out to these constituencies with a program that meets their needs. So it is clear that without an independent labor movement, anchored in these most oppressed sectors of the U.S. working class, labor will not be in the strongest position to effectively pressure Obama for crucial progressive reforms if he should win re-election, or to fight the devastating plans of the right wing Republican agenda directed against us if Romney/Ryan take the election.

Rebuilding a labor movement, independent of the Democratic and Republican parties, anchored in the most oppressed sectors of the U.S. working class, and vigorously fighting not only to protect trade union rights, but also to organize southern labor, and to directly challenge the racism, sexism, and attacks against immigrants’ rights suffered by these communities, is the only way forward!

What Next?

Back in the 1930s, coal miners immortalized a song titled “Which Side Are You On?” with one of the lines being, “There are no neutrals there” (referring to Harlan County in Kentucky).

We in the Emergency Labor Network believe that same spirit should drive labor’s policies in the period ahead. We cannot continue to be subservient to a political party that fails to represent our interests — a party that takes from us but does not give. There can be no neutrals when sharp fights break out between labor and capital. And as the old saying goes, “You always find out who your true friends are at a time of crisis.” This is a time of crisis.

Here is how AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka put it: “When it comes to politics, we’re looking for real champions of working women and men. And I have a message for some of our ‘friends.’ It doesn’t matter if candidates and parties are controlling the wrecking ball or simply standing aside — the outcome is the same either way. If leaders aren’t blocking the wrecking ball and advancing working families’ interests, working people will not support them. This is where our focus will be — now, in 2012 and beyond.”

We in the ELN are keenly aware that the Republican Party leadership is a sworn enemy of the labor movement. We also recognize that the Democrats have better positions than the Republicans on some issues, such as preserving Roe v. Wade. What is needed in the absence of a mass-based independent labor party is building a broad coalition of labor and its communality partners to protect and preserve Roe v. Wade, and the same is true with regard to Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and other urgently needed social programs.

But that does not negate the need for labor to build its own independent party. For decades we relied on the Democrats to advance our program, and that has not worked. We need to rely now on our own power and our own organized strength.

We also agree with Trumka’s May 20, 2012, statement when he said, “Moving forward, we are looking hard at how we work in the nation’s political arena. We have listened hard, and what workers want is an independent labor movement that builds the power of working people — in the workplace and in political life.”

The challenge now is to give life to those words and build that independent labor movement without delay. For starters, it would be big step forward for labor to run independent candidates for office at the local or even the congressional level. Labor can also utilize the referendum in some states to rescind repressive legislation, as was done so successfully in Ohio in 2011. And for states whose laws or constitutions do not permit initiatives or referenda, how about campaigns to make the needed changes so that the people can use these instruments of democracy and make the ultimate decisions regarding which laws govern their lives?

– Issued by the Emergency Labor Network (ELN)

For more information write emergencylabor@aol.com or P.O. Box 21004, Cleveland, OH 44121 or call 216-736-4715 or visit our website at www.laborfightback.org. Donations gratefully accepted. Please make checks payable to the ELN and mail to the above P.O. Box.

Oct
22

Gary Coutin Passed Away August 27, 2012

Coutin, Gary Michael
August 9, 1947 – August 27, 2012
From a heart attack. Gary was ASB President at Glendale High, graduated Stanford University, and Hastings Law School. Following his own lights, driven by his unrelenting passion, he fought for electoral reform the rights of the oppressed. He is survived by five brothers, one sister, four nephews, six nieces, two great-nephews and one great-niece.
Funeral Services to be held at Home of the Peace on Sunday, September 9th at 10.OO AM.

Published in the Los Angeles Times on September 8, 2012
Oct
22

From Gary Coutin

The Electoral College violates the Declaration of Independence and the self-evident truths it expresses: The Declaration is the Supreme Law of the Land.

The Slaveholder’s Constitution of 1787 was written by slaveholder’s for a government of slaveholders for the benefit of slaveholders.

The Constitution not only established the government but it rigged the government for the benefit of the one percent of the people that owned slaves.

The Slaveholder’s Constitution of 1787 also rigged the means of amending the Constitution so that it would not be possible for the national government to eliminate slavery by amending the Constitution.

Slaveholder’s Constitution of 1787 ceased to have any legitimacy when the Slaveholders launched the War of the Slaveholder’s Rebellion we call the Civil War.

The Slaveholder’s Constitution of 1787 was replaced by the People’s Constitution of a government of the people, by the people and for the people.

The Electoral College is not only a relic of slavery from the past but it is a mechanism of slavery in the present.

The Judiciary has jurisdiction to rule the Electoral College “unconstitutional” because the alternative to adjudication is a resumption of the Civil War and the courts are an alternative to violence.