Truthout Headlines Jan 8
Saturday 08 January
2011
Attacking Public Employees: Will New York
Lead?
Richard D. Wolff, MR Zine: "As in other
states, New York's new governor has focused attention on the
state's budget woes: revenues insufficient to cover
expenditures. His major response has been to blame public
employees and their unions as if their pay, benefits, and
especially pensions were chief causes of the problem....
Many political leaders across the states and in both major
parties have been pushing the same agenda."
Read the Article
US Seeks Twitter
Info on WikiLeaks' Assange, Others
McClatchy
Newspapers: "A U.S. magistrate in San Francisco has ordered
Twitter to turn over to the Justice Department account
whatever information it was about four of its users,
including WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange and Army PFC
Bradley Manning, the one-time Baghdad-based intelligence
analyst accused of unauthorized downloading of hundreds of
thousands of classified U.S. government documents."
Read the Article
Will Our Economy
Ever Recover From the "Greatest Recovery"?
Mark
Provost, Truthout: "For the past two years, American workers
submitted to the president's appeal - taking steep paycuts
despite hectic productivity growth. By contrast, corporate
executives have extracted record profits by sabotaging the
recovery on every front - eliminating employees, repressing
wages, withholding investment and shirking federal taxes....
The global recession increased unemployment in every
country, but the American experience is unparalleled....
Washington's embrace of labor market flexibility ensured
companies encountered little resistance when they launched
their brutal recovery plans. Leading into the recession, the
US had the weakest worker protections against individual and
collective dismissals in the world."
Read the Article
Obama Created
More Jobs in One Year Than Bush Created in Eight
Alex Seitz-Wald, ThinkProgress: "Yesterday morning, the
Labor Department released its employment data for December,
showing that the U.S. economy ended the year by adding
113,000 private sector jobs, knocking the unemployment rate
down sharply from 9.8 percent to 9.4 percent — its lowest
rate since July 2009.... Indeed, from February 2001,
Bush’s first full month in office, through January 2009,
his last, the economy added just 1 million jobs. By
contrast, in 2010 alone, the economy added at least 1.1
million jobs."
Read the Article
Protest by
Suicide Highlights Economic and Political Oppression in
Tunisia
Basel Saleh, Truthout: "Bouazizi's attempted
suicide, which comes hard on the heels of police humiliation
and confiscation of his only source of income, reveals the
utter despair prevalent today among Tunisia's population,
especially college graduates. Twenty-four years of ruthless
corruption, dictatorship and neoliberal economic policies
led to a concentration of wealth in the hands of a very few
people.... The miserable economic conditions in the interior
of the country and the lack of employment opportunities and
political freedoms pushed Bouazizi, like thousands of other
young men and women in the Maghreb countries, to the margins
of society."
Read the Article
Obama Signs Law,
Decries Its Limits on Transfer of Guantanamo Detainees
Margaret Talev and Carol Rosenberg, McClatchy
Newspapers: "President Barack Obama on Friday reluctantly
signed into law a military-funding bill that limits him from
transferring terrorism detainees from Guantanamo Bay, Cuba,
to the U.S. or foreign countries, but he signaled that he
may get past the restrictions by using non-Pentagon
resources to get the job done. Even as he reserved that
right, it wasn't immediately clear to what degree the
president still may capitulate to political pressure between
now and his 2012 re-election campaign to keep detainees off
U.S. soil and out of civilian courts."
Read the Article
Compensating for
Decline: Revitalizing US Asia-Pacific Hegemony
Joseph Gerson, Truthout: "The Obama administration is
attempting to leverage its allies' resources and power while
taking advantage of the insecurities resulting from China's
rising power and its aggressive assertions of its
territorial ambitions. The US is weaving together a system
of military and political alliances and relationships from
Japan to India and across Central Asia, as well as to Europe
and to NATO."
Read the Article
What's Behind
North Korea's Offer for Unconditional Talks?
Donald
Kirk, The Christian Science Monitor: "China, as expected,
has strongly supported North Korea’s call for talks,
saying they offer hope for “stability” on the Korean
Peninsula. Japanese leaders have been increasingly concerned
by rising confrontation on the Korean Peninsula – a major
reason why the Democratic Party of Japan has reversed its
previously soft-line stance. Analysts are puzzled, however,
as to what North Korea expects from calling for talks –
or, for that matter, is likely to gain even if talks
resume."
Read the Article
Cathie Black and
the Demise of Public Education
Christopher Lawrence,
Truthout: "The appointment of Cathie Black - the Hearst
magazine executive with zero education experience - as New
York City schools chancellor is further evidence of the
complete collapse of the 20th century model of liberal
public education in the US.... [This] only serves to
highlight the obvious message: education is a business that
is too lucrative in these difficult times to leave to
teachers and communities. It now seems inevitable that we
will move to a dual education system not seen since the days
of legal segregation, with minorities and the poor shuttled
through a system of for-profit institutions emphasizing
standardized testing, uniform lessons and rote learning."
Read the Article
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BUZZFLASH DAILY
HEADLINES
Bill Daley is a vivid metaphor of
the Democratic Party abandonment of the working class.
Back in the day, when I was a full-time advocate
for handgun control, I got to know Richard M. Daley (the
outgoing mayor of Chicago) and his brother Bill a bit. In
fact, I first met both of them when Richard M. was still
Cook County State's Attorney and the "mayor in waiting," and
Bill - the younger of the two - was known as the brains of
the family.
They were both completely
down-to-earth people - and I suppose they still are. They
had no airs, smugness or arrogance about them. That was when
the Daley family base was still the South Side neighborhood
of Bridgeport - near the hallowed grounds of their beloved
White Sox - a working-class enclave of
bungalows.
But over the last ten years, I haven't
seen much of them. My passion moved into journalism, Richard
M. has served as mayor for more than 20 years (likely to be
succeeded by corporatist Rahm Emanuel next year), and Bill
Daley moved from being a lawyer to heading a union bank
(Amalgamated) and then solidly into the Wall Street private
sector, while still advising his brother and the Democratic
Party (he was co-chair of Al Gore's presidential
campaign).
While Richard M. Daley was literally
moving from Bridgeport to a home in a new neighborhood
nearer downtown, he was also steering Chicago into a
corporatized future. The mayor was planning to privatize
everything in sight (one recent, disastrous selling-off of a
public revenue stream was the parking meters). Meanwhile,
the mayor's chums became more and more corporate and less
and less the power brokers, politicians and people
representing the residents of the city.
On a
parallel, but more personal path, Bill Daley returned to a
prestigious Chicago law firm as a rainmaker, then became
Clinton's Secretary of Commerce, with a mandate to sell
NAFTA (the gateway to the offshoring of jobs), then became
the CEO of a regional division of what is now known as AT&T.
JP Morgan Chase hired him as Midwest chairman of the bank in
2004, where he has served until being appointed Obama's
chief of staff.
It's safe to say that Bill Daley -
while a nice guy - took many anti-labor, anti-consumer and
anti-health care reform positions in his corporate
professional life. It is safe to say that he won't leave
them behind in his new position in the White
House.
In many ways, the Daley brothers - Bill and
Richard M. - symbolize how in one generation, the Democratic
Party moved from being the voice of the working class (as in
Richard J. Daley, the legendary autocratic father) to
representing the forsaking of Americans who labor for a
living.
Mark Karlin
Editor, BuzzFlash at
Truthout
WikiLeaks Demands Google and Facebook
Unseal US Subpoenas
Read the Article at Guardian UK
Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords Shot In
Arizona
Read the Article at NPR
North
Sudan Faces Its Likely Truncated Future
Read the Article at The Washington Post
Algeria Debates Food Price Cuts to Quell
Riots
Read the Article at Al Jazeera
US
to Offer More Support to Pakistan
Read the Article at The Washington Post
GOP Votes to Make Constitution Violation Go
Away
Read the Article at Salon
Freed
Scott Sisters Say They Aren't Bitter, Despite 16 Years in
Prison for Robbery in Which No One Was Hurt
Read the Article at Clarion Ledger
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