Thursday, August 31, 2006

Virginity or Death!

Nation readers should be familiar with columnist Katha Pollitt's lively and penetrating dissections of America's most controversial political, social and cultural trends. Witty, astute and invariably logical, Pollitt's Nation column has been singled out as one of the key voices of the US left and has been chosen for a National Magazine Award, the industry's highest honor.

For those who missed any of Pollitt's past Nation work, or want to re-live it currently, check out Virginity or Death!, her new collection of 84 taut and timely essays. Packaged together with a stirring new introduction, the book displays the full range of this award-winning writer's indefatigable wit and brilliance.

Buy a copy of Virginity or Death! today.

See Pollitt's most recent Nation column.

Read Sarah Goldstein's piece about the book from the August 28, 2006 issue of The Nation.

Peruse Nation intern Emily Amick's online Q & A with Pollitt.

And check out Katha Pollitt.com for more info, related media appearances and Pollitt herself.

Finally, please visit The Nation online to listen to RadioNation with Laura Flanders, to read new Nation blogs, to view newsfeed links updated each day, to see when Nation writers are appearing on TV and radio, to get info on nationwide activist campaigns, and to read exclusive online reports and special weekly selections from The Nation magazine!

Best Regards,
Peter Rothberg,
The Nation

P.S. If you like what you read at TheNation.com, please consider subscribing to The Nation at a sharply discounted rate. Subscribing is the only way to read ALL of what's in the magazine week after week--both in print and online.

FROM ALTERNET

REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS VICTORY -- IN THE BUSH ERA?!
Ellen Goodman, Truthdig
It tells you how bad things are when wrenching approval for
contraception out of the Bush administration counts as a
smashing victory.
http://www.alternet.org/rights/40165/

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SY HERSH: CHENEY HELPED PLAN ISRAEL'S ATTACK ON HEZBOLLAH
Sy Hersh's latest article reveals that the Bush administration, especially Dick
Cheney's office, was involved in planning Israel's attack on Hezbollah and
considers it "a prelude to a potential American preemptive attack" on Iran.
http://www.alternet.org/blogs/video/40291/

LAMONT'S FACE THE NATION INTERVIEW
Discussion of Ned Lamont's primary victory and the impact it is having on
political discourse throughout the country dominated the Sunday talk shows.
http://www.alternet.org/blogs/video/40278/
______________________________

These stories and more are available on AlterNet.
http://www.alternet.org/

Bush's Political Survival Depends on Terror Threats


By William Greider, TheNation.com. Posted August 14, 2006.


The president is trying for the third time to make terrorism his big campaign issue -- are Americans going to finally snap out of it?


An evil symbiosis does exist between Muslim terrorists and American politicians, but it is not the one Republicans describe. The jihadists need George W. Bush to sustain their cause. His bloody crusade in the Middle East bolsters their accusation that America is out to destroy Islam. The president has unwittingly made himself the lead recruiter of willing young martyrs.

More to the point, it is equally true that Bush desperately needs the terrorists. They are his last frail hope for political survival. They divert public attention, at least momentarily, from his disastrous war in Iraq and his shameful abuses of the Constitution. The "news" of terror -- whether real or fantasized -- reduces American politics to its most primitive impulses, the realm of fear-and-smear where George Bush is at his best.

So, once again in the run-up to a national election, we are visited with alarming news. A monstrous plot, red alert, high drama playing on all channels and extreme measures taken to tighten security.

The White House men wear grave faces, but they cannot hide their delight. It's another chance for Bush to protect us from those aliens with funny names, another opportunity to accuse Democrats of aiding and abetting the enemy.

This has worked twice before. It could work again this fall unless gullible Americans snap out of it. Wake up, folks, and recognize how stupid and wimpish you look. I wrote the following two years ago during a similar episode of red alerts: "Bush's 'war on terrorism' is a political slogan -- not a coherent strategy for national defense -- and it succeeds brillantly only as politics. For everything else, it is quite illogical."

Where is the famous American skepticism? The loose-jointed ability to laugh at ourselves in anxious moments? Can't people see the campy joke in this docudrama called "Terror in the Sky"? The joke is on them. I have a suspicion that a lot of Americans actually enjoy the occasional fright since they know the alarm bell does actually not toll for them. It's a good, scary movie, but it's a slapstick war.

The other day at the airport in Burlington, Vermont, security guards confiscated liquid containers from two adolescent sisters returning home from vacation. The substance was labeled "Pure Maple Syrup." I am reminded of the Amish pretzel factory that was put on Pennsylvania's list of targets. Mothers with babes in arms are now told they must take a swiq of their baby formula before they can board the plane. I already feel safer.

The latest plot uncovered by British authorities may be real. Or maybe not. We do not yet know enough to be certain. The early reporting does not reassure or settle anything (though the Brits do sound more convincing than former Attorney General John Ashcroft, who gave "terror alerts" such a bad reputation). Tony Blair is no more trustworthy on these matters than Bush and Cheney. British investigators are as anxious as their American counterparts to prove their vigilance (and support their leaders). The close collaboration with Pakistani authorities doesn't exactly add credibility.

One question to ask is: Why now? The police have had a "mole" inside this operation since late 2005, but have yet to explain why they felt the need to swoop down and arest alleged plotters at this moment (two days after the Connecticut primary produced a triumph for anti-war politics).

The early claim that a massive takedown of a dozen airliners was set for August 16 is "rubbish," according to London authorities. So who decided this case was ripe for its public rollout? Blair consulted Cheney: What did they decide? American economist Jamie Galbraith was on a ten-hour flight from Manchester, England, to Boston on the day the story broke, and has wittily reflected on other weak points in the official story line.

The point is, Americans are not entirely defenseless pawns. They can keep their wits and reserve judgment. They can voice loudly the skepticism that Bush and company have earned by politicizing of the so-called "war" from the very start. Leading Democrats are toughening up. Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid uses plain English to explain what the Republicans up to -- using genuine concerns of national security "as a political wedge issue. It is disgusting, but not surprising."

Instead of cowering in silence, the opposition party should start explaining this sick joke. Political confusion starts with the ill-conceived definition of a "war" that's best fought by police work, not heavy brigades on a battlefield. Forget the hype, call for common sense and stout hearts.

All we know, for sure, is that Bush and his handlers are not going to back off the fear-and-smear strategy until it loses an election for them. Maybe this will be the year.

William Greider is the author of, most recently, "The Soul of Capitalism" (Simon & Schuster).

What is he hiding?

The Democratic Party


You know the joke about how the government paid $640 for a toilet seat?

It's true.

So a bipartisan group of Senators introduced the Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act of 2006 -- a bill that would create a public, searchable database of all federal grants and contracts. Letting the public and the press see where the money goes would be a huge step towards eliminating ridiculous, wasteful spending.

A Google-like web site to find out where your tax dollars go -- seems like a no-brainer, right?

Think again. A Republican Senator famous for pork barrel spending placed a "secret hold" that's preventing the proposal from even getting a vote. The mystery Senator has revealed himself -- it's none other than Senator Ted Stevens of Alaska, who became famous for trying to waste taxpayer dollars to build a "bridge to nowhere".

It's time to ratchet up the pressure and get this bill on the Congressional agenda. Tell Ted Stevens to give this important open government measure a fair up or down vote:

http://www.democrats.org/publicaccountability

Under the Bush administration, fraud, corruption and abuse are worse than ever.

In fact, their chief procurement officer -- the guy who spends the money Congress authorizes -- was arrested and charged with being part of the web of Republican corruption surrounding disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff.

Under Bush and the Republican Congress, the number of contracts awarded without competitive bidding has skyrocketed, as Democrat Henry Waxman on the House Government Reform Committee has documented. There are likely thousands of examples even more ridiculous than a toilet seat out there -- money wasted, stolen or misspent under this administration.

There's only one way to find out for sure, and that's by publicly accounting for which companies are getting your federal tax dollars. Send your message demanding a vote on the bill now:

http://www.democrats.org/publicaccountability

Ted Stevens, the most senior Republican in the Senate, don't want you to see the wasteful mess that he and his party have made of the federal budget.

From Iraq to our own Gulf Coast, dollars that could be saving lives are being held up, misspent, or wasted. Troops don't have the body armor they need, small businesses in New Orleans haven't received support, and across the country 45 million people go without health insurance.

We've seen the damage that Republican secrets and lies can do to our country, and enough is enough.

Tell Republican Ted Stevens that you demand accountability from the people who spend your money:

http://www.democrats.org/publicaccountability

The corruption and right-wing ideology of Republican rule has created a double nightmare for taxpayers.

Republicans have created the most expensive government in history through their corruption and out-of-control spending, but at the same time they've either refused or failed to meet the challenges of governing, like adequately preparing for disasters like Hurricane Katrina.

Democrats offer a new direction. We'll cut waste, root out corruption, and reprioritize federal spending so that it works for the people -- and we'll do it responsibly.

Remember -- only one president has balanced the budget in the last 45 years, and he was a Democrat.

One lesson learned over the last six years should be clear beyond any doubt: You cannot trust Republicans with your money.

By pressuring the Republicans to give this accountability measure an up or down vote, you can make this election about the open government and fiscal responsibility Americans deserve.

Thank you.

Governor Howard Dean, M.D.








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Wednesday, August 30, 2006

Firesign update: London show on BBC Radio 4 Wednesday

The Firesign show from London in late 2005 is being replayed
on BBC Radio 4 on Wednesday 11:30 - midnight PM London time;
you can listen live on the BBC website, which should be
6:30 PM Eastern/3:30 PM Pacific time on Wednesday:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/weinterruptthisprogramme/pip/q469q/

The Firesign Theatre Live

Wednesday 30 August 2006 23:30-0:00 (Radio 4 FM)

Comedian Mark Thomas hosts an exclusive show for Radio 4 at the London
Comedy Store, featuring American comedy heroes The Firesign Theatre.
Arising from the California counterculture in the late 1960s, they
became cult favourites, and in this rare British appearance, they
reprise some of their greatest routines, as well as bringing their wit
to bear on more recent events.

US Plus: We Own The Idea Of Now [TM]
-- Firesign Theatre

Katrina: The Continuing Storm

Opinions

Katrina: The Continuing Storm
On the first anniversary of Hurricane Katrina's landfall on the Gulf Coast, TomPaine.com is devoting its entire opinion section to an exploration of the ongoing struggles of the region and the conservative failure that has hampered the recovery.
An archive of our commentary and analysis of the response to Hurricane Katrina can be found at http://www.tompaine.com/docs/Katrina.htm.

Katrina's Victims Of Ideology
By Isaiah J. Poole, TomPaine.com
The conservative contempt for government is at the root of the failed response to the hurricane.
New Orleans' Housing Fiasco
by Anya Kamenetz, TomPaine.com
Protecting New Orleans—and the nation—means reforming the Army Corps of Engineers now.
Simply Blown Away
by Emma Dixon, TomPaine.com
The senior citizens harmed by Katrina had, and have, very little holding them up.
Planning For Disaster
by John R. Harrald, TomPaine.com
Is government merely reacting to the last crisis, or thinking creatively about the next one?

KATRINA: A GRIM ONE YEAR FACT SHEET

PROGRESS REPORT - 1,833 lives lost. 270,000 homes destroyed. $55 billion
in insured damage. Up to $1.4 billion in American tax dollars wasted by
the Federal Emergency Management Agency. But even more staggering has
been the slow pace of recovery on the Gulf Coast.

Yesterday, as part of the White House's "public relations blitz," Bush
trumpeted in his weekly radio address that the federal government has
"committed $110 billion to the recovery effort." But those billions of
dollars have yet "to translate into billions in building."

In his Sept. 15 speech, Bush stated that his administration "will stay
as long as it takes, to help citizens rebuild their communities and
their lives" and promised to "get the work done quickly." But one year
after the storm, repopulation in New Orleans "has slowed to a trickle,
leaving the city with well under half its pre-storm population of
460,000." Lacking the resources to return to the city are many
African-Americans who formed the working-class backbone of the city. The
Houston Chronicle notes, "Vast sections of New Orleans are still devoid
of life, populated by endless rows of broken, empty houses waving For
Sale signs like flags of surrender." Many New Orleans property owners
may lose their former homes. The one year anniversary of Katrina is the
deadline when property owners "must have gutted the buildings or shown
some signs they intend to rebuild when they can. If they don't, the city
can take it as a given they do not intend to return."

The average selling price for homes in areas that weren't affected by
flooding has risen 25 percent. Rental rates have risen 40 percent,
disproportionately affecting black and low-income families. In Biloxi,
MS, 70 percent of renters affected by the storm are black, according to
an NAACP study, and another report by the Leadership Conference on Civil
Rights noted that almost "100 percent of public housing families in New
Orleans are African-American." Approximately 112,000 low-income homes
were damaged, but only a fraction of federal housing assistance has been
earmarked for rental units.

More than 81,000 regional businesses were affected by the storm,
resulting in the loss of 450,000 jobs. . . Bush touted the government's
$110 billion commitment to Katrina recovery, . . . but in reality, just
$44 billion has been spent. Approximately 60 percent of the businesses
in New Orleans have still not reopened. According to a report by the
Democratic members of the House Small Business Committee, "80 percent of
small businesses on the Gulf Coast have not yet received loans promised
by the federal government."

A White House "Fact Sheet" released in advance of Katrina's one year
anniversary notes that FEMA has provided $5.6 billion to repair and
replace damaged public infrastructure. But Gulf Coast Recovery
Coordinator Donald E. Powell has admitted that nearly a third of the
trash in New Orleans has yet to be picked up. Sixty percent of New
Orleans homes still lack electricity and just 66 percent of public
schools have reopened. Only 17 percent of the city's buses are
operational, causing severe problems for the many residents who don't
own cars.

"Look at what we're getting in terms of services," said Janet Howard, of
the Bureau of Governmental Research, a nonprofit group in New Orleans.
"It's basically a nonfunctioning city." Crime has risen again in New
Orleans -- the homicide rate is nearly 10 times the national average --
but only seven of 13 courtrooms have reopened and judges have a backlog
of nearly 7,000 cases. A recent report by the Department of Justice
found that in New Orleans, "justice is simply unavailable." But where
the federal, state, and local governments have been absent, citizen
activism has surged in the wake of the storm, "chipping away at some of
this city's unhealthy institutions." Many schools -- formerly in "the
control of a corrupt district office" -- are now being managed by
parents and community activists as charter schools, and newcomers are
pushing for reform and tighter ethics in the City Council.

Health care is an increasing problem in the post-Katrina Gulf Coast. The
Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals estimated that "New Orleans
has lost half of its physicians and suffers from a shortage of 1,000
nurses." Forty-four percent of adult caregivers now lack health coverage
and "34 percent of children in FEMA-subsidized communities have at least
one chronic health condition that requires treatment, but half of the
affected children no longer have a medical provider." Even though the
population of New Orleans is at less than half of its pre-storm
population, the suicide rate has tripled and there is no capacity to
deal with mental health and substance abuse problems. The people of New
Orleans are also suffering from a lack of hospitals and the inability to
receive immediate care from emergency rooms.

A June Government Accountability Office report found that between $600
million and $1.4 billion in taxpayer dollars has been wasted on
"improper and potentially fraudulent individual assistance payments."
Payments went to Katrina evacuees to pay for items such as Dom Perignon
champagne, New Orleans Saints season tickets, and adult-oriented
entertainment. A recent report by the House Committee on Government
Reform found that 19 Katrina contracts -- worth $8.75 billion --
"experienced significant overcharges, wasteful spending, or
mismanagement."

The head of the Army Corps of Engineers recently expressed skepticism
that the New Orleans levees could withstand a hurricane with a heavy
storm surge this year. In order for the levees to withstand a Category 5
hurricane and for residents of New Orleans to finally feel safe, another
$30 billion will need to be spent. Unfortunately, as the New Orleans
Times-Picayune notes, the federal government's "commitment to the
long-term protection of South Louisiana is still uncomfortably murky."

LINKS TO FACTS
http://www.americanprogressaction.org/site/apps/nl/content2.asp?c=klLWJcP7H&b=
1331575&ct=2902751

Daily Grist: New Orleans residents tell their post-Katrina stories, and more

Daily Grist
Grist Magazine
Tuesday, 29 Aug 2006
The Few, the Proud, the Marine Conservation Alliance
Send a question to David Benton, expert on Alaskan fisheries, head of the Marine Conservation Alliance, and this week's InterActivist.



G NEW IN GRIST
Life After Katrina
A new exhibit lets New Orleans residents tell their own stories

Photo: Teri Stubbs You might have noticed, what with the media onslaught and all, that it's been a year since Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans and the surrounding Gulf Coast. And what a difference a year makes ... oh wait, actually, the city's still screwed. Fixing the damage caused to homes, communities, families, and hearts has only just begun -- as a group of residents shows in a new exhibit of photos and stories.

bullets
new in Main Dish: Life After Katrina


The Big Seep
Global warming could lead to release of more methane from seafloor

A warming ocean could release more of the potent greenhouse gas methane in a vicious cycle that leads to more warming, says a new report in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Petroleum and methane seep consistently from small cracks in the seafloor, but a study of ocean sediments near Santa Barbara, Calif., found that during the last two major warming periods, around 11,000 and 15,000 years ago, three times more oil and methane were released than average. The researchers hypothesize that undersea methane ice melt could disturb the seafloor and open new cracks for seepage. "This is a source of methane that we might have assumed in the past was stable," said lead author Tessa Hill. "As it turns out, it's very sensitive to climate change." Hill cautioned that the research should not be extrapolated worldwide, as methane stores in different parts of the ocean might not follow the same pattern. Small consolation, that.

straight to the source: ScienceNOW, Julie Rehmeyer, 28 Aug 2006

straight to the source: The Sacramento Bee, Matt Weiser, 29 Aug 2006


G NEW IN GRIST
Left and Fright
Is there a place for fear in environmentalism?

Fear: it's as American as freedom fries these days, and the Right isn't afraid to manipulate you with it. Anger and fear are good motivators, like it or not, and violence is oft cited as effectively "sending a message." Should environmentalists be focusing more energies on scare tactics, or is there a more effective way to tackle long-term problems? In a five-part series on Grist's blog, David Roberts considers where fear intersects with environmentalism, and whether reason, compassion, forbearance, and selflessness can hold their own.

discuss in Gristmill: Fear and environmentalism

discuss in Gristmill: Fear and environmentalism: more


Lebanon Sequitur
Lebanese oil spill continues to spread

Six weeks after Israel bombed a Lebanese power plant, spilling 10,000 to 15,000 tons of heavy fuel oil into the Mediterranean Sea, the disaster continues to be disastrous. The slick has traveled an estimated 90 miles north, affecting every one of Lebanon's approximately 200 beaches, and may reach Syria and Turkey. Lebanon's coastline has traded in throngs of tourists for beach-cleanup volunteers; in Beirut, 18 miles from the original site of the spill, they gaze upon black sand and yellowish-green water, breathe in the scent of petroleum, and look in vain for any sign of live fish. Lebanese divers have found oil up to four inches thick on the seabed; sea turtle hatchlings at an island nature reserve will have to crawl through an oil slick to reach the water; and coastal towns with fishing- and tourism-dependent economies are struggling mightily. Ongoing conflict has delayed cleanup, which Lebanon's Environment Ministry estimates will cost $150 million over the next year. Worst of all, there's really nothing funny to say about any of it.

straight to the source: San Francisco Chronicle, Christopher Allbritton, 28 Aug 2006

straight to the source: Gulf News, Frank Kennedy, 28 Aug 2006

straight to the source: The Washington Times, David Enders, 29 Aug 2006


G NEW IN GRIST
Plastics, Take Two
Advice from sustainability leaders for today's aspiring entrepreneurs

Photo: iStockphoto As summer winds down and fall looms on the horizon, it's time for some of you bright young things to go back to school. To inspire and motivate the aspiring environmental entrepreneurs in the bunch, John Elkington and Mark Lee surveyed sustainability experts, asking: What's the 21st-century version of the famous "plastics" advice from The Graduate? Find out today in the latest Full Disclosure column.

bullets
new in Full Disclosure: Plastics, Take Two


The Beak Shall Inherit the Earth
Sixteen bird species saved from extinction

Sixteen bird species that nearly went extinct in the mid-1990s were saved by international cooperation and concerted conservation efforts, according to a study published in the journal Oryx by researchers from BirdLife International. Scientists say the rebounds in populations of the Norfolk Island green parrot, the Mauritius parakeet, and 14 other species show there's hope of slowing the trend toward human-caused bird extinctions. "It is encouraging that bird conservation actions worldwide are making a noticeable dent in the bleak scenario of global biodiversity loss," wrote Cambridge zoologist Ana S. L. Rodrigues, who summarized the research in Science. However, if humans continue to tear down tropical forests and engage in other not-so-bird-conducive activities, the feathered-friend extinction rate could rise tenfold in the next decade. Said Stuart Butchart, author of the BirdLife study, "These successes show that preventing extinctions is possible, given political will and concerted action." Hmm, speaking of rare ...

straight to the source: The Independent, Maxine Frith, 28 Aug 2006

straight to the source: The New York Times, Andrew C. Revkin, 29 Aug 2006

NOW IN GRIST

Fight Fire With Mire. Umbra advises on fire-fighting chemicals.

The Trouble With Normal, by Christine Gardner. Can a mom in middle America survive a month without a car?

From Hurley to Hetchy. A new Grist List by Sarah van Schagen and David Roberts.

ADVERTISEMENT

click here


GRISTMILL BLOG

Growing a stabilization wedge: lessons from green buildings. Can we compare growth in the green building and green transportation sectors?

Vonnegut doesn't mince words. America's black-humorist tells it like it is in his Rolling Stone interview.

TerraPass partners with Expedia. Carbon-offsetting becomes a normal part of booking travel.
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Wednesday's Daily Brief

The Huffington Post Huffington Post HomeHuffington Post HomeForward to a Friend
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Bush's Day In New Orleans: "A Whirlwind More Of Sights And Sounds Than Of Substance"...

bushnoweb.jpg

AP

President Bush made a series of appearances in New Orleans today as part of White House efforts to make amends to Gulf Coast residents who were largely abandoned by the government during Hurricane Katrina one year ago.

The tone of the day was "optimistic" and "at times almost defiant," according the The New York Times. Bush listened to a brass band and visited the home of legendary musician Fats Domino. He rode through the Lower Ninth Ward, the area most severely damaged by Katrina, although he did not leave his motorcade. The President attended a memorial mass and delivered an anticipated speech, but, ultimately, his visit seemed "a whirlwind more of sights and sounds than of substance." After the last of the scheduled events he boarded Air Force One and headed back to Crawford, Texas, where he will prepare to shift focus from the catastrophic hurricane to the impending five-year anniversary of 9/11.

Click here to read the whole story.

Click here to discuss it on HuffPost.

On AOL News... A Year After Katrina, How Different Does New Orleans Look?

ON THE BLOG TODAY

Arianna Huffington: Will the Karr Debacle Lead the Media Addicts to
Rehab? Don't Count on It

Peter Lance: TRIPLE CROSS: Nat Geo Channel's Whitewash of the Ali Mohamed Story

Laurie David: New Zealand Leader Embraces 'Truth', U.S. President Ignores

Carole Bayer Sager: "Feel the Fear and Do It Anyway"

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Before Katrina

The Democratic Party


An important fact has to be remembered as we recall the victims of last year's devastating storms:

Almost half of all children in New Orleans lived in poverty -- before Hurricane Katrina.

The callous and inept federal response to Hurricane Katrina revealed that, when faced with a crisis that experts had actually predicted, the Republican administration was utterly unprepared and unresponsive.

Meanwhile, the shameful foot-dragging since the storm on reconstruction and help to families shows the same lack of interest in solving real problems and saving lives. So far, the administration has gotten around to spending barely half of what Congress authorized.

The Republican administration's failures before and after the storms are linked by a common approach to the solemn responsibilities of government. Simply put: they aren't interested.

This Republican leadership's philosophy means that our government simply will not meet the needs of our people.

Not because it's impossible -- but because they don't believe it should.

And so we are left with each American having to do what he or she can to help.

There is too much to be done for individuals acting alone to fix everything, but until we achieve a change in leadership we all must step up to the plate.

One way to do that is by donating new or used books to the Children's Defense Fund, an organization that's working to make sure that school libraries in Gulf Coast are well-stocked for returning students.

Only 18% of New Orleans children had returned by the end of the last school year, according to the New York Times. More children will return this year, but the conditions they will return to can be terrible.

I want to ask that you participate in a book drive for the children of the Gulf Coast. It's important, and it's a tangible way for you to make a difference:

http://www.democrats.org/bookdrive

While we all take time to reflect and do our small part to help, one thing is clear: Democrats offer a new direction.

We believe in a government that takes its obligations to the American people seriously, one that is always improving the services and protections it provides -- a government that becomes more efficient as it meets challenges and takes on new challenges with serious commitment.

And we believe passionately in the responsibility of public service -- doing the hard, unglamorous work that comes with solving real problems that impact people's lives.

With that sense of responsibility missing in our leaders today, we find ourselves in deep trouble.

A fifth grader interviewed by the New York Times recently -- one of the few who have made it back -- told the reporter that his father, who is in the National Guard, has been sent to the Middle East. Meanwhile, back on the home front, their house has been burglarized.

The boy summed up what people on the Gulf Coast -- and people all across the country -- are feeling right now:

"We deserve better."

Governor Howard Dean, M.D.

P.S. -- We've set up a resource center to help people learn more a year after Katrina. From the promises made and subsequently broken, to a look back at the failure of leadership on the levees in New Orleans, take a minute to explore just where we are one year later:

http://www.democrats.org/katrinaanniversary








Paid for and authorized by the Democratic National Committee, www.democrats.org.
This communication is not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee.

Democratic National Committee, 430 S. Capitol St. SE, Washington, DC 20003

Contributions or gifts to the Democratic National Committee are not deductible as charitable contributions for federal income tax purposes.

KATRINA

Here are several stories from New Orleans and the lasting effects of Hurricane Katrina..........Scott


Dramatic look back at Katrina coverage
Democracy Now! marked the one year anniversary of Hurricane
Katrina by taking a dramatic look back at their coverage of the
disaster.
http://www.alternet.org/blogs/video/40999/

AN UNHAPPY ANNIVERSARY
The Progress Report
The financial, emotional, and human costs of Hurricane
Katrina have been absolutely staggering -- and they aren't
subsiding yet.
http://www.alternet.org/katrina/40974/

NEW ORLEANS, ONE YEAR LATER
Jordan Flaherty, WireTap
A New Orleans resident says that a year after Hurricane
Katrina tore through the Gulf Coast, not much has changed.
http://www.alternet.org/wiretap/40976/

VIDEO | Katrina Survivors Visit Camp Casey
A Film by Geoffrey Millard and Scott Galindez
http://www.truthout.org/multimedia.htm
The "Social Change Caravan" rolled through Camp Casey with 21 Katrina evacuees
on their way back to New Orleans for the hurricane's one year anniversary. Some
plan to reclaim their homes, while others will be checking on the progress of
the reconstruction efforts. Many of the Katrina survivors remember and are
grateful to Camp Casey and Veterans for Peace for their quick response after the
hurricane hit.

DISASTER PROFETEERS

Since 9/11, military contractors like United Technologies, which
makes Black Hawk helicopters, have seen their profits explode
and their executives and top shareholders rake in windfall
salaries. And as the rest of us shell out record prices for gas,
oil executives claim that "we're all in this together."

But a new report by United for a Fair Economy shows the high
cost of CEO salaries, and today, AlterNet presents two
investigations of what these industries are doing to people
and the planet:

BLATANTLY BOASTING WAR PROFITEERS
Sarah Anderson, AlterNet
Profiteering execs don't usually brag about their windfalls
from the 'war on terror' -- unless they're talking to
potential investors.
http://www.alternet.org/waroniraq/40962/

TIME TO REIN IN THE PUMP PROFITEERS
Chuck Collins, Eric Benjamin, AlterNet
Ordinary people may believe that unprecedented global strife
is a bad thing. The barons of Big Oil beg to differ.
http://www.alternet.org/story/40986/

After the Deluge

By Jane Slaughter
In These Times

Monday 28 August 2006

Big Easy organizers confront racial tensions.

In New Orleans, the history of work in this country over the last 15 years was compressed into six months," says Saket Soni, an organizer for the New Orleans Worker Justice Coalition, one of several groups reaching out to workers in the post-flood city. To give workers a voice in its reconstruction, he says, the Coalition must somehow bring together new Latino immigrants with displaced New Orleanians, mostly African Americans, who are still struggling to return to the city.

Before the levees broke, Latinos made up three percent of New Orleans' population. Today, they've risen to 20 percent, as immigrants seeking work in demolition and construction have arrived from other US cities and from south of the border. A study by Tulane University and the University of California, Berkeley found that nearly half the reconstruction workers in the area are Latinos.

As in the rest of the country, these two groups are mostly not talking to each other. According to a new report from the Advancement Project, which worked closely with the Coalition to interview more than 700 workers, "The perception is that workers of color are competing for jobs. The reality is that private contractors are competing for the cheapest labor." Both unions and social justice organizations say they will need to confront divisive stereotypes if they are to improve workers' conditions.

Contractors have welcomed immigrants because they are more easily exploitable. Ana Mendes, for example, from Guatemala by way of Arkansas, worked four weeks without pay until she and a dozen others tracked the contractor down at his home.

Meanwhile, displaced black residents - two-thirds of New Orleans' pre-flood population - have been excluded from a city where housing is scarce and rents have doubled or tripled.

Their problems stem partly from the poverty that was a fact of life in pre-Katrina New Orleans, which had the fourth-highest unemployment rate in the country and the worst schools. Tens of thousands of residents lived payday to payday on service industry wages.

"You cannot talk about doing any type of justice work," says Coalition member Kimberley Richards, a trainer with the People's Institute for Survival and Beyond, "without looking at those who were living in unjust conditions before the storm."

At Lee Circle, the city's largest corner for day laborer pick-ups, a young black man from Baton Rouge is angry at immigrants he perceives as doing better than he is. "They got Mexicans out here that are not even supposed to be here," he fumes.

"It's a pick and choose kind of thing. People feel like they can pay the Mexicans less and take more of them and get more work done. If they run up to a car where I'm at, I'm gonna beat 'em up."

Debra Campbell, a black New Orleans homeowner living in Houston and working to return home, says the Mexicans "are doing pretty good construction work. They're bringing in their families, and they're going to take the houses because they have money to pay the rent. Let our youngsters learn the skills so they can do the work."

The stereotypes run rampant on both sides. Michael White, an African American day laborer from Atlanta, insists that it's not about race discrimination - contractors are thinking only of their bottom line. He worked on a crew with four Mexican immigrants to gut a ruined house, and he didn't come back the next day: "A black man is not going to work that hard," he says.

Ana Mendes has had jobs cleaning hotels and homes. She says, "When we work, we work. When we take lunch, we take lunch. They [black workers] are more like" - she mimes a relaxed drag on a cigarette.

To bridge the gulf caused by such perceptions, the Justice Coalition is working with both African-American organizations, like the People's Institute and the People's Hurricane Relief Fund, and with experienced Latino day laborer organizers. In July the National Day Labor Organizing Network, based in Los Angeles, sent in a team of Latino organizers to recruit leaders from the corners and train them in assessing organizing possibilities.

The Coalition has successfully pressured some employers to cough up unpaid wages and has wage-and-hour lawsuits pending. NAACP attorney Tracie Washington, a board member of the Coalition's fledgling Louisiana Workers Center, advocated on behalf of 200 Latino hotel workers to get them Louisiana state ID cards. She says, "They got the opportunity to see - 'all we've heard is that black people don't like us, and here's this person on behalf of the NAACP who came to our aid.'"

Coalition members are working creatively to find ways to bring these communities together. When day laborer leaders came to town in April with the Day Laborer Run for Peace and Dignity, says Coalition activist Robert Caldwell, "we put the event in a black neighborhood with a deep history of struggle, and invited key people to the planning committee. We had food prepared by the best cook in the neighborhood." Almost 100 people, mainly African Americans, turned out.

As these grassroots efforts look for footing in the ravaged city, national unions are coming to New Orleans with ambitious programs, for what historically has been largely a non-union town.

In July the Laborers Union started free classes in construction basics, and in September the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) will offer classes for certified nurses' aides and home health aides. (Both unions are part of the Change to Win federation.) A spokesman for the two unions' Worker Resource Center said that graduates of the first one-day safety class were snapped up by employers the next day. The unions are counting on a construction boom when the government finally releases federal aid money to homeowners.

The AFL-CIO is coming at the jobs problem from a different angle: Two investment trusts sponsored by union pension funds will pump $700 million into construction of apartments, hotels and hospitals, as well as home mortgages. All construction will be union, and the federation's Building and Construction Trades Department will offer apprenticeships.

The AFL-CIO says its money is the first major infusion of private capital into the Gulf Coast since the flood. "If the community sees that the union has decided to be there for them in their fight to return and rebuild, they will see that a strong workers movement will benefit the whole of the community," says Gulf Coast Recovery Coordinator Arlene Holt Baker. "It won't be overnight that this will be a union town. We will be laying the foundations."

But who will get the jobs that are created? Although both unions say they are open to all, the programs are targeted at former Gulf Coast residents. Graduates of the first Laborers class were all African Americans. Rosana Cruz, Gulf Coast field organizer for the National Immigration Law Center, says, "For unions to come in now and just pay attention to Latinos, after decades of ignoring blacks in the South - 'here's where we can increase our market share' - would be awful."

"We get past the tensions by recognizing that we don't have to fight over a $6 an hour job changing sheets in somebody else's hotel," Tracie Washington says. "The fight is to make that job a $10 an hour job, and to ultimately own the hotel."

Jane Slaughter works for Labor Notes in Detroit.

ECOLOGY

Pat Rasmussen | Cascades' Reddened Forests Signal Threat to Humans
http://www.truthout.org/issues_06/082906EA.shtml
Forests in the West are dying. Pat Rasmussen says, "As I look around, I see
humans continuing life as usual, seemingly unaware that the planetary forests
that make life possible are more and more stressed, pushed toward death, by our
actions. We stand at the edge of a catastrophic precipice, where life as we know
it may no longer be possible."

Engineers Race to Steal Nature's Secrets
http://www.truthout.org/issues_06/082906EB.shtml
A new generation of small green companies is emerging with radical but proven
ideas to revolutionize engineering and create anything from intelligent
refrigerators to colossal wind turbines moored at sea.


FIRST HALF OF 2006 HOTTEST ON RECORD

AP - The first half of the year was the warmest on record for the United
States. The government reported Friday that the average temperature for
the 48 contiguous United States from January through June was 51.8
degrees Fahrenheit, or 3.4 degrees above average for the 20th century.
That made it the warmest such period since recordkeeping began in 1895,
the National Climatic Data Center reported. No state was cooler than
average and five states Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, and Missouri
experienced record warmth for the period. . . As of June, 45 percent of
the contiguous U.S. was in moderate-to-extreme drought, an increase of 6
percent from May. . . Worldwide, it was the sixth warmest year-to-date
since record keeping began in 1880.

http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory?id=2192795

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AMERICAN AGRIBUSINESS WRECKING THE AMAZON


DANIEL HOWDEN, INDEPENDENT UK - The scars are unmistakably man made.
Hard-edged squares and rectangles, hundreds of acres across, hacked and
burned out of the Amazon rainforest. The dark green of the canopy is
lacerated with thin red lines - the illegal dirt roads that stitch
together these giant clearings.

Seen from the air, this fearful symmetry marks out the battle lines of
an invasion that has seen the humble soya bean emerge as the greatest
threat to the world's most important rainforest.


On the ground, what was once a thriving ecosystem supporting at least
300 tree species for every hectare, is now a wasteland. Dead roots and
dry grass crunch underfoot and the breeze throws up dust from eroded
soil. . .

The Amazon basin is home to one in 10 of the world's mammals and 15 per
cent of the world's land-based plant species. It holds more than half of
the world's fresh water and its vast forests act as the largest carbon
sink on the planet, providing a vital check on the greenhouse effect. .
.

In the past three years, nearly 70,000 square kilometers of the Amazon
rainforest have been destroyed. The smoke from burning trees pushed
Brazil into the top four of global greenhouse gas producers in 2004.
Despite commitments from the government of President Lula da Silva, the
destruction of the Amazon rainforest continues.

http://news.independent.co.uk/environment/article1181617.ece

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SALT WATER MARSHES FADING IN NEW ENGLAND

CAROLYN Y. JOHNSON, BOSTON GLOBE - A puzzling, ominously named
phenomenon, sudden wetland dieback, is transforming salt marshes in the
region into barren mudflats, scientists say, and their best efforts have
failed to figure out why.
Across New England, researchers are poring over aerial photographs and
slogging into mucky marshes on the lookout for ailing marshes, in hope
of understanding its cause. "It appears to us we have a new phenomenon
we've never seen before," said Ron Rozsa, coastal ecologist at
Connecticut's Department of Environmental Protection. . . Over the past
five years, there have been reports of marshes that look as if they have
been mowed . There are 17 suspected dieback marshes on Cape Cod, and a
few other possible sites are on the North and South Shore, according to
the Wetland Restoration Program of the Massachusetts Office of Coastal
Zone Management. Rozsa says dead patches are also visible on about
two-thirds of Connecticut's shoreline. At least one report is from Rhode
Island.

http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2006/07/17/
cause_sought_as_marshes_turn_into_barren_flats?mode=PF


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SOUTH DAKOTA HITS 120 DEGREES

RAPID CITY JOURNAL - The National Weather Service in Rapid City received
reports of 120 degree temperatures in Usta in the northwest corner of
the state, but the reports had not been officially confirmed by Saturday
evening. If the reports are accurate, the temperature would tie the
state record for high temperatures set in Gann Valley in 1936.
NWS meteorologist Jeff Johnson in Rapid City said temperatures reached
111 degrees at Rapid City Regional Airport, beating the previous record
of 110 degrees set in 1989 and 1973.

http://www.rapidcityjournal.com/articles/2006/07/16/news/local/news02.txt

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POISON IVY, OTHER VINES, LIKE CLIMATE CHANGE

ELIZABETH WILLIAMSON WASHINGTON POST - Vines -- poison ivy, Japanese
honeysuckle, kudzu -- snake through the back yard, girdling trees and
strangling shrubs, thriving, scientists say, on the same pollution they
blame for global warming.
From backyard gardens to the Amazon rain forest, vines are growing
faster, stronger and, in the case of poison ivy, more poisonous on the
heavy doses of carbon dioxide that come from burning such fossil fuels
as gasoline and coal.

Complaints about vine infestation have increased tenfold in a decade,
said Carole Bergmann, forest ecologist for the Maryland-National Capital
Parks and Planning Commission. . . Vines have choked gardens, ruined
brickwork, disrupted bird habitat and clogged paths, ponds and air
conditioning and electronic equipment. "The woods they used to know have
just changed character," Bergmann said. "They're covered with vines. The
trees are being weakened and falling over -- or strangled." That leaves
scientists worried that the forest of the future could become a weedy
tangle of hyper-vines choking off the trees, which absorb more carbon
dioxide. . .

"Fifteen years ago, kudzu" -- known as the vine that ate the South --
"would not survive in the D.C. area," Bergmann said, because the climate
was too cold. "Now it survives even up in New York."

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/07/14/
AR2006071401793.html

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HOW ONE CITY REDUCED ITS ABUSE OF NATURE

SALT LAKE CITY MAYOR ROCKY ANDERSON, ARIZONA DAILY STAR - I committed
our city in 2001 to meet, in our municipal operations, the emissions
reduction target of the Kyoto protocol. While some may disparage that
sort of commitment as a public relations exercise, we acted aggressively
and, seven years early, exceeded our goal, reducing emissions more than
21 percent, and we have only just begun.

We started in city hall, converting light bulbs to compact fluorescents.
The change saves us about $33,000 every year in electricity costs. We
applied some of the savings to purchasing wind-generated electricity.
These two simple measures saved taxpayers money and reduced
carbon-dioxide emissions by 1,100 tons each year.

We converted our traffic lights to high-efficiency LEDs, saving huge
amounts of electricity and money.

We capture methane - which has 21 times the warming effect of carbon
dioxide - at our wastewater treatment facility and use it to fuel a
cogeneration plant that meets half the electricity needs there, further
reducing the amount of electricity needed from coal-burning power
plants.

We have converted our fleet, using more fuel-efficient cars and trucks,
as well as alternative fuel vehicles.

Every resident enjoys curbside recycling, our city forestry program
(which helps sequester greenhouse gases) has been enhanced, and I have
issued an executive order requiring all city-owned buildings be designed
according to high-energy-performance standards.

If every governmental entity, business and individual in the United
States took these sorts of measures, we would be far along in meeting
the challenge before us. But we're not going to get there with a
can't-do attitude and a failure of leadership.

Corporations, cities, states and other nations have profited from
reducing global warming pollution. Dupont reduced global warming
pollution by 67 percent since 1990 and saved $2 billion. BP - which used
to be "British Petroleum," but now is marketed as "Beyond Petroleum" -
invested $20 million in reducing emissions by 20 percent and saved $650
million. IBM reduced its greenhouse gas emissions 38 percent and saved
$791 million through energy efficiencies. Seattle Mayor Greg Nickels led
his city's utility to achieve zero net emissions.

Between 1990 and 2003, while electricity use climbed 5 percent, Germany
created 120,000 jobs in its renewable energy sector while cutting global
warming emissions from power generation by 13 percent. Denmark now
generates 20 percent of its energy from wind. . .

Our individual actions may seem small, but the combined impact of
everyone working together will make a huge difference

ARIZONA DAILY STAR
http://www.azstarnet.com/opinion/138594

ROCKY ANDERSON
rocky.anderson@slcgov.com

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RICHARD BLACK, BBC - Diversity in bees and wild flowers is declining
together, at least in Britain and the Netherlands, research shows.
Scientists . . . write in the journal Science that habitat alterations,
climate change and modern industrial farming are possible factors in the
linked decline. There is a chance, they say, that the decline in
pollinating bees could have detrimental effects on food production. . .
While declines in Britain and the Netherlands might not indicate a
global trend, the team says, it is an issue deserving serious future
research.

Labor Law Change Could Gut Unions

By Kari Lydersen
The NewStandard

Monday 28 August 2006

By reclassifying workers with any significant authority in the workplace as "supervisors," the National Labor Relations Board may effectively gut millions' right to unionize.

With 24 years under her belt at Children's Hospital in Oakland, California, Martha Kuhl has plenty of wisdom to offer younger nurses and aides. And she does, along with asking for help when she needs it.

"I might say, 'Can you go check on this patient; can you take some vital signs?'" explained Kuhl, who is also a union organizer with the California Nurses Association (CNA), which represents 65,000 registered nurses in the state.

Advising, asking and delegating are routine for nurses, according to those in the profession. But under rulings expected soon from the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), these job duties could label Kuhl and many other nurses "supervisors." The rulings could also affect millions of workers in other professions.

The impact of such a title change would not be as simple as new business cards or an ego boost; it would take away their right to belong to a labor union.

If the NLRB acts as expected in imminent rulings on three separate 2002 cases - collectively known as the "Kentucky River" cases - more than 8 million workers could see their collective-bargaining rights disappear, according to an analysis by the Economic Policy Institute (EPI), a progressive research organization.

The NLRB rulings could essentially change the way the Board interprets the definition of "supervisor" in the National Labor Relations Act, a 1935 law that defines workers' rights.

Up until now the definition of supervisor under the Act has generally been interpreted to hinge on the power to hire or fire. But employers have been pushing for a new interpretation that would also emphasize the "responsibly to direct" other employees while using "independent judgment" - phrases also included in the Act's definition of a supervisor.

"The issue isn't so much hire and fire, but what does responsibly to direct mean," said Dave Parker, deputy executive secretary of the NLRB. "What does it mean to have independent judgment? That's what the Board is drilling down on in terms of deciding these cases."

Meanwhile between 60 and 100 cases pending before the NLRB are stalled until the Kentucky River decisions are handed down. Many of those cases involve union elections in which the supervisor issue could make or break the outcome.

Labor leaders fear a new interpretation would classify as a supervisor anyone who delegates tasks. The EPI estimates that 843,000 registered nurses - more than a third of all RNs nationwide - and 123,800 licensed practical nurses could be affected by a new interpretation, as well as 180,700 cooks, 167,000 secretaries, and tens of thousands of cashiers, electricians, bank tellers, repairmen and pharmacists.

The three challenges facing the NLRB are the Oakwood Healthcare case, involving hospital nurses represented by the United Auto Workers (UAW); Golden Crest Healthcare Center, involving nurses at a long-term care facility represented by the United Steelworkers (USW); and Croft Metals, involving "leadmen" and "load supervisors" at a manufacturing facility represented by the Boilermakers union.

The cases are referred to as "Kentucky River" because they will clarify labor issues left open by the US Supreme Court's 2001 ruling of that name, which dealt with nurses at a mental health facility. The cases will be decided separately, but all are expected to be key determinants in redefining how "supervisor" is interpreted in the Labor Relations Act.

A number of business groups, including the US Chamber of Commerce and American Hospital Association, have filed briefs with the NLRB asking for a broad definition of supervisor status.

Kathleen Casavant, director of the AFL-CIO's Voice at Work campaign, said labor leaders "absolutely believe it's an overt effort" to undercut employees' ability to form unions. She said the AFL-CIO is asking people to pressure their elected officials to contact the NLRB in opposition to classification change.

The AFL-CIO also sponsored marches in more than 20 cities the week of July 10 in protest of the change. The demonstrations culminated in a march on the NLRB office in Washington, DC.

"Over the past fifteen or twenty years, corporations have been moving toward this whole team-building model, saying it's more efficient," said Casavant. "So anyone who's a team leader could be reclassified."

While numerous trades and professions may be affected, nurses have taken the lead in raising public awareness about the potential change. The California Nurses Association/National Nurses Organizing Committee (CNA/NNOC), known for its battles with California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, have held protests around the country, including outside a Chicago meeting of the American Hospital Association on August 8.

"We've been making sure all the nurses we represent understand the potential impact this decision could have," said Kuhl. She notes that even if the definition is changed, employers could voluntarily allow reclassified employees to continue as union members, a crucial caveat for a union-heavy profession like nursing, where the reclassification could gut an entire workforce's collective-bargaining rights.

In most healthcare situations, there will be a rotating "charge" nurse making decisions and keeping an eye on things during each shift. These nurses usually move between positions; they are not permanently in charge of a given unit.

"Today I might be in charge for eight hours; tomorrow I'm back at the bedside," said Margaret Shanks, a nurse at Children's National Medical Center in Washington, DC for 27 years and a member of the District of Columbia Nurses Association union.

Meanwhile, given the nature of the health profession, all nurses are likely to request assistance from their co-workers on a regular basis.

"Sometimes I can't leave my patient, so I might ask an aide to get something for me or go to the blood bank," said Shanks. "If you've been there that long you know how your unit runs, so naturally you'll be mentoring younger nurses. That doesn't make me a supervisor, and that shouldn't take away my right to be in a union."