Sunday, March 24, 2013

Blood on Their Hands

The warmongers and profiteers of the Iraqi invasion caused the deaths of over a million Iraqis, coutless injuries, infants born with malformations never seen before in that country (see previous blog), scores of displaced persons, ruin of infrastructures and more. More than 4,400 American soldiers lost their lives. This was a war based on imperial conquest, oil resources, and corporate profits.
According to the warmongers' thinking, if the Iraqi people had to pay the price, so be it. Acutally I don't even think that these war criminals gave a second thought to the pain and suffering they were about to inflict on a nation, in the runup to that war. An understanding of their way of thinking can only be found if one realizes that to them the Iraqis were expendable, a means to an end. They were considered pawns in the buildup of empire. There was no legitimate reason to invade Iraq, and so Bush, Cheney, Rice, Powell, Wolfowitz, Rumsfeld and the majority of the congress people who supported them,  invented reasons, and the war drums began. The drum beating  ended in the invasion of Baghdad, with the cartoonish and insulting  name  Operation Shock and Awe. Talk about supremacho titles. The only problem was that it wasn't macho at all but cowardly, because the U.S. is vastly superior militarily to Iraq.
All of those against that war did everything we could to stop it. We marched, we signed peititions, we wrote articles, we appealed to the UN, but we all knew that somehow we were fighting a losing battle. The monster of war was out of the bottle, and most Americans supported it.
 A few days before the invasion I felt despondent, knowing that Baghdad would certainly be attacked, and that people would be killed and many would be children. I went out and bought a set of prayer flags and hung them outdoors, as a symbol of compassionate thoughts to those people who were about to be bombed, about to lose children, about to have their homes destroyed, about to lose their lives. It was all I could do. The war criminals had their way. Today they sit pretty, hold their heads up , are interviewed on TV, and live comfortably. They are still arrogant and remorseless. None has been held accountable.

Friday, March 22, 2013

Iraq Invasion left Legacy of Birth Defects

This is the tenth anniversay of the Iraq invasion. Among the many crimes committed against the Iraqi people is the legacy of birth defects and cancers found among children, the real victims of this war. According to Democray Now's interview with Al Jazeera's reporter, Dahr Jamail, this legacy was allegedly caused by the large use of depleted uranium and white phosphorous by the U.S. military. Jamail says, "What this has generated is, from 2004 up to this day, we are seeing a rate of congenital malformations in the city of Fallujah that has surpassed even that in the wake of the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki that nuclear bombs were dropped on at the end of World War 11."
I saw the interview on Link TV, and became sickened to listen to the details of the malformations and cancers. More than Hiroshima and Nagasaki! This is a inhumane. Bush, Cheney, Wolfowitz and other architects of that war should be hauled  before the international court in the Hague for the crimes they committed against these children,  their mothers, their fathers, and the Iraqi population. The reasons given for that war were entirely bogus. And Iraq is worse off now than it was under Saddam Hussein.
Real reparatons, not paltry sums, should be given to every Iraqi citizen. It will do some good, although it will surely not make up for all the suffering they have endured. On this tenth anniversary all people who love peace should vow that they will do everything possible to try to stop another war like this one. Not in my name.

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Losing Weight is Big Business

Like everything else, weight loss has become a huge business. Corporations looked around, saw how many overweight people were walking about, realized they weren't going away any time soon, and decided "let's nake a profit." So over the last several years dozens of diets and weight loss programs have sprung into action, with their promises of svelte bodies and quick happiness. I don't know how much money they make, but they sure have enough for tons of advertising. I have my doubts as to how much all their methods really work.
Do all these corporations dealing in fat actually care if people lose weight? Of course they don't care. They would really prefer if folks stayed heavy, in order for them to have a steady influx of customers. The more fat people out there the better. If the US was a nation of slim folks these companies would go out of business. So they make their money off of human discontent with their bodies. Nothing new of course. Capitalism always seeks out new markets.
I have drawn a simple conclusion. If you think you need to lose a few pounds, or many pounds, diet on your own without the aid of some special packaged diet food or drink. And weigh yourself every day so you can see tangible results. Oh yes, do exercise. Don't fall into the trap of the next diet gimmick waiting around the corner.

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Favorite Topics of TV News: Weather, Disease, Royalty

If you watch the TV news anchors for any length of time you'll notice how their favorite topics are bad weather, frightening warnings about diseases, and British royalty. Pretty safe topics, right?
Who is going to argue with reports about horrible tornadoes, death and destruction? Most people like hearing about that, as long as they're not in the pathway of mother nature. These reports provide an oppoutunity  to have a momentary collective sympathy for others. The reporters know that viewers like the feeling of having compassion for those in dire distress. Mark Twain once said that Americans were obsessed by the weather. Modern day reporting has taken to whole new level. The good thing is that the weather is always there and so all the reporters have to do is sit around waiting for the next catastrophe, which will not be long in coming, thanks to climate change. Weather reporting, is also so non controversial. Who's going to argue about it?
Nothing excites these reporters more than the latest dreadful disease around the corner. Scaring the viewer is something they revel in because the topic takes up a lot of air time. Who will argue with those dire warnings about watching  what you eat, or what medicine you take, or what vaccine you should get. What about warnings about diseases you cannot do anything about? You have to sit and wait and hope to heaven they don't come your way. Of course the public has the right to know about certain illnesses, and the right to know what medical progress has been made to combat them. But it doesn't have to be bombarded with messages intended to induce dread and  anxiety.  The onslaught of these dire warnings is also a distraction tactic, a distraction from thinking about. oh let's say, how a tiny percentage of Americans owns most of the wealth in this country, and their wealth keeps on increasing. Or, how not one of the bailed out bankers went to jail.
Brian Williams, of ABC, loves reporting on every minute detail of the British royals. Scott Pelley of CBS doesn't do a bad job himself. One would think they were American royalty, or is this perhaps just wishful thinking on the part of those guys. Actually the entirety of the media in this country falls over itself in adulation of Queen Elizabeth's clan. The funny part is that they are a rather dull lot, with little excitement going on. The one exception was Princess Diana, who struck me as being a real person, but look how she was treated. In any case the reporters' obsession with these bluebloods connotes a certain type of homage to Anglo Saxon culture. You don't see them tripping over themselves to cover stories about the Dutch royalty.
The real heart of the matter is that weather, disease and royalty are safe topics. They are a distraction from urgent matters such as the illegal and inhumane drone killings that have resulted in the deaths of approximately 275 children. They are a distraction from any questioning of  a government policy of endless war. For the most part, they merely fill up time.

Sunday, March 10, 2013

High Maternal Mortality in the US

The following is a speech I gave at a Stop Violence Against Women rally organized by the Answer Coalition.
                        

Amnesty International says the following, “It’s more dangerous to give birth in the United States than in 49 other countries.” In 2010 The UN placed the US as 50th in the world for maternal mortality. The risk to African American women is four times greater than it is for Caucasian women.

The rates of maternal deaths in the US have risen dramatically since 1987. This is strange considering that the US spends more money on maternal health than any other hospital care. And yet women die at higher rates than they do in Kuwait, Bulgaria and South Korea.

Half of maternal deaths in the US are preventable. According to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, “every human being has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself (herself) and his (her) family, including medical care and necessary social services.” Ideally this would mean that the US should provide quality health services regardless of income, race or color. We all know this is not the case, because the health care system is engineered by profit. The reality of the situation is that women come across shortages of providers, facilities, bureaucratic problems, language barriers, cultural barriers, lack of health insurance for those who are poor, to name a few. The government has turned a blind eye to making sure that all women receive access to quality health care, including reproductive health services. This is a grave injustice.

For more than 20 years the government has failed to improve maternal health care. The Maternal Health Accountability Act of 2011 failed. It did not have enough support. Surely, if this were some type of legislation involving more weapons it would have passed. Or if all the pregnant women and their infants had filler the coffers of their representatives it would have passed.

All pregnant women and their infants, regardless of their income, color and social standing are entitled to quality maternal health care, because this is a basic human right. It is not a right reserved for the few or for pampered royals.

This is a statement from a 2011 editorial in the Contraception Journal, “It is a human tragedy when a woman dies giving birth; her death forever changes her community and family for all future generations. It is both a tragedy and a human rights failure when a woman dies needlessly of preventable causes in a country that lacks the political will to have prevented her death.”

Sources: Amnesty International and website of the Contraception Journal

 

 

 

 

                      

 

Friday, March 8, 2013

Happy International Women's Day



                            Happy International Women's Day to all the Women
                                                                                      
                                                                                     para todas las Mujeres

                                                                                     per tutte le Donne

                                                                                     para todas as mulheres

                                                                                     pour toutes les femmes.



















Wednesday, March 6, 2013

A Toast to the AIDS Free Baby

A few days ago the mainstream media reported on a baby who had been cured of AIDS. The reporters expressed optimism at this incredible event but then quickly became negative in their comments concerning if  it is too early to tell if the child is really cured, and one should be cautious about the cures for other babies. A Dr. Persaud, who was one of the main researchers and authors of the report one this baby's case, appeared on the screen with non gushy enthusiasm. She is a woman of color who spoke English with an accent. I got the feeling that somehow she was not being taken as seriously as a real Anglo type would have been. It is just a hunch. I have seen the corporate anchors practically jump out of their chairs with excitement when a story about a disabled person is suddenly able to oversome some hurdle. But here we have a baby who, two years after birth is AIDS free. This indeed is a cause for great celebration. The Mississippi mother  did not receive any prenatal care, as a more affluent mother would have received. And yet the baby is now healthy.
These reporters should have been smiling and wishing the baby well. For some reason they chose to be cautious and wary. ABC medical reporter Nancy Sniderman, with her plastic surgery face, seemed to know little about the child in question. Dr. Persaud, a real looking woman who does not have a gig on a glitzy  news program, spoke with clarity, and compassion.
A toast to the baby. May you live a long life.

Sunday, March 3, 2013

Stop Violence Against Women Now

Violence against women is global, pervasive and a violation of women's human rights. Women have the right to live in a society free of violence, whether that be in the home, on the streets, in the workplace or on a bus. On March 8 and 9 there will be rallies and marches all over the world in support of the struggle to stop the violence. I will be at a rally here in the Southwest, sponsored by the Answer Coalition.
 March 8 is International Women's Day, a day to honor women. Men, step aside and take a moment to reflect upon the good women in your life, whether they be your mother, a girlfriend, a wife, daughter or sister. Be our allies in our fight for a safer and more humane world.
Misogyny is alive and well because it serves the interests of patriarchy. This is considering the fact  that women do most of the world's labor, bear children, run households, hold jobs outside the home, and often volunteer their services. Patriarchy serves no purpose, other than to empower a group of men, especially older white men. It does not care about children, who are always intimately tied to women. The most important people on this earth are children, and so that tells you a lot about the base instincts of these patriarchs.
Reflect. Join the struggle to put an end to violence against women everywhere.

Saturday, March 2, 2013

My Grandparents Passed Through Ellis Island

For the home page I chose these photos of passengers, arriving and  waiting  at Ellis Island, the main port of entry to the United States from about 1880 to 1950. My Italian grandparents went through there, and ultimately settled in Pennsylvania. Ellis Island was the final destination for thousands more. Men, women and children  endured  medical examinations, questions, and sometimes frightening bureaucracy to see if they would be admitted into this country. For me these photos struck a personal note; but in a much larger sense they tell a story of real people, their determination and their dignity. To the people.