Posts Tagged ‘Iraq’

Austin: “Hidden Battles” (film screening) – fundraiser for Under the Hood Cafe

Sunday, January 15th, 2012

Join us on Friday, January 27th at 7:00 p.m. at 5604 Manor for screening of
the documentary “Hidden Battles.”  “Hidden Battles”, a feature length documentary, is a dramatic and deeply personal film about the psychological impact of killing on the lives of five soldiers.  (see trailer at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YDSQETnkIgk)

Representing a cross section of nationalities, gender, class and race, these soldiers reveal intimate memories about the central act of war, the killing of another human being. How do these
individuals make sense of what they have done? What happens when time challenges
their carefully constructed stories? Consciously apolitical but deeply psychological, Hidden Battles examines the strength and struggles of men and women who kill and how they create a life for themselves afterward.

Immediately following the film, volunteers with Under the Hood Cafe & Outreach Center will talk about their efforts to support IVAW’s (Iraq Veterans Against the War) Operation Recovery, an outreach program promoting traumatized soldiers’ right to heal.

$10 suggested donation at the door.  All donations support the work of
Under the Hood Cafe & Outreach Center.   http://underthehoodcafe.org/ and https://www.facebook.com/underthehoodcafe#!/underthehoodcafe

also see event announcement at https://www.facebook.com/events/217030288384556/

The Fort Hood Support Network (FHSN) operates Under the Hood Cafe and Outreach Center, FHSN is a Texas non-profit corporation with 501(c)(3) tax exempt status.

Class struggle continues: “The bonds of solidarity USLAW forged with the Iraqi labor movement through nine years of struggle will continue.”

Sunday, January 1st, 2012

On December 23, 2011, U.S. Labor Against the War sent this solidarity statement to the unions in Iraq.

Dear Comrades in the Iraqi Labor Movement:

U.S. Labor Against the War recognizes that the end to formal U.S. military occupation of Iraq does not end continuing U.S. interference in the internal affairs of Iraq. The Maliki regime has given
permission to the U.S. to continue to operate unarmed Predator drones from Iraqi
bases, purportedly to provide the Turkish government with intelligence on the
activities of PKK fighters operating in the mountains of Iraq. These can be
armed and redeployed elsewhere in Iraq whenever the U.S. desires.

Many thousands of private mercenary security forces will remain and the U.S.
government has constructed the largest embassy in the world to manage and direct
its continuing interference in Iraqi affairs. It may redeploy many of the
departing troops to bases in Kuwait and other areas in the region, positioned to
reenter Iraq on short notice if U.S. interests appear to be threatened.

The Maliki regime is a political creation of the U.S. occupation, not a
legitimate expression of the democratic will of the Iraqi people. Already
parties that had been cobbled together to provide Maliki with a majority in
Parliament have abandoned him as he aggravates sectarian tensions for partisan
advantage. As a predictable outcome of the U.S. divide and conquer policies that
pitted religious, sectarian, ethnic and regional interests against one another,
Iraq will now likely see escalating sectarian conflict. The responsibility for
this belongs first and foremost to the U.S. government.

Predatory multinational corporations have not abandoned their plans to gain control over
Iraq’s abundant oil and gas reserves. Therefore, the struggle by the Iraqi
people to regain full sovereignty over the nation’s natural resources will
continue because the neo-liberal scheme to privatize the Iraqi economy has not
been abandoned.

The struggle to establish human and labor rights will continue because under U.S. occupation, those rights were a fiction, and were and continue to be regularly violated. The Iraqi government has ignored the country’s own constitution, which calls for the adoption of a basic labor rights
law that conforms to international standards, and continues to enforce the 1987
antiunion decree of the dictatorship, adding even more repressive edicts in an
effort to cripple the Iraqi labor movement and suppress the movement for true
democratic rights. In this the U.S. and Maliki regime will fail because the
Iraqi labor movement will not forfeit its rights. The will of the Iraqi people
for a true democracy and Iraqi sovereignty will prove stronger than the schemes
of a corrupt regime that serves as a willing pawn for U.S. interests.

The U.S. debt to Iraqis will not be paid by the withdrawal of U.S. military forces.
We consider it our honor and duty to stand in solidarity with you, to hold our
government to account, to demand that our government abandon its interference in
the internal affairs of Iraq, to struggle in support of your national
sovereignty and human and labor rights, and to demand that reparations without
strings be paid for the horrific damage inflicted on Iraq and its people.

The U.S. military was driven from Iraq by the iron resolve of the Iraqi
people to be free of all foreign domination, supported by the solidarity of U.S.
and other antiwar forces around the world which finally made it politically
untenable for the occupation to continue. The work of U.S. Labor Against the
War, founded nine years ago in January in response to the threat of the illegal
U.S. invasion, does not end with the departure of U.S. troops. The bonds of
solidarity USLAW forged with the Iraqi labor movement through nine years of
struggle will continue.

We extend to you and the courageous labor movement and working people of Iraq our heartfelt wishes for peace, democracy, justice, security and sovereignty in the new year.

Yours in solidarity and struggle,

USLAW Co-convenors: Kathy Black, Gene Bruskin, Bob Muehlenkamp, Brooks Sunkett, Nancy Wohlforth, Michael Zweig

Staff: National Coordinator Michael Eisenscher, National Organizer Tom Gogan, Administrative Coordinator Adrienne Nicosia

On behalf of the Steering Committee and 195 labor organizations affiliated with U.S. Labor Against the War

Killeen: Under the Hood Update, December 2011

Wednesday, December 21st, 2011
December 2011
Despite the recent “end” of the Iraq war,  those of us at Under the Hood Cafe & Outreach Center know that the impact of ten years of war continues on the home front and is far from over.  We are still
engaged in a ground war in Afghanistan despite the slow draw down of forces, and recently over 4,000 Ft. Hood soldiers shifted from Iraq to Kuwait. Deployments are not over.
By January, more than 8,000 soldiers will return to Ft. Hood. They are returning to a base with services already overwhelmed, and they will face many obstacles in accessing trauma care and overcoming the stigma that still surrounds trauma.
An active duty service member commits suicide every 36 hours. 18 veterans commit suicide every day. Every day at Under the Hood we continue to work to break the isolation that service members and
military family members experience by offering a space to relax, gather and speak freely about the wars and military life with their peers and to work together for change.
Under the Hood Cafe and Outreach Center is run almost entirely on the unpaid labor of our volunteers which consist primarily of veterans, active duty soldiers and military family members. We have only one paid staff person.
Every day we are transforming lives affected by war. We urge you to become a sustaining donor or make a one-time donation today.
“I want my feelings to get out and be heard. And that is what Under the Hood is doing for me. We are getting stuff done, and we have got the potential to do so much more… Im feeling like I am accomplishing what I have been wanting to do ever since I came back from Iraq. I saw all kinds of nonsense in Iraq. I want to speak out.  I guess you could call it the focal point, the head, this is
where all the energy is focused and we are accomplishing things. I feel like I am just reaching so many more people.”

- Curtis Sirmans, Ft Hood soldier and Under the Hood volunteer
Here are some highlights of what Under the
Hood Cafe and Outreach Center has accomplished in the last six
months:
***We have had a 200% increase in visitors to the Under the Hood since July of this year.
***We renovated Under the Hood, painting the interior and building a coffee bar, a
designated childcare space, an art-making room and a stage area for hosting community events.
***We partnered with Iraq Veterans Against the War’s Operation Recovery, a campaign to defend service members and veterans right to heal and to stop the practice of deploying traumatized troops
experiencing Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), Military Sexual Trauma (MST), and Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI). In May we helped launch an outreach drive and have talked with over 350 active duty soldiers about their experience with these issues.
***On Veterans Day, we partnered with the Ft. Hood chapter of Iraq Veterans Against the War to participate in the Killeen Veterans’ Day parade to raise awareness of the issues that Ft. Hood
soldiers face in accessing trauma care. We distributed over 400 leaflets to parade attendees about
Operation Recovery and Under the Hood and received very favorable media coverage by a local television station.  We are helping to shape the conversation about these issues by highlighting the direct experience of those who are most impacted and by demanding the changes that they identify as needed at Ft. Hood.
***We held monthly woman’s nights and will increase our women’s programming in the new year to address the unique needs of women service and family members.
***We host weekly community organizing meetings.
***We expanded our referral capacity to an extended network of mental health providers.
***We developed a volunteer program and now have over 15 regular volunteers on the ground.
***We developed an arts based program to open a healing space, creating dialogue in the community that extends beyond the confines of words.  Yo(ur) Art Show, Combat Paper Project and Warrior Writers Ft. Hood Community Arts Forum have been transformational experiences for us here.
***We offer in-house individual GI rights counseling in partnership with the San Diego Military Counseling Project, a member group of the GI Rights Hotline.
***We host the Killeen Poetry Slam group twice monthly.
***We host weekly “Ribs and Rights”, a free BBQ and peer training on service members’ rights.  In the spirit of peer support and empowerment, veterans, active duty soldiers and family members research and teach each other about service members’ rights and how to navigate through issues they face at Ft. Hood. An average of 10 participants come weekly but we know that the impact of these trainings
reaches far more people as participants are armed with knowledge that they can share with fellow soldiers back on base.
“The issues that Under the Hood addresses dont go away, regardless of the end of the Iraq war. I think in the next couple of months…couple of years, there is going to be a lot of soldiers in this area that will find themselves pretty confused, pretty lost with what’s going on and maybe this place can help with that.
Under the Hood allows people of all different backgrounds, whether they are prior service, active duty, family member, or just a community member, it allows them an outlet to express themselves or plug into something that they might not be able to find in other parts of thiscommunity.”
–Chris May, Ft. Hood soldier and Under the Hood volunteer
Thank you to all who made it possible for us to expand our programs to continue meet the needs of the community in the Ft. Hood area. We depend primarily on individual donors to fund our work. In order to continue to be able to provide these vital programs we urge you to become a sustaining donor to Under the Hood Cafe and Outreach Center today.
Sincerely,
Under the Hood staff and volunteers,
Lori, Kyle, Chris, Curtis, Amy, Sean, Alice, Heidi, Fran, Jim, Cindy and Naomi
The Fort Hood Support Network (FHSN) operates Under the Hood Cafe and Outreach Center, FHSN is a Texas non-profit corporation with 501(c)(3) tax exempt status.

Austin: VIDEO–Flash mob at Barton Creek Mall, innocent young woman brutalized and arrested

Wednesday, December 7th, 2011

Thanks, Jeff Zavala, for the video evidence.  More to come on how we can support the young woman who got 3 broken ribs by the police but was herself charged with assault!

http://blip.tv/zgraphix/freeze-flash-mob-police-brutality-don-t-buy-war-5793178

CodePink Austin, along with allies from Veteran’s for Peace and Women in Black staged a Don’t Buy War “freeze” at Barton Creek Mall on Saturday, December 3rd. The strategically chosen mall location was between the Santa photo station and the Gamestop store, which prominently advertises the ‘Modern Warfare 3′ video game. The goals were to raise awareness about the continuing wars on Iraq and Afghanistan, to educate shoppers about the costs (both human and economic) of the wars, and to dissuade parents from purchasing war toys. The creative action was well received by shoppers, and several veterans approached the group to thank us. All was peaceful until mall security and APD arrived, and an APD officer brutally attacked a young woman who had joined the group spontaneously. Produced for Austin Indymedia by Jeff Zavala. A ZGraphix Production. http://zgraphix.org http://twitter.com/zgraphix http://facebook.com/zgraphix.org http://austin.indymedia.org

 

Oakland: Police critically injure Iraq war vet at Occupy Oakland | IVAW

Wednesday, October 26th, 2011

Police in Oakland critically injure  Iraq war veteran during Occupy
Oakland crack-down

Iraq war vet Scott Olsen wounded by Oakland police (photo Hart Noecker)

Tell Oakland Mayor Jean Quan to investigate this incident and allow
peaceful protests to continue.

    Click
    here
    to send her an email message

  • Call the Mayor’s office: (510) 238-3141
  • Post a message on her Facebook
    page

Scott Olsen, a Marine veteran who did two tours in Iraq, was hit by a police
projectile during last night’s brutal police crackdown of Occupy Oakland.  He is
in serious but stable condition at an Oakland hospital.

It’s ironic that days after Obama’s announcement of the end of the Iraq War,
Scott faced a veritable war zone in the streets of Oakland last night.  He and
other protesters were surrounded by explosions and smoke (tear gas) going off
around him as people nearby carried him injured while yelling for a medic.

A disturbing video can be seen at http://ivaw.org/

The Bay Area Indy Media center also
posted dramatic photos of Scott being cared for and escorted to saftey right
after he was hit.
WARNING: these images are graphic and disturbing: http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2011/10/25/18695124.php

More and more veterans are joining the 99% Movement

Scott is a member of Iraq Veterans Against the War who was discharged from
military service with the Marines in 2010 after two tours in Iraq.  He is one of
many veterans who have returned home and gotten involved in the Occupy protests
taking place in hundreds of cities around the nation.  Veterans like Scott
recognize that they are part of the 99% who face uncertain economic futures,
including few job prospects and rising tuition costs. Rates of homelessness and
unemployment are higher for veterans than for their civilian counterparts.

IVAW members around the country have been participating in their local Occupy
demonstrations, and are finding other veterans there as well.  “Our members are
flocking to these occupations,” says Joyce Wagner, IVAW Board President who has
been participating in Occupy Pittsburgh.  “The Occupy encampments are a great
place to meet other veterans, network, and get veterans services.  We’re
actually bringing a VA social worker to our camp and have several older
homeless veterans in our camp.”

Supporting Scott’s recovery

Scott remains in stable but critical condition at an Oakland hospital
awaiting a decision about whether he will undergo surgery. We have set up a
medical fund to support any up-coming health needs he has.
To contribute to this fund, click here.
Thank you for your support. We will keep you posted on Scott’s condition.

In Solidarity,

Iraq Veterans Against the War

“Occupy the U.S., not Iraq/Afghanistan” | US Labor Against the War

Wednesday, October 26th, 2011

U.S. Labor Against the War marches in New York, supports the “Occupy” movement.

http://www.uslaboragainstwar.org/section.php?id=153

Why is the Most Wasteful Government Agency Ignored in Deficit Hysteria?

Sunday, September 4th, 2011

by David Morris

(reprinted from the Houston Peace and Justice Center, http://www.hpjc.org/node/275)

U.S. military spending now exceeds the spending of all other countries combined.

In all the talk about the federal deficit, why is the single largest culprit
left out of the conversation? Why is the one part of government that best
epitomizes everything conservatives say they hate about government—- waste, incompetence, and corruption—all but exempt from conservative criticism?

Of course, I’m talking about the Pentagon. Any serious battle plan to reduce
the deficit must take on the Pentagon. In 2011 military spending accounted for
more than 58 percent of all federal discretionary spending and even more if the
interest on the federal debt that is related to military spending were added. In
the last ten years we have spent more than $7.6 trillion on military and
homeland security according to the National Priorities Project.

In the last decade military spending has soared from $300 billion to $700 billion.


When debt ceilings and deficits seem to be the
only two items on Washington’s agenda, it is both revealing and tragic that both
parties give a free pass to military spending. Representative Paul Ryan’s much
discussed Tea Party budget accepted Obama’s proposal for a pathetic $78 billion
reduction in military spending over 5 years, a recommendation that would only
modestly slow the rate of growth of military spending.

Indeed, the Republican government battering ram appears to have stopped at
the Pentagon door. This was evident early on. As soon as they took over the
House of Representatives, Republicans changed the rules so that military
spending does not have to be offset by reduced spending somewhere else, unlike
any other kind of government spending. It is the only activity of government
they believe does not have to be paid for. Which brings to mind a bit of wisdom from one of their heroes, Adam Smith. “Were the expense of war to be defrayed always by revenue raised within the year … wars would in general be more speedily concluded, and less wantonly undertaken.”

The Tea Party revolution has only strengthened the Republican Party’s resolve
that the Pentagon’s budget is untouchable. An analysis by the Heritage
Foundation of Republican votes on defense spending found that Tea Party freshmen
were even more likely than their Republican elders to vote against cutting any
part of the military budget.

What makes the hypocrisy even more revealing is that the Pentagon turns out
to be the poster child for government waste and incompetence.

In 2009 the Government Accountability Office (GAO) found “staggering” cost overruns of almost $300 billion in nearly 70  percent of the Pentagon’s 96 major weapons. What’s more, the programs were
running, on average, 21 months behind schedule. And when they were completed,
they provided less than they promised.
The Defense Logistics Agency had no use for parts worth more than half of the
$13.7 billion in equipment stacked up in DOD warehouses in 2006 to 2008.

And these are only the tips of the military’s misspending iceberg. We really
don’t know how much the Pentagon wastes because, believe it or not, there hasn’t
been a complete audit of the Pentagon in more than 15 years.

In 1994, the Government Management Reform Act required the Inspector General
of each federal agency to audit and publish the financial statements of their
agency. The Department of Defense was the only agency that has been unable to
comply. In fiscal 1998 the Department of Defense used $1.7 trillion of
undocumentable adjustments to balance the books. In 2002 the situation was even
worse. CBS News reported that Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld admitted, “we cannot
track $2.3 trillion in transactions.”

Imagine that a school district were to reveal that it didn’t know where it
spent its money. Now imagine the Republican response. Perhaps, “Off with
their desktops!”

How did Congress’ respond to DOD’s delinquency? It gave it absolution and
allowed it to opt out of its legal requirement. But as a sop to outraged public
opinion Congress required DOD to set a date when it would have its book
sufficiently in order to be audited. Which the Pentagon dutiful did, and missed
every one of the target dates. The latest is 2017 and DOD has already announced
it will be unable to meet that deadline.

Adding insult to injury, last September, the GAO found that the new computer systems intended to improve the Pentagon’s financial oversight are themselves nearly 100 percent or $7 billion
over budget and as much as 12 years behind schedule!

The Pentagon is not just incompetent. It is corrupt. In November 2009 the
Pentagon’s Defense Contract Audit Agency (DCAA), the federal watchdog
responsible for auditing oversight of military contractors, raised the question of criminal wrongdoing when it found that the audits that did occur were riddled with serious breaches of auditor
independence. One Pentagon auditor admitted he did not perform detailed tests
because, “The contractor would not appreciate it.”

Why would the Pentagon allow its contractors to get away with fraud? To
answer that question we need to understand the incestuous relationship between
the Pentagon and its contractors that has been going on for years, and is
getting worse. From 2004 to 2008, 80 percent of retiring three and four star
officers went to work as consultants or defense industry executives.
Thirty-four out of 39 three- and four-star generals and admirals who
retired in 2007 are now working in defense industry roles — nearly 90 percent.


Generals are recruited for private sector jobs
well before they retire. Once employed by the military contractor the general
maintains a Pentagon advisory role.

“In almost any other realm it would seem a clear conflict of interest. But
this is the Pentagon where…such apparent conflicts are a routine fact of life”,
an in-depth investigation by the Boston Globe concluded.

U.S. military spending now exceeds the spending of all other countries combined. Knowledge
military experts argue that we can cut at least $1 trillion from the Pentagon
budget without changing its currently expressed mission. But a growing number
believe that the mission itself is suspect. Economic competitors like India and
China certainly approve of our willingness to undermine our economic
competitiveness by diverting trillions of dollars into war and weapons
production. Some argue that all this spending has made us more secure but all
the evidence points in the opposite direction. Certainly our $2 trillion and
counting military adventures in the Middle East and Afghanistan and Pakistan
have won us few friends and multiplied our enemies.

Defense experts Gordon Adams and Matthew Leatherman, writing in the Washington
Post
offer another argument against unrestrained military spending.

“Countries feel threatened when rivals ramp up their defenses; this was true
in the Cold War, and now it may happen with China. It’s how arms races are born.
We spend more, inspiring competitors to do the same — thus inflating defense
budgets without making anyone safer. For example, Gates observed in May that no
other country has a single ship comparable to our 11 aircraft carriers. Based on
the perceived threat that this fleet poses, the Chinese are pursuing an
anti-ship ballistic missile program. U.S. military officials have decried this
“carrier-killer’‘ effort, and in response we are diversifying our capabilities
to strike China, including a new long-range bomber program, and modernizing our
carrier fleet at a cost of about $10 billion per ship.”

For tens of millions of Americans real security comes not from fighting wars
on foreign soil but from not having to worry losing their house or their job or
their medical care. As Joshua Holland, columnist for Alternet points out 46 states faced combined budget shortfalls this year of $130 billion, leading them to fire tens of thousands of workers and cut
off assistance to millions of families. Just the supplemental requests for
fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan this year were $170 billion.

What is perhaps most astonishing of all is that cutting the military budget
is wildly popular. Even back in 1995, when military spending was only a fraction
of its present size, a poll by the Program on International Policy Attitudes
reported that 42 percent of the US public feeling that defense spending is too
high and a majority of Americans were convinced
that defense spending “has weakened the US economy and given some allies an
economic edge.”

This March Reuters released a new poll that found the majority of Americans support
reducing defense spending.

The next time you hear Republicans insist they want to ferret out government
waste and reduce spending and stamp out incompetence ask them why the one part
of government that exemplifies everything they say is wrong with government is
the one part of government they embrace most heartily.

David Morris is co-founder and vice president of the Institute for Local Self-Reliance in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and director of its New Rules Project.
You can follow David at defendingthepublicgood.org

Posted July 7, 2011

Killeen: Under the Hood Update, August 2011

Thursday, August 18th, 2011

August 2011
Under the Hood and IVAW have joined forces with the Civilian Soldier Alliance to expand Operation Recovery efforts in Killeen!
Founded in 2007, the Civilian Soldier Alliance is an organization of civilians working with veterans and active-duty service-members to build a GI resistance movement towards a just foreign policy. They work with and support service-members and veterans to withdraw military support from the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan, supporting resistance within the military that empowers
service members to have a voice and develop as leaders organizing for change.
We are very excited about this new partnership. Read more about how Civilian Soldier Alliance is  digging into the Operation Recovery Campaign in Killeen.
Check out Under the Hood’s new coffee bar!
Thanks to Malachi Muncy, UTH’s intern extraordinaire, Under the Hood now has a new coffee bar with UTH logo.  Now when you visit Under the Hood, you’ll be greeted with a cup of organic fair trade coffee when you walk in the door.  Please stop by and enjoy a cup with us.
Join us this Friday, August 19th at 5604 Manor (Austin) for a screening of the documentary “ Grounds for Resistance.”
A $5 suggested donation at the door will benefit Under the Hood.
Location: 5604 Manor, 5604 Manor Road, Austin, Texas 78723
Time: 7 – 9 p.m.
This documentary tells the story of the Coffee Strong coffee house located outside the
Fort Lewis, Washington army base.  Aaron Hughes, an organizer with Iraq Veterans Against the War will be on hand to answer questions and speak about IVAW’s Operation Recovery program.  Staff and
volunteers from Under the Hood will also be available to answer questions about their work.
Under the Hood Upcoming Events:

Ribs n’ Rights
Every Thursday 7-9pm
Eat some ribs and learn more about your rights as a service member.
Free with enlisted ID.

Killeen Poetry Slam
Friday August 26, 7-11pm
Under the Hood is proud to host the Killeen Poetry Slam every other Friday kicking off on Friday
August 26!
Refreshments and snacks available.
[Note: This is recurring. Every other Friday, 8/26, 9/9, 9/23]

Women’s Night at Under the Hood
Friday September 16, 7-10pm
A woman’s only space to relax, speak freely and have fun together.  More details tba.

Soldier and Veteran Art Showcase
Friday, September 30, 8pm-11pm
Under the Hood will be hosting a Soldier and Veteran’s Art Showcase, where soldiers can display artwork and see what other art is being done by soldiers and veterans in the community. Interested in
submitting artwork? More details to be announced soon.

Join us for Hoodstock III on Sunday, October 2nd at Jovita’s!  (Austin)
Our annual Hoodstock show will feature local artists and musicians and all proceeds will benefit Under the Hood Cafe & Outreach Center.  We are still recruiting local artists to perform at this year’s event.  If you would like to donate your time and talent to this important annual event, please contact Jim Turpin at [email protected].
Your continued support of Under the Hood allows us to continue our important work in Killeen. Whether you are making a one-time donation or want to sign up as a sustainer, it’s easy to contribute through PayPal.
The Fort Hood Support Network (FHSN) operates Under the Hood Café and Outreach Center.  FHSN is a Texas non-profit corporation with 501(c)(3) tax exempt status.  Donations may be treated as
tax-deductible.
Interested in sharing some of your time and talents with Under the Hood?
We are always happy for support in any form.  Along with monetary support to keep our doors open, we can always use other forms of assistance.  If you believe that you can provide support in some way, please feel free to contact us.  We’d be happy to put you to work!
Check out the  ResiStore! Now you can purchase great items and support Under the Hood at the same time. Check it out here.

Under the Hood Update is on Facebook. Become a fan! You can find archived issues and
connect with other fans of Under the Hood.  Visit our Facebook page by clicking here.
Past issues of Under the Hood Update are now on the Under the Hood website! If you’ve missed any of our past issues, or if you just want to re-read past articles, please click here.

Middle East/North Africa: “We stand by the region’s independent labor movements in their struggle for economic and political rights and a better life for all.” | AFL-CIO

Friday, August 5th, 2011
People’s Movement In The Middle East And North Africa
August 04, 2011, Washington, D.C.
AFL-CIO Executive Council statement, http://www.aflcio.org/aboutus/thisistheaflcio/ecouncil/ec08042011.cfm
In Tunisia, Egypt and elsewhere in the Middle East and North Africa, worsening unemployment and economic conditions, especially among young people, combined with the lack of political freedom, have sparked popular mobilization against the existing corrupt and authoritarian regimes.

Striking museum workers, Cairo, Feb 9, 2011 (Ben Curtis-AP)

After enduring decades of repression exercised by governments with the support of the West, including the United States, the workers and people of Tunisia and Egypt have mobilized by the millions for democracy and fundamental rights. The AFL-CIO and the global labor movement salute the independent trade union movements in both of these countries and support their aspirations for social justice.
In Tunisia, the Tunisian General Union of Labor (known by its French acronym UGTT) played a key role in coordinating and supporting mobilization across the country to help express the demands of the Tunisian citizenry for an end to authoritarian rule and a more just economic system. The global labor movement, led by the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC), salutes the role the UGTT is playing to help bring about a democratic transition in Tunisia, and to fight for a more equitable economy.
Weeks later, the Egyptian people rose up in massive numbers led by the youth to demand change and to call for fundamental economic and political rights. Independent trade unions were among those demonstrating for 18 days in Tahrir  Square and elsewhere around the nation. The seeds of a transition to a just, transparent and participatory political system have taken root and the AFL-CIO stands with the Egyptian people in this time of transformative change, and salutes the leadership role of the ITUC to bring the full force of the international labor movement in solidarity with Egypt’s new unions to help them solidify the promise of the revolution.
“Brave independent trade unionists in Algeria, Iraq, Yemen and Oman also are speaking out for better jobs and wages, and for more political rights for the underrepresented and voiceless.”

Federation of Workers Councils and Unions in Iraq, Baghdad, May Day, 2011 (USLAW)

Since then, the movement for change in the region has spread. In Bahrain, the General Federation of Bahrain Trade Unions has been a leading voice in the political reform movement and has advocated strongly on behalf of more equitable distribution of wealth in the country. Despite the entry of foreign troops into the country to suppress the reform movement and sweeping arrests of Bahrain’s political and human rights leaders, the trade unions continue to stand up for basic principles of human dignity. They called a general strike in the wake of the government’s brutal crackdown on dissent. Brave independent trade unionists in Algeria, Iraq, Yemen and Oman also are speaking out for better jobs and wages, and for more political rights for the underrepresented and voiceless.
Over the coming months in Tunisia, Egypt, Bahrain and across the region, the voice of workers must be heard by policy makers working on reforming the political systems. All workers, irrespective of age or gender, must be represented in the discussions about the future of their countries.
Equitable and sustainable economic development, with decent work at its heart, is essential to meeting the aspirations of people in the region. Economic systems that expand opportunities for everyone to achieve satisfying, productive and secure jobs are crucial to a democracy that delivers for people, and these priorities are being articulated through the protest movement in the region. They also are the underpinning of the ILO’s Decent Work agenda, whose values and program should be expanded in the region.
Millions of people throughout the Middle East and North Africa are united in their demand for change. Throughout the region, unemployment and underemployment, low wages, lack of opportunity and political repression are the root causes of this growing movement for reform. Workers in particular have suffered repression due to severe restrictions on freedom of association and collective bargaining. This repression must end.
“We express deep appreciation for the many unions across the region that have stood in solidarity with America’s workers fighting for these same principles of justice and democracy for workers, right here in Wisconsin and throughout the United States.”

Egypt supports Wisconsin (March 2011, USLAW, source unidentified)

We stand by the region’s independent labor movements in their struggle for economic and political rights and a better life for all. Their tireless, visionary efforts on behalf of workers and their societies are an inspiration to us. Together with the global labor movement, we will continue to encourage and stand in solidarity with their efforts to help transform their societies.
We express deep appreciation for the many unions across the region that have stood in solidarity with America’s workers fighting for these same principles of justice and democracy for workers, right here in Wisconsin and throughout the United States.
The U.S. government historically has not stood up for the workers and the people of the Middle East and North Africa. It is time for this to change. The peoples of the region deserve better. The governments of the region and the United States need to be responsive to the demands of the people for political and economic reform, and prioritize them over narrowly perceived national economic or political interests that usually leave average working people in the Middle East and North Africa holding the short end of the stick.
We call on the U.S. government to make a clean break with past practice and strongly support freedom of association, human and workers’ rights in all its policies in the region as a matter of urgent priority. Democracy and social justice are not built by outside forces, but it is incumbent on the international community and the United  States in particular to follow the will of the people who are risking everything for better futures.

Washington, D.C.: How to make the deficit and debt disappear | Michael Eisenscher, US Labor Against the War

Tuesday, August 2nd, 2011

In the Deficit & Debt Debate, the Problem Is a Deficit  of Facts

by Michael Eisenscher, National Coordinator, U.S. Labor Against the War
July 27th, 2011

[TxLAW note:  Where should the cuts be?  Who should pay?  Here are Eisenscher's suggestions.  For the full statement (well worth reading!), see http://uslaboragainstwar.org/article.php?id=24517]

End the war in Afghanistan and finish withdrawing US troops from
Iraq ($118 billion).
Nearly two-thirds of Americans say the
Afghan war isn’t worth fighting.  31% want U.S.  troops home from Afghanistan
immediately; another 21% say within a year.[11] They are
right.  These wars are not protecting us from Al Qaeda or other terrorist
networks.  Instead, they help them recruit.

Close half of our military bases overseas, with appropriate force reductions ($55
billion).

Stop trying to control fossil fuel supplies abroad – at a cost of $103 billion a year.[12] We don’t need to dominate the world’s gas and oil supplies
to guarantee our own security.  Investing in sustainable and renewable energy
systems here would make us more secure.  But even as is, all the world’s major
suppliers happily sell as much as the U.S.  is prepared to buy.

There’s $276 billion – $2.76 trillion over ten years.  We could get to $3.5 trillion by
terminating destabilizing Cold War weapons systems, cutting thousands of nuclear
warheads (the ultimate weapons of mass destruction) from our stockpile of 5000,
and actually tackling $60 billion in annual military cost overruns. . . .

If in addition, Bush era tax cuts for the very wealthy were rescinded, a new top
bracket were instituted for millionaires and billionaires, capital gains were
taxed at ordinary income rates rather than the 15% now in effect, a small
transaction tax was applied to speculative stock trades, tax loopholes that
allow the wealthy and large corporations to reduce or evade taxes altogether
were closed, the cap was lifted on maximum income subject to Social Security
taxes ($108,600) so that high earners paid on all their income, the estate tax
were restored to 2008 levels (45% on estates larger than $2 million), a
“Medicare for All” single-payer health plan replaced the for-profit model we
have now – in other words, if the privileged elite actually had to shoulder
their share commensurate with their wealth – the issue of the deficit and debt
would simply evaporate, and Social Security and Medicare would be put on a sound
basis for many decades to come.  Add to that the impact of real economic
recovery that puts people back to work, which would bring additional revenues
into the treasury, and we’ d be debating how to spend budget surpluses rather
than whose ox is to be gored.