Xref: utzoo soc.rights.human:7009 misc.headlines:26749 alt.activism:14759 soc.culture.arabic:7843 misc.activism.progressive:111 Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!usc!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!wuarchive!mont!rich From: jad@whutt.att.com (John A Dinardo) Newsgroups: soc.rights.human,misc.headlines,alt.activism,soc.culture.arabic,misc.activism.progressive Subject: #II, CRIMINALS AGAINST HUMANITY Usurp Our Power & Extort Our Earnings (was: Shamir Perpetrates His Final Solution. Congress Cooperates.) Keywords: SEE WHAT'S BEING DEDUCTED FROM YOUR SALARY AND YOUR SOUL. Message-ID: <1991Jun17.181739.24722@pencil.cs.missouri.edu> Date: 17 Jun 91 15:19:16 GMT Sender: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel) Followup-To: soc.rights.human Distribution: na Organization: AT&T Bell Laboratories Lines: 100 Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu The following excerpts are from the June 12, 1991 edition of the UNDERCURRENTS program, broadcast daily over Pacifica Radio Network affiliate WBAI-FM 99.5 in New York City, which I transcribed from a tape recording: * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * (continuation) PHYLLIS BENNIS: The economic pressures are leading to the same kinds of feelings. I was in the Gaza Strip all day today -- in Jabalya Camp, in Gaza City, all over the main part of the Strip. And the sense of economic desperation is really growing. We asked one representative of one of the international organizations working in Gaza, how people are surviving with the unemploymemt rate, among the people who used to work inside Israel from Gaza, ranging somewhere up to 60 percent. We said, "How are people surviving?" And he said, "Well, first of all, they're cutting back on their consumption patterns." This is obviously a very poor population who never had a high consumption pattern anyway. They're now eating cheaper foods, which means people are subsisting largely on bread, olive oil, and maybe some spices, but very little protein -- very little good food. The women -- and men, as well, but particularly the women -- are beginning to sell their jewelry. We heard stories of women who, during the very brief period (sometimes one-half hour or one hour in as much as an entire week) [when the populace was allowed to exit their houses] during the curfew that was imposed throughout the Gulf War, would have to first try and find, in that very brief time, a buyer for their wedding gold before they could have enough money to buy bread for their families before the curfew went back into effect. So there's this tremendous sense of pressure -- a tremendous sense of things beginning to increase in tension. And there's just no relief in sight. Things are worse than I've ever seen them. LAURA FLANDERS: As far as the response from the people -- people in that country and elsewhere -- in talking about the future of the Intifada, what have you found in terms of that discussion on your trips there? PHYLLIS BENNIS: ..... There's a sense here that things will have to change. There's a sense that we have entered a different period of history since the Gulf War, and that everything is different, and we cannot rely on the kinds of assumptions that for so long governed the dynamics of the Intifada. On the other hand, there is no clear set of alternatives emerging. The aspects of the Intifada that characterized the later period, in terms of the creation of alternative institutions and economic systems designed to help resist dependency on the Israeli occupation authorities -- those things still exist, but they are under tremendous pressure. The pressure of taxation, for example, has meant that the issue of calling for even broader civil disobedience may have to be reassessed. There's just no way for people to live with the kind of tax pressures that the Israelis have imposed. And there has not yet been created the ability of the Intifada's leadership to provide alternatives. Asking people to avoid working inside Israel can only work for so long when there are no alternative jobs available. So the whole question of the direction of the Intifada is very intimately bound up with the question of the economy. And right now that remains an unresolved question that is rapidly reaching crisis proportions. (to be continued) * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * The criminals against humanity who perpetrate these atrocities derive their political power and financing from you and me! >From THEY DARE TO SPEAK OUT, by Paul Findley, a 22-year veteran of the House of Representatives: * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Washington is a city of acronyms, and today one of the best-known in Congress is AIPAC. The mere mention of it brings a sober, if not furtive look, to the face of anyone on Capitol Hill who deals with Middle East policy. AIPAC -- the American Israel Public Affairs Committee -- is now the preeminent power in Washington Lobbying. ..... AIPAC sometimes finds out what Congressmen say about Middle East policy even in private conversations, and those who criticize Israel do so at their political peril. ..... It is no overstatement to say that AIPAC has effectively gained control of virtually all of Capitol Hill's action on Middle East policy. Almost without exception, House and Senate members do its bidding, because most of them consider AIPAC to be the direct Capitol Hill representative of a political force that can make or break their chances at election time. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * I hope you will save the installments of this ongoing series and disseminate them to anyone whom you think might care enough (e.g. leaders of religious congregations, senior citizens groups, compassionate members of your community, etc.) to contact their Congressperson and insist that the leaders responsible for these crimes against humanity be charged with violations of the Nuremburg Principles, the Fourth Geneva Convention and the International Treaty Against Genocide (which President Reagan signed in 1988). John DiNardo