Posts Tagged civil rights

Getting Stuff Off My Chest

May 28, 2010… It’s Friday and time to get some things “off my chest.” I have three items that I need to yell about. So here goes:

REP. FUDGE – YOU MADE THE WRONG DECISION

I guess my Congresswoman – Rep. Marcia Fudge – believes nothing she does will ever put any stress on her holding the 11th District job.

Maybe she thinks no one will notice that she sided with the big telecommunication companies and against her constituents. The big communications companies would like to control the internet and how much it costs to access it.

Fudge, along with 74 other Democratic Congress members, allied themselves with AT&T, Verizon ad Comcast by signing a letter that will undercut the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) “ability to make a fast, affordable and open internet available to everyone in America,” as a watchdog labels of the letter.

Fudge – who represents a district with many low income people – took the side that will deprive rural and low income communities from adequate internet access.

Shame on the Congresswoman.

Tell her she’s on the wrong side: 216-522-4900.

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CHINA ON MY MIND

Clevelanders and Ohioans should be angry about labor practices that discriminate against workers. Let’s start with China since we have a mayor that wants to marry Cleveland to a Chinese manufacturer.

I don’t know about you but I’ve been opposed to slavery for a long time.

Apparently, the Chinese government isn’t.

The New York Times had several articles that point to how the government there tramples all over its citizens. And that includes its state companies.

I guess developers here would like to have the same privileges the government has in China to spur development. People in the way? Just push them away.

They say new rules are being set to correct these problems. But before they take effect the Times reports the inhumane process. Some people are pressing back but not quickly enough:

“Today in Laogucheng, a dingy warren of apartments and shops slated for redevelopment on Beijing’s far west side, the fruits of that effort are on vivid display: a powerful developer is racing to demolish the neighborhood before the rules are passed, says the Times. What’s occurring around the country, says one holdout to the demolition, are “sudden and violent demolitions.”

Read the entire front page story from Thursday:

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/27/world/asia/27china.html?th&emc=th

POOR WORK CONDITIONS PROMPT SUICIDES

The Times on its business page Thursday has a startling article about a firm, which supplies a number of American companies (Apple, Dell, and Hewlett-Packard). It has such harsh work standards that a number of young workers have committed suicide. The company is Foxconn.

“There were bows and an apology from Terry Gou, one of the richest men in Asia and chairman of Foxconn Technology, reports the Times. The company employs some 400,000 people. Workers get some $32 for 40 hours work, the article says. Workers are housed 10 to a room.

Apologies are totally inadequate.

“Foxconn’s production line system is designed so well that no worker will rest even for one second during work; they make sure you’re always busy for every section,” says a spokesperson for China Labor Watch.

That’s great. Who needs a one second break?

Just what we need in Cleveland, right? I guess there are a few more questions Council can ask the Jackson administration about its no-bid deal to bring a Chinese LEDs company’s U. S. headquarters here.

No thanks.

The full Times piece on the China suicide company can be found here:

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/27/technology/27suicide.html?th&emc=th

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PD NEEDS MORE PROOF THAN A TELEPHONE CALL

The Plain Dealer led the newspaper today (Friday) with a front-page headlines advertising a sparkling new Casino in downtown Cleveland. I know the PD wants to push positive stuff for the city. But it can’t be created by articles in the paper.

Shockingly, the basis of the article comes from a telephone call. That’s putting a lot of trust in talking to someone you can’t even see.

We’re not even shown the typically phony sketches for the advertised “sleek, contemporary building with large areas of glass at two main entrances along Huron Road and a row of restaurants and shops between them, facing the street and sidewalk.”

We’re to expected believe the developers. No thanks. The story is by Steve Litt, the Plain Dealer’s architect critic. Steve, you can do better than this.

We are given a lot of promises, including “the majority of the infrastructure will be borne by us,” meaning Dan Gilbert, who won the rights to build a Cleveland casino. I hope Steve saves that quote when the time comes for these “entrepreneurs” to do private enterprise. Without public money, that is. Laughable.

There’s a whole lot of flackery being peddled here.

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Kent State Shootings… Euclid Avenue Blocked – May 4, 1970

May 4, 2010… Not everyone knows or remembers that Case-Western Reserve University was a center of anti-war and peace activities during the long Vietnam War. I remember because, although I wasn’t a student, I spent a good deal of time on campus.

On May 4, 1970, I remember being in my car when I heard news of the Kent State shootings on the radio. I don’t remember where I was going. I do remember changing my direction.

I drove my car to the CWRU campus.

It’s hard to believe that it was 40 years ago today. It’s difficult to believe that we as a nation are engaged again in far off war – this time two wars.

I remember joining students and others who of their own volition began to sit down in the street to block Euclid Avenue. Reaction to the news had begun to spread. It was their protest of the shooting. Four students had been killed in 13 seconds of rifle fire by the Ohio National Guard at Kent State. The shootings occurred at 12:24 p.m. As I remember it, the protesters sat and stood in the street as a blocking body across Euclid Avenue in front of Thwing Center. Vehicle travel, of course, came to a halt.

The demonstration happened spontaneously. There was no Twitter or Facebook at that time to rally people to action. It wasn’t required. People knew automatically what to do.

The protest reflected the passions of the times. The war was deeply unpopular. More so on American campuses. The war had gone on far too long. The Vietnam War eventually took the lives of more than 58,000 Americans. There were more than 300,000 Americans wounded. Some 500,000 to 600,000 North Vietnamese were killed with some 15 million casualties in the North. Tens of thousands more were killed in the South.

Despite the intensity of the times, my memory of the day is sketchy.

I do remember one thing. It was one of the few times when I can pinpoint chest pains. I had been having these pains for some time and certainly the intensity of the day must have caused my pain. Although my symptoms were classic – pain down in the chest and down the arm – I was being treated at the time for an “overly acidic stomach.” I was 38 at the time.

I do remember Police Chief Patrick Gerity appeared soon after the protesters blocked off Euclid Avenue, a main city thoroughfare. Police in cars, on foot and mounted on horses assembled in force to face off against the protesters. It was obvious the police would not allow Euclid to remain blocked from traffic for long.

The bullhorn message from Gerity was that the street had to be cleared. He had the Mounted Police readied to enforce his demand.

I don’t remember how long the standoff lasted. It wasn’t very long. The protests did persist, however, as protesters continued to mingle in groups off the street. We moved from the street but still congregated on the sides of the street and by nearby buildings. It was a message to police that the street might be blocked again.

I do remember the protests continuing later into the afternoon. And I remember that, after the street had been cleared of demonstrators, the police continued to try to break-up any possibility of assembly. Mounted police riding off the street came up beyond the sidewalks into the campus breaking up groups of protesters. It’s surprising how intimidating a charging horse can be. People moved.

The history of the anti-war movement on Case’s campus, though rich in actors and acts, has never been very well documented to my knowledge. It could serve as a contrast to the quiet nature of the campus today as two wars hardly touch the consciences or consciousness of students.

Case-Western campus individuals and organizations, however, played an important role in anti-war activities locally and nationally.

Sid Peck, an associate professor of sociology at CWRU, was a national peace mobilization leader along with anti-war notables Dave Dellinger and Tom Hayden. Dr. Benjamin Spock, a professor of child development, spent 12 years here and gained national press attention for his anti-war activities. I wrote a page-one profile about Dr. Spock for the Wall Street Journal. Here are my remembrances of my 1967 interviews with Spock:

http://www.albionmonitor.com/9806a/copyright/spockprofile.html

Cleveland was also a hot spot in the 1960-70s, because Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) had chosen Cleveland as one of its two target cities (Newark was the other) for organizing in the ’60s. Some Cleveland SDS people played a role in the Kent State protests that led up to the May 4th killings. The ferment of the civil rights movement here, along with the election of Carl Stokes as mayor, made the city prominent in the national news of the times.

You would think that this era of Cleveland was rich enough in people’s history that someone would produce a detailed written record of those times and events. It deserves that attention.

Here is a copy of a letter sent by Peck and others for the mobilization for demonstrations in Washington, D. C. “to bring an end to the most tragic war in our history:”

http://www.blogs.nybooks.com/articles/archives/1969/nov/20/november-mobilization/

You also can find some material on the war and Cleveland’s involvement in this Encyclopedia of Cleveland History article:

http://ech.cwru.edu/ech-cgi/article.pl?id=VW

It took another five years for the Vietnam War to come to an end. It wasn’t until April 1975, that the final U. S. Marines guarding the U. S. Embassy in South Vietnam left in helicopters to end U. S. military involvement in Vietnam.

It seemed to me that the firing upon Kent students and killing by the Ohio National Guard, along with the killing of two students at the historically black Jackson State University in Mississippi on May 14, had a strong effect on students. It instilled upon anti-war students the fact that their country would kill them for protesting against the war. There were student protests on campuses throughout the nation following the Kent State killings. However, I have the memory that the Kent State deadly force by officials did dampen the anti-war passions of the young.

They learned that their government, not simply the enemy, could kill them.

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