Showing posts with label resistance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label resistance. Show all posts

Friday, September 20, 2024

Necessary Discomfort: Career Fair Disruption

Cornell student demonstrators after shutting down recruiting by genocide profiteers Boeing and L3Harris at the Statler Hotel in Ithaca, NY  (photo: Karlie McGann/Sun Contributor)
 

Reposting this rocking column by Cornell student organizer Nick Wilson, with permission. 

Necessary Discomfort: On the Sept. 18 Career Fair Disruption

What does it mean to live because other people are dying? A friend posed this question at Cornell Students for Justice in Palestine’s vigil Tuesday night, describing the agonizing cognitive dissonance of living a “normal life” while your country carries out imperialist ethnic cleansing across the globe. How can you know that your tax dollars and tuition are bankrolling an ongoing genocide that has likely already killed upwards of 180,000 people and not spend every waking hour attempting to wash the blood from your hands? How the hell can you apply for a job at Boeing?

Most Cornell students live simultaneously in two realities: one where they are aware that American missiles are being used in one of the most repugnant acts of ethnic cleansing in human history, where every day brings new stories of mothers forced collect the scattered remains of their infant children in plastic bags; and another where they are pursuing a lucrative career that will allow them to live comfortably in the most powerful nation on Earth after graduation. It is time to recognize that these realities are not only simultaneous, but deeply connected — your comfortable life in the imperial core is predicated on violent dispossession and occupation in the rest of the world.

On Wednesday, students disrupted the ILR School’s Human Capital and HR Career Fair, which featured recruiters from weapons manufacturers Boeing and L3Harris. Students organized with the Coalition for Mutual Liberation successfully shut the event down using pots, pans and noisemakers in Statler Hall until both employers left the building. They also delivered an indictment to Boeing and L3Harris recruiters finding both companies guilty of aiding and abetting human rights violations, war crimes and genocide.

This action has significantly altered incentive structures at our university. For the administration, it has been made clear that inviting arms manufacturers to our campus after 70 percent of students voted to sever ties with them will also invite the risk of a negative student response. For students, CML has made it clear that you cannot passively support Palestine or understand the role of American weapons manufacturers in the genocide in Gaza and also make the personal decision to work for genocidaires — your friends and peers are watching and will hold you accountable for facilitating genocide with your labor.

Even when left implicit, the only real argument students make in defense of working for such repugnant firms is that their personal well-being matters more than the survival of Palestinian civilians. Cornell students are a part of the 4 percent of the world population that lives in the United States, and a part of the roughly .079 percent of the American population that attend a university with an endowment in excess of $10 billion. Regardless of your background, attending Cornell allows you to join the global hyper-elite — and even if students believe that they have earned that class position through hard work and merit, they will be faced with countless prime opportunities to perpetrate unspeakable harm towards working people in the Global South. You will likely become, and in some ways already are, immensely powerful. You alone are morally responsible for how you choose to wield your power over others — and you can almost certainly find a job that doesn’t involve constructing missiles that kill children.

But change cannot rely on people collectively deciding to act ethically against their own interests — the underlying incentive structures that shape the role of genocidal firms in our universities must first be shifted. Our university should not be a recruitment pipeline or a corporate partner for companies that profit from ethnic cleansing and imperial violence. Given the Cornell Board of Trustees’ refusal to even hold a vote on divestment from arms manufacturers — University leadership elected to arrest 24 students, graduate workers and staff members instead — it seems inevitable that students would at some point intervene and push this campus forcibly in the direction of humanity.

Wednesday night, VP Joel Malina announced that Cornell will target students who disrupted the career fair with “immediate action including suspension.” This represents Cornell’s own attempt to alter incentive structures for speaking out about our university’s complicity in genocide, making it even easier for students to justify their individual complicity. Cornell should not suspend its students of conscience — but as with the first two rounds of suspensions last spring, suppression tactics would likely only fuel the further growth of CML and its member organizations.

In the ivory tower, it is not just easy to ignore the suffering of colonized peoples around the world — it is a necessary precondition for participation in university life. Wednesday’s disruption may have inconvenienced some students, including plenty that never intended to approach the Boeing or L3Harris tables. But in doing so, they made our university’s role in facilitating an ongoing genocide impossible to ignore — and made visible a strong stigma against working for arms manufacturers. Until Cornell does the right thing and breaks ties with firms engaged in genocide profiteering, life on campus may be uncomfortable — but that is a price we should all be willing to pay.

Nick Wilson is a third year student in the New York State School of Industrial & Labor Relations at Cornell. His biweekly column Interim Expressive Activity provides a perspective on goings-on on campus from those who believe that Cornell should act less like a hedge fund and more like a responsible stakeholder in the Ithaca and global communities. The column does not intend to facilitate, engage in, participate or assist in any violations of University policy. Nick can be reached at nwilson@cornellsun.com.

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Readers of this blog may recall my related post "Bad Boss, Bad Job" about disrupting genocide profiteer General Dynamics' hiring event recently in Augusta, Maine. We are everywhere. Expect us!

Friday, August 23, 2024

Peace Action Maine Speaker Condemns Hamas & Is Booed Off The Stage


On Wednesday I was at a rally organized by the Maine Coalition for Palestine and DSA Maine in downtown Portland. It drew about 150 people and received some coverage from local tv channel WGME, including this comment from my friend Mary Beth Sullivan: 

So, we say one thing and do another. That doesn't represent the American people. The American people do not want this genocide to continue.

"Say one thing" referred to the Democratic Party convention hearing lie after lie from the current administration claiming they want a ceasefire while meanwhile shipping an additional $20 billion worth of weapons to Israel.

The program for the rally was varied and included speakers from several organizations that are part of the Maine Coalition for Palestine. There was a dabke dance led by Palestinian-Americans, a plea for humanitarian donations to help a family in Gaza, and a speech sharing the history of the British empire's intention to create a foothold in Asia via a Zionist homeland in Palestine even prior to WWI. 



One Jewish Voice for Peace member wore a baby carrier with the message "Jewish baby against killing Palestinian babies" and another spoke saying:

Zionism doesn't protect Jews. It never has, and it never will.

From the beginning, Zionism was dreamed up by European Christian white supremacists who intended to use Jews as a glove.. while their hands were dirty extracting resources and profits from Palestine.

A problem arose when a speaker from Peace Action Maine, attorney Seth Berner, stepped to the mic. After identifying himself and his organization (which is part of the Maine Coalition for Palestine) he opened his remarks with a reference to war crimes allegedly committed by Hamas on October 7. 

From the audience one of our group responded with, "Resistance to occupation is justified!" Berner was visibly irritated and asked if he should just stop speaking. I wanted to be sure that I had heard him correctly so I called out, "Did you say that Hamas committed war crimes on October 7th, Seth?"

"Yes, I did," he replied.

"Then I'm out," I said, and walked away from the rally to go sit in my car. As an attendee but not an organizer I didn't feel I could stop him from speaking, but I could register my disagreement and discomfort by leaving rather than standing by while such a claim was made.

As I departed Monument Square I could hear more comments being made from the audience, but not very clearly. According to Jessie Mathieson of Maine Labor for Palestine, the crowd began chanting, "When people are occupied / resistance is justified" led by coalition organizers. Berner stood down and did not deliver his remarks after all.


Mathieson commented further:

I think if he had gotten up there and started talking about the "Not Another Bomb" campaign or other electoral strategies -- that many of us know are wasted energy, but are still within the wheelhouse of organizers in the movement -- people would have let him speak. 

He was stopped from speaking because he was repeating the Zionist rhetoric about October 7th.

And we cannot let someone get away with that. He was emphasizing children being murdered and placing the blame for this escalation in genocide on what happened on October 7th.


Personally, I was not surprised that Berner took this approach. His organization has been dead wrong in their analysis of the proxy war NATO is waging on Russia via Ukraine since 2014. Also, in 2022, Peace Action Maine endorsed Democratic Congresswoman Chellie Pingree despite her repeated votes to spend billions on weapons of mass destruction. (Pingree excels at making nice words come out of her mouth while funding violence against civilians.)

I believe based on years of observation that Peace Action Maine is completely in thrall to the Democratic Party. This puts them in a tricky situation as Dems now own the Gaza genocide. As a pro-imperialism party, Democrats are going to be wrong on their characterization of world events and I believe they are going to try and sneak those messages in when they see an opportunity.

Good on the people of Portland for calling this out.

Saturday, April 6, 2024

Congress Cares Deeply About Israel Bombing Gaza Now That Foreign Aid Workers Are Victims

"A view of a damaged vehicle that was carrying aid workers with the World Central Kitchen charity and their Palestinian driver who were killed in Deir al-Balah, Gaza Strip, April 1, 2024, in an airstrike conducted by Israel.YASSER QUDAIH/ANADOLU/GETTY"Source: CBS NEWS

Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives have released a performative letter condemning Israel's air strikes on international aid workers delivering food to the deliberately starved population of Gaza. While voting for more money to Israel so they can continue bombing and starving Palestinians, these reps paused to issue some weasel words appearing to object to the very thing they are funding. 



Are voters fooled? Not this voter.

Their letter to President Biden also smacks of racism in that 13,000+ brown children, or 32,000+ Gazans of all ages, dying at Israel's hands has generated more funding. But killing a handful of white adults including one from the U.S. who was being paid by World Central Kitchen to deliver food in Gaza is beyond what congressional Democrats can tolerate, apparently.

Note: the word "apparently" is doing a lot of work in my last sentence.

So it isn't the horrors of the torture camp that Israel turned Al-Shifah Hospital into, or the evidence of Palestinian prisoners zip tied so tightly that their legs have to be amputated, that moves Democrats in Congress. It's this one airstrike

Luckily, most young people today understand that Congress isn't going to monitor the war machine. They know that Congress IS the war machine, and are acting accordingly.

In the hit parade of vigorous resistance actions this week, California is in the lead. Big props to Pomona College students who endured police brutality over their entirely nonviolent occupation of their administration building. 


Also to protesters who blocked every entrance to Lockheed's plant in Sunnyvale and faced off against an angry worker who was unable to get to work.


Threatened with a knife and with his vehicle as a weapon, notice how calm they remain as they work to de-escalate his response.


https://twitter.com/ariel_koko/status/1775961951191154860


Did you read about any of this actual resistance in mainstream media? I didn't think so. Now you know why the U.S. government works overtime to censor Twitter, TikTok, Instagram, and other social media sites. Because that's where we're able to get real news while WaPo and the NYT cover congressional posturing.

Sunday, February 18, 2024

Grieving Gaza In The Company Of The Ones Who Also See


Fifty people from all over the state converged on Waterville, Maine yesterday to grieve together. We came together to demand the U.S. government stop funding Israel, and stop arming genocide. It was remarkable to me how many of the fifty I did not know. This is a good thing!



A few who joined us were just passing by, saw our signs and banners, and joined in. Many who passed by honked in support.




Some had come from as far away as Calais up near the Canadian border.

Some had heard about the event from the men's coffee circle at their UU Church.

Some had heard about it from email, or social media, or word of mouth.




Some were on their second event of the day, having started at the annual Lenten vigil at General Dynamics' warship factory in Maine, while some had never protested before.




One person I've stood with many times in Bath spoke words like these: When I see a bomb, I rage. When I see a severed limb, I cry.

One told my husband they have lost a host of former friends who turned out to be Zionists. Yet another heartbreak.




Some were Veterans for Peace. Some were professors. Some were teachers. Some were caretakers, artists, carpenters, organizers, and students.




My husband's sign is hard to read here but it says "Resistance against occupation is a human right." Behind him, the banner reads in full, "No war with Russia." Because we are against that imperial project of death-dealing, too.



It nourished us being together and also knowing that some who could not be with us in person were nonetheless with us in spirit.

We will continue our resistance to genocide in our time, with our taxes. We will escalate our resistance this week, again. We will not stop if the U.S. imposes a temporary ceasefire so that Palestinians can be forced across the border at Rafah into a concentration camp in Egypt.

We will not be done until Palestine is free.


Sunday, February 11, 2024

The Grieving, And The Resistance

Healthcare Workers for Palestine created a space for grieving yesterday in Portland, Maine, and I felt grateful. 

If the angle of my photo induces vertigo, it may be because I had been carrying little Hind Rajab with me for days. She is the 6 year old whose historic phone call from a car where her family had been shot dead by Israelis was heard round the world. It didn't save her, though. Because then Israel used U.S. shells and fired on the ambulance rushing to where she was trapped with the corpses of those whom she loved. Subsequent rescuers didn't reach the car until Hind's body had been decomposing for days. Yup, the Israelis killed her, too.

Here's how imperial narrative managers are spinning this child's hell on Earth:


"Found dead." Got it.

So, we grieve and we resist. And we welcome news of resistance in the belly of the beast. 

https://twitter.com/palyouthmvmt/status/1756437134066561439

What they're chanting at the Museum of Modern Art in NYC: "There is only one solution / Intifada revolution!"

Are we gearing up to a general strike that will shut down the war machine? Will I live to see it?

Banality of evil department

Here's the response I got from the man who allegedly "represents" me, objecting to the humanitarian disaster resulting from suspension of funding to UNRWA:



Meanwhile, as Jared Golden goes about his well-renumerated imperial service, there are three families who lost loved ones in an attack that has been lied about from the get-go. Was it in Jordan, whose government's hosting of U.S. imperial outposts is a vulnerability with its own people -- many of whom are Nakba refugees? Or was it, as Jordan claimed, just over the border in Syria, where U.S. military presence is an illegal occupation?




This blog I'm reading lately points out the truth hiding behind the bureaucratic lies: the Pentagon killed these Black soldiers by leaving them undefended on an assignment surrounded by hostile forces. 

Why am I siding with the soldiers? Because I think the poverty draft is intense, the pro-military propaganda is immense (cf. Super Bowl today), and two of them -- Breonna Moffett and Kennedy Sanders -- were quite young. They will never get the opportunity to learn more than they knew and change their minds. I wonder if they ever learned the term "Nakba" in school?

Yes, I'm grieving for them, too. I'm grieving for all the casualties of the war on Palestine -- including the truth.

Saturday, March 19, 2016

Okinawa's Beautiful Resistance To Rape Of Women And Environment

Okinawa resistance movement messages. Photo credit: Satoko Kojo
Okinawa is generally considered to be part of Japan, but it really isn't. Okinawa is an island in the Pacific Ocean that is as close to China's coast as it is to Japan's. And, until the end of WWII and the Allied invasion, Okinawans successfully resisted the domination of Imperial Japan by an alliance with China.  Following its defeat of Japan in 1945, the U.S. occupied Okinawa until 1972. The Pentagon's biggest military presence in "Japan" is actually in Okinawa.

Massive resistance to the U.S. military presence in Okinawa has heated up recently. The increased resistance is partly due to yet another rape committed by personnel coming from the military bases. 

From an editorial last week in the English-language version of the online Ryukyu Shimbo:
As long as the U.S.-Japan security treaty allows some 20,000 and several thousand US military personnel to be stationed in Okinawa, soldiers who cannot control themselves, and attack women in a vulnerable position, will continue to be among the stationed troops.
Nicholson apologizing to Okinawa's Governor Takeshi Onaga, who ran on a platform opposing the expansion of U.S. military bases and swept to power over the candidate backed by Japan's ruling party. Photo credit: Stripes.com
Lt. General Lawrence Nicholson was reported in StarsandStripes.Okinawa to have apologized to Okinawa's governor for the rape of a Japanese tourist by a sailor stationed there, and his apology described the U.S. presence in Okinawa as even larger:
Today, I came here to represent 27,000 uniformed members, 17,000 families, 4,000 civilians, 50,000 Americans. The allegation against the specific individual is a great shame and dishonor of us all.
Resistance to the U.S. presence in Okinawa has also increased in response to plans to expand the Henoko base into an offshore presence controlling the waters of Henoko Bay. 
Photo credit: AP
Anthropologist Hideki Yoshikawa reported extensively in Counterpunch on the difficult process of ramming through official approvals in the face of massive opposition by the actual people who live there.  Bases are heavily polluted sites, and the Pentagon recently blocked release of its own environmental study of a different base it is returning to Okinawans. As reported by Jon Mitchell in the Japan Times:
The U.S. military is refusing to release a report detailing environmental contamination at Camp Kinser, a 2.7-sq.-km U.S. Marine Corps supply base near Okinawa’s capital, Naha, that is scheduled for return to civilian use. Since April 2014, U.S. Pacific Command has repeatedly stonewalled a Freedom of Information Act request for the 1993 report, titled “USFJ Talking Paper on Possible Toxic Contamination at Camp Kinser, Okinawa.”
Indigenous people everywhere love their land and waterways, and revere their traditional ways of life. When they win territory back from U.S. control, it is often too polluted to support those ways. 

Okinawa's indigenous resistance is inspiring -- and that is why the corporate media in the U.S. make sure that most people never hear about it.
June 28, 2014 Boat Rally at Henoko. Via Masami Mel Kawamura/Okinawa Outreach.
Photo: Toyozato Tomoyuki

For news of their beautiful resistance, you can follow the Facebook community page I Expose the Expansion of US Bases in Okinawa.

Sunday, June 29, 2014

People Waking Up, Rising Up, All Over This Planet!

June 28, 2014 Boat Rally at Henoko. Via Masami Mel Kawamura/Okinawa Outreach. Photo: Toyozato Tomoyuki
Okinawa residents and supporters gathered 300 strong to oppose the expansion of yet another U.S. military base entombing paradise in concrete. Why would they oppose expanding a U.S. military base on their shores? People in Okinawa have suffered from the violent occupation of their territory since WWII, with rapes and murders occurring throughout that time. And, the people love their native environs. Here's a link to the full article in the Okinawa Times. 

While some people are born into resistance, others wake up later in life. Check out this amazing testimony from an Israeli American woman on how and why she finally stopped letting Zionist wool be pulled over her eyes:



Thanks to Philip Weiss of Mondoweiss for this interview. Some of its salient points, as quoted in the article that accompanies the video
"[Palestinians] are oppressed terrible. They are tortured. They are imprisoned for no reason. Their land is stolen. What is going on there is a pogrom."
"[American Jews] do such a harm… They don’t understand that they are fooled by the Zionists. There is no connection between Judaism and Zionism. The Zionists just use Jews. Jews are so naive… They don’t know what Israel is. Israel is a monster.” 

Maine activist Regis Tremblay -- whose great film on Jeju Island resistance has met with international acclaim -- posted this news of South Korean resistance to corporate takeover of their ancestral lands.
This has to be one of the most amazing non-violent protests ever. Elderly Korean grandmothers, naked and bare-breasted down to their panties, chained together in a trench covered by a makeshift tarp, along with nuns, are hauled away by hundreds of police. This happened today [June 11] in the town of Miryang, South Korea. The people have been protesting the construction of massive electrical transmission lines and towers through their town. These people, mostly women and nuns give hope to the rest of the world, and silent Americans, that non-violent direct action works and scares the crap out of the corporate state.
I could go on all day with news of brave resistance, but I'll conclude with this one very, very close to home. 

Detroit as a city was gutted when its industries were killed by Clinton's NAFTA giveaway to the wealthy, then declared bankruptcy and had an "emergency manager" appointed by Michigan's governor during the second Obama administration. What could go wrong?

Thousands of families unable to make their payment to the water district are having their water cut off. WTF?? Here's a quote from a resident:
"Our water bill is $250 /month & we owe about $3K this yr. The only thing we using is water for cooking/washing up" -Highland Park resident
Here's what people are organizing to do about it: 

How you can support while the struggle is still a few steps away from your tap or backyard paradise? Help get the word out.