Saturday, January 31, 2009

Arctic's Thaw Brings Security Risks


NATO will need a military presence in the Arctic as global warming melts frozen sea routes and major powers rush to lay claim to lucrative energy reserves, the military bloc's chief said Thursday.

NATO commanders and lawmakers meeting in Iceland's capital said the Arctic thaw is bringing the prospect of new standoffs between powerful nations.

"I would be the last one to expect military conflict — but there will be a military presence," NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer told reporters. "It should be a military presence that is not overdone, and there is a need for political cooperation and economic cooperation."

The opening up of Arctic sea routes once navigable only by icebreakers threatens to complicate delicate relations between countries with competing claims to Arctic territory — particularly as exploration for oil and natural gas becomes possible in once inaccessible areas.

De Hoop Scheffer said negotiations involving Russia, NATO and other nations will be key to preventing a future conflict. The NATO chief is expected to meet Russian Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov next week for talks.

The United States, Russia and Canada are among the countries attempting to claim jurisdiction over Arctic territory alongside Nordic nations. Analysts say China is also likely to join a rush to capture energy reserves.

"Several Arctic rim countries are strengthening their capabilities, and military activity in the High North region has been steadily increasing," de Hoop Scheffer told delegates.

Some scientists predict that Arctic waters could be ice-free in summers by 2013, decades earlier than previously thought. De Hoop Scheffer said trans-Arctic routes are likely to become an alternative to passage through the Suez or Panama canals for commercial shipping.

"Climate change is not a fanciful idea, it is already a reality, a reality that brings with it certain new challenges, including for NATO," de Hoop Scheffer said.

The NATO chief said an upsurge in energy exploration — and the likelihood of more commercial ships needing emergency rescue — would require a larger NATO presence in the Arctic.

"The end of the Cold War resulted in a marked reduction in military activity in the High North — Iceland would like it to stay that way," Iceland's outgoing Prime Minister Geir Haarde told the conference.

Haarde tendered his resignation Monday amid the country's economic crisis and said the one-day conference was among his final duties before he steps down on Saturday.

Lee Willett, head of the maritime studies program at the Royal United Services Institute, a London-based military think tank, said that as routes open up, warships from nations seeking to defend claims on energy resources will follow.

"Having lots of warships, from lots of nations who have lots of competing claims on territory — that may lend itself to a rather tense situation," Willett said. "We may see that flash points come to pass there more readily than elsewhere in the world."

Russia and Canada have already traded verbal shots over each other's intentions in the Arctic, and Canada has beefed up its military presence in the region, announcing plans to build a new army training center and a deep-water port in contested Arctic waters. Norway, the U.S. and Denmark also have claims in the vast region, while Russian President Dmitry Medvedev seeks to lay claim to Arctic territory the size of France.

Six people were arrested on Wednesday outside the Reykjavik conference venue — two for burning a NATO flag. Many Icelanders oppose the volcanic island's membership in the military bloc, fearing it compromises the nation's independence.

Such attempts to miltarize the north is obvious. Global warming has been a concern since the 1980s. However this militarization of the north only comes during the race for the claim over the natural resources located in the Arctic. This is just another power play, placing military power where it is not needed in order for nations to fight over resources. We at the Maoist Rebel news call on Iceland's people to refuse the NATO Agreement (which never had real purpose) in order to maintain their own sovereignty.


Obama reverses Bush-era policies to 'level playing field' for organized labour


President Barack Obama signed a number of executive orders Friday that he said should "level the playing field" for labour unions in their struggles with management.

Obama also used the occasion to announce formally a new White House task force on the problems of middle-class Americans, with Vice-President Joe Biden as chairman.

Union officials say the new orders by Obama will undo Bush administration policies that favoured employers over workers. The orders will:

-Require federal contractors to offer jobs to current workers when contracts change.

-Reverse a Bush administration order requiring federal contractors to post notice that workers can limit financial support of unions serving as their exclusive bargaining representatives.

-Prevent federal contractors from being reimbursed for expenses meant to influence workers deciding whether to form a union and engage in collective bargaining.

"We need to level the playing field for workers and the unions that represent their interests," Obama said during a signing ceremony in the East Room of the White House.

"I do not view the labour movement as part of the problem. To me, it's part of the solution," he said. "You cannot have a strong middle class without a strong labour movement."

Signing the executive orders was Obama's second overture to organized labour in as many days. On Thursday, he signed the first bill of his presidency, giving workers more time to sue for wage discrimination.

"It's a new day for workers," said James Hoffa, president of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, who attended the ceremony with other union leaders.

"We finally have a White House that is dedicated to working with us to rebuild our middle class. Hope for the American Dream is being restored."

Of the White House Task Force on Middle Class Working Families, Obama said, "We're not forgetting the poor. They are going to be front and centre, because they, too, share our American Dream."

He said his administration wants to make sure low-income people "get a piece" of the American pie "if they're willing to work for it."

"With this task force, we have a single, highly visible group with one single goal: to raise the living standards of the people who are the backbone of this country," Biden said.

Obama set several goals for the task force, including expanding opportunities for education and training; improving the work-family balance; restoring labour standards, including workplace safety, and protecting retirement security.

The president and vice-president said the task force will include the secretaries of commerce, education, labour and health and human services because those cabinet departments have the most influence on the well-being of the middle class.

It also will include White House advisers on the economy, the budget and domestic policy.

Biden pledged that the task force will conduct its business in the open, and announced a website, www.astrongmiddleclass.gov, for the public to get information.

He also announced that the panel's first meeting will be Feb. 27 in Philadelphia and will focus on environmental or "green jobs."


Blagojevich ousted as Illinois gov.; Quinn sworn in


After weeks of shocking twists and turns, the conclusion of Rod Blagojevich's tenure as Illinois governor offered no surprises at all.

Blagojevich addressed his Senate impeachment trial and offered familiar lines: He was innocent. The trial rules were unfair. His goal always was to help people.

Then the Senate did what was expected and voted to throw Blagojevich out of office. And on an identical 59-0 roll call, it barred the two-term Democrat from ever again holding public office in the state.

"He failed the test of character. He is beneath the dignity of the state of Illinois. He is no longer worthy to be our governor," said Sen. Matt Murphy, a Republican from suburban Chicago.

Blagojevich, accused of trying to sell President Barack Obama's vacant Senate seat, becomes the first U.S. governor in more than 20 years to be removed by impeachment.

Democratic Lt. Gov. Pat Quinn, one of Blagojevich's critics, was promptly sworn in as governor. "The ordeal is over," declared Quinn, 60.

Blagojevich's troubles, however, are not over. Federal prosecutors are drawing up an indictment against him on corruption charges.

Outside his Chicago home Thursday night, Blagojevich vowed to "keep fighting to clear my name," and added: "Give me a chance to show you that I haven't let you down."

Blagojevich, 52, had boycotted the first three days of the impeachment trial, calling the proceedings a kangaroo court. But on Thursday, he went before the Senate to fight for his job, delivering a 47-minute plea that was, by turns, defiant, humble and sentimental.

"You haven't proved a crime, and you can't because it didn't happen," Blagojevich told lawmakers. "How can you throw a governor out of office with insufficient and incomplete evidence?"

The verdict brought to an end what one legislator branded "the freak show" in Illinois. Over the past few weeks, Blagojevich found himself isolated, with almost the entire political establishment lined up against him. The crisis paralyzed state government and made Blagojevich and his helmet of lush, dark hair a punchline from coast to coast.

Many ordinary Illinoisans were glad to see him go.

"It's very embarrassing. I think it's a shame that with our city and Illinois, everybody thinks we're all corrupt," Gene Ciepierski, 54, said after watching the trial's conclusion on a TV at Chicago's beloved Billy Goat Tavern. "To think he would do something like that, it hurts more than anything."

In a solemn scene, more than 30 legislators rose one by one on the Senate floor to accuse Blagojevich of abusing his office and embarrassing the state. They denounced him as a hypocrite, saying he cynically tried to enrich himself and then posed as the brave protector of the poor and "wrapped himself in the constitution."

Blagojevich did not stick around to hear the vote. He took a state plane back to Chicago.

He did, however, use his last day in office to grant clemency to a prominent Chicago real estate developer and a former drug dealer, just hours before the vote to oust him.

The verdict capped a head-spinning string of developments that began with his arrest by the FBI on Dec. 9. Federal prosecutors had been investigating Blagojevich's administration for years, and some of his closest cronies already have been convicted.

The most spectacular allegation was that Blagojevich had been caught on wiretaps scheming to sell an appointment to Obama's Senate seat for campaign cash or a plum job for himself or his wife.

"I've got this thing and it's (expletive) golden, and I'm just not giving it up for (expletive) nothing. I'm not gonna do it," he was quoted as saying on a government wiretap.

Sen. James Meeks, a Chicago Democrat, mocked Blagojevich during debate: "We have this thing called impeachment and it's bleeping golden and we've used it the right way."

Prosecutors also said Blagojevich illegally pressured people to make campaign contributions and tried to get editorial writers fired from the Chicago Tribune for badmouthing him in print.

Obama himself, fresh from his historic election victory, was forced to look into the matter and issued a report concluding that no one in his inner circle had done anything wrong.

"Today ends a painful episode for Illinois," the president said in a Thursday night statement. "For months, the state had been crippled by a crisis of leadership. Now that cloud has lifted."

Even as legislators were deciding whether to launch an impeachment, Blagojevich defied the political establishment by appointing a former Illinois attorney general, Roland Burris, to the very Senate seat he had been accused of trying to sell. Top Democrats on Capitol Hill eventually backed down and seated Burris.

As his trial got under way, Blagojevich launched a media blitz, rushing from one TV studio to another in New York to proclaim his innocence. He likened himself to the hero of a Frank Capra movie and to a cowboy in the hands of a Wild West lynch mob.

The impeachment case included not only the criminal charges against Blagojevich, but allegations he broke the law when it came to hiring state workers, expanded a health care program without legislative approval and spent $2.6 million on flu vaccine that went to waste. The 118-member House twice voted to impeach him, both times with only one "no" vote.

By Thursday night, Blagojevich's name and picture had disappeared from the state's official Web site. Instead, an unobtrusive "Pat Quinn, Governor" was in the upper right corner.

Never before has a man who is blatantly guilty acted as a persecuted victim. This man was caught red-handed undermining democracy. Undermining the spirit of the fore fathers. This man could not be more guitly. It is sickening for this man who say he is being judged unfairly. It is a true testiment to the shear BS of the Conservative to try to find a way to blame Obama.

There has never been one piece of evidence to link Obama to this scandal. The fact they can out right lie saying he is, after 8 years of George Bush destroying democracy, show what kind of people Conservatives really are.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Special Comment: China is Not Communist



It is an incorrect statement often repeated by those who know little or nothing at all. It’s also the favourite lie of any educated capitalist. One they know very well is not true. A lie propagated by them in an effort to keep the people’s revolution from achieving victory. It covers up the true effects of capitalism every time it is spoken. A lie that is always repeated even by popular liberals Jon Stewart and Steven Colbert.

China is a Communist country.

The statement is laughable to us Communists, socialists, anarchists and libertarians. But apparently not the general uninformed public.

China's industry is almost completely privatized. The government runs virtually nothing at all. The means of production are all in the private businessman's hands. Citizens can own stock in private companies.

If we are looking for evidence of communism in China, the first and most important place to look is at the economy. The economy in China is now decidedly capitalist. Chinese citizens can start their own businesses and put their income into private bank accounts. Chinese citizens can buy stocks in companies and enjoy the revenues or suffer the losses. As of just a few years ago, private property rights have been greatly enhanced in China. Let us not forget about the heavy international investment that has been permitted in China which has played a major role in fuelling this developing and booming economy. As a result, there are very rich people and very poor people in China as well as a small emerging middle class.

A good many of the businesses in China are wholly dependent on foreign investment in order to operate. Their entire demand comes from another country. There are entire industries in China that depend on foreign trade. This is not Communism at all, not even close.

Everyone notices that there is no democracy in China. Always Communism is blamed for their being no democracy. But what say these people now? Clearly there is no Communism, but also no democracy. Is capitalism blamed for the lack of democracy?

No, you don't have to admit that capitalism is to blame. You can lie and keep saying that it is Communism. Even when it is obviously not there.
The have to lie in order to continue to make us look bad. So when you hear someone say China is a Communist country... Say... "No its not you idiot." Or in the case of someone who already knows, "Stop lying you propaganda whore."

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Maoist Rebel News January 28th, 2009




U.S. war resister and mother of three scheduled for deportation Tuesday

A U.S. war resister living in Toronto is scheduled to be deported Tuesday after losing a recent appeal to remain in Canada.

Kim Rivera served in Iraq with the American military in 2006 but moved to Canada the following year after she refused redeployment. She has been living in Ontario with her husband and three children, including a six-week-old girl who was born in Canada.

Rivera told her appeal hearing earlier this month that her experience in Iraq left her emotionally scarred and unable to face another tour of duty.

Last week, Christopher Teske - who had been living in British Columbia for two years -
exhausted his last appeal and was ordered to leave Canada.

War resisters sent back to the U.S. fear a fate like the one that awaited Robin Long, who was sentenced to 15 months in prison after being deported.

We at The Maoist Rebel News are disapointed in Canada for breaking its tradition of supporting war resisters. We here are just wondering if it has anyhting to do with the Conservative goverment and its history of blindly supporting Bush administration wishes. Canada is supposed to be haven for thse who resist violence and war. Now it appears that is no longer so.


Man, 93, Freezes to Death in Home

A 93-year-old man froze to death inside his home just days after the municipal power company restricted his use of electricity because of unpaid bills, officials said.

Marvin Schur died "a slow, painful death," said Kanu Virani, Oakland County's deputy chief medical examiner, who performed the autopsy.

Neighbours discovered Schur's body on Jan. 17. They said the indoor temperature was below zero Celsius at the time, the Bay City Times reported Monday.

"Hypothermia shuts the whole system down, slowly," Virani said. "It's not easy to die from hypothermia without first realizing your fingers and toes feel like they're burning."

Schur owed Bay City Electric Light & Power more than $1,000 in unpaid electric bills, Bay City manager Robert Belleman told The Associated Press on Monday.

A city utility worker had installed a "limiter" device to restrict the use of electricity at Schur's home on Jan. 13, Belleman said. The device limits power reaching a home and blows out like a fuse if consumption rises past a set level. Power is not restored until the device is reset.

The limiter was tripped sometime between the time of installation and the discovery of Schur's body, Belleman said. He didn't know if anyone had made personal contact with Schur to explain how the device works.

Schur's body was discovered by neighbour George Pauwels.

"His furnace was not running, the insides of his windows were full of ice the morning we found him," Pauwels told the newspaper.

Belleman said city workers keep the limiter on houses for 10 days, then shut off power entirely if the homeowner hasn't paid utility bills or arranged to do so.

He said Bay City Electric Light & Power's policies will be reviewed, but he didn't believe the city did anything wrong.

"I've said this before and some of my colleagues have said this: Neighbours need to keep an eye on neighbours," Belleman said. "When they think there's something wrong, they should contact the appropriate agency or city department."

Schur had no children and his wife had died several years ago.

Bay City is on Saginaw Bay, just north of the city of Saginaw in central Michigan.

This is disguesting, this is in human. To think a humanbeing died simply because they were unable to pay a bill. A god damned human life for a hydro bill. A human being who couldn't even work. You know I can hear the capitalist defenders now, "if we let this guy off the hook they will all start doing it."

This Bay City Electric Light & Power should burn in hell. Or freeze would be better.


Issue of Peguis First Nation accepting $118M settlement up in air

In Winnipeg A vote on whether to accept the largest land claim settlement in Canadian history was declared invalid Sunday because not enough ballots were cast.

The Peguis First Nation has 4,234 band members who were eligible to participate in the weekend referendum, but only 1,470 showed up. That represented 38 per cent of the population, and federal rules said that 51 per cent needed to vote.

Chief Glen Hudson said he was disappointed, though the results were overwhelmingly in support of accepting the treaty, 1368 votes in favour to 102 against.

"Now we have more time to talk to people and obviously to hear their concerns on the agreement itself," he said.

At issue was whether they wanted to accept a $127 million settlement with the government of Canada that included individual payments of $1,000 to eligible, adult band members.

The First Nation as a whole would receive $118 million in tightly controlled community trusts for education, business loans and community infrastructure projects.

But many band members said they deliberately chose not to vote - some because they felt they didn't have enough information and some because they believed children in the community should also get their cut of the individual payments.

"Don't Vote: Stand up for the Children," read one sign on the side of a house on the reserve, 220 km north of Winnipeg.

"It's forgetting about the children, the ones that are under 18," band member Stuart Stevenson told a national news agency. "I think it should be about the children - the younger generation."

But Darlene Bird, a band councillor, said she hopes the deal will eventually go through.

"It's an economic opportunity - we can address housing, we can address education," she said. "It's not just the children right now. It's the children of generations to come."

Grand Rapids Chief Ovide Mercredi, who is a lawyer, said he thinks the band members should hold out for a better deal.

"The value of the land is more than what the government is offering. This was prime property at the time that the treaty was made, and the value of the land has increased over the years."
Hudson said another vote will be scheduled for July, adding he hopes it will give people on the reserve more time to understand the deal.

He said each month that the deal goes unsigned, the band loses $500,000 in interest.
The Peguis territory was seized by Ottawa following unresolved land disputes between 1874 and 1906.

Band members were forced to leave the former St. Peter's reserve near Selkirk, Man., an area estimated to be 31,566 hectares.


NDF-EV: Waging revolution the best alternative to deteriorating conditions of calamities, corruption, foreign domination and war under Arroyo regime

The National Democratic Front-Eastern Visayas today expressed distress at the increasingly dire straits of the people this 2009 under the Arroyo regime and said that waging revolution is the best way for fundamental changes. Even in the first month of this year, the real plight of the people is glaringly clear,” said NDF-EV spokesperson Fr. Santiago Salas. The people of Northern Samar and Eastern Samar have been wallowing for two straight months in the misery of natural calamity, compounded by the ineptitude of the Arroyo regime. Such calamities were also in the first place made possible or at the very least worsened by unsound, pro-imperialist and anti-people policies being pushed by the regime.

The NDF-EV extends the deepest sympathies to the people of Northern and Eastern Samar who are suffering from widespread flooding. The revolutionary movement is helping those affected, especially within the scope of the people's democratic government. We go among the people to know their real conditions, help in organizing relief and rehabilitation efforts, and advise the people to struggle against the conditions that lead to and aggravate such natural calamities.

Fr. Salas added that recent pronouncements of the Arroyo government show that the people's ordeal is not over but could only turn for the worse. Natural calamities are made worse by man-made conditions, as well as add further grief to the people who are already suffering under a government that is corrupt, subservient to foreign interests and warlike. The Arroyo government's economic policies lead to social and environmental degradation. There is the push for widespread mining and logging, as well as an agricultural program promoting plantation farming of crops for export. These have long been criticized for leading to landlessness and the ransacking of the national patrimony, as well as environmental destruction that has led to thousands of deaths in the region in various natural disasters beginning with the 1991 Ormoc flashflood.
The NDF-EV spokesperson also assailed the Arroyo government's ineptitude as shown by the marked failure to prepare as well as respond to calamities. “Dozens of storms pass the region every year. Yet the reactionary government is woefully unprepared because it is more used to robbing and abusing the people rather than helping them. Such disasters worsen the people's poverty and misery, in a region that is materially rich but where the majority of the people are landless and jobless. The peak of the government's callousness is expressed in the military's recruitment drive to increase the paramilitary CAFGU for a bloody all-out war, even while the people in wide swathes of Samar are still struggling to recover from disaster.

The people's abject conditions further inflame them against the Arroyo regime, which they already want to end and bring to justice, as well as strengthen their desire to wage revolution and achieve genuine change.

Reference:Roy Santos, NDF-EV
Media OfficerContact: NDF-EV