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2-16-08/Ludlow Massacre and Columbia FTA

Hi, AfDers and friends,

Third items today:

1.  Next meeting of the Alliance for Democracy is at my house on next Monday, April 21st beginning at 7 PM.  Address: 112 NE 45th Ave. Portland

2.  I would like to welcome to the list all the folks that signed up during two AfD sponsored events recently, the Global Exchange Tour event on April 8th, which focused on NAFTA and the Security and Prosperity Partnership, and the Maude Barlow event on Tuesday this week as she talked about the growing crisis of water, how water has been viewed has part of the commons but increasingly is viewed as a corporate profit center.  Thanks to all of you for being at these events and for joining the Alliance For Democracy email list.  Should you want to unsubscribe please just sent me a note.

3.  Pres. Bush had sent the US Columbia Free Trade Agreement to Congress a week or so ago using the Fast Track mechanism.  Speaker Nancy Pelosi changed the rules so that it will not be considered at least until after the Nov elections. Our fear is that it will now be voted on during the lame duck session of Congress following the election when members who are not returning to congress and those members who don't have the guts to vote for it because of a likely voter backlash will be able to vote in favor.  The following piece by David Sirota looks at the situation.  It is important to contact our representatives and senators to give voice to our desire that we have no more "free trade" agreements.

David e. Delk, Co-chair Alliance for Democracy - Portland Chapter 503 232 5495 www.afd-pdx.org
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Colombia trade agreement as a precedent - the Ludlow massacre

David Sirota, Creators Syndicate, Inc.

Friday, April 11, 2008

Ninety-four years ago on April 20, America made international news when a government-sanctioned paramilitary unit murdered Colorado union organizers at a Rockefeller-owned coal mine. The Ludlow Massacre was "a story of horror unparalleled in the history of industrial warfare," wrote the New York Times in 1914 - and the abomination was not just the violence, but the way political and corporate leaders colluded on their homicidal plans to protect profits.

Sanitized history teaches that our government has since changed. Quite the contrary, as the Bush administration attempted this week to legitimize the methods of Ludlow through its Colombia Free Trade Agreement. That attempt failed when House Speaker Nancy Pelosi led the House to a vote that indefinitely postpones consideration of the pact.

Colombia resembles Colorado in the early 20th century, only with more frequent slaughters. In the last two decades, more than 2,500 Colombian labor organizers have been assassinated, making Colombia the world's most dangerous place for unionists.

This violence is underwritten by companies like Chiquita, which has financed Colombian death squads that "destroyed unions, terrorized workers and killed thousands of civilians," according to Portfolio magazine. The brutality deliberately depresses labor costs in a country where business analysts cite exploitative conditions as reason to invest.

This situation, like Ludlow, developed not in spite of the governing elite, but thanks to it. As the Washington Post reports, Colombia's "most influential political, military and business figures helped build" the killing machine. Recently, prosecutors connected these paramilitaries to Colombian President Alvaro Uribe's allies.

Colombian labor leaders have begged the White House to drop the deal, saying it will undermine their struggle for human rights by validating Uribe's thug-ocracy. Nonetheless, President Bush bolstered Uribe with a pact giving corporations incentives to leave America for the corpse-strewn pastures of Colombia - a union hater's paradise.

Bush justifies the deal as "urgent for our national security." The rationale asks us to believe that in backing tyrannical regimes, we will quell anti-Americanism among the oppressed, rather than sow it.

Congressional Democrats voted down the agreement 224-195, overcoming the pernicious forces in their midst. Specifically, the Colombian government and corporate groups have hired former Clinton administration officials to champion the deal, paid off former President Bill Clinton with an $800,000 speaking contract, and employed Mark Penn - Hillary Rodham Clinton's chief presidential strategist - to push the pact.

Oh, how we've regressed from Ludlow, when mere Rockefellers owned everything. Today, Dubai princes purchase our stock exchanges, Chinese communists buy our banks, and now Colombian goons bid on our politicians - and the results are trickling in.

When Bush dropped the deal on Congress, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi complained only that his tactics are "jeopardizing prospects" for the pact's passage. Instead of blocking the accord, she postponed it - a maneuver that could ensure its approval. National Journal reports that Democrats are considering "delaying a vote until after the November elections." The scheme would let Democratic candidates campaign as aw-shucks populists promisin' to fight for the little fella, and then head to D.C. to do the bidding of lobbyists and ratify the deal in a lame-duck session.

Between equivocating press releases, Pelosi said she worries that if voted on now, the pact "would lose, and what message would that send?" For starters, it would say the Democratic Party joins most Americans in opposing job-killing trade policies. It would also declare the party against rewarding murderous regimes on behalf of Clintonites now living large off of Colombian blood money.  

But, then, such principled stands are considered uncouth in this, the Ludlow renaissance.

Calendars may say it is 2008, but the Establishment mentality is 1914. On the anniversary of the butchery in Colorado, we see the hideous power of corruption in all its pathological glory. Our government is showing that it views the Ludlow Massacre not as an embarrassment, but as an ideal to be embraced and exported.

David Sirota is a bestselling author whose newest book, "The Uprising," will be released in June. He is a fellow at the Campaign for America's Future and a board member of the Progressive States Network - both nonpartisan organizations.

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/04/11/EDK6103CKL.DTL

This article appeared on page B - 11 of the San Francisco Chronicle

 

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Last Updated: April 16, 2008