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LB Protesters Demand CSU Divestment from Israeli Arms Suppliers

 

By Daniel Rivera, Reporter

On May 21, several students and community members gathered at Lincoln Park in Downtown Long Beach. They marched along Ocean Boulevard to the California State University Office of the Chancellor where several of the participants delivered speeches until the afternoon. They were marching to pressure the state university system into divesting from the defense industries supplying Israel with arms and munitions.

“We are out here to demand that the CSU system disclose its investments in companies that monetarily and materially support genocide,” Amy Parker, a computer science major at Cal State Fullerton, told Random Lengths News.

The protestors gathered in Downtown Long Beach, then marched down Ocean, blocking half the street with a small group of police trailing them and warning them to disperse or be arrested. They eventually made it to the CSU office without incident or conflict with the police that followed them.

The CSU and all of its campuses have investments in defense industries that support the Israeli military. The CSU also provides trained labor for the research and development departments of these companies in the development of new generations of weapons.

Cal State Long Beach has a particularly close relationship with Boeing, with grants, scholarships, presentations, programs and other forms of outreach done at the campus.

CSU is a part of the golden triangle between the military, technology companies and research institutions aimed at developing surveillance and military products that are being used in theaters of war, including Israel’s war on Gaza.

Though Cal State University has not publicly released the precise extent of the investments, the CSU currently holds $8 billion in reserve funds spread over a vast investment portfolio.

The CSU issued a general statement that reads, “The California State University does not intend to alter existing investment policies related to Israel or the Israel-Hamas conflict.”

On the CSU investment page, it states that about $3.2 million or .04% of investment in any mutual funds based in Israel and $51.4 million or about .62% of funds invested are in Aerospace and Defense. But it also states that it’s impossible to determine the portion of the Aerospace funds that are going to Israel directly. The CSU says that it is minimal, but military technology is shared within the NATO alliance for the purposes of standardization and goes beyond direct funding and into tactics, doctrines, production and objectives like surveillance or policing.

“It’s just the complete ignoring of all the human suffering that is going on in Gaza. It reduces the genocide to a war between Israel and Hamas,” Parker said of the statement made by the CSU.

The protesters are a part of a global movement known as BDS, or Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions that works to peacefully pressure Israel — similarly to South Africa in the 1980s — to obey international law and respect Palestinians’ human rights with a focus on the settlements and businesses in the West Bank. The Israeli settlements are illegal under international law.

No Western government has criminalized the BDS movement, but many U.S. states, including California, have used anti-boycott laws to punish companies that do not do business with illegal Israeli settlements. California passed an anti-BDS law in 2016, When Gov. Jerry Brown signed AB 2844 into law after it passed the Senate 34–1.

A few schools have made steps towards divestments, such as Sacramento State and San Francisco State. But others have faced backlash, such as Sonoma State, with President Mike Lee promising to move towards divestment, only to be sacked not long after by CSU Chancellor Mildred García.

Israel began its assault on the Gaza Strip about seven months ago, in retaliation for terror attacks committed by Hamas, leaving more than 1,000 dead and the kidnapping of a few hundred citizens who have yet to be recovered.

Up to this point, Palestinian civilians make up the overwhelming majority of casualties. According to the Palestinian Health Ministry the Israeli Defense Forces or IDF have killed more than 35,000 Palestinians while Hamas killed 1,200 Israelis in the October attack. An additional 3,500 Israeli soldiers have been injured according to Israeli figures.

Justice Prevails

Court Demands Action on Port Emissions After 23-Year Legal Battle

“Twenty-three years is far too long to wait for justice. But it’s better than waiting forever for none,” said Janet Schaaf-Gunter, who helped initiate China Shipping litigation in 2001. “Five of the original six people who personally solicited the NRDC [Natural Resources Defense Council] to engage in this lawsuit have either passed away or have moved from San Pedro,” she said. “How many people have died or suffered health issues from port emissions during these years? We can’t undo the past harm but we can fight to limit injury going forward!”

The first lawsuit began when the Harbor Commission approved the construction and operation of the terminal without an environmental impact report. San Pedro and Peninsula Homeowners Coalition and San Pedro Peninsula Homeowners United, which Schaaf-Gunter has been associated with, began the process, soon joined by the Coalition For Clean Air. That suit was won in 2003, but 11 mitigation measures in the resulting EIR were secretly never implemented, due to a lack of oversight, leading to the second lawsuit in 2020.

Finally, that era of lawlessness seems to be at an end.

On May 24, a San Diego court rejected the Port of LA’s attempt to put the lawsuit behind them without oversight, instead setting terms for further environmental mitigation and at least seven years of court oversight.

Judge Timothy Taylor rejected — for the time being — a further request for a special master to oversee compliance, opting instead to take it on himself, starting with a June 24 site visit to “include visits to the neighborhood areas” suffering from the terminal’s operations.

“Years of promises by both the port and China Shipping have resulted in no action,” said Jackie Prange, senior litigating counsel at NRDC. “Finally, this court has recognized that enforceable, common-sense requirements are needed to protect air quality and communities that surround the port.”

While Taylor rejected shutting down the terminal temporarily — which no one had requested —he noted that “it is crystal clear that the mere spectre of such a shutdown … was the motivating factor behind the city’s and China Shipping’s decision to finally get moving on Amendment No. 5 to Permit 999” which put many — but not all — mitigation measures in place.

The port and City of Los Angeles proffered that amendment as a complete solution, conditioned on his acceptance, expressing what Taylor evidently took to be a high-handed, take-it-or-leave it attitude.

“It was brinkmanship. Here it is, fait accompli. This is what you are doing,” Taylor said to attorney Amrit Kulkarni. “Frankly sir, you’re not in a position to proceed in that fashion. You lost here. You lost in the court of appeals,” he said. “I acknowledge the power and impressiveness of the city of Los Angeles. But that’s not how you proceed.”

So Taylor rejected the port’s writ, opting instead for a writ proposed by those who brought the lawsuit that would decertify the 2019 supplemental EIR they sued to challenge.

The writ also calls for a new SEIR within 18 months to remedy defects found in previous proceedings, both before Taylor in early 2023 and before an appeals court earlier this year. Most notably, the writ calls for a robust greenhouse gas measure, a revised alternative marine power provision and a revision of the 2019 SEIR emissions impact analysis. It also requires that the port ensure enforceability “through permit conditions, agreements, or other legally binding instruments.”

Judge Timothy Taylor rules against the Port of Los Angeles in the May 24 hearing. File photo

“We cannot continue to place the quantity of goods over the quality and health of human life,” Gunter said. “That policy has been instituted for far too many years at the Port of LA and a serious price has been paid. Our lawsuit settlement in 2003 did not result in the commitment we hoped for. We look to this latest legal action to eliminate further industrial commerce absent of conscience. We now expect the port to embrace a firm policy to improve environmental conditions for our people and the region.”

“They say good things come to those who wait. We’ve worked and waited 23 years to get the port and China Shipping to reduce their air pollution as required by the law. It’s long overdue but we’re thankful that it is now going to happen,” said Joe Lyou, president of Coalition for Clean Air.

“The port is committed to reaching full resolution of this matter,” said POLA spokesperson Phillip Sanfield. “As this remains an item of pending litigation, we will reserve further comment.”

While homeowner groups and environmental justice allies have been fighting this battle for more than 20 years, the violations leading to the second lawsuit drew an unprecedented alliance of allies, including the South Coast Air Quality Management District, the California Air Resources Board, and the state Attorney General.

“South Coast AQMD is happy with the court’s judgment and ruling. The judge ordered important air pollution mitigation to finally be implemented at the China Shipping Terminal without further delay, as CEQA requires,” said AQMD spokesperson Nahal Mogharabi.

“CARB is pleased with the court’s decision and its consideration of the emissions impact on port adjacent communities that are often overburdened and disadvantaged,” added CARB spokesperson, Lynda Lambert.

The original plaintiffs had sought a special master to oversee compliance, but Taylor rejected that to oversee matters directly himself.

“The court perceives no need for a special master at this time, as the court is presently available to undertake the role envisioned by the Court of Appeal (and expects to be available through 2025),” Taylor wrote.

“Why would I have a middle man or middle woman?” he asked in the hearing preceding his ruling. “I’m going to do it, at least for the foreseeable future.”

However, the end of 2025 is a relatively short timeframe compared to the seven-year compliance window laid out in the writ he approved. So Taylor clearly could opt to appoint a special master later on.

Beyond the site visit, Taylor also scheduled a status hearing for Aug. 23. Random Lengths will continue to report on this story, as oversight continues and a new EIR process proceeds.

Colorful Celebration

 

Long Beach Hosts Vibrant 41st Pride Parade

By Daniel Rivera, Reporter

Long Beach united on May 19th, for its 41st Pride Parade, featuring floats, motorbikes, performers, and enthusiastic participants across the city and its neighboring areas.

The parade started around 10 a.m. at the same place it did last year, on Lindero Avenue and East Ocean Street near Bluff Park, and ended on First Street and Alamitos Avenue. Thousands of onlookers and participants attended the parade.

“This is our freedom and this is our love, we are allowed to be here as much as anyone, and I’m here to rep that,” Kim Preston, an observer, told Random Lengths News. She said this would be her second year, but not for her friend, Sierra Davis, who was adorned in a pride-themed pinata costume.

“I like being as colorful as possible. I like standing out as much as possible and today was a great day to do it,” Davis said about her costume. She wasn’t the only one. Many onlookers chose LGBTQ Pride colors from flags to stickers and armbands.

While most of the crowd was jubilant and celebratory, others, like the protestors affiliated with the anti-LGBTQ church, were not.

“They have been warned, hearing it makes them without excuse,” Rev. Ed told Random Lengths News, holding up several banners with several phrases including derogatory terms for queer people and anti-LGBTQ messaging. He was there alongside people who carried signs that had Official Street Preachers, a group that has a national following and similar beliefs to the Westboro Baptists, but with a more nationalistic bent.

He has been attending the counter-demonstration for four years. Some of the others with him claimed they had been protesting the parade for over 30 years. Their chanting was drowned out by the nearby bikers and paraders, revving their engines, playing music, and singing over them before and during the parade.

“I think it’s really sad. I think everyone loves their child unconditionally when they are born, [at] least I hope and wish [that] for them. But things change when things don’t line up with their kids’ identity. We all look to our parents for that affirmation and support,” Valencia Foster, an advocate and marcher with Free Mom Hugs told Random Lengths News. Free Mom Hugs started in 2018 and Foster joined in 2019 because it “meets people where they are.” That lack of support in the home has contributed to the vulnerability of LGBTQ youth to violence and exploitation.

According to the California Partnership To End Domestic Violence, LGBTQ teens are at a higher risk for dating violence with 43% reporting physical dating violence, “lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender teenagers are at much greater risk of dating abuse than their heterosexual counterparts.”

Long Beach represents the LGBT community nationwide as a kind of a safe port, closely embracing LGBT cultural symbols and people like Harvey Milk. People from all over the country come to Long Beach, not just to celebrate pride but its diversity in general.

“We lived in LA before, then we moved out to Long Beach, but once I got pregnant I wanted to be somewhere that was really tolerant so that he could see every type of relationship, I think it’s very important to normalize that at an early age,” Jennifer Silva, another spectator, told Random Lengths News. She took her 18-month-old son to his first pride parade and they were on their home after attending for a few hours.

While it may be the first time for some residents of Long Beach, maybe the second time for a few others, some have been coming to pride longer than some of the younger people have been alive.

“It’s been 15-plus years we have been in the pride parade,” said Edi Mick, a marcher with the Universalist Church. She is originally from Connecticut and a Catholic community that was less tolerant of LGBTQ people.

“I think having a conversation is a really good way to find common ground with people,” Mick said when asked about the counter-protestors but she also emphasized that, “that’s not the message of the Bible.”

The Long Beach Pride Parade is an opportunity to come together to celebrate its diversity in an open space, for some it’s a port in the storm, and for others, it’s a stop on the journey.

“I just left one (Pride) in Dallas, the Port of Sayulita, and one in Chicago, I travel to all of them,” Alan, an onlooker told Random Lengths News, and when asked the traveler about why Pride is important he said, ”because so many people have a diverse reaction and all this good stuff and we need to have to look out for us.”

Whiskey Flats BBQ

 

How Whiskey Flats BBQ Won Over a Skeptic’s Palate

By ShuRhonda Bradley, Columnist

As my dog’s head hung out the window while I drove down Pacific Avenue, she and I were enjoying the coastal breeze and the warm rays of the sun. A captivating aroma flowed through the air, drawing me towards its origin. With my keen nose for barbecue, I followed the scent until I stumbled upon a gem.

I first heard about Whiskey Flats BBQ through DoorDash, but doubts about the authenticity of their barbecue lingered in my mind. Traditionally, the best barbecue comes from the Midwest and the South because of the use of hickory wood. However, as soon as I set foot on the location, the aroma of smoked meat and the warm greetings from the servers dispelled my uncertainties. The staff at Whiskey Flats even welcomed my dog, Lily, adding to the inviting atmosphere. Lily and I were drawn to the patio area. I felt as if I was sitting at a picnic table at my parents’ house waiting for the barbecue to come off the grill.

I was giddy like a kid in a candy store. I got the pulled pork sandwich, anticipating the sweet savory goodness with the smoked hickory wood scent. I shared my excitement with my server who then corrected me. Whiskey Flats BBQ uses almond wood to smoke their meat, promising a barbecue experience unique to California. Imagine my surprise.

As I learned more about the use of almond wood, I discovered its remarkable ability to add subtle flavor to the meats when smoking or grilling. Unlike hickory or mesquite, which can sometimes overwhelm with their intensity, almond wood offers a more delicate smokiness that perfectly enhances the natural flavors of the meat without overpowering it. This approach to smoking sets Whiskey Flats BBQ apart, allowing the essence of the barbecue to shine through in every bite.

Whiskey Flat BBQ pitmaster skills were on full display in that pulled pork sandwich I ordered. The smokiness of the almond wood perfectly complemented the juicy pulled pork and barbecue sauce. It was a perfect fusion of barbecue traditions, where the mild and clean flavors of California met the rich heritage of barbecue.

But it wasn’t just the main dishes that captivated me. Whiskey Flats’ jalapeno mac and cheese paired with the pulled pork was an exceptional union. While their new location on Gaffey offers the same outstanding barbecue, the charm of their original spot on Pacific Avenue encapsulates the essence of a sunny day barbecue experience with family and friends. The Whiskey Flats BBQ team provided a sense of community and hospitality that represents the barbecue history.

Barbecue’s rich history, deeply rooted in American culinary traditions, has long been a source of comfort and celebration. Originating from the indigenous cooking methods of Native Americans, barbecue evolved over centuries, influenced by African, European and Caribbean culinary practices. It became a symbol of community gatherings, where friends and family would come together to share stories, laughter and delicious food.

Whiskey Flats BBQ has long achieved IYKYK (if you know, you know) status among San Pedro’s barbecue snobs. Their almond wood-smoked meats are complemented by their barbecue sauces. Each flavor is a testament to the passion and dedication of the team at Whiskey Flats BBQ. So don’t hesitate to try — your taste buds will thank you for it.

Whiskey Flats BBQ

Price point: $10 to $20

424-457-2776

530 S. Gaffey St., San Pedro

 

Gov. Newsom Enacts Law to Safeguard Abortion Access for Arizona Residents in California

SACRAMENTO — Gov. Gavin Newsom May 23 signed SB 233 by Senator Nancy Skinner (D-Oakland) and Assembly Majority Leader Cecilia Aguiar-Curry (D-Winters) to allow Arizona abortion providers to temporarily provide abortion care to patients from Arizona who travel to California for that care.

Last month, the Arizona Supreme Court ruled to reimpose a regressive 1864 law imposing a near-total abortion ban and threatening to almost completely curtail access to abortion care in Arizona. Arizona’s leaders have been hard at work repealing the ban and challenging its enforcement in court. Meanwhile, Gov. Newsom and the California Women’s Caucus acted to put in place a backstop for Arizonans by quickly passing legislation through both houses and sending it to the Governor’s desk.

The Governor’s signature on SB 233 will immediately allow Arizona abortion care providers in good standing to register to provide abortion care on a temporary basis in California to patients from Arizona. The signing builds on the Governor’s efforts to defend and advance reproductive rights and women’s health care, even before the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade.

Arizona’s leaders have taken steps to block the reimposition of the 1864 abortion ban. But given the uncertainty and confusion the Arizona Supreme Court’s decision has caused, California acted to assure Arizonans that they will continue to be able to access the reproductive health care they need and deserve if the 1864 ban goes into effect.

Gov. Newsom, in partnership with the California Legislative Women’s Caucus, has temporarily authorized licensed Arizona abortion care providers in good standing to provide care to Arizonans here in California — meaning they could cross the border and continue to provide care legally to their Arizona patients. While enforcement of the 1864 bill remains uncertain, SB 233 provides a critical stopgap for Arizona patients and providers.

Now through Nov. 30, 2024, Arizona doctors will be able to provide abortions and abortion-related care for Arizona patients in California if the absolute ban takes effect – even temporarily – and to facilitate continued access to care when Arizona’s 15-week ban goes into effect. California shares a roughly 200-mile-long border with Arizona. Thanks to partners Essential Access and Red, Wine, and Blue, additional costs Arizona providers and patients would face would be offset through philanthropic funds.

About the law

SB 233 will temporarily allow licensed Arizona doctors in good standing to provide abortion and abortion-related care to Arizona patients traveling to California through Nov. 30, 2024. The Arizona doctors would be under the oversight of California’s Medical Board and Osteopathic Medical Board and would be required to first provide registration information to those boards before providing abortion care in California. The bill contains an urgency clause and takes effect immediately.

Details: https://tinyurl.com/AZ-abortion-bill

LA Briefs: CD15 Clears15K Tons of Illegal Dumping, Hahn Helps Squash Deer Killing Plan on Catalina and Reps Announce funding for So-Cal Water Recycling Projects

McOsker’s Clean 15 Clears Over 15,500 Tons of Illegal Dumping Since January

LOS ANGELES — Since Jan. 1, Council District 15’s Clean 15 program has picked up, removed, and discarded over 15,582 tons, or over 31 million pounds, of trash, debris and overgrown vegetation on streets, alleys and other public spaces throughout the council district. In total, since its launch in July, the Clean 15 team has picked up a total of 26,103 tons (52.2 million pounds).

The Clean 15 program was allotted $1 Million in funding in the 2023-24 fiscal year budget and initiated in mid-July 2023. The team, made up of two Council District 15 staffers, is supported by local community organizations including LA Conservation Corps./Clean and Green, Gang Alternatives Program, Coalition for Responsible Community Development and SBCC Clean Wilmington.

“Clearing illegal dumping and trash is vital for our communities, it conveys respect for our public spaces and enhances the safety, health, and overall well-being for our residents,” said Councilmember Tim McOsker. “There’s clearly a systemic problem when we’ve removed 52 million pounds of trash and dumping in 10 months, 31 million of which was just this calendar year. But as we work to strengthen our city’s illegal dumping prevention and criminal enforcement, we can’t let our neighborhoods be dumpsites in the meantime. By removing debris, ultimately, this Clean 15 initiative creates cleaner, safer spaces that promote a higher quality of life for all.”

The Clean 15 Program travels throughout the 15th Council District on a schedule addressing dumping issues in each of the five communities, Monday to Friday. Recently, the program expanded to include a dedicated support team, the Coalition for Responsible Community Development, to focus on Watts and the Harbor Gateway communities.

 

Hahn Applauds Cancellation of Plans to Shoot Catalina Deer from Helicopters

LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles County Supervisor Janice Hahn May 29 applauded an announcement by the Catalina Island Conservancy that they will cancel and rework plans to eradicate the island’s deer population by shooting them from helicopters, instead prioritizing other methodologies.

The Conservancy has argued that the mule deer pose a threat to the island’s ecosystem by overgrazing and destroying native plants and habitats. However, their plan to eliminate the estimated 1,770 deer on the island through aerial shooting garnered strong opposition, including from Hahn. Last month, Hahn led the Board of Supervisors in an unanimous vote to oppose the aerial shooting plan and asked the conservancy to reconsider several alternative proposals they had previously dismissed – including relocating the deer, extending the deer hunting season to thin the herd, and sterilization.

This morning, at a special meeting of the Los Angeles County Fish and Wildlife Commission, Dr. Lauren Dennhardt, the Catalina Island Conservancy’s Senior Director of Conservation, announced the decision. She stated, “We have heard the concerns expressed by residents and by Supervisor Hahn, and per her request, we are working on revising our plan to prioritize other methodologies.” In a separate phone call, the conservancy told Hahn’s office that they have taken the aerial shooting proposal off the table.

“I appreciate the Conservancy for listening to the serious concerns people had about this plan, especially from people living on the island,” said Supervisor Hahn. “I heard from residents who were terrified at the thought of bullets raining down from helicopters over their beloved island and others who couldn’t stand the thought of the deer carcasses that would be left in their wake. I am hopeful that the next plan that the Conservancy puts forward can earn more widespread support from residents and everyone who loves Catalina Island.”

Hahn has represented Catalina Island since being elected to the Board of Supervisors in 2016.

 

Reps. Barragán, Napolitano, Sen. Padilla announce $159 Million in Funding for Large Scale Water Recycling Projects in Southern California

LOS ANGELES — Rep. Nanette Barragán (CA-44) joined Sen. Alex Padilla (D-CA.), Rep. Grace Napolitano (CA-31) and the Bureau of Reclamation May 28 to announce $159 million in transformational investments for three large-scale water recycling projects in Southern California. Leadership from the three recipients of this major Infrastructure Law funding — Metropolitan Water District, the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power or LADWP, and the City of Ventura — joined the lawmakers and administration officials for the announcement.

The funding was delivered by a new federal program, the Infrastructure Law, to help invest in large-scale water recycling programs and water reuse projects that strengthen drought resilience across the West. Through the Infrastructure Law, the Bureau of Reclamation is investing $8.3 billion over five years for water infrastructure projects, including rural water, water storage, conservation and conveyance, nature-based solutions, dam safety, water purification and reuse and desalination.

“Today’s announcement exemplifies how the Infrastructure Law is delivering for the American people,” said Representative Barragán. “This new program unlocks $450 million of federal funding to help vulnerable communities in my district and other under-resourced areas create drought-resistant water supplies and reduce our state’s dependence on imported water. This investment includes $99 million for Pure Water Southern California, the largest water recycling program in the region. I am proud to support the Pure Water project and other transformative investments made possible by Democrats in Congress and the Biden Administration.”

The program was established to support projects like the Metropolitan Water District’s water recycling program, Pure Water Southern California, which will receive nearly $100 million of this Infrastructure Law funding to build the largest recycling facility in the world. This recycling program will be instrumental for developing local water solutions and reducing Colorado River water use, potentially producing 150 million gallons of purified water each day, enough to meet the water demands of 1.5 million people. The federal funding for Pure Water will help advance design work and make necessary improvements to existing infrastructure. Construction could begin as soon as 2025, and the first water could be delivered by 2032.

Additionally, the City of Ventura will receive $30 million for its VenturaWaterPure Program, and LADWP will receive $30 million for the Los Angeles Groundwater Replenishment Project.

Long Beach Stands with Brandon Lee

By Mark Friedman, Labor Columnist

The Fight Like Brandon Lee! Speaking Tour landed in Long Beach this past Sunday, May 26 at the Unitarian Church, featuring human rights activist, Brandon Lee, a survivor of an assassination attempt by the Philippine military. Lee, a defender of environmental and Indigenous rights, discussed the economic and human rights crises in the Philippines, including war crimes and counterinsurgency programs committed by the Philippine government with the backing of the United States.

One hundred twenty-five people​ attended the speaking engagement, including church members, veterans opposing war, peace activists, anti-imperialist groups, labor unions, pro-Palestine groups, and individuals.

Brandon Lee, a Chinese American resident of San Francisco, recounted his story of how he became an anti-war activist after the US invaded Afghanistan in 2001.

“The US was there for profit, for oil,” said Lee.

When the US invaded Iraq, during its so-called war on terror, Lee joined the League of Filipino Students at San Francisco State. He wanted to learn how to organize Chinese immigrants and workers in the U.S. On an exposure trip to the Philippines, he learned that Filipino peasants tied to the land for generations are paid ten pesos a day, the equivalent of 17 cents in the United States, making them unable to buy basic necessities.

I was equally inspired and in awe by the vivacious Igorot mass movement and culture of resistance against government neglect, development aggression like large destructive mining and large and hydropower dams, and militarization,” Lee said.

“Unbridled large-scale destructive mining, dams, energy, and other foreign projects, masquerades as development projects, while destroying the environment and forcibly displacing Indigenous people who have been living there for generations.”

Lee discussed the Filipino government’s brutal crackdown on Nestle workers engaged in a sustained labor action of picketing for salary increases and improved working conditions. Lee noted the slogan, “There’s Blood in your Coffee” was inspired by that crackdown.

Lee supported the indigenous communities’ struggle to defend their land, livelihood, and culture. These communities are 10 – 20% of the population, or 100 million people, in the Philippines.

“There is tremendous corruption and theft of money that is supposed to go to these Indigenous communities’ money allocated for roads and hospitals but the work is never finished,” Lee said.

Asked why Indigenous people and their allies are such a threat, he replied, “We are fighting them, imperialist plunder of the land for decades, for the protection of the natural resources like the Chico River which is essential for food and irrigation. But the mining industries have come in and destroyed the Indigenous people’s land and contaminated the river.”

Citing a specific example, Lee noted that, “The internationally banned white phosphorus bomb was even dropped on the province of Abra (2017) and Kalinga (2023) burning the Indigenous people’s communal forest for days and exacerbating the climate crisis.”

Assassination attempt
In 2019, Lee was shot multiple times outside of his home in Ifugao, a province in the northern Luzon region of the Philippines. Lee’s supporters maintain that the attack was an attempted assassination orchestrated by the Philippine government. In 2015, Lee was red-tagged as an enemy of the state for his work as a journalist, environmental rights advocate, and defender of indigenous rights. According to Global Witness, the Philippines has been labeled the deadliest country in the world for environmental activists.

The assassination attempt nearly cost him his life. One of the bullets pierced his spine causing permanent paralysis from the chest down as a quadriplegic, leaving him without the use of his legs or hands. Until now, there has been no accountability for the shooting.

Following the assassination attempt, President Rodrigo Duterte signed an anti-terror law in 2020, which allows suspects to be detained without a judicial warrant of arrest for 14 days and extended by 10 days. For suspects placed under a surveillance warrant for 60 days, the police or the military can extend the surveillance warrant by up to 30 days.

“I continue to voice my opposition to the Anti-Terror Bill in the Philippines alongside local Filipino American communities,” Lees said. “This controversial law granted sweeping powers to define terrorism, persecute activists and critics, and suppress free speech and the right to assembly and to associate with an organization.”

Lee said he was inspired to keep fighting and speaking out as have the indigenous communities and organizations, such as the Cordillera Peoples Alliance and the millions of people in the global south who continue to resist Imperialist attacks, and neoliberal projects, over the decades.

Filipino activists in Southern California are mobilizing for protests in San Diego, June 29-30 to demand the cancellation of RIMPAC, or The Rim of the Pacific Exercise, the world’s largest international maritime warfare exercise. A total of 40 surface ships, three submarines, 14 national land forces, over 150 aircraft, and more than 25,000 personnel are expected to join the maneuvers.

Members of the LA Hands Off Cuba committee participated in the meeting and received a warm response from Filipino activists who are part of the Cuba solidarity movement in LA, some of whom just returned from Cuba with the “Labor and Youth Activists” delegation.

For more information: Justice4BrandonLee@gmail.com

LBCC Faculty Association Formally Endorses Re-Election Of College District Board Member Vivian Malauulu

 

LONG BEACH — The Long Beach City College Faculty Association (LBCCFA) announced today that they have formally endorsed the re-election of Long Beach Community College District Board President Vivian Malauulu for Board Trustee Area 2 this November.

“We are proud to endorse the re-election of Board President Vivian Malauulu,” said Jeffrey Sabol, Chair of the Faculty Association’s Political Action Committee. “She has done an excellent job for our College District, providing important leadership and a strong personal commitment to our students, faculty, college employees, and Long Beach community over the last four years. The district’s faculty strongly believe she is deserving of another four-year term and look forward to working with her.”

The Long Beach City College Faculty Association or LBCCFA represents the Long Beach Community College District’s 325+ full-time faculty members at the district’s two Long Beach campuses. The group is a member of the California’s Community College Association or CCA – the higher education affiliate of the California Teachers Association or CTA, as well as the National Education Association or NEA – the largest public employee association in the nation.

Malauulu has also been endorsed by both of the college district’s other two employee groups, the Long Beach City College Certificated Hourly Instructors (LBCC CHI), and the Long Beach Council of Classified Employees (LBCCE-AFT-AFL-CIO).

The Problem Isn’t Civil Disobedience, It’s Civil Obedience

https://www.caitlinjohnst.one/p/the-problem-isnt-civil-disobedience?utm_source=post-email-title&publication_id=82124&post_id=144836761&utm_campaign=email-post-title&isFreemail=true&r=1qabbh&triedRedirect=true&utm_medium=email

CAITLIN JOHNSTONE May 21

Our society does not have an antisemitism crisis. It doesn’t have a crisis of far left radicalism, Islamist extremism, support for terrorism, or fomenting of dissent by foreign powers.

Our society has a moral crisis. A cruelty crisis. An imperialism crisis. A militarism crisis. A propaganda crisis. An insincerity crisis. A stupidity crisis. An obedience crisis.

Empire managers and imperial spinmeisters try to pretend there’s some horrifying existential emergency involving hatred of Jews or love of Hamas or some other ridiculous nonsense in our society, because the empire too is in a state of crisis. People are waking up from its lullaby of propaganda and are rejecting its narrative manipulation like never before, which is why instead of relenting and accepting the empire’s destruction of Gaza, opposition to it is only growing stronger.

So the authorized custodians of imperial narratives flail around desperately trying to regain some control by spinning all the civil disobedience we are seeing in a way that makes it seem like some sort of problem which needs to be fixed. But as Howard Zinn said, “Civil disobedience is not our problem. Our problem is civil obedience.”

Our problem is not that more and more people are opposing Israel’s empire-backed atrocities in Gaza with more and more aggression, our problem is that people are not opposing it aggressively enough. Our problem is that too many people still have their minds jacked into the mainstream worldview and ignore the most urgent matter of our time, letting their thoughts be preoccupied with frivolous garbage and trusting that our leaders are doing what’s best for us.

Mainstream culture is so shallow, vapid and idiotic that when an artist rapped about this issue of unparalleled urgency, he included the line “I want a ceasefire, fuck a response from Drake” — and everyone knew what he meant. He meant mainstream culture is fixated on phony public spats between millionaire pop stars while the US empire funnels weapons of annihilation into Israel to be dropped on a giant concentration camp full of children. It says so much about this fraudulent dystopia we live in that such a thing would need to be said. But it did.

The problem isn’t that people are becoming too disobedient, the problem is that people remain too obedient. The problem isn’t that people are becoming too radicalized against their government, the problem is that people aren’t radicalized enough. The problem is that the freaks who rule over us are not sufficiently afraid of us. The problem is that we have not yet come to the collective realization that there are a whole lot more of us than there are of them, and that we don’t actually need to put up with them doing crazy and evil things right in front of our faces.

Instead people sit around drooling with their eyes fixed on screens full of endless diversion while children are ripped to shreds by western-supplied military explosives for no other reason than because they happen to belong to the wrong ethnic group.

That is the real crisis of our society. Not an imaginary antisemitism epidemic. Not college kids disobeying authority figures. Not leftists. Not anarchists. Not Islam. Not Hamas.

The real crisis in our society is that too many people are still blindly obedient to a murderous and tyrannical empire which should be hacked to pieces and scattered to the winds.

The Slow-Motion Execution of Julian Assange Continues – Read by Eunice Wong

https://chrishedges.substack.com/p/the-slow-motion-execution-of-julian-986?utm_source=post-email-title&publication_id=778851&post_id=144930141&utm_campaign=email-post-title&isFreemail=true&r=d8q4a&triedRedirect=true&utm_medium=email

The ruling by the High Court in London permitting Julian Assange to appeal his extradition order leaves him languishing in precarious health in a high-security prison. That is the point.

Chris Hedges, May 24

The decision by the High Court in London to grant Julian Assange the right to appeal the order to extradite him to the United States may prove to be a Pyrrhic victory. It does not mean Julian will elude extradition. It does not mean the court has ruled, as it should, that he is a journalist whose only “crime” was providing evidence of war crimes and lies by the U.S. government to the public. It does not mean he will be released from the high-security HMS Belmarsh prison where, as Nils Melzer, the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture, after visiting Julian there, said he was undergoing a “slow-motion execution.”

It does not mean that journalism is any less imperiled. Editors and publishers of five international media outlets —– The New York Times, the Guardian, Le Monde, El Pais and DER SPIEGEL —– which published stories based on documents released by WikiLeaks, have urged that the U.S. charges be dropped and Julian be released. None of these media executives were charged with espionage. It does not dismiss the ludicrous ploy by the U.S. government to extradite an Australian citizen whose publication is not based in the U.S. and charge him under the Espionage Act. It continues the long Dickensian farce that mocks the most basic concepts of due process.

This ruling is based on the grounds that the U.S. government did not offer sufficient assurances that Julian would be granted the same First Amendment protections afforded to a U.S. citizen, should he stand trial. The appeal process is one more legal hurdle in the persecution of a journalist who should not only be free, but feted and honored as the most courageous of our generation.

Yes. He can file an appeal. But this means another year, perhaps longer, in harsh prison conditions as his physical and psychological health deteriorates. He has spent over five years in HMS Belmarsh without being charged. He spent seven years in the Ecuadorian Embassy because the U.K. and Swedish governments refused to guarantee that he wouldn’t be extradited to the U.S., even though he agreed to return to Sweden to aid a preliminary investigation that was eventually dropped.

The judicial lynching of Julian was never about justice. The plethora of legal irregularities, including the recording of his meetings with attorneys by the Spanish security firm UC Global at the embassy on behalf of the CIA, alone should have seen the case thrown out of court as it eviscerates attorney-client privilege.

The U.S. has charged Julian with 17 counts under the Espionage Act and one count of computer misuse, for an alleged conspiracy to take possession of and then publish national defense information. If found guilty on all of these charges he faces 175 years in a U.S. prison.

The extradition request is based on the 2010 release by WikiLeaks of the Iraq and Afghanistan war logs — hundreds of thousands of classified documents, leaked to the site by Chelsea Manning, then an Army intelligence analyst, which exposed numerous U.S. war crimes including video images of the gunning down of two Reuters journalists and 10 other unarmed civilians in the Collateral Murder video, the routine torture of Iraqi prisoners, the covering up of thousands of civilian deaths and the killing of nearly 700 civilians that had approached too closely to U.S. checkpoints.

In February, lawyers for Julian submitted nine separate grounds for a possible appeal.

A two-day hearing in March, which I attended, was Julian’s last chance to request an appeal of the extradition decision made in 2022 by the then British home secretary, Priti Patel, and of many of the rulings of District Judge Baraitser in 2021.

The two High Court judges, Dame Victoria Sharp and Justice Jeremy Johnson, in March rejected most of Julian’s grounds of appeal. These included his lawyers’ contention that the UK-US extradition treaty bars extradition for political offenses; that the extradition request was made for the purpose of prosecuting him for his political opinions; that extradition would amount to retroactive application of the law — because it was not foreseeable that a century-old espionage law would be used against a foreign publisher; and that he would not receive a fair trial in the Eastern District of Virginia. The judges also refused to hear new evidence that the CIA plotted to kidnap and assassinate Julian, concluding — both perversely and incorrectly — that the CIA only considered these options because they believed Julian was planning to flee to Russia.

But the two judges determined Monday that it is “arguable” that a U.S. court might not grant Julian protection under the First Amendment, violating his rights to free speech as enshrined in the European Convention on Human Rights.

The judges in March asked the U.S. to provide written assurances that Julian would be protected under the First Amendment and that he would be exempt from a death penalty verdict. The U.S. assured the court that Julian would not be subjected to the death penalty, which Julian’s lawyers ultimately accepted. But the Department of Justice was unable to provide an assurance that Julian could mount a First Amendment defense in a U.S. court. Such a decision is made in a U.S. federal court, their lawyers explained.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Gordon Kromberg, who is prosecuting Julian, has argued that only U.S. citizens are guaranteed First Amendment rights in U.S. courts. Kromberg has stated that what Julian published was “not in the public interest” and that the U.S. was not seeking his extradition on political grounds.

Free speech is a key issue. If Julian is granted First Amendment rights in a U.S. court it will be very difficult for the U.S. to build a criminal case against him, since other news organizations, including The New York Times and The Guardian, published the material he released.

The extradition request is based on the contention that Julian is not a journalist and not protected under the First Amendment.

Julian’s attorneys and those representing the U.S. government had until May 24 to submit a draft order, which will determine when the appeal will be heard.

Julian committed the empire’s greatest sin — he exposed it as a criminal enterprise. He documented its lies, routine violation of human rights, wanton killing of innocent civilians, rampant corruption and war crimes. Republican or Democrat, Conservative or Labour, Trump or Biden — it does not matter. Those who manage the empire use the same dirty playbook.

The publication of classified documents is not a crime in the United States, but if Julian is extradited and convicted, it will become one.

Julian is in precarious physical and psychological health. His physical and psychological deterioration has resulted in a minor stroke, hallucinations and depression. He takes antidepressant medication and the antipsychotic quetiapine. He has been observed pacing his cell until he collapses, punching himself in the face and banging his head against the wall. He has spent weeks in the medical wing of Belmarsh, nicknamed “hell wing.” Prison authorities found “half of a razor blade” hidden under his socks. He has repeatedly called the suicide hotline run by the Samaritans because he thought about killing himself “hundreds of times a day.”

These slow-motion executioners have not yet completed their work. Toussaint L’Ouverture, who led the Haitian independence movement, the only successful slave revolt in human history, was physically destroyed in the same manner. He was locked by the French in an unheated and cramped prison cell and left to die of exhaustion, malnutrition, apoplexy, pneumonia and probably tuberculosis.

Prolonged imprisonment, which the granting of this appeal perpetuates, is the point. The 12 years Julian has been detained — seven in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London and over five in high-security Belmarsh Prison — have been accompanied by a lack of sunlight and exercise, as well as unrelenting threats, pressure, prolonged isolation, anxiety and constant stress. The goal is to destroy him.

We must free Julian. We must keep him out of the hands of the U.S. government. Given all he did for us, we owe him an unrelenting fight.

If there is no freedom of speech for Julian, there will be no freedom of speech for us.