Detroit has once again been named America’s most dangerous city, this time by Forbes , which offers the top (or, perhaps, bottom) 10, based on the FBI’s uniform crime report for 2010: Detroit : A rate of 1,111 violent crimes per 100,000 residents. A dwindling population, low employment rates, and…
Continue reading …AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka joined a host of labor leaders and organizations that are supporting Occupy Wall Street. He released the following statement on Tuesday: Occupy Wall Street has captured the imagination and passion of millions of Americans who have lost hope that our nation’s policymakers are speaking for them. We support the protesters in their determination to hold Wall Street accountable and create good jobs. We are proud that today on Wall Street, bus drivers, painters, nurses and utility workers are joining students and homeowners, the unemployed and the underemployed to call for fundamental change. Across America, working people are turning out with their friends and neighbors in parks, congregations and union halls to express their frustration – and anger — about our country’s staggering wealth gap, the lack of work for people who want to work and the corrupting of our politics by business and financial elites. The people who do the work to keep our great country running are being robbed not only of income, but of a voice. It is time for all of us—the 99 percent—to be heard. As we did when we marched on Wall Street last year, working people call on corporations, big banks, and the financial industry to do their part to create good jobs, stop foreclosures and pay their fair share of taxes. · Wall Street and corporate America must invest in America: Big corporations should invest some of the $2 trillion in cash they have on hand, and use it to create good jobs. And the banks themselves should be making credit more accessible to small businesses, instead of parking almost $1 trillion at the Federal Reserve. · Stop foreclosures: Banks should write down the 14 million mortgages that are underwater and stop the more than 10 million pending foreclosures to stop the downward spiral of our housing markets and inject more than $70 billion into our economy. · Fund education and jobs by taxing financial speculation: A tiny tax on financial transactions could raise hundreds of billions in revenue that could fund education and create jobs rebuilding our country. And it would discourage speculation and encourage long term investment. We will open our union halls and community centers as well as our arms and our hearts to those with the courage to stand up and demand a better America. As more and more organizations join the Occupy Wall Street movement, the harder it will be for the media to ignore what is going on or for opponents to use dirty tricks to undermine the protests and their concerns.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media [Video via WJHG ] It’s not like they weren’t warned. There was already the example of Arizona, whose wrecked economy lies in ruins in the wake of SB1070 and the wave of anti-immigrant sentiment that came with its passage. People warned Alabamans that if they went ahead and passed their own version of anti-immigrant legislation, they would suffer similar economic consequences. But they did it anyway. Now, the state’s anti-immigration laws — which involve using schoolchildren as proxies for enforcement — are easily the most draconian and vicious anti-immigrant laws in the country. And guess what? They are now paying the price. Not only are the schools suddenly emptying of Latino children, more tellingly, the state’s tomato farmers are in crisis because there’s no one available to harvest the fruit. And the authors of the legislation are just telling them, “tough luck”: STEELE, Ala. — A sponsor of Alabama’s tough new immigration law told desperate tomato farmers Monday that he won’t change the law, even though they told him that their crops are rotting in the field and they are at risk of losing their farms. Republican state Sen. Scott Beason of Gardendale met with about 50 growers, workers, brokers and business people Monday at a tomato packing shed on Chandler Mountain in northeast Alabama. They complained that the new law, which went into effect Thursday, scared off many of their migrant workers at harvest time. “The tomatoes are rotting on the vine, and there is very little we can do,” said Chad Smith, who farms tomatoes with his uncle, father and brother. “My position is to stay with the law as it is,” Beason told the farmers. Beason helped write and sponsor a law the Legislature enacted in June to crack down on illegal immigration. It copied portions of laws enacted in Arizona, Georgia and other states, including allowing police to detain people indefinitely if they don’t have legal status. Beason and other proponents said the law would help free up jobs for Alabamians in a state suffering through 9.9 percent unemployment. The farmers said the some of their workers may have been in the country illegally, but they were the only ones willing to do the work. “This law will be in effect this entire growing season,” Beason told the farmers. He said he would talk to his congressman about the need for a federal temporary worker program that would help the farmers next season. “There won’t be no next growing season,” farmer Wayne Smith said. “Does America know how much this is going to affect them? They’ll find out when they go to the grocery store. Prices on produce will double,” he said. Good question. No doubt these good Republicans will find a way to blame it on President Obama. This is where the rubber hits the road when it comes to conservative ideology, just as it does when Randian fantasy meets reality — which is to say, it quickly comes apart. The right-wing nativists want to pretend that undocumented immigrants are taking away jobs that Americans want to be doing, but the reality is they are largely filling unskilled-labor positions that involve back-breaking work — the kind of work Americans simply are incapable of performing nowadays, regardless of pay. Another report on the crisis in Alabama delves this point: From 11Alive in Atlanta : CHANDLER MOUNTAIN, Ala.– Chad Smith’s family grows tomatoes on a mountaintop in rural northeast Alabama, and ships them from to Canada. The summer’s crop has been good. But Smith sees thousands of overripe tomatoes rotting alongside his vines, and sees only trouble. “As of right now, we could lose probably fifty percent of what we have left for the year,” Smith said. That, said Smith, is because of a stiff shortage of field hands, traditionally Hispanic migrant workers. And Smith doesn’t sugar-coat their status. “Farmers across the whole country and every state (rely) on illegal immigration workers to do this kind of work,” Smith said, “because that’s the only people that’s willing to do it.” Like Georgia, this year Alabama enacted a tough new immigration law designed to squeeze out people working and living illegally in the US. By the time Smith’s crop started ripening in July, he says most of his usual workers had disappeared. Chad Smith says he’s tried local workers. “It ain’t about the money, it’s about the work physically. If a person can’t do the work, they can’t do it no matter how much you pay them,” Smith said. “As of next year, if nothing changes, there won’t be a tomato grown here.” It appears that many of the Alabama workers are fleeing to Florida, which has more sane immigration statutes on the books. Click here to view this media Meanwhile, the farmers have been trying to talk sense into state officials, but to no avail : “Give us hope, give us something,” said farmer Jeremy Calvert, who served as moderator at the meeting. “We feed more people than ever before. We have to have a labor force. There are no machines to pick fresh tomatoes or cucumbers. We use Hispanic labor because we have to. We’re caught between a rock and a hard place.” Calvert’s words were repeated often concerning the largely Hispanic workforce that harvests the state’s and nation’s crops. Keith Smith, a Gold Ridge area farmer who helped organize the event, said the labor issue extends beyond the agriculture community. He said other industries rely heavily on Hispanic labor because of necessity. As the farmer in the video above observes: FARMER: I was at a meeting at the Greenbriar restaurant in Huntsville several weeks ago, and there were several senators and legislators there … Some of them spoke and said where were we at when this law was being debated. They heard from 80 percent of the people that said they were in favor of this law. Well, there’s a fundamental problem with that. Eighty percent of the people that’s for this law doesn’t understand that the 1 percent of us feeds the United States. Our voice is small because we are small. ,,, But we have to have a labor force. This is all very reminiscent of what’s happened when there have been previous outbreaks of xenophobic hysteria. One prime example of this occurred during World War II, when an even more intense outbreak of hysteria in the wake of the attack on Pearl Harbor led Americans to incarcerate 120,000 Japanese Americans in various internment camps. As it happened, Japanese Americans provided a substantial portion of the nation’s fresh produce supply, particularly on the West Coast, but also in the Midwest. And when we shipped them off to concentration camps, we lost all that production — even though the nativists who ardently pushed for the evacuation had dismissed this concern beforehand. I explored this in some detail in my book Strawberry Days: How Internment Destroyed a Japanese American Community . The question first was raised when the idea of removing all Japanese Americans to the interior was being debated by the public: The removal would not be without problems, warned some. “Approximately 95 percent of the vegetables grown here are raised by the Japanese,” noted J.R. Davidson, market master for the Pike Place Public Market in Seattle, where Eastside Japanese sold many of their goods. “About 35 percent of the sellers in the market are Japanese. Many white persons are leaving the produce business to take defense jobs, which are not open to the Japanese.” Letter writers to the local newspapers raised the same concern. Their fears were quickly derided. Wrote Charlotte Drysdale of Seattle in a letter to the Post-Intelligencer: It has been interesting to note how many contributors have been afraid we would have no garden truck if the Japs are sent to concentration areas. We had gardens long before the Japs were imported about the turn of the century, to work for a very low wage (a move for which we are still paying dearly) and we can still have them after we have no Japs. Isn’t that discounting American ability just a little too low? These concerns were raised during the congressional hearings that preceded the internment episode too: Floyd Oles, a spokesman for the Washington Produce Shippers’ Association, warned the committee that the state’s vegetable and fruit production would suffer if the Japanese were evacuated and urged the members to reconsider. He was told that plans were already being formed for replacement farmers to take over the operation of the Japanese farms. And he was questioned about his business connections with Japanese produce cooperatives, including Bellevue’s. The result was anything but pretty: The day after Bellevue’s Japanese residents were loaded aboard the train for evacuation, the May 21 edition of the local weekly, the Bellevue American, noted their departure with a front-page story headlined, “Bellevue Japanese are Evacuated Wednesday — Sent to California.” On the same page was a smaller item headlined, “No Strawberry Festival This Year.” The story put a wartime face on the reasons presented for ending the city’s main summer attraction, a 16-year tradition: “With the rationing of gasoline, all agreed that the Festival would have to be abandoned this year. Other reasons given were: the shortage of sugar, conservation of tires, avoidance of large crowds and the war effort that is keeping so many busy.” A simpler explanation, of course, was that 90 percent of Bellevue’s agricultural workforce — the people who provided the Strawberry Festival with strawberries — was riding a train to Pinedale, Calif. That loss became painfully obvious in the next week’s paper. A front-page headline read: “200 Workers Needed Now to Care for Crops in Overlake Area.” The Japanese farmers, under threat of law, had maintained their crops through the spring. At the time they were evacuated, the lettuce crop was ready for harvest, peas were a week or two away, and strawberries were red and ready for plucking. Tomatoes and the second crop of lettuce were due for harvest by the end of July. Western Farm and Produce Inc., which had stepped in as the wartime substitute for the Japanese, received a Farm Service Administration loan the day of the evacuation for $32,107, mostly to cover the costs it incurred in purchasing the remaining crops, and equipment to grow and harvest them, from the 33 lease farmers who had signed agreements. The company also set up operations at the Midlake warehouse the Japanese growers owned. But it quickly became apparent that the company was going to have trouble raising enough labor to work the fields. H.C. Van Valkenburgh, the lawyer who formed the company and managed it, pleaded for help through the story in the American. “Labor is the biggest immediate problem because of the highly perishable nature of these crops, which are maturing rapidly,” the story reported. “The pay is much higher than in normal times, and many of the good people who are helping with such fine spirit, consider the money as secondary to the national need of preserving these foods. “Most of these foods are going to the armed forces, according to Van Valkenburgh, who pointed out that a carload of cauliflower has just been shipped to men in Alaska, and another carload of lettuce has just been shipped to Chicago for the armed forces.” Van Valkenburgh told the reporter he needed 100 workers immediately for picking strawberries and another 100 to care for other crops. A week later, Van Valkenburgh still needed 100 workers for the strawberry harvest. The following week’s story in the American made no mention of the other crops, but simply appealed for labor. “ ‘We much prefer to employ local help,’ said Mr. Van Valkenburgh Wednesday night. ‘Local help proves more reliable, transportation difficulties are avoided, the number of workers can be regulated, there is more interest aiding a local industry, workers can be trained into steady year-around jobs — and, of course, we would much prefer to keep the money here.’ “ ‘Consequently, we are making an urgent appeal to all who want to aid in harvesting and caring for these crops to notify us at once, so that we can organize our labor. If insufficient local labor is available, we can get the workers from Seattle, but we want to know how many to send for.’ ” Actually, the ready labor pool in Seattle was not merely short; it was practically nonexistent. Local Filipinos were already in place on Bainbridge Island farms, and the larger White River land tracts were also sapping the usual workforce. Few white farmers would touch the small Japanese tracts, and other laborers were signing up to join the war effort, which had the advantages of better pay and considerably greater glory. Berry pickers were paid by the carry — a wooden tray that held a large number of smaller berry crates, which meant that the fastest pickers were paid the most. The company also hired tomato planters and weeders, who were paid 50 cents an hour. Truck drivers to haul the goods were paid the best: $1 an hour. But Western Farm and Produce lost a large portion of the strawberry crop to wet weather conditions, so returns on its first harvest were a considerable disappointment. Soon, it was cutting back its operations. Confusion soon set in, especially as the Japanese leasees began to settle into the camps. In most cases, the farmers had reached agreement with Western Farm to continue paying them through the harvest, so they could in turn make their lease payments to the landowners. A few had been released of their lease obligations altogether, and so the company itself became responsible for paying the rent. But Western Farm fell down on both accounts. First, it began receiving letters of complaint from the landowners who had released the Japanese from their leases, demanding rent for the land the company was working. The company paid up for a few months in some cases — it contested others — and then quit paying altogether after the summer. Then the Japanese internees, with War Relocation Authority officials backing them, began demanding their unpaid rent. In some cases, the company made partial payments, but even those ended after 1942. And, with only a handful of workers available for the harvest, it became clear that Van Valkenburgh’s grand scheme to become “the successor to the Bellevue Vegetable Growers Association,” as Western Farm and Produce Inc.’s letterhead suggested, was a money-losing proposition, and the operation quickly dried up. The crops were abandoned. The company kept hiring tomato planters and weeders through July, but there is no indication that either the tomatoes or the second lettuce crop were ever harvested. When the Nisei came back three and four years later, it was obvious that only a fraction of the crops they had planted were harvested. The farms had lain fallow since they had left. And the Strawberry Festival, that great gathering in tiny Bellevue of thousands of people from all walks of life and from all around the Puget Sound, was gone forever. Similarly, you have to wonder what will happen now to Alabama’s tomato-farming industry. Once it gets blown away like this, it may take years to recover — if it ever does.
Continue reading …In a report filed at the Los Angeles Times's Politics Now blog earlier today, Washington Bureau reporter James Oliphant relayed a number of whoppers delivered by Vice President Joe Biden without anything resembling a challenge. Breaking Biden's bilge into three sections, they involve his claim about the historical origins of the Tea Party, which Biden characterized as a collection of ” barbarians ” only a month ago; his hit at Bank of America and its $5 monthly fee for debit-card use; and the nature of the “bailouts” which followed the passage of the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) in the fall of 2008. In this first part, I will go after what Biden said about the Tea Party. An excerpt from Oliphant's writeup follows the jump (bolds are mine throughout): Biden likens Occupy Wall Street to tea party, blasts BofA Vice President Joe Biden likened the Occupy Wall Street movement to the tea party at a forum in Washington on Thursday, saying both were driven by middle-class frustration with government bailouts of corporate America. “What is the core of that protest, and why is it increasing in terms of the people its attracting? The core is that the bargain has been breached with the American people. The core is that the American people do not think the system is fair or on the level,” Biden said at forum sponsored by the Atlantic magazine and the Aspen Institute at the Newseum in Washington. “There’s a lot in common with the tea party,” Biden said. “The tea party started why? TARP. They thought it was unfair we were bailing out the big guys.” Citizens' underlying frustrations origins indeed began with TARP, but the frustration didn't begin jell into organized protests until February of 2009 in direct response to imminent passage of the Obama administration's stimulus plan. The St. Louis Tea Party tells us that “The 2009 Stimulus helped inpire the Tea Party movement in February 2009.” Oliphant's own paper noted the following on February 27, 2009 : … a wave of images, blog posts and videos from a nationwide protest has been washing across the Web. The protests, dubbed “tea parties” by participants, were held Friday in several U.S. cities including Portland and Washington, D.C. as a response to what demonstrators see as unfettered spending and encroaching government as represented by President Obama's economic recovery plans. An Associated Press photo at the beginning of the item has the following caption: “Protesters rally against the stimulus plan in Hartford, Conn.” The word “bailout” and “TARP” do not appear in the Times's article. That's because it was the Obama administration's “economic recovery plans,” which came to be known as “stimulus,” which drove everyday Americans to demonstrate. Jim Geraghty's take on the Tea Party's origins at National Review in January of this year mentions TARP, but in context the actions of the Obama administration in its early months dominate his treatment, and clearly were the organizing motivator: You didn’t see the demographics that make up the GOP base – small businessmen, parents, members of the military – marching and waving signs because they were too busy working for a living. … Enter the Obama administration. Like most successes, at least a thousand figures are claiming fatherhood of the Tea Party phenomenon, but a key moment came Feb. 19, 2009, from an unlikely source: CNBC correspondent Rick Santelli, who launched into an off-the-cuff rant when asked to evaluate the initial moves from the Obama administration to deal with a housing market that had plummeted. “The government is promoting bad behavior!” Santelli shouted, accusing the administration of a plan that amounted to “subsidizing the losers’ mortgages.” … Listen to a discussion of the debt and deficit at a Tea Party meeting, and you won’t hear a lot of numbers; instead, it is articulated as a moral issue, and a national moral failure. The spending spree of TARP and the stimulus — and a deficit exacerbated by plummeting tax revenues — is spurring Americans to look at the debt as a great horror inflicted upon their children and grand children. Again, while TARP has been a particular source of concern among Tea Party sympathizers, it is not, as Biden claims, the reason why Tea Party activism began. It began in earnest as a result of the stimulus plan, and the sudden prospect, since fulfilled for three years running, that the nation was facing trillion-dollar budget deficits as far as the eye can see. Assuming he reads and remembers what has been written in his own newspaper, James Oliphant should know that, in my opinion probably does. But he still let Biden's babble and his sudden fake respect for the “barbarians” in the Tea Party go unchallenged. The Occupy Wall Street crowd, in total contrast to Tea Party sympathizers, seems singularly uninterested in the size of the government's annual deficits. The only things the two groups appear to have in common is that their participants breathe in oxygen and breathe out carbon dioxide. As to who the real “barbarians” are, well, that determination has become pretty easy given the conduct of many in the OWS contingent. Later this evening, Part 2 will deal with Biden's comments on Bank of America, while Part 3 will address the largely untold story of the original bank bailouts. Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .
Continue reading …The slackers of the 1990s are remembered as listless MTV watchers and basement dwellers who opted out of America’s striving, mercenary ethos. Many young adults today look similar at first glance. They’re in their 20s or early 30s, they don’t have jobs or spouses, and many live with mom and dad. But that’s not by
Continue reading …The slackers of the 1990s are remembered as listless MTV watchers and basement dwellers who opted out of America’s striving, mercenary ethos. Many young adults today look similar at first glance. They’re in their 20s or early 30s, they don’t have jobs or spouses, and many live with mom and dad. But that’s not by
Continue reading …Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan defended his bank’s controversial new $5 debit card fee in a CNBC interview yesterday, saying that most customers would avoid it, and that the bank had given customers plenty of warning about it. Asked to respond to President Obama’s statement that banks don’t have…
Continue reading …The left-wing, anti-capitalist Occupy Wall Street camp-out in Lower Manhattan stretched into its third week, bolstered by an influx of labor unions. The story made the front of Thursday’s New York Times along with a large photo of protestors in Foley Square, “ Seeking Energy, Unions Join Wall Street Protest. ” It’s a far cry from the paper’s coverage of the first major Tea Party rally in Manhattan. The paper’s hostile reporting of the nationwide Tea Party rallies on April 15, 2009 (Tax Day) virtually ignored a supportive crowd of thousands, citing in a single sentence an Associated Press report on Newt Gingrich speaking at the Manhattan rally. The report made Page 16. Labor reporter Steven Greenhouse and Cara Buckley promoted the labor perspective on Thursday. Stuart Appelbaum, an influential union leader in New York City, was in Tunisia last month, advising the fledgling labor movement there, when he received a flurry of phone calls and e-mails alerting him to the rumblings of something back home. Protesters united under a provocative name, Occupy Wall Street, were gathering in a Lower Manhattan park and raising issues long dear to organized labor. And gaining attention for it. Mr. Appelbaum recalled asking a colleague over the phone to find out who was behind Occupy Wall Street — a bunch of hippies or perhaps troublemakers? — and whether the movement might quickly fade. So far, at least, it has not, and on Wednesday, several prominent unions, struggling to gain traction on their own, made their first effort to join forces with Occupy Wall Street. Thousands of union members marched with the protesters from Foley Square to their encampment in nearby Zuccotti Park. “The labor movement needs to tap into the energy and learn from them,” Mr. Appelbaum, president of the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union, said. “They are reaching a lot of people and exciting a lot of people that the labor movement has been struggling to reach for years.” In fact, the unexpected success of Occupy Wall Street in leveling criticism of corporate America has stirred some soul-searching among labor leaders . They have noted with envy that the new movement has done a far better job, not only of capturing interest, but also of attracting young people. Protests have spread to dozens of cities, including Boston, Chicago and Los Angeles. What precisely is that criticism? The Times doesn’t say, perhaps because the Occupy protests are more a collection of various grievances than specific demands (as Greenhouse hinted at deeper into the story). Greenhouse at least committed some accurate labeling when reporting on the activists’ confrontations with the police: Others said they were wary of being embarrassed by the far-left activists in the group who have repeatedly denounced the United States government. Those concerns may be renewed after a disturbance about 8 p.m. Wednesday as the march was breaking up. The police said they arrested eight protesters around the intersection of Broadway and Wall Street, after people rushed barriers and began spilling into the street. While a couple of witnesses said that officers used pepper spray to clear the streets, Paul J. Browne, the Police Department’s chief spokesman, said that one officer “possibly” used it. Several protesters were also arrested at State and Bridge Streets at 9:30 p.m.; the police said one protester was charged with assault after an officer was knocked off his scooter.
Continue reading …“It was an angry call,” is how “Family Guy” creator Seth MacFarlane describes a little known conversation he had with Jon Stewart in 2008 on this week’s episode of “Piers Morgan Tonight.” The “beef” as Morgan and MacFarlane describe it in the preview clip below, was instigated by a joke on “Family Guy” about “The Daily Show” returning to air before the Writer’s Guild Of America strike back in 2007. MacFarlane claims Stewart phoned him and said, among other things, “Who the hell made you the moral arbiter of Hollywood?” MacFarlane, who seemed taken aback that Morgan even had heard of the incident, admits that he thinks Stewart “Was wrong not to shut his show down” during the strike which saw many beloved programs go dark, including “Family Guy.” A few of the main issues argued during the strike included compensation for reality TV stars and TV content distributed online. MacFarlane described the gag directed at Stewart as “Coming from the right place but probably so over the line,” a much more measured response than Morgan was hoping for, who robustly asked MacFarlane to “Stand up for your jokes.” MacFarlane, while obviously not pleased with Stewart’s call, did call the “Daily Show” host “An important voice in the sphere of rational thought.” In 2008, MacFarlane first detailed the phone call in a Q&A For Time, excerpted below: “There was a very inside joke on “Family Guy” referring to the fact that he was working before the writers’ strike was over. It was admittedly a very direct middle finger of a joke, which I don’t discount. But he called and was very angry about it. The call lasted an hour. It was pretty amazing. He’s a very good debater, I’ll tell you that.” MacFarlane’s full interview airs on “Piers Morgan Tonight” this Wednesday, Oct. 5 at 9:00 p.m. EST. WATCH:
Continue reading …The death of Steve Jobs has brought tribute from politicians from across America, many of whom compare Jobs to the greatest geniuses in American history, Politico reports. President Obama: “The world has lost a visionary. And there may be no greater tribute to Steve’s success than the fact that much…
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