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You Want to Deal With a Humanitarian Crisis, Mr Obama?
“Right now Israel, with full support from the U.S. is denying 1.5 million people in Gaza ALL the necessities of life.” Read Kathleen and Bill Christison’s searing emergency bulletin to Obama. “This is a U.S.-created, U.S.-supported disaster…Put meat on the bones of your talk about compassion…” Also in the new issue of our subscriber-only newsletter, Barbara Rose Johnston brings us a detailed report on the drive for justice in Guatemala after another catastrophe sponsored by the U.S. – the building of the Chixoy Dam. Finally, Alexander Cockburn sets out the record of assaults on freedom in the Bush years. Get your Legacy Edition today by subscribing online or calling 1-800-840-3683 Contributions to CounterPunch are tax-deductible. Click here to make a donation. If you find our site useful please: Subscribe Now! CounterPunch books and gear make great presents.Order CounterPunch By Email For Only $35 a Year !
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Today's Stories December 19 - 21, 2008 Jeffrey St. Clair December 18, 2008 Phillip Doe Ronnie Cummins Jesse Sharkey Saul Landau Peter Morici Dave Lindorff Panos Petrou Jeff Cohen / Worthy Group of the Day December 17, 2008 Peter Lee Conn Hallinan Mike Whitney Jeff Halper Alan Farago Peter Morici Norm Kent Col. Douglas MacGregor Margaret Kimberley Ron Jacobs Worthy Group of the Day December 16, 2008 Vicente Navarro Patrick Cockburn Thomas Michael Power Jason Hribal Farzana Versey Wajahat Ali / Mats Svensson Paul Fitzgerald / David Macaray Howard Lisnoff Worthy Group of the Day December 15, 2008 Andy Worthington Franklin Lamb Karl Grossman Brian Cloughley Mary Lynn Cramer Steve Early Thomas Christie Ken Paff Niranjan Ramakrishnan Dave Lindorff Alan Farago Worthy Group of the Day December 12 / 14, 2008 Alexander Cockburn Michael Hudson / David Price Jeffrey St. Clair Frank Barat John Ross Binoy Kampmark David Macaray Ralph Nader Eamonn Fingleton Lawrence Velvel Behzad Yaghmaian Sam Husseini Tom Barry Howard Lisnoff Laura Carlsen Raj Patel Ron Jacobs Paul Watson David Yearsley Lorenzo Wolff Kim Nicolini Susie Day Poets' Basement Worthy Group of the Weekend December 11, 2008 Patrick Cockburn P. Sainath Vicken Cheterian Ray McGovern Dedrick Muhammad Lee Sustar Peter Morici Ayesha Ijaz Khan George Wuerthner Christopher Brauchli Worthy Group of the Day December 10, 2008 Ismael Hossein-Zadeh Mary Lynn Cramer Manuel Garcia, Jr. Joshua Frank Steve Conn Lee Sustar Glen Ford Stephen Lendman Nadia Hijab Dave Lindorff Website of the Day December 9, 2008 Mike Whitney Fawzia Afzal-Khan Ghada Karmi Dave Lindorff Steve Breyman Lee Sustar / Rev. William E. Alberts Martha Rosenberg Sam Husseini David Macaray Website of the Day December 8, 2008 Steve Early Michael Hudson Patrick Cockburn Diane Farsetta Paul Craig Roberts Daniel Gross Saul Landau Harvey Wasserman Mike Ferner Norman Solomon David Michael Green Website of the Day
December 5 / 7, 2008 Alexander Cockburn Brian Cloughley Paul Craig Roberts Liaquat Ali Khan Farzana Versey Peter Lee Peter Morici Ralph Nader / Yinon Cohen / Wajahat Ali Johnny Barber Alan Farago Jeremy Scahill Mike Whitney Ranjit Hoskote Carl Finamore Marjorie Cohn Norm Kent Missy Beattie Binoy Kampmark David Macaray Nancy Stohlman Ron Jacobs David Yearsley Lorenzo Wolff Poets' Basement Website of the Weekend December 4, 2008 Ece Temelkuran Ralph Nader Harry Browne Eamonn Fingleton Conn Hallinan Mike Whitney Stewart J. Lawrence Paul Fitzgerald / Karyn Strickler Jennifer Matsui Website of the Day December 3, 2008 Andrew Cockburn Sheldon Rampton Robert Weissman Yifat Susskind William Blum Alan Singer David Macaray Martha Rosenberg Mats Svensson Website of the Day December 2, 2008 Jeremy Scahill Paul Craig Roberts Ayesha Ijaz Khan Sarah Anderson / William Blum John Ross Dave Lindorff Nicola Nasser Steve Conn Robert Bryce Website of the Day December 1, 2008 Patrick Cockburn Damien Millet / Vijay Prashad Deepak Tripathi Joshua Frank P. Sainath Alan Farago Binoy Kampmark Chris Genovali David Michael Green Stephen Martin Website of the Day November 28-30, 2008 Alexander Cockburn Mike Whitney Ted Honderich Tom Kerr Mike Ely David Yearsley Deepak Tripathi Sonja Karkar Ramzy Baroud Robert Weitzel Robert Roth Carlos Fierro David Macaray David Rosen James Cockcroft Stan Cox Steve Conn Stephen Martin Richard Rhames Kim Nicolini Lorenzo Wolff Poets' Basement
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Weekend Edition Beyond the Apparel EconomyClothes and Commentaries That Don't FitBy STAN COX As they sink beneath the waves even faster than the rest of the economy, the nation’s print media are clinging to their remaining advertisers for dear life. In the past month, I’ve seen firsthand the fear that newspapers have of losing advertising income and the wariness with which advertisers view their own belt-tightening customers. For six years, I have been writing for the Prairie Writers’ Circle, an op-ed syndication service sponsored by The Land Institute, where I work. PWC distributes opinion columns by writers ranging from mild-mannered environmentalists and agronomists to radical provocateurs. The columns go to more than 500 US newspapers, more or less monthly. We have learned over the years that many papers are willing to print opinions that fall quite far outside the mainstream and that are sure to rile up substantial numbers of their readers. PWC pieces encouraging stepped-up immigration of Latino farmers into the US, urging the conversion of America’s High Plains into a vast “buffalo commons”, and even calling for an end to capitalism have been run by newspapers large and small across the country. Based on that history, I would not have guessed that a column could be considered virtually unprintable simply for urging Americans not to go clothes shopping. But that seems to be what happened. My op-ed to that effect, sent out the Monday before Thanksgiving this year, prompted the editor at a Nebraska paper (one that has often run our work) to write back immediately to say that he would not be using the piece. The reason: the paper’s top advertising customer, mega-retailer J.C. Penney, would not appreciate seeing such ideas in print during the week leading up to the biggest shopping day of the year. The next day, an Iowa paper asked to be removed from the PWC list altogether, apparently in order to avoid all contact with such ideas. The content of my op-ed column would not seem to be the stuff of controversy. I had documented the colossal and growing volume of clothing, almost all imported, that is bought by the US population each year, and how much is thrown away; I’d listed the human and environmental costs of apparel production; I’d pointed out that most households have stockpiled enough clothes to last for years and that polls typically find clothing to be the “most disappointing” Christmas present; and I had suggested that one good way for readers to economize during the tough year ahead would be to buy no new clothing. But having been hit by a potent one-two punch – the general economic crisis and competition from free web content – newspaper publishers are desperate to halt the decline in their ad revenues. An op-ed extolling the virtues of organically grown cotton would have caused no worries on that score, but when my column urged readers not to buy any clothes at all, it crossed the line. CounterPunch.org, of course, had no problem with running such a piece[1], and some other non-advertising-dependent web publications ran it as well. And it did, in the end, see print, in the Peoria Journal-Star (owned by Gatehouse Media, which is flirting with bankruptcy) and in a small-city paper in the Northeast at which several staff members, including the person whose decision it was to run my column, are slated to be laid off at year’s end and presumably would have few concerns about the paper’s holiday ad sales. But that was it. It didn’t even run in my hometown paper. To say that editors find an anti-shopping op-ed more troubling than one calling for truly revolutionary change is not to say that changes in individual consumption are sufficient to right what’s wrong with the economy and the planet. That has to happen at the production end, where ownership and power are concentrated. But the commercial media aren’t concerned with that bigger picture. A newspaper is simply more likely to run a piece that threatens its readers’ worldviews than one that threatens its own revenues. In these tight times for the print media, the debate over whether they have a liberal or conservative bias is less relevant than ever. It’s their profit bias that matters. J.C. Penney executives, in turn, are not in any way worried that shoppers will actually stay out of their stores just because they read in an op-ed column that they should do so. But the retail industry should be plenty worried about the bigger conclusions to which such logic might lead. It might lead readers to conclude, for instance, that the high-consumption apparel economy isn’t designed to create manufacturing jobs (American-made clothing having long been on the endangered species list) or to create satisfying, good-paying jobs in retail (also as rare as spotted owls), or to bring delight to the recipients of Christmas sweaters (Oh, crap, another sweater!?), but rather to generate profits for owners of retail firms. And that could expose the absurdity of an economy that lives and dies with the monthly figures on consumer spending – one, that is, that allocates resources and fills people’s needs through roundabout, cobbled-together, inefficient, and grandly wasteful mechanism worthy of Rube Goldberg. This holiday season, big business, including the big-newspaper business, is getting to feel at least a little bit of the economic stress that’s been closing in on working Americans for years. Maybe the realization that times have changed will hit some CEOs and tycoons when they open their gifts this December 25 only to find socks and sweaters. Stan Cox lives in Salina, Kansas and is author of Sick Planet: Corporate Food and Medicine (Pluto Press, 2008). Contact him at t.stan@cox.net
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