Leave a twig for the birds to perch on... don't let the capitalists do your thinking for you... if you are in the neighborhood, stop on in; the coffee is always hot and the cookie jar is full... looking forward to the day when the real decisions in America are made by working class families gathered around the kitchen table... new postings daily...Yours in the struggle...Alan L. Maki
Texas Longhorns with newborn calf in Bluebonnets
Please note I have a new phone number...
512-517-2708
Alan Maki
Doing research at the LBJ Library in Austin, Texas
What we need is a "21st Century Full Employment Act for Peace and Prosperity" which would make it a mandatory requirement that the president and Congress attain and maintain full employment.
"Voting is easy and marginally useful, but it is a poor substitute for democracy, which requires direct action by concerned citizens"
Will this national conference continue to be dominated by the over-paid muddle-headed upper-middle class intellectuals and Democratic Party hacks working for the foundation-funded outfits fronting for the Democratic Party who refuse to bring forward in a timely manner the impact on the economy of financing this insane militarism and these dirty imperialist Wall Street wars while pushing an agenda for reforms which doesn't take into consideration the urgency of solving the problems of working people from the cost-of-living crisis to the need to immediately create millions of new jobs through universal social programs like a National Public Health Care System and a National Public Child Care System?
We need an economic populism which attacks Wall Street's agenda that helps us build an anti-monopoly coalition capable of challenging Wall Street for political and economic power not just "regulating" Wall Street.
Check it out but don't get sucked in to a false economic populism intended to hoodwink people into voting for Democrats like Hillary Clinton at the expense of our problems going unresolved:
Will your voice for peace, jobs and a Basic Income Guarantee be included?
Will we be lectured about how we must be "patient with the pace of reforms" by accepting "incremental baby steps" as Democrats "inch" us on the way to the good society?
Should a call for a "21st Century Full Employment Act for Peace and Prosperity" be brought before this conference?
How many "wake-up calls" do we need before people wake up?
"Fast Track" is apparently the favored way of doing things by both Republicans and Obama. Get these dirty deeds done before people understand fully what is going on and can organize effective opposition.
Walker used a "fast track" process to ram through this reactionary undemocratic "Right-to-Work" (for less) legislation that is an attack on the entire working class.
Obama seeks "Fast Track" legislation (he has almost unanimous support from the Republicans) to shove the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) down our throats. Again, an attack on the entire working class.
Shouldn't the combination of all of this tell us, as workers. both the Democrats and Republicans are part of Wall Street's "two-party trap" and that we need a new working class based progressive people's party whose politicians would be grassroots and rank-and-file activists?
We need an anti-monopoly people's party to remove Wall Street from power.
U.S.
Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin Signs ‘Right to Work’ Bill
MADISON,
Wis. — For decades, states across the South, Great Plains and Rocky
Mountains enacted policies, known as “right to work,” that prevented
organized labor from forcing all workers to pay union dues or fees. But
the industrial Midwest resisted.
Those days are gone. After a wave of Republican victories across the region in 2010, Indiana and then Michigan
enacted right-to-work laws that supporters said strengthened those
states economically, but that labor leaders asserted left behind a trail
of weakened unions.
“This
freedom-to-work legislation will give workers the freedom to choose
whether or not they want to join a union, and employers another
compelling reason to consider expanding or moving their business to
Wisconsin,” Mr. Walker said.
Even
before the Legislature passed the measure on Friday in a fast-tracked
process, Mr. Walker’s political fund-raisers were raising money on the
issue, saying of the right-to-work bill in an email pitch to donors:
“You know how it is: It threatens the power the Big Government Labor
Bosses crave and they are going to come after him with everything
they’ve got.”
Democrats
assert that Mr. Walker’s real motivation is more about politics than
job creation: breaking a dwindling union movement in Wisconsin and
boosting his standing as the conservative choice for the Republican
presidential nomination next year. And beyond Mr. Walker’s prospects,
they say the new laws throughout the region are intended to help
Republicans build a favorable electoral map for 2016, by weakening the
labor groups that have traditionally provided muscle and money to
Democratic candidates in crucial swing states.
Right-to-work
battles are also emerging in other states. Republican legislators in
Missouri and New Mexico are weighing similar measures. In Kentucky,
where a split Legislature and a Democratic governor pose obstacles to a
statewide bill, leaders in more than a dozen counties have approved or are weighing measures, officials there said on Saturday, and efforts in six other counties are awaiting final approval.
And
in Illinois, a long-held Democratic territory with Democratic
supermajorities in the Legislature, the new Republican governor, Bruce
Rauner, announced an executive order
barring state workers who opt out of unions from being forced to pay
fees based on a constitutional argument, offering a new model for states
where split partisan politics have slowed right-to-work policies.
Federal
law already permits workers not to join unions. But right-to-work laws
go further, permitting workers to not pay fees to them. Unions argue
that the fees are fair for nonunion members who still benefit from the
contracts they negotiate, and that without a requirement, their
membership, financial support and very existence are threatened.
The effects of right-to-work measures are fiercely debated and a matter of dueling experts and research papers.
In Michigan, the percentage of workers in unions has dropped
to 14.5 percent from 16.6 percent before the changes. Yet in Indiana,
the percentage of union members actually grew to 10.7 percent from 9.1
percent in 2012, a statistic some labor experts say shows how difficult
it is to gauge the effects of such measures given other factors at play.
In Wisconsin, the percentage of workers in unions has dropped to 11.7 percent in 2014 from 14.2 percent in 2010, before Mr. Walker took office.
Central
to the new momentum behind the laws were sweeping Republican victories
in state elections in 2010, when the party got full control — in the
chambers and the governor’s office — of states that included Wisconsin,
Michigan and Indiana. They made more gains in 2014,
now controlling 68 of the 98 chambers around the country and the most
state legislative seats since 1920. But it was the victories in 2010
that set off a new flood of right-to-work legislation in the Midwest,
which had rarely seen it.
Soon
after taking office, Mr. Walker pressed for a bill that cut collective
bargaining for most public sector workers as well as removing
requirements that they pay fees if they chose not to join unions that
represented them, and Republicans elsewhere followed suit. But not all
of those measures flew through. Ohio, where Republicans had taken sole
control of state government, passed a measure limiting collective
bargaining, but it was rejected months later in a statewide ballot measure.
Then,
for right-to-work advocates, there came an even more memorable turning
point: In November 2012, voters in Indiana (where there had been a
right-to-work law until it was repealed in the 1960s) re-elected
majorities of Republicans to the statehouse even after labor leaders
pledged to defeat them for passing a right-to-work law earlier in the
year. On the same election night, voters in Michigan rejected a
labor-backed ballot measure to enshrine collective bargaining rights in
the State Constitution.
“The
combination sent a clear message to elected officials in the region:
You can end forced dues by passing right-to-work and voters will reward
you for it,” said Patrick Semmens, a spokesman for the National Right to
Work Committee, who keeps a copy of The Indianapolis Star outside his
office from the day after the law passed there.
A month after the 2012 election, the Republican-held Legislature in Michigan, a cradle of the American labor movement, passed a right-to-work measure, which was promptly signed by Gov. Rick Snyder, a Republican who had previously said that the matter was not on his agenda.
“It’s
a concerted effort by the folks who have a lot of wealth and power to
get more wealth and power,” Lee Saunders, the president of the American
Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, said. “They’ve had
these plans a long time, and now they’ve come to fruition.”
In
Madison, politics have been nearly impossible to separate from the
debate over the policy in recent weeks. For many Democrats, the issue
became an intense, highly partisan battle over Mr. Walker, his
conservative policies since 2011, and his flirtation with a presidential
bid.
“This is about crushing unions,” Representative Chris Taylor, a Democrat, said during a debate that ran all night last week. At another point, Robin Vos, the Republican House speaker, accused the Democrats of suffering from “Walker Derangement Syndrome.”
In
other states, where the debate is complicated by split partisan
control, leaders were closely watching. In New Mexico, where a
right-to-work measure passed through a newly Republican-held House last
month, Democrats said they expected to see the measure vanish in a
committee of the Senate, still held by Democrats. “This is all about
breaking up unions,” said Sam Bregman, chairman of the New Mexico
Democratic Party.
In
Missouri, Republican lawmakers said they were concerned that they might
be left behind by their Midwestern neighbors, given all that had
changed. A right-to-work measure that had stalled for several years, passed the State House last month,
and a Senate committee is expected to send it to the floor in a matter
of weeks. Gov. Jay Nixon, a Democrat, has suggested a veto is likely,
and Republicans say an override will be difficult.
“But when you see a Wisconsin, a Michigan, when they can get it done there,” said Senator Mike Parson, a Republican, “it’s pretty tough to sit here in Missouri with the makeup of things here and we can’t get it done?”
Notice how this right-to-work (for less) legislation will take effect IMMEDIATELY.
Question:
Why don't the Democrats make their Minimum Wage increases effective IMMEDIATELY?
Question:
Why were there only TWO protesters?
Comment:
Employers will reap billions of dollars in profits from this right-to-work-for-less legislation.
Walker signs right-to-work bill
Associated Press
9:29 a.m. CDT March 9, 2015
BROWN DEER — Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker has signed a right-to-work
bill into law, striking another blow against organized labor after four
years ago effectively ending collective bargaining for public-sector
workers.
Walker signed the bill at an invitation-only ceremony on
Monday morning at Badger Meter. He was surrounded by company officials
and others who supported the divisive proposal including Lt. Gov.
Rebecca Kleefisch, Assembly Speaker Robin Vos and Senate Majority Leader
Scott Fitzgerald.
The new law, which takes effect immediately,
makes Wisconsin the 25th state to ban contracts that force all workers
to pay union dues.
Walker signed the bill after spending the
weekend in Iowa and before he heads to another early presidential
primary state of New Hampshire this weekend.
Two people protested the bill outside Badger Meter.
A number of people have asked me to expand my thoughts about "Letters to the Editor" and how to use them more effectively... do you have additional ideas?
Write, and write often.
Be sure to include your name, address and phone number where you can be reached for verification that you wrote the letter.
If one newspaper won't publish your letter send it on to the next newspaper.
At a recent forum in Thief River Falls, Minnesota where I was on a panel discussing Minnesota's financial woes, I was asked what I would do if I was governor.
This is a fair question.
This was my answer:
Please keep in mind as I proceed with my thoughts that there is a "fare" and a "fair." One is spelled "f-a-r-e" and means something completely different from "fair" spelled "f-a-i-r."
If I were elected governor of Minnesota the very first reforms I would implement to solve the state's budget problems would be:
1. A hefty tax on the rich like Mark Dayton promised as he campaigned for election but reneged on once elected.
2. Substantially increase the taconite tax; the mining companies are robbing us blind leaving us with poverty and pits filled with pollution while they abscond with the profits. This has to end.
3. Place a really hefty tax on the forestry industry in the form of stumpage fees; cut down any tree and you pay what the tree is really worth.
4. I would place toll booths at the entrances to each and every casino in Minnesota charging the exact same fee Minnesotans are charged to enter our State Parks. Anyone who can afford to gamble can afford such a fee. I would also initiate a "gambling license" on all gamblers. Just like a fishing license
Like most of you, I am fed up with this "circus in the Cities." Democrats and Republicans don't know the difference between the words "f-a-r-e" and "f-a-i-r;" we should give them all a dictionary not our votes.
I think most Minnesotans would agree with these four solutions. So, what kind of democracy do we have where politicians won't do what people want and expect?
It's just like the priorities at the national level... like they say in the Navy--- it's a SNAFU. If you don't know what a S-N-A-F-U stands for, look it up in the Urban Dictionary on your computer when you get home.
If the United States government would stop spending our tax dollars on this insane militarism and all these dirty imperialist wars we would have the money to put people to work solving the problems of the people.
I recently read this little book by former Democratic Vice-president under FDR, Henry Wallace, "Sixty Million Jobs." I would encourage everyone to read this book because it was in 1945 when this book was published to support the Full Employment Act of 1945 when Democrats and Republicans--- at Wall Street's insistence--- decided not to take Henry Wallace's advice provided in this book that our country began going way off track.
Henry Wallace pointed out that Peace will put everyone to work which will solve just about every major problem we have in this country.
Who gave their consent to make this a "two-party system" where only one class gets representation?
How capitalism works...
How capitalism works explained from a worker's perspective...
Abba Ramos, a veteran organizer in the International Longshore and Warehouse Union:
"If they can get a trained monkey to unload that boxcar tomorrow morning, rest assured, they'll have them over there and they'll have some bananas for lunch, and you'll be out on the street looking for work. Simple as that. You've got to remember, they follow only one rule of economic law, and that's that maximum production-minimum cost yields the greatest amount of profit. They don't deviate from that."
Helpful tip
Notice: You can make the picture or writing on my blog bigger or smaller on your monitor simply holding down your "Ctrl" key while hitting your "+" key to enlarge size or your "-" key to reduce size.
A new banner to promote my blog
My computer; a billboard for peace that travels with me
Howard managed a nice big fake smile after I asked him: As you travel around the country are you asking people how Barack Obama's Wall Street war economy is working out for them?
Keep True, a life in politics by Howard Pawley
A most important book for progressives
Check out what others are saying about "Keep True"
* Peace--- end the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya and shutdown the 800 U.S. military bases on foreign soil.
* A National Public Health Care System - ten million new jobs.
* A National Public Child Care System - three to five million new jobs.
* WPA - three million new jobs.
* CCC - two million new jobs.
* Tax the hell out of the rich and cut the military budget by ending the wars to pay for it all which will create full employment.
* Enforce Affirmative Action; end discrimination.
* Raise the minimum wage to a real living wage
* What tax-payers subsidize in the way of businesses, tax-payers should own and reap the profits from.
* Moratorium on home foreclosures and evictions.
* Defend democracy by defending workers' rights including the right to collective bargaining for improving the lives and livelihoods of working people.
* Roll-back and freeze the price of food, electricity, gas and heating fuels; not wages, benefits or pensions.
* Wall Street is our enemy.
Let's talk about the politics and economics of livelihood for a real change.
Search This Blog
Follow and support the important working class' victory at the polls in Canada
Canadian workers and their New Democratic Party are blazing the path of independence from the big-business controlled political parties. Manitoba will be having elections in the fall. Workers here in the United States should be paying attention to Canadian politics as there is a lot to learn. Ask your union to link its websites to the Canadian Labour Congress, New Democratic Party and Manitoba NDP.
Also, I would encourage you to paste this into your own personal blogs, web sites and FaceBook and other social netwoking sites.
I have been involved in the peace, labor, civil rights, and environmental movements for over 30 years, and I am a socialist. I would encourage everyone to get involved in promoting the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which came into existence on December 10, 1948; we should strive to use the yearly anniversary of this document to popularize it. We need to struggle to create a more progressive, socially just society where all working people receive real living wages and have a voice at work, and in their communities. I have worked with casino workers across Minnesota who are trying to organize a union. I have worked with people in northern Minnesota struggling to save the Big Bog, the primary freshwater aquifer--- this bog is being mined for peat. In my spare time during the spring and fall you can find me fly fishing on the Dark River, a pristine designated trout stream;in the winter ice fishing on Lake-of-the-Woods.
I look forward to hearing from you. Nothing human is alien to me.
Any lessons from this picture for liberals, progressives and leftists today?
My dog Fred...
My dog Fred understands the way the system works better than labor "leaders" like Leo Gerard or Richard Trumka... at least my dog knows to keep barking UNTIL he gets his bone.
Vote for Mark Dayton to "tax the rich" and enforce affirmative action
Unfortunately, Mark Dayton as Governor has renegged on both of these promises even though he has a Democratic super-majority here in Minnesota. So much for being able to trust the Democrats.
General McCrystal... please don't leave me alone like a Rolling Stone with no way home...
Good articles to read about the healthcare legislation
Barack Obama and the greedy Wall Street pigs he represents
A note from Governor Pawlenty
"Alan, ...active and thoughtful citizens like you make Minnesota a great state in which to live."
This blog is proud to be a part of the ever growing and expanding People Before Profit network.
Question...
Could Minnesota's debt be eliminated by modestly taxing the Indian Gaming Industry in Minnesota?
If, so, why haven't any of the Minnesota Democratic Farmer-Labor Party candidates for governor brought this idea forward as part of their campaigns?
Other businesses and industries are faced with a myriad of taxes... shouldn't there be a level playing field in taxation?
Wouldn't such a tax on gaming revenues amounting to tens of billions of dollars provide working people and small business owners and the middle class with a little much needed tax relief?
Suggestion:
Ask this question at a "meet the candidates forum;" no one else will ask this question if you don't.
Comment:
We have toll booths at the entrances to all Minnesota State Parks; put up toll booths on the public roads going into all casinos--- budget problems solved.
Real health care reform creates jobs
-
Our organization is distributing this in union circles and beyond in
preparation for the AFL-CIO's National Convention in September:
Sisters and Brothers, ...
Due to recent budget cuts and the cost of electricity, gas and oil, as well as current market conditions and the continued decline of the economy, The Light at the End of the Tunnel has been turned off.
-
Two views. Which way for organized labor and the working class.
Listen to this. Richard Trumka's main speech to the AFL-CIO's National
Convention: http://ww...
The United States has 800 military bases on foreign soil...What we need--- instead--- is 800 public health care centers spread out across the United States where people can universally access, for free, all their health care needs from pre-natal care, to general health care to eye, dental and mental care right through to burial.
Instead of moving in this progressive direction, President Barack Obama and the United States Congress are moving in a most reactionary direction towards establishing military bases in outer space as they seek to insure the profits of both the merchants of death and destruction and the profit-driven health care industries... talk about skewed priorities and your wacky ideas which will execerbate the problems surrounding the failing capitalist economy, and ideas devoid of common sense.
In addition to these 800 U.S. military bases on foreign soil, Barack Obama and the United States Congress continue funding--- with our tax-dollars--- the Israeli killing machine to the tune of tens of billions of dollars. Where is the "change?"
This is the change Americans want, and the change we need:
A network of 800 public health care centers spread out across the United States would create over four-million good-paying, decent jobs--- talk about your "economic stimulus" package!
We would be redistributing the wealth as we are planting the seeds of socialism while helping to eradicate poverty by keeping people healthy and getting them well when sick.
Think about this kind of solution in relation to what Barack Obama, the U.S. Congress and the Wall Street bankers and coupon clippers are offering the American people, and the peoples of the world... just what is the reason for bailing out the banks and AIG and maintaining more than 800 expensive U.S. military bases of foreign soil?
The Mt. Carmel Clinic in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada offers us a glimpse at what militarization and wars continue to rob us of.
The problems created by Wall Street will not be solved as long as the military-financial-industrial complex is allowed to squander human and natural resources on militarism and wars... we might just as well be dumping these resources out into the ocean... at least no one would die in wars.
These merchants of death and destruction must be stopped if humanity is to survive in a livable world.
The time has come to talk about working class Marxist politics and the economics of livelihood... capitalism has failed humanity miserably and left us a real mess to clean up.
Capitalism is on the skids to oblivion and unless we take a "left turn" we will continue down this road to perdition.
Something for working people to think about and discuss around the dinner table... the capitalist sooth-Sayers certainly are not going to broach such solutions to the problems of working people as they hide behind the skirt of Rosy Scenario as this global capitalist economic depression intensifies while wars rage on.
The times and conditions call for "building a new era of justice and peace;" this is one step in that direction; this is the change the American people voted for.
Alan L. Maki
Founder,
Frank Marshall Davis Roundtable for Change
A gift returned...
Dear Mr. Ambassador,
Thank you for the 3 bottles of wine that you sent me as season’s greetings. I wish to you, your family and everybody in the Embassy a happy new year. Good health and progress to you all.
Unhappily, I noticed that the wine you have sent me has been produced in the Golan Heights. I have been taught since I was very young not to steal and not to accept products of theft. So I cannot possibly accept this gift and I must return it back to you.
As you know, your country occupies illegally the Golan Heights which belongs to Syria, according to the International Law and numerous decisions of the International Community.
I take the opportunity to express my hope that Israel will find security within its internationally recognized borders and the terrorist activities against Israel territory by Hamas or anybody else will be contained and made impossible, but I also hope that your government will cease practicing the policy of collective punishment which was applied on a mass scale by Hitler and his armies.
Actions such as those of these days of the Israel military in Gaza remind the Greek people of holocausts such as in Kalavrita or Doxato or Distomo and certainly in the ghetto of Warsaw.
With these thoughts allow me to express to you my best wishes for you, the Israeli people and all the people of our region of the world.
Athens, 30/12/2008
Theodoros Pangalos, Member of Parliament (Greece)
Auto workers fight for union recognition 1930's
This demonstration was organized by the Trade Union Unity League under the leadership of Phil Raymond who was an organizer of the auto workers
Coleman Young... a politician who brought forward real solutions to the problems of working people
Union organizer, civil rights activist, peace activist, working class politician, victim of "red squads" & McCarthyite political repression
Coleman Young testifies before House Un-American Activities Committee
1952: Coleman Young, center, testifies before the House Un-American Activities Committee. A future House member, George Crockett Jr., right, accompanied him.
A great YouTube video from Virginia Beach... Karl Rove on Trial
Everybody knows the boat is leaking. Everybody knows the captain lied.... Everybody knows the plague is coming. Everybody knows it’s moving fast. Everybody knows ...
— Leonard Cohen
Historic victory
Communist Elected President of Cyprus
AKEL anti-fascist, anti-imperialist elected
Congratulations to AKEL and Dimitris Christofias.... GC of AKEL and President of the House of Representatives comrade Dimitris Christofias and GC of KKE (Communist Party Of Greece) comrade Aleca Papariga at the rally against the war in Iraq a few hundred meters towards the USA Embassy in Nicosia
Michigan poet--- The poetry of Ann Holdreith merges the mystical with the everyday. A chapter of her work is included in "Beyond the Lines", an anthology of Michigan authors published by Plainview Press. Her publishing credits also include: Wayne State University, Gravity Presses, Dixie Phoenix, Poetry Motel, Free Fall, Snakeskin, Gravity Webzine, Stirring (Best Love Poems), Aether, Friction Magazine and a Pushcart Prize nomination. Ann has taught for the Detroit Writer's Voice and is a Magna Cum Laude graduate in Fine Art and Literature from the University of Detroit. She has featured at the Michigan Opera Theatre, The Detroit Festival for the Arts and Spring Fed Arts of Detroit. Her riveting performance style synthesizes her background as an actress, vocalist, dancer and performance artist. Ann has been teaching her Fire Seed workshop, designed to free the authentic self, since 1987. Her work is dedicated to the full expression and elevation of the human spirit.
Autumn Sky
By: Ann Holdreith
On the ride home from Toledo, from a worn out school resurrected for good honest men, for men with kids and grandkids, guys who eat sugar doughnuts and wink while they hammer-out fenders and hurl the carcasses of metal beasts, against autumn’s haunted sky, I wonder if they remember the grip of thighs around engine-less muscle and sweat, ragged dirty hair assaulting the wind, buttocks and back pounding with hooves that know exactly where they belong on this earth.
On the way from Toledo, a pulsing cloud of blackbirds hurls its wings against the dying blue; dark umbrellas opening to summer’s last ride.
Carlton, Minnesota
Help Stop Sulfide Mining in Michigan's Upper Peninsula... urgent action needed
Democratic majority in the Michigan House abandons casino workers...
Wednesday, August 8, 2007--- Lansing, Michigan. By a shameful vote of 63 to 41... not a single Michigan Legislator--- with the exception of one lone Republican--- would take a stand in defense of the rights of casino workers to be employed in a workplace free of second-hand smoke. Not one single Michigan Legislator would take a stand for casino workers being paid real living wages protected by state and federal labor laws along with the right to organize for collective bargaining. House Democratic Floor Leader Steve Tobacman and Democratic Representative Barbara Farrah did this dirty work for the Fertitta Family and the Kansas City mob which will "skim" the profits from the Gun Lake Casino like they have done in all the other casinos managed by the Fertitta Family. The United Auto Workers union leadership, fearing estrangement and being shunned by the Democratic Party, dropped its feeble opposition to this legislation giving a hint as to how they intend to abandon autoworkers in the present contract negotiations with the "Big Three."
Minnesotans give Bush a piece of their mind...
Lake Michigan
Northern shore in the Upper Peninsula
Michigan: Gun Lake Casino venture... workers' rights and health are the issues
Communist singers and songwriters in the struggle for peace and socialism
This Land Is Your Land
Words and Music by Woody Guthrie, one of America's outstanding working class Communists
Chorus:
This land is your land, this land is my land From California, to the New York Island From the redwood forest, to the gulf stream waters This land was made for you and me
As I was walking a ribbon of highway I saw above me an endless skyway I saw below me a golden valley This land was made for you and me
Chorus
I've roamed and rambled and I've followed my footsteps To the sparkling sands of her diamond deserts And all around me a voice was sounding This land was made for you and me
Chorus
The sun comes shining as I was strolling The wheat fields waving and the dust clouds rolling The fog was lifting a voice come chanting This land was made for you and me
Chorus
As I was walkin' - I saw a sign there And that sign said - no tress passin' But on the other side .... it didn't say nothin! Now that side was made for you and me!
Chorus
In the squares of the city - In the shadow of the steeple Near the relief office - I see my people And some are grumblin' and some are wonderin' If this land's still made for you and me.
Mitch Berg interviews Alan Maki, union organizer and socialist.
Length: 00:48:55
AM 1280 The Patriot; Right-wing talk radio with Mitch Berg
Maki calls for:
* health care not warfare
* smoke-free casinos to protect worker health
Super Profits and Crises; Modern U.S. Capitalism by Victor Perlo
This is a must read book for anyone wanting to fully understand the present economic crisis.
Victor Perlo was a noted researcher and economist in the Franklin D. Roosevelt and Truman Administrations.
Perlo has made economics easy to understand for everyone.
Did anyone notice former President Jimmy Carter did not address the Democratic National Convention?
Former President Jimmy Carter speaks about his controversial book 'Palestine Peace Not Apartheid' at Jewish-founded Brandeis University in Waltham, Massachusetts January 23, 2007. [Reuters]
Owl on cold winter day
near Jacobson, Minnesota
Minnesotans give United States Senator Norm Coleman a piece of their mind about the Iraq War...
The protest was organized by the Twin Cities Peace Campaign--Focus on Iraq and WAMM (Women Against Military Madness)
As these Minnesotans protested outside Coleman's office...
Others went inside to write their statements calling for an end to this dirty war in Iraq
These protests at Coleman's local office will continue as long as he continues to support the war
Among the concerned citizens opposed to the war in Iraq were members of many church groups, the Iraq Peace Action Coalition, Veterans for Peace, the Minneapolis Club of the Communist Party USA and members of the Minnesota Democratic Farmer-Labor Party, Military Families Speak Out... the diversity of the demonstrators reflected a broad cross-section of the Minnesota public.
He could get it fixed on Wall St. create real jobs on Main St. and select a better crew, He'd end blank checks to Israel and bring some peace to that hell -- if he only had a clue
He could make the Congress line up if he pressed them all to sign on but instead he tries to woo the right-wing crooks who hate him and will still block and berate him -- if he only had a clue
He could deal with all the Repugs imprisoning the worst thugs and save the constitution too but instead he will continue their imperialist venue, -- if he only had a clue
He could close down all our gulags and end so-called "renditions" but this he will not do-- He could bring the world together and address the changing weather -- if he only had a clue
posted by Jaded Prole
Destroying a people, their homeland, their right to survive...
I offer guided tours of Northern Minnesota that include visits to historic Mesaba Co-op Park, historic buildings and cemetaries on the Iron Range, the Wellstone Memorial, "Mine View," United States Steel's Minntac operation, the Big Bog, Red Lake.
A great opportunity for photographers.
Individual, family, small or large groups. Meals and overnight accomodations can be arranged.
Let's really explore Northern Minnesota.
Drive Easy... Conserve
For stickers and more info, contact: Fulton Hanson 320-384-9967; e-mail: fultonhanson@yahoo.com