Thursday, November 29, 2007

Global Cooperation Replacing Reckless Global Party - Conservatives Soon To Be History

seismic change in the landscape of power.
end of the Liberal Party [of Australia]

conservative politics has begun to wither away

issue of the future
the environment

imminent demise of the United States economy.

coming economic collapse in globalised trade

subprime meltdown

avalanche-like fall of US house prices
will be closely followed by the same in linked economies worldwide

We are a civilisation in collapse.

not in power for power's sake.
the ecology

Greens will emerge as the new opposition

thinking people will see the need for austerity

issue will be simply how green, how to balance the need for a much simpler and more communal kind of life, with the need to give people comfort and amenity now.
This issue will continue to define life for the rest of this century.

Climate change will bring horrific costs

    The big lie
 economic management.

how to spend
build
superb hospitals, bullet trains, schools and training centres, low cost public transport of luxurious quality, magnificent public housing
+++



   The Party's Over and Liberals Will Soon Be History
    By Steve Biddulph
    The Sydney Morning Herald

    Thursday 29 November 2007
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/112807T.shtml

    The Liberal Party(Conservative party in Australia) is in trauma. The corporate sector is attempting to calm its nerves, and even the victors in the Labor Party cannot quite believe the seismic change in the landscape of power. But the ramifications of last Saturday may be much greater than just one election won or lost. In a way that seems unthinkable to us now, 2007 may mark the end of the Liberal Party itself. It won't happen overnight, but just watch it happen.

    We are so conditioned to the idea that two main parties define politics, we even call them left and right as if they were parts of our body. But parties spring up in response to the primary tensions in a certain time and place. In the 20th century that polarisation was capital versus labour. A century earlier, before even the idea of power among the working poor, politics was aristocrats versus tradesmen, the growing middle class of shopkeepers and artisans that formed the basis of the Tories.

    This is no longer the central tension in modern democracies. Centrist governments cover all the bases, and conservative politics has begun to wither away. This is a change that has come late to Australia. But social evolution is now speeding up and even this alignment is becoming dated.

    The issue of the future, coming down on us now like a steam train, is of course the environment, the double hammer blows of climate change and peak oil. Energy, weather and human misery are the factors that will define our lives for decades to come. You can cancel your newspaper, those are the only four words you need to know.

    Linked to this, but compounding it in frightening ways, is the imminent demise of the United States economy. In fact the whisper, the subplot in economist circles, was that this election was one to lose. That whoever inherited Australia in 2007 inherited a coming economic collapse in globalised trade that would suck Australia and much of the rest of the world down with it. For two years now the best predictions have been that the subprime meltdown would act as merely the detonator of a much larger explosive charge created long ago by US consumer debt, concealed by Chinese and Arab investment in keeping that great hungry maw that is America sucking in what it could not begin to pay for. The avalanche-like fall of US house prices will be closely followed by the same in linked economies worldwide, and presage a harsh and very different world than the one we have lived in. In short, the party is over. We are a civilisation in collapse.

    Labor is the right party to manage this. Despite the widespread belief after years of cynical politics that politicians are all the same, Rudd and Gillard are not in power for power's sake. I am willing to stake my 30 years as a psychologist on this, but I think many observers have also come to this conclusion. Kevin and Julia, as Australia already calls them, want to make this country a better place for the people in it. In the coming times of deprivation, they have the value systems that will be needed to care for the sudden rise in poverty, stress, and need. They also have the unity.

    So what will be the new polarity in future elections? It's the ecology, stupid. The Greens will emerge as the new opposition, though this will take probably two election cycles. By the 2010 election, 20 per cent will vote Green, simply because peak oil and climate catastrophe will have proven them right, and thinking people will see the need for austerity now for our children's tomorrow. The Liberal Party will be lucky to attract 30 per cent, which is the habitual, rusted-on portion of the community that thinks greed is good.

    By 2014, we will have a struggle between a new left and right - Labor and Green - and the issue will be simply how green, how to balance the need for a much simpler and more communal kind of life, with the need to give people comfort and amenity now. This issue will continue to define life for the rest of this century.

    Climate change will bring horrific costs this century unless a global effort is rallied in a way that has never been done before to regulate our gluttonous use of the air and water. Perhaps a billion lives are at risk, let alone 2 to 3 billion refugees, as agriculture and water supplies collapse across southern Asia and elsewhere, and producer countries, like Australia, find they can barely feed themselves.

    The big lie of Liberal supremacy was economic management. In fact, they knew how to generate income, but not how to spend it.

We could have been building what Europe built in this past decade - superb hospitals, bullet trains, schools and training centres, low cost public transport of luxurious quality, magnificent public housing. We pissed it all away on tax giveaways and consumer goods. On bloated homes that we will not be able to cool or heat, or sell, and cars we won't be able to afford to drive. A party based on self interest may evaporate along with our rivers and lakes, and have no role to play in a world where we co-operate or die.

    --------

    Steve Biddulph is a psychologist and author.



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Wednesday, November 28, 2007

More Than 1 Billion Trees Planted in 2007 - UN

More Than 1 Billion Trees Planted in 2007 - UN
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NORWAY: November 29, 2007
http://www.planetark.com/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/45614/story.htm


OSLO - The world has surpassed a UN goal of planting 1 billion trees in 2007 to help slow climate change, led by huge forestry projects in Ethiopia and Mexico, the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) said on Wednesday.


The global tree-planting drive, inspired by Kenyan environmentalist and 2004 Nobel Peace Prize winner Wangari Maathai, is meant to counter deforestation from logging and the burning of forests to create farmland.

"An initiative to catalyze the pledging and the planting of one billion trees has achieved and indeed surpassed its mark," UNEP head Achim Steiner said in a statement on plantings by governments, companies and individuals.

"It is a further sign of the breathtaking momentum witnessed this year on the challenge for this generation -- climate change." Trees soak up carbon dioxide, the main gas blamed for stoking global warming, as they grow.

UNEP said Ethiopia appeared to be the runaway leader with 700 million trees planted in a national reforestation drive. Only 3 percent of Ethiopia is now forested, down from 40 percent centuries ago.

Other top planters were Mexico with 217 million trees, Turkey 150 million, Kenya 100 million, Cuba 96.5 million, Rwanda 50 million, South Korea 43 million, Tunisia 21 million, Morocco 20 million, Myanmar 20 million and Brazil 16 million, it said.

The billion-tree target was set in Nairobi in November despite criticism that it would be impossible to verify. It was declared passed less than a week before the start of a Dec 3-14 meeting of the world's environment ministers in Bali, Indonesia.

"You responded beyond our dreams," said Maathai. "Now we must keep the pressure on and continue the good work for the planet. Plant another tree today in celebration."

China, Guatemala and Spain were expected soon to announce new plantings of millions of trees, UNEP said.

Indonesia plans to plant 80 million trees in one day before the Bali conference, which is meant to launch two years of talks to work out a new international deal to fight global warming.

UNEP says it checks planting pledges, which now cover 1.5 billion trees, to see if they sound credible but does not ensure all are planted. It said the totals were still being collated.

-- For Reuters latest environment blogs click on: http://blogs.reuters.com/environment/ (Editing by Robert Woodward, Reuters messaging:


Story by Alister Doyle, Environment Correspondent

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The End of America: A Letter of Warning - DemocracyNow Interview

I read other histories of Italy in the ’20s, Russia in the ’30s, East Germany in the ’50s, Czechoslovakia in the ’60s, Pinochet’s coup in Chile in ’73, the crushing of the democracy movement in China at the end of the ’80s. And I saw that there is a blueprint that would-be dictators always do the same ten things, whether they’re on the left or the right,

these ten steps taking place systematically right now in the United States.

Stalin spoke about sleeper cells, which is one of those phrases that are being recirculated now by the Bush White House.

fake story, but it worked to frighten citizens.

they intimidated people counting the vote in Milan.

They face job loss, character assassination or worse. Valerie Plame's bolts were taken away from her back deck, fifty feet off the ground. She has two toddlers.

unaccountable prisons where torture takes place.

it’s our own American souls that are at stake.

the state legalizes torture of people at the margins, inevitably it will begin to direct state abuse at people at the heart of civil society, and it’s always the same cast of characters: journalists, editors, opposition leaders, outspoken clergy and labor leaders.

society can close down in a heartbeat,

the Nuremberg trial was about to identify supporters of these war crimes who were US collaborators.

developing a paramilitary force and surveilling ordinary citizens.

an adviser to the White House was reported in a British newspaper yesterday as not ruling out waterboarding against US citizens.

infiltrate citizen groups.
arbitrarily detain and release citizens
.
target key individuals
.

the ACLU is suing many agents of the state for illegally infiltrating citizens’ groups.

you can’t close down a democracy without a surveillance apparatus aimed at ordinary citizens.

our country is unique right now in directing the crackdown on civil liberties and surveillance at citizens.

can’t close down a society without a paramilitary force.
Blackwater, the Blackshirts, the Brownshirts, that’s not answerable to the people, and surveillance.

I got taken aside for extra searching
many critics of the administration are on the list:
I was off the list ’til this book came out, and now I’m back on the list.

they’re adding 20,000 names a month

restrict the press; cast criticism as espionage, dissent as treason. Subvert the rule of law

wake up.

You don’t make it easier for the President to declare martial law, as we just did with the 2007 Defense Authorization Act.

You don’t make it easier for the President to lock up political opponents in a cell or strip people of habeas corpus.

you don’t make it easier for the President to have a paramilitary force like Blackwater, composed of hand-selected torturers and murderers from countries like Chile and Nigeria and El Salvador, where they're trained to torture their own civilians.

we started the americanfreedomcampaign.org.
It’s a democracy movement to restore the rule of law.

We're calling for lawyers across the country and citizens to call for hearings, special prosecutor, identify the crimes, impeach and prosecute, and save the country.
---

SIGN THE AMERICAN americanfreedomcampaign.org
FREEDOM PLEDGE
We are Americans, and in our America we do not torture, we do not imprison people without charge or legal remedy, we do not tap people’s phones and emails without a court order, and above all we do not give any President unchecked power.

I pledge to fight to protect and defend the Constitution from assault by any President.
+++




Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

“The End of America”: Feminist Social Critic Naomi Wolf Warns U.S. in Slow Descent into Fascism

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In her new book, “The End of America: Letter of Warning to a Young Patriot”, Naomi Wolf says the United States is on the road to becoming a fascist society, right under our very noses. Wolf outlines what she sees as the ten steps to shut down a democratic society and argues that the Bush administration has already implemented many of these steps. Wolf is the author of several books including the 1990s feminist classic, “The Beauty Myth.” [includes rush transcript]
The United States is on the road to becoming a fascist society, right under our very noses. That’s the premise of a new book by feminist social critic Naomi Wolf. It’s called "The End of America: Letter of Warning to a Young Patriot" and is already on the New York Times bestseller list.

Naomi Wolf outlines what she sees as the ten steps to shut down a democratic society and argues that the Bush administration has already implemented many of these steps. Wolf is the author of several books including the 1990s feminist classic, "The Beauty Myth.”

Critics describe her latest book, “The End of America,” as a wake-up call to Americans to heed the lessons of history and fight to save their democracy before its too late. Naomi Wolf joins me now in the firehouse studio.

  • Naomi Wolf. Social critic, feminist, and author of "The Beauty Myth.” Her latest book is called “The End of America: A Letter of Warning to a Young Patriot.”


AMY GOODMAN: Today, we're joined by a special guest who has just written a book. The United States is on the road to becoming a fascist society, right under our very noses. That’s the premise of the new book by feminist social critic Naomi Wolf. It’s called The End of America: Letter of Warning to a Young Patriot, and it’s already on the New York Times bestseller list.

Naomi Wolf outlines what she sees as the ten steps to shut down a democratic society. She argues the Bush administration has already implemented many of these steps. Naomi Wolf is the author of several books, including the ’90s feminist classic, The Beauty Myth.

Critics describe her latest book, The End of America, as a wake-up call to Americans to heed the lessons of history and fight to save their democracy before its too late.

Naomi Wolf joins us in our firehouse studio. Welcome to Democracy Now!

NAOMI WOLF: Thank you, Amy.

AMY GOODMAN: It’s good to have you with us. Start off with the stories that you tell in your book.

NAOMI WOLF: Well, they’re the stories of societies that were systematically closed down by would-be despots, would-be dictators, whether they were on the left or the right, who essentially developed a blueprint in the first part of the twentieth century to crush democracies or to crush democracy movements. So they’re also individual stories of how people react as a democracy is being closed down.

But I guess the book really began with a very personal story, because I was forced to write it, even though I didn’t really want to, by a dear friend who is a Holocaust survivor’s daughter. And when we spoke about news events, she kept saying, “They did this in Germany. They did this in Germany.” And I really didn’t think that made sense. I thought that was very extreme language. But finally she forced me to sit down and start reading the histories, of course, not of the later years, because she wasn’t talking about German outcomes, ’38, ’39; she was talking about the early years, 1930, ’31, ’32, when Germany was a parliamentary democracy, and there was this systematic assault using the rule of law to subvert the rule of law.

And once I saw how many parallels there were, not just in strategy and tactics that we’re seeing again today, but actually in images and sound bites and language, then I read other histories of Italy in the ’20s, Russia in the ’30s, East Germany in the ’50s, Czechoslovakia in the ’60s, Pinochet’s coup in Chile in ’73, the crushing of the democracy movement in China at the end of the ’80s. And I saw that there is a blueprint that would-be dictators always do the same ten things, whether they’re on the left or the right,

and that we are seeing these ten steps taking place systematically right now in the United States.

AMY GOODMAN: Lay them out.

NAOMI WOLF: Well, they’re not happy. The first step is that all would-be dictators or would-be despots, which is what the founders of our country who foresaw exactly this kind of possibility would call them -- all would-be dictators invoke a terrifying internal and external threat. And often it’s a real threat, which they will hype or manipulate. For instance, Stalin spoke about sleeper cells, which is one of those phrases that are being recirculated now by the Bush White House. And this was an invention. He said there were capitalist secret agents who were hiding among good Soviet citizens and who are going to rise up at a signal and create terrorist mayhem -- fake story, but it worked to frighten citizens.

Pinochet talked about a real threat: armed insurgents. There were armed insurgents, but he hyped it using fake documents. And we saw -- we see this a lot in the historical blueprint, that a would-be dictator will fake documents. His were called Plan Z. He claimed they were going to bomb infrastructure, assassinate leaders. We saw fake documents used by the White House to hype of a terror threat when they used the fake yellowcake documents to claim that Iraq was trying to secure yellowcake uranium. And remember the famous sound bite -- “We can’t wait for the smoking gun to come in the form of a mushroom cloud” -- to drive us into an illegal war with a nation we were not at war with.

AMY GOODMAN: You also talk about the language, like the Department of Homeland Security.

NAOMI WOLF: That is where I, as a social critic and a student of language, get really scared. It’s scary enough to see these ten steps, but what is terrifying to me personally is how many actual phrases are being recycled, and tactics. “Homeland security” -- “heimat” -- became popularized by the National Socialists. Goebbels developed the practice of embedding journalists. Leni von Riefenstahl was embedded, for instance, in Poland. And we’re seeing embedded --

AMY GOODMAN: She’s the famous German filmmaker.

NAOMI WOLF: Filmmaker. If you look at the sequence of, you know, Hitler descending in an airplane in von Riefenstahl’s famous Triumph of the Will and being greeted by the uniformly armed paramilitary sort of surrounding their leader and him saying, “Help us accomplish our mission,” and then you look at other famous images from this administration --

AMY GOODMAN: Like George Bush on “Mission Accomplished.”

NAOMI WOLF: “Mission Accomplished,” exactly right. You look at how, you know, Hitler said we have to invade Czechoslovakia because they’re a staging ground for terrorists and they’re abusing their ethnic minorities -- again, a country that we’re not at war with, when the WMD charge vanished, the White House said we have to invade Iraq because they’re a staging ground for terrorists and they’re abusing their ethnic minorities. On and on and on.

I mean, this one scare's me to death. You know, Mussolini developed -- again, a parliamentary democracy, Italy was, in the teens and into 1920. He developed the Blackshirts, which were these paramilitary thugs that beat up newspaper editors, terrorized the population, and they intimidated people counting the vote in Milan. And then Hitler studied Mussolini, so many things were repeated by Hitler. Stalin studied Hitler, Hitler studied Stalin. But Hitler developed the Brownshirts, the SA, who intimidated people counting the vote in Austria. So 90% of them voted for their own annexation, because they were the Brownshirts. And you saw this scene of identically dressed Republican staffers in Florida in 2000 intimidating people counting the vote.

So things like that are really chilling. And they’re more and more chilling as -- I think right now people are kind of ramping up their awareness of these echoes, and what you also see predictably, because the blueprint is predictive, is that the White House is ramping up its implementation of some of the scariest aspects of its crackdown.

AMY GOODMAN: You began with these stories back in the summer of 2006 of headlines from a two-week period. Give some of those examples.

NAOMI WOLF: Well, 2006 seems so long ago and so innocent a time, considering how swiftly we’ve zoomed along implementing this blueprint or we’re suffering this implementation. In 2006, a blogger was jailed in San Francisco. In 2006, people in Alabama couldn’t get a fair hearing for protecting voter rolls. There was the beginning of the Military Commissions Act of 2006, in which the state basically legalized torture, which is one of these crucial turning points as an open society closes down.

AMY GOODMAN: You talk about Christine Axsmith, the computer security expert working for the CIA, who, what, wrote -- posted a message on a blog site on a top-secret computer network, criticizing waterboarding --

NAOMI WOLF: Waterboarding.

AMY GOODMAN: -- saying waterboarding is torture, and torture is wrong.

NAOMI WOLF: And then she lost her security clearance. She’s one of many, many whistleblowers, key individuals, who have tried to take a stand against some of these positions and who have faced -- again, in a closing society this is what happens. This is step seven: target key individuals. They face job loss, character assassination or worse. Valerie Plame's bolts were taken away from her back deck, fifty feet off the ground. She has two toddlers. People are being put on the watch list for criticizing the government, for engaging in antiwar protest. Their kids are being put on the watch list. But, yeah, back then, all she said was it’s wrong. And now we’ve just confirmed an attorney general who pretends not to know what waterboarding is, because if he acknowledged that it’s against US and international law, he’d be confirming the fact that there are criminals in the White House right now who have already staged a coup.

AMY GOODMAN: You say step three is establishing secret prisons.

NAOMI WOLF: That’s right. You establish secret prisons, and what I mean by that is unaccountable prisons where torture takes place. And often there will be a military tribunal system set in place. Lenin pioneered that. Mussolini developed the confino system. Hitler again studied Mussolini and developed the People's Court.

And what starts to happen is -- and this is what’s so scary about Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib and these black sites around the world -- apart from the moral issue -- and your interview just now with the Palestinian representative brought me to tears, because when he said it’s not just the Palestinians he’s concerned about, it’s the Israelis who lose their souls by this kind of occupation -- it’s not just the often-innocent prisoners in Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib and these black sites around the world we should be concerned about, it’s our own American souls that are at stake. But just for purely personal reasons, we should be afraid when the state starts to torture people that it sees as at the margins or that citizens see at the margins: brown people on an island in Guantanamo with Muslim names, whatever. That’s what they did in Germany in ’31, ’32: anarchists, communists, Gypsies, Jews, whatever, homosexuals, whatever. You know, people didn’t care, because they were seen as at the margins. People knew about the torture cellars in Germany.

But then, what always happens, always -- you can’t name a society in which this doesn’t happen, Amy -- is that there’s a blurring of the line. And once the state legalizes torture of people at the margins, inevitably it will begin to direct state abuse at people at the heart of civil society, and it’s always the same cast of characters: journalists, editors, opposition leaders, outspoken clergy and labor leaders.

And when that starts to happen, society can close down in a heartbeat, because people start to sensor themselves.

AMY GOODMAN: It’s interesting. During the lead up to Nazi Germany, American reporters were fired by their American editors, pulled back from Germany, because they were sounding the warning. They were saying, “We’re seeing a fascist society build.” And they were told that they were biased, they were not understanding the circumstances in which Hitler was rising up, people were concerned about their economy, they had been devastated, and that they were being alarmist.

NAOMI WOLF: Interesting. That’s really interesting. I mean, I’m immediately thinking, as you say that, which I actually hadn’t known, that -- thinking of a lot of books I’ve been reading lately about deep US involvement. Some corporations were deeply involved in Nazi Germany, making millions, like IBM. How did they round people up so quickly, you know, in Germany when they were rounding up the Jews so fast? It’s because IBM had developed this prototype of a punch card system, and they were secretly working with the Nazis. Prescott Bush, Bush's grandfather, was making millions in consolidation with Krupp, Thyssen, and it’s very interesting to me, because in the Nuremberg trials they went after these industrialists like Krupp, and so there was a moment at which the Nuremberg trial was about to identify supporters of these war crimes who were US collaborators.

AMY GOODMAN: But they didn’t.

NAOMI WOLF: But they didn’t. But I think it’s interesting that there is that historical memory in the family.

AMY GOODMAN: It’s the question of who controlled the trials, right? It’s the question of who controlled the trials and not wanting their own people to be involved.

NAOMI WOLF: I see.

AMY GOODMAN: You talk then -- four, developing a paramilitary force and surveilling ordinary citizens. Those are the fourth and fifth steps.

NAOMI WOLF: Yeah, that’s another big one. I just want to note about the blurring of the line why we’re in such a moment of danger right now. The President has said that he can say, “Amy Goodman, you’re an enemy combatant. Naomi Wolf, you’re an enemy combatant. This guy behind the camera, you’re an enemy combatant. A person walking down the street, enemy combatant. can be anyone. A person walking down the street, enemy combatant.” And it doesn’t matter that we're innocent US citizens. I mean, we could be Republicans, we could be evangelicals. It doesn’t matter. He can take us, and if he says it’s true, that makes it true, because it’s a status offense, and he can put us in a ten-by-twelve-foot cell in a Navy brig in solitary confinement for three years, making it difficult for us to see our families, to contact an attorney, to get charges filed.

They can’t torture us yet, though I was chilled to learn that an adviser to the White House was reported in a British newspaper yesterday as not ruling out waterboarding against US citizens. However, psychologists know that prolonged isolation makes sane people insane. That’s what happened to Jose Padilla. So, you know, when I say everyone’s got their moment at which they start to silence themselves, the day I read in the New York Times that someone I identify with has been named an enemy combatant and is sitting in a Navy brig in isolation, that’s when I’m going to stop talking in a context like this, because that’s when I will become too afraid.

AMY GOODMAN: We're talking to Naomi Wolf. Her book is The End of America: A Letter of Warning to a Young Patriot. Number six in these ten steps toward fascism: infiltrate citizen groups. Seven: arbitrarily detain and release citizens. Eight: target key individuals. Infiltrate citizens’ groups, the evidence?

NAOMI WOLF: Well, the ACLU is suing many agents of the state for illegally infiltrating citizens’ groups. It’s not a new thing in the United States. COINTELPRO did it quite a lot. But it is a hallmark -- it’s an extension of a surveillance society, and it’s a hallmark. It’s an extension of step number four, which was the surveillance apparatus. Now, you can’t close down a democracy without a surveillance apparatus aimed at ordinary citizens. And what many of us know is that there’s been a heightening of surveillance in the wake of 9/11.

But what we’ve got to understand is that our country is unique right now in directing the crackdown on civil liberties and surveillance at citizens. In countries like England and Spain, experienced the same terror attacks, the same kind of terror attacks by the same bad guys that we did, but they're not using that as a pretext to strip citizens of civil liberties in the same way. And what is so terrifying -- again, Italy had a surveillance apparatus, people were informing on each other; Germany, surveillance, the Stasi in East Germany. You couldn’t have a conversation with your neighbor without fearing that it was going to go into your file.

You can’t close down a society without a paramilitary force. We skipped over that one. It’s very important. Blackwater, the Blackshirts, the Brownshirts, that’s not answerable to the people, and surveillance.

So why am I petrified, you know, when I read about Blackwater and about surveillance? I was on the watch list for a year and a half, Amy, which means that every time I got on a plane, I got taken aside for extra searching, quadruple-S high-risk Naomi, you know. And I was told, “You’re on a list.” And I found out that many critics of the administration are on the list: ACLU staffers, Ted Kennedy, antiwar activists, David Altoon [phon.], a highly decorated Vietnam War veteran who was critical of the Iraq war. Not only is he on the list, but people who come to me in tears after my readings are more upset that now their kids are on the list if they write a letter critical of the Bush administration.

AMY GOODMAN: Have you been able to get off the list?

NAOMI WOLF: Well, I was off the list ’til this book came out, and now I’m back on the list. Why is this more than a sort of irritation? Or, you know, in a strong society, it’s just like whatever, you know, it’s a kind of compliment. But in a closing society, it gets very frightening. In February, the management of the list, which has swollen from 45,000 to 775,000 Americans -- they’re adding 20,000 names a month, right? Where are they getting those names? Remember when I said, how do they round up people so quickly in a closing society? The management of the lists is going to go from the airlines to the government. And in February, unless we push back this regulation -- it’s being slipped in very quietly -- we are going to have to apply to the state to get an airline ticket to cross a border, which moves us from 1931 to about 1936.

AMY GOODMAN: Number nine and number ten of your steps toward fascism: restrict the press; cast criticism as espionage, dissent as treason. Subvert the rule of law is eleven. What is the patriot’s task, where you conclude?

NAOMI WOLF: Well, the patriot’s task is, first, wake up. I mean, all around the world, democracy activists who are familiar with these same ten steps are sort of waving their arms at us, going, “No! You know, recognize this.” You don’t make it easier for the President to declare martial law, as we just did with the 2007 Defense Authorization Act. You don’t make it easier for the President to lock up political opponents in a cell or strip people of habeas corpus. No, you don’t make it easier for the President to have a paramilitary force like Blackwater, composed of hand-selected torturers and murderers from countries like Chile and Nigeria and El Salvador, where they're trained to torture their own civilians. You know, you don’t set them loose in Illinois and Southern California and North Carolina. No! Bad idea! So, first, you wake up. You see the blueprint.

AMY GOODMAN: We have ten seconds.

NAOMI WOLF: Finally, we have to -- we started the americanfreedomcampaign.org. It’s a democracy movement to restore the rule of law. We're calling for lawyers across the country and citizens to call for hearings, special prosecutor, identify the crimes, impeach and prosecute, and save the country.

AMY GOODMAN: Naomi Wolf, I want to thank you for being with us. Do you think Democratic candidates are raising these issues, for president?

NAOMI WOLF: Not enough. This is a transpartisan issue, and we all need to push them, hold their feet to the fire across the board.

AMY GOODMAN: Naomi Wolf’s book is The End of America. Thank you for being with us.


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Extinction Of More Than 1/4 of US Bird Species Threatened



The problems of urban sprawl and the resulting loss of habitat are critical
the human relationship with the environment is off-kilter
The sea level rise caused by global warming puts pressure on bird populations
+++

[Notice - This issue is caused by people not the birds. This and many other nature & people issues can be directly influenced for the better by better policies and actions by individuals and the various decision makers in corporations, governments and other groups.

Today's decisions are being tested by the birds and others. Further testing of these decisions will get similar disastrous results. Adjusting decisions that are no longer working for the better can help. The birds would be much happier to test better decisions.

This issue like many is a local issue that can not be solved locally.

These issues can only be resolved at the global level.

This too can be tested. The birds show the current results of decision making using thinking with artificial borders and boundaries - nations, markets, states, counties, religions, ideologies, isms and all the rest. Even the USA Audubon Society all to often uses the constricted focus of artificial borders. Birds can never recognized these artificial borders. Border free decision making for the better can certainly help the birds.]

Links:
The 2007 Audubon WatchList
http://web1.audubon.org/science/species/watchlist/browseWatchlist.php

The 2007 Audubon WatchList
http://web1.audubon.org/science/species/watchlist/
===


More Than 1/4 of US Birds Threatened - Report

http://www.planetark.com/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/45599/story.htm
US: November 29, 2007


WASHINGTON - More than a quarter of all US bird species are vulnerable to extinction, according to a comprehensive list compiled by two conservation groups released on Wednesday. Global warming may be partially to blame.


The new WatchList 2007, compiled by the National Audubon Society and the American Bird Conservancy, found 178 species in the continental United States and 39 in Hawaii in danger.

Of those, 98 are on the "red list" of greatest concern, and 119 in the "yellow" category, indicating their numbers are seriously declining or the species is rare.

Global warming, the loss of habitat due to urban and suburban sprawl and the current US administration's policies on endangered species are all to blame, a co-author of the list said in a telephone interview.

"It's a sign that basically the human relationship with the environment is off-kilter and these are some of the species that are suffering from that," said Gregory Butcher of the National Audubon Society.

The sea level rise caused by global warming puts pressure on bird populations, Butcher said.

Coastal bird habitats of species like the seaside sparrow and the piping plover are likely to be inundated, he said.

"And because there's so many people living close to the oceans, we're not sure that the natural habitats at the edge of the sea will continue to exist in the face of sea level rise," Butcher said.


'LOOMING THREAT'

Arctic birds that breed in Canada and Alaska, such as the puff-breasted sandpiper and the snowy owl, are losing their tundra habitat as the planet warms. "We're very concerned about those species due to global warming," Butcher said.

David Pashley, a co-author from the American Bird Conservancy, agreed that global warming was a "looming threat" but said, "This is not something the bird conservation community can tackle."

The problems of urban sprawl and the resulting loss of habitat are critical, Pashley said by telephone.

Both authors said the Bush administration's policies on endangered species had not helped.

"Unfortunately we've been seven years in an administration that really doesn't believe in the Endangered Species Act, so they've sort of been looking for excuses not to list species that should be added to the act," Butcher said.

Some of the "most imperiled" birds on the WatchList are not protected under the Endangered Species Act, the two groups said in a statement.

These include the Gunnison sage-grouse, whose numbers have been reduced by drought and habitat destruction in Colorado and Utah; the lesser prairie-chicken, which has isolated populations from Kansas to New Mexico; the ashy storm-petrel, whose breeding populations are restricted to the West Coast; and the Kittlitz murrelet, whose breeding and feeding habitat appears linked to Alaska's tidewater glaciers.
===

The 2007 Audubon WatchList
http://web1.audubon.org/science/species/watchlist/browseWatchlist.php

You can view information about the natural history and conservation status of each species on the WatchList as well as the threats to each of these species. Species are grouped by family and listed taxonomically within each group. To select a species, first click on the family from the options below. The color before the species name will indicate if the species is on the red list or yellow list. 

Family Groups

Swans, Geese, Ducks Crane
Gallinaceous Birds Plovers
Loons, Grebes Snipe, Sandpipers, Phalaropes, allies
Albatrosses Gulls, Terns, Skimmers
Shearwaters, Fulmars, Petrels Auks, Murres, Puffins, Guillemots
Storm-Petrels Pigeons, Doves
Boobies, Gannets Parrots
Cormorants Cuckoos
Frigatebirds Owls, Nightjars
Herons, Bitterns, Egrets Swifts, Hummingbirds, Trogon
Condor Woodpeckers
Hawks, Kites, Osprey, Eagles Songbirds
Coots, Rails  

  

 

Swans, Geese, Ducks 

Emperor Goose 
Trumpeter Swan
Mottled Duck
Steller's Eider
Spectacled Eider
Hawaiian Duck 
Hawaiian Goose
Laysan Duck

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Gallinaceous Birds 

  Greater Sage-Grouse
  Gunnison Sage-Grouse
  Sooty Grouse
  Greater Prairie-Chicken
  Lesser Prairie-Chicken
  Mountain Quail
  Scaled Quail
  Montezuma Quail

Back to top


Loons, Grebes 
  Yellow-billed Loon
  Clark's Grebe

 
Albatrosses 
  Laysan Albatross
  Black-footed Albatross
  Short-tailed Albatross

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Shearwaters, Fulmars, Petrels
  Bermuda Petrel
  Black-capped Petrel
  Hawaiian Petrel
  Cory's Shearwater
  Pink-footed Shearwater
  Greater Shearwater
  Buller's Shearwater
  Sooty Shearwater
  Manx Shearwater
  Newell's Shearwater
  Black-vented Shearwater
  Audubon's Shearwater

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Storm-Petrels
  Ashy Storm-Petrel
  Band-rumped Storm-Petrel
  Black Storm-Petrel
  Tristram's Storm-Petrel
  Least Storm-Petrel

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Boobies, Gannets
  Masked Booby


Cormorants
  Red-faced Cormorant


Frigatebirds
  Magnificent Frigatebird

Herons, Bitterns, Egrets 
  Reddish Egret


Condor
  California Condor

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Hawks, Kites, Osprey, Eagles
  Swallow-tailed Kite
  Swainson's Hawk
  Hawaiian Hawk

 

Back to top

 Coots, Rails
  Yellow Rail
  Black Rail
  Clapper Rail
  King Rail
  Hawaiian Coot

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 Cranes

  Whooping Crane

Plovers
  American Golden-Plover
  Snowy Plover
  Wilson's Plover
  Piping Plover
  Mountain Plover

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Snipe, Sandpipers, Phalaropes, allies
  Wandering Tattler
  Eskimo Curlew
  Bristle-thighed Curlew
  Long-billed Curlew
  Hudsonian Godwit
  Bar-tailed Godwit
  Marbled Godwit
  Black Turnstone
  Surfbird
  Red Knot
  Sanderling
  Semipalmated Sandpiper
  Western Sandpiper
  White-rumped Sandpiper
  Rock Sandpiper
  Stilt Sandpiper
  Buff-breasted Sandpiper

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Gulls, Terns, Skimmers
  Heermann's Gull
  Thayer's Gull
  Iceland Gull
  Yellow-footed Gull
  Red-legged Kittiwake
  Ross's Gull
  Ivory Gull
  Gull-billed Tern
  Elegant Tern
  Roseate Tern
  Least Tern
  Aleutian Tern
  Bridled Tern
  Black Skimmer

Back to top


Auks, Murres, Puffins, Guillemots
  Razorbill
  Marbled Murrelet
  Kittlitz's Murrelet
  Xantus's Murrelet
  Craveri's Murrelet
  Ancient Murrelet
  Whiskered Auklet


Back to top

Pigeons, Doves

   White-crowned Pigeon

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Parrots

  Green Parakeet
  Thick-billed Parrot
  Red-crowned Parrot

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Cuckoos, Anis

  Mangrove Cuckoo


Owls, Nightjars

  Flammulated Owl
  Elf Owl
  Spotted Owl
  Short-eared Owl
  Antillean Nighthawk

Back to top

Swifts, Hummingbirds, Trogon

  Black Swift
  Blue-throated Hummingbird
  Costa's Hummingbird
  Calliope Hummingbird
  Allen's Hummingbird
  Elegant Trogon

Back to top

Woodpeckers

  Lewis's Woodpecker
  Red-headed Woodpecker
  Williamson's Sapsucker
  Nuttall's Woodpecker
  Arizona Woodpecker
  Red-cockaded Woodpecker
  White-headed Woodpecker
  Gilded Flicker
  Ivory-billed Woodpecker

Back to top

Songbirds
  Olive-sided Flycatcher
  Willow Flycatcher
  Thick-billed Kingbird
  Bell's Vireo
  Gray Vireo
  Black-capped Vireo
  Florida Scrub-Jay
  Island Scrub-Jay
  Pinyon Jay
  Yellow-billed Magpie
  Hawaiian Crow
  Elepaio
  Mexican Chickadee
  Oak Titmouse
  Millerbird
  California Gnatcatcher
  Kamao
  Olomao
  Omao
  Puaiohi
  Bicknell's Thrush 
  Wood Thrush
  Varied Thrush
  Wrentit
  Bendire's Thrasher
  California Thrasher
  Le Conte's Thrasher
  Sprague's Pipit
  Bachman's Warbler
  Blue-winged Warbler
  Golden-winged Warbler
  Virginia's Warbler
  Colima Warbler
  Lucy's Warbler
  Bay-breasted Warbler
  Golden-cheeked Warbler
  Hermit Warbler
  Grace's Warbler
  Kirtland's Warbler
  Prairie Warbler
  Cerulean Warbler
  Prothonotary Warbler
  Swainson's Warbler
  Kentucky Warbler
  Canada Warbler
  Red-faced  Warbler
  Abert's Towhee
  Rufous-winged Sparrow
  Bachman's Sparrow
  Five-striped Sparrow
  Brewer's Sparrow
  Black-chinned Sparrow
  Sage Sparrow
  Lark Bunting
  Baird's Sparrow
  Henslow's Sparrow
  Le Conte's Sparrow
  Nelson's Sharp-tailed Sparrow
  Saltmarsh Sharp-tailed Sparrow
  Seaside Sparrow
  Smith's Longspur
  Chestnut-collared Longspur
   McKay's Bunting
  Varied Bunting
  Painted Bunting
  Tricolored Blackbird
  Rusty Blackbird
  Audubon's Oriole
  Black Rosy-Finch
  Brown-capped Rosy-Finch
  Lawrence's Goldfinch
  Laysan Finch
  Nihoa Finch 
  Ou
  Palila
  Maui Parrotbill
  Oahu Amakihi
  Kauai Amakihi
  Anianiau
  Nukupuu
  Akiapolaau
  Akikiki
  Hawaii Creeper
  Oahu Alauahio
  Maui Alauahio
  Akekee
  Akepa
  Iiwi
  Akohekohe
  Poo-uli


Story by Deborah Zabarenko, Environment Correspondent
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