César Chávez Day: Sí se puede!

March 31, 2011














“Once social change begins, it cannot be reversed. You cannot uneducate the person who has learned to read. You cannot humiliate the person who feels pride. You cannot oppress the people who are not afraid anymore. We have seen the future, and the future is ours.” César Chávez

Today is César Chávez Day of Service.  All across our nation Americans will be celebrating and performing service to honor the legacy of this great labor and human rights activist.

César Chávez devoted his adult life to work for social justice. He was one of the most respected civil rights leaders of the 20th century working tirelessly for fair wages and better working conditions for farm workers and civil rights for every American. He inspired a nation to awaken to promote economic, political, environmental and social justice.

César Chávez Day of Service is a state holiday in 11 states including California, Arizona, Colorado, Texas, Utah, Michigan, Illinois, New Mexico, Wisconsin, Rhode Island and Nevada. Rep. Joe Baca (D-CA) introduced HR 213 in the House of Representatives with 43 co-sponsors. The proposed legislation would establish a legal, public holiday for Cesar Chavez.  Please join us in signing the petition to establish César Chávez Day as a national holiday here.

I celebrate this day not just to honor one of America's great heroes, but to advocate for his principles.  I invite you to perform service in his name today and to honor the contributions of the nonresident workers today, as César Chávez did every day. Sí se puede!

Senator Robert F. Kennedy with Cesar Chávez and his wife, Helen Chávez after he broke his fast in 1968 at a mass attended by 8,000 people
An America Hero
César Estrada Chávez was the son of Mexican-American parents and was born in March 31, 1927 in Yuma, Arizona. During the Great Depression his family lost their farm and moved to California where they became migrant farm workers. When he was 15 years old he began working in the fields picking lettuce and beets to help support his family.

In 1952 he joined the Community Service Organization (CSO), a civil rights organization which fought for racial and economic equality. Ten years later he and Dolores Huerta co-founded the National Farm Workers Association (NFWA), which later became the United Farm Workers (UFW). César Chávez worked for decades for political, civil, and social rights for foreign born laborers and migrant workers who toiled on American soil, and for social justice and equality for every person.






















In 1965 César Chávez threw his support behind Filipino-American farm workers who had organized the Delano grape strike to protest for higher wages. He led the grape pickers in a strike and march and called upon the nation to boycott grapes. That successful boycott lasted five years, with 17 million adult Americans participating in it. It was hailed as the first of many labor victories for the farm workers. In 1970 César Chávez led a boycott against California lettuce growers, and over 10,000 farm workers went on strike. He was jailed for 14 days refusing to stop the boycott.

César Chávez was also an environmentalist who fought for regulations of pesticides that were used in the fields causing illness and death to farm workers.

Chávez was a human rights and civil rights activist. He followed the teaching of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Mahatma Gandhi, pushing the cause through boycotts, peaceful marches, demonstrations, and fasts. He fasted in 1968, 1972 and 1988 to put a spotlight on "La Causa" and to protest the use of dangerous pesticides.

On April 23, 1993, César Chávez died in his sleep in Arizona, very close to the place he was born. Over 50,000 people attended his funeral in Delano, California where the cause was born.
An estimated 50,000 mourners walked in Cesar Chavez's funeral procession
Cesar E. Chávez Foundation
In 1993, The César E. Chávez Foundation was established by members of César Chávez's family and officers of the United Farm Workers to promote his legacy, and to encourage all people to carry on his work for social justice in the world. Several years ago I was selected to be trained as a César Chávez trainer. César Chávez 's granddaughter, Julie Chávez Rodriquez, Program Director of the César Chávez Foundation, led the training in Miami, Florida. The experience reinforced my beliefs about social justice, and gave me personal first-hand glimpses into the life of one of my heroes.

Julie Chávez Rodriquez, Minneapolis, MN
Photo by W.L. Doromal ©2008
Julie Chávez Rodriquez is a gentle and humble lady who personifies the attributes of her grandfather. Julie told a story about her grandfather's last fast in Delano California. She was a young girl at that time, and was worried because she thought her weak grandfather was going to die.

During those days she joined some farm workers in Fresno to hand out leaflets at a supermarket. A woman took a leaflet from her, and remarked to Julie, "I hope he dies this time."

Julie said she was shocked and deeply wounded by the hateful remarks. She decided to go to her grandfather and tell him what had happened. He just smiled at her and told her if someone ever says something like that again just say to that person, "I am sure you are in his prayers too." César Chávez taught the lesson that we should love and pray for our enemies.

Julie shared this poem written by her grandfather which demonstrates another role he took as a spiritual leader:

Poem of the Farm Workers' Struggle
by César E. Chávez

Show me the suffering of the most miserable;
So I will know my people's plight.

Free me to pray for others;
For you are present in every person.

Help me to take responsibility for my own life;
So that I may be free at last.

Grant me courage to serve others;
For in service there is true life.

Give me honesty and patience;
So that I can work with other workers.

Bring forth song and celebration;
So that the spirit will be alive among us.

Let the spirit flourish and grow;
So we will never tire of the struggle.

Let us remember those who have died for justice;
For they have given us life.

Help us love even those who hate us;
So we can change the world.
_______________________

Julie also shared with us this telegram that Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. sent to her grandfather during his first fast in 1968. It shows the bond and interconnectedness between the civil rights and labor rights movements in their fight for social justice.

Lessons From César Chávez
¡Sí se puede! This phrase also applies to the struggle of the guest workers in the CNMI. Many of the lessons from César Chávez can be applied to the guest workers' struggle for social justice and political rights. César Chávez's 10 Core Values serve as the foundation for promoting social justice: service to others; sacrifice; a preference to help the most needy; determination; non-violence; acceptance of all people; respect for life; celebrating community; knowledge; and innovation. These values can be used by any movement, or could serve as a road map for an individual's journey through life.

César Chávez stressed the unity of the workers, knowing that was the strongest thread that determined the strength of the movement. The farm workers prevailed because of the strength of their commitment to each other and to their fight for rights. Though they were disenfranchised and represented some of the poorest people in America, they became a powerful political voice when they joined hands in a union that could not be broken. César Chávez said, "The people united will never be defeated."

Some Quotes from César Chávez

"When you have people together who believe in something very strongly - whether it's religion or politics or unions - things happen."

"A movement with some lasting organization is a lot less dramatic than a movement with a lot of demonstrations and a lot of marching and so forth. The more dramatic organization does catch attention quicker. Over the long haul, however, it's a lot more difficult to keep together because you're not building solid...A lasting organization is one in which people will continue to build, develop and move when you are not there."

"We are confident. We have ourselves. We know how to sacrifice. We know how to work. We know how to combat the forces that oppose us. But even more than that, we are true believers in the whole idea of justice."
"From the depth of need and despair, people can work together, can organize themselves to solve their own problems and fill their own needs with dignity and strength."

"The fight is never about grapes or lettuce. It is always about people. "

"Society is made up of groups, and as long as the smaller groups do not have the same rights and the same protection as others - I don't care whether you call it capitalism or communism -it is not going to work. Somehow, the guys in power have to be reached by counter power, or through a change in their hearts and minds, or change will not come."

"It is not good enough to know why we are oppressed and by whom. We must join the struggle for what is right and just. Jesus does not promise that it will be an easy way to live life and His own life certainly points in a hard direction; but it does promise that we will be "satisfied" (not stuffed; but satisfied). He promises that by giving life we will find life - full, meaningful life as God meant it."

"Until the chance for political participation is there, we who are poor will continue to attack the soft part of the American system - its economic structure. We will build power through boycotts, strikes, new union - whatever techniques we can develop. These attacks on the status quo will come, not because we hate, but because we know America can construct a humane society for all its citizens - and that if it does not, there will chaos."

"Our struggle is not easy. Those who oppose our cause are rich and powerful and they have many allies in high places. We are poor. Our allies are few. But we have something the rich do not own. We have our own bodies and spirits and the justice of our cause as our weapons. When we are really honest with ourselves we must admit that our lives are all that really belong to us. So, it is how we use our lives that determines what kind of men we are."

“Non-violence is not inaction. It is not discussion. It is not for the timid or weak... Non-violence is hard work. It is the willingness to sacrifice. It is the patience to win.”

"(Farm workers) are involved in the planting and the cultivation and the harvesting of the greatest abundance of food known in this society. They bring in so much food to feed you and me and the whole country and enough food to export to other places. The ironic thing and the tragic thing is that after they make this tremendous contribution, they don't have any money or any food left for themselves."

"The consumer boycott is the only open door in the dark corridor of nothingness down which farm workers have had to walk for many years. It is a gate of hope through which they expect to find the sunlight of a better life for themselves and their families."

"It is possible to become discouraged about the injustice we see everywhere. But God did not promise us that the world would be humane and just. He gives us the gift of life and allows us to choose the way we will use our limited time on earth. It is an awesome opportunity."

"Because we have suffered, and we are not afraid to suffer in order to survive, we are ready to give up everything - even our lives - in our struggle for justice."

May you be inspired by this short video highlighting the accomplishments of César Chávez:



The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

For Immediate Release March 30, 2011
Presidential Proclamation--Cesar Chavez Day

A PROCLAMATION

Our Nation's story of progress is rich with profound struggle and great sacrifice, marked by the selfless acts and fearless leadership of remarkable Americans. A true champion for justice, Cesar Chavez advocated for and won many of the rights and benefits we now enjoy, and his spirit lives on in the hands and hearts of working women and men today. As we celebrate the anniversary of his birth, we honor Cesar Chavez's lasting victories for American workers and his noble methods in achieving them.

Raised in the fields of Arizona and California, Cesar Chavez faced hardship and injustice from a young age. At the time, farm workers toiled in the shadows of society, vulnerable to abuse and exploitation. Families like Chavez's were impoverished; exposed to hazardous working conditions and dangerous pesticides; and often denied clean drinking water, toilets, and other basic necessities.

Cesar Chavez saw the need for change and made a courageous choice to work to improve the lives of his fellow farm workers. Through boycotts and fasts, he led others on a path of nonviolence conceived in careful study of the teachings of St. Francis of Assisi and Mahatma Gandhi, and in the powerful example of Martin Luther King, Jr. He became a community organizer and began his lifelong advocacy to protect and empower people. With quiet leadership and a powerful voice, Cesar founded the United Farm Workers (UFW) with Dolores Huerta, launching one of our Nation's most inspiring social movements.

Cesar Chavez's legacy provides lessons from which all Americans can learn. One person can change the course of a nation and improve the lives of countless individuals. Cesar once said, "Non-violence is not inaction. . . . Non-violence is hard work. It is the willingness to sacrifice. It is the patience to win." From his inspiring accomplishments, we have learned that social justice takes action, selflessness, and commitment. As we face the challenges of our day, let us do so with the hope and determination of Cesar Chavez, echoing the words that were his rallying cry and that continue to inspire so many today, "Sí, se puede" – "Yes, we can."

NOW, THEREFORE, I, BARACK OBAMA, President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim March 31 of each year as Cesar Chavez Day.

I call upon all Americans to observe this day with appropriate service, community, and educational programs to honor Cesar Chavez's enduring legacy.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this thirtieth day of March, in the year of our Lord two thousand eleven, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and thirty-fifth.

BARACK OBAMA

Saipan Labor Forum Saturday Evening

March 31, 2011

















WHAT: The United Workers Movement-NMI and the U.S. Department of Labor Wage and Hour Division are sponsoring a presentation on the Fair Labor Standards Act. The forum is being held to educate employers and employees on federal labor laws that now apply to the CNMI.

WHEN: April 2, 2011, 5:00PM to 7:00PM

WHERE American Memorial Park Theater

WHO: Open to the public. The theater has limited seating, so first come, first serve seating.

Fitial Spin:Deport 3,000 Illegals

March 30, 2011

Governor Fitial announced that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Attorney General Office are working to deport 3,000 (really?) illegals.

I guess that it is appropriate that an announcement is made stating that the OAG is "working" since it seems that they have not been "working" to arrest the former police officer who beat a foreign worker, or to charge the man that threatened to kill a nonresident and his family, or to convict the hundreds of criminal employers who have stolen millions of dollars in wages from the nonresident workers.

The question is how can there suddenly be 3,000 "illegals" in the CNMI?  Are these nonresidents who have umbrella permits, but refused to report to the CNMI Department of Labor since they do not have to? Nonresidents who were given "umbrella" permits and have since lost their jobs are not illegal under federal law. So who are these 3,000 people? Let's see a list.

 Fitial claims that "ICE enforcement and removal operation executive associate director Gary Mead assured him that federal law will be enforced in the CNMI." (Duh.)

The Marianas Variety quoted Fitial:
ICE, Fitial noted, is doing a very good job in deporting aliens who commit crimes, “but they are not doing anything about the overstaying aliens.”

Mead, the governor said, is now dealing with the AGO on a daily basis. Some of the things they are discussing may not be for public consumption, Fitial added, but these have something to do with “illegals.”
Not for public consumption? That suggests something secretive behind closed doors.

The governor was also quoted as saying that there are laws against harboring illegal aliens.  That ugly threat has been used in the CNMI for decades. In fact, some seedy CNMI "leaders" threatened me and my husband repeatedly with that phrase. Again, if a person has a valid umbrella permit, whether employed or not, they are legally in the CNMI until November 27, 2011.


From the USCIS Questions and Answers: (emphasis added)
Q. Can an umbrella permit be extended or revoked?
A. Umbrella permits are valid through Nov. 27, 2011; the maximum period of time permitted by Federal law, and cannot be extended. An employee will need another work authorization under Federal law to continue to work after that date. Even if CNMI authorities revoke a holder’s umbrella permit, the holder remains authorized to work under Federal law until Nov. 27, 2011.

 Mead and other ICE officials should know that a nonresident with a valid umbrella permit is not "illegal" and cannot be deported according to USCIS. 


Before the transition period began on November 28, 2009, the CNMI government issued "umbrella permits" to the foreign contract workers and all categories of aliens in the CNMI. The "umbrella permits" allowed aliens who were in the Commonwealth before the transition period to remain legally in the CNMI for the two year maximum allowed under the CNRA or until November 27, 2011. The CNMI government stated that these permits would provide security and stability for the foreigners including the contract workers, investors, long-term business owners, immediate relatives of nonresidents, and students for the stated two-year period.

The “umbrella permits” are regarded as evidence of lawful presence and authorization to work under CNMI laws, and the federal government recognizes these permits as an extension of the expiration date of those who have CNMI-issued entry permits. Therefore, according to the federal government, all aliens who were issued an umbrella permit may remain in the CNMI and may work in the CNMI until November 27, 2011.

The Federal and CNMI governments have conflicting opinions on the conditions and authority of these "umbrella permits." The CNMI government claims that the CNRA only preempted the admission and removal of aliens, but not internal matters including alien workers' ability to work in the CNMI. The CNMI government argues that the "umbrella permits" were issued under the CNMI’s ongoing authority over the terms and conditions of employment of foreign workers in the CNMI. The CNMI Department of Labor, which has been a corrupt and negligent body regarding rights of the foreign contract workers, claims that it maintains authority and control over the “umbrella permits,” including the right to revoke them for a violation of any conditions that it may impose for maintaining valid permits.

The federal government (USCIS and ICE), regards these permits as evidence of lawful presence, and has stated that pursuant to the CNRA, holders of "umbrella permits" may reside in the CNMI until the expiration of the permit on November 27, 2011, even if the CNMI government has revoked the permit. It is unclear what the CNMI government would do after revoking a permit because it no longer has the authority to remove any foreigner.

The power struggle between the CNMI and federal governments escalated with the passage of CNMI law, P.L. 17-1. On March 22, 2010, the Immigration Conformity Act of 2010 amended P.L. 15-108, the Commonwealth Employment Act of 2007, and on June 1, 2010 CNMI P.L. 17-1, the Employment Rules and Regulations (ERR) went into effect. Human rights advocates, foreign contract workers and attorneys have opposed provisions within the laws that deny foreign contract workers constitutional rights. The laws are also in conflict with P.L. 110-229, the CNRA, which authorizes a federally administered CNMI-only guest worker program and applies U.S. immigration law to the CNMI.

Provisions of P.L. 17-1 give authority to the CNMI government to revoke “umbrella permits,” which are recognized by the USCIS and federal government as valid permits under federal law until November 27, 2011. So much unnecessary conflict could be resolved by not renewing these controversial permits as Fitial proposes.

Fitial was also quoted as saying that U.S. Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis will determine whether or not to extend the "umbrella" permits. I say not.  If the CNMI seriously believes that it needs a foreign workforce, then they should be given green cards and a pathway to citizenship, and not a renewal of the controversial "umbrella" permit. Enough with the indentured servitude and broken system that just perpetuates abuses such as failure to pay workers their rightful pay.

Raising Revenue in the CNMI: Expanding Gambling and Legalizing Marijuana

March 28, 2011
















One would expect that CNMI legislators would be coming up with solutions to raise revenue for the empty coffers.  Two legislators think that the revenue solution lies with gambling and drugs, both activities known to attract criminal elements.  Both legislators also seem to be proposing bills that would benefit themselves since one is known for his marijuana smoking, and one for his gambling interests.

Rep. Stanley Torres has reintroduced his marijuana legalization bill  for "medical and recreational use" with restrictions that adults don't smoke near school grounds or when minors are present.

The bill would tax and regulate marijuana according to Torres, who claimed that it would bring much needed income to the CNMI. It may also repeal any families looking to vacation in the islands and further raise the eyebrows of the U.S., which is the primary source of funding for the CNMI including grants.

At least some people support the bill, and it seems to have produced some publicity for the islands. The CNMI Representative's bill was featured on a website called Toke of the Town. From the blog:
"I have found that the time has come to legalize the use and possession of marijuana for all purposes and to remove any and all associated penalties," Torres said. (Damn, is this guy eligible to run for President of the United States?)


The CNMI Department of Public Health and the Public School System have already expressed their opposition to the legalization of marijuana use and possession.


Legalized marijuana in a protectorate of the United States like Saipan/CNMI would, as pointed out last April by NORML's "Radical" Russ Belville, mean "some really cool new vacation spots that don't require a passport and checking through Customs."


If, like me, you're a convicted felon in the United States, you're already well aware what that means. An exotic, "foreign" vacation spot is now available to you, even though you can't get a passport! (Yes, I know: felons can get passports -- with lots of money and good lawyers. I'm a felon. I can't get a passport. Capiche?)
Felons think it is a great bill!

It appears that Rep. Froilan Tenorio may have a back door deal with some South Korean, Chinese or Japanese casino and gambling investors because he has been pushing casino and internet gambling since he took office. He has gone ballistic when challenged by fellow lawmakers or when his bills have met their death. Such behavior suggests he stands to personally gain by the passage of the legislation.

Although Rep. Tenorio's casino bill was defeated by the Senate last year, a hybrid version combining his casino bill with one introduced by Rep. Stanley Torres has been drafted by the House Ways and Means Committee.

Tenorio appears to have an obsession with gambling. Remember Governor Froilan Tenorio was a good buddy with Jack Abramoff, another guy who was also pushing for and connected to casinos.  It was his greedy Indian lobbying deals and Sun Cruz, which landed him in federal prison. Tenorio hired Jack Abramoff to kill federalization and minimum wage legislation costing the CNMI $11 million. (Wouldn't it be helpful to have that cash now?)

Tenorio has a long history of supporting gambling and casinos.  In 1997 then governor Tenorio and his wife Sophie took an Abramoff-sponsored trip to visit the Choctaw Mississippi casinos on the taxpayers' dime. In 2003 Tenorio was pushing his "casinos will save the CNMI" theory once again at a public hearing. In 2004, Tenorio was pushing casinos on all three islands, vowing to meet with the Catholic Church and stating several "Japanese investors support the proposal."

Aside from Abramoff and fellow lobbyists, Tenorio has been hanging with some shady folks. In 1999 Governor Froilan Tenorio was being investigating for misuse of funds including a $3.4 million loan that he granted to the Tinian Casino Gaming Control Commission. In 2007, Tenorio was implicated in an illegal casino gambling scheme at the Victoria Hotel in Garapan, Saipan with his Japanese business partner, Hideo Kato and businessman, Byoong Seob Choi who were charged with 119 counts of illegal gambling activity and unlawful employment of aliens.

Now Tenorio plans to introduce a bill that would allow casinos on Rota and Tinian to offer online gambling. Masahiro Watanabe's name came up yesterday as discussing the idea of online gambling with Rota mayor Mendiola and the Rota legislative delegation. Maybe some of those "leaders" could ask that crook to pay his employees. The Rota Hotel and Casino run by Watanabe owes tens of thousands to many nonresident workers. How can they even consider an idea of expansion of gambling when the current business doesn't attract enough clients to keep it afloat or pay the employees?

The CNMI government is  also currently negotiating with shady company Bridge Capital LLC in restoring the La Fiesta Mall to create a video lottery mecca and other business enterprises in the vacant space. Bridge Capital owners, Shawn Scott and John K. Baldwin are controversial.  Residents in the Washington, D.C. area filed a lawsuit to oppose their proposal for slot-machines in the area.

From the Washington Post:
Bridge Capital is owned by Shawn Scott and John K. Baldwin, Las Vegas entrepreneurs who have tried for years to qualify for a license to operate a big-time gambling venture. They have had little luck, public records show. Scott, whose properties have received financial support from Baldwin, has been denied or failed to obtain gambling licenses in five states where regulators found evidence of financial mismanagement, irregular accounting practices and hidden partnerships.
TPM Muckraker details the connections of Baldwin, Abramoff, Julius Kaplan and others. Shady.

There are other revenue-raising ideas that may not go up in smoke or threaten to gamble away the public safety in the CNMI.  Legalizing marijuana and expanding casinos may attract some tourists down the road, but such endeavors will also attract an unwanted criminal element.  Focusing on developing agriculture, aquaculture or reviving the tourist industry seems a safer bet. The CNMI is physically beautiful and can offer an endless variety of alluring ocean and outdoor activities for tourists.  Highlighting the culture, history, and physical beauty instead of focusing on controversial activities like smoking pot and gambling would attract more families to vacation in the CNMI and would be better for the residents in the long run. Of course, establishment of sales, income or property taxes would also raise much-needed revenue and far more quickly than casinos could be built.

Kaipat Quits

March 27, 2011

Cinta Kaipat, the controversial Deputy Secretary of the CNMI Department of Labor, resigned in late February according to the Saipan Tribune.

Kaipat was a staunch defender of the Fitial Administration and an anti-federalization Covenant Party member.  She served as DOL's department head, propagandist, and voice, while the silent and seldom seen figurehead, Labor Secretary, Gil M. San Nicolas, existed behind her shadow.  Kaipat also served as a puppet for labor "volunteer" Deanne Siemer who pulled the strings at the department for years.

Aside from defending the Fitial Administration and DOL at all costs, Kaipat will be remembered as the untiring supporter of controversial labor laws, PL 15-108 and PL 17-1. While Kaipat claimed to have written the labor laws, most believe that Siemer actually was the chief author.

Kaipat was also known for refusing to cooperate with the federal government. From arguing about labor cases and data collection with the federal officials to refusing to share data and statistics, Kaipat made it clear that she viewed federal officials as enemies. Her goal over the last two years was to desperately hang on to local control of labor law despite the application of federal law to the CNMI. She argued that DOL retained control over such immigration permits including "umbrella" permits even though federal officials stated otherwise. She was a constant critic of federal officials including Pamela Brown, Jim Benedetto, David Cohen, and Tony Babauta. She also attacked human rights advocates.

Although the federal labor ombudsman and worker advocates collected DOL Administrative Orders proving that CNMI employers owed cheated foreign workers over $6.1 million, Kaipat denied and dismissed the persistent and ongoing theft of wages. In fact, the DOL did little to help the cheated workers collect their back wages and other money owed to them. Today the criminal employers remain unprosecuted, while the majority of the victim nonresident workers still wait for the money robbed from them.

As deputy secretary of DOL, Kaipat will not be missed by most foreign workers or their advocates.

Sex Offending Guard Signs Plea Bargain

March 26, 2011

Tyrone Fitial, a former guard at the Juvenile Detention Center, entered a guilty plea to Count 3 of the Superseding Indictment charging him with Enticement of a Minor in violation of Title 18, United States
Code,§ 2422(b). The government will move for dismissal of Counts 1 and 2 of the Superseding Indictment at sentencing. Those charges were deprivation of rights under color of law.

Fitial was originally charged with sexually assaulting three young minors at the Kagman Juvenile Detention Facility.

As part of the plea agreement Fitial will submit to a polygraph test, which "may include, but will not be limited to, his knowledge of or involvement in drug trafficking and money laundering activities and his knowledge of other person's involvement in such activities."

The plea agreement suggests that the federal agency has ongoing investigations at the detention centers:
The defendant, TYRON FARLEY REYES FITIAL, further agrees to fully and truthfully cooperate with Federal law enforcement agents concerning their investigation of official misconduct, civil rights violations, and other related offenses within the Kagman Juvenile Detention Facility and the Department of Corrections. Cooperation shall include providing all information known to defendant regarding any criminal activity, including but not limited to the offense to which he is pleading guilty. Cooperation will also include complying with all reasonable instructions from the United States; submitting to interviews by investigators and attorneys at such reasonable times and places to be determined by counsel for the United States; producing to the United States all non-privileged documents (including claimed personal documents) and other materials in the possession, custody or control of defendant requested by attorneys and agents of the United States; and testifying fully and truthfully before any grand juries, hearings, trials or any other proceedings where defendant's testimony is deemed by the United States to be relevant. Defendant understands that such cooperation shall be provided to any state, territorial, local or federal law enforcement agencies designated by counsel for the United States. Further, it is understood and agreed that defendant shall not directly, indirectly, or intentionally disclose anything defendant knows or had done concerning the United States' investigation to anyone other than defendant's attorney. Defendant agrees to take no steps directly or indirectly to "tip" or warn any subject of this investigation that defendant, a subject or anyone else is being investigated.
According to the plea agreement Fitial will receive up to ten years in prison. The plea agreement covers only the federal charges. The CNMI OAG charged him with five counts of sexual abuse of a minor in the second degree, two counts of unlawful exploitation of a minor, one count of assault and battery, one count of misconduct in public office, one count of failure to report child abuse or neglect, and one count of sexual servitude of a minor. Those charges will be heard in the CNMI Superior Court.

The plea agreement:

Status Question in the News (Again)

March 23, 2011

Photo by Itos Feliciano














The big news from the CNMI press today is that Congressman Gregorio (Kilili) Sablan declared that guest workers "will not be given green cards or U.S. citizenship."

I am guessing that Congressman Sablan made this statement because as everyone knows, the U.S. Congress no longer is functioning. It is politically polarized with members pushing party agendas, refusing to compromise, and acting more as obstructionists than legislators. No one expects that the issue of status will be acted upon any time soon. However, as a provision of the CNRA, status will eventually have to be decided.

There is support for green cards and a pathway to citizenship for the legal, long-term foreign workers among members of the U.S. Congress. The Congressional Hispanic Caucus and the Asian Pacific Caucus support a path for undocumented aliens– what more for legal nonresident workers! President Obama also supports a way for undocumented aliens to become citizens.

I contacted a couple of congressional offices Washington, DC today to get their take on the status question.  All made similar statements and were in agreement that the only reason there would be no action on the status issue was because of the divisive political climate and not because anyone objected to under 20,000 legal long-term workers being granted green cards and a pathway to citizenship. Not one person said that there would be no green cards or citizenship for the CNMI's legal, long-term nonresident workers or that there had been any such discussion.

The Marianas Variety reported:
Sablan told the officers and members of the NMI Women’s Association that green cards or “instant” U.S. citizenship for guest workers is not exactly what he is working on because even if he would suggest it in Congress, “I won’t be successful.”

He told reporters again yesterday during the economic restoration summit that the U.S. Congress won’t give long-term guest workers an automatic green card.

But he said he will try to help nonresidents married to U.S. citizens; those who were granted CNMI permanent residency from 1977 to 1981; and the 92 individuals who were born here between 1974 and Jan. 7, 1978.
No one has asked for "automatic green cards." Advocates and the petitioners have requested green cards with a pathway to citizenship for the legal, long-term nonresidents who have lived and worked in the CNMI for five years or more. Some of the long-term nonresident workers have been in the CNMI for decades. What is "automatic" about such a significant contribution and stake in the community?

Those classified as permanent CNMI residents who have lived in a political limbo for decades absolutely should be awarded green cards. However, legislation based on marital status or procreation may be deemed unconstitutional. How is it fair that a single nonresident male who has lived and worked in the CNMI for 32 years would not even be considered for status, yet a married nonresident worker with a U.S. citizen child who has lived and worked in the CNMI for far less time would be granted status?

Previously Congressman Sablan introduced similar legislation, H.R. 3658. This is not a new concept. I disagree with it. Ask for all legal, long-term nonresident workers, not some. To deem some more deserving because of marital or family status is discriminatory.

While Congressman Sablan may have an opinion, all of the members of the House and Senate will weigh in. Few, if any, would support the CNMI Senate's FAS-type status which is more akin to apartheid than democratic or American principles. The Obama Administration would not support such a proposal either. The FAS-style status recommended by the CNMI Senators will not be a consideration. One congressional staffer said there is no need to compare oranges to apples.  There are problems with FAS citizens in the U.S. and comparisons of the legal, long-term CNMI nonresident workers and the citizens of the Freely Associated States do not make sense.

One staffer agreed that the workers have suffered years of abuses and nonpayment of wages. Green cards could provide a way to make up for the negligence and inaction of the federal government who allowed the injustices for years.

It may take a while, but I am sure that the legal long-term foreign workers will eventually be granted green cards and a pathway to citizenship. When a new Congress is elected we can we expect to see some much-needed legislation passed on this issue and others.

CREW: Trying to Uncover the Truth

March 23, 2011

What happened to all of the Abramoff-related investigations? Why weren’t former Rep. John Doolittle (R-CA), wife Julie Doolittle, Rep. Don Young (R-AK), and former Rep. Tom DeLay (R-TX) ever indicted? What happened to the federal investigations into Abramoff-related improprieties involving former Governor Froilan Tenorio, Governor Benigno Fitial and other CNMI officials?

The DOJ announced last year that it had “closed their investigations” on DeLay, Doolittle and Young. It seems that I am not the only one wondering why. Evidence against the above-mentioned Abramoff co-conspirators seemed overwhelming and well documented.

CREW (Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington) filed a lawsuit yesterday against the U.S. Department of Justice to obtain any documents and records relating to the investigation. CREW Executive Director Melanie Sloan said:
“Rep. Tom DeLay spent years turning the House of Representatives into his personal casino, and yet shockingly was never federally prosecuted. The American people deserve to know why."
“The DeLay case is just one in a string of troubling instances where the Department of Justice has declined to prosecute blatantly corrupt politicians. The department doesn’t even want the public to know why it didn’t prosecute. If Rep. DeLay’s actions really were not criminal, shouldn’t DOJ be happy to turn over its records and prove that? Why all the secrecy?”
In October 2010, the U.S. Department of Justice denied CREW’s Freedom of Information Act request that sought FBI and DOJ records regarding the investigation into any illegal activities that DeLay may have conducted with his friend convicted felon Jack Abramoff. CREW also filed similar requests regarding the Abramoff-related investigations of  Jerry Lewis (R- CA), Rep. Don Young (R-AK), Rep. Alan Mollohan (D-WV), the late Rep. John Murtha (D-PA), and Senator John Ensign (R-NV).  The DOJ refused their requests saying that the "release of the records could interfere with open law enforcement proceedings."

The complaint filed in the District Court of the District of Columbia indicates that documents from the CNMI are among those being sought by CREW: From CREW’s lawsuit.

Lawsuit: CREW vs. Department of Justice (DOJ): Regarding Tom DeLay Investigation: 03/22/11



In October 2010 CREW also sued the USDOJ for records relating to their silencing Jack Abramoff from speaking to the press while he was imprisoned.

Meanwhile a third trial is scheduled for convicted felon Abramoff lobbyist Kevin Ring. The trial set for May 24th will address the remaining Abramoff-connected charges.

Another Criminal Cop

March 23, 2011

Kudos to the U.S. Department of Justice and Assistant U.S. Attorney James Benedetto for filing charges against a former CNMI policer officer who abused his position.

Former DPS officer Frankie S. Pangelinan was charged in federal court with deprivation of rights under color of law (excessive force), deprivation of rights under color of law (false arrest), and deprivation of rights under color of law.

 The charges stem from an incident on July 23, 2010 when the police officer pepper sprayed Felipe Kalen and Alafanso Anso Kintin in their eyes. The assault resulted in physical injuries. The officer arrested Kalen without probable cause.

Pangelinan continued working as a police officer until November 2010. From the Saipan Tribune:
Saipan Tribune learned that Pangelinan left the Department of Public Safety in November 2010. It was not clear if he was terminated or he resigned.

Pangelinan was named 2004 Government Employee of the Year. At the time, he was assigned to the governor's protective service.

Prior to that assignment, Pangelinan was a training and professional development instructor at DPS. His duties included preparing and training recruits in the department's Police Academy.
If this case follows the pattern of other cases of abusive CNMI law enforcement officers,  we can assume that Pangelinan left the DPS and was given another government position.

Now let's see an indictment for the officer(s) who brutally beat Jin Dong Wang.

Again?

March 20, 2011

Since Benigno Fitial has been serving as governor there have been numerous changes in personnel, particularly in the CNMI Department of Public Safety. Clearly the musical chairs is politically motivated.  Now DPS Commissioner Sandy Tudela is out and Ramon Mafnas is in. In typical Fitial style, Commissioner Sandy Tudela was informed that he was being replaced in a letter.

Mafnas has been serving as the Commissioner of the Department of Corrections since shortly after massage gate when equally unethical Delores San Nicolas Aldan was replaced as commissioner. Aldan was involved in such activities as releasing her violent criminal husband from prison for weekend furloughs, being an accomplice in her husband violating his restraining order from his former common law wide, and of course releasing the federal prisoner from jail to give the governor a massage. Quite the résumé.

The new Commissioner of the Department of Corrections is reportedly the governor's son-in-law police officer Arnold Kaipat Seman. He also has an interesting résumé. In August 2009, DOC Sergeant Seman was arrested along with Corrections Officer II Manuel Quitano for allegedly beating an inmate.

From the August 27, 2009 Saipan Tribune:
The Office of the Attorney General charged Seman and Quitano with assault and battery, and misconduct in public office. In addition, the OAG charged Quitano with obstructing justice.

According to an investigation conducted by Juan Santos of the White Collar Crimes/Public Corruption Task Force, Seman and Quitano, both assigned to the Correction Emergency Response Team, assaulted inmate Robert Jake Palacios inside the Isolation Unit at DOC on June 17, 2009.
Apparently the victim was beaten while still in handcuffs according to a witness. How disgusting is this case? The investigation revealed serious abuses and an attempted coverup:
The Task Force learned that another Corrections officer had tried to convince Palacios to drop his complaint against the CERT officers in exchange for letting him out on home furlough and eventual transfer to the cell for misdemeanor offenders.

Quitano also allegedly tried to hit the face of another inmate who saw the beatings. The officer told the inmate that he didn't see the beatings.

The Task Force learned that CERT officers did not submit any incident report or any notice to their superiors at DOC.

CERT officers, at the alleged direction of Seman and senior officers, failed to record the activities surrounding the assault and the restraining chair.

The Task Force said CERT officers, however, recanted their first statements and then confirmed that the slappings had occurred.

The Task Force also discovered that the surveillance camera recordings for June 17 to 23 were missing.
The victim's mother wrote a letter to the editor exposing the incident. If she hadn't taken the time to make this public, it would have probably been covered up or ignored, like many law enforcement abuse cases.

Incredibly in September 2009, Judge Demapan dismissed all charges without prejudice so that the charges could be dealt with within the Department of Corrections through administrative proceedings. (Whatever those are.)  Why would a judge trust the DOC that had missing surveillance camera recordings handle the case?

I guess beating someone up while on duty in the CNMI means being rewarded with a promotion. That is what happened to Seman anyway. He was promoted from sergeant to captain.  He was one of the DOC officers who escorted the Chinese masseuse from prison to Fitial's house to give him a massage in January 2010.

It is absolutely incredible that this man would be selected to be the acting commissioner of the Department of Corrections. Seriously, the USDOJ Civil Rights Division needs to thoroughly investigate both the Department of Public Safety and the Department of Corrections.  Both agencies have personnel who have no business wearing a badge or carrying a weapon. (See also this recent post, Wrong Side of the Law.)

"Shoot Illegal Immigrants Like Pigs"

March 20, 2011

Last week State Rep. Peck (R) declared that the best way to deal with illegal immigration "may be the same way the state deals with feral hogs ––by shooting them from a helicopter." The remark was made in a committee meeting where the discussion focused on how to control 500 feral pigs in Kansas.

Apparently, the despicable remark was an attempt at a joke. It is not funny at all, but it does serve as one more example that shows the mindset of too many ignorant lawmakers or candidates.

Previously, congressional candidate Pat Bertroche, a Republican who was running for Iowa's 3rd District Congressional primary, suggested that microchip tracking devices be planted in illegal aliens so they could be tracked like animals. As quoted in the Huffington Post:
"I think we should catch 'em, we should document 'em, make sure we know where they are and where they are going," said Pat Bertroche, an Urbandale physician. "I actually support microchipping them. I can microchip my dog so I can find it. Why can't I microchip an illegal?
Another candidate, Republican Tom Mullins who was running for a New Mexico seat, suggested placing land mines along the Mexico border. Yes, he suggested killing those who dare to cross the border illegally with land mines.

All of the remarks are examples of racist hate speech. Hate speech that is promoted not just by a few ignorant candidates and elected officials, but by racist, anti-immigrant groups, like the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR).

Hate speech is not free speech.

Hate speech incites hate crimes. In Suffolk County New York, County Executive Steve Levy is a well followed anti-immigrant basher who has held office since 2004. The official co-founded Mayors and Executives for Immigration Reform, a national group that promotes immigrant-cleansing ordinances. The SPLC reports that he described critics of the organization as "Communists" and "anarchists."

In November 2008 a Suffolk County teen stabbed and killed Marcelo Lucero, an Ecuadorean immigrant. The New York Times reported:
Mr. Lucero's death exposed racial tensions on eastern Long Island and caused a number of Hispanic residents to come forward saying they were the victims of harassment and assaults. Advocates for immigrants criticized the Suffolk County Police Department for failing to fully investigate complaints of assaults on Latinos, and also criticized some county leaders and politicians for fueling the hostility with anti-immigrant statements. Federal authorities began an investigation of the department's handling of reports of racially motivated attacks on Hispanics.

Prosecutors said Mr. Lucero, 37, who worked at a dry cleaning shop, was surrounded and attacked by Mr. Conroy and six others in a parking lot of the Patchogue train station shortly before midnight on Nov. 8, 2008. Mr. Lucero and a friend were walking to another friend's house as the group approached. The two men were taunted before Mr. Lucero was stabbed.

The U.S. Civil rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice launched an investigation into discriminatory policing of Latinos in Suffolk County a month after Mr. Lucero's death.  The investigation includes whether the county properly handled hate crime investigations.  (Such an investigation should be instituted in the CNMI especially concerning the recent beating of an innocent  Chinese worker by a Saipan police officer and no arrest.)

In February, two Pennsylvania teens were convicted of beating and killing 25-year-old Mexican immigrant Luis Ramirez. The jury determined that he died as a result of his race and ethnicity. During the trial it was revealed that the teens felt that Ramirez was “somehow worthy of being beaten like a dog in the streets” because of his ethnicity. 

Where do youth get these ideas? From parents, peers, and yes, our elected 'leaders'. Any elected official who engages in hate speech should be removed from office.


The Southern Law Poverty Center recently released its annual Intelligence Report that investigates and exposes hate groups in the United States. The SPLC identified 1,002 active hate, anti-government and anti-immigrant groups in 2010. That is 1,002 too many.

The report found three strands in  the 'radical right' ––"hatemongers, the nativists and the antigovernment zealots." From their report:
What may be most remarkable is that this growth of right-wing extremism came even as politicians around the country, blown by gusts from the Tea Parties and other conservative formations, tacked hard to the right, co-opting many of the issues important to extremists. Last April, for instance, Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer signed S.B. 1070, the harshest anti-immigrant law in memory, setting off a tsunami of proposals for similar laws across the country. Continuing growth of the radical right could be curtailed as a result of this shift, especially since Republicans, many of them highly conservative, recaptured the U.S. House last fall.

But despite those historic Republican gains, the early signs suggest that even as the more mainstream political right strengthens, the radical right has remained highly energized. In an 11-day period this January, a neo-Nazi was arrested headed for the Arizona border with a dozen homemade grenades; a terrorist bomb attack on a Martin Luther King Jr. Day parade in Spokane, Wash., was averted after police dismantled a sophisticated anti-personnel weapon; and a man who officials said had a long history of antigovernment activities was arrested outside a packed mosque in Dearborn, Mich., and charged with possessing explosives with unlawful intent. That’s in addition, the same month, to the shooting of U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords in Arizona, an attack that left six dead and may have had a political dimension.

...There also are new attempts by nativist forces to roll back birthright citizenship, which makes all children born in the U.S. citizens. Such laws have been introduced this year in Congress, and a coalition of state legislators is promising to do the same in their states. And then there’s Oklahoma, where 70% of voters last November approved a measure to forbid judges to consider Islamic law in the state’s courtrooms — a completely groundless fear, but one pushed nonetheless by Islamophobes. Since then, lawmakers have promised to pass similar laws in Arizona, Florida, Louisiana, South Carolina, Tennessee and Utah.

A Washington Post/ABC News poll this January captured the atmosphere well. It found that 82% of Americans saw their country’s political discourse as “negative.” Even more remarkably, the poll determined that 49% thought that negative tone could or already had encouraged political violence.
(Read the report here; support SLPC here.)

State of Emergency at Rota Health Center (Again)

March 19, 2011

This week Lt. Governor Eloy Inos declared another state of emergency for the Rota Health Center.  The "emergency" started a year ago when the CNMI government was made aware that the Rota (and Tinian) nurses were not being paid regularly or at all.

What has the CNMI government done? Not much, except to make excuses, shift blame and ignore the problem.

Like many employees in the CNMI, the Rota nurses are owed a lot of money.  They have not received wages since October 2010. The wages that they did receive over the last year were well below their contractual wages.

The crisis with the Rota Health Center is a result of irresponsible governmental decisions.

In most places in the world, declaring a "state of emergency" implies that immediate attention and action will be taken to fix the problem. However, when a  "state of emergency" is declared in the CNMI it is just that – a declaration.  No immediate resolution of the problem or crisis is usually forthcoming.

Inos, in his role as Acting Governor, stated that funds will be reprogrammed to pay the nurses. Will that solve the problem? In July 2007 Governor Fitial declared a "state of emergency" regarding the unpaid wages of nurses on Tinian and Rota.  He also ordered the reprogramming of funds to pay the nurses. The nurses were actually paid only a fraction of their contractual salary. Maybe the partial payment and promise of wages kept the nurses working, but the problem was never resolved and the "emergency" continues. It's time to look at real solutions instead of playing the shell game by shifting funds.

Meanwhile nurses on Saipan are still not receiving their contracted housing allowance.

Does this "emergency" account for the suffering that unpaid employees have endured for a year as they have had to find money to buy food and pay their bills in a place with no unemployment insurance and no social service or welfare agencies that provide assistance for unpaid non-citizens? No, it does not. In fact, the "emergency statement" appears to bypass the welfare of the cheated, unpaid employee/victims and focus the emergency on CNMI residents' needs:
“The CNMI faces an imminent threat of the disruption of critical medical services on the island of Rota due to the termination of services from the existing nursing services provider. The disruption of the provision of nursing services on the island of Rota poses a direct threat to the health and safety of the people,” said Inos in his declaration.
The U.S. and CNMI governments need to also acknowledge the serious emergency that exists for the unpaid nurses, and with all of the thousands of  unpaid CNMI foreign workers. These include unpaid employees of casino, hotel, poker rooms, water companies and more!

How many years should an employee have to endure months without pay or allowances? Maybe it is time for the nurses to cut their losses, sue to collect all of their back pay, and move on. There are many nursing jobs available in the U.S., Australia, New Zealand and Canada. These positions pay a much higher salary than what is being paid in the CNMI, provide excellent benefits, and quality living and working conditions.  Most positions will also lead to eventual citizenship and lack the uncertainty and hassle of CNMI regulations and non-enforcement of laws.

Wrong Side of the Law

March 19, 2011

Some violent law enforcement officials in Saipan belong behind bars.

There are cases where no charges against the rogue officers have been filed. One of the worst involved the brutal beating of an innocent foreign contract worker by an officer who left the DPS and rewarded with a another CNMI government position.

On October 18, 2010 a Chinese worker, Jin Dong Wang was severely beaten in what appeared to be a case of mistaken identity during a police raid. Six months have passed and no arrest has been made.

DPS Commissioner Tudela claimed in November 2010 that former police officer Jesse Dubrall was involved. After the assault Dubrall resigned on October 22, 2010 and on October 25, 2010 he was working at the Office of the Public Auditor.

Tudela said that case was forwarded to the FBI.  Why has there been no arrest in this case? If a civilian had assaulted the Chinese worker, you can bet that he/she would be sitting in a jail cell by now.

Maybe arrests are not made because the Office of the Attorney General doesn't prioritize the cases or looks the other way if the attacks are committed against foreigners? This week a federal court judge allowed the OAG an extension to respond to a lawsuit filed by Quiriano Adlaon.  Adlaon charges that he was beaten by Department of Corrections Officer Jesse Reyes Babauta.

According to the complaint, Adlaon was taken into custody for DUI and reckless driving. He was handcuffed and taken to the DPS. He took and passed a breathalyzer test three times, and a field sobriety test twice. Still he was taken to the Department of Corrections and put into a cell. He asked why he was being held if he passed all the tests and was informed that he was being held for DUI and reckless driving. He was never charged with those offenses.

While in custody in the cell, Adlaon was assaulted by DOC officer Jesse R. Babauta after he questioned why Babauta had not given him water.  Babauta allegedly hit him in the mouth so hard that his teeth were dislodged and later needed treatment. Adlaon bled profusely in the cell for an hour and he yelled for help. No one at DOC responded.

As if that was not enough, Adlaon was again the victim of false arrest on November 1, 2009. He was arrested by DPS officer Roque Camacho who went to his residence where he was sitting outside with friends.  The officer charged him with speeding and disturbing the peace.

During the arrest another police car arrived with Officer Cepeda and an unknown female officer. The three officers handcuffed and placed the plaintiff in their patrol car and drove him to the Department of Corrections.  There he was put in a small padded room, handcuffed and restrained with a ball and chain where he stood for over two hours. (Seriously, a ball and chain?)

During that time his hands and wrists were injured by the handcuffs. He was then transferred to a cell where he spent the evening until his release the next day at 3:30pm. Again he was never charged with any violation of the law. He was falsely arrested and imprisoned.

The complaint identifies the following defendants: Former DOC Commissioner Dolores San Nicolas, former DOC Commissioner Gregory F. Castro, DPS Commissioner Santiago Tudela, DPS Officer Jesse R. Babauta, DOC Officer Patrick Maanao, DPS Officer Jesse Cepeda, DPS Officer Roque Camacho, the CNMI Government, CNMI DPS, CNMI DOC and DOES 1-10.

The lawsuit lists 2 causes of action for the deprivation of due process for unlawful arrests and imprisonments, 2 causes of action for 2 incidents of assault and battery resulting in serious injury, and the intentional infliction of emotional distress.

Why does this man need to hire an attorney to sue? Why didn't the OAG file a case and put the offending officer(s) behind bars where they belong?

Aside from brutality cases, many CNMI law enforcement officials have been charged with criminal violations, many of them violent.  The following is a list of some Department of Public Safety and Department of Corrections officials who have been arrested over the last 10 or so years:
There could also be a list of law enforcement officials who have not been arrested, but have assualted innocent citizens. It is probably too lengthy and too difficult to document. Most of the police brutality cases in which no officer was charged, appear to be assaults on foreigners. Aside from the Jin Dong Wang and Quiriano Adlaon cases there are others.

In February 2010 Li Gui Xiang alleges she was assaulted by police officers on Saipan. In May 2007, employees of the Top Fashion garment factory in Tanapag alleged police brutality when during a sit down protest police officers pepper sprayed and kicked some of the protesters. (The brutality was captured and posted on You tube.) In October 2005 Dan Gao Bright, a tour agency operator was pulled over while driving, allegedly assaulted by Police Officer John C. Sablan and falsely imprisoned for 8 hours. In August 2005 a Chinese store owner alleged police brutality.  In August 2003 then DPS commissioner Edward Camacho and an unnamed policeman were sued by Zhang Qisen who was allegedly assaulted and falsely detained. In August 2002 another Chinese victim, Kwon Woo Kim, sued DPS officer Ralph Mendiola Torres for false arrest, assault and battery and other civil rights violations.  Does anyone see a pattern here?

The CNMI may hold the record for the most corrupt public officials per capita. It certainly must hold the record for the most victims of labor abuses, human rights, civil rights and criminal cases per capita.  Additionally, it can boast the most cases of crimes per capita where the victims rights have been ignored and the criminal abusers have not been charged.

Power to the People

March 17, 2011

Wisconsin protest AP













From the Middle East to the United States the people are uprising and protesting those in power who have been whittling away at democracy and suppressing the common peoples' rights.

In the United States the theft of collective bargaining rights under the GOP's agenda of destroying unions has awakened struggling middle class workers. State legislatures are attacking public servants and threatening to tax pensions while giving tax breaks to the rich and large corporations. Their actions have outraged the struggling middle class of our nation. People are taking to the streets to protest from coast to coast.

Over 100,000 protested in Wisconsin this weekend. Many thousands protested in Michigan this week, and over 10,000 demonstrated across in Ohio today. Some pro-union protesters in Tennessee were arrested at the state capitol. Last week more than 8,000 union workers, teachers and and labor organizers protested at the Indiana Statehouse. Tuesday hundreds of Oklahoma teachers rallied at the state capitol screaming, "We won't be silenced." Yesterday in Washington, DC hundreds of protesters crashed a lobbyist''s fundraiser for the Wisconsin Republicans as thousands of others blocked Washington, DC streets.



In Florida, every Tuesday after work, public workers, the jobless and middle class are holding protest rallies. The solidarity protests called "Awake the State" or "Defend the Dream" rallies are organized to push back against the GOP agenda that supports special interests and corporate America at the expense of the public servants and middle class. At Tuesday's rally at Lake Eola  in Orlando one sign read,  "The Tea Party is over!"

It looks like the Tea Party may be over. The Dick Armey-backed, Koch brother-backed, Ralph Reed-backed Tea Partiers have been overtaken by a new wave of protesters ––union members, public servants,  labor activists, the unemployed, and diverse group of angry middle class citizens of all ages. The Democrats and progressives have been awakened, and they have not just taken to the streets, but are organizing recalls of GOP elected officials.  Over two million dollars has been raised to support the Wisconsin recall.

The GOP made a big mistake by targeting unions perceived to be big donors to Democratic candidates. The union members are both Democrats and Republicans. They are angry at partisan attacks to their pensions, meager salaries and bargaining rights. They will remember when it comes time to vote.

Film maker Michael Moore spoke in Wisconsin. He said to pass his message on. (Read it here.) Here it is in part:
America is not broke.

Contrary to what those in power would like you to believe so that you'll give up your pension, cut your wages, and settle for the life your great-grandparents had, America is not broke. Not by a long shot. The country is awash in wealth and cash. It's just that it's not in your hands. It has been transferred, in the greatest heist in history, from the workers and consumers to the banks and the portfolios of the uber-rich.

Today just 400 Americans have the same wealth as half of all Americans combined.

Let me say that again. 400 obscenely rich people, most of whom benefited in some way from the multi-trillion dollar taxpayer "bailout" of 2008, now have as much loot, stock and property as the assets of 155 million Americans combined. If you can't bring yourself to call that a financial coup d'état, then you are simply not being honest about what you know in your heart to be true.

And I can see why. For us to admit that we have let a small group of men abscond with and hoard the bulk of the wealth that runs our economy, would mean that we'd have to accept the humiliating acknowledgment that we have indeed surrendered our precious Democracy to the moneyed elite. Wall Street, the banks and the Fortune 500 now run this Republic -- and, until this past month, the rest of us have felt completely helpless, unable to find a way to do anything about it...

...America ain't broke! The only thing that's broke is the moral compass of the rulers. And we aim to fix that compass and steer the ship ourselves from now on. Never forget, as long as that Constitution of ours still stands, it's one person, one vote, and it's the thing the rich hate most about America -- because even though they seem to hold all the money and all the cards, they begrudgingly know this one unshakeable basic fact: There are more of us than there are of them!