Leaked: The Internet must go!

Hey! Are you on the internet right now? Of course you are! Then you should definitely check out this amazing video about what the internet companies are planning. This move could hurt both consumers and content creators--but of course would be a huge windfall for internet providers.

How weathly are Americans?

The disparity in wealth between the richest one percent of Americans and the bottom 80 percent has grown exponentially over the last thirty years — but the video, posted by user politizane and relying on data from a popular Mother Jones post, focuses on the difference between the ideal disparity that Americans would like to see and the reality.

Tax the Rich

So long! It's been fun.

Dear listeners,

In July 2011 I started a new job teaching Italian at Kansas State University. In some ways this was a return to my roots, as I taught English as a Foreign Language for 17 years in Italy. Now I am teaching English speakers Italian. I've come full circle.

This coming full circle also means the end of an attempt on my part to start a new career in my 50s. Sadly, as much as I tried to bring community radio to Manhattan, I was not successful. So I have decided to dedicate my energy and time to my first love, being an educator.

The archive of my shows will remain active - there's a lot of great content in the shows. So I hope you continue to listen and enjoy them.

Once again thank you for your support and encouragement over the five years the show was on the air. I know many feel that my program needs to be on the air and I agree with you that a diversity of voices is sorely lacking in the local media. But alas, it is not I who will bring that diversity. It will have to be someone else.

Christopher E. Renner

30 May 2008

GOP cranking up suppression efforts

By MARTIN FROST

Politico.com

Voter suppression in the minority community has always been high on the Republican agenda. It’s done in the name of protecting the sanctity of the ballot. It’s really about keeping black, Hispanic and elderly voters away from the polls.

The Republicans are back at it again, and Democrats had better pay attention or they could lose elections on this basis alone.

Republicans got a big boost recently when the U.S. Supreme Court upheld an Indiana law requiring state- or federal-government-issued photo identification (such as a state driver’s license or a passport) for voting. Under the Indiana law, the document must be in the exact name that appears on the registration rolls and must have an expiration date that has not yet passed.

The fight now shifts to the states. The Supreme Court has opened the door to voter ID laws, but since each state determines its own rules for conducting elections, the rules could well vary from state to state, and fights in state legislatures on this subject will be epic. Civil rights groups will correctly view this as the single-greatest threat to the right to vote since the passage of the Voting Rights Act 43 years ago.

Seven states have variations of this type of law on the books, and it is possible that other states could pass similar laws in time to affect the 2008 elections. In the wake of the Supreme Court decision, the Republican-controlled Kansas Legislature passed a new voter ID bill, but it was vetoed by Democratic Gov. Kathleen Sebelius. It is also possible that partisan Republican election administrators in some other states may attempt to use the Supreme Court decision to unilaterally impose a photo ID requirement, even if there is no law in their state authorizing one.

Missouri considered amending its constitution in time to affect this year’s election. A proposal moving through the GOP-controlled Legislature earlier in May would have required proof of citizenship (a birth certificate, naturalization papers or a passport) in order to register to vote. That’s even tougher than producing a government-issued photo ID at the time you vote. However, the legislature adjourned without acting. Other states may consider comparable proposals in the future.

It is estimated that at least 20 million people in the United States do not have a driver’s license. The vast majority of those potential voters are minorities or the elderly — groups who normally vote Democratic. If someone does not have a driver’s license, it is also unlikely that he or she will have a passport. An extreme example of this problem was seen during Indiana’s May 6 primary, when a group of elderly nuns was turned away because they didn’t have driver’s licenses.

Proponents of such laws argue that states can provide an option for voters to obtain free state identification cards which would permit them to vote. The problem with this is that in order to obtain a state ID card, voters would need original copies of their birth certificates. Piece of cake? Not exactly. It can take weeks to obtain a new birth certificate, and it can be expensive.

I recently needed an original copy of my birth certificate. Since I was born in Glendale, Calif., I had to write to Los Angeles County to get the document. It took several phone calls to determine the procedure to apply for a new birth certificate and then a month to actually receive the document.

Other people may face discrimination under voter ID laws, even if they have driver’s licenses. A recently married woman may not have obtained a driver’s license in her new name, and if she has done so, she may not have changed her name on the voter registration rolls. Additionally, Hispanic names on registration rolls may differ from Hispanic names on official documents because the family name often is placed in the middle rather than at the end, as it would be on registration rolls.

Requiring proof of citizenship in order to register to vote is likewise flawed. As discussed above, it is often time-consuming and expensive to obtain an original birth certificate. Some rural counties may not even have good birth records, particularly for elderly African-Americans from the South. It should be enough that voters are subject to prosecution if they falsely swear that they are citizens in order to register.

The Voting Rights Act of 1965 outlawed poll taxes and literacy tests as ruses meant to prevent minorities from registering and voting. Let’s hope states will resist the temptation to bring them back in another form, even if it is approved by a Republican-dominated Supreme Court.

Martin Frost, a Democrat, represented the Dallas-Fort Worth area from 1979 to 2005. He rose to caucus chairman and head of the DCCC. He is now an attorney with Polsinelli Shalton Flanigan Suelthaus PC in Washington and serves as president of America Votes, a grass-roots voter mobilization and education effort.

29 May 2008

Alternative views to read...

The Elitism Thing

Tom Sullivan writes for Campaign for America's Future: "When character attacks make us uncomfortable and defensive, maybe we should pay more attention and not dismiss them immediately as unfair or overblown. Like Republicans being obsessed with money. I can often identify an acquaintance as a Republican by how quickly money dominates the conversation. With the activist left, it is how quickly the topic of voter ignorance arises."

For the complete essay, click here.

Stopping the War Machine: Military Recruiters Must Be Confronted

Ron Kovic writes for Truthdig: "As a former United States Marine Corps sergeant who was shot and paralyzed from my mid-chest down during my second tour of duty in Vietnam on Jan. 20, 1968, I am sending my complete support and admiration to all those now involved in the courageous struggle to stop military recruitment in Berkeley and across the country."

For the complete article click here.

Where Is the Outrage?

Also at Truthdig, Robert Scheer's writtes: "Are we Americans truly savages or merely tone-deaf in matters of morality, and therefore more guilty of terminal indifference than venality? It’s a question demanding an answer in response to the publication of a 370-page report on U.S. complicity in torture."

For the complete column, click here.

“Pro-Military” Iron Man

Nick Truse writes: "
Those who haven’t seen this summer’s biggest blockbuster (so far, at least—this weekend’s “Indiana Jones” sequel may well change that) “Iron Man” and are planning to hit the multiplex might want to take a gander at this review. The article points out how “Iron Man” is the latest in a string of “pro-military” movies served up for youngsters’ consumption—even as two disastrous wars rage on overseas."

For complete article, click here.

Post-Traumatic Stress Soars in US Troops

David Morgan of Reuters reports: "Newly diagnosed cases of post-traumatic stress disorder among US troops sent to Iraq and Afghanistan surged 46.4 percent in 2007, bringing the five-year total to nearly 40,000, according to US military data released on Tuesday."

For the complete article click here.

Voter Repression

The Winston-Salem Journal's editorial board writes: "The US Supreme Court has effectively reinstated the poll tax that once kept minorities and the poor from voting, and it did so for no justifiable reason."

To read the complete editorial, click here.

27 May 2008

House Votes to Ban Pentagon Propaganda: Networks Still Silent

Huffington Post, May 24, 2008
By Josh Silver

You probably didn't hear about the House voting to ban Pentagon propaganda last Thursday -- since the television networks have once again conveniently failed to cover the story.

But in a surprise move, a 2009 defense policy bill passed with an amendment, sponsored by Rep. Paul Hodes (D-N.H.), that outlaws the Defense Department from engaging in "a concerted effort to propagandize" the American people. The measure would also force an investigation by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) into efforts to plant positive news stories about the war in U.S. media.

An April 20 front-page New York Times article first reported how the Pentagon cultivated and coached more than 75 former military officers who became regulars on Fox News, CNN, the broadcast networks, and even NPR. One week later, the Pentagon announced that it would suspend the "briefing" program pending an internal review, which is continuing. On May 13, watchdog Media Matters documented that analysts in the Pentagon's program appeared or were quoted in major outlets more than 4,500 times.

For the complete story click here.

Guarantee net neutrality

Posted by Star-Ledger editorial board May 26, 2008 10:30PM

The information superhighway that is the internet has been an equal opportunity route. A local shop's web page isn't shunted into the slow lane while Mega Corporation's blows by in the express. Each is entitled to use the same path at the same speed.

Federal legislation is needed to ensure internet providers, primarily phone and cable companies, don't undermine that equality. There is a danger that internet providers will charge extra for faster transmission of websites or services, leaving those unwilling or unable to pay to lag behind. There also is a danger that providers might block sites or services because of content.

Internet providers say they would never do such things. They say that even if one company did, competition would ensure "net neutrality," as the wonkish call it.

For complete editoral, click here.

The Most Savage Shock Jock of Them All

By Rory O'Connor and Aaron Cutler, AlterNet Books. Posted May 23, 2008.

An excerpt from AlterNet's newest book, Shock Jocks: Hate Speech & Talk Radio.

Who is Michael Savage? On its surface the question seems obvious: he's a 66-year-old nationally syndicated conservative talk radio host whose program, The Savage Nation, airs five days a week from its home base of KNEW in San Francisco. He's the founder of the Paul Revere Society, which, according to its mission statement, aims to "take back our borders, our language, and our traditional culture from the liberal left corroding our great nation." He's a former MSNBC cable television talk host who was fired after four months on the job after he told a phone caller, "You should only get AIDS and die, you pig." He's also the third most popular radio talk show host in America, whose weekly audience of more than eight million listeners is surpassed only by Limbaugh and Hannity.

26 May 2008

FAIR Study: TV News Stresses Strategy, Downplays Issues

TV news coverage of the presidential primaries has focused on campaign strategy rather than candidates' stands on issues, and gave some candidates 100 times more coverage than others, according to a new study by FAIR.

FAIR studied primary election coverage on the nightly broadcast network newscasts in the six weeks leading up to February 5, often referred to this year as “Super-Duper Tuesday,” when 24 states held primaries or caucuses.

Of the 385 news stories aired on ABC World News, CBS Evening News and NBC Nightly News:

• 252 stories were mainly about campaign strategy--the “how” of getting elected--and 79 of those were only about strategy.

Only 19 stories, or one story in 20, were mainly about issues.

Eighty six percent of the stories were about campaign strategy/analysis, while 41 percent mentioned issues.

• When issues such as the economy, immigration and the Iraq War were present in a story, they were more often than not referred to in passing, usually in relation to polling.

In the 55 stories that raised the Iraq War as an issue, the networks made no mention of any of the Democrats’ plans for troop withdrawal or their stances on the troop “surge.”

• There was a vast discrepancy in the amount of coverage candidates received, with Barack Obama, Hilary Clinton, John McCain and Mitt Romney all receiving over 900 mentions, while Joe Biden, Ron Paul and Dennis Kucinich received ten or fewer mentions.

Kucinich appeared only seven times, with four of those reporting on his exiting the race.

The full study is available at: http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=3368

25 May 2008

Articles worth reading...

The Fall of Conservatism
George Packer, of The New Yorker writes: "The era of American politics that has been dying before our eyes was born in 1966. That January, a twenty-seven-year-old editorial writer for the St. Louis Globe-Democrat named Patrick Buchanan went to work for Richard Nixon, who was just beginning the most improbable political comeback in American history. Having served as Vice-President in the Eisenhower Administration, Nixon had lost the Presidency by a whisker to John F. Kennedy, in 1960, and had been humiliated in a 1962 bid for the California governorship. But he saw that he could propel himself back to power on the strength of a new feeling among Americans who, appalled by the chaos of the cities, the moral heedlessness of the young, and the insults to national pride in Vietnam, were ready to blame it all on the liberalism of President Lyndon B. Johnson. Right-wing populism was bubbling up from below; it needed to be guided by a leader who understood its resentments because he felt them, too."

To view complete article click here.

Oil: Power Has Changed Sides
Turthout.org brings us a translate of Le Monde journalist, Jean-Michel Bezat who says, "In the beginning of the 1970s, when a barrel of black gold cost less than $2, no one imagined that one day an American president would be reduced to begging the king of Saudi Arabia for an increase in the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries' (OPEC's) production to bring down prices. Yet the West has reached that point. After an initial rebuff in mid-January, George W. Bush was at it again on Friday, May 16, during his meeting with King Abdullah in Riyadh."

For complete article click here.

More Internet Radio coming to a portable device near you

Mark Ramsey of Hear 2.0 shows us new divices which will allow people with WIFI connectiosn to listen to Internet radio like any other broadcast radio station.

Read more, click here.

House Aims at Pentagon "Propaganda" on Iraq War
James Rainey for The Los Angeles Times reports, "The House of Representatives moved Thursday to crack down on a Pentagon program that Democrats say planted false and overly optimistic news stories about the Iraq war, using military analysts who appeared regularly on television."

For complete story click here.

Slavery Today: A Clear and Present Danger

Matt Renner, of Truthout: "Slavery never ended in the United States; it continues here and across the globe, facilitated by globalization, corruption and greed. There are more people enslaved today - controlled by violence and forced to work without pay - than at any time in human history. Experts put the number of slaves at 27 million worldwide. These men and women work across many sectors of the global economy, raking in profits for the criminals who hold them against their will. The US State Department estimates that 17,500 slaves are brought into the United States every year. An estimated 50,000 slaves are forced to work as prostitutes, farm workers and domestic servants in the US."

For complete article click here.

DOE Report Finds Wind Can Provide 20% of U.S. Electricity Needs by 2030
Wind power is capable of becoming a major contributor to America’s electricity supply over the next three decades, according to a report released earlier this month by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE). The report, 20 Percent Wind Energy by 2030: Increasing Wind Energy’s Contribution to U.S. Electricity Supply, looks at one scenario for reaching 20-percent wind energy by 2030, contrasting it with a scenario of no new U.S. wind power capacity. "DOE's wind report is a thorough look at America's wind resource, its industrial capabilities, and future energy prices, and confirms the viability and commercial maturity of wind as a major contributor to America's energy needs, now and in the future," said DOE Assistant Secretary of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Andy Karsner. "To dramatically reduce greenhouse gas emissions and enhance our energy security, clean power generation at the gigawatt-scale will be necessary, and will require us to take a comprehensive approach to scaling renewable wind power, streamlining siting and permitting processes, and expanding the domestic wind manufacturing base."
Included in the report are an examination of America’s technological and manufacturing capabilities, the future costs of energy sources, U.S. wind energy resources, and the environmental and economic impacts of wind development. Under the 20-percent wind scenario, installations of new wind power capacity would increase to more than 16,000 megawatts per year by 2018, and continue at that rate through 2030.
The report finds that achieving a 20 percent wind contribution to U.S. electricity supply would:
  • Reduce carbon dioxide emissions from electricity generation by 25 percent in 2030.
  • Reduce natural gas use by 11percent;
  • Reduce water consumption associated with electricity generation by 4 trillion gallons by 2030;
  • Increase annual revenues to local communities to more than $1.5 billion by 2030; and
  • Support roughly 500,000 jobs in the U.S., with an average of more than 150,000 workers directly employed by the wind industry.
At 20 percent of electric power generation, significant growth in the manufacturing supply chain would create jobs and remedy the current shortage in parts for wind turbines. Reducing the use of natural gas could save money for consumers due to the resulting downward pressure on the price of natural gas, according to AWEA.

For the complete report click here.

23 May 2008

Survey: Americans Say They’re Well-Informed, But Dissatisfied With Coverage of Iraq War

Zogby survey commissioned by Poynter reveals the stories people remember and the stories they want.

For five years, journalists have reported on the Iraq war from abroad and at home, telling stories about lives lost or forever changed, the economic impact of the war and the medical mistreatment of soldiers at Walter Reed Hospital.

A new study commissioned by The Poynter Institute to learn more about Americans’ views on Iraq war coverage reveals that of the 8,683 adults surveyed earlier this month, 75 percent feel well-informed. But the majority of readers, viewers and listeners say they are still far from satisfied with the coverage.

Among participants of the online survey, conducted by Zogby International, 47 percent described the coverage as ”poor” and 33 percent rated it “fair.” About 16 percent called it “good,” while 2 percent regarded it as “excellent.” Of those surveyed, 90 percent describe themselves as active consumers of news. (See sample details.)

The study reveals a deep dissatisfaction with war coverage and provides information journalists can use to learn more about what the public wants.

For the complete story, click here.

22 May 2008

Roberts Votes No on Bargaining Rights for Public Safety Workers

Another reason Senator Roberts needs to be retired....

Over the opposition of Kansas Senators Pat Roberts and Sam Brownback, the U.S. Senate moved a step closer to approving legislation that would protect the collective bargaining rights of tens of thousands of firefighters, police officers, emergency medical technicians and other public safety officers.

By a 69–29 vote on May 13, the Senate killed a filibuster led by several extreme anti-worker Republican senators against the workers’ rights bill. Eighteen Republicans joined all Democrats in backing the move to end the filibuster.

Some 20 states, including Kansas, do not fully protect the bargaining rights of firefighters, police officers and other first responders. Two states—Virginia and North Carolina—prohibit public safety employees from collectively bargaining. With final passage near certain, the only thing that stands in the first responders’ path to securing the workplace rights most other workers enjoy is a veto threat from the Bush administration.

But the Senate's veto-proof vote, coupled with last July’s 314–97 House vote, provides more than the two-thirds majority needed in each chamber to overturn a veto.

The bill, the Public Safety Employee-Employer Cooperation Act of 2007 (H.R. 980), guarantees first responders: * The right to join a union. * The right to have their union recognized by their employer. * The right to bargain collectively over hours, wages and terms and conditions of employment. * A mediation or arbitration process for resolving an impasse in negotiations. * Enforcement of the bill’s provisions through the courts.

20 May 2008

Stories of interest

A New Documentary Draws Stark Parallels Between Chile Under Pinochet and the Post-9/11 "War on Terror"

Sophia A McClennen for AlerNet writes: "Torture, the suspension of democracy and civil rights, illegal surveillance, forced displacement, and a culture of fear led by a despot who gains power through an act of violence committed on September 11. Sound familiar? Canadian director Peter Raymont's new documentary, A Promise to the Dead: The Exile Journey of Ariel Dorfman, covers familiar ground but in less familiar territory as he intertwines the life of Chilean writer Ariel Dorfman with the history of Chile and with the events of 9/11 in both Chile and the United States."
For complete story click here.

Senate Rejects Media Consolidation


Truthout's Christopher Kuttruff reports: "On Thursday night, the US Senate initiated the process of overturning an FCC ruling made in December to allow for greater media consolidation."
For the complete story click here.

Democracy in America

Bill Moyers writes for Common Dreams: "Democracy in America is a series of narrow escapes, and we may be running out of luck. The reigning presumption about the American experience, as the historian Lawrence Goodwyn has written, is grounded in the idea of progress, the conviction that the present is 'better' than the past and the future will bring even more improvement. For all of its shortcomings, we keep telling ourselves, 'The system works.' Now all bets are off. We have fallen under the spell of money, faction, and fear, and the great American experience in creating a different future together has been subjugated to individual cunning in the pursuit of wealth and power - and to the claims of empire, with its ravenous demands and stuporous distractions."
For the complete story click here.

McCain Secured Federal Funds Aiding Developer


Reuters reports: "Presumptive Republican presidential candidate John McCain secured millions in federal funds for a land acquisition program that provided a windfall for an Arizona developer whose executives were major campaign donors."
For the complete story click here.

Farm Bill Highlights Rich-Poor Debate


Gail Russell Chaddock, of The Christian Science Monitor writes: "At the heart of the standoff between the White House and Congress over a $307 billion farm bill is the question: Should taxpayers subsidize rich farmers - and who counts as rich? What income levels qualify - or disqualify - Americans from federal aid programs has figured in several clashes between the Bush administration and the Democrat-controlled Congress."
For the complete article click here.

"Extraordinary Rendition" on Trial in Italy

Elisabeth Rosenthal reports for the International Herald Tribune: "Clutching her Italian identity card in a gloved hand, the cloaked wife of a fiery Muslim cleric Wednesday tearfully recounted publicly for the first time how her husband was kidnapped on a Milan street in 2003 and sent to Egypt to endure torture and repeated imprisonment... Ghali Nabila spent more than six hours on the stand, marking the first testimony in a complicated court case that opened nearly a year ago." And, The Los Angeles Times' Tracy Wilkinson reports: "Ghali became the first witness to testify in the trial of 26 Americans, most of them CIA operatives, who are accused of kidnapping Abu Omar and flying him to Egypt as part of the US government's secret 'extraordinary rendition' program."
For the complete story click here.

19 May 2008

The Myth of Voter Fraud

New York Times Editorial
May 13, 2008
To view original click here.

Missouri and at least 19 other states are considering passing laws that would force people to prove their citizenship before they can vote. These bills are not a sincere effort to prevent noncitizens from voting; that is a made-up problem. The real aim is to reduce turnout by eligible voters. Republicans seem to think that laws of this kind will help them win elections, but burdensome rules like these — and others cropping up around the country — pose a serious threat to democracy and should be stopped.

The Missouri legislature is, as Ian Urbina reported in The Times on Monday, on the verge of passing an amendment to the State Constitution that would require proof of citizenship from anyone registering to vote. In addition to the Missouri amendment, which would require voter approval, Florida, Kansas, South Carolina and other states are considering similar rules.

There is no evidence that voting by noncitizens is a significant problem. Illegal immigrants do their best to remain in the shadows, to avoid attracting government attention and risking deportation. It is hard to imagine that many would walk into a polling place, in the presence of challengers and police, and try to cast a ballot.

There is, however, ample evidence that a requirement of proof of citizenship will keep many eligible voters from voting. Many people do not have birth certificates or other acceptable proof of citizenship, and for some people, that proof is not available. One Missouri voter, Lillie Lewis, said at a news conference last week that officials in Mississippi, where she was born, told her they had no record of her birth.

Proof of citizenship is just one of an array of new barriers to voting that have been springing up across the country. Indiana adopted a tough new photo ID voting requirement, over objections from Democrats that it would prevent eligible voters from casting a ballot. The critics were right. In last week’s Indiana primary, a group of about 12 nuns in their 80s and 90s were prevented from voting because they lacked acceptable ID.

As with Missouri’s proposed amendment, the driving force behind strict voter ID requirements in general is not a genuine effort to prevent fraud, since there is virtually no evidence that in-person voter fraud is occurring. It is, rather, the Republican Party’s electoral calculations. Barriers at the polls drive down voter turnout, especially among the poor, racial minorities and students — groups that are less likely than average to have driver’s licenses, and that are more likely than average to vote Democratic.

The imposition of harsh new requirements to vote has become a partisan issue, but it should not be. These rules are an assault on democracy itself. The current conservative Supreme Court showed last month, in its ruling upholding the Indiana ID law, that it will not perform its historical role of protecting voters. That puts the burden on state legislators, governors, state courts and ordinary citizens to ensure that the right to vote is not taken away for partisan political gain.

Copyright 2008 The New York Times Company

15 May 2008

No Converts: Being a conscientious objector in World War II

May 15 is International Conscientious Objectors Day honoring those who for reasons of conscience choose not to take up arms or enter the military.

- by Christopher E. Renner
The victors write history. But often pieces of the whole story are left out or lost to time, especially pieces that don’t quite fit with the legends that arise around an historical event.

World War II was fought between the Axis Powers - Germany, Italy and Japan - against the Allies - the U. S., Great Britain and her colonies along with Free France and other nations as they were liberated. It is often referred to as the “Good War.”

Today the number of those who served in World War II is dwindling, but efforts are underway to capture the stories of those who served so the whole story of World War II can be preserved, including those that don’t quite fit. Charles Perkins has one of those stories.

For 16 years, K-State’s psychology department was home to Charles Perkins. Perkins earned his Ph.D. in 1946 at the University of Iowa. His career included Kent State University, Emory University - where he was department head from 1961 - 1964, and finally K-State from which he retired in 1986.

At 91, Charlie Perkins moves a little slower than he did in 1941. Today Perkins busies himself with grandchildren and caring for his wife of 62 years, Nancy, at their retirement home in Seattle. They moved to Seattle two years ago to be closer to grandchildren and Perkins’ favorite fishing spots in Montana. As such, he was interviewed via telephone for this article.

Perkins’ story of his involvement in World War II isn’t typical of those you will find in the World War II kiosk at the Robert Dole Center in Lawrence, or in the many story projects that have begun to record the tales of heroism and bravery that the men and women who fought have to tell.

During World War II, 34.5 million men registered for the draft. According to records obtained by Nebraska Educational Television for their 1993 film, A Matter of Conscience, 72,354 applied for conscientious objector (CO) status. Approximately 25,000 of those COs served in non-combatant roles while some 29,000 were exempted when they failed to pass the physical exam. This latter number is difficult to confirm given that record keeping on 4-F (physical defects) classifications are not complete. Over 6,000 men rejected the draft outright and chose to go to jail instead of serving the war effort. Also, 12,000 men chose to perform alternative service in the Civilian Public Service (CPS), which supervised these men and the work they conducted. As a CO, Perkins was among these men.

Preparing for War
Missing from some history books is the fact that America has always had COs. George Washington specifically exempted those “of tender conscience” from induction into the Continental Army. Our nation’s principle of religious freedom brought Mennonite, Amish, Brethren/Dunker and many Jews seeking to escape compulsory military service in Europe.

A closer look at American history reveals numerous utopian experimental communities that often included a commitment to peace and nonviolence. But, until World War II, if one was a pacifist or conscientious objector in America, one was usually given only a few options: violate one’s conscience by serving in the military; pay for another to go in one’s place (an option until the Civil War); flee to avoid service (draft dodging); or prison.

Scott Bennett’s Radical Pacifism: The War Resisters League and Gandhian Nonviolence in America, 1915-1963 provides a complete historical overview leading up to the decisions the Roosevelt administration and Congress put in place for COs, following the reactions to imprisoning thousands of men who were COs in World War I.

In the months leading up to World War II, Congress recognized "CO Status" as a legitimate moral stand for the first time in our nation’s history. Under the law, objectors had two choices — they could go into the military but serve in non-combatant roles: the medical corps, food preparation, staff clerks, etc., or they were required to do "alternative service" here at home that was "work of national importance" in the Civilian Public Service (CPS).

The CPS was the product of a unique and conflicted collaboration between the U.S. government's Selective Service and the traditional peace churches: Mennonite/Amish, Church of the Brethren and Quakers. CPS was a response to the first peacetime draft in U.S. history, initiated more than a year before Pearl Harbor. It was also the first time COs were offered legal alternative service under civilian command.

The churches' goal was to prevent the fate COs suffered in World War I - including verbal harassment, physical beatings and death - and allow them to do "work of national importance" as an alternative to military service. The churches funded the CPS program through $7 million in donations.

For the government, their motivation came in part from the fall out caused by the lack of CO status in World War I and a fear that COs would have a negative impact on wartime morale. The government wanted to keep COs out of sight and saw the CPS as a means to that end.
CPS men were not limited to members of the peace churches; they represented over 200 religious groups and others, like Perkins, without church affiliation. Their only shared philosophy was the rejection of war.

“I just didn't believe war works and believed refusal to participate was a way to stop wars eventually,” said Perkins. “I had read Gandhi and Millis’ Road to War which had an effect on my thinking, but the Grand Inquisitor in Dostoevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov probably had the greatest impact in that it showed me that people could do the worst things based on the best motives.”

Becoming a CO
Generally the process for being a CO was pretty straightforward. The candidate had to appear before the Draft Board to make his case. COs coming from the historic peace churches were granted their status based on their religious affiliation. Perkins never met with his draft board in Cambridge, Mass.

“I guest I had to write something stating my position, but I don’t remember. I spent about a year thinking about war and war resistance and it was tough going. It is hard to take a position on a vital issue with which none of your friends or relatives agreed,” he said.

In any case, his status as a CO was approved and he received his orders to report to a Mennonite-ran camp in Henry, Ill.

Perkins and Nancy were married two months before he entered his first CPS camp in July 1942. This was supposed to help him stay closer to Nancy who was still working on her graduate degree at the University of Iowa in his camp assignments, but other than a few months when he was assigned to a state hospital in Michigan, Nancy wasn’t with him.

“COs varied in a lot of ways,” he said. “Some were political objectors. A large number of them just plain refused to serve” and were sentenced to prison as a result. In fact, one out of every six men in U.S. prisons during World War II was a draft resister. “I might have joined those who just plain refused, if I hadn’t received the medical discharge,” he said.

“As far as I could tell just about everyone I knew supported my decision to be a CO, but few if any agreed with my position,” said Perkins.

The life of a conscientious objector was often extremely difficult, especially for those who were not members of the traditional peace churches. Catholics, Jehovah's Witnesses, Muslims, and Jews are all among the ranks of COs and often this meant that society, friends and family rejected them.

“I think this depended on the CO,” said Perkins. “If he was sincere and open about his beliefs, he was accepted or at least not hassled openly.”

But it also depended “on the sort of people he had contact with,” he said.

CPS people had about the same amount of leave as military personnel.

“Riding on trains during leave I would bring up the fact that I was a CO, if it could be worked into the conversation,” said Perkins, “and had some good discussions but no converts. The Mennonites guys tried to avoid conversation with strangers for fear of violence.”

During World War I, Mennonite, Brethren and Quaker COs often faced violence for their pacifist beliefs. The CPS was supposed to eliminate such incidents.

Melvin Gingerich in his book Service for Peace, a History of Mennonite Civilian Public Service, reports that over 2,000 COs were imprisoned in World War I because they refused to take up arms. Will McKale, archivist at Fort Riley’s Cavalry Museum, confirmed that two Mennonites were beaten at Fort Riley for their refusal to take up arms, but that “no COs were assigned to the base during World War II.”

CPS camps members found themselves reviled by the communities located nearby. In PBS’s The Good War, World War II CO Martin Ponch gives an example of the resentment CPS members encountered when he tells of how the City of Plymouth, N.H., allowed nearly a third of the city to burn down rather than call on the services of the trained firefighters at the CPS camp outside of town.

Life in the Camp
In early 1941 COs began receiving orders to report to CPS camps. Most expected to stay for six months based on government issued information. An expectation that would prove to be false as most COs would stay in the camps for the duration of the war and others would not be released from duty until 1947, two years after World War II had ended.

According to Albert Keim in his book The CPS Story: An Illustrated History of Civilian Public Service, COs were required to work nine-hour days, six days a week, often at hard labor. In addition they were expected to pay the government $35 a month for their room and board. Those that could, covered this expense on their own, but for many this expense was covered at great cost by their congregations. These same congregations provided an additional $2.50 a month for expenses. The families of married COs had no such support. For them the war years were a time of dire poverty.

Perkins was in CPS service for one and a half years before receiving a medial discharge. Following his first assignment at Henry, Ill., he was transferred to Downey, Idaho, where he worked in soil conservation.

“Soil conservation was done mostly by the shovelful,” said Perkins. “The regular soil conservation men who assigned the work were not permitted to have COs do work that would put them in regular contact with farmers that the service had contracts.” As a result, the CPS members mostly worked on isolated projects.

Finally he was assigned to a state hospital in Michigan where he preformed the duties of a registered nurse, even if he had no formal training as one.

Life in the camp “was a case of culture shock. I had refused to claim religious grounds [for my status as a CO] and almost all the other campees there were fundamentalists,” said Perkins. “Their attitudes were very different from mine. In Henry there was a fair amount of conflict between a small group of radicals and the Mennonites in control. The radicals wanted things to be done democratically.”

Camp life was pretty routine.

“You got up fairly early, had breakfast and then were driven to where ever we would work,” he said. The men had a fair amount of free time, which was spent talking to other COs, or in Perkins case, writing letters home to Nancy.

“The camp in Idaho was a little more liberal. About half were people who thought in terms of the social effect of war and weren’t really religious,” he said.

Such thinking was more in line with Perkins’ own beliefs.

His work in Michigan was an eye opening experience. “The state hospital was pretty bad, but not as bad as some of them,” he said.

Long-term contributions
Beginning in 1942 and following agitation and work walkouts, COs began to take on responsibilities not originally foreseen by the CPS structure. COs began to fill the rank of those working in mental institutions which had seen their employees leave for better-paying jobs in the war industries. According to The Good War over 3,000 COs worked in 41 mental institutions in 20 states, and at 17 training schools for "mental deficients" in 12 states. This work is perhaps the most significant long-term contribution World War II COs made to the national welfare.

Alex Sareyan in The Turning Point discusses how the conditions of these institutions were extreme with patients often suffering cruel and inhumane treatment at the hands of institutional officials. In response, CO's introduced nonviolent methods of patient care, took legal action and won a lawsuit against the state of Virginia for humane treatment of patients, and contributed to the founding of what became the National Mental Health Foundation.

Sareyan points out that the COs most important work was a shocking 1946 Life Magazine exposé that brought national attention to the issue of mental health and treatment of patients. Life reporter Albert Q. Maisel’s exposé was based on first-hand accounts by COs. Their reports shocked the nation as they revealed the squalid and repressive conditions in mental institutions and lead to reforms that continue to the present day.

“I don’t think my time as a CO had any effect on me in terms of people’s reactions. I came to my views very much on my own. Most of my friends volunteer for the military. My brother was a paratrooper who fought in the Philippines, one sister was a WAC and the other lost a husband who was serving in the navy.”

“What it did was make me more committed to social issues,” said Perkins. He was involved in the civil rights movement during his time in Atlanta and in Iowa City where he helped with organization and participated in protests and probably wouldn’t have been had he not developed his CO attitudes.

“The people in my age group that I run into talk about nonviolence, but back then no one used the term,” Perkins said. Nonviolence is how many of his generation are today reaching out to new COs, some of whom have come to their decisions based on their experiences as active duty military and thinking about what they are being asked to do.

The Center on Conscience and War, which advises military personnel on CO discharges, reported on April 14, 2003 that several hundred service members had contact their group for assistance in applying for CO status since the start of 2003--when many soldiers realized they might have to fight in the Iraq war.

The Government Accountability Office report found that from 2002 to 2006 the active and reserve components of all the military reported processing 425 applications for conscientious objectors. Two of the most publicized cases in recent months involve Spc. Jeremy Hinzman and Staff Sgt. Camilo Mejia. Like Perkins, they have come to the decisions based on their life experiences that have lead them to conclude that war isn’t the answer.


World War II CO Timeline

1940
July 1 - Congress passes the Selective service Training and Service Act of 1940 creating the first peacetime draft in US history. Signed into law by President Roosevelt on September 16, conscientious objectors (COs) are exempted on the basis of training and belief.
October 5 - Historic peace churches - Quakers, Church of the Brethren and Mennonites -form the National Service Board for Religious Conscientious Objectors.
October 30 - Conscription begins.
December 17 - Civilian Public Service is established to provide COs with the opportunity to serve their country by doing “work of national importance.” The federal government and the peace churches jointly create 151 camps across the country to inter legal COs.
1941
May 15 - First COs receive orders to report to the CPS camp at Patapsco, Maryland.
1942
February 16 - COs walk out of a CPS camp in Merom, Indiana, because of the lack of “work of national importance.”
March 5 - COs begin performing other tasks (as smoke jumpers, attendants in mental hospitals, human guinea pigs) as detached CPS units working outside of the camps.
June - First CPS unit arrives at Eastern State Mental Hospital in Williamsburg, Virginia.
1943
June - First smoke jumpers assigned to work in Missoula, Montana.
December 23 - Segregation at Danbury Federal Prison ends as the result of a four-month work strike by 23 COs.
1944
January/February - the Civilian Public Service Union is organized at the CPS camp in Big Flats, New York. The union provides an organized means of communication and group action among the COs nation-wide.
June 24 - COs volunteer as guinea pigs for influenza and pneumonia experiments.
1945
May 7 - Unconditional surrender of all German forces to Allies.
Aug 6 - First atomic bomb dropped, on Hiroshima, Japan.
Aug 9 - Second atomic bomb dropped, on Nagasaki, Japan.
Aug 14 - Japanese agree to unconditional surrender.
Oct 24 - United Nations is officially born.
1946
May - COs who had worked in mental hospitals found the National Mental Health Foundation.
Life magazine reporter, Albert Q. Maisel, writes an exposé based of first-hand accounts by COs that shocks the nation as it reveals the conditions in mental institutions.
1947
April - COs George Houser and Bayard Rustin and the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) organize the first Freedom Ride though south.
Last COs released from CPS camps - two years after the end of World War II.
New Legislation and Debate on Net Neutrality

Christopher Kuttruff, of Truthout: "Last week, lawmakers proposed legislation on network neutrality that would open up the possibility for antitrust lawsuits against companies that violate the bill's regulations. The bill has fueled the ongoing debate about the implications of network regulation. On Thursday, May 8, House Judiciary Chairman John Conyers (D-Michigan) and Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-California) introduced the 'Internet Freedom and Nondiscrimination Act of 2008' (H.R. 5994) which seeks to prevent anti-competitive and discriminatory activity by broadband Internet service providers."

For complete story go to:
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2006/051508J.shtml

Judge Counters Army, Approves Conscientious Objector Status

For the Anchorage Daily News, George Bryson writes: "The Army should grant conscientious objector status to Pfc. Michael Barnes, a Fort Richardson-based paratrooper who had his request for that designation denied last year, U.S. Magistrate John D. Roberts concluded Tuesday. In a 26-page recommendation to the U.S. District Court, Roberts noted that the Army failed to show 'any basis in fact' to support its decision to deny Barnes' petition to be honorably discharged due to his religious beliefs."

For complete story go to:
http://www.adn.com/front/story/405341.html

What's McCain Have Against Education Benefits for Veterans?

David Lightman, of McClatchy Newspapers: "The 'Post 9/11 Veterans Educational Assistance Act' sounds like the kind of rally-round-the-flag plan that John McCain, Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton all could embrace. Instead, it's become one of the starkest dividing lines between McCain, the presumptive Republican nominee, and his likely Democratic opponent. The bill, which the House of Representatives is expected to debate as soon as Thursday and the Senate could take up next week, would increase education aid to all military members who've served on active duty since the Sept. 11, 2001."

For complete story go to:
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/251/story/36929.html

14 May 2008

Articles of possible interest...

Scott Ritter on Opposing War with Iran
The Chicago City Council is debating a resolution urging the Illinois congressional delegation to oppose a war with Iran. Scott Ritter, who has been called as an expert witness on the matter, explains why the resolution should be supported—and not just by the citizens of Chicago.
For full article go to: http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/20080511_taking_a_stand_against_war/

Robert Scheer on Torture
"The Tortured Law on Torture" -- Ah yes, those torture confessions have proved so useful. That, at least, was the claim of our president in justifying one of the most egregious assaults ever on this nation’s commitment to the rule of law. But now comes news that charges have been dropped against the so-called Sept. 11 attacks’ 20th hijacker, one of dozens so identified, because the “evidence” he supplied under torture and later recanted is not credible enough to go to trial.
For full article go to:
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/20080513_the_tortured_law_on_torture/

Wind Can Supply 20 Percent of US Electricity
Washington Post Staff Writer , Tuesday, May 13, 2008; Page D07
The Washington Post's Steven Mufson writes: "The Energy Department said yesterday that the United States has the ability to meet 20 percent of its electricity-generation needs with wind by 2030, enough to displace 50 percent of natural gas consumption and 18 percent of coal consumption."

For full article go to:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/05/12/AR2008051202596.html

Breaking news from The Onion...

30 Years Of Man's Life Disappear In Mysterious 'Kansas Rectangle'
While traveling across the 'Kansas Rectangle" former Chicagoan Kevin Corcoran suddenly vanished into the eerie region 30 years ago this week, never to return.
For full article go to:
http://www.theonion.com/content/news/30_years_of_mans_life_disappear_in?utm_source=EMTF_Onion

12 May 2008

The Truth About Veteran Suicides

Aaron Glantz writes for Foreign Policy in Focus: "Eighteen American war veterans kill themselves every day. One thousand former soldiers receiving care from the Department of Veterans Affairs attempt suicide every month. More veterans are committing suicide than are dying in combat overseas."

To read the complete article click here.

Truthout video to watch....

In their recent book "Betraying Our Troops: The Destructive Results of Privatizing War," Dina Rasor and Robert Bauman present firsthand accounts of fraud, deception, negligence and treachery by contractors during the privatized invasion and occupation of Iraq.

This is the first war that was designed to rely on contractors - private companies with profit as their top priority - for transportation, food, water, spare parts and even protection. As a result, according to Rasor and Bauman, the government has been bilked out of billions of dollars, Americans and Iraqis have suffered and died, and the war effort as a whole has been deeply weakened.

Dina Rasor founded the Project On Governmental Oversight and now serves on the board of directors. She sat down with me to discuss the ongoing problems with military contracting and the complete lack of fraud prosecution at the Department of Justice.

For more information on Rasor and Bauman's work, visit Follow the Money Project.


Matt Renner interviews Dina Rasor in this informative video. To watch click here.


Iraq: Will We Ever Get Out?

Thomas Powers writes in The New York Review of Books: "There is a working assumption among the American people that a new president enters the White House free of responsibility for the errors of the past, free to set a new course in any program or policy, and therefore free - at the very least in constitutional theory, and perhaps even really and truly free - to call off a war begun by a predecessor. No one would expect something so dramatic on the first day of a new administration but it remains a fact that the president is the commander in chief of the armed forces, and the power that allowed one president to invade Iraq would allow another to bring the troops home."

Long, but well worth the read. Click here to see full article.

09 May 2008

War Made Easy

By Norman Solomon
t r u t h o u t | Perspective

Tuesday 06 May 2008

To view CNN interview, click here.

When The New York Times published its explosive "Pentagon Pundits" story on April 20, the result was a wave of criticism directed at the Defense Department for manipulating TV news coverage of the Iraq war. Critics also faulted the networks for failing to scrutinize the conflicts of interest of the "military analysts" who went on the air. Many of those retired military officers were being coached by the Pentagon to mislead the public, and many had personal financial stakes in corporations with major Pentagon contracts.

Routinely lost in the current uproar is the extent to which media managers have gone out of their way to suck up to the Pentagon. Top network executive Eason Jordan - who ran CNN's news operation during the invasion of Iraq - is a case in point. He repeatedly asked the Pentagon for approval of the "military analysts" who were under consideration for on-air roles.

The documentary film "War Made Easy," based on my book of the same name, shows the pervasive and long-running partnership between key news outlets and high-ranking warmakers in Washington. This video excerpt from the movie puts the "Pentagon Pundits" story in a broad and chilling context.

Years later, some news outlets like to critique the previous media spin for war. It's part of what amounts to a repetition compulsion disorder - which includes participating in the corrupted process and then critiquing it long after the damage has been done.

Unfortunately, when the next agenda-setting for war gets underway, as is now the case for Iran, the mainline news reporting slides into a very similar mode of parroting official sources. It's not hard to point the finger backwards and acknowledge misdeeds in the past. As Mark Twain said long ago: "It's easy to quit smoking. I've done it hundreds of times."


From the "War Made Easy" transcript:

SEAN PENN [narrator]: CNN's use of retired generals as supposedly independent experts reinforced a decidedly military mindset, even as serious questions remained about the wisdom and necessity of going to war.

NORMAN SOLOMON: Often journalists blame the government for the failure of the journalists themselves to do independent reporting. But nobody forced the major networks like CNN to do so much commentary from retired generals and admirals and all the rest of it. You had a top CNN official named Eason Jordan going on the air of his network and boasting that he had visited the Pentagon with a list of possible military commentators, and he asked officials at the Defense Department whether that was a good list of people to hire.

EASON JORDAN [speaking on CNN]: Oh, I think it's important to have experts explain the war and to describe the military hardware, describe the tactics, talk about the strategy behind the conflict. I went to the Pentagon myself several times before the war started and met with important people there and said, for instance, at CNN, here are the generals we're thinking of retaining to advise us on the air and off about the war, and we got a big thumbs up on all of them. That was important.

NORMAN SOLOMON: It wasn't even something to hide, ultimately. It was something to say to the American people on its own network, "See, we're team players. We may be the news media, but we're on the same side and the same page as the Pentagon." And that really runs directly counter to the idea of an independent press, and that suggests that we have some deep patterns of media avoidance when the US is involved in a war based on lies.

-------

FCC Urged to Look into Pentagon Analysts

TVWeek, May 6, 2008

By Ira Teinowitz

The Federal Communications Commission is the latest federal agency being asked by members of Congress to investigate the Pentagon's use of network and cable military analysts.

In a letter today, Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, joined U.S. Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn., in asking the FCC to probe whether the Pentagon’s wooing of the analysts was sufficient to require sponsorship identification when the analysts appeared.

“While we deem the DoD’s policy unethical and perhaps illegal, we also question whether the analysts and the networks are potentially equally culpable pursuant to the sponsorship identification requirements in the Communications Act of 1934 and the rules of the Federal Communications Commission,” the letter stated.

“When seemingly objective television commentators are in fact highly motivated to promote the agenda of a government agency, a gross violation of the public trust occurs,” it continued. “The American people should never be subject to a covert propaganda campaign but rather should be clearly notified of who is sponsoring what they are watching.”

The New York Times disclosed recently that the Pentagon had a program to woo the analysts to its stance on the Iraq war that included providing trips to combat zones and meetings with top defense officials. The paper reported that some of the analysts were at the time also working with companies seeking defense contracts, potentially giving them information and access not enjoyed by competitors and risking that access with unfavorable TV reports.

Rep. DeLauro previously wrote to news executives at the TV and cable networks asking they explain their criteria for military analysts; she joined with 40 other congressmen to ask the Pentagon’s Inspector General to conduct a probe.

Her office said today that executives of ABC News and CNN have responded.

FCC Commissioner Michael J. Copps suggested the agency should investigate.

“Forty-seven years ago, President Eisenhower warned against the excesses of a military-industrial complex. I’d like to think that hasn’t morphed into a military-industrial-media complex, but reports of spinning the news through a program of favored insiders don’t inspire a lot of confidence. Chairman Dingell and Chairwoman DeLauro are right to seek inquiries as to what went on and whether any violations may have occurred,” said Mr. Copps.

07 May 2008

Women Take Stand for Better World


Group Urges Women to Rise in Global Silence at 1 p.m., May 11

Mother’s Day is fast approaching and as we prepare to celebrate the mothers in our lives we often neglect to recognize the most important mother of all: Mother Earth. On Sunday, May 11 at 1 p.m., thousands of people around the globe will stand together in silence for five minutes in local parks, schools, churches and other gathering places to promote a better world for future generations. The result will be a 24-hour global wave of humanity standing to motivate and invigorate others to realize the dream of a better world for all.
In May of 2007, thousands of women stood together in 75 countries and on all the continents of the globe to show their support for the world of which they dream. Inspired by a story written by Sharon Mehdi of Ashland, Oregon, The Great Silent Grandmother Gathering, collectively they decided that it was time to take a stand to make a difference. By standing for a moment of silence, participants will recognize the importance for all of the children of the world of issues such as safe drinking water, clean air, food for all to eat, access to basic education, adequate health care and safety from violence.

The event is not limited only to women, however, and many men stood in May 2007. Julian Koss of Sarasota, Florida has actively promoted the event in his state. “We’re all obligated to leave for our children and the ‘seven generations to follow’ a better world,” says Koss.

Standing sites in all 50 U.S. states and around the globe are listed on the website and range from large-scale groups of a thousand or more to individual standings. Participants have the option of attending one of the gatherings listed or starting their own.

In our area, we invite you to stand together at the Peace Pole at the Manhattan Community Garden.

More information on the event including standing sites, promotional materials and registration can be found at www.standingwomen.org.

For more information on our local standing contact: Carol Barta 785-410-8608.

Roberts, Brownback Block Pay Equity Bill

From Kansas WorkBeat

One day after Equal Pay Day, a minority of primarily Republican senators once again made it harder for women workers to overcome pay discrimination.

The Senate failed to cut off debate on the Fair Pay Restoration Act (H.R. 2831) and bring the bill to the floor for a vote. The 56-42 margin fell four votes short of the 60 needed to end debate and vote on the bill. The House passed the legislation July 2007. President Bush has threatened to veto the bill if passed by the Senate. Kansas Senators Pat Roberts and Sam Brownback voted against the bill.

The legislation, also known as the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, would reverse a 2007 U.S. Supreme Court decision dismissing a suit by Lilly Ledbetter, an employee for 19 years at a Goodyear Tire plant in Alabama. Her suit alleged she was paid less than her male counterparts.

In the Ledbetter ruling, the Supreme Court said she did not file her lawsuit against Goodyear within 180 days after the discrimination occurred, as required by Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The court let the company off the hook by calculating the deadline from the day Goodyear made its original decision to pay her less than her male colleagues. The law had previously made it clear the clock did not start until she received her last discriminatory paycheck. The bill would remove the 180-day limit.

06 May 2008

A Nuclear Energy Renaissance Wouldn't Solve Our Problems, But It Would Rip Us Off

By Christian Parenti, The Nation.
Posted May 6, 2008.


If you listen to the rhetoric, nuclear power is back. Smashing atoms will replace burning carbon-based coal, gas and oil. In the face of a disaster movie-like future of runaway climate change -- bringing drought, floods, famine and social breakdown -- carbon-free nukes are cast as the deus ex machina to save us at the last minute.

Even a few greens support nuclear power -- most famously James Lovelock, father of the Gaia theory. In the popular press, discussion of nuclear energy is dominated by its boosters, thanks in part to sophisticated industry PR.

In an effort to jump-start a "nuclear renaissance," the Bush Administration has pushed one package of subsidies after another. For the past two years a program of federal loan guarantees has sat waiting for utilities to build nukes. Last year's appropriations bill set the total amount on offer at $18.5 billion. And now the Lieberman-Warner climate change bill is gaining momentum and will likely accrue amendments that will offer yet more money.

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) expects up to thirty applications to be filed to build atomic plants; five or six of those proposals are moving through the complicated multi-stage process. But no new atomic power stations have been fully licensed or have broken ground. And two newly proposed projects have just been shelved.

The fact is, nuclear power has not recovered from the crisis that hit it three decades ago with the reactor fire at Browns Ferry, Alabama, in 1975 and the meltdown at Three Mile Island in 1979. Then came what seemed to be the coup de grâce: Chernobyl in 1986. The last nuclear power plant ordered by a U.S. utility, the TVA's Watts Bar 1, began construction in 1973 and took twenty-three years to complete. Nuclear power has been in steady decline worldwide since 1984, with almost as many plants canceled as completed since then.

All of which raises the question: why is the much-storied "nuclear renaissance" so slow to get rolling? Who is holding up the show? In a nutshell, blame Warren Buffett and the banks -- they won't put up the cash.

"Wall Street doesn't like nuclear power," says Arjun Makhijani of the Institute for Energy and Environmental Research. The fundamental fact is that nuclear power is too expensive and risky to attract the necessary commercial investors. Even with vast government subsidies, it is difficult or almost impossible to get proper financing and insurance. The massive federal subsidies on offer will cover up to 80 percent of construction costs of several nuclear power plants in addition to generous production tax credits, as well as risk insurance. But consider this: the average two-reactor nuclear power plant is estimated to cost $10 billion to $18 billion to build. That's before cost overruns, and no U.S. nuclear power plant has ever been delivered on time or on budget.

As Dieter Helm, an Oxford professor and leading economic expert on energy markets, has found, there never has been and never will be a nuclear power program totally dependent on the market.

Sixty years ago, the technology was swathed in manic space-age optimism -- its electricity was going to be "too cheap to meter." While that wasn't true, nuclear power did serve a key role in the cold war: spent nuclear fuel rods are refined for weapons-grade plutonium and enriched uranium. That fact aside, rarely has so much money, scientific know-how and raw state power been marshaled to achieve so little. By some estimates, an investment of several hundred billion dollars has led to a U.S. nuke industry of 104 operating plants -- about a quarter of the global total -- that produces a mere 19 percent of our electricity.

In fact, the sputtering decline of nuclear power has been one of the greatest industrial failures of modern times. In 1985 Forbes called the nuke industry "the largest managerial disaster in history."

Atomic optimism run amok caused the largest municipal bond default in U.S. history. In 1983 Washington Public Power Supply System abandoned three nuke plants in midconstruction. The projects were plagued by massive cost overruns -- one infamous section of piping was reinstalled seventeen times, safety inspections were blatantly ignored, incompetent contractors were allowed to continue work and on and on. When the project finally died, unfinished costs had ballooned to $24 billion, and the utility walked away from $2.25 billion worth of bonds.

That project, like many others, drowned in the financial riptides of rising interest rates that were the central feature of the "Volcker recession" of the early '80s. (That was when Federal Reserve chairman Paul Volcker smashed inflation by jacking the Fed's interest rate from 8 percent in 1979 to more than 16 percent in 1982.) But nukes were also killed by the corruption and incompetence that so often plague large state projects, like Boston's Big Dig, the New Orleans levees, space-based weapons systems and Iraq's reconstruction.

Another reason atomic energy is so expensive is that its accidents are potentially catastrophic, and activists have forced utilities to build in costly double and triple safety systems. Right-wing champions of atom-smashing blame prohibitive costs on neurotic fears and unnecessary safety measures. They have a point in that safety is expensive, but safety is hardly excessive -- details on that in a moment.

More important is the fact that nuclear fission is a mind-bogglingly complex process, a sublime, truly Promethean technology. Let's recall: it involves smashing a subatomic particle, a neutron, into an atom of uranium-235 to release energy and more neutrons, which then smash other atoms that release more energy and so on infinitely, except the whole process is controlled and used to boil water, which spins a turbine that generates electricity.

In this nether realm, where industry and science seek to reproduce a process akin to that which occurs inside the sun, even basic tasks -- like moving the fuel rods, changing spare parts -- become complicated, mechanized and expensive. Atom-smashing is to coal power, or a windmill, as a Formula One race-car engine is to the mechanics of a bicycle. Thus, it costs an enormous amount of money.

Worldwide, about twenty nuclear power plants are being built, but most are in Asia and Russia and are closely linked to nuclear weapons programs. Japan and France have large nuke programs, but both countries heavily subsidize their plants, use a single design and built their fleets not to make profits but to ensure some minimum strategic energy independence and, for France, to build an atomic arsenal.

Even if a society were ready to absorb the high costs of nuclear power, it hardly makes the most sense as a tool to quickly combat climate change. These plants take too long to build. A 2004 analysis in Science by Stephen Pacala and Robert Socolow, of Princeton University's Carbon Mitigation Initiative, estimates that achieving just one-seventh of the carbon reductions necessary to stabilize atmospheric CO2 at 500 parts per billion would require "building about 700 new 1,000- megawatt nuclear plants around the world." That represents a huge wave of investment that few seem willing to undertake, and it would require decades to accomplish.

None of this has stopped the Bush Administration and Congress from channeling more money toward nukes. The current push to build nukes began in 2002, when the Administration launched its Nuclear Power 2010 program, which sought to spur construction of at least three major nuclear power plants. Then came the U.S. Energy Policy Act of 2005, which offered three major forms of subsidy. New nuclear power plants could get production tax credits, federal loan guarantees and construction insurance against cost overruns and delays -- together worth $18.5 billion.

The notion that nukes make sense and are the version of green preferred by grown-ups is being conjured by a slick PR campaign. The Nuclear Energy Institute -- the industry's main trade group -- has retained Hill and Knowlton to run a greenwashing campaign.

Part of their strategy involves an advocacy group with the grassroots-sounding name the Clean and Safe Energy Coalition. At the center of the effort are former EPA chief Christine Todd Whitman and former Greenpeace co-founder turned corporate shill Patrick Moore. (Moore is also a huge champion of GMO crops, which are notorious for impoverishing farmers in developing economies and using massive amounts of pesticides.) The industry also places ghostwritten op-eds under the bylines of scientists for hire.

All the major environmental groups oppose nuclear power. But the campaign is having some impact at the grassroots: the online environmental journal Grist found that 54 percent of its readers are ready to give atomic energy a second look; 59 percent of Treehugger.com readers feel the same way. In other words, people who understand climate change are feeling downright desperate.

But even the Oz-like magic of corporate spin, public subsidies and presidential speechifying have their limits. In late December the man whose name is synonymous with sound money turned his back on nuclear power.

Warren Buffett's MidAmerican Nuclear Energy Company scrapped plans to build a plant in Payette, Idaho, because no matter how many times its managers ran the numbers (and they spent $13 million researching it), they found that it simply made no sense from an economic standpoint.

South Carolina Electric and Gas has also suspended its two planned reactors, citing costs as the key factor. But the company says, "We remain very upbeat about the future of nuclear power."

If a nuke plant breaks ground soon, it will likely be NRG Energy's double-reactor plant, set to be erected in South Texas. But that one has also been delayed.

The fact that new nukes make little economic sense does not mean that old nukes are not profitable. In fact, these nightmarishly complex radioactive boondoggles have recently been turned into cash cows. Utilities achieved this remarkable transformation the old-fashioned way -- they used socialism.

Beginning in the 1990s, most American energy markets were deregulated one state, one region at a time. In the process many old utilities were broken up into different firms: some generated power, others sold it, still others handled transmission. One of the crucial details of deregulation was allowing utilities to pass on to rate payers the "stranded costs" -- the outstanding mortgage payments of their nuclear power plants.

Perhaps the most egregious example of this occurred in California. In 1996 the State Assembly passed legislation -- written by utility lobbyists -- that allowed Southern California Edison and Pacific Gas & Electric to hold rates high as prices dropped nationally. The two utilities were on target to receive $28 billion over four years. This money would pay off the stranded costs of the Diablo Canyon and San Onofre atomic plants. Halfway through the deal the California power crisis hit and deregulation was put on hold -- utilities were forced to stop selling off their assets, and third-party speculation in energy markets was halted. But the state floated bonds to mop up the remaining stranded costs.

Similar deals were struck across the country. Once unburdened of old debts, the nuke plants -- now having relatively low overhead costs -- became valuable assets. A new generation of firms began buying them up. By 2002 ten companies owned seventy of the nation's 104 reactors. Among the big players in this game are Exelon, Entergy and Dominion Resources.

Many of the old plants went for a song. A particularly disturbing example of this is Vermont Yankee, a thirty-five-year-old reactor purchased by Entergy seven years ago for a mere $180 million. That's about half the price it would cost to build an equal-sized coal plant or wind farm.

Now Entergy is trying to run the power station as hard and as long as possible. In 2006 it received approval to increase power output at the plant by 20 percent. This "uprate" means the plant operates with 20 percent more pressure, heat and flow. And in just one year it earned Entergy $100 million in profits. Over the last decade, almost all U.S. nuclear power plants have received uprates, but few match Vermont Yankee's full-throttle, 120 percent capacity.

Just after the uprate, one of Vermont Yankee's twenty-two cooling towers collapsed. That's right -- it crumbled and fell over. Entergy officials said the collapse "baffled" them. The plant's spokesman, Rob Williams, admitted that "our inspections were not effective enough." Reached by phone, Gregory Jaczko, a commissioner at the NRC, admitted that the collapse "didn't look good." But he went on to reassure the public that the plant is essentially safe.

Now Entergy is petitioning the NRC to extend its operating license so that it can run the old plant for twenty years longer than was intended. Nationally, forty-eight facilities have had their licenses extended. In fact, despite critics' arguments that aging plants pose serious dangers, no license renewal requests have ever been denied.

"The NRC falls all over itself to facilitate the industry," says Ray Shadis, a consultant who has worked for both environmental groups and on NRC panels and research projects. The Project on Government Oversight and other watchdog groups point to a revolving door between the commission's staff and the nuclear industry. To take just one example, in 2007 former commissioner Jeffrey Merrifield joined the Shaw Group after spending his last months on the commission pushing to ease restrictions for precisely the type of construction activities that were the Shaw Group's specialty.

Diana Sidebotham, an antinuclear activist in Putney, Vermont, twenty miles north of the Vermont Yankee plant, thinks Entergy and the NRC are courting disaster. In 1971 Sidebotham helped found the New England Coalition on Nuclear Pollution, and she has been trying to shut down nuclear plants ever since. Her hillside farm looks out over the ridge lines of the Connecticut River Valley.

"One of these days a plant will blow," says Sidebotham, with just a touch of a genteel but steely New England accent. "And when it does, it will cause a great many deaths and widespread suffering, not to mention extraordinary economic damage."

Accidents do happen. In 2002 the Davis-Besse Nuclear Plant in Ohio was forced to close for two years after inspectors found a football-sized corrosion hole in the reactor's six-inch-thick steel cap. The plant was very close to a major accident. Repairs cost $600 million.

Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama says he opposes any more relicensing of old nuclear plants. His rival Hillary Clinton has stopped just short of saying that. However, as was reported by the New York Times, Obama has close ties to the nuclear industry, particularly the Illinois-based Exelon, which has contributed at least $227,000 to his campaigns. Two of his top advisers have links to the firm, including his chief strategist, David Axelrod, who was a consultant for Exelon. Obama voted yes on the 2005 Energy bill, which lavished subsidies on oil, coal, ethanol and nukes; Senator Clinton, like almost half the Senate Democrats, voted against it. The Obama campaign says that as President he would not cut nuclear subsidies, only that he would boost subsidies for green power.

Activists like Sidebotham say the real issue is not how to build more nukes but how to handle the old, decrepit plants and their huge stockpiles of radioactive waste. Most of the atomic plants in this country are reaching the end of their life span; seventeen have been decommissioned. And increasingly the question is what to do with the accumulated waste -- the extremely radioactive spent fuel rods. This is dangerous stuff. If exposed to air for more than six hours, spent fuel rods spontaneously combust, spewing highly poisonous radioactive isotopes far and wide. This spent fuel will be hot for 10,000 years.

Since 1978 the Energy Department has been studying Yucca Mountain in Nevada as a possible permanent repository for atomic waste. But intense opposition has held up those efforts. In the meantime, the partially burned uranium is stored at the old power plants, in pools of water called "spent fuel pools." Lying near great cities, on crucial river systems, in small rural towns, these pools are potentially a far greater risk than a reactor meltdown. Scenarios for how terrorists might attack and drain them range from driving a truck bomb to crashing an explosive-laden plane into them.

Just after 9/11, when security at nuke plants was supposed to be high, lead pellets started raining down on the containment structure and guard shack at Maine Yankee, in Wiscasset. (The plant has since been decommissioned.) A group of four men in camouflage, armed and intent on killing, had infiltrated into a swamp and were firing weapons from somewhere in the reeds. This "cell" turned out to be four local duck hunters who had no idea they were hitting the power plant.

Their foray against innocent mallards proved just how easy an attack could be. Activists demanded, and got, a safety review, which led to a shockingly blunt NRC document called "Report on Spent Fuel Pool Accident Risk," or NUREG-1738. The report found that containment structures, such as that at Vermont Yankee, "present no substantial obstacle to aircraft penetration." According to the NRC, a fire in the spent fuel pool at a reactor like Vermont Yankee (which stores 488 metric tons of spent fuel) would cause 25,000 fatalities over a distance of 500 miles if evacuation was 95 percent effective. But that evacuation rate would be almost impossible to achieve. The NRC claims to have the threat of terrorism under control, but for reasons of national security it can't explain how. And after 9/11 it admitted, "At this time, we could not exclude the possibility that a jetliner flying into a containment structure could damage the facility and cause a release of radiation that could impact public health."

Humanity's Faustian bargain with atomic power is a story still in its early stages. No one knows how long nuclear facilities will last or what will happen to them during future social upheavals -- and there are bound to be a few of those during the next 10,000 years.

This much seems clear: a handful of firms might soak up huge federal subsidies and build one or two overpriced plants. While a new administration might tighten regulations, public safety will continue to be menaced by problems at new as well as older plants. But there will be no massive nuclear renaissance. Talk of such a renaissance, however, helps keep people distracted, their minds off the real project of developing wind, solar, geothermal and tidal kinetics to build a green power grid.

Christian Parenti is the author of The Freedom: Shadows and Hallucinations in Occupied Iraq (New Press) and a visiting fellow at CUNY's Center for Place, Culture and Politics.