Thursday, October 30, 2008

Prospect of an African-American president is bringing white supremacist subculture in the US out of the shadows

I borrowed the title of this post from a report in The Guardian which i will get to in awhile. It was only two days ago that news broke of a plot by two white supremacists to kill African-Americans culminating in the assassination of Barack Obama,
Authorities say skinhead plot wasn't fully formed
By Woody Baird And Andrew Demillo, Associated Press Writers – Tue Oct 28


BELLS, Tenn. – Two white supremacists charged with plotting to behead blacks across the country and assassinate Barack Obama while wearing white top hats and tuxes were likely too disorganized to carry out the plot, authorities said, and their planning was riddled with blunders.

Paul Schlesselman, 18, of Helena-West Helena, Ark., and Daniel Cowart, 20, of Bells are accused of dreaming up the plan. While authorities say they had guns capable of creating carnage, documents show they never got close to getting off the ground.

Among the blunders: They drew attention to themselves by etching swastikas on a car with sidewalk chalk, only knew each other for a month, couldn't even pull off a house robbery, and a friend ratted them out to authorities.

"Certainly these men have some frightening weapons and some very frightening plans," said Mark Potok, director of the Southern Poverty Law Center, who studies the white supremacy movement. "But with the part about wearing top hats ... it gets a bit hard to take them seriously."

Despite making sure the plot was stopped, authorities did not believe Cowart and Schlesselman had the means to carry out their threat to assassinate Obama, said a federal law enforcement official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the case publicly.

Asked whether the two suspects had Obama's schedule or plans to kill him at a specific time or place, a second law enforcement official who also was not authorized to speak publicly said, "I don't think they had that level of detail."

The two met online about a month ago, introduced by a friend and bound by a mutual belief in white supremacy, according to an affidavit written by a Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives agent who interviewed them. Together, they chatted about how they could carry out such a terroristic spree, officials said. Schlesselman volunteered a sawed-off shotgun that would be "easier to manuever," and also took a gun from his father, according to an affidavit.

The plot referenced two numbers important to skinhead culture by aiming to take the lives of 88 people, and 14 of them would be beheaded. The number 14 refers to a 14-word phrase attributed to an imprisoned white supremacist: "We must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children" and to the eighth letter of the alphabet, H. Two "8"s or "H"s stand for "Heil Hitler."

But that may have been as detailed as it got. Last week, Cowart drove to pick up Schlesselman from his Arkansas home so the plot could begin, according to the affidavit. They decided to start with a house robbery, and asked a friend to drive them. But when they got to the driveway, they saw a dog and two vehicles, and got spooked.

Armed with ski masks and nylon rope they purchased at a Wal-Mart, they tried again the next day to get started. Authorities say they decided to fire on the windows of a church, then bragged about it to a friend. She told her mother, who alerted the local sheriff. Investigators were able to trace the shell casings to the pair, and took them into custody after spotting their car, decorated with chalk-drawn swastikas and racially motivated words, along with the numbers "88" and "14."

Schlesselman's family said Tuesday that it was unlikely he was seriously planning an attack, even though he expressed hatred for blacks. A high school dropout who was unsuccessful finding work, he often spent time on the computer, his 16-year-old sister, Kayla said. She said she often argued with him about his racial beliefs, and he would say things like "Obama would make the world suffer."

He hated his tiny Delta hometown of Helena-West Helena because it was predominantly black, she said.

"He just believes that he's the master race," she said. "He would just say things like 'white power' and 'Sieg Heil' and 'Heil Hitler.'"

His father, Mike, also doubted the plot was serious. "I think it's just a lot of talk. He would never do something like this," he said.

Cowart worked at a grocery store in Bells for about a year, according to Scotty Runions, 54, who supervised him. Runions said Cowart was preoccupied with computers and bagged groceries at the store until about May 2007, before moving to Texas.

"The guy I saw on TV last night was not the same person that I knew, and I saw him about a month ago," Runions said. "This is something he's created in the past month — that's not the young man that we know."

The Southern Poverty Law Center traced Cowart to the Supreme White Alliance, a skinhead hate group organized this spring that describes itself on its Web site as a "Club based on Racial beliefs. and for those of you who don't know what that means, we are in fact Racist's."

But the link doesn't appear strong, and the group apparently kicked him out earlier this year. A post on the alliance's Web site accused the law center of lying about the extent of its connection with Cowart, but acknowledged that "one of the two young men was in fact a probate earlier this year but was ousted."

The group's leader on Tuesday condemned the plot and denied that Cowart had been a part of his "club," but nevertheless said he was resigning as its president over negative publicity the case generated.

"We don't go out and start trouble. We are more like a social club. We just hang out," Steve Edwards of Central City, Ky., told The Associated Press.

Potok, the law center's intelligence director, said Cowart is shown in a photograph of an April alliance gathering to commemorate Hitler's birthday.

"The chances are excellent he was booted out when he was in the news in a way that didn't reflect wonderfully on them," Potok said.

Attorneys for Cowart and Schesselman haven't commented, but Schlesselman's sister said Tuesday she spoke with him after the charges were made public. "He said he's sorry about everything he's done," she said.

The plot was the third high-profile incident involving death threats against Obama in the last three months.

Raymond Hunter Geisel, 22, has pleaded not guilty to charges he threatened to assassinate Obama and President Bush. Authorities said Geisel kept an arsenal of weaponry and military gear and made the threats while attending a training class to become a bail bondsman.

A group of men who sparked fears of an assassination plot against Obama during the Democratic Party's presidential convention in Denver in August. Authorities said the men had guns and bulletproof vests and made racist threats against Obama, but were high on methamphetamine and posed no true danger.
___

Associated Press Writer Andrew DeMillo reported from Helena-West Helena, Ark. Also contributing were Erik Schelzig in Nashville, Bill Poovey in Chattanooga, Tenn. and Lara Jakes Jordan in Washington.
This is James Ridgeway's report in The Guardian.
Fourteen Words that spell racism
The prospect of an African-American president is bringing white supremacist subculture in the US out of the shadows


Daniel Cowart and Paul Schlesselman, the two Tennessee neo-Nazis arrested for plotting to kill 102 African-American schoolchildren and then assassinate Barack Obama, clearly drew inspiration from a violent white nationalist group called the Order. In the 1980s, members of the Order carried out a crime spree that included several high-profile murders.

The connection to the Order is evident in the numbers the two men scrawled on their car on Saturday shortly before they were arrested: 14 and 88. The so-called Fourteen Words is a slogan - "We must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children" - coined by Order member David Lane, who also wrote an essay called 88 Precepts. In white supremacist circles, 14-88 is a shorthand expression of allegiance to the beliefs put forth by Lane and the Order, who wanted to found a white homeland where they could preserve the "Aryan race" from being polluted by non-whites and enslaved by the "Zionist-occupied government" of the US. Lane also advocated polygamy and a kind of European paganism he called Wotanism.

The plot by the two Tennessee men, grotesque as it may be, seems not to have got beyond the half-baked stage. But in the early 1980s, the Order - also known as the BrĂ¼der Schweigen or Silent Brotherhood - was active, violent, and deadly.

In order to finance their mission, the gang robbed a series of banks and armoured cars and ran a counterfeiting operation. Cowart and Schlesselman are also said to have planned a series of robberies to support their plot - another indication that they modelled themselves on the Order.

Order members were best known for the 1984 murder of Denver talkshow host Alan Berg. The group's leader, Robert Jay Matthews, was killed soon afterwards in a shootout with federal agents. David Lane was arrested in 1985 and died in prison last year while serving a 190-year sentence. Both men have become heroes and martyrs to the white supremacist movement.

During the heyday of the racist far right in the 1980s, the Order was only one of the groups active across the US. I wrote about that subculture for years, and made a film about it.

During that time, I visited one of the meetings that brought the various groups together, hosted on the Michigan farm of Bob Miles, the Grand Dragon of the local Ku Klux Klan (and also a former finance chairman of the Michigan Republican party).

Miles sought to unite the divergent factions - the various Klans, the Aryan Nations, the National Alliance, the Posse Comitatus, the Order and others -into a serious revolutionary movement with an armed underground. This would be built around leaderless cells and have an overground political presence. In some cases, efforts were made to influence the most rightwing reaches of the Republican party.

Bob Miles's dream of a united front never materialised. And those who track the white power movement generally view it as having been in decline after the 1980s, floundering around without purpose or leadership. Yet remnants of it have clearly survived. They surfaced with horrific results in Oklahoma City in 1995, and they can be found among today's skinheads and their fellow travellers.

Some of these are part of biker gangs, including the Sons of Silence, who were implicated in a threat against Obama at the Democratic convention in Denver. Some have joined the anti-immigrant vigilante movement, committing drive-by shootings of Mexican labourers. Others are scattered around doing their own thing: picking fights in bars, beating up gay men. Some are clearly being brought out of the dark corners by the prospect of an African-American man as president. That's the case with the subject of our video, the National Socialist Movement's Steven Boswell, who talked to us in Columbia, Missouri.

• James Ridgeway is the author of Blood in the Face: The Ku Klux Klan, Aryan Nations, Nazi Skinheads and the Rise of a New White Culture
I was working on this post about racism in general when i came across Yawning Bread's latest article in which he highlights an incident in Singapore. Its true, and sad at the same time, when he writes Racism lurks just under the surface. All sorts of grievances, genuine though they may be, are often turned into colour-based accusations and Relative silence does not mean it does not exist.

Unfortunately, racism exists everywhere. Be it in very overt and/or violent forms (as evidenced in the above reports of white supremacists) or in very subtle forms.

Sweeping any form of racism under the carpet or using a big stick, by way of the law, should not be the only means of addressing the issue. Talking or writing on matters of race or religion is never really an easy thing to do. We tend to hold back worried whether we're going to offend.

But not airing it in public only worsens the situation because it is left to fester and grow till stereotypying and eventually hate takes over. But "airing it in public" doesn't mean "open season" on whacking each other thinking one's better then the other and calling each other all sorts of names and stuff. That's not going to help.

It might not be easy for some, possibly many, but we owe it to ourselves and future generations to have an ongoing civilized debate/conversation on such issues.

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Microsoft, Google and Yahoo sign global code of conduct promising to offer better protection for online free speech and against official intrusion

Tech giants in human rights deal
By Maggie Shiels
Technology reporter, BBC News, Silicon Valley


Microsoft, Google and Yahoo have signed a global code of conduct promising to offer better protection for online free speech and against official intrusion.

The Global Network Initiative follows criticism that companies were assisting governments in countries like China to censor the Internet.

The guidelines seek to limit what data should be shared with authorities, in cases where free speech is an issue.

"This is an important first step," said Mike Posner of Human Rights First.

He told the BBC "What this is is a recognition by all these tech companies, the human rights groups and social investors that there has to be a collective response to this growing problem.

"Companies need to step up to the plate and be more aggressive in challenging unwarranted government interference," he said.

The initiative states that privacy is "a human right and guarantor of human dignity," and the agreement commits the companies to try to resist overly broad demands for restrictions on freedom of speech and the privacy of users.

They will also assess the human rights climate in a country before concluding business deals and make sure their employees and partners follow suit.

"These principles are not going to be a silver bullet, but the most important point for me is to provide transparency," said Danny O'Brien of the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

"We have joined this initiative because we know that a wide range of groups working together can achieve much more than the company acting alone," said Andrew McLaughlin, Google's director of global public policy.

'Valuable roadmap'

The impetus for such an agreement follows years of criticism that a number of businesses, including Google, Yahoo and Microsoft have complicity built what has been dubbed the "Great Firewall of China".

Google has been accused of complying with Chinese government demands to filter internet searches to eliminate query results regarding topics such as democracy or Tiananmen Square.

Microsoft has come under attack for blocking the blog of a prominent Chinese Media researcher who posted articles critical of a management purge at the Beijing News Daily.

Canadian researchers uncovered that a Skype joint venture in China monitored users' communications.

And a Chinese reporter Shi Tao was jailed for 10 years after Yahoo China provided his personal information to the Chinese government.

Today Yahoo co-founder and CEO Jerry Yang welcomed the new code of conduct.

"These principles provide a valuable roadmap for companies like Yahoo operating in markets where freedom of expression and privacy are unfairly restricted.

"Yahoo was founded on the belief that promoting access to information can enrich people's lives and the principles we unveiled today reflect our determination that our actions match our values around the world," said Mr Yang.

While China has been painted as the worst abuser, Colin Maclay of the Berkman Centre for Internet and Society at Harvard University said there are other countries and governments all over the world at fault.

"The number of states actively seeking to censor online content and access personal information is growing.

"And the means employed - technical, social, legal, political - are increasingly sophisticated, often placing internet and telecommunications companies in difficult positions."

'Business case'

The Global Network Initiative was drawn up by the internet companies along with human rights groups, academics and investors.

Adam Kanzer who is the managing director and general counsel at Domini Social Investments said as well as being the right thing to do, it also makes good business sense.

He told BBC News "When you see the industry being caught up in the tactics of various regimes around the world, the business case is very clear. Freedom of expression and privacy is core to their business.

"They depend on a wide open, freely accessible and secure internet. That's what they are about. If people don't trust the internet and believe they are secure, then that is counterproductive to their business."

The effort is already being seen by some as not going far enough.

"After two years of effort, they have ended up with so little," said Morton Sklar executive director for the World Organisation for Human Rights USA.

"It is very little more than a broad statement of support for a general principle without any concrete backup mechanism to ensure that the guidelines will be followed."

Mr Posner of Human Rights First disputes that and said this agreement has not been set up as a "gotcha system" but as a way "to work with companies to get them to improve what they are doing, credit them when they do it and call them out if they fail."

While it is hoped many more companies will sign up, two European telecommunications firms, France Telecom and Vodafone, are already said to be considering adding their names.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Video the Vote - Ordinary folks keeping watch on democracy


Video the Vote ensures timely, complete, and accurate reporting of voter suppression and election irregularities by organizing citizen journalists to document elections and then using their footage to raise awareness about the ongoing challenges facing American voters
- Video the Vote

Sunday, October 26, 2008

A World of Conflict through the eyes of Kevin Sites

These two videos are the first and last chapters of a 15 chapter 2007 documentary called A World of Conflict by Kevin Sites. I got these videos from Sites' youtube page where you can watch the rest of the chapters.


Thursday, October 23, 2008

Shirin Ebadi banned from speaking in Malaysia after protest by Iranian embassy

The Malaysian government caved-in to protests by the Iranian embassy and banned Shirin Ebadi from speaking at a event there.

Ebadi, who is Iranian and the first Muslim woman to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2003, is also the author of Iran Awakening: A Memoir of Revolution and Hope.

Update on 27 Oct 08:

Friday October 24, 2008
Advice on Iranian Nobel laureate to be retracted
By SIM LEOI LEOI


PUTRAJAYA: Malaysians may get a chance to listen to the views of Iranian Nobel laureate Dr Shirin Ebadi after all.

Foreign Minister Datuk Seri Dr Rais Yatim has promised to direct the Wisma Putra officer involved to withdraw his advice on Dr Ebadi’s invitation to the Bridges - Dialogues Towards a Culture of Peace forum to be hosted by Universiti Malaya on Nov 3.

“We would like Dr Ebadi to be invited to the forum.

“Malaysia should allow the freedom of expression and criticisms at the highest level. I will go and investigate this matter,” he said here yesterday.

Dr Rais was commenting on a statement by UM vice-chancellor Datuk Rafiah Salim that it had decided against inviting Dr Ebadi, who is the first Muslim woman to be awarded the prestigious prize, after seeking the Foreign Ministry’s advice.

The ministry, in a letter signed by its Middle East and North Africa division secretary Dr Hasrul Sani Mujtabar, advised UM to withdraw the invitation to “keep close ties between Malaysia and Iran”.

The letter, made available to The Star, said it was not wise to invite Dr Ebadi as the Iranian government viewed her as a critic supporting a “Western agenda”.

Dr Rais said the advice from the ministry was “not official” and described the decision against inviting Dr Ebadi as “unfortunate”.

“This is definitely done without my involvement. If I had known of it, I would have informed my office against it,” he stressed.

Sisters in Islam (SIS) programme manager Norhayati Kaprawi said it was common for someone to be branded as being sympathetic towards the Western agenda if he or she challenged discriminatory policies and laws.

“SIS has also been accused of such things in the past. It is very rare for a Muslim woman to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize and Malaysia should be proud that she is coming to give her views,” she said.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Stiglitz on the American economy

A unique combination of ideology, special-interest pressure, populist politics, bad economics, and sheer incompetence has brought us to our present condition writes Joseph Stiglitz in his essay Reversal of Fortune, in the latest edition of Vanity Fair. You can read it here.

Friday, October 17, 2008

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

What a religious whackjob!

I first saw this video in a blogpost by Jotman,


I'm not against religion per se. I just dislike those, like the nutjob in the video, who mis-interpret and distort religion for their own ends. Unfortunately, these jokers can be found in every part of the world.

*shaking my head and exhaling a heavy sigh
*