Daily News Digest (by Duane Shank)
the latest news on Burma, IRS-All Saints, Darfur, SCHIP, Budget, Iran, Iraq, Mideast, Non-violence, Immigration, Gingrich, Anglican Church, Living the gospel, and nuclear weapons.
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SCHIP. Bush: Kids' Health Care Will Get Vetoed "President Bush again called Democrats "irresponsible" on Saturday for pushing an expansion he opposes to a children's health insurance program." Senate and House Reach Accord on Health Insurance for Children "Senate and House negotiators from both parties reached a final deal on an expansion of a health insurance program for the children of the working poor, just a day after President Bush vowed to veto it." Bush to veto children's healthcare bill "when senators of both parties reached a compromise this summer and then beat back efforts by House Democrats to triple the program's budget, its many Republican backers thought they had a political victory that President Bush could embrace."
Budget. Familiar Disagreements as Fiscal Deadline Nears"With the new fiscal year just a week away, President Bush and the Democratic-controlled Congress are far from agreement on the proper level of spending for myriad federal programs, and the two sides have not even begun negotiations to resolve their differences." Iraq war budget jumps for 2008 "After smothering efforts by war critics in Congress to drastically cut U.S. troop levels in Iraq, President Bush plans to ask lawmakers to approve another massive spending measure -- totaling nearly $200 billion -- to fund the war through next year," War Costing $720 Million Each Day, Group Says "The money spent on one day of the Iraq war could buy homes for almost 6,500 families or health care for 423,529 children, or could outfit 1.27 million homes with renewable electricity,"
IRS-All Saints. Pasadena church wants apology from IRS "The Internal Revenue Service has told a prominent Pasadena church that it has ended its lengthy investigation into a 2004 antiwar sermon, church leaders said Sunday. But the agency wrote in its letter to All Saints Episcopal Church that officials still considered the sermon to have been illegal, prompting the church to seek clarification, a corrected record and an apology from the IRS," Minister: IRS Has Dropped Investigation "A liberal church no longer faces the imminent loss of its tax-exempt status because of an anti-war sermon delivered days before the 2004 presidential election, its minister said Sunday."
Darfur . World Vision Convoy Ambushed in Darfur "An aid convoy from Christian agency World VisionInternational was ambushed in Darfur and three humanitarian workers were wounded, the U.N. mission to Sudan said Saturday." Darfur rebels warned of sanctions "Darfur's rebel groups could face sanctions if they do not attend peace talks with Khartoum in Libya next month, delegates to a UN-sponsored meeting in New York have warned." Nomads Describe Persecution in Chad "The Chadian government and its allied militias are indiscriminately targeting Arab nomads in eastern Chad, according to interviews with dozens of nomads, who described raids on their temporary villages, at least two aerial bombings, harassment and incidents of torture. As a result of the insecurity, an estimated 30,000 Chadian Arabs have migrated into the Darfur region of neighboring Sudan."
Burma . Record numbers rally in Burma "As many as 100,000 demonstrators protesting against the Burmese military regime took to the streets of Rangoon in the biggest show of dissent in almost two decades." Burma march 'largest in 20 years' "BBC South East Asia correspondent Jonathan Head says every day the protests are growing in size - the campaign the monks began just six days ago is now openly challenging the military, urging all citizens to join in." Monks' Protest Is Challenging Burmese Junta"The link between the clergy and the leader of the country's pro-democracy movement, the beginnings of large-scale public participation in the marches and a call by some monks for a wider protest raised the stakes for the government."
Iran. Ahmadinejad a hero for Arabs "Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, a flinty populist in a zip-up jacket whose scathing rhetoric and defiance of Washington are often caricatured in the Western media, has transcended national and religious divides to become a folk hero across the Middle East." Iran denies rush to war with US "Iran's president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, said yesterday there was "no war in the offing" between his country and the United States. He told the CBS programme 60 Minutes: "It's wrong to think that Iran and the US are walking toward war." Iran doesn't need bomb, leader says "Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said in an American television interview that Iran was neither building a nuclear bomb nor headed to war with the United States." U.S. Focus on Ahmadinejad Puzzles Iranians"In demonizing Mr. Ahmadinejad, the West has served him well, elevating his status at home and in the region at a time when he is increasingly isolated politically because of his go-it-alone style and ineffective economic policies, according to Iranian politicians, officials and political experts."
Iraq. Iraq Probe of U.S. Security Firm Grows "Iraq's probe into a deadly shooting by Blackwater USA in Baghdad last weekend has expanded to include allegations about the security firm's involvement in six other violent episodes this year that left at least 10 Iraqis dead." Iraqi Premier Says Blackwater Shootings Challenge His Nation's Sovereignty "Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki said that the shooting of Iraqi civilians last week by Blackwater USA, a private American security company, amounted to a challenge to the nation's sovereignty," U.S. Aims To Lure Insurgents With 'Bait' "A Pentagon group has encouraged some U.S. military snipers in Iraq to target suspected insurgents by scattering pieces of "bait," such as detonation cords, plastic explosives and ammunition, and then killing Iraqis who pick up the items,"
UN hopes to broaden role on Iraq "The UN is ready to broaden its role in support of Iraq, Secretary General Ban Ki-moon says at key talks."
Mideast. U.S. to invite Syria, Saudis to talks "The United States intends to invite Syria and Saudi Arabia to a Middle East peace conference it plans to hold this fall, a senior U.S. official said Sunday. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice reportedly informed top Arab officials before and after a meeting of the so-called quartet of world powers involved in the Middle East peace process," US invites Syria to peace talks "The attendance of Syria and Saudi Arabia, neither of which has diplomatic relations with Israel, has been a big question mark of the conference."
Non-violence. Nonviolent protest gains in West Bank "Inspired by the experience of other Palestinian villages, the Al Walajeh demonstrators are part of a small but growing core of protesters combining civil disobedience with legal petitions to fight Israeli policies."
Immigration. Spitzer Grants Illegal Immigrants Easier Access to Driver's Licenses "New York, home to more than 500,000 illegal immigrants, will issue driver's licenses without regard to immigration status under a policy change announced yesterday by Gov. Eliot Spitzer." Immigrants' Emergency Care Is Limited by U.S. Rule"The federal government has told New York State that chemotherapy, which had been covered for illegal immigrants under a Medicaid provision, does not qualify for coverage." Kansas analysis: Immigration issues will be revisited by lawmakers "Almost as certain as the sun rising in the east, Kansas legislators will deal with illegal immigration next year. People fed up with the federal government's failure to plug the nation's porous borders are looking to state legislators to do something." Va. GOP Seizes on 'Red-Hot' Concern "Candidates across the state, particularly in the increasingly diverse Northern Virginia suburbs, are hearing multiple sides of the immigration issue during visits to neighborhoods, fairs and community meetings. How they respond could help determine the outcome of the Nov. 6 elections for all 140 House and Senate seats."
Gingrich raising campaign funds. Gingrich seeks donors for GOP bid "Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich will begin to seek financial commitments from donors for a presidential-nomination bid, the Georgia Republican told The Washington Times."
Anglican church. Anti-gay Anglican archbishop speaks in Wheaton "In an impassioned Sunday morning sermon to more than 2,000 worshipers at a Wheaton church, a leading critic of the Episcopal Church's liberal stance on homosexuality spoke against sexual sin, saying unity must come from transformation and obedience to God."
Living the gospel. The World Comes to Georgia, and an Old Church Adapts "When the Rev. Phil Kitchin steps into the pulpit of the Clarkston International Bible Church on Sunday mornings, he stands eye to eye with the changing face of America. In the pews before him, alongside white-haired Southern women in their Sunday best, sit immigrants from the Philippines and Togo, refugees from war-scarred Liberia, Ethiopia and Sudan, even a convert from Afghanistan. "Jesus said heaven is a place for people of all nations," Mr. Kitchin likes to say. "So if you don't like Clarkston, you won't like heaven."
Nuclear weapons. Missteps in the Bunker "Just after 9 a.m. on Aug. 29, a group of U.S. airmen entered a sod-covered bunker on North Dakota's Minot Air Force Base with orders to collect a set of unarmed cruise missiles bound for a weapons graveyard. They quickly pulled out a dozen cylinders, all of which appeared identical from a cursory glance, and hauled them along Bomber Boulevard to a waiting B-52 bomber. The airmen attached the gray missiles to the plane's wings, six on each side. After eyeballing the missiles on the right side, a flight officer signed a manifest that listed a dozen unarmed AGM-129 missiles. The officer did not notice that the six on the left contained nuclear warheads, each with the destructive power of up to 10 Hiroshima bombs."






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Comments
It is amazing that the IRS would investigate a church where an anti-war sermon was given and ignore the large number of churches that became campaign headquarters for the Republican Party in general and George W. Bush in particular. An anti-war sermon is consistent with the teachings of Christianity, It is very appropriate for churches to raise moral issues that are also political issues. It is not appropriate for churches to be an integral part of a partisan election campaign. The churches that officially support candidates or parties should lose their tax free status.
Posted by: Jack Rhine | September 24, 2007 3:16 PM
Very well said, Jack Rhine. I grew up in Western Minnesota. I heard it said that one should not talk religion and politics but my dad and mother, uncles and aunts from both sides talked politics all the time and some interjected the religious connection. I never heard any of our pastors even suggest that we should not connect politics with religion, and I never heard them support a particular candidate or party from the pulpit.The bumper sticker "God is not a Republican or Democrat" says it. Perhaps God is an Independent!
Posted by: Richard Salmonson | September 24, 2007 3:52 PM
I agree about talking religion and politics together:
http://www.mikehuckabee.com/index.cfm?FuseAction=VerticalDay.Home&l=0C1A4585FE59F43DBE2DDF1E96C4ECA8
... none of the above-cited reports regarding Iran took the time to mention denying the Holocaust or threatening to destroy Israel.
The West isn't focusing on Iran for nothing.
Posted by: Ken Leonard | September 24, 2007 4:30 PM
Interesting develpment.
Good to see people of Burma being so sassionate about their own future and a good way of living it too.
Thank you for sharing this news with me !
Posted by: Nikita Kondraskov | September 24, 2007 6:56 PM
I have been to the West Bank village of Bil'in three times in solidarity with the nonviolent protesters against The Wall, which in Bil'in is 30' high electrified fence and miles of rolled razor edged barbwire
The people chanted;
The wall fell in Berlin!
The wall will fall in Bil'in!
Mohammed Khatib is a leading member of Bil'in's Popular Committee Against the Wall and the secretary of Bil'in's Village Council.
He reported:
Our achievements are due to our persistence, the worldwide media attention we attracted, and the support we gained from committed Israeli activists.
On September 4, after nearly three years of nonviolent protests by our village of Bil’in, the Israeli Supreme Court ruled that Israel’s wall here must be moved further west, returning 250 acres of our farmland. In Bil’in we celebrated, along with our Israeli and international supporters.
But Israel’s Supreme Court demonstrated both the power of nonviolent resistance to Israeli occupation, and its limits. On September 5 the court rejected our petition to stop the construction of another Israeli settlement, Mattiyahu East, on our land even further to the west. Israel, with US support, appears determined to retain major West Bank settlement blocs, including one west of Bil’in, that carve the West Bank into bantustans.
Bil’in is a West Bank agricultural village with 1600 residents located just east of “the Green Line”, the pre-1967 border between the West Bank and Israel. In Bil’in, as in tens of Palestinian villages, Israel exploited security justifications to build a wall deep inside the West Bank and seize Palestinian land for illegal settlements. Israel trapped 60% of our land behind the wall, mostly olive groves that we depend on.
In December, 2004 when the Israeli army started bulldozing our land and uprooting olive trees to build the wall, we went to our fields to protest. We learned from other West Bank villages that nonviolently resisted the wall, and we studied Gandhi, King and Mandela.
We developed creative activities for our weekly protests. One Friday, activists locked themselves inside a cage, representing the wall’s impacts. Another time, we built a Palestinian “outpost” on our village’s land located behind the wall and next to an Israeli settlement, mimicking the Israeli strategy of establishing outposts to expand settlements.
Another Friday we handed the Israeli soldiers a letter saying, “Had you come here as guests, we would show you the trees that our grandfathers planted here, and the vegetables that we grow… There will never be security for any of us until Israelis respect our rights to this land.”
We hosted two international conferences on nonviolent resistance, and many Israeli and international activists responded to our call to join us in a “joint struggle.” Palestinians, Israelis and foreigners suffered patiently together as the soldiers met our nonviolent actions with teargas, rubber-coated steel bullets, and clubs. Over 800 activists were injured in 200 demonstrations. An Israeli attorney and a Bil'in resident both suffered permanent brain damage from rubber-coated steel bullets shot from close range. Another Palestinian lost sight in one eye. 49 Bil’in residents, including some protest leaders, were arrested. Some spent months in prison.
Our achievements are due to our persistence, the worldwide media attention we attracted, and the support we gained from committed Israeli activists.
We never expected much from the occupier’s courts. The Israeli official who planned the wall told the Washington Post last month that he lost only three legal challenges to the wall’s path, out of 120 appeals filed, this though the wall isolates 10% of the West Bank and was ruled illegal where it is built inside the West Bank by the International Court of Justice.
All Israeli settlements are illegal under international law. Still, Israel’s Supreme Court legalized the settlement of Mattiyahu East on our land, even though Mattiyahu East appeared to violate even Israeli law because it lacked an approved building permit.
The rush to build followed President Bush’s April, 2004 letter to then Israeli Prime Minster Ariel Sharon stating that, “new realities on the ground, including already existing population centers” make it unrealistic to expect Israel to withdraw completely to the Green Line. Israel responded by expanding “existing population centers”, building huge apartment complexes, like Mattiyahu East, for hundreds of thousands of people, and calling them neighborhoods in existing settlements.
These expanding settlement blocs fall conveniently on Israel’s side of the wall. Strategically situated, the settlement blocs divide the West Bank into four isolated regions. Therefore, their annexation to Israel will render any Palestinian state unviable. Yet annexation of the settlement blocs is reportedly central to new Israeli government peace proposals to Palestinian President Abbas.
We will continue to challenge these expanding settlements because they threaten the futures of Bil’in and the Palestinian people. And we will put our experience at the service of other communities struggling against the wall and settlements. From Bil’in, we call on Israeli and international activists to join us as we renew our joint struggle for freedom.
By Mohammed Khatib
http://palestinechronicle.com/story-092207142352.htm
Posted by: eileen fleming | September 24, 2007 11:17 PM
Dear Ken Leonard,
You complained:
"none of the above-cited reports regarding Iran took the time to mention denying the Holocaust or threatening to destroy Israel."
Any thinking person knows the Jewish Holocaust happened.
But how come there is never a mention that not just 6 million innocent Jews were gassed and fried, but so were millions of other 'outcasts', rebels, dissidents, gays, lesbians, cripples, etc, etc, and it was helped to happen because good people did nothing for too very long.
Ahmadinejad has rightly pointed out that since the Palestinians had absolutely nothing to do with the Holocaust; why must they pay the price for Hitler's sins?
As far as 'destroying' Israel, how come nobody ever mentions how Israel has destroyed Palestine?
How come nobody mentions the fact that Israel is an apartheid regime and a military occupier for 40 years and that "Israel is only a democracy if you are a Jew."-Mordechai Vanunu
"Israel is not a democracy; it is an ethnocracy; full rights to Jews, but nobody else."-Jeff Halper, American Israeli and Founder and Coordinator of ICAHD/Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions
Eileen Fleming, Reporter and Editor
Http://www.wearewideawake.org/
Author "Keep Hope Alive" and "Memoirs of a Nice Irish American Girl's' Life in Occupied Territory"
Producer "30 Minutes With Vanunu."
Posted by: eileen fleming | September 24, 2007 11:37 PM
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