Sunday, September 1, 2019

Re: FBI Tracking of Bob Dylan and Suze Rotolo Foreshadowed Future Abuses

Gives me a warm, fuzzy feeling just knowing our FBI is out there
heroically defending our Freedom. Personal memories of the
intimidating actions of two very bulky, grim faced FBI agents letting
all our neighbors know that the FBI had concerns about the Jarvis
family, still, some 70 years later, those memories color my opinions
of this Lap Dog agency of the American Oligarchy.
But for sure, the FBI is consistent. You'll never see them defending
the rights of the poor Americans. When workers go out on strike, the
FBI will be there, writing down names and intimidating honest workers.
Carl Jarvis

On 9/1/19, t r u t h o u t <messenger@truthout.org wrote:
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Sunday, September 1, 2019Join Truthout as we expose inequality and
fight injustice -- support our
> journalism with a tax-deductible donation!
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>________________________________
>
> FBI Tracking of Bob Dylan and Suze Rotolo Foreshadowed Future Abuses
>
> Aaron J. Leonard, Truthout
>
> The recently released FBI file on Suze Rotolo, an artist, activist and
> daughter of Communist Party members, who was associated with Bob Dylan in
> the early 1960s, foreshadows the Bureau's many abuses of personal and
> political freedoms under the guise of national security. While Rotolo's file
> is proof of the agency's repressive power in the past, it also underscores
> the need for vigilance against ongoing abuse.
> Read the Article →
>
> ________________________________
>
> White Supremacy Tried to Kill Jazz. The Music Triumphed.
>
> Anton Woronczuk, Truthout
>
> Dodging "unscrulpuous bosses" and violent attacks by racist "fans" were part
> of the "common plight" of jazz musicians in the early 20th century, says
> historian Gerald Horne, author of Jazz and Justice: Racism and the Political
> Economy of the Music. In this interview with Truthout, Horne describes the
> role of racism in the development of jazz and why creativity, improvisation
> and technical mastery were a means of survival for its performers.
> Read the Interview →
>
> ________________________________
>
> The Criminal Legal System Punishes Youth for Not Thinking Like Adults
>
> Jeremiah Bourgeois, Truthout
>
> Since I was imprisoned and sentenced to life without parole 27 years ago for
> crimes I committed when 14 years old, new psycho-social research on
> juveniles has prompted a paradigm shift in the way the criminal legal system
> handles juvenile crimes. While I will be freed soon under the new rules, my
> fellow prisoners who were barely 18 when they committed their crimes are
> denied relief.
> Read the Article →
>
> ________________________________
>
> West Texas Mass Shooting Provokes Fresh Calls for Stricter Gun Laws
>
> Jessica Corbett, Common Dreams
>
> Gun control advocates and Democratic politicians swiftly demanded that
> Congress take action after at least seven people were killed and several
> more were injured in a mass shooting in Texas Saturday. Sunday morning,
> Odessa police updated the death toll to seven and said that one victim
> remains in "life-threatening" condition, but still have not released the
> suspect's name or possible motive.
> Read the Article →
>
> ________________________________
>
> Toxic Alaska Mine Could "Destroy the World's Last Great Sockeye Salmon
> Fishery"
>
> Joaqlin Estus, Indian Country Today
>
> Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy had nothing but encouragement for a potential
> investor in a controversial mine. But a coalition of tribes and
> environmental and fishing organizations say the waste from the Pebble Mine
> would have to be stored forever near the headwaters of the world's largest
> sockeye salmon fishery, both a cultural and multi-billion dollar resource.
> Read the Article →
>
> ________________________________
>
> Top NRA Official Faces Second Accusation of Sexual Harassment
>
> Mike Spies, ProPublica
>
> The National Rifle Association over the past two years has grappled with two
> separate sexual harassment allegations against Josh Powell, a senior
> official, including a case involving an employee. The disclosure of a recent
> settlement in 2017 comes amid a stream of reports alleging mismanagement and
> questionable spending by NRA leadership.
> Read the Article →
>
> ________________________________
>
> McConnell Seems Increasingly Nervous Republicans Could Lose Big Next Year
>
> Lisa Needham, The American Independent Institute
>
> Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell appears to be worried that Trump
> isn't going to win in 2020. At least, that's one explanation for his promise
> to "protect" the Supreme Court from Democrats. But if he was sincere, he
> wouldn't have blocked Merrick Garland from receiving a hearing, and he would
> have required a full and fair investigation into the highly credible
> allegations against Brett Kavanaugh.
> Read the Article →
>
> ________________________________
>
> Eight Unions Have Climate Plans, But None Call for End to Fossil Fuel
> Industry
>
> Rachel M. Cohen, In These Times
>
> Two months ago, the BlueGreen Alliance -- a national coalition of labor
> unions and environmental groups -- released an eight-page document laying
> out its vision to curb climate change and reduce inequality. The report,
> dubbed Solidarity for Climate Action, marks a significant development for
> labor, but is also receiving criticism for the absence of calls for an end
> to the fossil fuel industry itself.
> Read the Article →
>
> ________________________________
>
> In Case You Missed It
>
> ________________________________
>
> Monsanto Emails Show Employees Wanted to "Beat the Shit" Out of Concerned
> Moms
>
> William Rivers Pitt, Truthout
>
> A recent document dump from one of the thousands of lawsuits currently being
> brought against Bayer-Monsanto over its cancer-causing pesticide, Roundup,
> is revelatory. Emails between Monsanto employees and the company's
> consultants show them lashing out, expressing a desire to "beat the shit"
> out of concerned mothers and the organics industry.
> Read the Article →
>
> ________________________________
>
> A New Novel Transcends Space and Time to Illustrate Historical Struggle
>
> Paul Buhle, Truthout
>
> In Peter Linebaugh's Red Round Globe Hot Burning, we move across continents
> and back and forth in time, following the life of Edward Marcus Despard, an
> Irishman who married a former slave from the Caribbean and was hanged in
> 1802 as a revolutionary. Writing history in novel form, Linebaugh's book
> offers an education in 18th century interracial history, revolution and
> class resistance.
> Read the Article →
>
> ________________________________
>
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