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NEWS & LETTERS, January-February 2003

Editorial

Bush declares state of war as the state of the union

The massive protests that marked the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday weekend provided an undeniable picture of the forces contending for the minds of humanity against the drive for war that has consumed George Bush ever since he announced his intentions to wage permanent war in his "axis of evil" State of the Union message a year ago.

What is unprecedented is that the rapidly growing and diverse anti-war movement is taking place BEFORE Bush has dropped the first bomb. This movement will have to face its own contradictions to see where we will go from here. At the same time, this critical moment demands that we look at three other battlefields, in particular, where the forces for freedom are contending for our minds and reveal the true state of the union in 2003.

VICTORY FOR PRISONERS

Nothing more dramatically reveals the depth of the uprooting needed to achieve a new human world today than the storm released by the historic act George Ryan performed in his last days as governor of Illinois when he commuted the sentences of 164 men and 3 women on Death Row.  The day before he had granted full pardons to four other men, who thereby joined 13 others who had been found innocent of the crimes they were charged with.

Among those 13 was Anthony Porter who was only 48 hours before he was to be executed, thanks to evidence discovered by journalism students at Northwestern University. While it is important to see that Gov. Ryan's act did not come out of the blue but out of the hard and persistent efforts of a growing prisoner support movement nationwide, it is equally important to make sure that it opens wide a national debate on the entire criminal injustice system.

None are more determined to see that this takes place than those who have been freed. As one of the four, Madison Hobley, put it at a meeting to celebrate their freedom, "Now I'm on a mission."

REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS ROLLED BACK

The mission George Bush has been carrying out is the very opposite: fighting against the most basic of our freedoms. As we mark the 30th anniversary of the momentous Supreme Court ruling that established a woman's right to make her own decisions about bearing a child, we can see that Bush's mission from the beginning of his presidency, in tandem with the Christian Coalition, has been to scuttle that right. 

He has pursued his goal through two years of anti-choice, anti-woman executive orders and legal briefs that have made increasingly inaccessible not only obtaining an abortion but even information about contraceptives, including "disappearing" such information from federal government websites. 

We saw the extremes to which Bush would go on his very first day in office when he imposed a "gag" rule that barred health providers anywhere in the world who receive American funds from providing abortion services or even talking to a woman about abortion. It has succeeded in disastrously crippling international family planning and other programs that could advance reproductive health and combat HIV and AIDS.

RACIST TO THE CORE

As for the question of race, nothing better captures the state of the union than the way Trent Lott felt so comfortable as majority leader of the Senate with his racist longing for a return to the good old days when Strom Thurmond ruled and segregation was the law of the land that his nostalgia strangled him.

How little Bush's critique of Lott meant was clear from the speed with which he nominated Charles Pickering, whose record is every bit as racist, to the Court of Appeals. Yet all that pales in the face of the decision Bush announced, a few weeks after the Lott incident, to join in the attack on the University of Michigan's affirmative action program in the Supreme Court--daring to present his racist brief as a "defense of diversity" and choosing Jan. 15, Martin Luther King's birthday to make his announcement.

While Bush's brief stops short of claiming affirmative action is unconstitutional, its direction, if he wins, would force colleges and universities across the nation to abandon their current policies and adopt a so-called "race-neutral" position. 

WIDENING WAR ON THE POOR

Not content with all these wars against the American people, Bush has rushed to define the opposition he sees arising to his plans for us as nothing less than "class war."  That was the charge hurled when the first voices of protest were raised against the so-called "economic stimulus" package he presented in Chicago when he tried to make his proposal to eliminate taxes on corporate dividends--which will benefit the top 1%--sound as though it was an anti-poverty program for the elderly.  

Given that tax relief for the wealthy is the centerpiece of his proposed solution to the dismal economic situation confronting us--with the unemployment rate at an eight year high; all the states of the union facing their deepest deficits in 50 years and 11 of them considering such drastic cuts in Medicaid for the poor that no less than a million more face losing their health insurance--it seems clear that deepening and widening his war on the poor is exactly the "class war" Bush has in mind. 

The past two years have revealed that the permanent war he declared when he moved into the White House on a stolen election is a war he has been waging both at home and abroad. It demands from us the kind of total uprooting that will be inseparable from the creation of a world based on totally new human foundations.

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