Public Comment

The absence of ceasefire undermines Democrats chances of winning Congress, perhaps even the presidency.

Marc Sapir MD, MPH
Tuesday October 01, 2024 - 11:06:00 AM

Supporters of Israel insist opponents should stop calling Israel an apartheid and genocidal state. They pretend we make this up and are anti-Jewish (though they know many Palestine supporters are Jews).

Former US president Jimmy Carter long ago wrote about Israel’s apartheid. Moreover, every day now the Israel-US massacres and terrorism in Palestine and Lebanon prove those labels are apt—adding to the South African government’s case and the International Court of Justice’s provisional decision saying so. The reason that lovers of Israeli apartheid work so hard to try to stop this language is not because they think it’s untrue. They must crush accurate language about Israel or their narrative that this barbarity is all a response to Hamas, to terrorism and October 7, 2023 will collapse.

They must block people from learning that this full on genocide culminates 76 years of US-backed Israeli apartheid terrorism. Now they say the same about Hezbollah, the most popular political organization in Lebanon. Hezbollah’s head Nasrallah made clear that Hezbollah would stop shooting missiles into Israel as soon as Netanyahu agrees to a ceasefire on Gaza.

Israel’s response was to murder Nasrallah, killing a messenger proposing peace. -more-


Two Letters to Berkeley Councilmember Igor Tregub re Peace and Justice for All?

Summer Brenner, District 4 resident
Tuesday October 01, 2024 - 11:19:00 AM

LETTER 1:September 4, 2024 Dear Councilman Tregub:

Today, I am writing to you as a second generation Jew, mother of two, and grandmother of five. Seven blessings in my life, which qualify me to speak about humanity's responsibility to protect the rights of civilians in conflict, and especially the rights of children to live and thrive. There is even a UN Charter on the Rights of Children, which if you haven't read, I'm glad to send you a copy. In it, you will find a list of rights that entitle children to safety, shelter, healthcare, education, and LIFE! I believe that Berkeley's City Council adopted a Resolution to officially support this Charter.

To say that I was shocked at your dismissal of Diana Bohn from the Peace & Justice Commission is an understatement. Shock followed by dismay. There is some terrible calculus going on with the City Council, who, during the last 11 months, have refused to host an open discussion about the genocide in Palestine. The calculus is that the lives of one group are more valued and valuable, that is, more entitled to life than other groups. The lame excuse is that a discussion would exacerbate divisiveness. Yes, the community is divided, but hiding from division only creates more anxiety, more reactiveness, more hostility.

Last night, I heard the Director of MECA relate how he first learned about Berkeley. From life in the Jenin Refugee Camp, he learned that our City was the first in the USA to divest from the South African apartheid regime. History has proven that courageous and unorthodox decision correct. History will prove the same about the current and ongoing genocide against the Palestinian people. Rather than genocide, I prefer extermination. Killing children exterminates the future.

You've certainly seen the protests against Israel's systematic destruction of Gaza, and now the West Bank. These protests, small and large, are composed of millions of people, who have witnessed this magnitude of death and destruction 'live streaming.' There is no turning away. Or pretense that this is not happening. Note the news from Sept 1: At least 700,000 people have taken part in protests across Israel calling for a ceasefire.

In no way do I condone the Hamas attack on October 7th. However, the degree of revenge and retaliation waged against the Palestinian populace is unprecedented, except in the history of world wars and the genocides against indigenous populations by colonial powers.

What is terribly sinister is Netanyahu's self-serving perpetuation of conflict, and Israel's designs on appropriating all of Palestinian land as its own. There is a grand scheme here that appeals to the most base instincts of human nature: greed and indifference.

I now suspect that you have very different views about this. But what view can justify the deliberate killing and maiming of children? the destruction of all schools and hospitals? sites of worship? withholding food, drink, and medicine? These are rhetorical and heartbreaking questions. As I write them, I weep at the state of frozen hearts and minds, even here in my own City, a place once famed for its universal love and courage.

Summer Brenner, D4 long-time resident of Berkeley

LETTER 2: Sep 9 Dear Igor,

Thank you again for the reply to my letter regarding Diana Bohn and the PJC.

As mentioned, I am Jewish, but not a Zionist. In so many ways, the ethical tenets of Judaism contradict the Zionist project.

That said, I think the Zionist faction in this City has exercised a disproportionate influence over the Council and its refusal to have a mere discussion of a Ceasefire Resolution. I doubt that the Zionists would accept any resolution that includes the condemnation of Israel and its genocidal behavior. Yet that is the reality -- and the roadblock. That's why I'm afraid the concept of 'balanced and inclusive' rings hollow when children are being systematically slaughtered, maimed, and starved. WITH OUR TAX DOLLARS! According to Michael Moore, the calculation is $356 per US citizen and rising. Money for weaponry that has almost nothing to do with defense. That 'Israel has a right to defend itself' also rings hollow.

I appreciate and quote you: [my] "longstanding support of a lasting end of hostilities in the region, the return of all remaining hostages held by Hamas - alive, and efforts toward a two-state solution built on self-determination and mutual understanding." As tragic as the situation with hostages is, I believe the Israelis are correct in also blaming Netanyahu. The hostages have not been his priority. In fact, Israeli attacks with US bombs have led to an unknown number of hostage deaths. As for a two-state solution, the invasion/occupation of a half-million plus illegal settlers currently renders that scenario a fantasy.

One last personal note: I think the existential threat that many Jews/Israelis feel has suppressed their capacity for compassion for the Other. Maybe, not in Ukraine, where the Council had no hesitation in supporting a Resolution. But certainly towards the Palestinian people. In my opinion, that's where the greatest impasse lies. Until we embrace our universal humanity, this extermination will continue. But how our City Council can tacitly condone it remains a mystery that I shall never understand. -more-


Editorial

A New Age Now Begins

Becky O'Malley
Tuesday August 27, 2024 - 11:48:00 AM

This week my sister and brother-in-law celebrated their sixtieth anniversary. Remembering their wedding was especially meaningful for me because it coincided with another meaningful anniversary I remember from 1964, a Democratic convention quite different from the one we just watched which was a brilliantly produced television spectacle.

The 1964 convention was held in Atlantic City New Jersey. Lyndon Johnson was the incumbent president and his candidacy was locked up. Hubert Humphrey, a textbook exponent of what we called the SLP (standard liberal position), was slated to become the Democratic candidate for vice-president.

The wedding was in New Jersey too, at my parents’ home about an hour away from Atlantic City. My husband and I were allies of the civil rights struggle, and had been active in the fight for a fair housing law in Ann Arbor, Michigan, where we lived at the time. We took advantage of the opportunity to leave our not-quite-two-year-old daughter with her grandparents for the day so that we could make a trip to the convention, where the principal controversy was going to be the attempt of members of the multi-racial Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party to be seated as delegates in place of the traditional southern Democrats, the segregationists who officially represented Mississippi for close to a century.

As I watched the 2024 convention from home 60 years later, I was struck by the similarities and contrasts between the two events.

In 1964 we had no credentials whatsoever, but walked right in a side entrance and wandered at will through the spectator seats of the hall. Security did not seem to be a concern, despite the fact that John Kennedy had been assassinated just the year before. The Freedom Democrats were offered a couple of seats among the delegates in the Atlantic City auditorium, though without convention voting rights. (They weren’t satisfied.)

In Chicago last week the protestors, opponents of the war on Gaza, were among the elected and voting delegates seated on the floor, some sporting keffiyehs, but no one was allowed to express this opinion as a speech from the podium. Pre-convention credentialling and on-site security were very tight. No unauthorized person was allowed in. -more-