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UFPJ Lebanon Reportback: Weds 816 NYC

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You Know, This Is Why Asians Get Beat Up 96
NYC XYZ The Army isn't going to necessarily teach street fighting unless you're in a unit that specializes in that type of military operation ( e.g. Green...

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UFPJ Lebanon Report-back: Weds 8-16 NYC

Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit sent by Andy Pollack

United for Peace and Justice 212-868-5545

Please forward widely!

What : An Eye-Witness Account of the War in Lebanon from Judith Le Blanc, Co-Chair of UFPJ

When: Wednesday, Aug. 16, 2006 6:30 p.m

Where: 235 W. 23rd St, bet. 7th & 8th Aves

You Know, This Is Why Asians Get Beat Up 98
NYC XYZ fyi: here are some additional stories covering the same event. I picked buttociated Press because its a national press source so its is less influenced by local politics...

Judith LeBlanc, national co-chair of United for Peace and Justice, is on her way back from Lebanon where she and several other U.S. antiwar activists have been for the past week. Their trip to Lebanon followed several days of meetings in Jordan with some members of the Iraqi Parliament and other Iraqis.

We invite you to hear her stories. Below is a statement that she e-mailed to us just a few days ago. (Donations will be solicited to cover the cost of the trip, but no one will be turned away.)

THE TOP 10 MOST DANGEROUS U.S. CITIES REPORT
TOP 10 MOST DANGEROUS CITIES Houston, We Have a Problem! Most dangerous cities in America have one thing in common. 1. Camden, N.J. Black (53.3%) Hispanic (38.8%) Other race (22.8%) White Non-Hispanic...

"On day 29 of the war, Beirut is a blend of many realities. The facts are that 1,000 have died, and over 3,000 have been injured in Lebanon. Most are children. Whole villages and sections of cities have been evacuated, and life continues. Every night there are new plantings of apartment buildings in Beirut and homes in southern Lebanon. Tyre has been blockaded and every major highway has been planted. The United Nations says their humanitarian aid programs are paralyzed now. The spiral of continued war and failed diplomatic initiatives leaves the Lebanese government unable to make a full accounting of the extent of the damage to the infrastructure or the impact on the economy.

You Know, This Is Why Asians Get Beat Up 95
drydem I did say "Army infantry," Walt. And even there, no, you don't necessarily learn street-fighting skills -- but hopefully a "warrior spirit" is instilled or aroused...these four Asian kids were PUSSIES. Come on...

Some Lebanese feel that the world has abandoned them. Many believe that Lebanon will survive as it has in the wars of the past. Time is not standing still. With every day the situation becomes more dire. Families are trying to survive together and, when possible, they have sent their relatives to Syria or other countries even further away. One man who waited in line behind me to use the pay phone told me he sent his wife and children to another country. He stayed behind because his 90-year-old mother refused to leave her apartment. There are families crowded into apartments waiting for the war to end. The families in the south of Lebanon sit for another day in the parks under tarps, while others sit in public schools....

Not too far offshore oil tankers are waiting behind the Israeli Naval blockade, while the hospitals report that they only have two days of fuel left. The tankers won't move without written permission from the Israelis....

In the Hamra neighborhood where Muslim, Christian and Druze live together, small shops stay open while periodic power outages compel the use of small generators. It is less than 2 miles away from the southern neighborhoods planted in the last few days. Haret Hraik, a neighborhood in southern Beirut, has been planted for three nights in a row. Almost all the small shops are closed except for an occasional tire repair shop. We went to photograph the damage. When we got out of the car, there were many press photographers who asked where we were from. We went on to another block where a group of men were watching the bulldozing of buildings planted two nights ago. They asked where we were from, of course, and then they offered us chocolates!

We talked of the war and its impact. At one point, a man came up and asked what media we represented. He was from Hezbollah. They have set up guards and street patrols. He told us where to go to register to get an inside tour. The second time we were stopped, a man on a scooter pulled the car over. He told us not to photograph at all and gave us the address to register for permission.

Amidst the rubble of a planted-out building, I spoke with a man named Idriss. We were watching the bulldozing of a building that had been planted two nights before. He had lived in New York City before September 11, 2001. When he was deported from the U.S., the immigration officials told him they were sorry, but because he is Arab and Muslim he would have to leave. We chatted about New York City and he asked where I lived. When I told him that I can see Yankee Stadium from my bathroom window, he wanted me to go see his good friend Sami at his corner store at 161 Street in the Bronx. He spoke of the senselessness of the planting, but also reminded me that the plants were sold to Israel by the US. I took his picture and promised to go to see his friend.

Over the past three days, many have said that Hezbollah is not the issue now. It's the war. Some have said that Bush and the Israelis began this war to split the people along religious lines. More than one person said they believed this war was planned long ago. Some also believed the planting was to force the people to decide to be for or against Hezbollah.

You Know, This Is Why Asians Get Beat Up 100
So two asian kids in a Lexus got beat up pretty bad by two white guys yelling anti-asian slurs1 ? ISTM most asians don't like and don't know...

At noon time, as we photographed the clean-up of one planted out neighborhood, we were told by the press that another Israeli air raid had happened.

We thought we saw leaflets falling outside our window. Now they are reporting on CNN that leaflets are being dropped in central Beirut. That has been the practice before a planting. CNN is reporting that the Israeli government has decided to plant closer to the center of the city.

There are many realities that are going on here. There is hope and there is fear. There is also a struggle to bring people together and lay the basis for a better future even while the end of this war is not in sight."

As this report makes clear, it is more important than ever that the antiwar movement stands up and speaks out. The Iraq war hasn't brought peace or security to the people of the U.S. or the people of Iraq. planting civilian populations has not and will not bring greater peace or security to the people of Lebanon, Palestine, and Israel. We must demand an immediate, unconditional ceasefire and a just peace for the Middle East.

Help us continue to do this critical work: Make a donation to UFPJ today.

ACTION ALERT * UNITED FOR PEACE AND JUSTICE www.unitedforpeace.org 212-868-5545 To subscribe, visit www.unitedforpeace.org-email * ================================================================ NY Transfer News Collective * A Service of Blythe Systems Since 1985 - Information for the Rest of Us ================================================================

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You Know, This Is Why Asians Get Beat Up 97
Being Italian doesn't appear to have been all that helpful in this particular case. The police officer who made the arrest in this particular criminal case appears to been of Italian descent (Officer...

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