| Friday, March 4, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, protests take place  across Iraq, Iraqi forces attack journalists in Basra, Mosul demonstrators are  threatened with a number forced back into their homes, the US government remains  largely silent on the protests, the political situation in Iraq continues to  resemble a square dance  and more.   KUNA reports,  "Thousands of Iraqi demonstrators are flowing to Baghdad and other Iraqi cities  in what is called 'Friday of Dignity' in protest against poor services and  boringly sluggish efforts against alleged corruption and fraud in Iraq." Prashant Rao (AFP) reports  that, today, "a crowd  of about 2,000 people had descended Baghdad's Tahrir Square by early afternoon,  another 1,000 gathered i the southern city of Nasiriyah and about 300 were in  the central city of Hilla."AGI notes , "The protesters mostly  arrived on foot because of a ban on the movement of vehicles in the square."  Bushra Juhi and Qassim Abdul-Zahra (AP)  note  Bahjat Talib had to stop at eight checkpoints to get from the Sadr City  section of Baghdad to Tahrir Square and they quote him stating, "Our country is  lost and for the last eight years the government has failed to offer services  for people. Thousands of youths are without jobs."  In Nineveh Province, the Dar  Addustour live screen crawl noted , protesters have again demanded that  the release of detainees and the expulsions of US forces from the country. Al Rafidayn adds  security forces in  Nineveh used water cannons and batons to disperse the crowd.  American  University Cairo's Firas al-Atraqchi Tweeted this observation about the Iraqi  protests:   Thing about today's  protests is that they  happened despite general curfew         about 2 hours  ago via web    The Day of Dignity follows last week's Day of Rage   which saw  protests across Iraq with demonstrators often attacked by police leaving less  than 30 dead and hundreds injured. The attacks were not just on the  demonstrators, Iraqi forces also attacked the press. Physically attacked the  press. The groundwork for that physical attack was laid by Nouri who ordered  forces to bust into news outlets and journalistic organizations in the days  prior to last Friday's Day of Rage. In addition, Nouri also outlawed live  broadcasts from Baghdad on that Friday. Through his actions, he sent the message  that his government did not respect or support a free press and his thugs then  acted accordingly -- in one instance, barging into a Baghdad restaurant and  physically attacking four journalists who were eating lunch, beating them in the  heads with the butts of their rifles and then arresting them. Stephanie McCrummen (Washington Post)  reminds , "Witnesses in Baghdad and as far north as Kirkuk described watching  last week as security forces in black uniforms, tracksuits and T-shirts roared  up in trucks and Humvees, attacked protesters, rounded up others from cafes and  homes and hauled them off, blindfolded, to army detention centers. Entire  neighborhoods -- primarily Sunni Muslim areas where residnets are generally  opposed to Maliki, a Shiite -- were blockaded to prevent residents from joining  the demonstrations. Journalists were beaten."  In an essay on last Friday's  protest, Danial Anas Kaysi (Foreign Policy)  observes :  After the March 2010 elections, the Iraqi people waited close to  ten months for their political representatives to agree on a framework and form  a government (which is yet to be truly completed due to disputes concerning the  naming of security ministers). Those were months in which the population  continued to live in the shadow of an occupation, in face of high unemployment  levels and in deteriorating conditions -- from low levels of electricity and  water to mismanaged sewage systems and ration card provisions.  When Maliki was chosen, the Iraqi people continued to patiently  await the creation of a national unity government capable of addressing their  needs. All along, Maliki led a protracted campaign to retain the premiership,  arguing that was Iraq's best choice in guiding it away from its woes at a time  of uncertainty. While services were not central to his coalition's campaign,  Maliki concentrated on his capability to impose the rule of law and bring back  stability and security so that the country might begin to truly rebuild.  Security could be quite the convincing argument had terrorist attacks decreased  rather than increased, and had the prime minister not been creating police  forces outside the regular chain of command, such as the infamous Baghdad  Brigades, which is feared by the residents of the city.  The prime minister's image can no longer be built on a mirage of  security and stability. Worsening conditions, coupled with clear corruption and  an increase in terrorist attacks, have led people to lose trust in their local,  provincial, and federal representatives. Two months after government formation,  it has become clear to the people that it is one of a starkly political nature,  formed through backroom deals and the placating of various factions.     Al Mada notes that yesterday a  vehicle ban was placed on Basra in anticipation of the protest (in anticipation  of curbing the protest) and those violating the ban will not have their vehicles  returned until some time after Friday. Basra is where 23-year-old Salem Garuq  al-Dosari died last Friday, killed for the 'crime' of protesting. In reply to a  question about violence from McClatchy's Hannah Allam, AFP 's Prashant  Rao Tweeted:   @ We have reports of  a cameraman injured in Basra, but its not clear how. No violence reported to us  against journos in Baghdad about 1 hour  ago via TweetDeck    Aref Mohammed (Reuters) informs of  today's Basra protest, "A Reuters  reporter at the scene said some  journalists were also beaten by security forces. A vehicle ban was in effect."  J. David Goodman (New York Times) also  notes  the attacks on journalists ("beaten by authorities there"). The Dar  Addustour live screen crawl noted  Diyala, Kirkuk, Tikrit and Samarra  were also placed under curfew. Ammar Karim (AFP) adds , "Nasiriyah, in  the south, barred anyone from entering.  Complete vehicle bans were also placed  on every non-Kurdish province north of the capital, with protesters not even  allowed near provincial governorate offices in the city of Mosul, after five  demonstrators were killed and one building set ablaze in rallies there a week  ago."       While bans were put in place, Al  Mada reveaks  that the Iraqi Jurists Association announced they  would be participating in today's protests and called on the "legitimate"  reforms protesters have demanded to be implemented. They also saluted the  protesters noting that they have shown strength, that all Iraqis are one people  and one destiny.Al Rafidayn reports  that the  protesters in Baghdad today found Tahrir Square cordoned off by security forces  and that blockades were utilized to close down roads and prevent access to areas  including the Green Zone and the Sinak Republic Bridge. Osama Mahdi (Kitabat)  reports  that protesters in Baghdad chanted "Liar Liar Nouri  al-Maliki, the Iraqi Liar Liar" and "Peaceful, Peaceful" while carrying flags  and banners -- one banner read "Where did the people's money go?"  Stephanie McCrummen (Washington Post)  notes  that "security was tight as police in riot gear faced the  demonstrators, and it was unclear whether crowds would become larger following  Friday prayers.  Many protesters in the square said they were nervous about  staying there considering violence that followed last week's nationwide  demonstrations." The crowds did increase despite many obstacles, going from  hundreds before ten this morning to, Aref Mohammed (Reuters) estimates ,  "around 3,000,"  Tahrir Square is now being called "Iraqi Liberation Square".  But not all who wanted to take part in Baghdad were able to.  Alice Fordham and Raheem Salman (Los Angeles  Times) quote  Hansa Hassan who says, "There were many people who wanted  to participate but who were prevented; my husband insisted, and he managed to go  in, but there were many barriers."  NPR's Jonathan Blakley reported from  Baghdad :  Most of the participants today were young people, waving Iraqi  flags and plastic flowers. Many were college-age students, dressed in red and  black caps and gowns, upset because, they say, they couldn't find work after  graduation. Some demonstrators had walked for hours to get to Tahrir  Square. One Iraqi [home maker] said the protestors would "expose the  thieves" -- referring to government corruption. She said people would march  every Friday until their demands are met.   I've changed the term to "home maker."  It's 2011 and I'd love to Alicia   explain why NPR is using the term I'm not allowing at this site.  Was today  "Remember Glen Campbell Day"? I don't know.  Reporting for Al Jazeera  (link goes to Al Jazeera's YouTube page which  provides a live feed) from Baghdad, Jane Arraf stood in front of a large crowd  gathered in Tahrir Square explaining the thousands "have walked for hours to  come to this square," that the government had put up conrecte blocks at the end  of Sinak Republic Bridge and walled off the Green Zone and "despite this,  thousands of people came to chant that they believe the government they elected  are liars and they can do better."  Iraqi Streets 4 Change has a photo essay of the  Baghdad protest  at the top of their web page.    The Dar Addustour live screen crawl noted  so reports that  Baghdad Operations have been ordered to evacuate the square of journalists and  protesters. Al Rafidayn reports  that Iraqi state  television reported the protest in Baghdad was over and there were no incidents  and that, after this was announced by state TV, Baghdad security forces in  Tahrir Square dispersed the protesters --- still present, the protest hadn't  ended despite the TV claims -- and did so with force and utilizing batons after  one p.m. (Baghdad time).  On this violence, Iraq Oil Report  Tweeted a  reply to AFP 's Prashant Rao and McClatchy's Hannah Allam:    Alsumaria TV adds, "In  Diwaniya, hundreds of citizens rallied against weak services in their province  and called to dismiss the governor and dissolve the provincial council.  Demonstrators criticized the government's delay in meeting their demands.  Protestors called to dismiss governor Salem Alwan along with head of the  provincial council and its members on account of their failure to provide their  province with basic services, Alsumaria News reporter said." Dar  Addustour live screen crawl noted  protesters in Muthanna wants the  provincial council and the governor removed. DPA reports  Mosul protesters were  repeatedly intimidated and quotes Mohamed Saadon stating, "Security forced me to  return home though I was planning to join protests. They threatened to shoot me  in the leg if [I] did not go back to myhome.  They also prevented my three  children from leaving home." Al Rafidayn notes that MP Kamal  Saadi has invited the protesters to meet with the Parliament on Saturday and  discuss their demands according to Jalal Iipoidica who states that a call for  this meet up with go out across Facebook.   In one of the saddest developments, Gilbert Mercier (News Junkie Post) observes , "The US  media and most world news outlets (including the BBC) have been strangely silent  over the situation in Iraq. Of course it can be explained by the fact that our  current news cycle is on steroid. Tracking the Arab revolution's progress is  overwhelming even for big news outlets. Libya and the armed revolution to finish  off Gaddafi is the big headline, but not for long as it seems that the days of  the mad man are counted. Egypt and Tunisia are still in mid-revolution limbo.  Both are under military control, but the people are still putting pressure on  their respective military to make sure that the revolution doesn't get hijacked  by a military junta." Iraqis will most likely be gain ingored by the bulk of US  media but with the White House refusing to support the protests, media lackeys  will fall in line and declare it 'non-news'.  Which is so very true. The outlet  that's owned the story domestically would be the Washington Post .  (CNN  has done some very strong reports -- most of which didn't air on CNN but aired  on CNN International.)  Kelly McEvers (NPR) did some strong reporting but she  left Iraq Tuesday.  AP  has done strong and consistent work.  Monday morning  we were  noting how the New York Times  couldn't  be bothered mentioning the assault on Iraqi journalists.   Days later, they still had trouble despite the fact that by Monday evening , The Committee to Protect  Journalists had called out the assaults , as had Simone Vecchiator (International Press Institute)  and  Reporters Without Borders  released their open letter  to KRG President Massoud Barzani while  Nouri al-Maliki had apologized to one reporter, Wissam Ojji (Turkman Eli TV),  publicly.Al Rafidayn reported  Ojji accepted  Nouri's apology. No report on that in the New  York Times  today. Alsumaria TV reported   Tuesday that the White House National Security Council spokesperson Tommy Visor  issued a statement which included: "We were also deeply troubled by reports that  Iraqi Security Forces detained and beat Iraqi journalists and civil society  leaders during Friday's demonstrations." Testifying to the US House Foreign  Affairs Committee on Tuesday, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton never  mentioned it despite offering a media critique (for her appearance before the  Committee, see Tuesday's snapshot ,  Kat covered it in "Is you're Congressional district  in Tel Aviv or Jerusalem? ," Wally  covered it at Rebecca's site with "Pitching the State Dept. budget  (Wally) " and Ava  covered it at Trina's site with "Hillary's foreign policy aims  (Ava) .") US President Barack Obama hasn't said a word.  March  1st, Marian Wang (ProPublica) reported :    Asked generally about the violence  against Iraqi demonstrators [4] on Friday, White House Press Secretary  Jay Carney said only "the approach we've taken with regard to Iraq is the same  that we've taken with regard to the region," which he said was to call on  governments to respond to the protests peacefully. Neither the White  House [5]  nor the State Department seem to have mentioned the matter since. Yesterday's  State Department briefing discussed Libya, Egypt, Iran, Oman, Saudi Arabia,  South Korea, China, Pakistan, Argentina, South Africa and Haiti -- Iraq was  never  discussed  [6].   Wednesday, Sami Ramadani (Guardian) reported  on efforts to  stop last Friday's protests (more protests are scheduled for this Friday) --  efforts by the US government to stop the protests: For its part, the world's biggest US embassy -- the  power behind the throne -- took the unprecedented step of broadcasting in  Arabic, on state TV, a thinly veiled threat to protesters not to go too far in  their demands. The US, it stressed, fully backed the "democratically elected"  regime, while supporting the right to peaceful protest. Hillary Clinton and  Barack Obama must be pretty confused as to which dictatorship they should now  abandon and which to prop up.
 So it's not silence -- bad enough -- it's also actively attempt to scare  Iraqis from protests.  The US is supposed to be a democracy and shame on any  White House that uses tax payer money in another country to encourage people not  to utizlize the right to assembly and the right to free speech.  Shame on the  White House.   From the shameful games of US politics, to the circle  game  that is Iraqi politics, American University Cairo's Firas al-Atraqchi  Tweeted:   An older looking Muqtada Sadr meets  with Iyad Allawi - both say they support  peaceful  protests 31 minutes  ago via web      EuroNews notes, "Earlier, former Iraqi  premier Iyad Allawi and Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr held talks to discuss the  protests.  Last week, al-Sadr asked his supporters to give the government six  months to try to address their demands."  UPI notes , "Allawi conducted a joint  news conference in Najaf with his one-time enemy, Shiite cleric Moqtada Sadr,  calling on his followers to protest in support of the Libyan people and against  U.S. intervention. Sadr did not directly call on his followers to join the  demonstrations." Relationships may be shifting in Iraq. From yesterday's snapshot :     In political news, the big news may be Ayad Allawi's announcement.  Al Rafidayn  reports the Iraqiya leader has given a TV interview  in which he has declared he will have no part of the National Council on Supreme  Policies. He termed his decision "final" and said Iraqiya could nominate or back  someone else for that post if they want to. Iraiqy won the most votes in the  March 7th elections which should have meant Ayad Allawi had first crack at  forming a government but the Constitution wasn't followed. To end the stalemate,  the US government increased the pressure on various parties resulting in an  agreement largely brokered by the Kurds which gave Nouri the prime minister  poster and would make Allawi head of the National Council on Supreme Polcies;  however, that body has still not been created. For those who can remember, after  the agreement there was much fan fair in Parliament the next day . . . except  for Iraqiya walking out as it became obvious that their rewards in the agreement  were not priority. Among those who walked away then was Allawi. It probably  would have been smart for others in Iraqiya to have taken a stand back then when  it might have made a difference. Dar Addustour  reports the assertion that the National Council wil  lbe formed. When? Iraq still doesn't have a full Cabinet. In related news,  New Sabah reports  that Iraqiya is stating Nouri is using his '100 days' (a time of review Nouri's  given himself) not to reform, but to stall. Arab  News reports: "The Chairman of the Supreme  Iraqi Islamic Council (SIIC), Ammar al-Hakin, and the Leader of al-Iraqiya  Coalition, Iyad Allawi, have discussed on Wednesday the activiation of the  agreements, reached among different Iraqi political parties, to activiate the  national partnership to respond to the people's demands, an SIIC statement said  on Thursday. In further related news, Alsumaria TV  reports, "Al Sadr Front threatened to stop  supporting the government of Prime Minister Nuri Al Maliki if he keeps on his  weak performance and failures. The front even hinted about allying with Iraqiya  leader Iyad Allawi to form a parliamentary majority in case the government fails  to provide its people the needed services within the six month deadline set by  Sadr's referendum." UPI  notes, "The party loyal to Shiite cleric Moqtada  Sadr could rally against the country's prime minister if he doesn't address  national woes."    Alice Fordham (Los Angeles Times)  reports "In an interview on Iraqi TV, Allawi alleged that he was being  watched by intelligence services and said that he would not head the proposed  National Council for Strategic Policies. The council, backed by the United  States, was conceived as a counterweight to the power of the prime minister to  end the months-long deadlock on forming a government."  Meanwhile Michael S. Schmidt and Jack Healy (New York  Times) note  the fact that (Nouri's) Supreme Court gave him the power  over the Electoral Commission and other independent bodies at the start of the  year, that -- following Ned Parker's secret prisons report for the Los  Angeles Times  -- Human Rights Watch  and Amnesty  both released reports on the secret  prisons in Iraq under Nouri's command: "And in July, Iraq's high court ruled  that members of Parliament no longer had the power to propose legislation.  Instead, all new laws would have to be proposed by Mr. Maliki's cabinet or the  president and then passed to the Parliament for a veto.  Political experts said  they knew of no other parliamentary democracy that had such restrictions."  Iraqiya's Aliya Nasif tells the reporters, "This is the beginning of  dictatorship.  We are regressing by centuries."    Regressing?  Standing still on the issue of Kirkuk to be sure, the oil  rich, disputed territory in Iraq. The central government or 'government' in  Baghdad claims it has the right to it while the KRG claims it belongs to them.  Both lay claims about this period of time where their own was most discriminated  against and forced out. The issue was supposed to have been addressed sometime  ago. Supposed? The Constitution mandated that it be addressed. The US White  House's 2007 benchmarks -- signed off on by the US Congress and Nouri al-Maliki  -- demanded that progress be made on the issue or US funds would be cut off.  That didn't happen -- it didn't get addressed and US tax payer dollars continued  to flow like honey to Nouri. The issue has been postponed repeatedly. More  recently, the Constitutionally mandated census -- long pushed back -- was  supposed to finally take place in December. That got 'postponed'. It's an issue  that's been kicked down the road repeatedly. 
 Wednesday's snapshot  noted, "Al Rafidayn reports  Kurdistan  Regional Government President Massoud Barzani held a press conference yesterday  where he said the KRG would weigh reforms while noting that he had ordered the  pesh merga into Kirkuk. Dar Addustour reports  that Kirkuk's  curfew was removed yesterday in part due to the influx of additional pesh merga  forces." 
 Today, Al Rafidayn reports  that a source  close to Nouri al-Maliki is stating that Nouri is demanding the KRG remove the  thousands of pesh merga they've deployed to Kirkuk without his permission. Nidhal al-Laithi (Azzaman) reports  KRG President  "Massoud Barzani, in comments on his decision to send in his militias, said he  wanted to protect the Kurds in the city. However, he did not say from whom. The  presence of the Kurdish militia has ignited harsh criticism from both Arab and  Turkmen communities in Kirkuk who charge that the Kurds are intent to resort to  force to annex the city." Wednesday, Wisam al-Bayati (Press TV -- link has text and video) filed a  report noting , "Turkmen lawmakers and officials described the  presence of these troops as unconstitutional. They say Iraqi security forces  have the capability of dealing with the situation by themselves, and that the  Kurds have the ambition to take over the city." The report (video) also notes  Mohammed al-Juburi, of the Kirkuk Provincial Council, who asserts "that the US  presence in Kirkuk is one of the main obstacles to stability. He claims that the  US is creating instability by supporting the Kurds against the Arabs and the  Turkemen." He is quoted stating, "An active role has been played by the US  troops in the city and allowing US troops to commit violations against the Arabs  means that they are supporting these violations."  What to do about Kirkuk?   This week, American intellectual Noam Chomskey observed, "Look how hard it is  just to try to settle the issue of Kirkuk," when speaking with Namo Abdulla  (Rudaw) :      NA: Talking about the issue of Kirkuk and other disputed regions, some  people here believe that as soon as the American forces are withdrawn from Iraq,  there could be an Arab-Kurd war over those issues. How possible is  that? 
 CHOMSKY: You know better than I do. I don't think anyone really  knows. For another thing, I don't really think that it's very likely that the  American forces will be completely withdrawn. It doesn't look like it, but it is  a hard problem. I have not seen a sensible proposal about Kirkuk. I am not in a  position to make any sensible prediction about it.    Staying in the US, Wednesday's snapshot covered the Senate Veterans Affairs  Committee hearing on the VA's refusal to implement the caregivers law Congress  passed. Kat covered it in "Burr promises VA 'one hell of a  fight' " and Ava  covered it at Trina's site with "The VA still can't get it  together. " Also Wally  covered yesterday's Senate  Foreign Relations Committee hearing at Rebecca's site with "No one gives a damn about your  money (Wally). " Kimberly Hefling (AP) reported  on the Senate  Veterans Affairs Committee hearing and noted, "President Obama on May 5 signed a  law instructing the VA to provide a monthly stipend, health insurance, mental  health help and other aid directly to caregivers to help keep wounded veterans  out of nursing homes. But the VA missed a Jan. 31 deadline for implementation.  And the Associated Press reported last month that while the VA did announce  plans soon after that to help caregivers, aid was available to fewer families  than Congress intended."  Which is why, see Wednesday's snapshot, Committee  Chair Patty Murray wanted VA Secretary Eric Shinseki to explain how that  happened.  Chair Patty Murray: I've already discussed the caregiver issue with  you, I've talked about it with Jack Woo, I've talked with senior staff at the  White House and I have spoken directly with the president of the United States.  VA's plan on the caregivers issue was overdue and once submitted it hardly  resembled the bill that unanimously cleared this Congress. Three weeks ago, my  Committee staff requested information on how that plan was developed and to date  no information has been provided. Rather than following the law, the  administration set forth some overly stringent rules bureaucratic hurdles that  would essentially deny help to caregivers.  Sarah and Ted Wade who were staunch  advocates and worked hard with us to get this passed were invited by the  president to attend the bill signing at the White House, they won't be eligible  for the program under the plan that the department submitted. We're also hearing  a lot from veterans and caregivers from across the country who fall outside of  this new line in the sand the VA has drawn, who have been left in limbo and now  don't know if this benefit that they advocated and worked so hard for will  support them.  Mr. Secretary, it appears your that department is not complying  with the law as we have  written. Can you please tell this Committee  why?   We included Shinseki's non-response in full in Wednesday's snapshot.  The  short answer is: He doesn't know but he sure used a lot of words to say that.   Rob Hotakainen (McClatchy Newspapers) reported , "  According to Murray, Congress wanted the law to serve at least 3,500 caregivers,  at a cost of $1.7 billion over five years. The VA's plan, which calls for  covering only 840 caregivers, "is simply not good enough," she said." Richard  Burr is the Ranking Member on the Committee (most senior Republican) and Kat  covered his comments to Shinseki which included promising "one hell of a fight"  with the Committee if the law they passed was not properly implemented.  Rick Maze (Army Times) explained , "The  Obama administration's narrow interpretation of a new law granting benefits and  support to the caregivers of severely injured Iraq and Afghanistan veterans has  sparked bipartisan outrage in Congress, with a key senator warning of a 'hell of  a fight' if the administration moves ahead with its pending regulations."  There  weren't a lot of strong reports on the national level (and I'm sure I missed  some strong local reporting).  There wasn't room to note the coverage of  Wednesday's hearing in Thursday's snapshot so we're noting it today and we'll  close (today) this topic out with this from the Senate Committee on Veterans  Affairs (also on yesterday's hearing):(Washington,  D.C.) -- Today, U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA), Chairman of  the Veterans' Affairs Committee, heard  testimony from Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric K. Shinseki and  representatives from veterans groups and the American Federation of Government  Employees on next year's budget for the Department of  Veterans Affairs.  "On balance, and given that other agencies are facing budget cuts,  this VA  budget is a very good starting place from which to  work," said Senator Murray. "The President has requested an overall  increase for VA funding during a very difficult budget year, but we must ensure  that the cuts he also proposed do not hurt the veterans who have sacrificed so  much for this nation. Going forward, I will work to add funding that is  necessary for programs vital to veterans, such as for research and the operation  of VA's Inspector General which helps root out  fraud and other problems with existing programs."   The President's budget request  includes an overall increase of $1.8 billion in discretionary  spending over Fiscal Year 2011 levels. It also includes various proposed  funding cuts, however, including a reduction in spending for construction and  non-recurring maintenance, and a proposed $72 million cut for VA research  funding.   Following  today's hearing, Members of the Veterans' Affairs Committee will provide the  Senate Budget Committee with their views and estimates for VA's budget. Views  and estimates are a formal part of the federal budget process, in which Congressional  Committees recommend funding levels for programs and activities under  their legislative jurisdiction. (For the Veterans' Affairs Committee's  jurisdiction, click here.) The House and  Senate Budget Committees review these recommendations when formulating the  proposed Budget  Resolution for the coming fiscal year.  The Chairman's opening  statement is available in audio form here. For the  full witness list and the witnesses' written testimony, please visit http://veterans.senate.gov.    Meanwhile as protests rocked Iraq today, the question is whether a planned  demonstration against the ongoing war will rock the US?   A.N.S.W.E.R . and  March Forward!  and others will be  taking part in this action: 
 March 19 is the 8th anniversary of  the invasion and occupation of Iraq. Iraq today remains occupied by 50,000 U.S.  soldiers and tens of thousands of foreign mercenaries.   The war in Afghanistan is raging.  The U.S. is invading and bombing Pakistan. The U.S. is financing endless  atrocities against the people of Palestine, relentlessly threatening Iran and  bringing Korea to the brink of a new war.   While the United States will spend  $1 trillion for war, occupation and weapons in 2011, 30 million people in the  United States remain unemployed or severely underemployed, and cuts in  education, housing and healthcare are imposing a huge toll on the people.   Actions of civil resistance are  spreading.   On Dec. 16, 2010, a veterans-led  civil resistance at the White House played an important role in bringing the  anti-war movement from protest to resistance. Enduring hours of heavy snow, 131  veterans and other anti-war activists lined the White House fence and were  arrested. Some of those arrested will be going to trial, which will be scheduled  soon in Washington, D.C.   Saturday, March 19, 2011, the  anniversary of the invasion of Iraq, will be an international day of action  against the war machine.   Protest and resistance actions  will take place in cities and towns across the United States. Scores of  organizations are coming together. Demonstrations are scheduled for San  Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington, D.C., and more.        Hard Times GenerationFor some children, socializing and  learning in school are being cruelly complicated by homelessness, as Scott  Pelley reports from Florida, where school buses now stop at budget motels for  children who've lost their homes. | Watch  Video 
 HitchensSteve Kroft profiles Vanity Fair columnist, author and  public intellectual Christopher Hitchens, for whom nothing is off-limits when  making his wry and often outrageous observations, including the cancer he is  suffering from. | Watch  Video
 
 Spy on the IceBob Simon reports on the latest "spy-cam"  techniques used by wildlife filmmakers to show animals - in this case, polar  bears - up-close and in a way audiences have never seen them before. |  Watch  Video
 
 "60 Minutes," Sunday, March 6, at 7 p.m. ET/PT.     And finally, David Bacon's  latest book is Illegal People -- How  Globalization Creates Migration and Criminalizes Immigrants (Beacon  Press) which won the CLR James Award.  Bacon has a new report for In These  Times entitled "Divide and Deport: On  Immigration, Thom Hartmann and Lou Dobbs Have Much in  Common:" 
 There  has always been a conflict in U.S. labor about immigration. Conservatives  historically sought to restrict unions and jobs to the native born, to whites  and to men, and saw immigrants as job competitors-the enemy.This was part of an overall perspective that saw  unions as businesses or insurance programs, in which workers paid dues and got  benefits in return. Labor's radicals, however, from the IWW through the CIO to  those in many unions today, see the labor movement as inclusive, with a  responsibility to organize all workers, immigrant and native-born alike. They  see unions as part of a broader movement for social change in  general.In 1986, the AFL-CIO  supported the Immigration Reform and Control Act, because it contained employer  sanctions. This provision said employers could only hire people with legal  immigration status. In effect, the law made it a federal crime for an  undocumented person to hold a job. Since passage of the law, immigration raids  have led to firings and deportations of thousands of people in workplaces across  the country. In many cases employers have used the law as a way to intimidate  immigrant workers, and rid themselves of those trying to organize unions and  protest bad wages and conditions.Transnational corporations invest in developing  countries like Mexico, moving production to wherever wages are lowest. Treaties  like the North American Free Trade Agreement promote low wages, privatization,  the dumping of agricultural products, and other conditions that increase  corporate profits. But those measures also impoverish and displace people,  forcing them to migrate to survive.
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