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Today's Stories

April 3 / 5, 2004

Alexander Cockburn
Anti-Depressants a Problem? We're Shocked

Jeffrey St. Clair
How Neil Bush Succeeded in Business Without Really Trying

April 2, 2004

Dave Lindorff
Barbaric Relativism: the Press and Fallujah

Kurt Nimmo
Wherever Bush Goes, Osama is Bound to Follow

Emma Miller
The Role of the West in the Rwandan Genocide

Dr. Susan Block
Same Sex Marriages: Just Say "No" to Prohibition

Norman Solomon
Media Strategy Memo for George & Dick

Sacha Guney
The Meaning of the Elections in Turkey

Christopher Brauchli
The Disturbing Case of Cpt. Yee

Website of the Day
Mercenaries, Inc.

 

April 1, 2004

Ron Jacobs
Dying in Vain in Iraq

Harry Browne
No Smoke, Plenty of Fire: Ireland's Pubs Go Smokefree

Chris Floyd
Towel Boy: Bush Hits Workers with Chemical Weapons

Nicole Colson
Inside America's Concentration Camp: Tortured at Guantanamo

Charles Arthur
Haiti's Army Cracks Down on Workers

Laura Flanders
Elaine Chao: a First Daughter for the First Son


March 31, 2004

M. Junaid Alam
Israel: Suicide Nation?

John L. Hess
Condi Under Oath: But What About the NYTs Reporters?

Fernando Suarez del Solar
A Year Since My Son's Death in Iraq

Sofia Perez
Spain's U-Turn on Iraq is Real Democracy in Action

David Vest
Stick 'Em Up: Put Cheney and Bush Under Oath

Tanya Reinhart
As in Tiannamen Square: Justice and the Yassin Assassination

Mike Whitney
Time to Dump the Pledge

Donald Kaul
Martha Stewart's Lesson: Never Talk to the FBI

Milt Bearden
Mired in the Tracks of Alexander the Great

Marjorie Cohn
The Illegal Coup in Haiti: How the Kidnapping of Aristide Violated US and International Law

Website of the Day
New Pentagon Papers Dropped at DC Starbucks

 

March 30, 2004

William S. Lind
An Occurrence in Pakistan: the Battle That Wasn't

Ron Jacobs
Assassinations, Hate Mail & Justice

Mickey Z.
Tommy Boy Friedman Does "Imagine"

Neve Gordon
Strategic Motives of the Yassin Assassination

Mark Scaramella
The Founding Scam: Insider Trading is the American Way

John Chuckman
The Countessa of Empire: Condi Rice's Idea of Democracy

Greg Moses
Live from Pasadena: Silhouettes of New Order

Rai O'Brien
What Kind of Democracy to Expect if the Opposition Takes Power in Venezuela

Bill Christison
The 9/11 Commission: Dangerous Harbinger for the Future

Website of the Day
Ghost Town: Riding Through Chernobyl


March 29, 2004

John Maxwell
Crisis in the Caribbean: a Miasma Foretold

J. Michael Springmann
Email Spying & Attorney Client Privilege

Robert Fisk / Severin Carrell
Coalition of the Mercenaries

The Black Commentator
Haiti's Troika of Terror

Doug Giebel
Candide in the Wilderness:
How Bush Policy Was Made

David Krieger
The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Bargain

Mike Whitney
Rejecting the Language of Terrorism

Richard Oxman
The Pitts: a 9/11 Burrow of an American Family

Kim Scipes
The AFL-CIO in Venezuela: Deja Vu All Over Again

Michael Donnelly
End Game for Northwest Forests

Norman Solomon
The Media Politics of 9/11

Kathy Kelly
Last Lines Before Vanishing

Website of the Day
Swans: Can Money Buy Everything?

 

March 27 / 28, 2004

Jeffrey St. Clair
Empire of the Locusts

Gary Leupp
The Yassin Assassination: Prelude to an Attack on Syria

William A. Cook
The Yassin Assassination: a Monstrous Insanity Blessed by the US

Faheem Hussain
Some Thoughts on Waziristan: Once and Always a Colonial Army

Elaine Cassel
Is Playing Paintball Terrorism?

Larry Birns / Jessica Leight
Disturbing Signals: Kerry and Latin America

John Ross
Bush Tells the World: "Drop Dead"

John Eskow
A Memo to Karl Rove from the Hollywood Caucus

Alan Maass
Who Are the Real Terrorists?

Dave Lindorff
Spineless of US Journalists

Joe Bageant
Howling in the Belly of the Confederacy

Dave Zirin
Reasonable Doubt: Why Barry Bonds is Not on Steroids

Craig Waggoner
Who Would Mel's Jesus Nuke?

The Kerry Quandry

Joel Wendland
Marxists for Kerry

Josh Frank
Scary, Scary John Kerry

Matt Vidal
Spoilers, Electability and the Poverty of American Democracy

Poets' Basement
LaMorticella, Hamod, Guthrie, Davies and Albert

Website of the Weekend
Say a Little Prayer

 

 

March 26, 2004

Christopher Brauchli
There's a Chill Over the Country

Robert Fisk
The Man Who Knew Too Much: the Ordeal of Mordechai Vanunu

Joe DeRaymond
Democracy in El Salvador? Think Again

Mike Whitney
Lessons on Apartheid from Ariel Sharon

Mickey Z.
Somalia and Iraq: Looking Back and Ahead

Chris Floyd
The Pentagon Archipelago

CounterPunch Photo Wire
Cheney's Close Shave?

John Breneman
Bush's Comic Bomb

Website of the Day
Dick is a Killer

 

March 25, 2004

Lee Sustar
Who is to Blame for Lost Jobs?

Standard Schaefer
An Interview with Michael Hudson on Offshore Banking Centers

Roger Burbach
Lula vs. the IMF: Brazil Begins to Throw Off the Austerity Planners

Jimmer Endres
Elections Without Politics: The Military Budget Is Not an "Issue"

Larry Tuttle
Acting in Your Name: Identity Theft and Public Interest Groups

Toni Solo
Misreporting Venezuela

Dan Bacher
A Memorial Wall for Iraq War's Dead and Wounded

Saul Landau
Is Venezuela Next?

Website of the Day
The Spiral Railway

 

 

March 24, 2004

Gary Leupp
General Musharraf's IOU

Richard Oxman
Shakespeare for Kerry

William Lind
The Beginning of Phase Three: 4G Warfare Hits Iraq

Rep. Ron Paul
Iraq One Year Later

Michael Dempsey
Killing Rachel Corrie Again

Alan Farago
The Bad Math of Mercury: Bush's War on the Unborn

Benjamin Dangl
and April Howard
Media in Cuba

John L. Hess
No Lie Left Behind: Judy Miller Does Dick Clarke

Greg Weiher
Two Cheers for Dems: "We're Not as Bad as George"

Eva Golinger
An Open Letter to John Kerry on Venezuela

Grayson Childs
Where's Cynthia McKinney?

Steve Niva
Israel's Assassinations will Only Fuel More Suicide Bombings

Website of the Day
The Bushiad and the Idiossey

 

March 23, 2004

Phillip Cryan
The Drug War's Next Casualty: Colombia's National Parks

Ron Jacobs
They Shoot Men in Wheelchairs, Too?

Dave Lindorff
A Spanish Parallel: Scare Tactics and Elections

Mike Whitney
Richard Clarke and Teflon George

Brian McKinlay
Bush's Lil' Buddy in Trouble: John Howard Starts to Wobble

JG
Driving Mr. Koon: "Jim Crow Lives Next Door"

Phyllis Pollack
Gettin' Jigga with Metallica: the Battle Over the Double Black CD

Ahmed Bouzid
Sharon's One-Way Track

Sean Carter
The G-Word Goes to Court: One Nation Under [Your Logo Here]

M. Shahid Alam
World's Greatest Country: Do the Facts Lie

 

March 22, 2004

Mazin Qumsiyeh
On Extrajudicial Executions

Uri Avnery
The Assassination of Sheikh Yassin is Worse Than a Crime

Gilad Atzmon
Sharon's Rampage

Mike Whitney
Guilty Until Proven Innocent: the Story of Captain James Yee

Jason Leopold
Firm With Ties to Cheney Faces Criminal Indictment in Cal Energy Scam

Greg Moses
Stop Walling and Stalling: a Report from Houston's Peace March

Phil Gasper
San Francisco: 25,000 March for an End to the Occupation

Lenni Brenner
Report from NYC: Old and Young Parade for Peace

Julian Borger
The Clarke Revelations

Steve Perry
Karl Rove's Moment

Website of the Day
Enviros Against War

 

 

March 20 / 21, 2004

Alexander Cockburn
Gay Marriage: Sidestep on Freedom's Path

Jeffrey St. Clair
Intolerable Opinions in an Age of Shock and Awe: What Would Lilburne Do?

Ted Honderich
Tony Blair's Moral Responsibility for Atrocities

Saul Landau / Farrah Hassen
The Plot Against Syria: an Irresponsibility Act

Gary Leupp
On Viewing "The Passion of the Christ"

William A. Cook
Fence, Barrier, Wall

Phil Gasper
Bush v. Bush-lite: Chomsky's Lesser Evilism

Ron Jacobs
Fox News and the Masters of War

John Stanton
Which Way John Kerry? The Senator's Inner Nixon

Justin Felux
Kerry and Black America: Just Another Stupid White Man

Mike Whitney
Greenspan's Treason: Swindling Posterity

Augustin Velloso
Avoiding Osama's Abyss

Lawrence Magnuson
Eyes Wide Open: Is Spain Caving in to Terrorism?

Kathy Kelly
Getting Together to Defeat Terrorism

Tracy McLellan
Scalia & Cheney: Happiness is a Warm Gun

Kurt Nimmo
Emma Goldman for President!

Luis J. Rodriguez
The Redemptive Power of Art: It's Not a Frill

Mickey Z
The Michael Moore Diet

Jackie Corr
When Harry Truman Stopped in Butte

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
The Great Trial of 1922: Gandhi's Vision of Responsibility

Poets' Basement
Stew Albert & JD Curtis

Website of the Weekend
Virtual World Election

 

March 19, 2004

Jeffrey St. Clair
Zapatero to Kerry: Back Off, Senator, Our Troops are Coming Home

Ann Harrison
So Protesters, How Well Do You Know Your Rights?

William MacDougall
Fortress Britain's War on "Economic Migrants"

Greg Moses
Sold American: Cowboy Nation Gets Ready to Vote

Cynthia McKinney
Haiti and the Impotence of Black America: Roll Back This Coup, Mr. Bush

Norman Solomon
Spinning the Past; Threatening the Future

John L. Hess
"Missing" Evidence and the NYTs

Vicente Navarro
The End of Aznar, Bush's Best Friend

Website of the War
Naming the Dead

 


March 18, 2004

Gila Svirsky
Rachel Corrie, One Year Later: She Never Lost Faith in Decency

Christopher Brauchli
Drilling a Hole in the Sanctions: How Halliburton Made $73 Million from Saddam

William Kulin
Report from Iraq: Just Another Baghdad Car Bombing

Mike Whitney
Resistance: a Moral Imperative

Rep. Ron Paul
Broadcast Indecency Act: an Indecent Attack on the First Amendment

Josh Frank
The Nader Question

Jack Random
They Lied & They Lost: Madrid and the Lessons of Democracy

Greg Bates
What Makes a Nader Voter Tick? A Survey

Sam Hamod / Alfredo Reyes
Contempt of the World: Hastert, Bush and Cheney on Spain

Gary Leupp
The Madrid Bombings: the Chickens Come Home to Roost

Website of the Day
Privatizing Armageddon: Buy Your Own Doomsday Key

 

March 17, 2004

Marjorie Cohn
Spain, the EU and the US: War on Terror or Civil Liberties?

David MacMichael
Untruth and Consequences

Michael Donnelly
Wear the Green, But Skip the Green Beer

Tom Stephens
"Steady Leadership": Let the Buyer Beware

Wayne Madsen
Sen. Kerry, Let Me Help You Out

Karyn Strickler
Who Owns the Sierra Club? Anonymous Donors and Rigged Elections

Peter Linebaugh
Bush: Blanc Blanc

 

March 16, 2004

Lenni Brenner
James Madison: the Anti-Clerical Father of the Bill of Rights

Scott Boehm
Madrid Diary: How to Change World Order in Four Days

Alexander Lynch
From Franco to Aznar: the History Behind the Spanish Elections

Sam Hamod and Alfredo Reyes
The Truth About the Spanish Elections: Aznar Was Going Down Anyway

Elizabeth Weill-Greenberg
You Wouldn't Do a Dog This Way: Executing David Clayton Hill

Mike Whitney
The Case for a Nuclear Iran

Robert Fisk
The Bloody Price of the "War on Terror"

Bill Christison
The Aftershocks from Madrid

CounterPunch Photo Wire
The Passion of St. Teresa

Website of the Day
Join the War on Art!

 

March 15, 2004

Harry Browne
Terror Nothing New to Europe

Mike Whitney
Justice Not Murder: the Tragic Symmetry of Terrorism

Lidice Valenzuela
Haiti: a Coup without Consultation

Greg Moses
Lessons from the Texas Primaries: Looking for a Coalition with Legs

Mickey Z.
Depraved Indifference: C-Sections, Patriarchy & Women's Health

Asaf Shtull-Trauring
AWOL in New York: From Refusenik to Organizer

CounterPunch Wire
Gen. Gramajo Executed by Bees!

 

March 12 / 14, 2004

Gabriel Kolko
The Coming Elections and the Future of American Global Power

Saul Landau
Oh, Jesus...It's the Movie!

William Blum
Neo-Con(tradictions)

William S. Lind
Why They Throw Rocks

Rahul Mahajan
The Meaning of Madrid: War on "Terrorism" Makes Us All Less Safe

Neve Gordon
Demographic Wars

Kurt Nimmo
Kerry and the Progressive Interventionists

Mickey Z.
The "New" UN Blames the Poor

Mike Whitney
War Games: the American Media Leads the Charge

Helen Scott and Ashley Smith
Aristide's Fall: What Led to the Coup?

Justin E.H. Smith
Loïc Wacquant: Against a Sociodicy of the American Prison

Brandy Baker
Him Again? Al Gore Needs to Move On

Robin Philpot
Nobody Can Call It a "Plane Crash" Now: the Report on the Assassination of Rwandan President Habyarimana

Mokhiber / Weissman
The Meat Monopoly Takes a Rare Pounding

Dave Zirin
She Turned Her Back on the War: an Interview with Toni Smith

Daniel Wolff
The Lord's Pier

 

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Behold, the Head of a Neo-Con!

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CounterPunch Exclusive:
20,000 Wounded Iraqi Civilians

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Sheldon Rampton and John Stauber
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Weekend Edition
April 3 / 5, 2004

The Magic of Coca-Cola

Colombian Workers, Civil Rights, Advertising

By PHILLIP CRYAN

Commercials before movies are not popular. A quiet collective sigh fills the just-darkened theater each time the screen comes to life not with the film or even a preview but with an ad. We shake our heads or curse mildly or shrug.

Another incursion. Another flawless conquest: smoothly executed, apparently final, unchallenged. A ritual moment (a movie's beginning) with genuine magic--not an un-commercial moment before, obviously; but, also obviously, much more than commercial--located, claimed, divided up, sold off. Another fragment of cultural commons seized.

The unspoken, shared glee of that moment--the lights-out partial release from our selves' strictures; the preparations for transport, enthrallment--makes it precious. Profitable. Such magic is prime real estate.

An even more precious slice of psychic terrain is collective inspiration--hopefulness and courage and action, a sense of community, a sense of that community's strength. Memories and representations of the civil rights movement seem to hold that force more powerfully than anything else in our national culture.

*****************

The violation, then, was at least double when I took my seat in a darkening theater last Friday night.

The image: a black woman, smiling and joyous, walks down a city street, singing. Her voice is gorgeous. "I wish I knew how it would feel to be free," she sings--and her obvious joy, her booming voice, her proud walk convey that she does know. She must know, or how could she be so happy? She knows how it feels to be free.

Her song was a civil rights movement anthem. Jazz titan Dr. Billy Taylor wrote it in 1954 and Nina Simone popularized it on a 1967 recording. It became a protest song, a hymn for marching.

In the commercial that played before last Friday's film, the woman strutting and belting this song exchanges smiles with passersby. They all look exuberant, enchanted. As she walks, she hands each of them a bottle of Coca-Cola.

*******************

To be fair, I should admit that I've only described the first fifteen seconds or so of the ad. She keeps signing that beautiful song throughout it, but I can't say I know what happens, visually, toward the end. I was buckled over in my chair, sobbing, rocking back and forth to keep from screaming in rage.

********************

Last Friday, the day I went to see the movie, 30 workers at Coke bottling facilities were on hunger strike in eight Colombian cities. It was day twelve.

Two days before, on March 24, day ten, SINALTRAINAL (National Food Industry Workers Union: the union representing Coke workers) reported that many of the hunger strikers--who continued to work their normal shifts, collapsing at the union's tents outside the bottling facilities after work--were experiencing dizziness, depression, headaches, sleeplessness and chest pain. One hunger striker, Marco Tulio Rey, suffered a minor heart attack on the fourth day. Another, Ruben Dario Munoz Joya, was checked into a hospital for severe dehydration. Union leaders reported receiving multiple death threats since the strike began.

But they've seen worse.

Paramilitary death squads have murdered nine members of SINALTRAINAL over the last few years. Isidro Segundo Gil was killed inside the Carepa bottling facility where he worked. Paramilitaries have issued death threats to at least 65 SINALTRAINAL members.

Colombia is the most dangerous place in the world to be a trade unionist. No one knows the exact number, but around 1,500 Colombian unionists have been killed in just the last ten years. And impunity is practically law. According to a U.S. State Department report, no one has been convicted for any of the nearly 400 murders of Colombian trade unionists in 2001 and 2002.

SINALTRAINAL unionists have been kidnapped and tortured as well. Others have been jailed on false charges. Last September masked paramilitaries kidnapped the 15-year-old son of a SINALTRAINAL leader, demanding he tell them where to find his father. Union leaders say their employer--Panamerican Beverages, a bottling company recently bought out by FEMSA, a Mexico-based firm whose major shareholder is Coca-Cola--ordered many of the attacks, some of which took place inside the bottling facilities.

When New York City City Council Member Hiram Monserrate led a fact-finding delegation to Colombia in January, Coca-Cola representatives told the group that its employees may in fact have collaborated with paramilitaries in the murders and torture, according to a February In These Times article. Monserrate reported: "With respect to Coca-Cola, not one person has been prosecuted or convicted for any of these murders. Not one person has been prosecuted or convicted for any of the countless kidnappings that have occurred. Not one person has been prosecuted or convicted for any of the beatings that have occurred on-site [at bottling plants] or at people's homes, which are directly connected to their employment at Coca-Cola."

On March 2, a few days before SINALTRAINAL started the hunger strike, four heavily armed men raided the union's office in Baranquilla, a city on Colombia's Atlantic coast. Along with money and equipment, the men took the security camera's video cassette. The raid came just a few weeks after the New York delegation of unionists and students visited the Baranquilla office, and just one day after the company and union began a new collective bargaining process in the capital, Bogota. A Baranquilla office leader, Adolfo de Jesus Munera Lopez, was assassinated by paramilitaries on August 31, 2002.

Constant and brutal persecution has not succeeded, however: the union has not been silenced. In July 2003, SINALTRAINAL called for an international boycott of all Coke products. Organizations around the world--trade unions, churches, student groups, human rights organizations, politicians--have supported them by writing letters to Coca-Cola and the Colombian government, holding educational events to promote the boycott, protesting outside Coca-Cola facilities, and--most importantly, in terms of pressuring the company--convincing universities and other institutions to refrain from signing contracts with Coke. In addition, the United Steelworkers of America and International Labor Rights Fund have provided SINALTRAINAL invaluable support, filing a joint suit against Panamerican Beverages and Coca-Cola in a Miami U.S. District Court in 2001 for allegedly hiring paramilitaries to kill unionists.

And now a thirty-person hunger strike, in eight cities.

**********************

What I didn't know, sitting in the theater last Friday, wrestling with a terrible dissonance, was that all the solidarity efforts had paid off. Supporters abroad and in Colombia had flooded Coca-Cola and FEMSA with letters and phone calls since the hunger strike began on March 15, demanding that FEMSA negotiate to transfer unionists who lost their jobs when the company closed 11 bottling facilities last year. The union says FEMSA pressured 500 workers to resign in exchange for a severance payment, even though the workers were entitled by both Colombian law and a clause in their contract to transfer in the event of plant closure. Juan Carlos Galvis, a SINALTRAINAL leader in the oil refining city of Barrancabermeja, explained the reason for their fierce defense of the right to a transfer: "If we lose this fight against Coca-Cola, first we will lose our union, then our jobs, and then our lives."

That same day, March 26, SINALTRAINAL reached an unprecedented agreement with Juan Carlos Jaramillo, Coca-Cola's representative in Colombia. The company agreed to transfer 91 union members slated for layoff, lift all penalties that had been imposed on participants in the hunger strike, provide hunger strikers with two weeks of paid vacation to recuperate, and publish an advertisement in a national newspaper discouraging paramilitary reprisals against the union.

In a statement announcing the agreement and the hunger strike's end, SINALTRAINAL leaders wrote, "Twelve days of hunger strike had to pass, and the participants had to experience all the physical and mental rigors of fasting, for the company to finally agree to start a dialogue and listen to its workers. It took twelve days of sacrifice and paramilitary threats for the workers to be heard." They went on to note that it also took a tremendous amount of international pressure on Coca-Cola--and that "the problems that led to this protest have not been resolved. All that has happened is the start of a dialogue, a process that could lead to their resolution. Today, more than ever, we must be strong and united; and all those who have accompanied us in dignity, firmness, and love of our cause must continue doing so, to ensure the workers a just and swift resolution."

************************

A pair of paramilitary gunmen put ten bullets in Isidro Segundo Gil on December 5, 1996, after driving into the Carepa plant on a motorcycle. That night, the building housing the union's office went up in flames. Paramilitaries returned a few days later to demand workers resign from the union. Naturally, everyone complied. Some fled; those who remained were fired two months later.

Paramilitaries murdered Gil's wife Alcira in 2000, after she protested Coca-Cola's role in her husband's death.

************************

I wish I knew how it would feel to be free

I wish I could break all the chains holding me

I wish I could say all the things that I should say

Say 'em loud, say 'em clear

For the whole round world to hear

That's what she sings, strutting, handing out bottles of Coke. You know, it's funny: in November 2000, Coca-Cola paid $192.5 million to settle a class-action lawsuit brought by 2,000 of its African-American employees for discrimination in pay and promotions. Other, similar lawsuits are pending. Coca-Cola delivery drivers in Dallas told National Public Radio in June 2002 that the company regularly stocks stores in black and Latino neighborhoods with post-expiration date (flat) soft drinks.

Coke's 401(k)-holding employees lost over $71 million in 2002. The previous year, the company paid CEO Douglas Daft $105,186,544, including stock options.

I'm sure the bad press from these events doesn't have anything to do with the current advertising strategy.

**************************

When SINALTRAINAL President Luis Javier Correa Suarez traveled to Mumbai, India for the January 2004 World Social Forum, he learned that three Indian towns lack drinking water and have had their fields turned into deserts due to Coca-Cola's exploitation of groundwater and pollution of what little water remains. A protest movement in India has opposed Coke's actions.

In response, Coca-Cola India hired Perfect Relations, a p.r. firm, to improve its image. Now the company trucks drinking water into the communities that lost drinking water sources or had them polluted by Coke's activities--providing no cleanup of the damages or compensation for the loss. In keeping with the worst excesses documented by PR Watch, Coke is even telling farmers that live near its Kerala plant "Toxic Sludge is Good For You!"--giving the stuff away as fertilizer. A BBC-commissioned study found high levels of lead and cadmium in the sludge.

****************************

Well I wish I could be like a bird in the sky

How sweet it would be if I found I could fly

Oh I'd soar to the sun and look down at the sea

And I'd sing 'cause I'd know -

I'd know how it feels to be free

****************************

Some memories, some histories--like the recollection of millions marching, singing, courageous, aware of their own power; millions defying racism and injustice--are, quite simply, sacred.

Their power is why marketers covet them, naturally. And even if we first responded with outrage, I think most of us have grown accustomed to such ads--ads that not only exploit the power of an event or symbol or memory for profit, but in the process actually deplete that power. They take the event's (or symbol's or memory's) felt meaning away from us, bit by bit; they confuse it. They confuse us.

We get branded.

But it's important that we remember what else gets lost in this exploitation of what we hold dear, in this invigoration of a fetish: awareness of conditions of production. What's behind the Wizard's curtain?

In some cases, including that of Colombia's food and beverage workers, "the real thing" turns out to be not just poverty or injustice but outright murder.

Phillip Cryan is a freelance writer. His biweekly Colombia Week column focuses on media coverage of the country's conflict. He lives in Ames, Iowa, and can be reached at phillipcryan000@yahoo.com.

Weekend Edition Features for March 20 / 21, 2004

Jeffrey St. Clair
Empire of the Locusts

Gary Leupp
The Yassin Assassination: Prelude to an Attack on Syria

William A. Cook
The Yassin Assassination: a Monstrous Insanity Blessed by the US

Faheem Hussain
Some Thoughts on Waziristan: Once and Always a Colonial Army

Elaine Cassel
Is Playing Paintball Terrorism?

Larry Birns / Jessica Leight
Disturbing Signals: Kerry and Latin America

John Ross
Bush Tells the World: "Drop Dead"

John Eskow
A Memo to Karl Rove from the Hollywood Caucus

Alan Maass
Who Are the Real Terrorists?

Joe Bageant
Howling in the Belly of the Confederacy

Dave Zirin
Reasonable Doubt: Why Barry Bonds is Not on Steroids

Craig Waggoner
Who Would Mel's Jesus Nuke?

The Kerry Quandry

Joel Wendland
Marxists for Kerry

Josh Frank
Scary, Scary John Kerry

Matt Vidal
Spoilers, Electability and the Poverty of American Democracy

Poets' Basement
LaMorticella, Hamod, Guthrie, Davies and Albert

Website of the Weekend
Say a Little Prayer



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