Solidarity with the oppressed is unconditional. Period.

When activists speak of solidarity & unconditional support for the people of Palestine, Afghanistan, Iraq, & everywhere else, that doesn’t mean we anoint them all as saints or think they don’t have social divisions & problems as great as our own societies. War & occupation aggravate these & by no means ameliorate social conflicts.

Every society has its tough guys, hustlers, petty & grand thieves; every political movement has its extremists, goofballs, & clueless hangers-on. These don’t determine or affect our solidarity one iota. We keep our eyes on those struggling to end oppression, occupation, & war by whatever means they deem necessary (even if we’re not always in full agreement with their methods)–& we keep our eyes on the children.

Solidarity doesn’t mean turning a blind eye & playing stupid; it means recognizing that military intervention is to control, not to manage social conflicts. It means trusting other peoples don’t need outside intervention to address their conflicts, that they’re capable of handling their own problems if they’re not being bombed to smithereens.

For political activists, the debates among occupied & persecuted peoples are of great interest because how they conduct their struggles have the ability to change the world or at least to affect our struggles against our own regimes. Those under fire have lots to teach the rest of us. It isn’t up to us to parse political distinctions in these countries & publicly excoriate those we think lacking so some can weasel their way out of solidarity. Solidarity with the oppressed is unconditional. Period. No caveats, no addenda, no ulterior motives. Only the recognition that solidarity is the iron law of social transformation.

Israeli prisons hold 6,582 Palestinians hostage

Avraham Mengistu (AFP:Getty Images)  July 10 2015

Media is in orbit today, doing a freak-out about two Israelis “being held hostage by Hamas” after crossing illegally into Gaza. Avraham Mangisto, a 29-year-old man who–with completely unconscious racism–they identify as Ethiopian Israeli (though his ethnicity has no relevance to the story) was seen crossing the apartheid barrier fence into Gaza in September 2014.

The second “hostage” is an unidentified Israeli Palestinian, a Bedouin from the Negev desert area. Israeli officials provide no details as to how or when this second man got into Gaza or why he went there. But they claim somebody somewhere in Gaza has him in custody. Other than the accusation, they offer no evidence at all. That’s a charge that wouldn’t hold up in small claims court.

According to an unnamed Palestinian official in Gaza, Mangisto was arrested after entering Gaza illegally. He crossed just a few weeks after Israel’s carpet bombing siege so Hamas would have been on red alert for Israeli military operatives. When Hamas officials realized he wasn’t a soldier & that he had likely mental health issues, they released him. But Israeli officials claim that “according to credible intelligence,” Mangisto is being held against his will by Hamas.

It’s entirely possible Hamas has Mangisto in custody & if the fellow has mental health problems that would make it a human rights problem. If he’s being held, he should surely be released to his family. Because Hamas may have political problems but it has never stooped to the degraded levels of Israel. Of course, only a political fool would take Israel’s word as “credible intelligence.” Nothing that comes out of Israel’s propaganda office is either credible or intelligent but makes a mockery of both.

So why is this alleged “hostage crisis” over two guys in Gaza banner headlines all over the world when according to Btselem, the Israeli human rights group, there are now 5,554 Palestinians held in Israeli prisons, 357 of them from Gaza? Another 1,028 Palestinians are in Israeli prisons for crossing into Israel illegally, 16 of them from Gaza. Israel considers all of them criminal offenders. And not only that, but Israel arrests & imprisons between 500 to 700 Palestinian kids every year in the West Bank & East Jerusalem. Hundreds of Palestinians are held years in administrative detention without charges; many are subjected to torture. Why isn’t all that banner headlines!? Don’t Palestinian lives matter? Is Israel exempt from human rights standards in who, why, & for how long they incarcerate Palestinians, & under what conditions prisoners are held?

Build the hell out of the economic, cultural, & academic boycott of Israel (BDS)!

(Photo is Avraham Mangisto from AFP/Getty Images)

10th year commemoration of the Boycott, Divestment, & Sanctions movement

July 9th should not pass without tipping our hats to the 10 year anniversary of BDS–a call issued by Palestinian groups on July 9th 2005. It was a brilliant strategy that changed the political landscape internationally, educating hundreds of thousands about Israeli apartheid & the character of Palestinian Intifada & recruiting activists to solidarity work. It is a powerful tool that gives people around the world a concrete way to render solidarity in deed, not just in sentiment. Our deepest respect to the Palestinian organizers of BDS.

ISIS to the left of us, ISIS to the right of us, stuck in the middle with fools

According to CBS news, the FBI chief wants us to remain on high alert for ISIS recruiters. They claim ten people were arrested over the weekend for ISIS activity. Oh yeah!? Are they sure it wasn’t ordinary hooligans with firecrackers? Or maybe errant Boy Scouts up to no good?

They want us to call in suspicious activity in our neighborhoods. But likely that would only lead to high-speed chases where elderly drivers on scenic tours were carted off to Guantanamo for espionage. Who wants to risk that?

ISIS to the left of us, ISIS to the right of us, stuck in the middle with the clowns & jokers.

South Carolina takes down ugly-assed Confederate flag

South Carolina’s governor signed a bill removing the Confederate flag from in front of the capital building & says she will make sure the flag is “put in its rightful place.” She said this signifies the time for forgiveness for the massacre of nine worshippers. Forgiveness has nothing to do with justice. Forgiveness is a personal matter; justice is a political one that isn’t even close to being addressed. So let’s all have a moment of forgiveness for hanging that ugly-assed thing up there for over 50 years & then we can move on to justice.

As for its “rightful place”? Where the sun don’t shine.