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October/November 2005 - Issue 8
Up one level
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City Hall blocks Somerville divestment petition
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Somerville politicians can breathe a little easier today. Israel divestment will not be a question on the November ballot. On September 22, Superior Court Justice Julian Houston ruled against forcing the City to accept thousands of divestment petitions for validation.
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Questions on divestment — and a proposal
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The writer, a member of the Tikkun organization, presented this paper on Dec. 1 2004 to the Somerville Board of Aldermen, which did not act on it.
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How the west is won: What I saw last month in Palestine
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While the American and Western media fixed their cameras on tearful Jewish
settlers being consoled by Israeli soldiers as they left the homes they
stole from Palestinians in Gaza for Palestinian homes in Al Quds
(Jerusalem), the Naqab (Negev) and the West Bank, Israel has continued to wage
its colonial war against the Palestinian people with unprecedented speed and
impunity. The sham peace was immediately exposed when Israel instituted
brutal air strikes against Palestinians in Gaza and arrested over 400
Palestinians in the West Bank this past week.
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Recruiting American Jews for Israel
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The U.S. government funds Israel's ongoing program to remove the native population of Palestine, primarily Muslims and Christians, and supplant them with European-American Jewish colonists. Our tax dollars facilitate this ethnic cleansing and colonization of Occupied Palestine.
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Anarchy in New Orleans
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As Katrina’s torrential rains passed and the tides rose on New Orleans, the mainstream media sang accounts of looting, violence, rape and mayhem. “Anarchy in New Orleans” the UK Independent declared as it told of how “under-resourced” federal agents supposedly encountered angry and armed residents “bent on shooting their way out of town” [1] . New Orleans chief of police Eddie Compass attested to “little babies getting raped at the superdome”.
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Davis Square “terrorist” exonerated
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A local “terrorist scare” that attracted national attention to Somerville late this summer has been reduced by Federal Officials to nothing more than a drunk homeless man of Arab origin standing in front of a government building.
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Corporate “citizens” are planning a new Inner Belt
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The MBTA proposes to add certain "stakeholders" to the Citizens Advisory Committee (CAC), which will oversee planning for Phase 2 of the Urban Ring transportation project.
These would include Harvard University, the Massachusetts Turnpike Authority (MTA) and the Department of Conservation and Recreation (DCR).
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School committee candidate Luc Schuster on the Cambridge schools and his campaign
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Bridge Staff interview excerpts
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Three of ‘Somerville Five’ still suspended
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Around thirty people attended a community meeting against racial profiling and police brutality took place Tuesday October 4 at the Somerville Library.
Largely organized by the International Action center (IAC), the meeting heard from students and parents concerning their experiences with suspension from high school while under police accusations.
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Cops targeting man who won case at Review Board?
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The Cambridge Chronicle scream-headline could have been lifted straight from the front page of the New York Post: "Inca Son Leader Busted for Child Porn." The sensational, above-the-fold, 28-point Ariel Bold treatment came complete with a Fox News-style “backgrounder” sidebar, which intoned gravely: "About Inca Son." Inca Son is a local street band which has performed with the Boston Pops and in some other large venues such as the 1994 World Cup soccer games. The Chronicle entitled an additional subsection of the article: "International Star."
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Eminent domain decision reminds us that urban renewal is still around
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In June, the U.S. Supreme Court confirmed the authority of urban renewal agencies to use eminent domain powers to seize real estate and sell it to private developers.
Every year, thousands of properties in the U.S. are threatened or condemned under eminent domain. Five years ago, a study by the conservative Pioneer Institute showed that its use was increasing in Massachusetts.
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The property tax bomb—-again
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The property tax is a perennial political issue. But this year it is a bigger issue than usual—particularly in Cambridge.
No one has pushed this issue harder than city council candidate Jesse Gordon. He calls this year’s tax bills “the property tax bomb.” All the politicians are talking about the issue. Councilor David Mahar was perhaps the first to voice constituent tax complaints.
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Meetings about taxes prove… taxing
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The City [of Cambridge] responded to citizens’ concerns about the “property tax bomb” by holding some more meetings. Mayor Sullivan called the first one to order on Thursday September 22, 2005.
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‘Denise Simmons is the only sitting conuncillor worth considering’
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The Progressive Democrats of Cambridge (PDC) have given their
endorsement to 7 City Council candidates.
Of these, five are incumbents. The commitment of the PDC to five
incumbents makes their endorsement of so little worth, that Jesse
Gordon is forced to resort to the Green-Rainbow Party name. So he the invited 2002 Green candidate for governor,Jill Stein, to endorse him at a fund-raiser to establish his ‘progressive’ credentials.
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FBI murders Puerto Rican leader — Wide world of eminent domain — Desperate tenants in Revere — Parks Not Jails
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Oct-Nov 2005
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The Green-Rainbow Party does not endorse Jesse Gordon
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Jill Stein, a prominent member of the Green-Rainbow Party, endorsed Jesse Gordon at a fundraising event at the Middle East in August. Mystic River Green-Rainbow distributed the following statement at the event.
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Anti-Social, Social Worker-Politician
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The writer says that Councilor Davis ignores the needs of disabled citizens for the sake of the upper and middle classes. This article was intended for the Oct-Nov issue of The Bridge,but was omitted for lack of space.
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