Of Occupations and Economic Justice
From local peace activist Joy First:
Our vigil with Senator Kohl continues for the 7th straight Wednesday this week on February 21. We will again meet outside Senator Kohl's office at 4:00 pm at 14 W. Mifflin St. and then go inside. Our message remains the same, and is being echoed by peace activists in congressional offices around the country. We want Congress to end the funding for the war and bring all of our sons and daughters home NOW. Our work is part of the Occupation Project, a nationwide campaign organized by Voices for Creative Nonviolence. There are similar actions taking place in 35 states around the country. ...The Iraq War isn't the only issue on which Sen. Kohl's stance is wanting. He also voted for a bankruptcy bill authored by credit card companies and widely criticized by consumer groups, progressives and Democratic groups.
While many of you were vigiling in Madison on February 14, I was in court in DC with 20 others out of the 97 people who were arrested last September in an attempt to give the message to members of Congress that we want them to take responsibility and do something to end the horrific war in Iraq. There were many people in court this past Wednesday who spoke out so eloquently against the war, and their words were entered into the official court record. We were tried by the Chief Judge in the Washington, DC District Court. Though he found us guilty, I know that our words moved him, and we received a suspended sentence.
On a related note, two feminist economists present an interesting critique of microcredit and the Grameen Bank in a Women's eNews article:
One can hardly imagine a more paternalistic act than acknowledging the need for women's economic equality by making an award to a U.S.-trained, conservative male economist. This marginalizes the achievements of the world's first female-led microcredit organization, the Self-Employed Women's Association of India, known as SEWA.
Unlike Grameen and other microfinance enterprises, SEWA is run by poor women for other poor women. It organizes women working in the informal sectors so they can obtain income security, food security, health care, child care and shelter. Its philosophy unites the labor movement, the cooperative movement and the women's movement to ensure that self-employed women, like salaried employees, have a right to their wages, decent working conditions and protective labor laws. ...
Does the award of the Nobel Peace Prize to the Grameen Bank add credence to the neo-liberal myth of individuals escaping poverty merely through their own hard work? Yes. Do these programs help some women pull themselves up by their bootstraps? Yes. Will micro-enterprises do much to end widespread poverty among the world's poorest women? Not a chance.

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