September 2006

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“We have seen in the past few years stunning examples of Homes not Bombs campaigns that have succeeded in employing the noble zucchini in the cause of peace. We have argued that successive war ministers’ confused sexual desires to launch phallic-shaped missiles would be more safely directed if phallic-shaped zucchinis were sent instead.”

Afghanistan Needs Food, not Bombs: Send a Zucchini today to Canada’s War Minister (no postage required–details below, including sample letter and address)

A message from Toronto Action for Social Change / Homes Not Bombs

This message includes:

1. FOOD CRISIS IN AFGHANISTAN

2. CANADA SHOULD SEND FOOD, NOT BOMBS, TO AFGHANISTAN

3. WHY ZUCCHINIS, WHY NOW?

4. FEED THE AFGHAN PEOPLE, STOP SQUASHING THEIR HOPES FOR PEACE (includes
address of War Minister Gordon O’Connor and sample letter)

5. SENLIS COUNCIL NEWS RELEASE ON HUMANITARIAN CRISIS IN AFGHANISTAN

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In Mexico, a Class War Looms

John Ross
The Nation
September 6, 2006

“For the new president, the task of governance will not be an easy one. The country is divided in half geographically (Calder

Gwynne Dyer

The United Nations Security Council deadline for Iran to stop producing enriched uranium expires on Aug 31, and UN Secretary-General Kofi Annnan arrives in Tehran on Sep 2. Washington demands UN sanctions against Iran if it doesn

by Dahr Jamail and Ali Al-Fadhily
Inter Press Service
September 5, 2006

RAMADI - The U.S. military has lost control over the volatile al-Anbar province, Iraqi police and residents say.

The area to the west of Baghdad includes Fallujah, Ramadi and other towns that have seen the worst of military occupation, and the strongest resistance.

Despite massive military operations which destroyed most of Fallujah and much of cities like Haditha and al-Qa’im in Ramadi, real control of the city now seems to be in the hands of local resistance.

In losing control of this province, the U.S. would have lost control over much of Iraq.

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Another Grenade Attack Against Por Esto! Brings Out Civil Society to Defend the Newspaper

By Harsha Walia
The Georgia Straight
Aug 31, 2006

On July 31, Citizenship and Immigration Minister Monte Solberg announced a federal initiative aimed at speeding up recruitment of foreign workers by establishing

September 4, 2006
CBC News

Temporary farm workers brought to British Columbia from other countries should be made Canadian citizens, says the president of the province’s largest labour organization.

Jim Sinclair of the B.C. Federation of Labour has warned that too many Mexican berry pickers working in the Fraser Valley under the federal Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program have been threatened with deportation because of disputes with their bosses.

Sinclair, whose group represents more than 450,000 workers through affiliated unions, said making the farm workers Canadian citizens would solve the problem.

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By Chris Arsenault
Briarpatch Magazine
September/October 2006

Ducking behind walls to avoid a suspicious hotel manager’s roving eye; flipping burgers and washing dishes in university cafeterias; sharing cigarettes with co-workers and trying to gauge when to drop the U-word; holding impromptu organizing meetings behind the dumpster out back—I did all of these things while working as an organizer, and none of it got me any closer to that promised land of twenty-first century union organizing: the service sector. Simply put, the service sector is where the labour movement needs to be if it’s going to hold its ground in the face of corporate and government rollbacks. And we’re not making much headway.

The service sector—baristas, walmart cashiers, call center representatives, and grocery baggers (as well as some high-wage consultants and computer programmers)—now accounts for seventy percent of the Canadian workforce. Meanwhile, union density in Canada dipped below thirty percent of the paid labour force in 1999, for the first time in five decades. There is a correlation here.

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By Michael Skinner
Briarpatch Magazine
September/October 2006

In 1997, the World Bank loaned thirteen million dollars (US) to the government of Guatemala to finance the privatization of the country’s seaport, electrical grid, and telephone and postal services. A Canada Post subsidiary and its offshore partner International Postal Services (IPS) received the lucrative concession to manage the privatization of the Guatemalan postal service.

Canada Post International Limited (CPIL), which at the time was known as Canada Post Systems Management Limited, is a subsidiary company of Canada Post, a crown corporation wholly-owned by the government of Canada.

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By J. F. Conway
Briarpatch Magazine
September/October 2006

The NDP is on the cusp of forgetting—not for the first time—how crucial the support of the province’s labour movement and the working-class vote are to maintaining its hold on power.

The Saskatchewan NDP is nearing the end of its fifteenth year of continuous power, and faces an election in 2007 or 2008. Premier Lorne Calvert has begun to equivocate in his support for labour, most recently bowing to the right-wing Saskatchewan Party and an aroused business lobby to repeal labour legislation of benefit to part-time workers. Further, Calvert, like his predecessor Roy Romanow, has dragged his feet on responding to the labour movement�s demands for more progressive, pro-worker labour laws. Accordingly, disillusionment has grown within the labour movement towards the NDP government. In the June 19 Weyburn-Big Muddy by-election, the NDP was defeated by a two-to-one margin by the Sasatchewan Party, placing third behind the Liberals. There�s a growing mood of defeatism in the NDP, and among its electoral supporters. Unless the government makes some dramatic moves, it seems likely that Calvert will lose the next election. It appears the NDP is on the cusp of forgetting—not for the first time—how crucial the support of the labour movement and the working-class vote are to maintaining its hold on power.

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