"Heretic, Rebel, a Thing to Flout"

An Eclectic Journal of Opinion, Poetry, and General Bloviating


LAW SCHOOL PROF BRING “POEMS FROM GUANTANAMO” TO MCC
formal portrait
[info]patrickmurfin


Marc D. Falkoff, Ph.D., a professor of law at Northern Illinois University will bring voices of detainees at Guantanamo Bay to a program at McHenry County College on Thursday, December 3 at 7 PM in the Conference Center.


Since Falkoff 2004 he has been a principal lawyer in the habeas representation of seventeen prisoners being held by the U.S. military at Guantanamo Bay on suspicion of involvement with terrorism. For this work, he was named the Charles F. C. Ruff Pro Bono Lawyer of the Year in 2005. He received the Frederick Douglass Human Rights Award in 2007 from the Southern Center for Human Rights and in 2008 was the recipient of the Bill of Rights in Action Award from the Constitutional Rights Foundation in Chicago.


Falkoff writes and speaks frequently about the rule of law in the context of the war on terror. The book of prisoner poetry he edited, Poems from Guantánamo: The Detainees Speak, was a bestselling anthology translated into a dozen languages. Abused, desperate and isolated, Guantánamo prisoners turned to writing poetry as a way to preserve their humanity. Despite the Pentagon's efforts to suppress the poems, Falkoff and a dedicated group of pro bono lawyers succeeded in giving the detainees a voice.


According to Falkoff, a very real problem exists, "politics rather than principle reigns at Guantanamo." His presentation will discuss torture of the prisoners, the false information elicited, the disarray of evidentiary files, and the telling resignations of key military prosecutors.


Following the program, he will be available to sign books.


The program is part of the on-going Current American Issues Information Seminar Series sponsored by The Student Peace Action Network (SPAN), Pax Christi, and the McHenry County Peace Coalition. It is open to the public and admission is free.


For more information call 815 943-7611 or e-mail molly_mcq@hotmail.com .


What’s Really in the Health Care Reform Bill?
formal portrait
[info]patrickmurfin


HEALTH CARE REFORM BILLS

Truth and Fiction

 

Current American Issues

Information Seminar Series

 

SPEAKERS:

 

Jane Hansen, Family Nurse Practitioner

David Borris, Illinois Main Street Alliance

Hal Snyder, M.D.

John Gaudette, Illinois Director, HCAN

 

America's health care system is a disaster causing vast amounts of suffering and unneeded expense.  Now is the time to work together to correct its' many flaws, however myths perpetuated by the health industry itself appear to be derailing this process by creating confusion in the public discourse.  We have assembled a panel of experts to help sort fact from fiction.  Jane Hansen who holds an MBA from the University of Chicago and a BA in economics from Wellesley will begin the evening by presenting an overview of the current health care system.  This will provide a better understanding of the present health care crisis facing our country.  David Borris, proprietor of Hel's Kitchen Catering, will address the need for reform in the health care industry to assist small business owners.  Dr. Hal Snyder is a volunteer organizer with Health Care for America Now who has studied the various bills in Congress.  He will dispel the many myths circulating throughout our country and tell the truth about the reform legislation and what it will do for us.  Illinois Director of Health Care for America Now John Gaudette, will explain what's happening in Congress and how we can have a say in the outcome. If you have questions regarding the pending legislation in Congress, please join us.

 

McHenry County College Conference Center

Wednesday, September 9, 2009 at 7:00 pm

 

Sponsored by Pax Christi, The McHenry County Peace Coalition,

and The Student Peace Action Network

 


TAXI TO THE DARK SIDE—Acclaimed Film to be Screened at MCC
formal portrait
[info]patrickmurfin


The Academy Award winning documentary Taxi to the Dark Side will be presented at McHenry County College, Room B177C, at 7 PM, Thursday, June 25.

 

The free presentation is in support of Torture Awareness Month, sponsored by the National Religious Campaign to End Torture. 

 

“The film which exposes the US government policy of torture by telling the story of an innocent Afghan taxi driver.  Through both images of Bagram Air Force Base prison in Afghanistan and discussions with those convicted of his homicide, it investigates the brutality causing his death and examines the history of this cruel practice,” according to

 

There will be a discussion following the film regarding what actions can be taken to pressure the Obama administration to follow through on his campaign rhetoric.

 

The program is free and open to the public.  It is co-sponsored by the Coalition and the MCC Student Peace Action Network.


CURRENT AMERICAN ISSUES FORUM—“Legal Murder: Exposing the Death Penalty
formal portrait
[info]patrickmurfin

 

Legal Murder:  Exposing the Death Penalty will be the topic of the next Current American Issues Forum at the Conference Center of McHenry County College on Wednesday, April 8 at 7 pm.

 

The program will feature Illinois Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty (ICADP) Executive Director Jeremy Schroeder.  The ICADP leads the fight to remove the death penalty from the Illinois Criminal Code.

 

After 13 death row inmates were exonerated, former Governor George Ryan declared a moratorium on executions.  Although the moratorium remains in effect, without change to the Illinois Criminal Code it can be reinstated at any time.  Convicted individuals continue to be sentenced to death under the Code.

 

McHenry County’s most famous wrongfully convicted death row inmate, Gary Gauger will also speak.  Gauger, an innocent victim of a failed system, will share his personal nightmare. He has been interviewed on The Oprah Winfrey Show, 60 Minutes, 20/20, CNN, A&E Investigative Reports, and Court TV. The acclaimed play, The Exonerated, included Gauger's profile.  In the recently released book, In Spite of the System, Gauger told his story.

 

A representative from Murder Victims' Families for Human Rights (MVFHR) will explain why they oppose the death penalty and work for its global abolition.

 

The program is the third in the highly successful revival of the Current American Issues Forum presented by the MCC Student Peace Action Network (SPAN).  Previous programs on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the Iraq War were well attended and provoked sometimes passionate discussion.

 

The program is co-sponsored by the McHenry County Peace Coalition, the ICADP, and the MVFHR

 

As always, the public is invited and there will be time for questions and discussion.  There is no charge for attendance.


WOODSTOCK VIGIL TO MARK 6th ANNIVERSARY OF IRAQ WAR
formal portrait
[info]patrickmurfin
 

The sixth anniversary of the beginning of the War in Iraq will be commemorated with a vigil on Thursday, March 19 at 7 PM at the Congregational Unitarian Church at the corner of Dean and South Streets in Woodstock.

 

The vigil will recognize all of the victims of the war, American and Iraqi, military and civilian.  Participants will gather outside the church on the corner to stand witness the ongoing war, now the longest conflict in American history.

 

The vigil is sponsored by the McHenry County Peace Coalition, the Peace and Justice Committee of the Congregational Unitarian Church, Pax Cristi, the Student Peace Action Network at McHenry County College.

 

For more information call the church at 815 338-0731.

 


THE WAR STILL RAGES—Two Events at MCC Help Remember
formal portrait
[info]patrickmurfin

 

Just in case you didn’t notice, there is still a war on.  The members of the Student Peace Action Network at McHenry County College have not forgotten.  After a hugely successful re-launch of the Current American Issues forum last month with their Road to Gaza presentation (Northwest Herald coverage here), they are back with two days of activities focusing on the War in Iraq.

 
 

On March 10 and 11 the Eyes Wide Open exhibit provided by the American Friends Service Committee will bring the powerful imagery of empty combat boots representing Illinois soldiers lost in the war.  The boots, along with lists of civilian deaths in the war, will be on display both days in the College Commons.
 

 

 

 

On Tuesday, March 10 at 7:00 pm in the MCC Conference Center the Current American Issues forum will present The Personal Cost of War:  Viewpoints from Former Soldiers. A panel of U.S. veterans from the Chicago Iraq Veterans Against the War will share their personal stories of occupation and military service.  They will discuss what they saw and what they were asked to do.  These "winter soldiers" are not anti-military.  Their goal is to shed light on routine abuses rooted in military policy in an attempt to improve it.  Having been there, they believe it is their patriotic duty to inform the people of what is really happening on the ground. 

 
 

Molly McQueen, coordinator of the student group, notes that it is “important to address the issue of the Iraq War with the upcoming 6th anniversary approaching on March 21.”

 

 

These events are co-sponsored by the McHenry County Peace Coalition.


 



JOHN DARGER FOR MCC TRUSTEE JOINS CHANGE FOR NUNDA CANDIDATES FOR PHONE BANKING
formal portrait
[info]patrickmurfin
 

John Darger, candidate for McHenry County College Trustee


Please join us for a co-operative voter calling party this Sunday, March 1 from 12 to 3 PM at Pauline Walker's house, 233 Third Street in Crystal Lake.  Volunteers will be calling identified Democratic voters on behalf of John Darger’s campaign for McHenry County College Trustee, and the Change for Nunda candidates Meredith Reid Sarkees and Patrick Murfin.

 

If you are not familiar with John Darger, you should be.  A former candidate for the McHenry County Board, Darger is a leading McHenry County Democrat who worked full-time as an Obama Fellow this past summer in Saginaw, Michigan, the town where his parents grew up, and worked weekends for Obama in northwest Indiana.  Now he is applying that hard earned political acumen to making our community college work for all of us.

 

Darger is a sale representative for a leading independent publisher, W.W. Norton and has the intellectual curiosity of a true bibliophile.

 

He has also been a strong supporter of MCC, as well as a vocal critic when this vital community institution has strayed away from its mission.  Many observers point to him as critical to crystallizing opposition to the Board’s ill advised scheme to build an addition with a minor league baseball stadium last year.  And he has been skeptical of the current proposal to locate the world’s tallest free standing broadcast antenna on land sold by the college.

 

Bring your cell phones and join us this Sunday!


 

NEW PEACE COALITION OFFERS TWO PROGRAMS--The Death Penalty and the War in Gaza
formal portrait
[info]patrickmurfin

The McHenry County Peace Coalition is a successor to the former McHenry County Peace Group, which succumbed to exhaustion last year after nearly five year of fervent activity to advance the cause of peace and end the war in Iraq.  After taking a deep breath many of the tireless activists who so long kept up the good fight, united with other peace advocates and members of the Congregational Unitarian Church’s peace group and are back doing what they do best.

 

This Thursday members will roll out two, count them two, first class educational programs.  Take your pick.  You can’t go wrong.

 



Jeremy Schroeder, the executive director of the Illinois Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty will be talking about the status of the death penalty moratorium, at a meeting hosted by the Coalition on February 12, 7:00 PM at the Congregational Unitarian Church, 221 Dean Street, Woodstock.

 

The Illinois Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty is a grassroots membership organization committed to educating the public about the flaws and injustices in the Illinois capital punishment system and promoting humane alternatives to the punitive death penalty system.

 

The program is free and open to the public.

 

For more information call the church at 815 338-0731.


Todd Culp, PhD

Meanwhile, down the road at McHenry County College, the Coalition will join forces with a new MCC Student Peace Action Network to revive the popular Current American Issues public forum series.

 

On Thursday, February 12 at 7 PM in Room B177C they will present The Road to Gaza:  How Did We Get Here?

 

Dr. Todd Culp will be the featured speaker.  Culp teaches History and Political Science at MCC and holds a PhD in Political Science with intensive study in political violence, terrorism, and insurgency. 

 

Culp’s work for reconciliation between the Israelis and the Palestinians includes developing and leading study groups throughout the Middle East where he joins local organizations working to bring Israelis and Palestinians together and creating enduring friendships.  He organized and raised funds for a construction project, leading a group of volunteer builders from the Rockford community to assist in building an interfaith college in January 2009.  While there he became an eyewitness to the devastating results of the on-going conflict. He will discuss the current situation and analyze the key events leading up to the Gaza War.

 

The program is free and open to the public

.

 


HEALTH CARE FOR ALL ILLINOIS--Join Me in Testifying for Single Payer Health Care Illinois
formal portrait
[info]patrickmurfin

 

I, for one, plan to be there when Representative Mary Flowers (D-Chicago) brings hearings on the Health Care for all Illinois Act (HB 311) to McHenry County this Saturday.  How about you?

 

Saturday, June 28

11 a.m. to 2 p.m.

McHenry County College Shah Center

4100 Shamrock Lane

McHenry, Illinois

 

HB 311, which calls for a single payer health care plan for Illinois, has been voted out of committee in the House and will be considered in this session.  Rep. Flowers, the bill’s main sponsor, is launching a series of hearings to be held through out the state right here in McHenry County.  Why?   I’m not sure, but it could have something to do with Rep. Mike Tryon (R-64) a vocal opponent of single payer health coverage in Illinois who recently declared that “McHenry County is not ready for socialized medicine.”

I don't have one of those dramatic, life-and-death horror stories that so many do.  I'm just an older family man (age 59) who lost my health insurance when I was involuntarily "retired" after nearly 25 years as a public school head custodian three years ago.  Since then, I have held part time jobs and contract employment without health coverage.  Private insurance is completely cost prohibitive and even being added to my wife's coverage would run several hundred dollars a month.  As a result, with our family’s monthly income barely able to keep up with the bills we have, I have not accessed any health care services since then, even when I incurred an ankle injury that kept me walking with a cane for the better part of a year.

I am considerably overweight--yeah, I know it's my fault and a character fault to boot--and  at risk for high blood pressure and type 2 diabetes  I am years behind schedule for tests for colon cancer. I have urinary tract problems that could indicate an enlarged prostrate--or something worse.  Twice I have simply "waited out" lengthy bouts of what was either bronchitis or pneumonia.  When asked about my health care plan, the answer is "Don't get sick or successfully die suddenly."

Adult, pre-retirement men like me aren't cute or cuddly.  We’re kind of a glut on the market.  And every sort of half-way health care proposal out there specifically excludes us—the old “women-and-children-to-the-life-boats-first” philosophy..  Our only hope is the adoption some form of true universal, single payer health plan.

 

I bet you have a story, too.  Or know someone who does.  If you want to add your testimony, please call Nicholas Skala at 312 782-6006 or e-mail nick@healthcareil.org .

 


ILLINOIS MINUTEMAN PROJECT--A Pseudo Public Meeting At MCC
formal portrait
[info]patrickmurfin
 

Well, the Illinois Minuteman Project circus rolls into town tonight when they put on their $50-a-head show at McHenry County College featuring Ohio Sheriff Daniel Beck.  You may remember these folks as the eye of the hurricane that blew through McHenry County this summer when they tried to put on the same show at a local hotel.  This blog carried the ensuing drama blow by blow.  Check the archives to get up to speed or refresh your memory.

I’ve been asked why the McHenry County Peace Group and the Latino Coalition have not publicized protests to this meeting.  Good question.  First, neither group ever denied the right of the Minuteman group, or anyone else, to meet.  We only wanted to counter their support of draconian measures targeting immigrants and, inevitably, any one who looks or sounds like an immigrant.  Secondly, we agreed that Latinos Unitdos, the recognized college student group, should take the lead in plotting a response.

In speaking to the press shortly after this meeting was announced, I made clear that we were not opposed to allowing them to have a forum.  I did point out that when the Peace Group recently sponsored its Current American Issues forum on immigration with Salvadore Cicero, it was free and open to the public.  No attempt was made to screen out Minuteman members or other opposed to a fair and equitable immigration policy.  We accommodated written questions from the audience regardless of the perspective of the questioners.

On the other hand the Minuteman Project has gone out of its way to make its “public” meeting as private as possible.  The $50 admission charge and the refusal to sell tickets at the door are meant to screen out attendance by any possible opponents.  Minuteman front woman Rosanna Pulido, after denying that the high charge was meant to screen out opponents in the NORTHWEST HERALD was caught red handed admitting it in the DAILY HERALD. 

When the group was planning its first meeting, it even returned the money of Latino Coalition leader Carlos Acosta and refused to allow him to attend even to observe.  Acosta and others have secured tickets to the new program.  It will be interesting to see if they will honor their commitment to the college for an “open” meeting or will try to deny them entrance anyway.

The group also will ban cameras and recording devises from the meeting so no record of what is actually being said by whom will likely be made public.

Another interesting question is whether the group can fill the auditorium with paying customers.  $50 a head is quite a shot, even for many of their own supporters.  One wonders how many tickets will be “comped” to loyal supporters to avoid the embracement of a half-empty house.  Again, the wide spread use of free passes while soaking the general public would call into question their “public” meeting.

Latino Unidos students did take the lead and outlined ambitious plans for counter events.  But the administration, probably fearing confrontations, refused to allow the group to use the commons area near the Conference Center to set up alternative literature and programming.  They turned down a proposal to allow a teach-in  in classrooms any where near the Minuteman event or to allow the group to invite high school students to attend.  Hints were heavily dropped that any “disruptive” behavior by Latinos Unidos could result in the suspension of their recognition as an official student group.

When the group presented college President  Walter Packard, with a petition containing over 400 names, protesting the use of the college as a venue for the event, Packard used the media to paint Latinos Unidos as advocates of censorship and the college as a bastion of free speech.  But neither the President nor the College has ever explained how the Minuteman group’s restrictive admissions policy should qualify it to use college facilities under the tissue thin guise of presenting a “public” meeting.

Tonight Latino students, acting as individuals, will make their presence known to those attending the event.  In the course of their normal activities—going to classes, the library, commons, and the parking lot—they can be observed wearing identifying t-shirts.  Meanwhile supportive observers, including Peace Group and Latino Coalition members will be on hand to monitor the situation.  No demonstrations or disruptive activities are planned.

But the Minuteman group and their allies will not be able to slink into McHenry County unnoticed.

Look to this space for coverage of what takes place tonight.


CURRENT AMERICAN ISSUES--Fr. Harak to Expose Blackwater and the Rise of Private Militaries
formal portrait
[info]patrickmurfin

 

G. Simon Harak, S.J

 

G. Simon Harak, S.J. will lead a discussion of War Profiteering and Blackwater: the Rise of Private Militaries at the Conference Center at McHenry County College in Crystal Lake on Tuesday, November 6 at 7 p.m.

            The private security firm Blackwater has been the focus of international controversy recently after being accused by the Iraqi government of the murder of civilians and has been the focus of Congressional hearings.

            Fr. Harak is a former Director of the War Resisters League in New York where he organized a National Speakers Bureau on war profiteering and has traveled extensively speaking on this issue.  In 2006, he was awarded Pax Christi‘s New York City Peacemaker of the Year

            The longtime peace activist helped found Voices in the Wilderness which has been nominated three times for the Nobel Peace Prize.  He is currently director of the newly formed Marquette University Center for Peacemaking.      

            “Fr. Harak will address the issue of corporations that sell war, then profit from the bloodshed,” according to Peace Group member Libby Pappalardo.  “Extensive research reveals who these companies are, how much they make, and how they literally ‘call the shots, when it comes to selling war.”

            He will also talk about Blackwater, which has opened a training facility recently in northern Illinois’s Joe Davies County, and the rapid rise of corporate armies. Since 9-11, the Bush administration has paid Blackwater more than one billion dollars for its trained civilian soldiers, while granting full immunity from prosecution in Iraq and allowing them to operate without oversight.         

            The program is sponsored by the McHenry County Peace Group and McHenry County Pax Christi as part of the Current American Issues series.  It is free and open to the public.  For more information call 815-455-3683 or e-mail lib4paz@comcast.net

 


DIVERSITY DAY 2007--A Photo Gallery
formal portrait
[info]patrickmurfin
 

Well, it’s been a week and I am finally getting around to posting a gallery of photos from DIVERSITY DAY 2007:  “…Skies Everywhere as Blue as Mine.”  It was a beautiful, but unseasonably hot day.  I made a very unattractive sight as co-host with my shirt soaked through with sweat.  Attendance was down a bit.  Whether that was due to the weather, competing events like near-by Marengo’s  big Settler’s Day Parade or the McHenry County Historical Society in Union  annual Cider Fest, lingering depression over the Chicago Cub loss the night before, or my failure to get adequate publicity is open to question.  Anyway, those who did come out seemed to enjoy the day.  This is what it looked like.
 

                                

The festival opened with the fabulous Congregational Unitarian Church Choir.  Director Tom Steffens was on the injured list following an automobile accident earlier in the week—Get well, Tom.  Rebecca Strong stepped up to pinch hit.

                                              

A row of display tables.  That’s McHenry County Citizens for Choice (MCCC) under the white canopy, an unidentified table (sorry), the Latino Coalition, and the Woodstock Area Community Ministry (WACM.)

                                               

Carlos Acosta of the Latino Coalition.

                                   

A view from the Gazebo.

                                  

O Brother sang their traditional Appalachian music.  Brian Pappalardo, Harold Rail, Sam Jones, and Kemberly Dallay-Hohnson.

                               

SubZero Sandwich and Ice Cream Shop/Lucia’s Custom Catering kept the folks fed. 

                                

Gary Christ explained his Demine Cambodia project at his elaborate display.  He is raising funds to return to Cambodia and build more of his ingenious mine clearing devices.


                                                


Two of the Latinos Unidos dancers from McHenry County College show how to salsa.


                               

Da Utes of the Congregational Unitarian Church did great business with their “Diverse Pumpkins for Diversity Day” table.  They probably made more money than the festival itself.
  
                              
Pat Young and Ray Eberhardt staffed the CUC booth under the cover of the pump house.  They sold—or tried to sell—Choir CDs, Wise Words From Women of a Certain Age books, and the CUC window booklet.  

                               

Rev. Dan Larsen chatted at the CUC Green Sanctuary Committee table.  That committee chair Margaret Fox-Hawthorne partially obscured by the display. The committee is the environmental voice of the church.


                                                                

Lisa Haderlein of the Land Conservancy of McHenry County accepted the 2007 Peace and Justice Award on behalf the Quaker environmentalists Alice and Bill Howenstine.

                               


 The McHenry County Peace Group table was a busy place.

                              
McHenry County Pride was proud to have table.

                             
Joy Martin (left) was doing double duty for Family Alliance (senior services) and Home of the Sparrow (emergency housing for women and children

                                         
                            


The Family Health Partnership table.

                  
Betty Appleton (left) and the Woodstock Folk Dancers got the audience on their feet to dance the Macarana.

   

                        

 The McHenry County Democratic Party, despite a large contingent marching in the Marengo parade the same day, had several volunteers at their table among them were District 3 Chair Pauline Walker (left) and John Darger.

                                         
                           

Kathy Bergan-Schmidt made sure that there was a Bill Richardson For President table.  That’s Rich Garling in the hat.

.
                                         

 

 


                     

 


THE GREEN PARTY'S SCOTT SUMMERS RUNS IN 16TH DISTRICT--I'm Supporting Abboud
formal portrait
[info]patrickmurfin

                
(Left) Scott Summers announces his candidacy.  Fuzzy screen shot from video on his web site by Cal Skinner’s McHENRY COUNTY BLOG.  (Right) Bob Abboud, his wife Patricia, and an old dog from his campaign web site.
              

 

            I received a very nice and polite e-mail yesterday from SCOTT SUMMERS, who recently announced as the ILLINOIS GREEN PARTY candidate for the 16th CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT seat now held by DON MANZULO.  Coincidently, Manzulo announced his candidacy for reelection the same day.

            In his message to me Summers, an attorney who currently is Chairman of the McHENRY COUNTY COLLEGE Board, acknowledged that I am an active and known DEMOCRAT as well a some one associated with the peace movement.  He asked if I would post the message below on this blog.

            I have always supported easier ballot access for non-traditional parties.  A variety of viewpoints is healthy for a democracy.  And minor parties, like the SOCIALIST PARTY of EUGENE V. DEBS, have been important in introducing important reforms.  The New Deal subsequently enacted many of the planks of the Socialist platform including Social Security and child labor laws.

So for public information and in the interest of fairness I am posting Summers’s appeal.

But while I wish him and his party well, I won’t be circulating or signing his petitions and encourage no Democrats to do so.  The Democrats in the 16th District have a very attractive candidate in ROBERT ABBOUD, President of the VILLAGE OF BARINGTON HILLS.  Bob is informed, articulate, and offers a great alternative to the abysmal Manzulo.  He also has the capacity to raise the kind of serious cash to make the race against an entrenched incumbent a real contest.  Bob can win.

The distressing reports we receive daily from a Congress with insufficient Democratic muscle to break the Senate minority log jam and the Resident’s arrogant intransigence on critical issues highlight the need to beef up progressive Democratic majorities.  The Shrub’s veto of expanded health coverage for children, which Manzulo will surely vote to sustain, is one example.

I will be circulating Bob Abboud’s petitions, working for him in the election, and celebrating with him when the people of northern Illinois elect him to Congress.

Hi –

What if you could step into the voting booth in November, 2008 and have
a choice between three different candidates for U.S. Congress?

Yes, you read that correctly. Three candidates, not just two.

I’m Scott Summers, the Illinois Green Party candidate for Congress from
the 16th District (greater
Rockford area and far northwestern Illinois).

I’m not asking for you to agree with me politically. And I’m not asking
you to vote for me, either.

But I am hoping you’ll agree that having a three-way race is healthy for
democracy.

I need to turn in no fewer than 600 verified voter signatures by the end
of October.

Would you be so kind as to “high five” me?

Please ask five voters – family, co-workers, classmates, neighbors,
friends – to sign my petition. Please ask five voters to speak up for
democracy. Please ask five voters to stand up for more voter choice.
Please ask five voters to help put me on the ballot.

If you want to do more -- “hang ten”, perhaps, as surfers say -- there
are parades, farmers markets, and door-to-door opportunities for passing
my petitions. I’m very grateful for your help.

 Call me at 815-403-8411 and I’ll explain.

I hope you’ll take a couple of moments to learn more about me at
www.SummersForCongress.com.

Click on the “download and circulate the petition” link on my home page.
Print it out and call me; I’ll walk you through it and tell you how to
turn it in. In order to finish processing, please plan to mail it to me
no later than October 24th.

Sincerely,
Scott Summers




CURRENT AMERICAN ISSUES--Large Turnout Hears Salvador Cicero on Immigration
formal portrait
[info]patrickmurfin



 Rev. Dan Larsen of the Congregational Unitarian Church (left) and program host Dr. Nelson Borrelli (right) look on as Ann Legg and Patrick Murfin review questions for speaker Salvador Cicero at the September Current American Issues program.

 

            The hot topic of immigration received a cool and considered examination at the McHENRY COUNTY PEACE GROUP’S first CURRENT AMERICAN ISSUES forum of the new season at McHENRY COUNTY COLLEGE Thursday night.  Chicago attorney SALVADOR CICERO explained the myths and realities of immigration, especially Mexican immigration, to an audience of almost 150 in the college Conference Center.

            With graphic illustrations projected behind him, Cicero traced the roots of Mexican immigration to this country, the economic realities that fuel it in both countries, and the controversy over what some see as “an invasion.”

            Cicero was quick to point out that Mexicans make up only a portion, albeit a large portion, of overall immigration to the United States, both legal and undocumented.  And they are also only a part of a wider Latino immigration that includes people from Central and South America, the Caribbean, and Spain.  But Mexican immigrants have concentrated in four states—California, Texas, Arizona, and Illinois—and the Chicago metropolitan region is second only to Los Angeles as a destination.

            The misconceptions are that all Latinos are Mexican and that they are all “illegal.”  Cicero pointed out that huge swaths of the US were once Mexican and people in those areas have been citizens for generations.  Immigration patterns also reach back to the 19th and early 20th centuries when many Mexican railroad workers followed the tracks north and began settling in Chicago.  People from the same regions and villages tended to follow one another and establish communities.  Today a large majority of people of Mexican origin in the United States are American born, citizens, or in the country legally.

            Still, “illegal” immigration has risen dramatically in recent decades due to a population explosion in Mexico, economic necessity and the desire for family reunification.  For its part, American industry has welcomed the semi- and unskilled labor provided by the immigrants.

            Changes in immigration law may have actually acerbated the situation.  Earlier many Mexican workers came seasonally for agricultural work, returning to their homes yearly.  Others came to work for a few years and returned with their saving to their families.  But current immigration law makes such routine border crossing difficult and encourages worker to stay in the U.S.  rather than risk not being able to come back.

            Following the presentation, questions were collected from the audience on note cards and read by moderators ANN LEGG and PATRICK MURFIN.  Murfin acknowledged that the issues were emotional and that people of all shades of opinion would be in the audience.  He promised that all questions, even those that clearly arose from an exclusionist view point would be read, subject to time constraints and legibility.  Only questions that were “insulting” would be disregarded.  In the end, none were disallowed on that basis and a wide ranging discussion was possible.

 


IMMIGRATION--Two Chances to Talk About It
formal portrait
[info]patrickmurfin

 
MCPG SPONSORS THE CURRENT AMERICAN ISSUES FORUMS AT McHENRY COUNTY COLLEGE

THE TREE OF LIFE AND FLAMING CHALICE, SYMBOL OF THE CONGREGATIONAL UNITARIAN CHURCH, HOST OF THE FRIDAY NIGHT SALONS.

The hot button immigration issue returns to the front burner again this week as the McHENRY COUNTY PEACE GROUP sponsors a CURRENT AMERICAN ISSUES FORUM at McHENRY COUNTY COLLEGE this Thursday at 7 p.m.

Immigration attorney and advocate SALVADOR A. CICERO, a leading member of the LEAGUE OF UNITED LATIN AMERICAN CITIZENS (LULAC), will be the principle speaker.  The program will also include a welcome and introduction by DR. NELSON BORELLI and comments on the immigration controversy by the REV. DAN LARSEN of the CONGREGATIONAL UNITARIAN CHURCH, who has long been an advocate for the Latino community.  PATRICK MURFIN will moderate the discussion following Cicero’s presentation.

Last Sunday, November 2, the NORTHWEST HERALD featured the upcoming program on its front page, linking the forum to the brouhaha that erupted earlier this summer when the ILLINOIS MINUTEMAN PROJECT announced an anti immigration program at a CRYSTAL LAKE hotel.  That meeting was scrubbed by the hotel because of “security concerns” and the apparent misrepresentation of who was sponsoring the event by Minuteman leaders.  A Peace Group vigil supported by the LATINO COALITION and the CARPENTERSVILLE CITIZEN ALLIANCE had to be moved to McCORMICK PARK when a second group of Minuteman vowed to stage counter demonstrations.

Although those competing events were peaceful, the discussions set of by this chain of events in the on-line comments section of the Herald have been anything but.  The tone has grown increasingly angry, insulting and threatening.  Several people say they plan to put pressure on the College to cancel the event and on Crystal Lake police to charge the Peace Group’s the same “security fee” that they sought from the HOLIDAY INN prior to the Minuteman event.  The college, which has hosted Current America Issues Forums for the last four years, remains undeterred and the police cannot charge security fees for such a public program at a public institution.

Although no group has announced plans to protest the Thursday meeting, many of the anonymous commentators on the Herald web site vow to “be there.”  Whether that means they plan to protest of just ask questions is unclear.

For its part the Peace group welcome the public no mater what their position on immigration issues and invites them to participate in the open discussion following the presentation.  “We ask only for a civil discussion of these divisive issues,” Murfin said.  “Written questions will be gathered from the audience.  I will select questions that reflect a wide variety of viewpoints, do not duplicate already asked questions, and are not insulting in tone.”

The next evening, the FRIDAY NIGHT SALON at the Congregational Unitarian Church will allow continued discussion in a more intimate venue.  Rev. Larsen will lead a small group conversation at 7 p.m. The Salon Series are free wheeling, informal discussions presented monthly by the church on a wide variety of philosophic, theological, political, economic, scientific, artistic, and literary issues in the tradition of the great European salons.

            The program is free and open to the public.

 



CURRENT AMERICAN ISSUES FORUM--Immigration Myths vs. Realities on Deck for September
formal portrait
[info]patrickmurfin


SALVADOR A CICERO, FEATURED SPEAKER AT SEPTEMBER CURRENT AMERICAN ISSUES FORUM

IMMIGRATION: MYTHS VS. REALITIES IN THE CURRENT DEBATE will be the topic of a public forum in the CURRENT AMERICAN ISSUES FORUM in the McHENRY COUNTY COLLEGE CONFERENCE CENTER on Thursday, September 13 at 7 p.m.

            The featured speaker will be SALVADOR A. CICERO, an award winning Chicago attorney whose law practice focuses on civil rights, immigration, business law and international human rights.  Cicero, a former CONSUL OF MEXICO, is a volunteer with the LEAUGE OF UNITED LATIN AMERICAN CITIZENS (LULAC.)  He has directed projects for the AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION (ABA) and serves as a consulting expert for the ORGANIZATION OF AMERICAN STATES (0AS.)  His scholarly articles have been published in peer reviewed law journals and he is qualified by U.S. COURTS as an expert in international law.  He has made a specialty of preventing trafficking in human beings.

            Cicero will offer his perspectives on U.S. immigration policy as it exists today and how international trade agreements have affected the influx of job seekers.

            The program follows a month of controversy about immigration touched off by an program, later cancelled, sponsored by ILLINOIS MINUTEMAN PROJECT and public demonstrations by both sides in CRYSTAL LAKE.

            The Current American Issues Series is sponsored monthly at MCC by the McHENRY COUNTY PEACE GROUP.  There will be a period of open discussion following the program.  Admission is free and open to the public.

            For more information visit e-mail aglegg@sbcglobal.net or visit McHenry County Peace Group. 



McHENRY COUNTY PEACE GROUP TO LEAD PROTEST OF MINUTEMEN PROJECT MEETING
formal portrait
[info]patrickmurfin


The McHENRY COUNTY PEACE GROUP has announced that it will hold a vigil near the Crystal Lake hotel where the ILLINOIS MINUTEMAN PROJECT plans to gather to oppose immigration.

            The anti-immigration group plans a meeting at the HOLIDAY INN CRYSTAL LAKE on the afternoon of Saturday, August 25.  That meeting will feature DANIEL BECK, an Ohio sheriff who has made a name for himself rounding up Hispanic looking “suspects” and turning those that are undocumented over to Federal authorities for deportation. Admission to the event limited to tickets sold in advance, in an apparent attempt to prevent “infiltration” by protestors or opponents.

The Minuteman Project is considered a “hate group” by the SOUTHERN POVERTY LAW CENTER, which has been monitoring KU KLUX KLAN, neo-nazi, skin head, militia, and other extremist groups for over a decade. 

The Peace Group and allies will conduct a vigil from 12:30 to 4 pm at the southwest corner of Route 31 and Three Oaks Road, near the hotel.

“Although the public identifies us with our opposition to the War in Iraq, the Peace Group’s mission has always been to broadly support peace in our communities, the nation and the world,” according to Peace Group member PATRICK MURFIN, “Immigration is a divisive issue in this country.  It deserves a serious discussion.  The Minutemen do not promote that discussion.  They promote hatred and discrimination by fanning the flames of fear.  Our job as peace makers is to oppose that fear mongering.”

The Peace Group will follow up the vigil with a program on immigration in its CURRENT AMERICAN ISSUES forum series at McHENRY COUNTY COLLEGE at 7 pm September 13.  SALVADOR A. CICERO, a Chicago Lawyer who specializes in civil rights, immigration and international human rights will be the principle speaker for the program, “Immigration:  Myths vs. Realities in the Current Debate.”  Cicero is a leader of the LEAGUE OF UNITED LATIN AMERICAN CITIZENS (LULAC) and a former MEXICAN Consul.

For more information call 815 455-3630, e-mail lib4paz@comcast.net or visit http://mcpg.org.

 


CAROLYN QUINN--Dems to Bike to Algonquin Parade as Part of "Clean Up America Day"
formal portrait
[info]patrickmurfin

Some CRYSTAL LAKE DEMOCRATS  biked to the FIESTA DAYS PARADE in McHENRY, inspiring the Bicycle Brigade trip to ALGONQUIN for the FOUNDERS’ DAY PARADE this coming Saturday, July28.

The following was adapted from a letter to NORTHWEST HERALD editor KEVIN LYONS.

There is a BICYCLE BRIGADE planned for a mini-trip (3 miles) from CRYSTAL LAKE to the ALGONQUIN FOUNDERS DAY PARADE line-up area on Saturday, July 28.  We are joining together to make a symbolic, political statement and to have ourselves a grand pre-parade party.  At the same time, we will be promoting the PRAIRIE BIKE PATH that crosses the entire length of McHENRY COUNTY from WISCONSIN to the KANE COUNTY Border.


By using our bicycles instead of cars to get to the parade does the following things for us we reduce our carbon footprint for the day; increase our intake of fresh air and exercise with friends and neighbors; reduce our use of gasoline; promote community pride—the Prairie Trail through McHenry County is remarkable—and prevent the frustration of being stuck in traffic at the Fox River Bridge in Algonquin, which is also remarkable.


The Bicycle Brigade is sponsored by the McHENRY COUNTY DEMOCRATIC PARTY.  We will join the party contingent for the at the MY KIND OF COUNTY float in position #93.).  This is a part of the NATIONAL CLEAN UP AMERICA promoted by party Chair, GOV. HOWARD DEAN for the DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL REUNION DAY 2007.

 

So far, we are being joined by members of the McHENRY COUNTY DEFENDERS, the OUTDOOR ADVENTURE/RECREATION CLUB (OAR) of McHENRY COUNTY COLLEGE, and the McHENRY COUNTY PEACE GROUP. Anyone is invited to bring their bike, grab a helmet and join us for the event.


In the 18 years that I have lived here, traffic problems have been one of the primary concerns of
McHenry County.  The hottest spot in the county is still the corner of 62 & 31, and on parade day both highways are closed at 9:30 AM.  I don't mean to complain, as I, myself, love having the roads closed for a parade or a block party.  But there will be plenty of people who are complaining that day (cursing in their cars) because they are frustrated, wasting time and gas in a traffic jam.  We are going to sail right through all of that and arrive at the Parade in fine spirits.


We are gathering at the DIVERSE CITY PRAIRIE on the Prairie Path Bike Trail.  There is a special parking for bikers there on
EASTGATE ROAD, public water fountains and restrooms.


CAROLYN QUINN
Secretary, 
Democratic Party of
McHenry County
info@mchenrydems.com  

815-788-9540

 


CURRENT AMERICAN ISSUES--The War on Drugs this Wednesday at MCC
formal portrait
[info]patrickmurfin


SANHO TREE

THE WAR ON DRUGS: SUCCESS OR FAILURE will be the topic at the next CURRENT AMERICAN ISSUES forum on Wednesday, April 18 at 7 p.m. at McHENRY COUNTY COLLEGE, room B166/167.

            SANHO TREE will be the featured speaker.  Tree is a Fellow and Director of the DRUG POLICY PROJECT at the INSTITUTE FOR POLICY STUDIES. in Washington, D.C.  The project aims at replacing the current WAR ON DRUGS with policies that promote public health and safety while providing economic alternatives to the prohibition drug economy.

            Tree was featured in JOHN STOSSEL’S ABC TELEVISION documentary on the drug war which aired in 2002 and has appeared on POLITICALY INCORRECT  with BILL MAHER.  He currently serves on the boards of WITNESS FOR PEACE and the ANDEAN INFORMATION NETWORK.

            Prior to the main program, at 5:30, Tree will conduct a workshop on grassroots advocacy, INNOVATIVE STRATAGIES FOR INFORMING THE MEDIA AND LEGISLATORS. Also participating in this workshop will be GIDEON BLUESTEIN, District Director for REP. MELISSA BEAN (D-8).

           Both the evening forum and the workshop are free and open to the public.

This program is co-sponsored by the McHENRY COUNTY PEACE GROUP and the McHENRY COUNTY DEFENDERS Education Committee.  For more information call 815 338-5838.

 


Check Out the TOWN CRIER for Top McHenry County Coverage
formal portrait
[info]patrickmurfin

  Town Crier

 

            IRIS BRYAN is an endangered species—a real nose-to-the-grindstone reporter with a passion for local news.  With decades of experience behind her, Bryan has for years been keeping discerning McHenry County citizens, office holders and wannabes informed through her invaluable monthly newsletter the TOWN CRIER.

            Focusing on the affairs of government in Crystal Lake, Algonquin and Nunda Townships, McHenry County, and other bodies including the McHenry County Conservation District and McHenry County College, Bryan does what the local daily press hardly bothers to do.  She goes to the meetings.  All of them.  She stays to the end.  She takes careful and detailed notes.  And she knows all of the players—not just who they are and what they are doing this week, but all of their past histories and connections.

            In the TOWN CRIER Iris lays out dense, detailed accounts of the proceedings of government and explains out the nuts-and-bolts of proposed ordinances and actions, not just thumbnail summaries endlessly repeated by rote familiar to readers of the local daily press.  That makes her the go-to source for what is really going on in the area.

            The recent February issue, for instance, leads with an exhaustive examination of the proposed Kishwaukee Valley Water Authority, the object of so much recent controversy and court action.  Additional articles cover the proposed MCCD Open Space Referendum, an update on progress on the new Animal Control facility in Crystal Lake, and proposed revisions in the County Animal Control Ordinance.  There is also coverage of local politics including a profile of Crystal Lake Mayoral challenger Lori Phillips.  A “Bits ‘n’ Pieces” column reprints press releases and announcements of programs and activities of local groups.

            Iris takes care that her coverage is both scrupulous and fair.  I have known her for years and would characterize her personal politics as an endangered version of what used to be called Goo-Goo (good government) main street Republican, but unlike some other commentators on local affairs—Cal Skinner or me for instance—she  does not use her forum to grind her personal ax.
           The best part of it all is that Iris is willing to share this valuable resource with anyone who asks for free.  (She will gladly accept donations however.)  She will deliver to your computer screen every month a .pdf version of the TOWN CRIER   All you have to do is ask.   E-mail towncrier@ameritech.net .

 

 


Home