Neighbors for Peace and Justice

KPFK - 90.7 FM
AIr America Radio - 1150 AM
listen to Air America online - click here
The News Hour - PBS / KCET
NOW - PBS / KCET
Frontline - PBS / KCET

There's zillions of them out there ...
here are few of our favorites:
Daily Kos
Eschaton - Atrios
MyDD
Talking Points Memo

AlterNet
CounterPunch
The Nation
The Progressive
ZNet

These websites present news articles and commentaries collected from various sources
antiwar.com
Common Dreams
Information Clearing House
LA Sound Posse
The Smirking Chimp

 

Other links related to specific topics and issues are found on various pages throughout this site

Featured site:
Baghdad Burning »
written by a young woman living in Baghdad, this site consistently features fascinating introspective discourse on life in Iraq today -
sample entries:

Sunday, April 3 2005
American Media...
... I've been enchanted with the shows these last few weeks. The thing that strikes me most is the fact that the news is so... clean. It's like hospital food. It's all organized and disinfected. Everything is partitioned and you can feel how it has been doled out carefully with extreme attention to the portions- 2 minutes on women's rights in Afghanistan, 1 minute on training troops in Iraq and 20 minutes on Terri Schiavo! All the reportages are upbeat and somewhat cheerful, and the anchor person manages to look properly concerned and completely uncaring all at once.

About a month ago, we were treated to an interview on 20/20 with Sabrina Harman- the witch in some of the Abu Ghraib pictures. You know- the one smiling over faceless, naked Iraqis piled up to make a human pyramid. Elizabeth Vargus was doing the interview and the whole show was revolting. They were trying to portray Sabrina as an innocent who was caught up in military orders and fear of higher ranking officers. The show went on and on about how American troops never really got seminars on Geneva Conventions (like one needs to be taught humanity) and how poor Sabrina was being made a scapegoat. They showed the restaurant where she worked before the war and how everyone thought she was "such a nice person" who couldn't hurt a fly!

Furthermore, I don’t understand the worlds fascination with reality shows. Survivor, The Bachelor … it’s endless. Is life so boring that people need to watch the conjured up lives of others?

I have a suggestion of my own for a reality show. Take 15 Bush supporters and throw them in a house in the suburbs of, say, Falloojeh for at least 14 days. We could watch them cope with the water problems, the lack of electricity, the check points, the raids, the Iraqi National Guard, the bombings, and- oh yeah- the ‘insurgents’. We could watch their house bombed to the ground and their few belongings crushed under the weight of cement and brick or simply burned or riddled with bullets. We could see them try to rebuild their life with their bare hands (and the equivalent of $150).

Friday, February 18 2005
Groceries and Election Results
Yesterday, one of our neighbors stopped by the house. She was carrying a hot plate of some green beans in a tomato sauce. “Abu Ammar has some wonderful green beans,” she confided. “But you have to tell him to give you some of the ones he hides under the table- the ones on display are a little bit chewy.” I added green beans to the grocery list and headed off with E. to Abu Ammar.

... It’s not about a Sunni government or a Shia government- it’s about the possibility of an Iranian-modeled Iraq. Many Shia are also appalled with the results of the elections.

... Women feel it the most. There’s an almost constant pressure in Baghdad from these parties for women to cover up what little they have showing. There’s a pressure in many colleges for the segregation of males and females. There are the threats, and the printed and verbal warnings, and sometimes we hear of attacks or insults.

You feel it all around you. It begins slowly and almost insidiously. You stop wearing slacks or jeans or skirts that show any leg because you don’t want to be stopped in the street and lectured by someone who doesn’t approve. You stop wearing short sleeves and start preferring wider shirts with a collar that will cover up some of you neck. You stop letting your hair flow because you don’t want to attract attention to it. On the days when you forget to pull it back into a ponytail, you want to kick yourself and you rummage around in your handbag trying to find a hair band… hell, a rubber band to pull back your hair and make sure you attract less attention from *them*.

BugMeNot.com was created as a mechanism to quickly bypass the login of web sites that require compulsory registration and / or the collection of personal / demographic information - such as the LA Times

Is this ethically justifiable?
You're your own there.

Finding it difficult getting through to those "darn, thick headed conservatives" ... or your mate ... somebody at work? Maybe these can help:

Constructive Conversations that Reach Across Differences
Public Conversations Project
- documents page

Anatomy of a Conversation 
four basic principles on how to encourage better dialogue (PDF: 336k)

50years.org
Freeway Blogger
Move-On
The Nation Action Alert

NPJ Silverlake ...
is affiliated with
United for Peace

 

neighborsforpeaceandjustice.org