Friday, November 20, 2009

Hilda Solís (US)

Hilda Solís - US Labor Minister

I heard about her when reading about Zelaya (ousted Honduras president) where Zelaya thanked to a couple of people for their support, including Mrs Solis.

Zelaya:
"On behalf of the people, we thank the International Community, the OAS, Secretary Insulza, the ex-President of Chile Mr Ricardo Lagos Escobar, and the US Labor Secretary Mrs Hilda Solís."

"...arguably the most progressive member of the Obama cabinet"
link

Hilda Solís was part of the Honduras Verification Commission, together with the former Chilean President Ricardo Lagos:

Lagos is a particularly interesting addition to the Verification Commission. In 1972, Chilean President Salvador Allende nominated him as ambassador to the Soviet Union and Congress refused to vote on his nomination. After the 1973 coup d'etat in Chile he was forced into exile to Argentina and then the United States. He returned to Chile to lead the resistance against the coup regime of General Augusto Pinochet, including the successful "vote no" referendum of 1988 that brought down the then fifteen-year-old coup regime.

There is great rejoicing in the selection of Hilda Solis and as part of the Verification Commission of the Accord. Both she and Lagos bring strong commitments to authentic democracy. Their skills will very much be needed to confront the ongoing stalling and deceptive tactics of the coup regime in Honduras. This is a step forward for President Obama to earn something already granted: the Nobel Peace Prize. Now if we would stop letting the military-industrial complex keep fueling the wars in Afghanistan/Pakistan and Iraq, then he will get definitely deserve it.

en.wiki (Solis)

en.wiki (Lagos)
other
other

Monday, April 20, 2009

Sophie Scholl

A German trio (Scholl, Meinhof, Ensslin) - three women I did not know before and I was only and mainly inspired by films I saw. Germany is a country next to mine but I was not aware of these important fighters who lived not so long ago, in the 40s and 70s.
First I saw the German film "Die Welle" about a US school experiment where there is a week of autocracy class, a film based on real events. There was a scene which copied the events carried out by the White Rose movement in Nazi Germany, where one of the leading figures was Scholl (she was cought and arrested for throwing out anti-Nazi leaflets at university). Then, logically, I went to see a film about her short life and resistance movement - Sophie Scholl: The Final Days.
Meinhof and Ensslin very much continue in the line of resistance in Germany, they are almost autobiographically portraied in the film Der Baader Meinhof Komplex. I knew about RAF from the film Munich and also because of the Lufthansa plane hijacking, but I did not know any details about the group, who they were, how they started, what they fought for, how did they form their minds and what they wanted to achieve and what they caused. The film gives a good overview of this.

Gudrun Ensslin

Gudrun Ensslin - a German social activist and leader of RAF. Took no compromises and was quite militant. Radical writing and fighting against injustices and what she saw as forms of fascism. Sexual freedom. (I will write more on her later, I could not find many links..., but she is the driving source of the RAF movement, as others say, more than Meinhof.)
Blogger info / en.wiki / youtube (de)


Ulrike Meinhof

Ulrike Meinhof - a German writer, social activist and member of RAF (Red Army Faction). She wrote articles against state imperialism, like on the occasion of Shah of Iran's visit to Germany in 1967 or about the injustices of Vietnam war, moving to guerrilla writing and fighting together with Gudrun Ensslin and Andreas Baader.
en.wiki / youtube / writings

Friday, January 16, 2009

Helen Thomas (US)

I would have asked [Bush] why—why do you
continue to support the killing in Gaza?
And that’s what we’re doing.

“The greatest sin of all in the Nazi era was silence.”
When you remain silent to the suffering and the incredible aggression
against a people, then you are culpable.



Helen Thomas is an American journalist and for the last 60 years she has reported on US presidents, she was the journalist who attended the last 10 US presidents' press conferences and was a member of the White House press corps. She is known for asking tough questions and demanding straight answers. On DemocracyNow!, after George Bush jr. gave his final press conference, she talked among others on Obama's upcoming presidency:

AMY GOODMAN: Do you expect to see a change of policy, for example, on Israel and the Occupied Territories?

HELEN THOMAS: No, I don’t.

AMY GOODMAN: Why not?

HELEN THOMAS: Because I think that Obama, during the campaign, made many promises, as every president, potential president does to Israel, that they seem somehow bounded by their promises, promises to uphold all Israeli goals.

I don’t see how the US can provide F-16s, gunships, Apache gunships, phosphorus, possibly phosphorus, and cluster bombs and so forth to kill helpless people, children who are starving to death. They control the checkpoints. They control the arrivals and departures, supplies and people. And the Americans—President Bush has remained silent to that suffering. He has blocked by a veto at the UN any stoppage of the warfare, and he continues to supply Israel.