Tag Archives: Blackwater

Blackwater Election Results

Last night, I was watching CSI Miami with an episode featuring a rogue mercenary contractor outfit killing people stateside. I didn’t get a chance to finish the show, because my phone rang with a reporter wanting to talk about Blackwater. At that point, I realized Blackwater really is the talk of the town, but no where more so than Potrero, California this evening when the voters have a chance to recall the local planning commissioners who voted to allow a mercenary base in California.

Realize, those voting in the VBM special recall election represent a very conservative electorate that Bush won in 2004 by over 25 points. So if the move to recall the Blackwater supporters votes breaks 40%, we’ll see that even Bush supporters aren’t down with the GOP plan to privatize via crisis.

What will the 509 registered voters decide?

I’ve done some stuff for Courage Campaign on this

Blackwater Parachutes into San Diego State’s Halftime

On Saturday night, the San Diego State Aztecs hosted BYU to close out their regular football season.  The game was the 3rd Annual Fleet Week-sponsored game, rescheduled from October 27 because of wildfires.  The Fleet Week Foundation describes the game like this:

San Diego State University plays in this third annual Fleet Week Football Classic.  Pregame and half-time shows will feature flyovers, parachutists, the Navy Region South West and SDSU bands, and a tribute to our wounded warriors at Balboa Hospital and Camp Pendleton as well as a tribute to members of the Legion of Valor.

The festivities have a wide range of public and private sponsors and it’s fun for the whole family right?  Well, for at least the second year in a row (probably all three), the halftime show included an American flag being parachuted onto the field by members of a nation parachutist team…who happen to work for Blackwater and use parachutes emblazoned with the Blackwater logo.

Attached is the promotional video from last year’s (2006) Fleet Week.  You can skip ahead to the 2:43 mark to see the Blackwater parachutist bringing in the giant American flag.  If you want, you can also zip over to about the 3:09 mark to see the flag being dragged across the field during landing.

Fleet Week events, which go on year round, are to honor veterans.  I’ve attended several of them and in my experience they’ve been good opportunities to pay tribute to veterans.  So I have a hard time understanding how Blackwater fits into the puzzle.  They consistently undermine the work being done by our armed forces around the world and especially in Iraq.  It seems a particularly unfortunate inclusion in the festivities; made all the more uncomfortable given that the Blackwater recall election culminates on Tuesday (12/11).

I spoke with Steve Becvar of the SDSU Athletic Foundation, which was involved in planning the event.  He explained that this is the third year that Blackwater-affiliated parachutists had played a role in the Fleet Week game.  He emphasized that the school was not seeking to make any sort of political point, simply to partner with the Fleet Week Foundation to honor veterans.

But despite what may well have been the best intentions of event organizers, Blackwater has NO business honoring veterans.  Blackwater profits from war and has a vested interest in prolonging any military struggle as long as it increases revenue.  They are, in fact, naturally at odds with everything that our veterans should be honored for.  They dishonor the flag and all the people who have bled for it whenever they or their representatives try to wrap themselves or the Blackwater logo in the American flag.

Blackwater knows what it does.  And they know that they’re nothing next to the members of the actual military.  Past that, they know that their only hope for success or survival is to blur the distinction between their criminal behavior and the valor of American servicemen and women.  As the Potrero vote peaks, I hope San Diegans and Americans everywhere refuse to be tricked.  Blackwater is hoping for honor by osmosis, but they end up literally and figuratively dragging the reputations of our soldiers through the mud.

If people wanted yet ANOTHER reason to resist at every opportunity Blackwater’s plans for a training facility in Potrero, here you go.  They’ve taken advantage of SDSU and the Fleet Week Foundation to undermine what otherwise could have been a wonderful evening for veterans.  But Blackwater doesn’t serve the United States or its ideals.  Blackwater serves the dollar.  And they have no business being remotely affiliated with veterans or current servicemembers.

So from San Diego to Blackwater: Get out and stay out.

A time to remember

Its time for the annual march on Fort Benning, and great strides have been made by SOAW.  Two hundred three congressmen voted to stop funding to the School of Assassins, a fifth country announced its military will discontinue involvement with the school, and congress voted to release the names of the 2005 and 2006 graduating class. But this progress may be deceiving.  The last year’s Foreign Operations bill included $16.2 million to fund International Law Enforcement Academies (ILEAs).  These facilities including ILEA-South in El Salvador which was established to deal with the prolific gang violence and instability in Central America.  Unfortunately, reports about human rights violations from authorities continue to come from El Salvador.

International Gangs

Gang violence and social instability in El Salvador and other Latin American countries are products of our actions and influences.  Guadalupe Chavez and Tiel Rainelli, along with the good people on staff at Presente!,  provide an incriminating article connecting the actions of mercenaries, paid for by our representative and trained by our military, to the violence in Latin American and the resulting emergence of international gangs

“During the 1980’s, under the false logic of the Cold War, the United States provided direct military aid and School of the Americas training for the Salvadoran army that was systematically violating human rights in El Salvador. U.S. military aid, training, and on-the-ground advisors provided the government of El Salvador with the resources and know-how to terrorize the civilian population.
The war left over 70,000 dead and not a single soul untouched. Over two million people fled El Salvador with a great majority of them immigrating into the United States. Los Angeles became a refuge for many Salvadoran families…

…The War on Gangs gradually began to take shape in the mid 1990’s after a 1996 immigration law in the U.S. facilitated the deportation of undocumented people serving more than two years in U.S. detention facilities. From 1996 to 2003, the United States deported 70,000 people to El Salvador.” Those deported were not well received once they arrived in El Salvador, instead they were stigmatized and marginalized for their cultural differences and kept out of yet another system of employment, and education. In response to the deportations and the import of the gang culture from the United States to El Salvador, the Salvadorian government implemented “localized anti-gang measures and [formed] death squads that emerged to kill youth thought to be gang members.”

The Broader Picture

The story of El Salvador is one of many that connects the struggles in our own communities with those in Latin America.  Developing countries have the resources and ability to create prosperous, democratic, and even capitalist societies.  But if they try to become independent of our interest and our corporations cannot exploit their resources we, intervene like in Chile and Venezuela among others.  And a plug for our economic hit men

On the Domestic Front

The threat of political violence may be just as real here at home.  Our government hosts a list of the usual suspect left over from the Iran/Contra scandal like current Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte, head of the Information Awareness Office Adm. John Poindexter and Deputy National Security Adviser Elliot Abrams.  They instigated the ‘Salvadoran option’ in Iraq and now oversee security in the US.  Besides the ILEA facilities overseas we are expending Blackwater training facilities here in Southern California .  Isn’t it nice to know, just in case some disaster happens, real or perceived (say an earthquake or rise in gang violence), that we have an apparatus of private mercenaries, who operate with impunity, ready to profit off the suffering of other.  Additionally, more social unrest will only feed our prison industrial complex which act as gangland finishing school.

Positive Alternatives

While there must be an exponential return on investment from the $16M we spend on our School of Assassins, that money might serve better going to other programs.  Here in Los Angeles, the city is busy implementing the advancement project, a comprehensive report by Constance Rice and others geared toward prevention of inner city violence, prison reform, and community development. Churches in 50 cities across the US have joined the   new sanctuary movement. Homies Unidos has gang prevention programs set up in the US and El Salvador.  Homeboy Industries has opened its new facilities in downtown LA.  Jeff Car, founder of the Bresee foundation and ex-COO of Sojourners has been appointed Gang Czar by Mayor Villaraigosa.  We might also look at the success of gang intervention programs in other countries like the Alcatraz Project in Venezuela.

A Town Beseiged: Potrero Residents Battling Blackwater Now Suffer Ravages of Wildfire

(Welcome Miriam, an award winning journalist to Calitics. More info from on the ground there, following up on my post earlier today. Note: I moved some stuff below the fold. – promoted by Julia Rosen)

Potrero, California, the town that has gained national attention for standing up against Blackwater Worldwide’s plan to build a private military-style training camp in their pristine backcountry community east of San Diego, now faces an even more formidable force.  The Harris wildfire which began outside Potrero early Sunday morning has ravaged the small rural community, where many residents remain trapped without supplies four days after the fire began.

“It’s like the Kalahari Desert as you drive down Potrero Valley Road.  There are sand dunes everywhere-dirt and ash,” Jan Hedlun reported via cell phone on Tuesday.  “We can’t get in or out, and we are running out of supplies.” This morning, however, Hedlun said food will be provided to beleaguered residents at the old Volunteer Fire Department Building.  The County recently began initiating its fire consolidation plan, closing some rural volunteer firefighting departments.  But here in Potrero, some residents complained that they never saw a single fire engine until long after their homes burned down.

Stretches where homes once stood along Highway 94 have been reduced to wasteland.  Many homes have burned, although the town’s store, library, and Post Office are still standing.  “There is looting going on up here,” said Hedlun.  Another source described Potrero as a “moonscape with houses here and there.”

Many Potrero residents never received reverse 911 calls warning them to evacuate.  Some rely on cell phones, which were not included in the evacuation system.

“It’s like Armageddon,” said Jill Michaels, who had just four minutes to pack belongings before fleeing flames that singed her husband.  She and her family tried to evacuate but found all roads blocked.  She returned to witness her Potrero home burn to the ground. 

Others suffered worse losses.  Tom Varshock died trying to save his home on the Potrero/Tecate boundary.  His son remains hospitalized with burns over 50% of his body. 

Fires continue to burn on two sides of Potrero, blocking roads in and out.  For the moment, Hedlun assured me this morning, she and others believe they are safe.  Hurricane-force winds that howled through the mountain area on Sunday night have now calmed, giving firefighters cautious optimism to believe the fires may be contained by this weekend.

Portions of the Cleveland National Forest and Hauser Wilderness area adjoining the Blackwater site are believed to have burned, Hedlun said, though residents have not been permitted near the area yet.  Hedlun said.  Military C130 aircraft arrived late yesterday, dropping fire retardant onto the forest, which provides critical habitat for wildlife.

Blackwater’s 824-acre site in Round Potrero Valley, which survived the initial blaze, may also have burned last night.  “There is a haze of smoke rising above it this morning,” Hedlun informed me at 10:00 a.m. today (Wednesday).

  Brian Bonfiglio, vice president of Blackwater West, said Blackwater remains determined to build its planned facility despite the wildfire’s devastation.  Those plans include 11 firing ranges for small and large caliber weapons, an emergency vehicular training track, bunkhouses for 200 trainees, additional training facilities and a large armory to stockpile ammunition.

“I see a tactical operation center for East County fires,” said Bonfiglio, noting that Blackwater’s proposal includes water tanks capable of holding 35,000 gallons.  “Can you imagine how much of a benefit it would be if we were operational now?”

Opponents of Blackwater have suggested that live-fire operations could heighten the risk of fire starting in the box canyon where Blackwater seeks to locate and note that fires have been started by live-fire at military bases in the past.  The Courage Campaign has mounted a petition calling on Senators Diane Feinstein and Barbara Boxer to oppose Blackwater’s base in Potrero for reasons including the proposed facility’s location in a “fire-prone landscape http://www.courageca…

Bonfiglio maintains that shooting areas will have berms, cleared surrounding areas, and a standby fire watch person with fire equipment on hand.  No flares or explosives will be used, he said.

But even a fire started off-site could become an inferno, critics contend, if it were to reach the armory full of ammunition at Blackwater’s site.

Blackwater has sought approval for its project under the County’s new “shelter in place” policy.  The valley, which has only one road in and one road out, would include a 9,600 square foot facility equipped with sprinklers and surrounded by enhanced fire modification zone.  Blackwater has offered to shelter townspeople in its facility in event of a future fire.

But one Potrero resident who remained in town despite evacuation orders observed, “There is no way in hell anyone up here would want to go there during a fire.”  Evacuation would have been required from the valley as fire leap-frogged across the area, said the source, who asked to remain anonymous.

Authorities are still investigating the cause of the blaze, one of several major wildfires now burning throughout San Diego County.  Combined, the fires have forced evacuation of over half a million people – more than fled New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina.  With over a billion dollars in property damage and 1,500 homes burned countywide, the fires are now the worst in California history.

The Harris fire raises many troubling issues with regard to the fate of the Blackwater project.

Hedlun confirmed that Potrero residents will likely request a new Environmental Impact Report be filed, since much critical wildlife habitat and watershed areas have burned.  The original EIR was expected to be completed in December, followed by a vote of the San Diego County Planning Commission and ultimately, the County Board of Supervisors. 

Those votes would rely in part on an advisory vote cast by the Potrero Planning Group in favor of the Blackwater project.  Angry residents had mounted a recall election of all pro-Blackwater planners.  That election, set for December 11th, was slated to be a mandatory vote-by-mail election with ballots going out in early November.

San Diego’s Registrar of Voters, Debra Seiler, has not yet responded to an inquiry asking whether the recall election may be postponed because of the fire, or how she intends to assure that voters who lost homes or have been displaced will receive ballots and be able to cast their votes.  At least two planners facing recall have lost their homes.  Fates of some candidates running on a “Save Potrero” anti-Blackwater slate remain unknown.  Some voters now face divided loyalties, sympathizing with neighbors who lost homes and another planner facing recall who reportedly saved several houses from burning.

Residents in Potrero, scarred by internal strife and fire,  now seek time to heal. Hedlun held out hope that Blackwater may yet decide to abandon its plan to open up a training camp in Potrero.

“For now,” she concluded, “We are digging out, cleaning up, and looking to see what’s left.”

 

Blackwater and the Fires

(full disclosure: I work for Courage Campaign) Note: this post was adapted from one posted earlier on dailykos

This past Sunday I was all set to have a call with the local activists on the ground in the tiny town of Potrero where Blackwater is planning on setting up a training facility on 824 acres in a fire-prone box canyon with one way in and out.  We were going to talk about ways that the Courage Campaign could support them during the upcoming recall election to boot the Planning Board members who voted to support Blackwater’s proposal.  But the locals had to evacuate due to a fire bearing down on the town and we canceled the call.

Until this morning, only word we have had from them was via the San Diego Union Tribune where Jan Hedlun, one of the organizers was quoted talking about her former colleague who was killed in the fire.  His son is in the hospital with four firefighters after a heroic rescue.  We did hear from Jan today.  She is ok.  Her house survived, though countless others in the town were destroyed.

This weekend, we were planning to travel to Potrero for a face-to-face meeting.  But we have decided not to make the trip, given what has happened.  Since we don’t even know for sure if they still have their homes at that point, now is not the best time to be entering into this potentially destroyed community.

What we can do is be here waiting in the wings when the fight resumes.  What we can do is let them know we have their back.  That was the message we delivered to Courage Campaign members last night.  Below the fold is that email.  Please join me in passing on a message of support to the brave people of Potrero.  They have a lot on their plate now, but perhaps we can be some moral support.  Blackwater has their army.  We have ours.

Meanwhile, what is Blackwater doing?  The are asking people for PR support, for them.  Much more below the fold.

Yesterday (via a press release), the Courage Campaign called on Blackwater USA to abandon plans to build a para-military training facility in Potrero, located in East San Diego County and site of at least one fatality and some of the worst damage caused by the California wildfires.

With over 1 million people displaced, 1,418 structures destroyed, and at least 5 people confirmed dead in Southern California, Blackwater USA sent an email to its supporters today with the following subject line: “A Request for Your Support”.

But, instead of asking its members to provide financial and volunteer support to Southern Californians victimized by the wildfires, Blackwater asked its supporters for public relations help:

“While we can’t ask that each supporter do everything, Blackwater asks that everyone does something. Contact your lawmakers and tell them to stand by the truth… Tell the Blackwater story and encourage your representatives to seek the truth instead of reading negative propaganda and drawing the wrong conclusions.

And here is the quote we included from Rick Jacobs:

Erik Prince and his Blackwater cronies have hewn the fine art of Orwellian double-speak. While San Diego County burns, Blackwater is more concerned about defending its corporate image. Maybe they should take this opportunity to recognize that the para-military base they want to build in East San Diego County would actually significantly increase fire danger to the people of Potrero and abandon their plans to build that base.

We are still waiting for their response.

Here is the email we sent the other night.  Lot’s of good background information on what is going on in Potrero with respect to Blackwater.

Dear Julia,

As I write this, massive fires are raging across Southern California. While it is quiet and normal at my house in Los Angeles, I can see smoke in the distance and smell it in the air.

And I keep thinking about the good people of Potrero — a serene small community in East San Diego County — that I met just a few weeks ago as we rallied together to block Blackwater from building a base in their tiny, beautiful town.

These concerned community members have been working for months to stop Blackwater from building a mercenary training facility on 824 acres, consisting of 11 firing ranges, a helipad, and an emergency vehicle operator’s course covering the equivalent of 10 football fields. As we watch the fire burn across the area today, one can only imagine what might have happened if an armory full of ammunition and explosives were located inside this box canyon.

I was inspired and proud to march with the good folks of Potrero, people who are not usually political, but who know that if they do not stand up against Blackwater in their own community, then no one will.

We need to show our support for the people of San Diego County at this difficult time. Click here to send a brief message to Potrero residents expressing your support and then consider sending a donation to the San Diego Foundation’s After the Fires Fund:

http://www.couragecampaign.org/Potrero

Beyond the damage and destruction to life and property, the timing of this wildfire could not b e much worse. This fire exploded just as the people of Potrero were preparing for a recall election on December 11 to kick out the planning group members who approved Blackwater’s base. With ballots scheduled to be mailed in early November to less than 600 registered voters in this historic vote-by-mail recall, Potrero residents were preparing for an intense campaign over the next six weeks.

But the actual landscape — and the political landscape — of Potrero have been transformed over the last 48 hours.

There’s no time to waste. On Sunday, if the situation permits, I will travel down to Potrero with my Courage Campaign colleagues Eden James and Julia Rosen. If we are able, we will hand-deliver your notes of support to the people of Potrero, survey the damage and determine how we can help them move forward.

Please click here to watch a brief YouTube preview of a documentary film being made about the battle over Blackwater and the people of Potrero. Then consider sending a donation, and let them know that you are behind them:

http://www.couragecampaign.org/Potrero

Jan Hedlun and Carl Meyer are two Potrero residents featured in the documentary film produced by Alternate Focus that you can watch at the link above. Although she is not identified, Jan is the first woman appearing on-screen, describing how the Potrero residents “first heard of Blackwater.”

Just last Sunday, as we were about to talk with both Jan and Carl by conference call about how to help them block Blackwater’s base, news broke of a huge fire moving towards Potrero. We spoke with Jan again that evening but, despite many repeated attempts, we have not heard back from either Jan or Carl since Sunday night. While we ass ume they are OK, reports from East San Diego County have been unclear and we remain deeply concerned.

Obviously, the last thing Jan, Carl and their fellow concerned citizens can think about right now is Blackwater and the recall election. But I can guarantee you that Blackwater is thinking about nothing BUT that recall election. From what we understand, Blackwater is already crafting arguments to defend their proposed base and play on people’s emotions during this crisis. Blackwater will likely argue that their base will not increase fire danger in San Diego County even as they plan to build it in a brushy, dry box canyon with only one way in and one way out.

We need to be there for Jan and Carl and everyone in Potrero. After watching the YouTube video, will you consider sending a donation to the “After the Fires Fund” or a note showing your support for the people of Potrero? On Sunday, we’ll hand-deliver the note for you:

http://www.couragecampaign.org/Potrero

While the good people of Potrero are focused on recovering from this disaster, we will continue to keep you updated on the other disaster threatening their community — Blackwater’s plans to build a mercenary base on their pristine land, just a few miles from the California border.

Thank you again for everything you are doing to support the people of Potrero.

Rick Jacobs
Chair

P.S. Three weeks ago, we asked you to sign your name to a letter to Senator Dianne Feinstein and Senator Barbara Boxer about Blackwater’s base, including a warning about Potrero’s “fire-prone landscape”:

“Not only will Blackwater’s proposed California paramilitary base disrupt the lives of its residents, but it will also threaten the pristine natural habitat of the Round Potrero Valley, which includes part of Cleveland National Forest and is adjacent to the proposed Hauser Wilderness preserve. The regular detonation of firearms would be a risk both to the fire-prone landscape as well as to the wildlife that currently calls that area home, including the golden eagle and the California condor.”

Despite this ominous warning, Senator Feinstein and Senator Boxer have failed to respond. The residents of Potrero and San Diego County can’t wait for politicians to act to reduce the fire danger posed by Blackwater. That’s why the Courage Campaign is getting involved now.

To show your support in their time of need, please consider sending a donation to the “After the Fires Fund” and a note of support to the people of Potrero:

http://www.couragecampaign.org/Potrero

Hundreds of people from around the country have already sent messages.  Here are a few highlights of mine.  I have to admit they made tears run down my face.

I know it’s asking a lot to ask you to continue to stand strong against Blackwater in the face of these devastating fires.  But please, don’t give up the fight.  You’re fighting for all Californians.  I’m standing shoulder-to-shoulder with you in spirit. -Jennifer, Manteca, CA

Our hearts are with you during this most difficult time. We admire your courage and your work in blocking Blackwater. We hope that you will be able continue your fight and hope that you will be soon recover from this devastating fire -Inge, Blue Bell, PA

viva potrero!!  i know sometimes each of us feels alone, and, more particularly, feels hopeless ….  this is just to let you know that YOU ARE NOT ALONE, and we’ll all make it with a little help from our friends.  peace. -Artie, Montrose, CA

Please know how proud your fellow citizens are of you for taking a stand for what you believe in and how much our hearts are with you during this difficult time.  I hope we might be as inspirational to you as you have been to us. -Lise, San Francisco, CA

We have Blackwater in North Carolina, which we don’t want…we stand with you in this. Find a way to keep them out. No one needs this Bush controlled army in America. -Kenneth, Browns Summit, NC

We gave what we could today to the After the Fires Fund, because we are especially grateful to those of you who took a stand against Blackwater.  The idea of having a private army in the U.S. is outrageous, and we must not tolerate having them in California–ever! We hope you will get all the support you need to return to your peaceful lives in Portrero.  We will be watching. – James & Suzanne, Manhattan Beach, CA

I watched the skies turn black and the ash cover my town of South Lake Tahoe this past June. I have friends who have lost all their personal belongings. We suffered no human casualties and I hope you all remain safe as well. Know that the fight you are waging, against nature, and then once that’s passed, against a mercenary army and training ground, is supported by fellow Californians and Americans just like me. Thank you for all the work you are doing to bring the shameful efforts of the Blackwater training camp into the light in an effort to destroy it. You are my heroes.  -Liz, South Lake Tahoe, CA

Join them in sending a message to the brave people of Potrero.  I promise to report back on the delivery.

I want to note that the donation link on the page is to the San Diego Foundation thanks to noweaseles at daily kos who answered my request for an organization other than Red Cross to send donations.  Everyone down in SD County that we talked to had bad experiences with Red Cross in the past and suggested we direct people to another charity.  The goal of the donations is to support relief efforts after the initial crisis is over.

October 17, 2007 Blog Roundup

Today’s Blog Roundup is on the flip. Let me know what I missed.

To subscribe by email, click
here and do what comes naturally
.

Look, it all depends on
who Issa means by “us”.  For example, if he means
“Republicans” then Blackwater is probably “our troops”.  If he
means the United States, not so much.

Ayup

Health Care

Immigration

Voting Integrity

Environment

Local

The Rest

Blackwater Still Planning Move to California

(full disclosure: I am working for Courage Campaign)

Despite the uproar over their murder of 17 civilians in Iraq, Blackwater is still moving forward with their plans for a massive base in San Diego County.  Dubbed Blackwater West, the facility would stretch 824 acres in an environmentally sensitive area, populated by 360 staff and “students.”  The training facility would consist of 15 firing ranges, a helipad, and a heavy vehicle operator’s course covering the equivalent of 10 football fields.  SignOnSanDiego.com:

Despite rumblings that Blackwater might cancel expansion plans, Vice President Brian Bonfiglio said his bosses at the North Carolina-based company are still eager to open a law enforcement and military training center in Potrero, about 45 miles east of San Diego.

“Their charter is to make this thing work even more now,” Bonfiglio said.

These guys sure are stubborn.  Good thing the locals down there are adamant about keeping Blackwater out.  Courage Campaign has been working to build up support for the local efforts.  Thousands of people have signed the letter to Boxer and Feinstein asking them to stand with the California Democratic Party and go on record opposing this base.

Below the fold is more information on the official process that Blackwater needs to follow through on to get this base built.

Last year the local elected officially voted 7-0 to approve Blackwater’s plans to move forward with the base.  Immediately there was an uproar against the Potrero Community Planning Group.  The residents forced a contentious second vote that also passed, though more narrowly.  Now those who voted in favor face a recall election on December 11th.  This is a small town of around 1,000 residents and well over 300 have signed petitions against the approval.  The Planning Group is feeling the pressure and it is reflected in this quote by the Chairman:

Chairman Gordon Hammers, one of the members facing a recall, said Blackwater’s project should be judged only as a land-use issue.

“If they’re turned down, I want them turned down for the right reasons,” Hammers said. “My attitude is: What are we going to punish them for? For being better shots than the Iraqis?”

No.  We are going to punish them for killing innocent civilians.  We are not going to reward them by building a huge base to train more mercenaries.  We are not going to let a sensitive habitat be destroyed by firing ranges and a heavy vehicle operator’s course.

The residents of Portero will have their say in December.  The vote will be a two parter, much like the governor’s recall they will be asked if they want to recall the group and who they would like to replace them with.  If they are recalled it is almost assured that the group would revisit the Blackwater plans and reverse the official support.  In terms of process, the Potrero Community Planning Group does not have the power to officially block the base from being built.  That resides with the San Diego County Board of Supervisors.

The project is undergoing environmental review by the county and could come before the Board of Supervisors late next year.

Glenn Russell, interim deputy director for the county planning department, said the project would be governed by a permit that sets conditions, but only for land use. If those conditions are violated, such as by adding a facility that wasn’t in the plans, the county could take enforcement action.

Although the planning department deals only with land-use issues when reviewing the project, the supervisors might consider public reaction to Blackwater when weighing approval, Russell said.

“It is a discretionary action, and they have a broad range of authority,” he said.

Land use is why the environmental issues are going to be crucial to the approval or rejection of the plans by the County Board.  However, local opposition can be used.  The recall would be a powerful statement to that effect.

This is a multi-year fight, since the Board does not hold their hearing for another year.  So think of it as a short term fight for the recall, then a longer term battle to ensure the San Diego Board of Supervisors vote the right way next year.

For fun, check out the comments below the SDUT article.  Even though most of the commentors at the SDUT site are pretty conservative, the vast majority writing are opposing Blackwater West.  The case can easily be made that our military, law enforcement and border patrols are the professionals and they do not need the help from the likes of mercenaries from Blackwater.  The fact that the military on the ground in Iraq can’t stand these guys makes our case against Blackwater even stronger.


There are loads more images from the recent protests down in Porero on these flickr streams. (1) (2) (3)

October 12, 2007 Blog Roundup

Today’s Blog Roundup is on the flip. People wrote a *lot* in the last couple days, which means that yesterday was a bad day for me to quit sniffing glue be too busy to put together a roundup. Let me know what I missed.

To subscribe by email, click
here and do what comes naturally
.

Oh, Madam Speaker…

Soldiers, Mercenaries,
“Security”

Health Care

Whiskey Is For Drinkin’

Environmment and, um,
Labor

Other Legislation

Local News

All the Rest

Resolution re Private Military Contractors

Now that Blackwater is back in the news and CCR (Center for Constitutional Rights) is filing a lawsuit in DC Federal Court this morning on behalf of 3 of the recent shooting victims, it’s time to dust off my resolution. My first draft was last June. Please feel free to make changes within your own club or central committee, bearing in mind the idea is to get this to the EBoard Resolutions Committee where they will certainly make their own changes. It’s a resolution, not legislation. It needs to go to the EBoard with broad support if they are going to consider it at all. The power to apply deadly force needs to reside within our government and not be outsourced to private entities.
Stevan Thomas
Candidate AD15
http://ElectSteveTho…

DRAFT 10.11.07

Resolution Regarding Private Military Contractors Operating Within California

Whereas, The Constitution of the State of California, under Declaration of Rights, Article 1, Section 5 reads: “The military is subordinate to civil power. A standing army may not be maintained in peacetime.”

Whereas, Private Military Contactors (P.M.C., a.k.a. mercenaries or private armies) are NOT under civil control OR military chain-of-command AND can be looked upon as a “standing private army maintained in peacetime” if allowed to operate within California:

Whereas, Private Military Contractors, using military weapons, were used in New Orleans following hurricane Katrina to keep peace and order and were actively disarming law abiding citizens of their lawfully owned weapons, and were outside of civil control:

Resolved by the Democratic Party of California that we support the urgent need for legislation stating that NO Private Military Contractor, mercenary corporation acting as a paramilitary or private military entity, or any subsidiary of same, be granted a corporate charter to operate in the State of California unless fully and completely under civil control and within the civil or military chain-of-command, subject to civil control and that there be a prohibition against any and all private corporate armies being formed.

Be it further resolved that the Posse Comitatus Act be enforced within the State of California and that it be amended so that no Private Military Contractor may be employed against the civilian population in times of civil unrest.

October 9, 2007 Blog Roundup

Today’s Blog Roundup is on the flip. Let me know what I missed.

To subscribe by email, click
here and do what comes naturally
.

Whiskey is for drinkin’

California Freikorps Watch

Local

Everything Else