Archive for October, 2008

Protect the Children

Wednesday, October 29th, 2008

Counter Recruiting on Parent Night at New York City High Schools

The Granny Peace Brigade and Code Pink NYC believe wholeheartedly that students and their parents should be aware that there are alternatives to military service, that an education can be secured without risking lives in needless wars. To further that objective, 25 volunteers traveled to eight high schools in Manhattan and one in the Bronx with Opt-Out forms and information on Parent Teacher Conference night at NYC high schools on October 23, 2008.
Standing in front of the schools, the volunteers met with parents and students to give them the information needed to protect a student’s privacy and prevent her/his personal information from being sent to military recruiters.  With just a few words – “Protect your child’s privacy from military recruiters’ or ‘Bring this form to the principals office’, parents were encouraged to stop for a minute and find out more.

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Few parents knew about the importance of completing the Opt-Out and filing the form in the school office.  Parents thanked the volunteers for explaining the serious nature of the choice, for being at the school to furnish information, and for providing the Opt-Out form.  Many students also took the form, ‘I’m not going into the military. I don’t want to be called and harassed. No way, not me.’  Several teachers, parent coordinators and a school student advisor took forms to copy and distribute.  The message was clear – parents as well as students want high schools to provide an education and were not comfortable with military recruiters having personal information or coming to call.

Meeting parents and hearing ‘They’re not getting my baby’ and ‘Thank you for helping me understand’ is the reward volunteers receive. Thanks to all the volunteers for their time, effort and commitment to providing Opt-Out information – you have made a difference.  Your dedicated service may have helped guide a youngster’s education and career or save a young life.  There can be no greater satisfaction.

- Barbara Harris
for the Granny Peace Brigade

Truth in Recruitment

Wednesday, October 29th, 2008

Opt-out Program at McKee High School, Staten Island, Oct 23, 2008

Parents/guardians and students were gathering at the entrance to McKee High School (Staten Island) at  5:30p.m., eager to pick up report cards.  Between 5:30p.m. and 7:00p.m., Kathy Bayer and I (Barbara Walker) talked with a goodly number of parents/guardians and students about  military recruiters in the school and the Opt-out Program and Opt-out Form.

A group of boys, waiting for their parents, took the forms and promised to turn them in to the Principal’s office.  One said he wanted eventually to join the military for the discipline training it provided.  I asked him to look at the list in the

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New York Civil Liberties Union (NYCLU) brochure, and to pay attention especially to the American Friends Service Committee (all I said to him was at top speed; it is so hard to have a conversation with one person while trying to catch as many others as possible).

A number of parents/guardians/students said they had received the form from the school that morning or the day before (why so late?).  A few had turned them in and others planned to do so; some of the latter took forms from us and said they would give them in immediately.

Most  gave us a warm and receptive response.  Some said yes, indeed, they would turn in the form as they certainly did not want the military enticing their children to join.  Several, one woman and two men, said they were “military families” and so did not oppose the turning over of their children’s information to the U.S. Military.  The most touching was the grandmother who described the condition of one of her grandson’s who served in Iraq and is now a psychological wreck – and receives little help.  She certainly does not want her young grandson to join the  military — she was adamant.

At one point  the security officer, trying to be helpful, warned me that I should not stand outside the school talking with those entering.  I said I had the right to do so.  Then the Vice-Principal came out, she said I could not talk with those entering the school and that the school had already taken care of distribution of the Opt-out information; she took the authorizing form Sally Jones had given me and left, saying she would return the form to me  (but did not).  The Principal came out and asked me to leave.  I referred to the authorizing form; she left.

Kathy and I gave Opt-out forms to perhaps fifty people (some — relatively few — managed to go into the school before we could reach them).

-Barbara Walker
for the Granny Peace Brigade

GRANNIES SHINE ON WBAI

Saturday, October 25th, 2008

 Vinie, Molly & Lillian guest on pre-debate round-table.

Like fingerprints and snowflakes, there are no duplications in the ranks of the Granny Peace Brigade. When WBAI put out the call for three grannies who survived the Great Depression to participate in an on-air round table discussion, their listeners got a kaleidoscopic look at the 1930s from three different perspectives.

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Molly Klopot, Lillian Rydell and Vinie Burrows in action – always

Vinie gave a warm and nuanced recollection of growing up in depression era Harlem, reminding us all of the extraordinary journey of this talented woman. Molly’s account of the 1932 Ford Hunger March from Detroit to Dearborn that resulted in the murder of four of her friends is the stuff of legends. Lillian recounted the deep hardships suffered and life lessons learned in a small coal mining town in rural Pennsylvania. All three women spoke of the dynamic and positive role a responsive and progressive government can have during tough economic times. Citing ground-breaking programs like the WPA (Work Progress Administration) and the CCC (Civilian Conservation Corps), the rise of organized labor, the creation of the Social Security Administration and other programs that helped level the social and economic justice playing fields, they called on concerned citizens everywhere to reach out into their communities. 

Click on the link and listen to the stories of these three life-long advocates for peace and justice — you won’t be disappointed.

- Fran Sears and Lillian Rydell
- Photos: Phyllis Cunningham & Eva-Lee Baird

LAST CHANCE VOTER REGISTRATION PHONE-A-THON

Tuesday, October 14th, 2008

It is the perfect combination: clear skies and a lively crowd. It is the final day in NY for voter registration and we Granny Peace Brigadiers do a brisk business.

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Our supply of registration forms is soon gone.The people we meet are angry about the bailout and they want to talk. Our flier urges voters to tell their representatives to bring back oversight and regulations in the banking business, starting with the GLASS-STEAGALL ACT.

A dispirited woman asks Lillian P., “What does calling do if they won’t listen to us?”

“They do listen,” Lillian reminds her. “It was our calls that stopped the first version of the bailout.”

With both houses of congress going into recess until after the election, we encourage folks to call their reps’ home offices here and demand town halls meetings regarding our tattered economy. This sure hits a responsive chord with our fellow citizens. In spite of the gloom from Wall Street and the escalating international crisis in Pakistan and Afghanistan, there is a lot of good energy out in the street.

And on a strictly personal note – we were all thrilled to have Betty back in our ranks – she sure has been missed.

- Caroline, Edith, Phyllis, Betty, Eva-Lee, Joan P, Owen, Hope, Lillian P. and Fran

MIS-FORTUNE

Wednesday, October 8th, 2008

THE GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED STATES VS FINANCIAL REGULATION – Two Sad Stories

First Story:
We had a law on the books that might have prevented the present financial crisis if it had been left alone. The Glass Steagall Act was passed in 1933 to get us out of the great depression. It was doing okay for years until it became the victim of some unwise surgery.

In 1999, that good old Glass Steagall Act, was eviscerated when the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act was passed by Congress. (Note well: One of the authors, Phil Gramm, had been an advisor to John McCain’s 2008 Presidential campaign, until he said that US consumers were “whiners.”) President Clinton signed the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act but if he had vetoed it, the number of votes in Congress was high enough that it was said to be “veto-proof.”

This change to the Glass Steagall Act allowed investment banking, insurance, and commercial banking to be mingled in firms, rather than being kept separate.

Why is this important? Investment banks help companies raise money by issuing stocks or bonds. Usually they keep some of the stock for themselves, and this stock becomes part of their capital; they also earn fees for issuing and distributing the stock. These activities can be risky especially if the stock declines in price.

Conversely, commercial (and savings & loan association banks) were prohibited under the Glass Steagall Act from the above-noted activities; they could take deposits, and lend money in many ways, especially mortgages. They had to keep on hand enough money to pay out on demand. That all changed in 1999.

Insurance companies jumped into the mix. Insurance companies had a lot of money to invest, so they wanted to combine with investment banks and commercial banks.

Once the two types of banks and insurance companies could be combined, the riskiness of the investment banking activity could affect the health of the resulting institutions and their ability to pay money on demand and, even more important, their ability to continue making loans. However, there were rules, such as the net capital rule, that required maintaining a certain ratio of capital to debt, just in case.

In 2004 the Securities and Exchange Commission met for 90 minutes in April and eliminated the net capital rule for the largest banks, with over $4 trillion in assets.  Examples are Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers.  The banks were supposed to monitor themselves.  The SEC was supposed to oversee this but not regulate it, but they only had 7 people to do so, and after a while the unit’s chief resigned and was not replaced.

During 2005-2008 people who thought they were very smart bundled mortgage loans and “sliced and diced them” giving portions to companies that serviced the loan and creating mortgage backed securities for sale to investors, i.e., the securities were collateralized by the mortgages. However, these securities included many mortgages that were sub-prime, although they had higher interest rates on them than prime loans they were, of course, also more risky because the people had less secure jobs or were not careful or able to understand what they were signing. (Dollars & Sense “Predatory Lending story)

Second Story:
Fannie Mae was created in 1938 – the year I was born. It was a government institution created to help people keep their homes.  It purchased Veterans Administration (VA) mortgage loans and Federal Home Administration (FHA) mortgage loans, which it then pooled and sold to investors in the open market. It had a goal of making housing affordable. This worked pretty well for quite some time.

In 1968, because of the Federal budget problems caused by the Vietnam War, Fannie Mae was made a semi-private Government Sponsored Enterprise (GSE). It was then allowed to purchase conventional loans originated in thrift institutions (Savings & Loans banks).  When Freddie Mac began operations in 1970, it was specifically created to compete with Fannie Mae for the secondary market for the conventional loans.

In 1995, Fannie Mae began including sub-prime securities (bundles of mortgages) in its purchases; this continued with increasing encouragement until 1999. In 2000 rules were put in discouraging the inclusion of risky mortgages, but in 2004, those rules were dropped.

Call your Senators. Call your Representative. Tell them to reinstate the provisions of the Glass-Steagall Act. Then join us in the streets. Granny Peace Brigade “Coming Events”

- Edith Cresmer
for the Granny Peace Brigade

SPONTANEOUS CONNECTION

Wednesday, October 1st, 2008

A REPORT FROM THE STREET

Here is our granny wisdom for today:  be flexible! Had we not made our 11th hour switch from our standard phone-a-thon in order to join forces with Code Pink, the Rainforest Action Network and the Billionaires for today’s action, we would have missed a spectacular opportunity to connect with our fellow citizens. As always, Dennis Kucinich is the Man with a Plan and he has drafted a smart, sane formula to rectify our faltering economy. We make up a couple of hundred fliers with his outline and head down to Bowling Green. High over the statue of the rapacious bull, two young activists from the Rainforest Action Network have shimmied up the twin flag poles and have hung a huge flag emblazoned with “FORECLOSED?”

That gets everyone’s attention and before you know it, we’re out of literature. Phyllis heads off to find a Kinkos and the rest of us fan out into the crowd and start talking.  We’ve got our signs, pink crowns, and Joan P is wearing her ‘march of the dead’ mask.  The lunchtime crowd has no hesitation in expressing their outrage and dismay.  When we tell one gentleman that the main congressional switchboard seems to be jammed, he breaks into a huge grin and says, “Well, let me just jam it up a little more!” as he starts dialing.

Our sense of the street?  Folks may be hurting, but they sure aren’t cowed by anything coming out of Washington or Wall Street. They want some answers before any precipitous actions on the part of our representatives and they sure aren’t shy about making their opinions known. If Congress hands Paulson & Company a blank check, a wink and no oversight, then there are some feisty constituents who are going to hold their representatives responsible come November.

Once more, we are humbled. We embark on these actions with a desire to inform and come away with a priceless education. Times are tough, this despicable war wears on, and the war mongers may be rattling their sabers in Iran’s direction, but there are a lot of good people out there who are willing to stand up and be part of something that speaks to the best part of all of us.

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Thank you, fellow citizens! You sure made our day!

In peace, solidarity and hope,

- Fran Sears for the Granny Peace Brigade with Eva-Lee, Phyllis, Edith, Joan P, Lillian P and Owen
- Photos: Eva-Lee Baird