The National Security Archives | The Chiquita Papers
Published by The National Service Archive on April 7, 2011 Banana Giants Paramilitary Payoffs Detailed in Trove
Read MorePublished by The National Service Archive on April 7, 2011 Banana Giants Paramilitary Payoffs Detailed in Trove
Read MoreFunds for Jobs, Housing, Health Care & Veterans Benefits, Not War! Download the Flyer Bring the Troops Home Now! Out
Read MoreThursday, December 9th @ 6:30 pm @ Walker Library Large Meeting room, 2880 Hennepin Avenue (Hennepin & Lagoon) Minneapolis Video
Read MoreThursday, December 9th @ 6:30 pm @ Walker Library Large Meeting room, 2880 Hennepin Avenue (Hennepin & Lagoon) Minneapolis Video
Read MoreThursday, December 9th @ 6:30 pm @ Walker Library Large Meeting room, 2880 Hennepin Avenue (Hennepin & Lagoon) Minneapolis Video
Read More“Disappearances.” When you mention the word in the Latin American context, most people think of Argentina, where 30,000 people were disappeared during the dirty war, or Chile, where 3,000 people were killed or disappeared. But the magnitude of the tragedy in Colombia may be even greater.
Read MoreSeptember 24 began like any other Friday for Joe Iosbaker and Stephanie Weiner. Then, at 7 a.m., FBI agents knocked on the door of the Chicago couple’s house in the city’s North Side.
Armed with a search warrant, more than 20 agents examined the couple’s home, photographing every room and combing through notebooks, family videos and books, even their children’s drawings. Some items were connected to their decades of anti-war and international solidarity activism, but others were not. “Folders were opened, letters were pulled out of envelopes,” says Weiner, an adult education professor at Wilbur Wright College. “They had rubber gloves and they went through every aspect of our home.”
Read MoreIn late September, the FBI carried out a series of raids of homes and antiwar offices of public activists in Minneapolis and Chicago. Following the raids, the Obama Justice Department subpoenaed 14 activists to a grand jury in Chicago and also subpoenaed the files of several antiwar and community organizations. In carrying out these repressive actions, the Justice Department was taking its lead from the Supreme Court’s 6-3 opinion last June in Holder v. the Humanitarian Law Project, which decided that nonviolent First Amendment speech and advocacy “coordinated with” or “under the direction of” a foreign group listed by the Secretary of State as “terrorist” was a crime.
Read MoreIn late September, the FBI carried out a series of raids of homes and antiwar offices of public activists in Minneapolis and Chicago. Following the raids, the Obama Justice Department subpoenaed 14 activists to a grand jury in Chicago and also subpoenaed the files of several antiwar and community organizations. In carrying out these repressive actions, the Justice Department was taking its lead from the Supreme Court’s 6-3 opinion last June in Holder v. the Humanitarian Law Project, which decided that nonviolent First Amendment speech and advocacy “coordinated with” or “under the direction of” a foreign group listed by the Secretary of State as “terrorist” was a crime.
Read MoreSpeech by Karen Sullivan, member of the Anti-War Committee, at the US Social Forum in Detroit, Michigan in June 2010.
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