Against the Current, No. 65, November/December 1996
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The Gulf Slaughter Revisited
— The Editors -
The Poisoned Fruits of Oslo (II)
— The Editors -
For Iraqi Children, Death by Sanctions
— Stanley Heller -
The Vulnerable Are 70% of the Population
— interview with Professor Peter Pellett -
Jerusalem's Inevitable Explosion
— David Finkel -
The Strike at McDonnell Douglas
— Peter Downs -
HMOs, A Pox on Our Houses
— Pauline Furth, M.D. -
Toward 21st Century Democracy
— an interview with Steven Hill -
Proportional Representation: The Urgency of Real Reform
— Gerald Meyer -
Can Repression Save Indonesia's Suharto?
— Dianne Feeley -
Congratulations!
— The Editors -
Mexico: Insurrection and Disintegration
— Dan La Botz -
Towards A Red Feminism
— Teresa Ebert -
The Rebel Girl: The Transgendered Outlaw
— Catherine Sameh -
Detroit Newspaper Strike Update
— The Editors -
Random Shots: Notes from a Smoker's Diary
— R.F. Kampfer - Viewpoints on the "Stand for Children"
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Standing for Children, or Clinton?
— Susan Dorazio -
Standing for All Our Children
— Sasha Roberts - Reviews
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Marxism and the Fate of the European Jews
— Peter Drucker - Dialogue
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A Response to Cathy Crosson
— Anne E. Menasche -
A Rejoinder
— Cathy Crosson -
On the Trotskyist Opposition
— Paul Le Blanc -
A Rejoinder
— John Marot - In Memoriam
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Michel Mill 1944-1996
— Patrick M. Quinn -
In Memory of Constance Coiner
— Alan Wald -
Friend, Scholar and Fighter
— James Petras -
In Memory of Steve Zeluck
— Lew Friedman -
Steve Zeluck: Revolutionary Marxist
— Charlie Post
The Editors
THE TWO-DECADE GENOCIDE in East Timor has become news with the 1996 Nobel Peace Prize to Bishop Carlos Felipe Belo and Jose Ramos-Horta, two courageous Timorese activists. Since the Indonesian military regime invaded East Timor in 1975, a third of the population has died from starvation, epidemics and military repression.
East Timor became the prime example, in the “propaganda model” analysis developed by Noam Chomsky and Ed Herman, of the media’s disinterest in massacres perpetrated by “friendly” governments. Indeed, it was primarily through Chomsky, his collaborators, and small solidarity newsletters that East Timor was known at all in this country.
The co-winners called for a referendum on autonomy to end Indonesia’s miitary rule over the country. Along with that demand, the U.S.-based East Timor Action Network couples ending all U.S. arms sales–including the proposed F-16 jet fighters–to Indonesia. For further information, contact: fbp@igc.apc.org or call John M. Miller at 718-788-6071.
The Nobel Peace Prize, for reasons that remain obscure, seems to alternate between genuinely heroic figures, like Rigobertu Menchu or this year’s recipients, and world-class thugs such as Henry Kissinger or Yitzhak Rabin. Prominent lobbies for the 1996 prize had been mounted for Richard Holbrooke, whose “achievement” was to force the republic of Bosnia to accept ethnic dismemberment. It is at least a small triumph for social justice that the Nobel selection committee, this year, came up winners.
ATC 65, November-December 1996