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John Nichols on Jesse Jackson Jr.'s legacy, Steven Hsieh on human rights in Burma, Lucy McKeon on prosecuting stop-and-frisk protesters, Allison Kilkenny on Occupy’s Strike Debt movement

Various Contributors

November 28, 2012

JESSE JACKSON JR.’S LEGACY: Jesse Jackson Jr. resigned from Congress with a poignant note following a personal journey that took a heartbreaking turn. “For seventeen years I have given 100 percent of my time, energy, and life to public service,” he wrote in a letter delivered before Thanksgiving. “However, over the past several months, as my health has deteriorated, my ability to serve the constituents of my district has continued to diminish.” 

The congressman, who has been receiving treatment for bipolar disorder, acknowledged not just his health challenges but a deeply embarrassing federal investigation into the misdirection of campaign funds. There is no point in trying to diminish that charge. But neither should it obscure the rest of Jackson’s service. From the moment the son of the Reverend Jesse Jackson was elected in 1995, he pursued one of the most independent and reform-oriented agendas in the House. Jackson clashed not just with the right, but with Democrats who chose to compromise with the forces of reaction, militarism and austerity. Jackson not only condemned the Bush v. Gore ruling in 2000, but a year later—when most Democrats were cowed by 9/11—he stood in front of the Supreme Court to challenge the legitimacy of the decision and call for national voting reform. Jackson not only voted against the Patriot Act; he joined Bernie Sanders to push legislation to exempt libraries and bookstores from having to provide the government with the reading lists of citizens. He not only voted against the invasion of Iraq, but signed on to a lawsuit arguing that George W. Bush could not take the country to war without a full declaration from Congress. 

Jackson’s last major proposal sought to raise the minimum wage to $10 per hour. “That may sound like a hefty wage increase, but it doesn’t fully equal the purchasing power of the minimum wage in 1968—which today would be closer to $11 per hour,” he explained in June. His career may have ended on a sad note, but it would be sadder still if we were to neglect the long arc of a service that bent toward economic and social justice.   JOHN NICHOLS

A CALL FOR HUMAN RIGHTS IN BURMA: During his historic speech at Burma’s Yangon University on November 19, Barack Obama acknowledged one of the world’s most pressing human rights crises: the persecution of the Rohingya in Burma’s Rakhine State. “There is no excuse for violence against innocent people,” he said of recent attacks on the group. Although his remarks stopped short of actual policy demands in support of the Rohingya, the president brought attention to one of the biggest stains on Burma’s reform process.

The Rohingya, a Muslim minority stripped of Burmese citizenship in 1982, have faced decades of persecution at the hands of the country’s Buddhist majority. Government figures show that sectarian violence has killed at least 180 Rohingya in the past year alone and displaced an additional 110,000. Haunting satellite photos published by Human Rights Watch on November 17 show entire towns once populated by Rohingya now burned to the ground. To make matters worse, threats of violence from religious leaders have blocked international aid groups from delivering crucial support to squalid Rohingya refugee camps. The Arakan Project, a Rohingya advocacy group, obtained pamphlets published by Buddhist monks warning NGOs and Rakhine locals not to employ, aid or even associate with the Rohingya. Director Chris Lewa told The Nation that the message is clear: “Any person in the Rakhine community trying to help Muslims will be punished severely.” 

Burmese President Thein Sein refuses to grant citizenship to the 800,000 Rohingya living in Burma and even called for their deportation in September. Democracy champion Aung San Suu Kyi has addressed the crisis only recently, but she still hasn’t taken a stand on the citizenship question. 

“It’s extremely disappointing,” Lewa said. “They are the ones with some power to reduce violence, and they are not using it.”   STEVEN HSIEH

PUTTING STOP-AND-FRISK ON TRIAL: On November 15, New York activist and teacher Jamel Mims was found not guilty of obstructing governmental administration at the 103rd Precinct in Jamaica, Queens, last fall, during a nonviolent protest against the New York Police Department’s stop-and-frisk policy. The misdemeanor charges against him carried up to twelve months in jail. In a separate trial this past April, other protesters, including Cornel West, were convicted of disorderly conduct. It was one of the largest political trials since that of the Chicago Seven in 1970.

Thirteen more protesters await trial in Queens and Brooklyn on other charges. Mims believes his verdict “sets a good precedent,” adding, “It’s an outrage that we’d be convicted of disorderly conduct for an orderly nonviolent protest.”

Mims is affiliated with the Stop Mass Incarceration Network, which challenges law enforcement policies that are carried out in a racially biased way. It is among a number of activist initiatives in New York, from the Bear Witness Project, which aims to put a human face on mass incarceration, to Blow the Whistle, which equips youth to be vigilant against police brutality. With lawsuits by groups like the Center for Constitutional Rights bringing increased attention to stop-and-frisk, Mims believes that mass resistance in the form of nonviolent civil disobedience is what’s missing. “This type of policy,” he says, “is at the heart of maintaining social control in this society.” 

To sign a petition in support of the stop-and-frisk protesters, visit stopmassincarceration.org.   LUCY McKEON

OCCUPY’S NEXT TARGET: On November 15 in New York City, Strike Debt, a movement formed by Occupy Wall Street activists, held a telethon and variety show in support of the Rolling Jubilee, a system to buy debt for pennies on the dollar and abolish it.

The sold-out telethon featured artists like Jeff Mangum of Neutral Milk Hotel, Lee Ranaldo of Sonic Youth, Guy Picciotto of Fugazi, Tunde Adebimpe of TV on the Radio and others. The goal was to raise $50,000, to be used to purchase and eliminate around $1 million in debt. The event far exceeded this figure, raising almost $450,000—enough to write off more than $8.5 million of debt. Organizers say they intend to prioritize erasing the debt of people being crushed under the weight of medical bills. For more information, visit strikedebt.org.   ALLISON KILKENNY

Andrew Ross and Astra Taylor report on Occupy’s Rolling Jubilee: “a spark—not the solution” to the debt crisis.

Various Contributors


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