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Proclamation Honoring Congressman Sam Farr
by Santa Cruz branch of WILPF
Wednesday Mar 7th, 2007 9:53 AM
Santa Cruz WILPFers Honor Sam Farr's Efforts for Peace
From the March 2007 Undaunted Dove, p.5 (Newsletter of the Santa Cruz branch of the Women's International League of Peace and Freedom)

Proclamation honoring
Congressman Sam Farr

Whereas Congressman Sam Farr has
introduced legislation to repeal the
authorization of the use of military force
against Iraq;

and whereas this legislation calls for the
withdrawal of U.S. armed forces from Iraq in a
safe and orderly manner;

and whereas this legislation aims
to increase the actual security of the United
States, of Iraq, and of the world;

and whereas by doing this he has shown
concern for the welfare of our men and women
who serve in the military;

and whereas he has shown respect for the
desire for peace expressed by a majority of the
people in the 17th Congressional District and
the entire nation, as evidenced by the recent
elections;

and whereas he has acted in obedience to his
conscience and his good common sense;

and whereas he has done this concisely and
unambiguously;

We, the Santa Cruz Branch of Women’s
International League for Peace and Freedom
on this 16th day of January 2007, do declare
Congressman Sam Farr a

Peace hero of the 110th Congress


Comments  (Hide Comments)

by Robert Norse
Saturday Mar 10th, 2007 12:54 AM
On February 16, 20 of us attempted to visit Rep. Farr's Santa Cruz office demanding that he end his yearly support for the bloated military budget, which he has NEVER opposed. That budget provides plenty of pork and blood for Iraq and other Middle-East military murder capers. We have heard NOTHING from his office on this matter.

His staff, fearful we'd occupy the office and "create a scene" locked the office for the day and fed us cookies and bottled water in the next room. The story is documented at http://indybay.org/newsitems/2007/02/16/18364631.php .

Full disclosure: Farr has opposed---after intense pressure from activists like us in 2002 and 2003--the Supplemental Budget for the Iraq war. A month ago, he finally initiated a proposal to rescind the Use of Force resolution of 2002.

He has yet to weigh in on rescinding the original Use of Force resolution of September 2001 (which actually can be done without a presidential veto since it was passed by joint resolution and didn't have presidential signature).


The details of the huge $600 billion military budget (which includes many items for Iraq and which Farr apparently intends to endorse)--can be found at the following websites, according to Farr's staff.
http://www.dod.mil/comptroller/defbudget/fy2007/fy2007_summary_tables_whole.pdf
http://www.dod.mil/comptroller/defbudget/fy2008/fy2008_summary_tables_whole.pdf

It's vital to raise the roof to stop what seems to be a juggernaut war machine ramping up for air war with Iran.

The Santa Cruz City Council under Reilly and Coonerty, while praising Farr to the skies has declined to research which items in its financial porfolio are war-related, to declare Santa Cruz a "war criminal free zone" (i.e. where war resisters such as Lt. Watada are invited to seek refuge), or to endorse criminal military organizing on high schools in the city.

While Farr has moved to urge reversal of the 2002 Congressional authorization of force in Iraq (and good for him for doing so), he needs to move on the broader more sweeping resolution passed in 2001, the September 18, 2001 Authorization of Force which opened the bogus "war on terror" and was passed by joint Congressional resolution (so its repeal can't be vetoed by Bush). That bill can be found at http://news.findlaw.com/wp/docs/terrorism/sjres23.es.html

Locally, how about calling City Council at 420-5020 and demanding (a) an immediate town hall meeting to demand immediate withdrawal from Iraq, (b) resolutions urging the impeachment of Chaney and Bush, (c) repeal of the War Commissions Act, (d) a resolution, such as that passed by Berkeley's Peace and Justice Commission signing on to the German government's prosecution of Rumsfeld as a war criminal (and demanding the extradition of the 17 CIA agents sought by German authorities for kidnapping political suspects and secretly transporting them to destinations in Eastern Europe to be torturned in extreme rendition programs) and (e) the obvious local measures taken to make sure we aren't financially invested in the war and/or war industries at a local level.

Local politicians and Farr groupies are planning a lovefest with Farr on Saturday the 17th as we know. Farr still lags significantly behind anti-war sentiment in this county. Unless we raise our voices, he will continue to misrepresent us in this regard.

Farr needs to take firm action to CUT OFF FUNDING. That means voting NO on the military budget this year and declaring his intention to do so--at least until all funds for the Bush-Clinton imperial designs int he Middle East are removed from the measure. (Remember that the Bush-Clinton-Bush economic sanctions have killed as many or more than the U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq).

The proposed return of The Occupation Project activists to Farr's office on March 16 is now in doubt because the main activist who organized the action (Steve Argue) is swamped with work.

If others are interested in pressing this action, please announce it on this side and/or call me at 831-423-4833.
by danielsan
Friday Mar 23rd, 2007 1:43 PM
Spokesman for Sam Farr, at a press conference decrying ICE roundups in Santa Cruz county which disappeared more than a hundred from our streets:

"I oppose illegal immigration and feel we need to strengthen border security"
by repost by danielsan
Friday Mar 23rd, 2007 5:15 PM
Published on Friday, March 23, 2007 by Inter Press Service
Congressman Trades Iraq Vote for Spinach
by Aaron Glantz

SAN FRANCISCO - A liberal Congressman who represents California’s picturesque central coast region is under fire for trading his vote on the Iraq war for spinach.

Rep. Sam Farr, a Democrat from the hippy college town of Santa Cruz, originally voted against the Iraq war and has voted against proposals to fund it each of the last four years.

This time, though, he’s singing a different tune — and critics say his change of heart has more to do with the spinach industry than anything else.

That’s because Farr’s district includes most of the lettuce and spinach grown in the United States, an area often called “the salad bowl of the world.” Last September the farms were hit by a deadly e-coli bacteria outbreak that caused U.S.-grown spinach to be pulled from store shelves worldwide.

Now, Farr has inserted a 25-million-dollar disaster relief programme to bail out California spinach growers into the 100-billion-dollar war appropriations funding bill sought by the White House.

“It’s very disappointing,” long-time peace activist Sherry Conable told IPS. “There was a lot of jubilation after the Democrats took back Congress that Sam had finally stepped forward in the leadership and was really trying to bring the war to an end, and I think this vote is just very disturbing.”

Farr denies that his support for spinach and Iraq are linked. He told the San Francisco Chronicle his vote for Bush’s war funding request “was about turning the corner in Iraq”.

He noted most Republicans will vote against the legislation because Democrats have attached conditions on how the war would be waged. The bill requires that combat troops be out of Iraq before September 2008, but would allow President Bush to waive the restrictions.

“They want to go gung-ho,” he said. “They want to escalate in Iraq. So what would our ‘no’ votes mean?”

Farr’s decision would appear to put him out of step with his more liberal constituents. In 2002, the Santa Cruz City council was the first local government body in the country to vote against the Iraq war. In September 2003 the council made history by being the first in the nation to call for the impeachment of President Bush.

Conable, who pushed the impeachment resolution through the city council, says peace activists can call Farr’s office and write letters, but that will only take them so far.

“He has a very safe seat,” she said. “I think the moral imperative has to come from inside him and I’ve seen it before. We can speak to that, but ultimately, he’s the one who will hold up his hand and make the vote.”

Farr is hardly the only Congressman to change his position on the Iraq war after receiving special monies for his district.

According to the watchdog group Citizens Against Government Waste (CAGW), the House appropriations bill contains 21 billion dollars more than President Bush requested to fight the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

“None of this has anything to do with the war,” the group’s President, Tom Schatz, told IPS.

Among the so-called “pork projects” listed by Citizens Against Government Waste: 283 million dollars for the Milk Income Loss Contract programme, 74 million dollars for peanut storage costs, 60.4 million dollars for salmon fisheries, 50 million dollars for asbestos mitigation at the U.S. Capitol Plant, and 25 million dollars for spinach.

“People will go to almost any extreme to try to get special provisions to help someone in their state or district and in turn they’ll vote for proposals they really oppose,” Schatz said.

Like Farr, Democrat Peter DeFazio of Oregon voted against authorising the war and previous war funding bills. He decided to vote for President Bush’s most recent funding request after Congressional leaders added 400 million dollars in funding for rural schools.

Like Farr, DeFazio’s constituents are overwhelmingly against the Iraq war. This week, the Oregon State House of Representatives passed a resolution calling for a withdrawal of all U.S. troops from Iraq. The cities of Portland, Covallis, and Eugene have all passed similar resolutions, but DeFazio’s spokesperson said this week the school funding was more important.

“That’s pretty vital for our district, so we’ll be voting for the bill,” his spokesman Danielle Langone told the website Politico.com

“It frustrates me when what should be a straight up or down vote gets muddied,” the Quaker American Friends Service Committee’s Kelly Campbell said from the group’s Portland office. “That puts Congresspeople in a difficult position and it puts all of us who are trying to stop this war in a difficult position. I’d like to see a system where we could actually vote on particular topics and not force people to weigh unrelated issues into a vote like this.”

The House of Representatives began debate on funding the Iraq war Thursday, with a vote likely on Friday. A House vote on continued funding the Iraq war is expected Friday.

Meanwhile, the National Priorities Project, a Massachusetts-based non-profit group, notes that for the more than 410 billion dollars that have been spent on the Iraq war so far, the U.S. could have hired 7,115,508 public school teachers for one year, built 3,696,945 affordable housing units, or given health insurance to 245,860,303 children.
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