MICHAEL MEEROPOL / POLITICAL COMMENTARY / Virtually everything the Trump Administration has done to ramp up deportations has been illegal

Honk for Trump Vance. Photo by Thomas Hawk / Flickr/ Creative Commons.

By Michael Meeropol / The Rag Blog / September 16, 2025

The following is an expanded version of a commentary delivered by Michael Meeropol, Professor Emeritus of Economics at Western New England University over WAMC-FM on August 29, 2025. It has been adapted for The Rag Blog. Michael Meeropol will be Thorne Dreyer’s guest on Rag Radio, Friday, September 19, 2-3 p.m., on KOOP 91.7-FM in Austin and streamed at KOOP.org. 

On Monday, August 11, I joined elected officials, activists, and ordinary citizens at a rally
in Peekskill, NY in Westchester County. We were there to support an Ecuadorean immigrant, Amy Lituma, who had been offered a Hobson’s Choice by ICE — either self-deport and you can take your child with you or we will arrest you and you will be separated from your child while your case is being adjudicated.

This is not an exaggeration. At the rally Attorney Ignacio Acevedo, from the New York Civil Liberties Union, described a case of a mother who was separated from her one-year-old. The baby is in Newburgh, NY in Orange County — the mother is incarcerated in Louisiana.

[See “ When You Take the Mom Away, You Take the Whole Family Away’: Peekskill Rally Condemns ICE Tactics,” The Examiner News, August 12, 2025, available at
https://www.theexaminernews.com/when-you-take-the-mom-away-you-take-the-whole-family-
away-peekskill-rally-condemns-ice-tactics/
]

I’d like to skip over the fact that virtually everything the Trump Administration has done
to ramp up deportations has been illegal (though I fear the runaway Supreme Court will make them legal after the fact). Trump and his minions do not care if what they are doing is illegal — they believe they have the power to ignore the law because the 6-3 right-wing majority on the Supreme Court has already given Trump a “get out of jail free” card. Also, many Trump supporters don’t care if what ICE is doing is illegal because they are so convinced that these immigrants are poisoning the blood stream of our country that anything done to get rid of them is all right with them. (Please note – I said many – I didn’t even say a majority because in fact I do not know how deep the fascist belief system has penetrated our population.)

No – I would like to ask and answer the rhetorical question — How does the self-deportation of this mother and her four-year-old son help American citizens and green card holders? To do this, I want to go back to a Rag Blog contribution from four weeks ago which constituted a deep dive into a speech given by Vice President Vance.

(What follows does include a quote from the previous Rag Blog contribution, but the issue explored is a different one from a few weeks ago.)

In that speech he said the following:

“[D]eporting low-wage immigrants will raise the wages of the native-born… [That
would] create higher living standards for those who are born and raised here, whether they’re black, white, or any other skin color. Every Western society, as I stand here today, has significant demographic and cultural problems. There is something about Western liberalism that seems almost suicidal, or at least socially parasitic, that tends to feed off of a healthy host until there’s nothing left. That’s why the demographic trends across the West are so bad… America in ’25 is more diverse than it has ever been. And yet, the institutions that take this incredibly diverse country and form culture are weaker than they have ever been. While our elites tell us that diversity is our greatest strength, they destroy the very institutions that allow us to thrive and build a common sense of purpose and meaning as Americans.

“… Social bonds form among people who have something in common. They share the same neighborhood. They share the same church. They send their kids to the same school. And what we’re doing is recognizing that if you stop importing millions of foreigners into the country, you allow that social cohesion to form naturally. It’s hard to become neighbors with your fellow citizens when your own government keeps on importing new neighbors every single year at a record number.”

Notice that Vance doesn’t dare raise the canard that the Trump Administration is deporting “the worst of the worst” as in violent criminals. That claim may be believed by some but it is a bold-faced lie. According to the Marshall Project:


“People with no criminal convictions at all make up two-thirds of the more than 120,000 people deported between January and May. For another 8%, the only offense on their record was illegal entry to the U.S. Only about 12% were convicted of a crime that was either violent or potentially violent.”

[See: “Ice is Deporting Thousands with Minor Offenses — From Traffic Violations to Weed Possession. Many people with little or no criminal record have been swept into the administration’s immigration dragnet since January, an analysis of deportation data shows.”


(August 15, 2025) available at: https://www.themarshallproject.org/2025/08/15/ice-georgia-
traffic-stop-arrest-immigration
.]

Videos are circulating from New York court houses and from street arrests, showing ICE Agents forcibly separating parents from children, breaking car windows and arresting ordinary workers, grabbing a man who had just dropped his kids off at school. I saw these three separate videos during just one evening watching TV news.

The good news is, bystanders are filming these outrageous events with their cell phones and community members are yelling at the ICE Nazis to go home. Demanding to know their names, attempting to photograph them, though most of them are hiding their faces. In a world where justice prevails, these ICE Nazis will someday have to answer for their “work” in courts of law.

And people wrongfully deported are fighting back with the help of courageous lawyers who are not kissing Trump’s behind. Kilmar Obrego Garcia, the man wrongfully deported to a gulag in El Salvador and then arrested when the Trump Administration finally complied with a judge’s order to bring him back to the U.S. (the charge was basically that he drove some undocumented people in his car!) was ordered freed by a Maryland Judge. After a day at home with his family (during which time he took the offensive and sued the government for his unlawful deportation, the government has arrested him again. They offered him a choice of pleading guilty and being sent to Costa Rica or, if he refused to plead guilty, they threatened to send him to Uganda! As of now, a federal judge has ordered the Trump Administration not to deport him till at least
October. Unfortunately, he remains in ICE custody, while members of the Trump
Administration, without any evidence, claim he is a member of a Salvadoran gang called MS-13. This prompted his lawyers to ask a federal judge for a gag order on Trump and members of his administration.

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ALICE EMBREE/ DOCUMENTARY FILM / The 9 Lives of Barbara Dane

By Alice Embree / The Rag Blog / September 8, 2025

Cross-posted from Alice Embree’s Substack.

The documentary portrait of folk and protest singer Barbara Dane will be shown twice in Austin. A post-screening Q&A with director Maureen Gosling and producer Jed Riffe will follow. Details follow: 

Barbara Dane died at the age of 97 in Oakland California in October 2024. As noted in her obituary in The New York Times she “saw music as fuel for social change, not personal fame.”

She used her strong contralto voice as fuel during the 1964 Mississippi Freedom Summer and to protest the war in Vietnam. She crossed genres from folk to jazz and blues. Her collaborators included Muddy Waters, Lightnin’ Hopkins, Earl Hines, and Louis Armstrong as well as Pete Seeger.

The New York Times reported,

She recalled Albert Grossman, who would later manage [Bob] Dylan, telling her that he would be interested in her professionally only when she “got her priorities straight.”

In that sense, she never did. In 1971, she joined Jane Fonda, Elliott Gould, Donald Sutherland and others in a traveling variety show that performed before American soldiers who had turned against the war.

Early in her career, she had declined an invitation to tour with the bandleader Alvino Rey. As she told The Times, “Why would I want to stand in front of a band with a low-cut dress singing stupid words when I could be singing for workers who are on strike?

The 9 Lives of Barbara Dane, explores this life well-lived with archival footing and interviews with friends and admirers that include Jane Fonda and Bonnie Raitt.

Filmmakers Maureen Gosling and Chris Simon and legendary music producer Chris Strachwitz were Thorne Dreyer’s guests on Rag Radio, March 15, 2013. They discussed their film about Strachwitz, This Ain’t no Mouse Music! See the Rag Blog article here.

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PAUL BUHLE / RADICAL COMICS / Anti-facism, partisan comics

By Paul Buhle / Special to The Rag Blog / August 28, 2025

The understandable fear of an American-style fascism will remind European readers and comics fans that their seemingly all-powerful but culturally backward cousins are slow to understand the gravity or the art of world history.

We note exceptions. Shortly after Pearl Harbor and the entry of the U.S. into the war, two youngsters and future super-notables in comics worked furiously to create The Boy Commandos. Only a few comics had been produced on the European conflict and none with the anti-fascist message. Writer Joe Simon was the son of a union organizer, artist Jack Kirby destined to become an all-powerful industry figure. 

The Boy Commandos (I wrote an introduction to the reprint edition) offers a handful of teenagers from assorted  national and ethnic backgrounds conducting sabotage behind German and Italian battle lines. French, Dutch, Irish and Brooklyn-American lads, under the direction of Captain Rip Carter. “Satan Wears a Swastika” would be a normal sort of adventure title. They even venture to Africa where uncaricatured natives join the struggle. 

The  Boy Commandos was a huge hit, with sales in the hundreds of thousands per issue (GIs stationed in Europe were, for a few years, a large part of the comic market), and the series continued until the end of the War. Other war comics abounded, of course, some of them with the enemy Japanese as simians, barely human, colored in vivid yellow. “Terry and the Pirates” may have been the singularly popular Asian-bsdrf adventure with a Dragon Lady but not much struggle behind the lines. 

Shortly after the war, comic sales dipped severely. Cold War comics lacked the antifascist quality, of course. The biggest seller for almost a decade (until the repression of unsavory comics in 1953) was “Crime Does Not Pay,” an amazingly sadistic series, along with horror comics. All gone, although GI Joe and other titles made a later, Cold War theme comeback, with precious little anti-fascist content.

The rise of “alternative comics” found Spanish artists and publishers the earliest and most dedicated anti-fascists. Paracuellos (1981, U.S. edition 2020) is considered a global classic in comic art, winner of practically every prize, but is mainly a survivor’s  story of children living through the war and the repression that followed until Francisco Franco’s fall from power. Los Arte de Volar by Paco Roca, another classic, is about those who escaped and plotted a counter-offensive. Gimenez’s deeply personal story  is said to have offered inspiration for the pained telling of self-history in modern comics, including Art Spiegelman’s Maus.

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RICHARD CROXDALE / ABORTION RIGHTS / Lone Star Three

By Richard Croxdale / The Rag Blog / August 21, 2025

[This article was originally published at People’s History in Texas (PHIT) and was cross-posted to The Rag Blog. The Lone Star Three will be featured on Rag Radio, Friday, August 22, 2025, on KOOP 91.7-FM, 2-3 p.m., in a show co-hosted by Thorne Dreyer and Alice Embree.]

People’s History in Texas attended the opening of Lone Star Three, a documentary on the origins of Roe v Wade. The place was packed with a mixture of oldsters and youngsters.

Lone Star Three is the story of the organizing and the friendship of three women in Austin, Texas, who coalesced around reproductive justice issues in the early ‘70s. The women organized, agitated, and focused on access to abortion and access to birth control which is, boiled-down, access to health care for women.

Victoria Foe, Judy Smith, and Barbara Hines are the three women that are highlighted, but there were many, many more who were involved in the fight. At a minimum, these three should be added to the imaginary University of Texas sculpture garden that PHIT created for Casey Hayden, who is mentioned in an earlier substack.

The three attended the University of Texas at Austin, some in graduate school, some headed to law school, some headed to MacArthur grants.

People’s History in Texas contributed the interview conducted with Judy Smith which was gathered at the reunion of The Rag underground newspaper, when PHIT collected thirty-plus interviews of the Rag staff and of organizing and protests in the ’60s and ’70s. The second part of The Rag: An Underground Newspaper documentary also highlighted other women and other issues in the women’s movement.

All three worked on The Rag. All three were instrumental in the formation of the surge of activity in women’s issues and women’s rights in those years. I think they call that slice of history second-wave feminism in these days. People tell PHIT that if you were living during those days, or were living with someone who was involved, there was no second wave about it. It was just a long overdue demand for some equal treatment.

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MARTIN MURRAY / CRIMINAL INTELLIGENCE / Lt. Burt Gerding and I

Photo by Belmer Wright published in Austin’s underground paper, The Rag, January 15, 1968.

By Martin Murray / The Rag Blog / August 19, 2025

Lt. Burt Gerding served in the Austin Police Department (APD) in the Criminal Intelligence Division from the early 1960s to some time in 1970, when he was transferred to the APD Narcotics Division. As an APD Intelligence Officer, Gerding worked in concert with the University of Texas Police Department (UTPD) and the FBI.  He was primarily responsible for monitoring the activities of suspected campus radicals and leftist student political organizations. Through his friend George Carlson (an FBI agent and Head of Security for University of Texas System), Gerding worked with agents from the FBI’s secret Counterintelligence Program, known as COINTELPRO. 

First Encounters of a Special Kind

My first personal encounter with Burt Gerding came in late November 1967, just a few weeks after I starting going to SDS meetings on the University of Texas campus.  As I was casually walking along a hallway in the University Union late one morning, I passed two middle-aged men in cheap suits, one of whom I recognized as Burt Gerding.  Burt greeted me cheerily with a hearty “Hey, Martin, so you’ve joined SDS.” I realized at that moment my presence had been noticed.  That was my introduction to the world of police spying on the anti-war movement.  

As I learned later, starting around 1963, and perhaps into late 1968, Burt and his sidekick Allan Hamilton (Head of the UT Austin campus police Department) were regular fixtures around political events on the UT Austin campus.  They monitored protest events, spied on political organizations, recorded our names, and identified our “leaders.”  We routinely identified them to everyone around whenever they appeared.  By the beginning of 1968, I rarely saw Burt Gerding again, except when he hovered around the edges of large demonstrations. 

I first learned who Burt Gerding was a few weeks earlier.  In mid-November 1967, I accidentally came upon a “sit-in” protest against Marine recruiters in a large alcove room about 30 feet long and 25 feet wide in the University Union. Around eight to 10 people were sitting on the floor, blocking access to the Marines.  They were chanting “end the war in Vietnam,” and such.  I was captivated.  I immediately joined the sit-in.  For the next several days during that week, I joined the protest as a participant.  During this week of the Marine Recruiters sit-in, counterprotesters jeered at us, pushed their way through the bodies on the floor, stomping and kicking.  I noticed several middle-aged men watching the protest from the far edge of the crowd. Some of the protesters blocking access to the Marines told me that the tall thin one with a sly grin on his face was Lt. Burt Gerding, the well-known head of the Austin Police Department Criminal Intelligence Division (euphemistically called the “Red Squad”).  

I learned that Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) had sponsored the sit-in protest.  I started attending SDS meetings.  At last, I had found like-minded people who shared by political views. 

Burt Gerding was a visible and ubiquitous presence at political meetings and protest gatherings.  He was always lurking around, looking puffed up and self-important.  By early 1968, as I recall, whenever we saw him, we pointed him out and heckled him.  Soon thereafter, he moved further into the background, giving up on the idea of sitting in on meetings and trying to listen to conversations. 

As the antiwar movement expanded from a small group of readily identifiable individuals into a mass movement, the Austin “Red Squad” (with Gerding at the helm) switched strategies and tactics. They began to infiltrate the growing anti-war and anti-racist movement with undercover informants.  In retrospect, I now see that police informants consisted of two types. One type was those who attended meetings and hovered at the edges of protests, taking notes and sometimes photographs.  These undercover agents pretended they were casual observers.  The second type were those who actively participated in organizing efforts, blending into the “movement” as activists, pretending to be our comrades.  

When SDS meetings grew in size, sometimes numbering well over 100 or 200 activists prior to planning a major demonstration, it was impossible to detect undercover informants patiently taking notes and preparing reports for whatever policing agency they worked for (the Austin Police Department, the FBI, or the University of Texas Public Security Unit).  The role of undercover police agents who actively participated was also difficult to detect.  But their purpose was clear: gain access to inside information by “being one of us.”  Sometimes this participation spilled over into the role of agents provocateurs, spreading rumors, exaggerating differences, and provoking dissent. 

The Gerding Papers at the Briscoe Center for American History (UT Austin)

After he left the APD and then retired from his security job at Westinghouse, Gerding donated a treasure trove of printed materials he had collected over the years to the Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, located (of all places) at the LBJ Library on the UT campus. These materials (and especially a transcribed series of interviews he provided to the Briscoe Center in 1994) provide a window into his modus operandi, his worldview, and his plan of attack to disrupt the antiwar movement.

The Burt Gerding Papers constitute an archive as such: they consist of materials produced at the time and gathered together and stored in six boxes, each of which is divided into individual files. These collected materials resemble something akin to a random assortment of printed materials, the most interesting of which focus on “political activism,” political protests, civil rights and black power, and organizations like Students for a Democratic Society, Student Mobilization Committee, and others.  Many of these files contain an assortment of old leaflets, occasional undercover police reports, copies of the underground newspaper, The Rag, and some newspaper clippings. 

The files are at best loosely classified, devoid of any semblance of temporal sequence, and incomplete as documentary evidence. What should be clear from the start: the Gerding Papers do not even gesture toward a history of political activism in Austin, the ideologies that drove it, or its wider meanings.  There are no reports on particular demonstrations or protest events, with the exception of the Don Weedon Gas Station Protests (3 May 1968), Waller Creek tree removals (21-23 October 1969), and the Chuck Wagon riot (10 November 1969).  But even these reports are not historical accounts.  They are surprisingly thin on recounting how SDS and other organizations planned marches, what routes protesters selected, and what banners were flown. The materials in the Gerding Papers are devoid of analysis.

The Gerding Papers do include reports from undercover informants. The principle mode of information exchange is contained in what were called “Memos of Information.”  Undercover informants submitted short (two-page) summaries of what happened at a particular meeting on a particular date.  The ritual included who called the meeting, where it was held, the date it occurred, how many were in attendance, who chaired, what were the main points of contention, what factions were present, and what decisions were reached.  Some of these reports talked about divorces, and who was responsible for breaking up marriages.   

For example, in one “Memo of Information” the informant claimed that Paul Turner and I were calling for a demonstration to disrupt the annual NAVY ROTC parade.  This event never appears in any other files.  Another example, there are several “Memos of Information” that turn their attention in late 1968 and early 1969 to the New Left Education Project (NLEP), an SDS-sponsored group, and its literature table.  Praise is heaped upon the University administration for waiting for the right moment to act.  No mention is ever made that Alan Locklear and I were brought before a University Disciplinary hearing, charged with “selling literature” without authorization on campus.  We obtained the services of an ACLU attorney, Gerald Lefcourt, and we argued that we were not “selling literature,” but only accepting donations.  Besides that, we also argued that fraternities and sororities openly sold tickets for such revolting events as “Round Up” (where sorority women were lassoed and dragged off to makeshift corrals), and the Old South Day dance and party (where frat boys on horses paid young African-American kids to hand-carry invitations to sorority houses).

Most likely police surveillance photos. Top on the left is Rag Blog editor Thorne Dreyer, and at the lower right is Rag Blog associate editor Alice Embree.

In 1970, Gerding prepared a Report for Chief Miles, a five-page document included in his Papers.  In this document, Gerding offers his assessment of Movement organizations.  Indeed, for someone who claims to have reliable undercover informants, and to have infiltrated organizations and secretly reported on meetings, this assessment was pathetic. It was incomplete, relied on deductive tropes about Communist organizations, and was incomplete in its coverage.  As our Movement grew in strength and numbers, he seems to have fallen back on well-worn truisms that no longer (if they ever were) instructive.  His claims to have his finger on the pulse of the Movement were only matched by his woefully inadequate ignorance of what the Movement – its people and organizations – were actually doing.  We were building organizations to confront the war machine, racism, misogyny, and homophobia. Gerding was trapped in old paradigms and analytic frameworks inherited from the 1950s Cold War. He was obsessed with tracing poplar protests back to one of several national “Communist” organizations – CPUSA, Socialist Workers Party, and Progressive Labor.  While these organizations had a presence in the Austin Movement, their members were certainly not orchestrating or leading popular protests.  By 1970, both the CPUSA and PL were spent forces in Austin, and we regarded the SWP and its offshoot sibling organizations — the “Trots” as we called them — as more or less irrelevant.  Gerding seems to epitomize the banality of evil: a self-deluded ordinary “little man” who believed that he could act with impunity because he operated under the official sanction of the security agencies he worked with.

In the Gerding Report, what he ignored was much more important than what he included as part of the official record.  CPUSA membership never amounted to more than three or four persons, led by Marian Vizard before she took a decided detour into countercultural and feminist politics. After the break-up of SDS in summer 1968, PL was a spent force in Austin, attracting ever-dwindling numbers to its events.  The Spartacists league, never more than perhaps five hardcore fanatics, always carried their banner to every rally and demonstration: “all Southeast Asia must go Communist.” As quasi-Maoists, their political position was that the Vietnamese revolution — both in the North and South — was hopelessly revisionist because of the support the Vietnamese obtained from the Soviet Union.  This arcane political position was never going to be a way to build a vibrant political movement in Austin.  The “Sparts” were pathetically irrelevant — a nuisance that we tolerated.

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CARL DAVIDSON / COMMENTARY / Trump as big-city crimefighter?

Cartoon courtesy of LeftLinks.

By Carl Davidson / The Rag Blog / August 15, 2025

This article was originally posted on August 15, 2025, as a weekly editorial on LeftLinks by its editor Carl Davidson and is cross-posted to The Rag Blog.

Whenever I hear politicians, especially those like President Donald Trump and his MAGA wannabes, talk about “war on crime” and “letting the police do their job,” my muscles tighten and fists clench. I’m ready to rumble. They have no idea what they’re talking about, save for dead ends that would make matters worse. In a fair debate, I would mop the floor with them.

I’ll start with a short story. I was chatting with a Beaver County DA a few years back, he was an FDR liberal of sorts, who has since passed on. I asked him one day if he saw a connection between the unemployment rate and the arrest rate here locally. He laughed softly and said he kept two charts on his office wall, with the numbers of each, which he updated regularly. “What did they show?” I asked. ‘They match exactly,” he replied, “But too many lack the will or the ideas to do anything about it.”

My lawyer friend had a point. First, we need the will to name and confront the problem as it’s perceived by those who live it. Using statistics of positive change starts on the wrong foot. Second, we need ideas about what to do, and we need to dump some bad ideas along the way.

Which leads to another story. For five years, I worked in a Chicago jobs program I had designed for “at-risk” youth — computer repair and network installation. I ran it successfully in five tough Chicago public high schools. The principals gave me a big room, and I brought boxes of screwdrivers and truckloads of donated older computers. I told the kids:

“You can’t steal anything here. You wouldn’t know what to do with it anyway. But if you can get one of these computers to work, it’s yours. You can take it home with you. And I’ll teach you how to do it, and more. The most crucial product in this class is going to be what’s between your ears, the skills you gain. Computers that work and good spare parts are just byproducts.”

It was a solid success, and one special group heard about it and approached me separately. They were all ex-offenders, recently out of prison. “If we found the space and some funds, could you do this for us, for ex-offenders and some inmates on work release?” I agreed and worked with them for five years, too.

We talked about everything during the classes. 0ne day I dropped the phrase, “Lock ‘em up and throw away the key.” One guy smiled and said, “They don’t get it, not at all.” “What do you mean,” I asked? “Nearly everyone you put in jail will come out some day. It may be five years, seven, or whatever. But nearly all of us come back out. They give us a new suit of clothes, a state I.D. card, a bus ticket to wherever ‘home’ is, and $50. Now think about it. I’m back in the ‘hood’ with less than $50 to buy food. What am I going to do in order to survive?”

“But here’s the next question,” he continued. “What if I were an 18-year-old kid who highjacked a car and got caught, and was sentenced to five years? The reality of most prisons is harsh and stark. This young kid will get nothing in the way of what you’re doing here. First, he’ll be brutalized and hardened. Then he’ll join a prison gang for defense.”

“So he will also learn new skills on how to be a better criminal. Then he gets dumped on the street with his bus ticket. Hardly anyone will hire him for a regular job. Some of his family won’t want to deal with him, either. So he hooks up with the “outside” version of the gang he had joined in prison, and he’ll start at the bottom, finding a corner to sell drugs on the street.

War on crime? In prison, we don’t fight crime. We create schools and conditions to create more and better criminals.

That’s why we laugh at “throwing away the key.” Unless you’re a mass murderer, that key is going to let you out as a new and better criminal in a few years. They want to get tougher, more brutal? They can do that. But what does it produce? A tougher and more brutal criminal.

Not all prisons are simply bleak. Some have decent libraries, where you can study to be a jailhouse lawyer or a Muslim, a Buddhist, or a Christian minister. (I know one guy who did all four). In maintaining the physical plant and structure of the prison itself — a much-desired prison job — some will learn carpentry, sheet metal, and plumbing skills.

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MICHAEL MEEROPOL / POLITICAL COMMENTARY / Vice President Vance says people who fought in the Civil War have a larger claim to citizenship than people living here today

J.D. Vance by DonkeyHotey. This caricature of J.D. Vance was adapted from a Creative Commons licensed photo from Gage Skidmore’s Flickr photostream.

By Michael Meeropol / The Rag Blog / August 5, 2025

The following is an expanded version of a commentary delivered over WAMC-FM on July 18, 2025, by Michael Meeropol, Professor Emeritus of Economics at Western New England University. It was adapted by the author to be published on The Rag Blog.

Michael Meeropol will be Thorne Dreyer’s guest on Rag Radio on KOOP-FM Friday, August 8, from 2-3 p.m.

 On July 5, Vice President Vance spoke at a right-wing think tank, the Claremont Institute.  Allegedly he was there to speak about “statesmanship” but in fact, he decided to use the opportunity to bash what he called “the left” and to present his idea as to what defines American citizenship.  Both of these sections of his speech involve dangerous nonsense — as well as outright lies.   Unfortunately, even in this longer version I cannot discuss the entire speech so I will restrict myself to his main themes.

[For the entire transcript, see:  “JD Vance’s Speech at The Claremont Institute’s Statesmanship Award Event. Available at https://singjupost.com/transcript-jd-vances-speech-at-the-claremont-institutes-statesmanship-award-event/”]

His first theme — to which he returned at the end of his speech — was an attack on the “American left.”

“I think it’s worth reflecting on the American left in 2025 because if you’re anything like me, I was very optimistic that the left had had such a beating in the 2024 elections that they might have a come-to-Jesus moment. They might look around and say, you know, maybe the American people are not going to go for grown men beating up women in girls’ sports. Maybe the American people are not going to go for a wide-open Southern border that has allowed tens of millions of people to come into our country, undercutting the wages of American workers and, of course, making our society much less safe.”

Notice — he doesn’t touch the most important goals of the “American left” — to pass a bill making reproductive rights the law of the land, to reduce economic inequality, restore democratic voting rights, and take action to slow climate change and mitigate the effects of it.   That’s of course because, all those goals are wildly popular among the general public.

But let’s take a look at his description of what “the American left” wants.

Let’s start with the idea of “open borders.”  According to government statistics, after a big jump in “encounters” on the Southwest border of the U.S. in fiscal year 2023 (October 2022 to September 2023) there was a marked decline for all of calendar year 2023 and that continued through December of 2024.   The decline was significant —  from 250,000 to 100,000.   Note, in no way did that allow “tens of millions” of people to come into our country.  The total number of so-called illegals in the country in 2022 was estimated at about 11 million — many of whom have been in the country five, 10, 20 years – even more.  So what’s up with “tens of millions” coming into the country while Biden was president?  It’s an outright lie — which of course he can get away with because of the audience to which he was speaking and the inability of the mainstream media to call out every dishonest rhetorical flourish.  But please note — this is a man with a law degree.  He knows the real numbers.    [for a detailed diagram see https://www.cbp.gov/newsroom/stats/southwest-land-border-encounters]

Next argument —  immigrants are undercutting the wages of American workers.  I will discuss that later in this essay.

His third assertion is that the left’s support for the rights of trans-gendered people means they want to see “grown men beating up women in girls’ sports?”   The city of San Francisco issued a report responding to the widespread hysteria exemplified by that assertion.   [See “Trans Women in Sports:  Facts over Fear,” available at https://www.sf.gov/trans-women-in-sports-facts-over-fear#].   Trans-women have been competing at least since Renee Richards played in tennis tournaments in the 1970s.   There is no evidence that trans-women have any advantages over people born as women, and as the article points out they represent a miniscule number of participants in women’s sports: “0.002% (10/500.000) of U.S. college athletes and even fewer of recent Olympians — (0.001%) identify as trans.”

Next, he decides to attack the Democratic nominee for Mayor of New York City – Zohran Mamdani: “…a 33-year-old communist… “

That first line is enough to refute Vance.  Free buses and a rent freeze is hardly “communism.”  But if anyone’s interested there is a detailed presentation of Mamdani’s platform at https://www.zohranfornyc.com/platform.  Among other things, he wants to raise the NYC income tax on millionaires and corporations.  He wants to raise the minimum wage to $30 an hour by 2030.  He wants to try an experiment with city-owned grocery stores in underserved neighborhoods.   It’s definitely a left-wing agenda, but “communist”?   Come on!

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ALICE EMBREE | DOCUMENTARY | Lone Star Three

By Alice Embree / The Rag Blog / August 4, 2025

Texas women won us the right to abortion then.  It’s up to us to win it back now.  The Lone Star Three is a documentary about three Texas women.  Their grassroots work set the stage for Roe v Wade.

The Lone Star Three will be screened

6:30 – 9:00 pm, Tuesday, August 12

Austin Film Society Cinema

6529 Middle Fiskville Road,  Austin, TX  78752

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THIS LINK

Ticket sales will benefit reproductive justice organizations.  A panel discussion will follow the screening.  Tickets are still available.

Lone Star Three features Judy Smith, Vic Foe, and Barbara Hines who operated a birth control counseling service and made referrals for abortion care.

I knew all of these women in the 70s. Their courage and leadership changed the world. I’ve written about their work in Substack, The Rag Blog, and Celebrating The Rag: Austin’s Iconic Underground Newspaper. Seeing Judy, Barbara, and Vic on screen telling their story brings this history to another level.

Mighty Force Productions has done an extraordinary job making this history come to life on film. Lone Star Three tells a timely story about grassroots activism. Roe v Wade didn’t start in a courtroom and the struggle for reproductive justice didn’t end in a courtroom with the Dobbs decision.

See this film!

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BRUCE MELTON / CLIMATE SCIENCE / It’s flooding down in Texas

Climate change has undersized our world’s engineered infrastructure, and increased modern flood safety has created complacency in a flood world far different from the safe one we recently vacated.

Caption: Cow Creek and what was Texas State Highway 1431, just northwest ofAustin, 70 miles northeast of Kerrville, 24 hours after the Kerrville tragedy in a completely separate rain event, after 13.3 inches of rain fell in the mountainous Hill Country of Central Texas, in three hours, with 17 fatalities and 5 still missing. Image: Bruce Melton

By Bruce Melton / The Rag Blog / July 31, 2025

Repeatedly unprecedented weather events are not “acts of God,” in the context used to describe the Kerrville flood tragedy on July 4. They are not a “new normal,” because we are still warming rapidly and every little bit of warming creates a lot more extremeness because of the basics of physics and energy where a little more heat does not create a little more energy, it nonlinearly creates a lot more energy, that is then translated into nonlinearly more extreme weather. This process is ongoing, so there is nothing “normal” about weather today as it keeps on getting a lot more extreme with further warming.

Even if we were to magically halt all warming this instant and stabilize our climate at today’s temperature, the extremes would continue to automatically increase. This is because in this new “magically stabilized” climate we have only been warmer than the weather created in our old climate for five to 10 years. Therefor it is likely that only the most frequent events today in our currently warmed climate, are the 2-, 5- and maybe the 10-year storm. As time passes, wewill automatically have to endure rarer and much more extreme events like the 25-, 50-, and 100-year storms.

We have warmed our climate beyond its natural variation. This means the temperature today is warmer than the evolutionary boundaries of our Earth systems. These systems are our forests, ocean currents, ice sheets, permafrost, etc. These evolutionary boundary rules are the same for almost any system: once crossed, stress creates degradation that if not stopped by removing the thing that caused the degradation to begin (warming effects) the results are the loss of many or all of the species and mechanisms in the system so they can be replaced by a new system with new species and mechanisms that are tolerant of the new conditions.

Some systems, like our hydrologic system that is typically known as the hydrologic cycle, are a little different and vastly more important. Our hydrologic system is the rain machine that creates our food and gives us water — the basics of life. Our hydrologic system is also vitally important in creating clouds. Different clouds cool by shading, or they warm like a blanket.

Changes in the types of clouds disrupt the balance of cloud cooling by reflecting sunlight harmlessly back into space, and warming by allowing sunlight to strike the ground, oceans of plants that changes that sunlight into heat where it can be trapped by the greenhouse effect.

A warmer atmosphere holds more moisture – nonlinearly more according to the laws of heat. Atmospheric moisture or water vapor, is the biggest greenhouse gas, responsible for two to three times the warming of carbon dioxide depending on the response of clouds. Water vapor however is not a greenhouse gas that we can control because it is directly related to evaporation of water from oceans, soils, and vegetation based on the temperature. The interplay of moisture in clouds is vital to our climate. A warmer climate creates fewer clouds that allows more sunlight to be absorbed by Earth systems creating more warming that then enters a feedback loop that allows even more moisture capacity in the atmosphere.

Each degree C (about 1.7 degrees F) warming allows the atmosphere to carry about seven percent more moisture. This alone allows weather systems to create seven percent more precipitation, but it doesn’t stop there. Dynamic effects (increase convection or rising water vapor in clouds) further increase rainfall. Hurricane Harvey for example, produced 32 percent more rainfall than an identical storm in the absence of global warming.

Warming amplifies the effects of the hydrologic system with significantly increased rainfall intensity (inches per hour of rain) and more extreme and longer-lived drought. Our climate’s temperature is warmer than any time in the last 10,000 years since the end of the last ice age, or really, since before the beginning of the last ice age pulse 100,000 years ago. Rainfall extremes therefore, are greater than any time our engineers have been designing stormwaterinfrastructure: since Roman times; since the Chen Dynasty.

Caption: A Cypress, maybe 1,000 years old, as big as a giant sequoia, lodged against a
transmission tower in a large bend of the Guadalupe River, just downstream from Hunt. There
is a section of deck railing leaning against the transmission tower on top of the root ball. This
area is an overflow channel that cuts across the bend during major floods. The river channel is
600 feet away, behind the transmission tower, where the long line of green cypress are located.

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LAMAR HANKINS / THE BOMB / The atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki 80 years out

The bombings of Hiroshima, left, and Nagasaki. Photos in the public domain.

By Lamar Hankins / The Rag Blog / July 27, 2025

I have lived now for 80 years in the only country that has used an atomic bomb against another people.  It is not something I am proud of.  It was a major catastrophe that extended a policy based on the idea that the United States was so special that it had the right, if not the duty, to control (rule) North America.  That idea is rooted in a belief termed “manifest destiny.” 

The belief in Manifest Destiny supposedly ended with the conclusion of the Mexican War of 1848, which solidified our boundaries to what became the lower 48 states.  That belief has now expanded to include most of the world.  Historians sometimes call its current incarnation the “New Manifest Destiny.”

We began our nearly 250 years as a nation obliterating the native inhabitants of this semi-continent and found war a good tool to maintain our hegemony over as much of mankind as possible.  What was not possible was to control China and the USSR (which was somewhat reduced after the official end of the Cold War).

Of course, I realize that it was Japan that attacked Pearl Harbor in a foolish attempt to overcome U.S. economic sanctions that prevented it from securing the oil it needed to pursue its own foreign policy.  Here we see the new U.S. manifest destiny working its way around the globe to control Japan’s own beliefs in its “right” to control others.

One side of my family has been in this country since my ninth great grandfather immigrated here from England in 1670 as an indentured servant.  Various degrees of grandfathers and relatives supported the revolution against King George from their land holdings in Virginia, and fought on both sides in the Civil War.  Some owned a few slaves along the way, and one branch spun off several Methodist ministers in Arkansas in later generations.  I tell this only to assure my patriotic readers that I come from a long history of red, white, and blue Americans (a word I try to use sparingly because there are a lot of people who are “Americans” who do not live in the 50 states).  To add to my family’s patriotic story, my spouse is related to Francis Scott Key, the slave-owning author of “The Star-Spangled Banner.”  Of course, we all have skeletons in our closets.

My antipathy to war, beginning early in my life, was brought into clear focus when the United States role in controlling Vietnam became an obsession of our leaders, starting with Eisenhower.  It was a conflict that a later president, who did so much good, could not see a way out of without appearing to appease communists, though I always saw Ho Chi Minh as more of a nationalist than a communist.  Even presidents can be blinded by their own propaganda.

I have talked with soldiers and sailors who were fighting for the U.S. in the Pacific Theater during World War II; some of them were close friends.  All of them held the view promoted by the government and most media in 1945 and thereafter that using atomic bombs was necessary to prevent the loss of 46,000 American lives (a worst-case estimate made by military authorities) if the U.S. invaded Japan to end the war.  This remains the view of most Americans.

But historians know that this narrative is false. Records released by the government over the past four decades reveal facts that belie the official version of events leading up to these atomic bombings on August 6 and 9, 1945.

The late Howard Zinn explained most of this 30 years ago.  But many people have never learned anything beyond the propaganda widely disseminated by the government and the media during and after the war in the Pacific.   Zinn argues that the atomic bombings were acts of terror.  The most widely accepted description of terrorism is “the indiscriminate use of violence against human beings for some political purpose.” This is a fair and accurate description of the use of the atomic bombs known as Little Boy and Fat Man detonated over Hiroshima and Nagasaki, respectively.

It was claimed that the U.S. wanted to convince the Japanese to surrender (even though our leaders knew months before the bombings of their willingness to surrender), and we know now that the government wanted to keep the Soviet Union out of the Pacific Theater (which it was days away from doing) to diminish its influence and demonstrate the superior weaponry of the U.S.  After all, what good is a weapon if other people don’t know how well it works to kill people?

To be sure, in World War II, the U.S. fought against fascism — international aggression — while failing to acknowledge the aggression previously carried out by the U.S., England, and France with their “long history of imperial domination in Asia, in Africa, the Middle East, [and] Latin America,” as Zinn described it.

The self-determination that our government claimed to support at the end of World War II did not end the colonization of Indochina by the French, of Indonesia and South Africa by the Dutch, of Malaysia and elsewhere by the British, and of the Philippines by the U.S.

In the 1950s, the U.S. gave extraordinary aid to the French, who were trying to maintain their dominance over the people of Indochina and secure for themselves and the U.S. tin, rubber, and oil needed by our industries. The Defense Department’s own official history of the Vietnam War revealed that in 1942 President Roosevelt gave assurances to the French that our government agreed that French sovereignty would be reestablished over its colonial conquest as soon as possible.

By the time the atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the American people had been conditioned by war propaganda to accept almost any atrocity.  And in June 1945, right after the US defeated Japanese fighters at Okinawa, the Japanese Supreme War Council authorized its Foreign Minister to contact the Soviet Union, America’s ally at the time, with the intention of terminating the war by September.

On July 13, Japanese Ambassador Sato wired Foreign Minister Togo that the Emperor of Japan wanted a swift termination of the war, a message intercepted by the U.S. government. The secret diaries kept by President Truman, released in 1978, verify this message. The bombs were dropped just days before the Soviets were planning to enter the Pacific Theater against Japan, portending a final death knell for the Japanese. But the U.S. rushed to use their new weapon before the Soviets could claim any credit for ending the war in the Pacific theater.

From 800 pages of secret documents released in 1994, the historian and economist Gar Alperowitz reported that President Truman had learned of the Japanese peace initiatives at least three months before Hiroshima and Nagasaki were bombed. A German diplomat notified Berlin in May 1945 that large sections of the Japanese armed forces were willing to capitulate. This information was passed up the U.S. chain of command by U.S. intelligence analysts.

A U.S. invasion of Japan was never going to be necessary, so there was no need to drop the atomic bombs to preserve American lives in an invasion. Our most revered general, Dwight Eisenhower, explained his feelings about the proposed atomic bombing when the plan was revealed to him by Secretary of War Henry Stimson, who headed up the “Interim Committee” assigned the task of deciding on the targets for the bombing:

During the recitation of the relevant facts, I had been very conscious of feelings of depression and so I voiced to him [Stimson] my grave misgivings, first on the basis of my belief that Japan was already defeated and that dropping the bomb was completely unnecessary, and secondly because I thought that our country should avoid shocking world opinion by the use of a weapon whose employment was, I thought, no longer mandatory as a measure to save American lives.

In a similar vein, Admiral William D. Leahy, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, explained his views:

The use of this barbarous weapon at Hiroshima and Nagasaki was of no material assistance in our war against Japan. The Japanese were already defeated and ready to surrender.

While President Truman announced that the bomb was dropped on a military base, the facts reveal that Truman was less than truthful. While there were 43,000 Japanese military personnel in Hiroshima, there were 250,000 civilians. The bomb killed all who were in what Zinn called “its circle of death,” both military and civilian, including many U.S. prisoners of war held there by the Japanese, as revealed by war documents.

It is irrational to blame Japanese civilians for the attack on Pearl Harbor (a frequent justification given for the use of the atomic bombs) any more than it is to blame German refugees slaughtered in Dresden for the holocaust. All Americans cannot be blamed for the horrors committed against the Vietnamese, just as all Muslims cannot be blamed for the terrorism of a few who subscribe to that religion.  The blame belongs with those who make the decisions to engage in such terror.

When we join together to create a government, we cannot know how badly that government might behave in the future. America’s founders explicitly opposed creating a government that would send its military around the world to force its will on a substantial portion of that world.  But before we can do anything about the inexcusable behavior of our government, we must recognize war propaganda for what it is — information or ideas methodically and deliberately spread to promote the desire for war or the acquiescence to war.

The government, with the cooperation and collaboration of the media, used propaganda to justify the use of atomic bombs 80 years ago. We can work against such manipulation by educating ourselves, by speaking out, by standing against manipulation, by demanding honesty from our elected and appointed officials, as well as corporations, and by openly and directly challenging the deceit of all of them.

History suggests that we have not been very successful in this endeavor to date. Maybe the future will be different, but there is little about the world today that convinces me this will be so.  Some days, I feel that human evolution has run its course and it is time for the molecules of life to begin again.

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MICHAEL MEEROPOL / TRUMP / The war with Iran should not distract us from important domestic issues

E. Jean Carroll, 2006. Photo by  julieannesmo. Creative Commons image.

By Michael Meeropol / The Rag Blog / July 3, 2025

The following is an expanded version of a commentary delivered over WAMC-FM on June 27, 2025 by Michael Meeropol and revised by the author for The Rag Blog. Meeropol will join Thorne Dreyer on Rag Radio to discuss these issues Friday, July 4, 2025, 2-3 p.m. on KOOP 91.7-FM in Austin and it will be streamed on KOOP.org.

In my opinion, the war in Iran is an attempt by all three governments to divert their peoples’ attention from domestic issues.  The Mullahs who rule Iran are hated by the vast majority of the population — they hold on to power with murderous repressive violence.   Prime Minister Netanyahu of Israel clings to power to keep himself out of jail.  Meanwhile, President Donald Trump is losing popularity over his domestic policies — the tax and spending bill working through the Senate is very unpopular, the wholesale round-ups of law-abiding immigrants (some of whom actually have green cards, or student visas or pending asylum hearings) continues to lose support. 

Here are some details and links to stories about that particularly egregious set of behaviors by our government:  

Washington, D.C. — The Supreme Court ruling yesterday offered a green light to the Trump administration’s efforts to deport immigrants to third countries — including war-torn areas — and without due process constraints or basic accountability. As U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote in a dissent, “The government has made clear in word and deed that it feels itself unconstrained by law, free to deport anyone anywhere without notice or an opportunity to be heard.”

The dangerous overreach by President Trump and Stephen Miller does not stop there. The terrifying reality of their disdain for the core pillars of our democracy is playing out in communities across America, as masked ICE agents lacking identification are — often violently — targeting, detaining and deporting students, workers, community members and even U.S. citizens.

According to Vanessa Cárdenas, Executive Director of America’s Voice

“Masked men with guns in unmarked cars. No identification. No warrant. Tearing our neighbors, co-workers and friends off the streets. No due process. Now, they will not only be kidnapped from our streets, but could be deported to a dangerous third country with impunity and without due process.   

“This is Trump and Steven Miller’s increasingly vigilante America. They are demonstrating utter contempt for due process and the rule of law.  Americans are recoiling as they experience militarized ICE raids and unidentified agents in masks and tactical gear tackle and ensnare long settled residents with families, jobs, lives and stakes in America. What is playing out before our eyes is at odds with democratic norms and basic American values and interests.”

Below find recent coverage on the continued impact of Trump’s anti-immigration policies: 

  • Los Angeles Times, “‘Who are these people?’ Masked immigration agents sow fear in L.A., vex local police,” including: “They show up without uniforms. They show up completely masked. They refuse to give ID,” Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass said during a news briefing after the Dodger Stadium incident. “Who are these people? And frankly, the vests that they have on look like they ordered them from Amazon. Are they bounty hunters? Are they vigilantes? If they’re federal officials, why is it that they do not identify themselves?”

These stories are all going on while the military actions against Iran are dominating the headlines.   

On another important and related issue — the Courts have been trying to rein in some of the extreme actions of the Justice Department as it violates the rights of immigrants — even some legal residents.  A whistle blower has just come forward revealing that within Trump’s own Justice Department efforts are under way to create the momentum towards refusing to follow Court orders.  This was the basis of a very intense examination of Emile Bove at his confirmation hearing.   (Trump has nominated him to a lifetime appointment to an appeals court.) 

[For that story, see https://contrarian.substack.com/p/trumps-pick-for-the-third-circuit?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email

Each regime has reason to divert the attention of the population from significant domestic issues.

The fact that innocent civilians have already died as part of this smokescreen effort means nothing to the decision makers in all three countries.  Instead, they hope to build on the legitimate nationalist sentiment in defense of one’s own country to divert public opinion.  It definitely remains to be seen whether the quick bombing strike against Iran will garner public support for Trump within the U.S.   (It is likely it will if there are no long-term repercussions.  After all, the Bush II war against Iraq was popular at first.  It was only after four years of insurgency that it became unpopular.)

One of the domestic American political issues being obscured by the violence in Iran is the fact that the appeal from the second E. Jean Carroll case was recently argued and that Ms. Carroll has just published her memoir, Not my Type.

[As a reminder to readers, E. Jean Carroll claimed in an article that back in 1995 (or 1996 – the date remains uncertain) Donald Trump raped her in a dressing room at the Bergdorf-Goodman department store.  Trump denied the story — called her a liar.   She sued him for defamation and later under a NY State Law the Adult Survivors Act which created a one-year window for survivors of sexual assault to file civil suits (even after the statute of limitations had expired) against their alleged attackers she sued him for the actual assault.  Two NY State juries found for Ms. Carroll — agreed that she had been sexually assaulted (but not raped), that she had been harmed by the assault, and that Trump’s denials had defamed her.  She was awarded first $5 million in damages and then in a second trial $83 million because of Trump’s continued defamation.   The first $5 million judgement has already been affirmed by the Court of Appeals.  The appeal from the $83 million was just argued on June 24.]

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ALICE EMBREE | REMEMBRANCE | Honoring the Lives of Bernice Hecker and Jere Locke, Austin Peace and Justice Activists

By Alice Embree / The Rag Blog / July 1, 2025

Two remarkable advocates for peace and justice in Austin, Texas, have passed on. In 2014, I posted to The Rag Blog in 2014 that featured Bernice Hecker and her work with the Interfaith Community for Palestinian Rights. For over a decade, at Bernice’s invitation, I participated in a women’s discussion group at her home. Jere Locke directed the Austin Peace and Justice Coalition in the 80s, a coalition well known to those of us active in Latin American solidarity. In recent years, Jere focused on climate change and climate justice. Both of these individuals were leaders known for their passion, their ability to reach out to younger generations, and their fierce love of community.

In this post, I am sharing their stories, taken from events that celebrated their lives. Rest in Power, Bernice and Jere!

Bernice (Batya) Hecker

November 13, 1935 – June 6, 2025

Bernice Hecker passed away on June 6, 2025, in Austin, Texas, at the age of 89.  She was born Bernice Varjick on November 13, 1935, in New York City.

A lifelong learner and intellectual, Bernice earned a B.S. in Physics (CUNY), followed by an M.A. in Mathematics (CUNY), and another in Linguistics (UT-Austin).  At the age of 71, she completed her Ph.D. in Linguistics in 2007.

From 1960 to 1962, Bernice lived on Kibbutz Urim in Israel.  After returning to New York City, she came in contact with people having a different perspective and began to understand the Palestinian situation.  In Austin, she was a founding member of Interfaith Community for Palestinian Rights, the Palestine Solidarity Committee, Jewish Voice for Peace, and the Austin Peace and Justice Coalition.  She was a pioneer in the second wave feminist movement and worked against the wars in Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan.  She also loved music, especially singing and playing her drum.

Professionally, Bernice worked for many years as a computer programmer, later becoming a programmer analyst/systems analyst for the Texas Comptroller’s Office.  She also dedicated time to teaching English as a Second Language through Manos de Cristo.  She was a member of Mensa. 

She was preceded in death by her sister, Binki Segal; her parents, Bessie and Steve Varjick, by her hands, Howard Hecker (Tzvi), and Ran Moran.

She will be greatly missed by her son, Orrin Hecker; Binki’s husband, Frankie Segal; Orrin’s step-mother, Barbara Larson, her nephew, Shai Segal, and her nieces, Sharona Beck, Yifat Smordin, and Ophira Shwartzfield, as well as many friends.

Jere Locke: A Life Well Lived

Jere Locke was born on August 20, 1944, to Katherine and John Locke at Ft. Still, Oklahoma, and died peacefully at home in Austin, Texas, on May 22, 2025, surrounded by his loving family.  Jere’s life was one of purpose and meaning devoted to working for peace and justice

A graduate of St. Thomas High School in Houston, Jere continued his education at the University of Notre Dame, graduating in 1966 from the University of Texas at Austin.  Jere subsequently earned a master’s degree in family counseling from Antioch University in Seattle, Washington.

In 1967, Jere joined the Peace Corps and was posted to Kenya where he was known for speaking great Swahili, loving to talk and eat, and enjoying track workouts with the excellent Nandi runners.  This experience was foundational for his life of service.  Throughout his life, he worked on many peace and justice issues.

Jere served as Director of the Austin Peace and Justice Coalition in the 1980s.  He also co-led the Austin-based Central American Peace Initiative’s efforts to cut off U.S. military aid to El Salvador and the Nicaragua Contras to promote peace.  With others he convinced the City of Austin to end its investments in apartheid South Africa.  After the first Gulf War in the 1990s, Jere worked to lift sanctions that were crippling Iraq and making it hard for children who had suffered radiation poisoning from bombings to get healthcare.  While co-sponsoring a forum on childcare in Austin, Jere met his lifelong partner, Gale.

In 2002, Jere founded and directed Texas Harambe (Swahili for “Let’s all pull together”).  In addition to funding a school in Vietnam for children with special needs due to Agent Orange, Texas Harambe helped tortured Burmese Democracy Workers obtain trauma counseling.  Harambe also assisted Thai environmentalists to protect the Mekong River.

After attending the 2007 UN Climate Conference in Bali, Indonesia, Jere dedicated the remaining years of his life to raising awareness about humanity’s urgent need to respond to the climate crisis.  Under Jere’s leadership, Texas Harambe ran a Climate Emergency Campaign advocating large-scale climate legislation.  Desiring to secure a future for his children and grandchildren, in 2009 Jere joined Alyssa Burgin in founding the Texas Drought Project.  In the second decade of the 2000s, Jere, Alyssa, and Joshua Wallis conducted Drought Project campaigns seeking to give Texans an understanding of the impact of changing weather and climate patterns.

Jere will be greatly missed by his lifelong partner, Gale, his sons, Tristan and Sundaram (Suny); daughter-in-law, Jessica; granddaughters, Isadora (Izzy) and Emilia (Emmie); siblings Stephen, Martha, Mary, and Sarah; sister-in-law, Carolyn; and stepsiblings, Margaret and Max.

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