Making the Case for Universal Broadband Access in SC

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SC Progressive Network Director Brett Bursey (left) and Sascha Meinrath, Director of New America Foundation’s Open Technology Initiative, speak at a press conference before a recent legislative hearing on the broadband transition.

On Sept. 18, Bursey was a guest on Frank Knapp’s U Need 2 Know radio program to talk about the latest developments in South Carolina’s broadband debate. Listen to the show’s audio stream here

[audio:http://www.scpronet.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/BrettBursey9-18-09.mp3]

Bill Fletcher Talks About Organized Labor on Bill Moyers Journal

fletcherBill Fletcher, Jr., will keynote the SC Progressive Network’s fall retreat Oct. 3-4.

With public support for labor unions at its lowest point in 70 years, Bill Moyers on Sept. 18 talked with experts Bill Fletcher, co-author of SOLIDARITY DIVIDED: THE CRISIS IN ORGANIZED LABOR AND A NEW PATH TOWARD SOCIAL JUSTICE and Michael Zweig, director of the Center for the Study of Working Class Life at SUNY Stony Brook, about the state of organized labor.

Click here to watch.

Bill Fletcher will be the keynote speaker at the SC Progressive Network’s fall retreat at Penn Center Oct. 3-4. See our web site for details. Call 803-808-3384 to register for the retreat, which is open to anyone interested in improving the quality of life in South Carolina.

The Other Race Battle Behind Joe Wilson’s Outburst

By Chris Kromm
Facing South

Ever since Rep. Joe Wilson’s Tourette’s-like outburst of “you lie!” during President Obama’s health care address last week, debate has swirled about the role of race in the incident.

Jimmy Carter himself said he thought Rep. Wilson’s rebuke was “based on racism,” and here at Facing South we were among the first to point to the Congressman’s checkered record on black/white relations — such as his 1999 claim during South Carolina’s confederate flag debate that “the Confederate heritage is very honorable.”

But the focus on Wilson v. Obama alone misses another important — and growing — factor in the politics of race in South Carolina and the country: immigration.

It’s no coincidence that the line in Obama’s address that forced Wilson to his feet focused on whether the Democratic health bill would cover immigrants who aren’t in the country legally. Rep. Wilson has been at the forefront of the nativist — and at times openly xenophobic — right-wing movement against not only undocumented immigrants, but immigration in general.

In many ways, the Palmetto State is ground zero for the immigration debate. According to a Facing South analysis of U.S. Census data, South Carolina has had the fastest-growing Latino population in the entire country two years in a row.

That rapidly-changing racial reality is coming full- force against a deeply conservative political culture embodied by Rep. Joe Wilson. Wilson is a member of the House Immigration Reform Caucus, launched in 1999 by anti-immigrant spokesman ex-Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-CO). As Political Research Associates reports:

According to caucus member Rep. Tom Price (R-GA), the main goals of the congressional group are to combat the purportedly “explosive growth” in “illegal immigration” to the United States, reverse the growth of legal immigration, and halt efforts to provide what he calls a “mini-amnesty” for undocumented migrants.

From his perch at the caucus, Rep. Wilson has been a leader in pushing a right-wing nativist agenda. Rep. Wilson has spearheaded legislation to:

* Declare English as the official language of the U.S. (February 2007)

* Make government services available only in English (March 2008)

* In May 2004, he sponsored a bill to have undocumented people be reported to the police if they tried to receive emergency medical care.

Rep. Wilson has openly aligned with the most radical elements of the anti-immigrant movement. This includes the vigilante border patrol group the Minuteman Project, which has been linked to extreme right and racist elements.

Indeed, Rep. Wilson had been so supportive of Minuteman that there was a deep sense of betrayal when in 2005 Wilson expressed mild reservations about “Operation Spotlight,” the group’s plan to expand its vigilante activities beyond the Mexico-U.S. border to raid businesses suspected of hiring undocumented employees.

But the Minutemen PAC has put those quibbles aside over the last week, immediately sending out an appeal to defend the Congressman against “leftist attacks” for his interruption of the president. Click here to see the email appeal.

Other leading elements of the anti-immigrant movement have also swung behind Rep. Wilson. For example, as Stephanie Mencimer reporter in Mother Jones, the Americans for Legal Immigration PAC has urged its members nation-wide to support Wilson.

What does this all tell us? Racial politics are changing in the South — especially in a state like South Carolina. And while Rep. Wilson’s Obama outburst rightfully raised a discussion about the persistence of Old South mindsets, the incident shows how New South tensions over race and immigration threaten to be just as explosive.

Register today for the Network’s annual grassroots retreat at historic Penn Center

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SC Progressive Network Fall Retreat
Oct. 3 – 4
Historic Penn Center, St. Helena Island (near Beaufort) SC

Get away to the Lowcountry to talk politics, build alliances, sharpen organizing skills and recharge your batteries. Find out what’s happening in South Carolina’s progressive community and how you can help grow a grassroots movement for social equality and political power. Come for a day or for the whole weekend.

Guest speakers include acclaimed labor and civil rights activist Bill Fletcher and SC Rep. Joe Neal, who will offer critical analysis and perspective on our state and nation. The most important component of the weekend will be the participants themselves, who will take a hands-on approach to advancing our issues in the coming year.

On Saturday afternoon, participants will break into caucuses to map strategy on the following issues:
• Workers’ Rights
• Waging Peace
• Racial Justice
• Environmental Protection
• LGBTQ Organizing
• SC Death Penalty

The weekend begins at 10am on Oct. 3 and runs through 2pm on Oct. 4. Full package is $100, and includes conference materials, all meals and overnight accommodations. Day-only registration is $10. Car pools available from Columbia, Greenville and Charleston. Call 803-808-3384 if you can offer or need a ride.

See the weekend’s full agenda by clicking here.

To register, call 803-808-3384 or download the registration form by clicking here.