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Date: Wed, 14 Dec 2005 00:49:24 -0500 (EST)
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Subject: Sneering at Redemption: Why Arnold Killed Tookie

Sneering at Redemption: Why Arnold Killed Tookie

1. Sneering at Redemption: Why Arnold Killed Tookie
By Dave Zirin
2. At the Gates of San Quentin By Norman Solomon

==========

Sneering at Redemption: Why Arnold Killed Tookie
By Dave Zirin

In the end, we can only assume the decision wasn't so
"agonizing" after all.  Last night Stan Tookie Williams
was legally lynched by the state of California, at the
behest of Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger who denied
Williams' appeal for clemency. The Governor deemed that
a man who had been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize
five times and brokered gang truces from Newark to
South Central was not worthy to walk and breathe among
us.  Stan's case for clemency was so compelling it was
articulated by people from Desmond Tutu to Snoop Dogg,
and yet, watching Schwarzenegger in action has been to
observe the nexus of cold-hearted political calculation
and cowardice.

Williams' Attorney John Harris challenged the governor
to meet with Tookie, saying to the San Francisco
Chronicle, "It's impossible to me to believe that if
you had met Stanley Williams and spent time with him,
that you would not believe in his personal
redemption." But that would require a courage the
Governor has never demonstrated. Unlike the movie tough
guy always ready to look his victims in the eye -- a
quip at the ready -- before shooting, stabbing, or
beheading them, Arnold made his decision at safe
remove, hanging  out this weekend at his son's soccer
game, his face a waxy mask of carefree detachment,
while Tookie's supporters organized, marched, chanted
and prayed themselves hoarse.

When it finally came time for Arnold to announce his
personal judgment that Stan Williams should die,
tragedy became farce. The Governor's office released an
ugly scandalous diatribe that qualifies as nothing less
than hate-speech.

As he - or his script doctor - wrote, "The dedication
of Williams' book Life in Prison casts significant
doubt on his personal redemption. This book was
published in 1998 several years after Williams'
redemptive experience. Specifically the book is
dedicated to Nelson Mandela, Angela Davis, Malcolm X,
Assata Shakur, Geronimo Ji Jaga Pratt, Ramona Africa,
John Africa, Leonard Peltier, George Jackson, Mumia Abu
Jamal, and the countless other men, women, and youths,
who have to endure the hellish oppression of living
behind bars.  The mix of individuals on this list is
curious. Most have violent pasts and some have been
convicted of committing heinous murders including the
killing of law enforcement. But the inclusion of George
Jackson on this list defies reason and is a significant
indicator that Williams is not reformed and that he
still sees violence and lawlessness as a legitimate
means to address societal problems."

For Tookie, all of these folks, from Mandela, to
Malcolm, to Assata, are one and the same: people of
color who strove for liberation in the darkest of
circumstances. For Schwarzenegger, the whole lot is the
same as well: people who are his political enemies
because they refused to be broken. Notice the singling
out of George Jackson, author of Soledad Brother, a
book for which there is no evidence Schwarzenegger has
so much as skimmed. Jackson was someone who despite
being framed for his political activism never stopped
organizing. That is the person Schwarzenegger wants to
kill by executing Tookie.

Later, Arnold passes judgment on Williams' very
redemption, writing, "Is Williams' redemption complete
and sincere, or is it just a hollow promise? . . .
Without an apology and atonement for these senseless
and brutal killings there can be no redemption." In
other words, because Williams has consistently defended
his own innocence, he should die. But as Tookie once
said, "Many people expect me to apologize for crimes I
didn't commit--just to save my life. Of course I want
to live, but not by having to lie."

While not surprising Arnold did not have the courage to
face Tookie and spew this nonsense to his face, it
certainly would have been incredible theatre. In fact,
it would have been something of a reunion. In the late
1970s, Arnold and Tookie, about fifty life times ago,
admired each other's biceps on Muscle Beach in Venice,
California. "Your arms are like thighs!" Arnold
grinned. Amazing the difference thirty years makes. In
that time, Arnold rode his muscles and Teutonic good
looks from Hollywood stardom to the Governor's mansion.
Yes, he had a spotty past including many allegations of
sexual assault and drug abuse. But he passed that off
as youthful indiscretion, claimed that he had changed,
and a pliant media were happy to believe that Arnold
was worthy of forgiveness and redemption.

Tookie, like Arnold, also fashioned an unlikely
political career. But his began not with Hollywood
riches but as the target of the tough-on-crime laws of
the Clinton-Bush years which saw the nation's prison
population balloon from more than one to two million.
He was convicted of murder in a manner that would make
Strom Thurmond proud, called a "Bengal tiger" by a
prosecutor who engineered an all-white jury to make
sure the "Crip founder" found San Quentin. While
Arnold cozied up to the Bush and Kennedy clans, Tookie
read dictionaries in solitary, wrote letters to gang
kids in LA, and became that most dangerous of political
beings: a Black leader in racist America.

In one of his final interviews he said, "So, as long as
I have breath, I will continue to do what I can to
proliferate a positive message throughout this country
and abroad to youths everywhere, of all colors or
gender and geographical area, and I will continue to do
what I can to help. I want to be a part of the, you
know, the solution."

Now another tragedy, along with the murders of Albert
Owens, Yen-I Yang, Tsai-Shai Chen Yang, and Yu-Chin
Yang Lin, has taken place because Stan Tookie has been
put to death. But the tragedy is not theirs to bear
alone.

Tonight children are being born to mothers without
health insurance, in neighborhoods politicians don"t
enter without SWAT teams, news cameras, and latex
gloves. The political class has already branded these
kids as human waste. But many of them could have found
another path, because Stanley Tookie Williams would
have been there to intervene in their lives and show
another way.

Now it's up to those of us who stood with Tookie to
keep on pushing. This is Schwarzenegger's "mission
accomplished" moment for his right wing, pro-death
base.  But his "mission" will fail. He is part of a
21st century set of rulers who have repeatedly shown,
whether in Baghdad or New Orleans, that they are unfit
to rule. Their brutality will be met with resistance in
the tradition of Nelson Mandela, Angela Davis, Malcolm
X, Leonard Peltier, George Jackson... and Stanley
Tookie Williams.

[Dave Zirin is the author of "'What's My Name Fool?':
Sports and Resistance in the United States" (Haymarket
Books). He is a regular writer for the Nation and a
columnist for Slam Magazine. You can reach him by
emailing [EMAIL PROTECTED] and you can get his
column every week by sending a blank email to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

==========

At the Gates of San Quentin
By Norman Solomon

t r u t h o u t  Perspective
Tuesday 13 December 2005

http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/121305I.shtml

No buzzards were gliding overhead, but several
helicopters circled, under black sky tinged blue. On
the shore of a stunning bay at a placid moment, the
state prepared to kill.

Outside the gates of San Quentin, people gathered to
protest the impending execution of Stanley Tookie
Williams. Hundreds became thousands as the midnight
hour approached. Rage and calming prayers were in the
air.

The operative God of the night was a governor. "Without
an apology and atonement for these senseless and brutal
killings, there can be no redemption," Arnold
Schwarzenegger had declared. Hours later, a new killing
would be sanitized by law and euphemism. (Before dawn,
a newscast on NPR's "Morning Edition" would air the
voice of a media witness who had observed the execution
by lethal injection. Within seconds, his on-air report
twice referred to the killing of Williams as a "medical
procedure.")

But at the prison gates, there were signs.

"The weak can never forgive."

"No Death in My Name"

"Executions teach vengeance and violence."

But for the warfare state - with the era of big
government a thing of the past except for police,
prisons and the Pentagon - vengeance and violence are
rudiments of policy, taught most profoundly of all by
the daily object lessons of acceptance, passivity and
budget.

The execution was scheduled for 12:01 a.m.

Twenty-five minutes before then, people outside the
gates began to sing "We Shall Overcome."

"We shall live in peace ..."

Overhead, the helicopters kept circling, high-tech
buzzards.

"An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind," said
one sign.

Elsewhere in the crowd, another asked: "Are we blind
yet?"

At seven minutes to midnight, it occurred to me how
much the ritual countdown to execution resembles the
Doomsday Clock invented by atomic scientists several
decades ago to estimate the world's proximity to
nuclear annihilation.

From the stage, speakers praised Williams' renunciation
of violence, his advocacy for nonviolence.

At two minutes before midnight, a TV news correspondent
stood on the roof of a white van, readying a report for
the top of the hour. At midnight the standup report
began. It ended at 12:02 a.m.

A speaker called for a national moratorium on the death
penalty in the United States.

"No to Death Machine Careerism," a sign said.

"As you do unto the least of these, you do unto me,"
another sign said.

Full silence took hold at 12:24 a.m.

Then, an old song again. "... We shall ... overcome ...
some ... day."

An announcement came at 12:38 a.m.; Stanley Tookie
Williams was dead.

The country was no safer. Just more violent.

The sanctity of life was not upheld, just violated.

"It's over," said a speaker. "But it's not over."

From San Quentin to Iraq, death is a goal of policy. In
the name of murder victims, the state murders. In the
name of the fallen, more kill and fall.

[Norman Solomon is the author of the new book War Made
Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to
Death. For information, go to: WarMadeEasy.com.]

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