Peter
Laufer's interviews, articles and op-ed
pieces have appeared in a wide variety of publications, from the Washington
Post and the San Francisco Chronicle to Mother Jones and Penthouse.
To
read the following articles in their entirety, please click the approproiate
link.
"The
Prisoner" by Peter Laufer
Just two months before I met Lori Berenson inside Huacariz maximum-security
prison, on the edge of the northern-Peru city of Cajamarca, Peru's Supreme
Court upheld her 20 year sentence for aiding terrorists. It was Berenson's
second conviction. After her arrest in 1995, she was jailed for life, convicted
by a secret military tribunal of being one of the leaders of the Tupac Amaru
Revolutionary Movement, known by its Spanish acronym MRTA. That conviction
was thrown out two years ago, and she was retried by a three judge civilian
court that convicted her of helping the MRTA plan a seizure of Peru's Congress.
Subtracting the time she has already served in Peru's forbidding prisons,
the 32-year-old New Yorker and former MIT student is due to be released two
weeks after she turns 46.
Read more...
"Reforming
Immigration Policy Let the Workers Come" by
Peter Laufer
Our immigrant governor stunned Californians last week by praising the work
of the Minutemen, an armed citizens' group patrolling the U.S.- Mexican border
in Arizona. "They've done a terrific job," Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger
declared during an interview Thursday on a right-wing Los Angeles radio talk
show. "They have cut down the crossing of illegal immigrants by a huge
percentage." Read
more...
"Springtime
in Prague" by Peter Laufer
Visitors to Prague just four years ago saw a city marked by beauty and calm;
the striking preservation of ancient architecture, untouched by World War
II; a window into the past, enhanced by the lack of western-style commerce.
Read
more...
"The
Disgrace of the So-Called Minutemen" by Peter Laufer
No one disagrees that the U.S.-Mexico border is out of control. Virtually
anyone who wants to come north across that line simply comes north. If they
survive the crossing, they try to disappear into an America anxious to take
advantage of their labor, and they usually succeed. But it's murderous chaos
on the border today: desperate migrants succumb to harsh weather, vicious
bandits and the brutal extortion techniques of the smugglers they hire to
help them gain access to the American Dream. The Border Patrol doesn't only
try to keep undocumented travelers out of the U.S., it often saves the border
jumpers' lives before it deports them. Read
more...
"Giving
Rush Good Phone" by Peter Laufer
How to get on radio talk shows--especially right-wing shows like Rush Limbaugh's--and
stay on long enough to say your piece. Read
more...
"When
Tourism is Not So Bad" by Peter Laufer
I grew up in Sausalito back when it was a Portuguese fishing village and an
artists colony that drew curious tourists on the weekends. Downtown Sausalito
looks ruined to me today: a Disneyland of souvenir shops, T-shirts and overpriced
ice cream. Read
more...
"My
New Kentucky Home" by Peter Laufer
Route 77 is a small road, an east Texas highway that runs north from Brownsville
to Corpus Christi, past the spring break resorts of the Padre Islands. There
it connects to Route 37, which takes you to San Antonio. If you turn on Route
35, you'll pass Dallas en route to Oklahoma, following a sagebrush express
highway built to cut across nearly empty counties and link the far-flung commercial
centers of the Southwest and heartland to one another. From Oklahoma City,
you get a choice of destinations, each of them places where Middle America
dwindles out into the countryside: west to the panhandle, north to Kansas,
east to Arkansas or Missouri, and, eventually, Kentucky. Drive long enough
on this route, and you begin to remember the value big interstate roads like
these had in allowing farmers to bring their products to market more easily.
Step off the road now and then, though, and you begin to notice something
else: This set of ur-red state roads has become a main artery for immigration.
Read more...
More...
Europe magazine: "Minsk"
San Francisco's The City magazine: "The Russians Keep Coming"
Nevada magazine: "Neon Nevada"
Europe magazine: "On The Way to Moscow"
Hearst's San Francisco Examiner Image magazine: "Prague's Left Bank"
Penthouse magazine: "The View From The Top"
Penthouse magazine: "Resident Evil"
Pozor magazine: "Split Personality"
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