Endymion
 
  -1  
Reply Wed 29 Aug, 2007 02:49 pm
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d3/DodgeRamMapleStreetLeveesNotWar.jpg/800px-DodgeRamMapleStreetLeveesNotWar.jpg
0 Replies
 
Endymion
 
  -1  
Reply Wed 29 Aug, 2007 02:56 pm
http://www.themossbrothers.com/Images/Bumpy's%20March%203rd/Resized/PICT0060%20enhanced.JPG
0 Replies
 
Endymion
 
  -1  
Reply Wed 29 Aug, 2007 02:58 pm
http://www.ominous-valve.com/not_war.jpg
0 Replies
 
Endymion
 
  -1  
Reply Wed 29 Aug, 2007 02:59 pm
http://www.womenscenter.emory.edu/Women_News_and_Narratives/WNN_SP07/ASSETS/make_levees_not_war.jpg
0 Replies
 
Endymion
 
  -1  
Reply Wed 29 Aug, 2007 03:10 pm
http://dominionpaper.ca/img/environment/mainantiwar-web.jpg
0 Replies
 
Endymion
 
  -1  
Reply Wed 29 Aug, 2007 03:14 pm
http://www.savethepinebush.org/protests/09-24-05/09-24-05-Thumbnails/27.jpg
0 Replies
 
Endymion
 
  -1  
Reply Thu 30 Aug, 2007 03:15 am
August 29th, 2007

"Funding the war means killing the troops."
-- Mother of Sgt. Sherwood Baker

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SSWzoGGmpqQ
0 Replies
 
Endymion
 
  -1  
Reply Thu 30 Aug, 2007 03:35 am
More Shame, More Sorrow


By Paul Craig Roberts

08/29/07 "ICH" -- - In the administration of George W. Bush, the Republican Party has achieved the greatest combination of idiocy and evil in human history.

The Republicans have bogged America down in a gratuitous and illegal war. The war has destroyed Iraq, killed between 650,000 and 1,000,000 Iraqi civilians, displaced 4,000,000 Iraqis, and littered the country with depleted uranium. Bush's war remains unwon despite its five year duration and $1 trillion in out-of-pocket and incurred future costs.

Bush's invasion of Iraq is a war crime under the Nuremberg standard, a direct counterpart to Hitler's invasion of Poland. Both were based on lies and deception, and the declared reasons for both were masks for secret agendas.

Bush's invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, his planned attack on Iran [http://www.rawstory.com/images/other/IranStudy082807a.pdf ], and his support for Israel's attack on Lebanon and genocidal policies toward the Palestinians have radicalized the Middle East and Muslims worldwide. American and Israeli aggression have vindicated Osama bin Laden's propaganda, produced massive recruits for Al Qaeda, and unleashed destabilizing forces throughout the Middle East

Bush's wars are strengthening Islam. Abdullah Gul has just been elected president of Turkey. Gul is described by the American media as "former Islamist." Gul is supported by the ruling political party of prime minister Erdogan, another "former Islamist."

Gul's election to the presidency by 76% of the Turkish parliament has upset Turkey's secularized military, long in the pay of the US government. On August 27 Turkey's military chief, General Yasar Buyukanit, declared that "centers of evil systematically try to corrode the secular nature of the Turkish Republic." The Turkish military, many believe at the request and pay of the US, has overthrown four Turkish governments since 1960, the last only 10 years ago.

With President Bush's rant about "bringing democracy to the Middle East," the Turkish military is less able to impose Western values on an Islamic people. Similarly, the American puppet in Egypt cannot as easily suppress the Islamic values and aspirations of Egyptians.

US puppet rulers in Jordan and Pakistan, and even the Saudis and oil emirates, report the ground shaking under their feet. America's puppet in Pakistan is in trouble, and his difficulties are compounded by US military incursions into Pakistan. The Bush administration is considering contingency plans to seize Pakistan's nuclear weapons in the event the American puppet is overthrown, delusional contingency plans considering the over-stretched US military.

In the postwar years, the US managed with its money and influence to secularize an elite class in Middle Eastern countries, an elite that identifies with the West and not with their own cultures. This artificial elite has produced a wide political gap between the masses of the people and the rulers. Increasingly, Muslim masses perceive their rulers as allied with foreign powers against them.

In Iraq the American puppet government of Nuri al-Maliki seems to be on its last legs. The Sunnis have pulled their support, as has the most important Shi'ite leader, Muqtada al-Sadr, who realizes that the Maliki government is too complicit in US crimes to be a legitimate government of Iraq. With both the Bush administration and Congress blaming Maliki for America's failure in Iraq, Maliki's fate looks increasingly to be that of Ngo Dinh Diem, America's Vietnam puppet who was blamed for the failure of US intervention in Vietnam.

Just as Hitler long denied German defeats on the Russian front and even in his last days was ordering non-existent German divisions to relieve Berlin, the Bush regime finds a new straw to grasp in Iraq each time the previous straw proves to be a delusion. The latest straw is "the surge." While Americans surge, the British have been defeated in southern Iraq and have withdrawn to two bases in eerie similarity to the French at Dien Bien Phu. The British bases are subjected to between 30 and 60 mortar and rocket attacks each day. British generals want their troops out of Iraq. The longer UK prime minister Brown keeps them in Iraq in order to appease the Bush administration, the harder it will be to rescue the survivors.

With American retreat south to Kuwait now potentially cut off, how will the US extract its troops and equipment when American defeat can no longer be denied?

The Bush administration and its politicized military are already blaming the failure of "the surge" on Iran. Iran is alleged to be training and arming Iraqis who resist the US occupation. Bush has said he will hold Iran responsible. There is abundant evidence that the Bush administration is preparing yet another illegal attack on a Muslim country without assessing the consequences.

The Bush administration seems destined to produce such disasters that it will be driven to the use of nuclear weapons in order to avoid defeat. The Bush administration possesses the combination of evil and stupidity required to escalate a failed "cakewalk war" into a nuclear one.

Many of the administration's most evil members--Wolfowitz, Feith, Libby, Rumsfeld, Rove, and Gonzales--have been discarded as the tragedy deepens, but Cheney remains ensconced as does the moron in the White House. Before they fall, Bush and Cheney will bring more sorrow to the world and more shame to Americans.

************************
Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration. He was Associate Editor of the Wall Street Journal editorial page and Contributing Editor of National Review. He is coauthor of The Tyranny of Good Intentions.

http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article18272.htm
0 Replies
 
Endymion
 
  -1  
Reply Thu 30 Aug, 2007 03:41 am
Bush to request $50 billion more for Iraq war: report

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070829/pl_nm/iraq_bush_funds_dc_1;_ylt=AhDkp4GS9wAEpDtAZ1PS_9oE1vAI
0 Replies
 
Endymion
 
  -1  
Reply Fri 31 Aug, 2007 10:20 pm
Taser electronic stun guns are being made available to more police officers in England and Wales.

Officers who are not firearms specialists will be able to use the 50,000-volt Tasers to protect themselves or the public from Saturday.

As part of a year-long trial the officers will be able to use Tasers when faced with serious violence - even if a suspect is not armed.

Amnesty International opposes the move, claiming the guns can be lethal.

Until now Tasers have only been issued in Britain to members of police firearms units.

http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/42930000/gif/_42930491_taser.gif

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/6973610.stm

Why am i still suprised? Shocked
0 Replies
 
Endymion
 
  -1  
Reply Fri 31 Aug, 2007 10:44 pm
My world is dissolving
in front of my eyes
Evil is good
the truth is lies
And everyone f*cking hates
the good guys
Why am i still suprised?
0 Replies
 
Endymion
 
  -1  
Reply Mon 3 Sep, 2007 06:11 pm
Basra Withdrawal

Well, here it is


http://english.aljazeera.net/mritems/images/2007/9/3/1_227815_1_3.jpg

http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/3AE53878-4DFF-4687-9947-B04E68F588A9.htm


***********

Leading Article: The Basra endgame and the trading of blame

http://comment.independent.co.uk/leading_articles/article2921859.ece

Stop The War Coalition's Response To Basra Withdrawal

http://www.stopwar.org.uk/index.php?option=com_content&task=blogsection&id=1&Itemid=27

Tell us more, top brass
http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,,2161122,00.html

Iraqi joy at British 'defeat' as Bush makes surprise visit to Baghdad
http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/news/article-23410743-details/Bush+furious+as+British+troops+pull+out+of+Basra/article.do

Tories call for Iraq war inquiry
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uklatest/story/0,,-6891968,00.html

*************

Mahdi Army 'obeys' truce order
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/04E6363D-700D-47E5-8095-D622EA63804C.htm


Gen Sir Mike Jackson condemns 'war on terror'
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/09/03/wjackson103.xml


Fresh UK attack on US Iraq policy
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/6974611.stm


I believe that leaving is the only honourable thing for the occupiers to do. The Iraqis do not want foreign troops in their land another day - and they have the right to ask us to leave.
0 Replies
 
Endymion
 
  -1  
Reply Mon 3 Sep, 2007 06:22 pm
The Next Quagmire

Published on Monday, September 3, 2007 by TruthDig.com
by Chris Hedges

The most effective diplomats, like the most effective intelligence officers and foreign correspondents, possess empathy. They have the intellectual, cultural and linguistic literacy to get inside the heads of those they must analyze or cover. They know the vast array of historical, religious, economic and cultural antecedents that go into making up decisions and reactions. And because of this-endowed with the ability to communicate and more able to find ways of resolving conflicts through diplomacy-they are less prone to blunders.

But we live in an age where dialogue is dismissed and empathy is suspect. We prefer the illusion that we can dictate events through force. It hasn't worked well in Iraq. It hasn't worked well in Afghanistan. And it won't work in Iran. But those who once tried to reach out and understand, who developed expertise to explain the world to us and ourselves to the world, no longer have a voice in the new imperial project. We are instead governed and informed by moral and intellectual trolls.

To make rational decisions in international relations we must perceive how others see us. We must grasp how they think about us and be sensitive to their fears and insecurities. But this is becoming hard to accomplish. Our embassies are packed with analysts whose main attribute is long service in the armed forces and who frequently report to intelligence agencies rather than the State Department. Our area specialists in the State Department are ignored by the ideologues driving foreign policy. Their complex view of the world is an inconvenience. And foreign correspondents are an endangered species, along with foreign coverage.

We speak to the rest of the globe in the language of violence. The proposed multibillion-dollar arms supply package for the Persian Gulf countries is the newest form of weapons-systems-as-message. U.S. Undersecretary of State
R. Nicholas Burns was rather blunt about the deal. He told the International Herald Tribune that the arms package "says to the Iranians and Syrians that the United States is the major power in the Middle East and will continue to be and is not going away."

The arrogant call for U.S. hegemony over the rest of the globe is making enemies of a lot of people who might be predisposed to support us, even in the Middle East. And it is terrifying those, such as the Iraqis, Iranians and Syrians, whom we have demonized. Empathy and knowledge, the qualities that make real communication possible, have been discarded. We use tough talk and big weapons deals to communicate. We spread fear, distrust and violence. And we expect missile systems to protect us.

"Imagine an Iranian government that was powerful, radical, and in possession of nuclear weapons; imagine the threat that would pose to Israel and to the American-led balance of power, which has been so important in the Middle East since the close of the Second World War," Burns said in a speech at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library in Boston last April 11. "That is our first challenge."

"Our second challenge is that Iran continues to be the central banker of Middle East terrorism," he went on. "It is the leading funder and director of Hamas, Hezbollah, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine general command. Third, Iran is in our judgment a major violator of the human rights of its own people; it denies religious, political, and press rights to the people of a very great country representing a very great civilization. And so we see a problem that is going to be with us for a long time, and we are trying to fashion a strategy that will work for the long term."

George W. Bush's latest salvo, on Aug. 28, was more of the same.

"Iran's active pursuit of technology that could lead to nuclear weapons threatens to put a region already known for instability and violence under the shadow of a nuclear holocaust," he said. Bush warned that the United States and its allies would confront Iran "before it is too late."

These kinds of words, pouring out of the administration, send a clear message to any Iranian: You are in trouble. Bend to our will or we destroy you. These were the same words, with a few minor changes, that the Bush administration delivered to Saddam Hussein, who, despite numerous compromises, including letting the U.N. inspectors back into his country, was overthrown and put to death during a U.S. occupation.

And the Iranians know that without the bomb, which no intelligence agency thinks they can produce for a few years, they are now probably going to be attacked.

The Pentagon has reportedly drawn up plans for a series of airstrikes against 1,200 targets in Iran. The air attacks are designed to cripple the Iranians' military capability in three days. The Bushehr nuclear power plant, along with targets in Saghand and Yazd, the uranium enrichment facility in Natanz, a heavy-water plant and radioisotope facility in Arak, the Ardekan Nuclear Fuel Unit, and the uranium conversion facility and nuclear technology center in Isfahan, will all probably be struck by the United States and perhaps even Israeli warplanes. The Tehran Nuclear Research Center, the Tehran molybdenum, iodine and xenon radioisotope production facility, the Tehran Jabr Ibn Hayan Multipurpose Laboratories, and the Kalaye Electric Co. in the Tehran suburbs will also most likely come under attack.

But then what? We don't have the troops to invade. And we don't have anyone minding the helm who knows the slightest thing about Persian culture or the Middle East. There is no one in power in Washington with the empathy to get it. We will lurch blindly into a catastrophe of our own creation.

It is not hard to imagine what will happen. Iranian Shabab-3 and Shabab-4 missiles, which cannot reach the United States, will be launched at Israel, as well as American military bases and the Green Zone in Baghdad. Expect massive American casualties, especially in Iraq, where Iranian agents and their Iraqi allies will be able to call in precise coordinates. The Strait of Hormuz, which is the corridor for 20 percent of the world's oil supply, will be shut down. Chinese-supplied C-801 and C-802 anti-shipping missiles, mines and coastal artillery will target U.S. shipping, along with Saudi oil production and oil export centers. Oil prices will skyrocket to well over $4 a gallon. The dollar will tumble against the euro. Hezbollah forces in southern Lebanon, interpreting the war as an attack on all Shiites, will fire rockets into northern Israel. Israel, already struck by missiles from Tehran, will begin retaliatory raids on Lebanon and Iran. Pakistan, with a huge Shiite minority, will reach greater levels of instability. The unrest could result in the overthrow of the weakened American ally President Pervez Musharraf and usher into power Islamic radicals. Pakistan could become the first radical Islamic state to possess a nuclear weapon. The neat little war with Iran, which few Democrats oppose, has the potential to ignite a regional inferno.

We have rendered the nation deaf and dumb. We no longer have the capacity for empathy. We prefer to amuse ourselves with trivia and gossip that pass for news rather than understand. We are blinded by our military prowess. We believe that huge explosions and death are an effective form of communication. And the rest of the world is learning to speak our language.

Chris Hedges, who graduated from Harvard Divinity School and was for nearly two decades a foreign correspondent for The New York Times, is the author of "American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America."

http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2007/09/03/3587/
0 Replies
 
Endymion
 
  -1  
Reply Tue 4 Sep, 2007 05:11 am
Secret deal for roadmap to peace bears stamp of Ulster


Agreement between Sunnis, Shias and N Ireland politicians

Patrick Wintour
Tuesday September 4, 2007
The Guardian

Representatives from Sunni and Shia groups in Iraq agreed on a road map to peace based on the experience in Northern Ireland after four days of secret talks in Finland, reconciliation group the Crisis Management Initiative said last night.

The meeting brought together 16 delegates from the feuding groups to study lessons learned from successful peacemaking efforts in South Africa and Northern Ireland. The factions were convened by the John W McCormack graduate school of policy studies at the University of Massachusetts in Boston. The former Finnish president Martti Ahtisaari organised the seminar but was not present.

"Participants committed themselves to work towards a robust framework for a lasting settlement," a statement issued by CMI said. It added that the participants "agreed to consult further" on a list of 12 recommendations to begin reconciliation talks including resolving political disputes through non-violence and democracy.

Politicians from Northern Ireland including the unionist Jeffrey Donaldson and the Sinn Féin leader Martin McGuinness also attended the talks.

The recommendations included disarming feuding factions and forming an independent commission to supervise this "in a verifiable manner".

Mr Donaldson said: "Agreement has been reached on the way forward between the parties, and they are now going back to Iraq with these proposals."

Among the groups reportedly at the talks were representatives of the radical Shia cleric Moqtada al-Sadr; the leader of the largest Sunni Arab political group, Adnan al-Dulaimi; and Humam Hammoudi, the Shia chairman of the Iraqi parliament's foreign affairs committee.

But it was not clear last night what influence these representatives have or whether they were committed to bringing their organisations on side.

There are some tentative signs of political reconciliation within Iraq, even though the government seems unable to make any big decisions due to sectarian disputes.

Government sources said they welcomed any effort to bring the factions together, but said they had not been officially involved in the discussions.

South Africa was represented by members of Nelson Mandela's first unity government following the end of apartheid: African National Congress activist Mac Maharaj and National Party reformer Roelf Meyer.

The agreement called for all parties to be involved in the reconciliation process and to accept the results of the negotiations while working "to end international and regional interference" in Iraq.

Political objectives of the agreement included moving away from sectarian and ethnic disputes, halting the displacement of Iraqi refugees and ending the presence of foreign troops according to a "realistic timetable".

The participants also agreed to deal with militias by arming and training security forces to become "an effective national force", while fostering economic development across the country.

Members of armed groups that "are not classified as terrorist" would be encouraged to adopt "peaceful political means" and given jobs within the state administration.

Mr Ahtisaari and his group have facilitated peace talks for other conflicts. In 2005 he helped end 30 years of fighting between Aceh rebels and the Indonesian government with peace talks in Finland, which he initiated and mediated with CMI.

The 12-point plan

1 Resolve political issues through non-violence and democracy.

2 Prohibit use of arms while in talks.

3 Form independent commission to disarm groups in verifiable manner.

4 Accept results of negotiations.

5 End international interference.

6 Commit to protect human rights.

7 Assure independence and effectiveness of the law and courts, especially constitutional court.

8 Full participation of all parties in political process and governance.

9 Take all steps to end violence, killings, forced displacement and damage to infrastructure.

10 Establish independent body to explore how to deal with the past in way which will unite nation.

11 Support efforts to make political process successful and to protect Iraq's unity and sovereignty.

12 Participating groups commit to principles as complete set of rules.
0 Replies
 
Endymion
 
  -1  
Reply Tue 4 Sep, 2007 08:04 am
http://www.able2know.com/forums/a2k-post2290211.html#2290211
0 Replies
 
Endymion
 
  -1  
Reply Tue 4 Sep, 2007 08:41 am
0 Replies
 
lostnsearching
 
  0  
Reply Tue 4 Sep, 2007 11:03 am
Endymion wrote:


Forever seems to have no end...

ps. great "Joke," Endy.
0 Replies
 
Endymion
 
  -1  
Reply Wed 5 Sep, 2007 08:00 pm
It's always good to hear from you Naima - i hope you are well

***********************************************

I heard this South African guy talking on the BBC World Service (Outlook) about how he went to Baghdad to rescue the zoo animals - while the initial fighting was still going on in 2003

When he got there, many of the animals had died from lack of water - others had been eaten by the starving Iraqis - the zoo had also been bombed - many of the animal lay dead - but some, like the big cats were still alive. He said that their tongues were so dry they had to dip their muzzles into water in order to looses their mouths before they could drink... anyway...

this guy was saying how surprised he was at the offers he had for help - at one point American and Iraqi fighters working side by side.

Some Americans offered to help him move some ostriches from a palace to the zoo and the only vehicles they had were armoured with a hatch... so yes, they drove through Baghdad with the ostrich's heads sticking out the top of these armoured vehicles...

He said they had to get ahead and warn the check point guards...
(that they weren't going nuts or anything)

WAR IS STRANGE
0 Replies
 
Endymion
 
  -1  
Reply Thu 6 Sep, 2007 12:23 am
Wednesday, September 5th, 2007
'Dead Wrong' ...by Cindy Sheehan

A new book called Dead Certain by Robert Draper of GQ magazine was just published. I haven't read it yet and I don't know when I will have the time or the intestinal fortitude to read an account of the presidential life of the person who was responsible for the death of my oldest child, Casey, but I have seen reports and read excerpts from it. I cannot profess complete knowledge about it, but of course, one of the excerpts particularly caught my eye and imagination.

George and Bar's oldest son, George, claims that he "cries" on "God's shoulder" frequently. Is this the same man who said in response to a question from a reporter in August, 2005, about not meeting with me that he had to "get on with his life?" Is this the same man who bragged frequently that he sleeps like a new-born baby every night?

Repeatedly, George and his neocon cabal of corrupt murderers lied through their perfect establishment teeth about the reasons for taking our country into a disastrous invasion and even more disastrous occupation of Iraq. We know from the exposition of the Downing Street minutes and such books by and about such BushCo insiders as George Tenet, Paul O'Neil and Richard Clark and the mission of the White House Iraq Group that was commissioned to sell the invasion to a gullible American public that EVERYONE knew the impending invasion was not, and could not legally or morally be justified, but by hook, but mostly by crook, they were going full-steam ahead anyway.

The excerpts that I have read from the book makes it seem that Georgie is a lonely little boy playing President and sometimes he feels like he is slipping into "self-pity" but his Stepford-Bush wife, Laura, reminds him that he asked for the job. I suspect from everything that I have read about George (especially, Bush on the Couch, by Dr. Justin Frank), observing his demeanor when he gives speeches or press conferences (smirking, blinking, giggling, sweating, liberal use of personal jabs and sarcasm), and by his arrogant posturing that the "self-pity" does not come from any kind of remorse for the hundreds of thousands of misused American troops and innocent Iraqis that his policies have killed, but because his approval ratings are in the toilet and people just don't like him.

I am sorry, but if George has to fight to save himself from the presidentially dangerous emotion of "self-pity" I don't pity him at all. Yes, he is a tool of forces and people who are far more powerful and infinitely smarter than he, and he has been used as a puppet, or more descriptively as a tool, but he put himself in the tool-box of the ruling class corporate fascists that the Bush clan have been charter members of for generations.

I have been a recipient of the fascist pain that came with a high price tag for my family, but high rewards for the war-profiteers. I have sobbed with other mothers, fathers, sisters, brothers and children of other soldiers who have similarly had to pay the ultimate price for the sins of the profiteers. I have cried with Iraqis who have been wounded or displaced by the same sins and I have seen the same sorrow in the eyes of Iraqi mothers who have lost their entire families for this American brand of greedy imperialism. I have cried and cried to the brink of dehydration, however, I don't have the same kind of comfort in my convictions that George does that I have always been "Dead Certain" in every choice I have made and the ill-informed (but honorable) choices that Casey made. I don't have the shoulder of a God who told George to bomb Iraq to the "stone ages" to cry on that gives me comfort or absolution from my sins that George has. Most of the time, I just cry into the pillow of another motel.

How can George always be Dead Certain that his choices were correct when he was always clearly "dead wrong?" Casey and hundreds of thousands of others are just plain dead.

I hope that Mr. Draper wrote his book too soon. I hope he will have to amend it with a final chapter about how George and his creepy cabal were impeached by a Democratic Congress that finally found some Constitutional courage and George and his side-kick, Dick, had to slink back to their respective dungeons to live in detested infamy for the rest of their unnatural lives. Occasionally coming out in the light of day to clear brush or shoot a friend in the face.

Figuratively chained to their homes by national and international animosity, with no pardon from President Kucinich. One can dream, can't one?

---

www.CindyforCongress.org[
0 Replies
 
Endymion
 
  -1  
Reply Thu 6 Sep, 2007 12:31 am
Wednesday, September 5th, 2007
'Vermonter Takes it to Bush Down Under' ...by Dan DeWalt

"President" Bush may not be willing to visit Vermont, but one of Vermont's finest, ex-marine Matt Howard, was in Australia today delivering the message to Bush and the world that we have seen through his lies, calling him and his sycophants out for their criminal Iraq adventure.

The three mile steel barrier that the city erected to keep the Decider from being exposed to the multitudes who disagree with and despise him may have prevented him from hearing the words of Mr. Howard, but listeners to the BBC/WBUR program The World, distributed across the U.S. by Public Radio International were treated to a short but articulate condemnation of the Bush Iraq war policy by Mr. Howard.

It is good and remarkable that we were able to hear this bit of dissension, but it is too bad that we only seem to hear about it when it happens on the other side of the globe.

While the Bush administration is clearly the main culprit to be blamed for our current pariah status in the world, we must now be targeting the Democratic leadership that is enabling these crimes to continue and the media that reports selectively on the subject.

It is a difficult pill to swallow that the Democrats are ultimately proving themselves to be merely another branch of the national security state, continually funding Bush's war and giving him even more draconian powers to spy on Americans than he had hoped for, but that is the reality that we face.

It is also difficult to accept that the supposed liberal media, exemplified by National Public Radio, spend most of their time merely parroting the war machine publicists' talking points and framing the debate just as the Bush/Cheney orchestrators would have them do, but that is also today's reality.

As grim as our world has been for the past few years, it is only darker and more serious today. Bush is very likely to launch a military strike against Iran in the near future. Sources in the military have been leaking opinions that it may well be a massive strike, designed to cripple Iran's military capabilities by bombing targets throughout the country. This would have catastrophic consequences and we must not let it happen.

We cannot rely on the Democrats to do anything but wring their hands and fund such actions. We cannot rely upon the media to inform us about impending actions. They will only earnestly regurgitate the spin fed to them by the administration and scramble to make sure that they won't be perceived as not being patriotic enough.

It is time for every one of us to stand as Matt Howard did today. It is time for every one of us to accost the Republicans, the Democrats and the news outlets that serve us, both nationally and locally.

We must put them all on notice that the continuation of lawless, immoral and reprehensible policies by our government will be met by strikes, protests and disruption of business as usual by every one of us. We must shake them from their complacency and put them in fear for their very own livelihoods and futures.

September marks the beginning of many organized efforts in the peace community to raise awareness and to get people onto the streets and into the halls of Congress.

Bush famously stated that we are either with him or with the terrorists. The death and destruction resulting from his actions have now far eclipsed anything that the terrorists have done. It is time that we repudiate them both and stop equivocating.

Dan DeWalt is a woodworker and selectboard member in the town of Newfane, Vermont, and the author of a successful town resolution calling for the impeachment of President Bush.
0 Replies
 
 

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