Tag Archive for 'f— the war!'

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Bush’s LAST State of the Union Address is tonight @ 9pm

Are you hesitant to risk the ensuing depression of putting yourself through it, but still feel a civic responsibility to tune in? Fear not, my friends, I have the solution: www.DrinkingGame.us

“The general rules of this game are no different from any other drinking game. A drink is either a shot or a good gulp from a beer (or cider). Different events call for different numbers of drinks and all you do is watch the speech and play along. If all goes well, you’ll be unconscious by the time they show the other party’s response.”

Featuring categories such as foreign policy (troops, Israel, Pakistan, “nukular”), general blather (freedom, progress), and domestic policy (stimulus, economy, Homeland.)

* * * Be alert for bonus drink opportunities, like if Bush pronounces “Mahmoud Ahmadinejad” correctly! If he discusses redeploying the troops, that’s when you “redeploy the contents of your beverage into your mouth.” If the camera shows a close-up of Nancy Pelosi (without Bush in the shot) you have to do a shot without moving any of your facial muscles— and other fun bonuses.

I’d like to add my own personal bonus — if Bush says “RON PAUL” at any time, you must immediately finish the entire bottle of whatever you’re drinking. If it’s beer, finish off the case!

Cheers, mateys!

Tonight’s Republican Debate on Fox News — full of surprises.

Here’s what I learned from tonight’s surprising debate chock full of new questions and equal response time:

  • Gay marriage : BAD. I know I don’t need to point out the obvious: that this is the most important issue facing our country today. Children need a mother AND a father, see. Got that, single moms and widows?
  • Pro-life : GOOD! Unless they’re babies in the Middle East, Asia, or Africa, those we don’t mind killing.
  • The military budget : TOO SMALL! Spending more than every other country in the world combined is not enough. No wonder Iran and Russia are standing up to us, we don’t spend enough on defense!
  • Hillary: BAD. And apparently the only Democratic party candidate.
  • Mitt Romney: PRETTY.
  • Diversity: BAD. Obvious from the demographic make-up of the audience. Or maybe there aren’t any black people in Florida?
  • Ron Paul: BAD. Not enough war-talk. Me need more war! Won’t spend enough imaginary money and bankrupt our future generations. BOOO!!!

Ron Paul, the only passionate and not-full-of-s—t speaker up there, was booed multiple times, including when he talked about non-interventionism and this crazy idea of TALKING with other countries instead of immediately bombing them. There was also booing at his mention of leaving Iraq. You can be sure those that booed are the people proudly shipping their children over there right now.

Here it is, not even November 2007, and already the election has been decided.

You all know this right? It will be Hillary vs. Giuliani whether you like it or not. Forget that we haven’t held a single primary yet, the media has already declared it thus, and so it must be. Giuliani could have stood up there and quacked like a duck the whole time and the commentators afterwards still would have said,

“The obvious front-runner is Giuliani, he did everything right tonight.”

Likewise, there may as well be no other candidates running for the Democratic party nomination, Hillary has already been dubbed The One.

The only way out of this — our only hope — is if we can get people to quit watching these ridiculous “debates”, do their own research on the candidates using objective sources of information (no campaign websites or corporate-owned media websites) and not base their opinions on what ANY members of the mainstream media say. If people would look up voting records, campaign contributions, find out who owns the TV stations they’re watching, and weigh the factors that truly qualify someone to be President — Giuliani, Hillary, and many others would be removed from the equation in a heartbeat, and the media could take their spoon-fed “2+2=5″ rhetoric and shove it up their doublespeak arses.

Get people to do their own research? Turn the TV off and f—k the media?

Yeah, I know, we’re screwed.

P.S. Why no follow-up poll, Fox News? Don’t like the way those pesky non-scientific and easy-to-hack measures of public opinion have been turning out lately?

Generation Q: My quiet, virtual response

At the urging of a couple friends, I’m posting a response I emailed to them, critiquing “Generation Q”, a recent New York Times Op-Ed by Thomas Friedman. In his article, Friedman discusses the “too quiet, too online” generation of college students, their idealism, tendency to be drawn to “virtual politics”, and what the implications are for activist movements and our political future.

“…the more I am around this generation of college students, the more I am both baffled and impressed.

I am impressed because they are so much more optimistic and idealistic than they should be. I am baffled because they are so much less radical and politically engaged than they need to be.”

My first thought — I wish he would address the effectiveness of this “traditional” activism that so many, including Friedman, seem to desire.

After reading about electronic civil disobedience (ECD), I started taking into account the decentralization of power and the need to adapt activist strategies accordingly. We no longer take to the streets like people did en masse in the 60′s, that’s quite obvious. Okay, sometimes we do. On the weekends. After weeks of planning. Wow, what spontaneous and effective actions those are, look what we’ve changed! But even if we did drop everything, walk out from our day jobs, and storm onto the streets like we see happening in our dreams of revolution, do those that have the power to make important changes even care? Are we really taking away their power by occupying the streets anymore, and isn’t that the whole idea? From my basic research and reading, the idea of ECD is that the streets no longer stand for what they used to. We still have ominous marble structures and riot-gear clad police officers looming around that symbolize power, but they are only facades. The real power is running through the underground channels, between banks, behind closed doors, through the phone lines. We are no longer interrupting the status quo like we used to by filling the streets with signs and chants. It is this very reason I’m no longer convinced that getting a million people in DC will mean anything anymore. It’s a sad realization and I would love for someone to convince me otherwise.

“The Iraq war may be a mess, but I noticed at Auburn and Ole Miss more than a few young men and women proudly wearing their R.O.T.C. uniforms. Many of those not going abroad have channeled their national service impulses into increasingly popular programs at home like “Teach for America,” which has become to this generation what the Peace Corps was to mine.

It’s for all these reasons that I’ve been calling them “Generation Q” — the Quiet Americans, in the best sense of that term, quietly pursuing their idealism, at home and abroad.”

I think he “misunderestimates” the power of the change in perspective which is illustrated by the growing number of people doing national service.

Yes this is particularly close to me since I did AmeriCorps. But devoting years of your life to national service is not a “quiet” undertaking whatsoever. It is not passive, it is not ineffective, it is not easy. Indeed, it was the most eye-opening thing I’d ever done at that point in my life. It allowed me to see and experience first-hand what our government’s policies do to the infrastructure of our country. It allowed me to develop myself so I could do what little I could to help the children that are having their lives fu—ed over by endless war and corruption, with no money and no focus left over for their future after we’ve paid for all our bombs. The fact that so many college students are doing Teach for America and Peace Corps is HUGE. It’s a first step in realizing there’s a whole world out there and we are all connected. Doesn’t he realize what that shift in perspective means? For students to be opening their eyes to that? Yes, maybe some just do it for their resumes and because it’s safer than going to war. The point is, they’re doing it. They can control their motivation for going in, but I firmly believe they can’t control the way service affects them and the way their lives are changed on their way out.

“America needs a jolt of the idealism, activism and outrage (it must be in there) of Generation Q. That’s what twentysomethings are for — to light a fire under the country. But they can’t e-mail it in, and an online petition or a mouse click for carbon neutrality won’t cut it. They have to get organized in a way that will force politicians to pay attention rather than just patronize them.

Martin Luther King and Bobby Kennedy didn’t change the world by asking people to join their Facebook crusades or to download their platforms. Activism can only be uploaded, the old-fashioned way — by young voters speaking truth to power, face to face, in big numbers, on campuses or the Washington Mall. Virtual politics is just that — virtual.”

Yes, we are the Q Generation. Correct, Facebook is not going to stop Global Warming. But there is vast power in the technology that such pseudo-actions are built on, it just needs to be realized.

There is a line by Ani DiFranco that I love, “every tool is a weapon, if you hold it right.” Well, to me that’s what technology is. Right now it’s very empowering, I mean look at how much information we have thrown at us. But information alone is not enough. And it’s to our detriment in many senses because it creates another layer of separation. We can read as many articles about melting ice caps and genocide as we want, but despite how well-written and true-to-life these articles may be, in the end they are still just pixels on a screen. They are not feltbreathedtouchedREAL to us. We don’t smell the smoke from the burning villages. We don’t hear the cries of children pierce the after-bomb silence. We don’t stand in the puddles of melting glaciers. These stories are only as palpable as the ones about OJ or Paris and therefore they’re just as easily tossed aside and forgotten. What Friedman is missing in his article is the next step. How to take this environment of energy and technology that Generation Q is living in — and make it REAL? Then, I believe, people will act.

Also worth noting, I think, is the fact that the way our children are raised these days, with such sick emphasis given to higher education.. no wonder they can only be concerned with their collegiate bubble!

All kids hear about is doing well in school… so they can get into a good college… so they can get a good job… so they can, so they can, so they can, on and on! Though it’s disappointing, the lack of motivation is understandable to me. It seems as early as kindergarten kids are thrown into this culture of competition in the ultimate quest for the almighty dollar and “the good life” where self-worth is only attained upon graduation. We are foolish to act surprised by the end result.

To end on a good note, I think Friedman has the foundation of the argument right, because most importantly— Generation Q GIVES A DAMN, and that is not something to be taken lightly.

That is the crucial foundation on which to build. But that’s the key word: “build.” Effective activism in 2007 is something that still needs to be cultivated and realized. Whether that’s utilizing effective practices from the 60′s, growing/inventing something entirely new, or creating a diverse mix of practices, old and new — it’s obvious that something is needed to fill the void.

In the end, of course, this is just another collection of easily dismissed thoughts and pixels, the opinion of a 20-something quiet activist web geek, and there is every possibility I’ve missed his point entirely because I’m one of those he is writing about.

Troops Out NOW! Protest Tomorrow

Saturday, September 29th, 2pm
@ the Federal Building, 200 N. High St.

NO to WAR! YES to IMPEACHMENT!

Over 4 years after the invasion and occupation of Iraq and what are we left with? Almost 4,000 dead U.S. soldiers, hundreds of thousands of dead Iraqi civilians, hundreds of billions of dollars gone, and a Congress that’s doing absolutely nothing, to name a few things. It’s time to really support the troops by ENDING the WAR and BRINGING THEM HOME NOW!

Bring your voices! Bring your signs and banners! Make your presence known! Raise your voices for JUSTICE, TRUTH, & ACCOUNTABILITY!

Email vargo.che@hotmail.com for more information. Parking is suggested at either City Center or the Convention Center.

* In solidarity with the Troops Out Now National March on Washington D.C. that same day. For information on the DC march, visit www.troopsoutnow.org.

Ignore your rights… and they’ll go away.

Yesterday’s arrests of anti-war protesters — declared “National Security Threats” — and disgusting display of our police state shows the First Amendment is on its way out. All the more reason to show up and SPEAK OUT on September 15th, while you still can.

The ANSWER coalition, an anti-war group, was holding a press conference yesterday to address the excessive fines they’ve received from DC authorities for their promotion of a September 15th protest. Last month they were fined tens of thousands of dollars for hanging up posters around the city. The alleged crime? Using unapproved adhesive. In actuality, they were using wheat paste, about the most natural and gentle adhesive you can imagine. You may be utterly shocked to also learn that this whole thing started after Fox News called on the DC government to take action against the posters.

Apparently we can’t hold press conferences on public property any more. And if you want to hang up a poster ::gasp:: — watch out! You may be declared a national security threat and trampled by police officers on horseback, apparently necessary to disperse a large crowd of a dozen people, followed by prompt arrest. Who do these protesters think they are, tax payers? American citizens protected by Free Speech rights? Don’t they remember George W. Bush saying the Constitution is just a damned piece of paper?

From A.N.S.W.E.R.:

Three anti-war activists were arrested in front of the White House today after the U.S. Park Police moved to suppress a press conference called to protest the fines and threats against the ANSWER Coalition for putting up anti-war posters promoting the September 15 March and Die-In in Washington DC.

…The press conference became a chaotic scene as U.S. Park Police interrupted the event on the basis that there was no permit for a folding table that was used as a speaker’s stand for media microphones. As U.S. Park Police officers surrounded the group, an officer on horseback rode into the crowd to disperse the media and onlookers…

Who the hell do we think we are — spending billions of dollars every month, killing thousands of our sons & daughters — to occupy “liberate” other countries so they can supposedly enjoy the fruits of democracy, when we aren’t free to exercise our inalienable rights here in Amerika?

They’re quelling dissent by any means necessary now. You think this is bad?

If you want to go even deeper down the rabbit hole, check out Bush’s Executive Order signed in July that nixes the Fourth Amendment for anti-war protesters: “Blocking Property of Certain Persons Who Threaten Stabilization Efforts in Iraq.” Or even worse: National Security Presidential Directive 51, which would essentially suspend the Constitution and make Bush a Dictator in the event of a “Catastrophic Emergency.”

I hate to say it, because people are so damned sensitive to the word — but this is a clear sign of fascism. It reeks of Police State as much as the Comfest incident.

Yeah, I said it. F A S C I S M.

I’m done saying “it’s coming” because clearly it’s already here. Perhaps people should question why they’re so uncomfortable with the word and admit their discomfort is actually plain ole’ cognitive dissonance? It’s their brain saying “hey, you say you love the flag so much, why don’t you stand up and defend the rights it signifies?” I suppose that’s asking too much.

See for yourself:

“IF YOU’RE NOT OUTRAGED, YOU’RE NOT PAYING ATTENTION.”

Zogby poll released today – 51% of Americans Want Congress to Probe Bush/Cheney Regarding 9/11 Attacks

Over 30% Seek Immediate Impeachment and 67% also fault 9/11 Commission for not investigating anomalous collapse of World Trade Center 7

Kansas City, MO (Zogby International) September 6, 2007 – As America nears the sixth anniversary of the world-churning events of September 11, 2001, a new Zogby International poll finds a majority of Americans still await a Congressional investigation of President Bush’ and Vice President Cheney’s actions before, during and after the 9/11 attacks. Over 30% also believe Bush and/or Cheney should be immediately impeached by the House of Representatives.

The 911truth.org–sponsored poll also found that over two-thirds of Americans say the 9/11 Commission should have investigated the still unexplained collapse of the 47-story World Trade Center Building 7 at 5:20 p.m. on September 11, 2001.

WTC 7 housed the mayor’s emergency bunker and offices of the SEC, IRS, CIA and Secret Service and was not hit by any planes but still completely collapsed into its own footprint nearly eight hours after the Twin Tower attacks. FEMA did not explain this collapse, the 911 Commission ignored it, and the promised official study by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) is now 2 years overdue.

Janice Matthews, executive director of poll sponsor 911truth.org, observes:

“The supermajority response to the WTC Building 7 question signals an increasing public concern about this remarkable event — up from 38% last year. We can perhaps credit this rising awareness to the millions who have recently witnessed videos or Youtube clips of this skyscraper’s descent and the outspoken demands for a new WTC inquiry from over 150 architects and engineering professionals, including NIST’s own former Fire Science Division Chief, Dr. James Quintiere. Another contributory factor is the increased questioning among Hispanics, Blacks and Asians whose responses appear significantly more critical of the 9/11 Commission than Whites, sometimes twice as critical.”

Strategy aide W. David Kubiak adds,

“While only 32% seek immediate Bush and/or Cheney impeachment based on their current personal knowledge, a clear majority of citizens still seems hungry for a full exposure of the facts. The results suggest widespread public support for legislators like Rep. Dennis Kucinich who pledge to investigate unanswered 9/11 questions in the relevant congressional committees this fall. We hope more of our representatives find the spine to respond to this escalating dissatisfaction with the dubious accounting we have received thus far.”

9/11 family member and 911truth.org advisor Donna Marsh O’Connor notes,

“I’m not sure this poll is at all surprising. Over half of those polled want more answers from Congress, from those they hired to represent them. One quarter of the country knows enough to want to impeach both. Doesn’t it just mean people need figures they consider credible to tell them whether key details add up or not? Truth advocates need to press their case in Congress, on college campuses, in church groups with reason and absolute discipline regarding what can and cannot be proven. The strongest evidence needs to reach the people—including people who hate computers. We must present it calmly. Like whispering so that people reach in to hear.”

Continue reading ‘Zogby poll released today – 51% of Americans Want Congress to Probe Bush/Cheney Regarding 9/11 Attacks’

Iran.

The Pentagon has plans to take out the entire Iranian military in three days.

The media is not reporting this. All they care about is Senator Craig, Hillary and Obama’s horse race, and stupid video clips on YouTube. It’s Iraq all over again. And still — nobody will care.

This is exactly what the The Kennebunkport Warning is about. You cannot find this in the newspaper right now to save your life. But just wait. Any day now they’ll be launching a full-scale media campaign to make the case for a “pre-emptive” war against Iran (even though by then they will have probably already started dropping bombs) and people will eat up every word of it.

Today I got this in an email from Antiwar.com:

“They [the source's institution] have ‘instructions’ (yes, that was the word used) from the Office of the Vice-President to roll out a campaign for war with Iran in the week after Labor Day; it will be coordinated with the American Enterprise Institute, the Wall Street Journal, the Weekly Standard, Commentary, Fox, and the usual suspects. It will be heavy sustained assault on the airwaves, designed to knock public sentiment into a position from which a war can be maintained. Evidently they don’t think they’ll ever get majority support for this – they want something like 35-40 percent support, which in their book is plenty.”

This comes via Barnett R. Rubin, Director of Studies and Senior Fellow at New York University’s Center on International Cooperation, and a leading expert on Afghanistan, who has it from “a friend who has excellent connections in Washington and whose information has often been prescient.” According to Rubin’s anonymous sibyl – or is that seer? – we can look forward to “a big kickoff on September 11.”

Even Fox News is reporting it now: Pentagon ‘three-day blitz’ plan for Iran, along with the Daily Kos.

I’m guessing they won’t need to make much of a case to such an apathetic and distracted public, but if we do put up any sort of a fight — you can bet they’ll give us another 9/11 to shut everyone up. And yes, that will be an inside job too.

Seriously.

Are people gonna fall for this all over again? This is perfectly acceptable behavior?

May our children forgive us.