Tag Archive for 'human rights'

Do You Really Support the Troops?

Yes, YOU.

I’m asking you flat out.
I’m questioning your patriotism.

Do you REALLY support the troops?

Then the question of who should be the next President of the United States is quite simple.

We’re quickly approaching the FIVE YEAR commemoration of the invasion and occupation of Iraq. This argument is well beyond a question of whether or not you sport a yellow ribbon on the back of your car. It’s beyond whether you think we should “stay the course”, set a timetable for leaving, or get out immediately. It’s beyond being a Democrat, Republican, Independent, Green, Libertarian, etc. It’s about being an AMERICAN and a HUMAN BEING.

The fact is— every day that passes is another day our soldiers are being killed and maimed.

“The greatest purveyor of violence in the world today is my own government.”
- Martin Luther King, Jr.

If you claim to support the troops, if not the war itself, shouldn’t you also support the candidate the troops support the most? The man who will bring them home NOW, still ALIVE?

It’s not Barack. It’s not Hillary. It’s not McCain. It’s Ron Paul.

Any excuses— dismissals of “he can’t win”, “I’m not a Republican”, or lapses in electoral faith are not going to save our troops. Understandable lapses in faith, of course. But in the end: YOU know who YOU voted for.

The Ron Paul Revolution is far from over. Not because Primary Day hasn’t yet arrived. Not because the Republican National Convention hasn’t come. Not because Election Day hasn’t arrived. But because our troops are still over there. Iraq, Afghanistan, Korea, Africa… They’re everywhere but HERE. That is why I REFUSE to throw in the flag for the Revolution, and I hope the rest of you will do the same.

So I’m calling you out. Let me ask you again:

Do YOU support the troops?
PROVE IT.

Vote for Ron Paul.

“The chain reaction of evil — wars producing more wars — must be broken, or we shall be plunged into the dark abyss of annihilation.”
- Martin Luther King, Jr.

Sidenote: If this post makes you uncomfortable, angry, whatever— if you think your chosen candidate DOES enable you to honestly say you support the troops, please leave me a comment and refute my accusations, I welcome your thoughts!

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.

Spreading Democracy & Freedom : Over Three Million Served

From Common Dreams (thanks to Chellinsky for sharing):

American Genocide In The Middle East: Three Million and Counting

by David Goodner

Deaths directly and indirectly attributable to the U.S. invasion and occupation of Iraq have neared one million people, a body count higher than the genocides in Rwanda and Sudan combined, according to a new report released by Just Foreign Policy.

That brings the U.S. caused death count in the Middle East to over three million people, and that’s not even counting fatalities in Afghanistan or Palestine.

The Just Foreign Policy report is an update to two controversial studies published by the prestigious British medical journal the Lancet. In 2003, the Lancet reported over 100,000 excess deaths in Iraq were attributal to the U.S. invasion. That study may be read here.

In 2006, the Lancet updated their study and found over 600,000 excess deaths in Iraq since the U.S. invasion. That study may be read here.

The killing of Iraqis since the U.S. invasion includes violence caused by the overwhelming air and ground power of U.S. military forces, mortalities caused by the destruction of civilian infrastructure, and disappearances and murders caused by sectarian conflict and internal power struggles among different Iraqi factions.

The report’s methodology is controversial because it bypasses the normal model of death verification - which requires documenting each and every individual body tallied by governments, hospitals, and morgues - and instead uses a model first developed to estimate deaths caused by earthquakes, hurricanes, tornadoes, and other natural disasters, where bodies are often never found.

Many defenders of the occupation of Iraq claim that a withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq would spark a genocide as sectarian conflict and civil war escalated out of control. Indeed, violence may increase temporarily in the short term following a U.S. withdrawal. Nature abhors a vacuum and competition among Iraqi factions for power may increase as they rush to fill the void.

However, what is clear is that the U.S. invasion and continuing occupation of Iraq in and of itself constitutes a kind of genocide. American economic sanctions against Iraq in the 1990s killed one million civilians, according to a 2003 study by the Centre for Population Studies. And the U.S. funded both sides of the Iran/Iraq war in the 1980’s, contributing to well over one million Arab and Persian casualties, according to Farhang Rajaee in a 1993 article published by the University of Florida titled The Iran-Iraq war: the politics of aggression.

Now an additional 996,836 Iraqis have been killed since the U.S. invasion in 2003. The instability and sectarian conflict were stoked by this unilateral, preemptive, and illegal invasion, and there is little hope of the internal conflict ending while Iraq is under foreign military occupation.

This situation is historically similar to the colonial period, where infighting between African and other indigenous tribes around the globe increased because of the havoc wreaked by colonial powers and their divide-and-conqueor strategies.

Indeed, the seeds of conflict and disputes between ethnic groups, e.g. in Rwanda, were planted by Western colonialism. People of color around the world reap what we sow.

The immediate future of Iraq looks grim, with solutions ranging from bad to worse. Our only hope of ending the senseless violence is an unconditional and immediate withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq, followed by some kind of responsible assistance by the U.N. and Arab peacekeeping forces.

If the Iraqis have to go to civil war to sort out the mess that our government has left them in, let them. It will eventually burn itself out like in Lebanon and, without any further interference from the West besides reconstruction and reparations, the Iraqis will be able to begin rebuilding their devastated country.

David Goodner is senior at the University of Iowa majoring in international studies and human rights.

Stop your life for 64 minutes and watch this.

WE.

Inspired by Arundhati Roy’s “Come September” speech, this documentary was created.

It’s 64 minutes of music, life, death, war, peace, history, future, everything. It’ll knock you over… but when you get back up, you’ll be stronger than ever.

“Either way, change will come. It could be bloody, or it could be beautiful. It depends on us.”
- Arundhati Roy

Kent State & Cindy Sheehan

This past Friday I attended the commemoration of the Kent State shootings 37 years ago. A major reason for going was to hear Cindy Sheehan speak. I may have mentioned her a few times on here… I remember the first time I read about Cindy and the rally we had for her shortly after. Little did I know we would meet her, talk about being speechless!

It was very surreal, in addition to the rest of the day’s context. She’s a quiet woman, seemingly tired from years of fighting the Bush Co. war machine, meeting so many people, etc. But when your son is killed in an illegal war based on lies what else do you do but devote your life to stopping the Administration that killed him?

Of course it was ironic that the group I was traveling with was harassed by the police before we even left Columbus. We were parked in a Tim Horton’s parking lot (ironic, yes?) and two cops decided to be jacka$$es and interrogate one of us (for making a shooting gesture with her hand, she was talking about Kent State), park us in, write down the plate number, etc. There’s more to the story but they don’t deserve any more space on my site.

The police harassment in the morning— hearing the words of a mother who lost her son to the greed of Big Oil and American Empire— and of course remembering the 4 students killed at Kent State all combined to form one big reminder of the Police State that we’re living in.

A rising police state is only part of the 2+2 equation, however. I have a new bumper sticker that says “Wake Up and Smell the Fascism.” People like to give me a hard time about it, I think because they don’t actually know what fascism is and therefore can’t see it staring them right in the face. Our educational system has assigned a negative connotation to the word, but when asked for specific reasons why fascism is bad, people are hard-pressed to give an answer. They get red in the face, wave their flags, and get extremely defensive at the mere suggestion that the United States is now a Fascist country. “Doublethink” it’s called. Works out pretty well for the government, wouldn’t you say?

I’ll conclude with the text of Sheehan’s speech, and a link to my photos from the day.

First of all, I would just like to say that I am not only in favor of impeaching George Bush and Dick Cheney, but of trying them for war crimes and locking them both up in Guantanamo for the rest of their lives! I also agree with Tom (Hayden) that an “anti-war” movement is basically a self-destructive movement, because when our objectives are achieved, the movement is over. That is why we must call ourselves a “peace” movement so our movement will never end. There will always be a need for people who commit their lives to peace as strenuously as they commit their lives to the anti-war movement.

I can’t begin to tell you how honored I am to have been invited here to speak on this historic occasion with the other speakers who have also felt the sting of war and the pain of loss and lingering regrets. I am indescribably moved to be adopted into the Kent State family and invite you all down to Camp Casey in Crawford this August to join our family!

Before the program started I took the chance to climb the hill and spend time at the places where Allison Krauss, Jeff Miller, Bill Schroeder and Sandy Scheuer each fell and I would like to share some thoughts that I had up there with you.

My first thought was of the randomness of violence. The four students who were killed that day just happened to occupy the same space as a National Guard bullet at the same time. Unlike those wounded, some pretty badly, those that perished that awful day were struck by the bullets in vitally important parts of their bodies. The places where the four fell, never to get up again, are marked in memoriam to the stupidity and permanence of violence. One day, I hope to travel to Sadr City, Baghdad to see and stand in the spot where my son, Casey’s, brain collided with an insurgent’s bullet, taking his life by the same shapeless and dark entity that stole the life of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr, on the same day: April 04.

Continue reading ‘Kent State & Cindy Sheehan’

April 4th, 1968

MLK Jr.

Early morning, April 4
Shot rings out in the Memphis sky
Free at last, they took your life
They could not take your pride

In the name of love
What more in the name of love
In the name of love
What more in the name of love…

Columbus Dispatch chooses Homer Simpson over Constitution

Once you start looking critically at mainstream media, it becomes hard to go back to being a passive reader/viewer/listener. Today’s Columbus Dispatch is a perfect example.

On the front page towards the bottom you will see an article titled “Ohio’s Springfield to Homer: ‘Pick me!’ - Cities of same name vie for movie premiere

You may think nothing of it, although it’d be nice if you thought “that’s a front-page worthy story? Is that all that’s going on in the world right now?”

Next we’ll flip to the last page of the main section, A10. Along with a large ad for some great mattress deals you’ll see an article titled “Hearings start for Guantanamo detainees.”

I guess the optimist in me would have hoped that the beginning of “a series of closed hearings yesterday to determine whether 14 alleged terrorist leaders … should be declared ‘enemy combatants’ who can be held indefinitely and prosecuted by military tribunals” would have garnered more attention and been placed on the front page. I mean these trials are UNCONSTITUTIONAL after all. Not to mention the TORTURE at Guantanamo Bay that most turn a blind eye to for fear of having to act on their cognitive dissonance and betrayal of humanity.

Care for some Habeas Corpus or Bill of Rights? Oh wait, we tossed both of those out the window along with our greasy cardboard container of Freedom Fries…