Sunday, August 25, 2013

***The "Projects" Boys... And Girls-For Denny And All The Other Adamsville Housing Authority Survivors From The Class Of 1964-With Tom Waits In Mind



A YouTube film clip of Tom Waits performing Jersey Girl

"Ain't Got No Time For The Corner Boys, Down In The Streets Making All That Noise"- The first line from Bruce Springsteen's classic working-class love song, Jersey Girl. The best version of the song is by Tom Waits (Waits lyrics below).
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Peter Paul Markin, Adamsville Housing Authority Alumnus and North Adamsville, Class Of 1964, (although most AHA alumni graduated from cross-town rival, Adamsville High) comment:


Funny how some stories get their start. A few years back one of my old Adamsville South Elementary corner boys, Denny Romano, he of the squeaky burgeoning tenor in our impromptu 1950s back end of the school-yard summer nights doo- wop group (and I of the squeaky bass, low, very low bass) “connected” with me again. He did so not through this website but through one of those looking for old high school graduate-based Internet sites that relentlessly track you down just as, in your dotage; you think you have finally gotten out from under that last remnant speck of fighting off the last forty years of your teen alienation and teen angst.

Denny asked me to speak of the old “corner boy” days down at “the projects,” the Adamsville Housing Authority low-rent housing where the desperately poor, temporarily so or not, were warehoused in our town in the post-World War II good night when some returning veteran fathers needed a helping hand to get them going back into civilian life. Corner boys, in case you were clueless (or too young to know of anything but mall rat-dom), were guys, mainly, who “hung out” together. Poor boy, no money, no other place to go, or with no transportation to get some other place, hung out in front of a million mom and pop variety corner variety stores, corner pizza parlors, corner bowling alleys, corner fast food joints, hell, even corner gas stations in some real small towns from what some guys have told me when I asked them. Here is the odd part though. Yeah, we were corner boys even that young, although we had no corner, no official corner like a corner mom and pop variety store, or a pizza parlor like I did later at Doc’s Drugstore in middle school and then as the king hell king’s scribe to Frankie Riley in front of Salducci’s Pizza Parlor in high school but just the back end of the elementary school, as long as we were quiet and nobody cried murder and mayhem to the cops. The following, in any case, a little revised, represents my “homage” to Denny and the gang from those by-gone days and even the girls that ninety-three point four percent of the time I was scared to death of/ fascinated by. Well, some things haven’t changed anyway.
*******

Taffrail Road, Yardarm Lane, Captain's Walk, Quarterdeck Road, Sextant Circle, the Old Sailor’s Home, the Shipyard (abandoned now) and Sea Street. Yes, those streets and places from the old public housing project down in the Germantown section of Adamsville surely evoke imagines of the near-by sea that touched its edges, of long ago sailing ships, and of battles fought off some mist-driven coast by those hearty enough to seek fame and fortune. And with the wherewithal to hold on to their booty (no, not that booty, booty call boot, dough, prizes, stuff like that) But, of course, we know that anyone with even a passing attachment to Adamsville had to have an instinctual love of the sea, and fear of its furies when old Mother Nature turns her back on us. Yes, the endless sea, our homeland the sea, the mother we never knew, the sea... But, enough of those imaginings.

Today I look to the landward side of that troubled housing project peninsula, that isolated expanse of land jutting out of the water and filled with wreckage of another kind, the human kind . No, this will not be a sociological survey of working- class pathologies made inevitable by the relentless struggle to scramble for life's necessities, the culture of poverty, or the like. Nor will it be a political screed about rising against the monsters that held us down, or the need for such a rising. Nor even about the poetic license necessary to cobble pretty words together to speak of the death of dreams, dreamless dreams or, maybe, just accepting small dreams to fit a small life. Rather, I am driven by the jumble of images that passed through the thoughts of a ragamuffin of a project boy as he tried to make sense out of a world that he did not create, and that he had no say in.

Ah, the scenes. Warm, sticky, humid summer nights, the air filled with the pungent, overpowering soapy fragrance from the Proctor & Gamble factory across the channel that never quite left one's nostrils. Waking up each morning to face the now vanished Fore River Shipyard superstructure; hearing the distant clang of metals being worked to shape; and, the sight of flickering welding torches binding metals together. The endless rust-encrusted, low-riding oil tankers coming through the channel guided to port by high whistle-blowing tugs.

More-The interminable wait for the lifeline, seemingly never on time, Eastern Mass bus that took one and all in and out through that single Palmer Street escape route to greater Adamsville. Or that then imposing central housing authority building where I was sent by my mother, too proud to go herself, with the monthly rent, usually short. Oh, did I mention Carter's Variety Store, the sole store for us all the way to Sea Street but police take notice off limits to corners boys young or old, another lifeline. Many a time I reached in Ma's pocketbook to steal money, or committed other small hoodlum wanna-be larcenies, in order to hike down that long road and get my sugar-drenched stash (candy bars, soda, a.k.a. localism "tonic" then but that word is long gone, Twinkles, Moon Pies, and so on, sugar-drenched all)

And the kids. Well, the idea in those “golden” post-war days was that the projects were a way-station to better things, or at least that was the hope. So there was plenty of turn-over of friends but there was a core of kids, kids like me and my brothers, who stayed long enough to learn the ropes. Or get beaten down by guys just a little hungrier, a little stronger, or with just a little bigger chip on their shoulder. Every guy had to prove himself, tough or not, by hanging with guys that were "really" tough. That was the ethos, and "thems were the rules." Rules that seemed to come out of eternity’s time, and like eternity never challenged.

I took my fair share of nicks but also, for a moment, well for more than a moment as it turned out, I was swayed by the gangster lifestyle. Hell, it looked easy. With old elementary school classmate Rickie B., Denny knows who I am talking about, who, later, served twenty years, maybe more for all know, for a series of armed robberies, I worked my first "clip" in some downtown Adamsville Square jewelry store, Sid’s I think, the one with all the onyx rings on display in the front and the twelve signs about how you could have anything in the place on very easy terms, only a million installments (with interest piling up, of course). No, thanks.

The clip, again for the clueless, is nothing but kids’ stuff, strictly for amateurs because no professional thief would risk his or her good name for such a low-rent payoff. The deal was one guy went in and got the salesperson’s attention while the other guy ripped off whatever was “hanging low on the tree.” In that arrangement I was usually the “tree” guy not because I had quick hands, although come to think of it I did (and big eyes, big greedy eyes for all the booty, and you know what booty means here now since I told you before), but because I didn’t have the knack of talking gibberish to adults. Hell, you probably did the clip yourself, maybe for kicks. And then forgot about it for some other less screwy kick. Not me.

Okay, so at that point maybe every kid, every curious kid ready in whatever manner to challenge authority and I (and most of my then corner boys, although not Denny if I recall correctly) are even. Here is the tie-breaker though. Moving on, I was the "holder" for more expansive enterprises with George H. (who, later, got killed when a drug deal he was promoting, a lonely gringo deal down in Mexico, went south, real two bullet south on some dusty Mex back road on him).

See George was a true artist, a true sneak thief who was able to get into any house by stealth and sheer determination. Mainly houses up in Adams Shore where people actually had stuff worth stealing unlike in the projects where the stuff was so much Bargain Center specials (the local Wal-Mart-like operation of it's day). He needed me for two, no three, things. First, I was the “look-out” and even the clueless know what that means. Secondly, I actually held and carried some of the loot that he passed to me out of the window or door, and one time out a backyard bulkhead (the good stuff, televisions, silverware, a stamp collection, a coin collection, and some other stuff that I have forgotten about, was in the basement family room). Lastly, as George started to draw school and police attention I actually “held” the stuff in a safe location (which I will not disclose here just in case the various statutes of limitations have not run out). That went on for a while but George got busted for something else, some unruly child baloney rap thing, and that was that.

That was just a kid’s gangster moment, right? It was not all larcenies and kid dreams of some “big score” to get himself, and his family, out from under though. It couldn’t be for a kid, or the whole world, poor as it was, would have just collapsed over my head, and I would not be here to honor Denny’s request.

Oh, the different things that came up. Oddball things like Christmas tree bonfires on New Year’s Eve where we scurried like rats just as soon as neighbors put their trees out to be taken away in order to assemble them on the beach ready to be fired up and welcome in the new year. Or annual Halloween hooliganism where we, in a sugar frenzy, worked the neighborhood trick or treat racket hitting every house like the 82nd Airborne Division, or some such elite unit running amok in Baghdad or some Iraqi town ...

Hey, wait a minute, all this is so much eyewash because what, at least in my memory's eye, is the driving "projects" image was the "great awakening." Girls. Girls turning from sticks to shapes just around the time that I started to notice the difference, and being interested in that different if not always sure about what it meant. You don’t need a book to figure that out, although maybe it would have helped. And being fascinated and ill at ease at the same time around them, and being a moonstruck kid on every girl that gave me a passing glance, or what I thought was a passing glance, and the shoe leather-wearing out marathon walking, thinking about what to do about them, especially when the intelligence-gatherers told you about a girl who liked you. And the innocent, mostly dreaded, little petting parties, in dank little basements that served as 'family rooms' for each apartment, trying to be picked by the one you want to pick you and, well, you get the drift. Remind me to tell you some time, and here is where Denny comes in, how we put together, a bunch of corner-less corner boys, a ragtag doo- wop group one summer for the express, the sole, the only purpose of, well, luring girls to the back of the school where we hung out. And it worked.

Now a lot of this is stuff any kid goes through, except just not in "the projects." And some of it is truly "projects" stuff - which way will he go, good or bad? But this next thing kind of ties it together. Just about the time when I was seriously committed to a petty criminal lifestyle, that “holding” stuff with my corner boy comrade George, I found the Thomas Crane Library branch that was then in the Adamsville South Elementary School (now further up the street toward Adamsville Square). And one summer I just started to read every biography or other interesting book they had in the Children's Section. While looking, longingly, over at the forbidden Adult Section on the other side of the room for the good stuff. And I dreamed. Yes, I am a "projects" boy, and I survived to tell the tale. Is that good enough for you, Denny?


Tom Waits Jersey Girl Lyrics

Got no time for the corner boys,
Down in the street makin' all that noise,
Don't want no whores on eighth avenue,
Cause tonight i'm gonna be with you.

'cause tonight i'm gonna take that ride,
Across the river to the jersey side,
Take my baby to the carnival,
And i'll take you all on the rides.

Down the shore everything's alright,
You're with your baby on a saturday night,
Don't you know that all my dreams come true,
When i'm walkin' down the street with you,
Sing sha la la la la la sha la la la.

You know she thrills me with all her charms,
When i'm wrapped up in my baby's arms,
My little angel gives me everything,
I know someday that she'll wear my ring.

So don't bother me cause i got no time,
I'm on my way to see that girl of mine,
Nothin' else matters in this whole wide world,
When you're in love with a jersey girl,
Sing sha la la la la la la.

And i call your name, i can't sleep at night,
Sha la la la la la la.
WORD - Women Organized to Resist and Defend
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We Won't Go Back! We Will Fight Back!

National Day of Actions for Women's Equality Day

Sunday, August 25 - 2:00 PM
Park St. Station - Boston

Click here for the Facebook event
As part of nationwide demonstrations in honor of Women's Equality Day, WORD Boston and other organizations and individuals are joining together for a rally in Boston. Click here to read the full call to action from WORD
WORD NYC Action 03-09-13Across the country, abortion rights, voting rights and workplace protections are under attack. While Black and Brown youth are targeted and face constant persecution, racist police and the George Zimmerman's of the world roam free. Right-wing and corporate forces seek to undo the gains won by the Civil Rights movement, the movement for women’s rights and every progressive movement that has changed the history of this country for the better. Women nationwide are taking the streets to defend the gains of our movements and to push for greater rights and equality for all.
  • Full reproductive rights now: Access to safe, legal abortion and birth control – on demand. We want healthcare that covers these services and access to it for all women. We want the information that we need to stay healthy, including an end to abstinence-only sex education in our schools.
  • Defend women in the workplace: Close the wage gap and provide equal pay for equal work. All jobs must offer maternity leave, access to childcare and an end to discrimination against working mothers. End sexual harassment at work.
  • Stop the budget cuts: Cutting federal, state and local social services punishes poor women. We demand government funding for SNAP, WIC and other social services that millions of working and poor women depend on.
  • We want full equality and respect now: Fight racism, sexism and anti-LGBT bigotry. Stop the exploitation and commercialization of women in mass media. An injury to one is an injury to all!
Shoulder to shoulder, and side by side, join the fight for women's rights and the rights of all oppressed people. Together, our voices will be heard!
For more info and to get involved, call (617) 506-WORD (9073) or email Boston@defendwomensrights.org

CCR Condemns Manning Sentence, Says Whistleblower Should Have Never Been Prosecuted

By: Wednesday August 21, 2013 11:44 am
The following is a press release issued by the Center for Constitutional Rights in response to today’s sentencing of Bradley Manning.
Pfc. Bradley Manning (Illustration by C. Stoeckley)
We are outraged that a whistleblower and a patriot has been sentenced on a conviction under the Espionage Act. The government has stretched this archaic and discredited law to send an unmistakable warning to potential whistleblowers and journalists willing to publish their information. We can only hope that Manning’s courage will continue to inspire others who witness state crimes to speak up.
This show trial was a frontal assault on the First Amendment, from the way the prosecution twisted Manning’s actions to blur the distinction between whistleblowing and spying to the government’s tireless efforts to obstruct media coverage of the proceedings. It is a travesty of justice that Manning, who helped bring to light the criminality of U.S. forces in Iraq and Afghanistan, is being punished while the alleged perpetrators of the crimes he exposed are not even investigated. Every aspect of this case sets a dangerous precedent for future prosecutions of whistleblowers – who play an essential role in democratic government by telling us the truth about government wrongdoing – and we fear for the future of our country in the wake of this case.
We must channel our outrage and continue building political pressure for Manning’s freedom. President Obama should pardon Bradley Manning, and if he refuses, a presidential pardon must be an election issue in 2016.
The Center for Constitutional Rights non-profit legal advocacy organization based in New York City dedicated to advancing and protecting the rights guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
Posted with permission (taken from Firedoglake). Please share; will take this press release and the one
from VFP to the sentencing protests.



"Governments derive their power from the consent of the governed."--US Declaration, 1776
"Consent is not 'consent' if it is not informed."--Edward Snowden, 2013
Coombs, Bradley, Amnesty Appeal for Presidential Pardon
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Bradley Manning Support Network

Outrageously sentenced to 35 years in prison:
Campaign for presidential pardon begins

Outrageously, Bradley Manning was sentenced today to 35 years in prison - a sentence meant to carry a chilling message to anyone considering future exposures of government illegalities. Bradley’s lawyer David Coombs held a press conference immediately following the announcement where he shared a profound letter written by Bradley Manning which will be delivered to the White House asking for a presidential pardon. He also recounted that when faced with the sentence, Bradley Manning spoke with integrity and composure: “I’m going to get through this” he said.
In response to this travesty of justice, Amnesty International and the Bradley Manning Support Network launched a White House petition today calling for Bradley Manning’s sentence to be commuted to time served. We must accumulate 100,000 signatures in the next month. Please share this petition widely!

Sign the petition.

Coinciding with the campaign to pardon Bradley Manning, a new website has been launched inviting people to show their support by submitting a photo holding a “Pardon Bradley Manning” sign, along with a personal message. View photos and submit your own here.

Lawyer David Coombs reads powerful letter by Bradley Manning

This profound statement by Bradley Manning was read by David Coombs at the press conference:
The decisions that I made in 2010 were made out of the concern for my country and the world that we live in. Since the tragic events of 9/11, our country has been at war. We have been at war with an enemy that chooses not to meet us on a traditional battlefield. Due to this fact, we’ve had to alter our methods of combatting the risk posed to us and our way of life.
I initially agreed with these methods and chose to volunteer to help defend our country. It was not until I was in Iraq and reading secret military reports on a daily basis that I started to question the morality of what we were doing. It was at this time that I realized that our efforts to meet the risk posed to us by the enemy, we had forgotten our humanity. We consciously elected to devalue life both in Iraq and Afghanistan. When we engaged those that we perceived were the enemy, we sometimes killed innocent civilians. Whenever we killed innocent civilians, instead of accepting responsibility for our conduct, we elected to hide behind the veil of national security and classified information in order to avoid any public accountability.
In our zeal to kill the enemy, we internally debated the definition of torture. We held individuals at Guantanamo for years without due process. We inexplicably turned a blind eye to torture and executions by the Iraqi government. And we stomached countless other acts in the name of our war on terror.
Patriotism is often the cry extolled when morally questionable acts are advocated by those in power. When these cries of patriotism drown any logically based dissension, it is usually an American soldier that is given the order to carry out some ill-conceived mission. Our nation has had similar dark moments for the virtues of democracy—the Trail of Tears, the Dred Scott decision, McCarthyism and the Japanese-American internment camps—to mention a few. I am confident that many of the actions since 9/11 will one day be viewed in a similar light. As the late Howard Zinn once said, there is not a flag large enough to cover the shame of killing innocent people.
I understand that my actions violated the law. I regret that my actions hurt anyone or harmed the United States. It was never my intent to hurt anyone. I only wanted to help people. When I chose to disclose classified information, I did so out of a love for my country and my sense of duty to others.
If you deny my request for a pardon, I will serve my request knowing that some time you have to pay a heavy price to live in a free society. I will gladly pay that price if it means we could have a country that is truly conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all women and men are created equal.”

Bradley's family also responded to the sentence through David Coombs:
"We are saddened and disappointed in today's sentence. We continue to believe that Brad's intentions were good, and that he believed he was acting in the best interests of his country.
We would again like to thank his extraordinary defense team for their tireless efforts on his behalf, and of course we want to thank Courage to Resist and the Bradley Manning Support Network and the thousands of supporters around the world who have stood with Brad throughout this ordeal.
Please know that his fight is not over."

Help us continue to cover 100%
of Bradley's legal fees! Donate today.

Boston Workers Alliance MLK 50th Anniversary March - Continue the Struggle for Jobs, Justice and Freedom!
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Boston Workers Alliance

411 Blue Hill Ave, Dorchester MA 02121 (617) 606-3580, (617) 606-3582 (fax)

PRESS RELEASE

Boston’s Unfinished March for Jobs, Freedom & Justice
An Event Marking the 50th Anniversary of the March on Washington

The Boston Workers Alliance, Inc. has issued a clarion call for a mobilization in Boston on the 50th Anniversary of the March on Washington. A coalition of neighborhood organizations, base building community organizing groups, labor unions, civil rights organizations, and faith communities will gather to mark “re-remember, re-imagine, and relive the March for our times.

We are holding Boston’s Unfinished March for Jobs, Freedom & Justice on Wednesday, August 28, 2013 4:30pm on the Boston Common.

With the recent tragic verdict in the Zimmerman case, and the loss of the Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, we feel called to organize and mobilize to address the continued devaluing of Black people, Black bodies, and Black political and economic interests. The recent developments remind us that many of us are still vulnerable to violence at the hands of police and citizens who wrongfully believe that they have the power to track police and violate the dignity of Black people. Equally important is our call to respect the rights and dignity of immigrants seeking their full human rights. High unemployment and underemployment of Black and Brown people remains persistent, structural and unaddressed.

Fifty years ago the movement connected these issues with the March on Washington for Jobs & Freedom. It is time for us to look anew at the significance of the moment because of the Fierce Urgency of Now.

Boston’s Unfinished March for Jobs, Freedom & Justice
Wednesday, August 28, 2013 at 4:30
Boston Common
Points of Contact:
Phil Reason, Director of Organizing, Boston Workers Alliance
(617) 606-3580, phil@bostonworkersalliance.org
Chuck Wynder, Jr., Executive Director, Boston Workers Alliance
(617) 238-5751, chuck@bostonworkersalliance.org

As part of the National JUSTICE for TRAYVON MARTIN Assemblies on the 50th Anniversary of the March on Washington for Jobs and Justice, Boston Peoples Power Assemblies calls on everyone to participate in the Boston Workers Alliance Rally on the Boston Common at 4:30 PM on August 28.


BOSTON PEOPLES POWER ASSEMBLIES, c/o Action Center, 284 Amory St, Jamaica Plain, MA 02130 617-286-6574
DONATE to the Action Center
Donate with WePay (support ongoing organizing against war, racism and sexism and for economic justice)
Wednesday, August 28:

Boston's Unfinished March for Jobs, Justice & Freedom

4:30pm on the Common.


https://fbcdn-sphotos-b-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash3/c0.0.206.205/p206x206/1094991_10153129393020290_1160355283_n.jpgThe Boston Workers Alliance has issued a call for a mobilization on the 50th Anniversary of the March on Washington. Join us on and others on Wednesday, for Boston's Unfinished March for Jobs, Freedom & Justice. We ask you to join us and others as we "re-remember, re-imagine, and relive" the March for our times and context. The trial in the Zimmerman case and its disavowal of Trayvon Martin's humanity, dignity and personhood is a strike against all of our freedom. The Supreme Court decision that invalidates Section 4 and effectively Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act is a reminder of that fight for our political empowerment continues. The violence that these developments pose to our communities is significant and real. So too, is our the ongoing and persistent long-term unemployment and unemployment of people in our communities. The link between the mass incarceration and the verdict in the Zimmerman trial reinforce the message that Jim Crow, Jane Crow, New Jim Crow are alive and pose threats to us collectively - our families and communities.

DPPers are urged to meet at 4:15pm outside the Park Street T-stop



BILL FLETCHER: Claiming and Teaching the 1963 March on Washington

Teaching about the March on Washington presents a series of challenges precisely because it involves counteracting sanitized textbooks and demythologizing not only the march, but also the Black Freedom Struggle—the Civil Rights Movement, as it became known… We can all do justice to this anniversary by asking the right questions and providing the actual historical context in which the 1963 March unfolded. More so, we can also offer, as Rustin asked the marchers in 1963, our “personal commitment to the struggle for jobs and freedom for Americans. . .and the achievement of social peace through social justice. How do you pledge?” More


* * * *

Another event in South Boston that evening:

Beacon to the Dream:

10,000 lanterns to encircle Castle Island South Boston, Honoring the 50th anniversary of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr’s, I have a Dream speech

“Darkness cannot drive out darkness, only light can.” Martin Luther King Jr.

Wednesday, August 28:

7-9pm, Castle Island South Boston, MA

Includes screening of Dr. Kings’ I Have a Dream Speech on the Walls of Fort Independence; Musical Program Nancy Armstrong Alan Rias Ja-Naé Duane; Lantern Walk and Community celebration of Inclusion

You are invited to take a cultural action by carrying a lantern to Castle Island in South Boston, a symbolic gesture, moving beyond diversity to inclusion, honoring the 50th anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech. The hope is to have several thousand lanterns encircle Pleasure Bay. The event, which we are calling “Beacon to the Dream,” is also invitation for artists from all over Boston to become part of an evening long program that will celebrate the richness and diversity of The City of Boson!


* * * *

JOBS NOT JAILS!


Boston Workers Alliance (BWA) and EPOCA (Ex-prisoners and Prisoners Organizing for Community Advancement) launched a new Jobs Not Jails statewide campaign and coalition on July 13 (more info here).


Corporate America's New Profit Center: Put as Many People in Jail as Possible

Turn unemployed Americans into criminals. Track them, punish them for any crime possible, take away their rights and throw them into for-profit prisons. Once thrown inside a for-profit prison, an inmate needs food, housing, healthcare and other services. This means huge profits for capitalists. They’re raking in tens of thousands of dollars per prisoner per year – hundreds of percent more than Roosevelt paid to simply put them back to work. And turning unemployed Americans into very profitable prisoners is a booming business. More


Two major actions are planned:

---a petition campaign, 50,000 signature goal: against the planned prison construction; for use of those resources for jobs; directed at the state legislators and the governor; signatures to be gathered between now and March 31, 2014.
---a big rally on Boston Common, 10,000 people goal, to be held in April, 2014; same message and targets.


 
 
Taking the Next Step


 

Sisters and Brothers, Comrades,





This October 7 at 5 pm



veterans and allies will gather at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Plaza in NYC, as we did last year, when 25 veterans and allies were arrested as we peacefully remembered the fallen, reaffirmed our commitment to ending war, exposed the lies and betrayals of U.S. wars and stood with dignity and resolve for our inalienable right to assemble.


The police normally do not bother anyone passing through or lingering at the Memorial at any hour although there is an arbitrary 10 pm closing time posted. We were arrested slightly after 10 pm as we read the names of the fallen and placed flowers at the base of the memorial wall.

Prior to 10 PM we had speakers, Vietnam, Iraq and Afghan war vets as well as non vets who exposed the lies and betrayals of the Vietnam war and made the connections between U.S. wars of empire, militarism, poverty and environmental devastation.

Subsequently 12 of us went to trial and after 5 days of compelling testimony had a very interesting and somewhat unprecedented verdict of guilty and then a

dismissal of all charges, “in the interest of justice.”


We are filing a federal suit to challenge the 10 PM closing time and are involving NY City Council members in the struggle to overturn this ordinance restricting our right to assemble. We claim the right to be at that open plaza place
of memories at any time day or night as is the case at most war memorials.
In 2012 we stated on our web site, “On this day and at this place, our demands are straightforward:
We call for an end to the 12-year war in Afghanistan.
We call for an end to all U.S. wars of aggression.
We will remember those who have fallen.
We will stand for our right, duty and sworn oath, to defend the Constitution and to assemble and organize.

The deeper issue is that we recognize, with no illusions, that the ghosts of Stalin, HItler, Mussolini have occupied the elite ruling class of the U.S., U.K. and their minions. We are in the grips of a efficient, ruthless and still partially disguised system of totalitarian fascism. All those of us who understand this, should also understand and take it to heart that many of us will face difficult times ahead.


“State power is to be, from now on, unchecked, unfettered and unregulated. And those who do not accept unlimited state power, always the road to tyranny, will be ruthlessly persecuted.”

-Chris Hedges


Most of us, especially white, privileged males (and females - somewhat less privileged) still live relatively comfortable and safe lives. This will probably not last.

We see signs of

encroaching repression and state surveillance all around. Being a white male - or female has not protected truth-tellers like Edward Snowden, Bradley Manning (35 years for revealing the truth), Thomas

Tamm




,


John Kiriakou




, Jesselyn Radack, and many others either pursued and harassed relentlessly by the government or sitting behind bars already.
 
This is not to forget the multitudes of sorely oppressed people of color and indigenous

 

women behind bars, and men, such as Mumia Abu Jamal, Leonard Peltier, many in solitary for decades.


Sooner or later, many of us may face more severe repression than an overnight in jail for civil resistance. This being the obvious reality, my question is - how much are a few more years of comfort and relative safety worth, while countless millions of living beings suffer and while the lives and future of our children and their children are increasingly endangered?

There is a sense of urgency.

Do we expect our highly paid, comfortable, so-called “democratically elected” representatives to change the system - to change the corporate machine that gives them wealth, prestige and comfort? The hope many decent people believed in 5 years ago has turned into a cruel and bitter disappointment.

We cannot expect a system, rotten from the beginning with slavery, genocide, wars for profit and empire, to voluntarily change itself or its essence. More likely, as all entrenched systems of power have done, from Rome to the Third Reich, it will seek to maintain itself until outside forces and inside decay cause collapse.

Let us put ourselves for a moment in the place of the



Vietnamese, the Iraqis, the Afghan people, indigenous people worldwide, poor people of color right here, who every day see U.S. corporate militarism destroying the lives of their women, children, incarcerating and torturing their men and women and stealing land lived upon for generations.


As Martin Luther King Jr. said on



April 4,1967 at Riverside Church in New York City,


"Somehow this madness must cease. . . we are at the moment when our lives must be placed on the line if our nation is to survive its own folly. Every man (and woman) of humane convictions must decide on the protest that best suits his convictions, but we must all protest."








Martin Luther King Jr. was not speaking hyperbolically, his words were literal - he gave his life exactly one year later.





"Somehow this madness must cease . . . "



The words he spoke 46 years ago ring even more true today:

“These are revolutionary times. All over the globe men are revolting against old systems of exploitation and oppression, and out of the wounds of a frail world, new systems of justice and equality are being born. The shirtless and barefoot people of the land are rising up as never before.”





The question of our times is: can we follow Martin’s lead and go beyond fear, embrace a willingness to sacrifice, which often means increased risk, to take one more step into that unknown and dangerous revolutionary zone, that zone where greater freedom and strength awaits?

There are many steps we can take and each of us has to decide what we must do, but we must act.

Think about joining us, as once again in October, veterans

and allies resist police and state repression of our right to assemble, our right to remember and speak out about the lies, the betrayals of this system.





Vietnam Army Medic, Mike Hastie arrested last Oct.7



. Picture Ellen Davidson


Join members of Veterans For Peace on


October 7th at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in NYC as we send a powerful message to the powers that be and to the public, that we, veterans and allies will stand for our rights and all people’s right to live freely and express themselves without fear.


For more information and to be involved, e-mail



StopTheseWars@PopularResistance.org.


Take the next step.


FREE CHELSEA MANNING! (The Heroic Soldier Wikileaks Whistle-Blower Formerly Known As Bradley)
 
 

 

Sign the White House Petition Now!


What a week it has been for Chelsea (formerly Bradley) Manning. After the young Army whistle-blower was sentenced to an outrageous 35 years in prison, she chose to reveal her true identity, the one she has felt ever since childhood. She is a female in a male body.

"Why now?" some may ask. Bradley/Chelsea's struggle has always been for truth and transparency. Apparently, she did not think it was a good idea to make this a full-blown issue in the midst of a military court martial. But now that the court martial is over, Chelsea wants us all to know who she is, and she is asking us to give her the respect of calling her by her chosen name.

Veterans For Peace is more than happy to comply. We will continue to fight for freedom for this courageous young whistleblower, as well as for her rights as a transgender female in prison.

Amnesty International and the Bradley Manning Support Network, which will soon be changing its name, have launched a White House petition calling on President Obama to "Pardon Bradley Manning." This petition was launched immediately after sentencing and before Bradley asked to be called Chelsea. It is too late to change the wording of this petition now, as it already has been signed by over 12,000 people, of the 100,000 now required for a White House response. This also remains her legal name, for the time being.

This White House petition is the most important and timely initiative, among many. We have only 27 more days to gain 88,000 additional signatures. Please go there now and sign this petition. Ask all your friends and allies to do the same.

If you are going to the White House petition site for the first time, you will be asked to register with your name, residential address and email address. Please do not be put off by this extra step or be overly concerned about your privacy (they already know where you live).

Soon Veterans For Peace will begin a letter-writing campaign to General Buchanan, to be part of a packet for sentence reduction that lawyer David Coombs will present him in November. General Buchanan's will announce his decision in December. So you may wish to begin working on those letters. But for now, please help us get to 100,000 signatures on the White House petition.

Learn more about the petition here.

http://pardon.bradleymanning.org/

Go straight to the White House petition, here.

http://wh.gov/lgG58