Saturday, December 15, 2018

Veterans For Peace: No Troops to the Border!

Veterans For Peace: No Troops to the Border!

Veterans For Peace strongly condemns the recent announcement that up to 15,000 active duty military personnel may be sent to the U.S. southern border. These troops will join the additional National Guard units that were sent last year, increasing the militarization of our borders at an alarming rate. Our immigration laws and enforcement tactics have long been at a crisis point and we are now witnessing an even more draconian surge in the use of force to prop up failed policies.
Veterans For Peace calls on all our members and all veterans who see the inhumanity and injustice of the current policies to call their Congressional Representative and Senators to demand the military be pulled back from the border and that the members of the approaching caravan be treated with dignity and processed according to international humanitarian standards as refugees. We call on all service members participating in the border deployment to follow the long American tradition of listening to their conscience and remember that they have no obligation to follow illegal orders. (For questions on military rights, contact the GI Rights Hotline or Courage to Resist)
The U.S. government, instead of welcoming the approaching refugees, the majority of whom will seek asylum under completely legal processes, is treating individuals and families fleeing to the U.S. as if they are "terrorists" (even when "counterterrorism" officials within the administration are stating that no such people exist within the caravan). The majority of these refugees are fleeing from violence in Honduras and a political situation United States' actions have made worse.
The U.S. government's claim that active duty troops are providing only innocuous support services are misleading. This is the introduction of U.S. military force as a deterrent to those who are pursuing their rights as asylum seekers fleeing from extreme poverty and violence in their homelands, much of it due to U.S policies. The U.S. is required under international humanitarian standards to welcome those seeking refuge.
Veterans For Peace recognizes that these orders did not happen in a vacuum, but represent a long history over several administrations of racist and violent policies that has perpetuated U.S. wars across the world and horrific domestic policies that created ICE, massive immigration detention centers and a wall that already splits towns and separates friends and families. However, the Trump administration has escalated, at an alarming pace, the implementation of new dangerous measures. President Trump is moving to fulfill on the promises of his campaign that caused an upsurge of hateful sentiment in our nation and spurred a rise in fear and anger.
Additionally, Veterans For Peace is not only concerned about the safety of individuals and families fleeing violence and the increased militarization of the border but we are extremely concerned about the continued disregard of federal law. Federal law, namely the Posse Comitatus Act, prohibits the deployment of active duty troops on domestic soil and the U.S. Government continues to ignore laws in favor of increasing militarization of U.S. domestic policy.
As military veterans from WWII to the current era of conflicts, who have trained for, and in many cases, fought in U.S. wars, we know that current U.S. policies have not only failed to bring peace but are morally bankrupt and we do not believe that more military at the border is rooted in justice or compassion.
It is more important than ever that veterans stand up, speak out and organize to disrupt the dangerous escalation of racist and unjust policies, both at home and abroad. We, as veterans, know that peace is possible, but only if resources are directed towards caring for one another, not perpetuating militarization across the globe.

Quick Links

From Veterans For Peace -Deployed to the Border: A Test of Conscience for GIs

Deployed to the Border: A Test of Conscience for GIs

James Branum of the Military Law Task Force of the NLG, has just written a legal memo for soldiers deployed/facing deployment to the border, explaining orders violations and the law surrounding refusal of unlawful orders.
"Critical legal information for US servicemembers concerned about the legality of orders to deploy to the US-Mexico border
The Trump Administration's political stunt of trying to block asylum seekers from reaching the United States, even if it requires the use of force, raises serious legal and ethical questions for military servicemembers deployed for "support operations" at the border.
The Military Law Task Force of the National Lawyers Guild shares the concerns of organizations such as Veterans For Peace, Courage to Resist, and others, that US servicemembers are being given illegal orders. We are also troubled about the lack of effective legal alternatives for service members dealing with possible illegal orders and believe it is essential that members of the military are fully informed about their rights and responsibilities under the law. In this memorandum, we will discuss briefly some the legal challenges that a servicemember might face when deciding whether to disobey a possibly illegal order."
You can also read our statement on the deployment of troops to the border.

BREAKING: 56 Senators vote to pass Yemen resolution MoveOn Civic Action Iram Ali

MoveOn Civic Action Iram Ali<moveon-help@list.moveon.org>
To  
Dear MoveOn member,
There's two huge news updates for you from our campaign to end U.S. military involvement in the Yemen conflict. 
✨ First news highlight: The Senate just overwhelmingly voted to officially pass the Yemen War Powers Resolution, introduced by Senators Bernie Sanders, Mike Lee, and Chris Murphy.1 
Senators have chosen to move toward ending U.S. complicity in the Saudi-led attacks in Yemen, where the humanitarian crisis is growing worse by the day and an estimated 85,000 children have already died.
Unfortunately, the House refused to move forward because of a measure that blocked a House vote on the Yemen conflict—and specifically because Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer chose not to whip Democrats against this measure. This was a failure that shouldn't be repeated again.
With this momentum from a strong bipartisan Senate vote and a new Democratic Congress in three weeks, we have a real chance to finally end U.S. involvement in this war in January.   
And let's be clear: this vote—with 56 senators voting in favor—is a huge grassroots victory powered by a broad movement, including MoveOn members like you. Check out what we accomplished together.   
✨ Second news highlight: On the eve of the vote, the U.N. successfully brokered a ceasefire in the port city of Hodeida, which is vital to getting aid supplies into Yemen for the millions of people that are suffering.2
This same ceasefire agreement could have happened nearly two years ago, saving tens of thousands of lives.  
As we've said from the beginning: Passing the war powers resolutions and holding Saudi Arabia accountable is not just to get the U.S. out of this unauthorized conflict. The external pressure that this will create, and has created, is vital to push the warring parties toward a peace agreement and an end to this horrific war. 
And there is still work to do to ensure Congress continues to build this pressure in January.
When I sent a breaking news email last week following the huge preliminary vote in the Senate, I noted how far we had come in this fight. When this was a fringe issue, we laid 5,000 flowers in front of the Capitol Building to garner attention to the unfolding humanitarian crisis claiming the lives of thousands of children.
This was at a time when few in the media or D.C. could have imagined what happened today on the floor of the U.S. Senate was even possible.
With 56 Senators voting for the resolution, things are finally shifting. We have momentum on our side to pressure the warring parties—especially the Saudi coalition—to stop the war in Yemen and to build out a different type of U.S. global policy. 
Share on Facebook 
Share on Twitter 
Thanks for all you do. 
–Iram, Schuyler, Mark, Erica, and the rest of the team
Sources: 
1. "Senate votes to end U.S. support for Saudi war in Yemen," CBS News, December 13, 2018
https://act.moveon.org/go/61603?t=23&akid=222154%2E38417624%2EUVwGOC
2. "Yemen's warring sides agree to ceasefire in critical port city," Axios, December 13, 2018
https://act.moveon.org/go/61590?t=25&akid=222154%2E38417624%2EUVwGOC
Want to support our work to build a progressive foreign policy? For too long, our global policies have been based around the interests of weapons manufacturers, detrimental alliances with those who are committing human rights abuses, and xenophobia and anti-Muslim racism that scapegoats some of the most vulnerable communities in the country. Now, we have a chance to start changing that. Will you stand with us and start a weekly contribution today?
Contributions to MoveOn.org Civic Action are not tax deductible as charitable contributions for federal income tax purposes. This email was sent to Alfred Johnson on December 14, 2018. To change your email address or update your contact info, click here. To remove yourself from this list, click here.

Help Stop Closing the U mass Joiner Center and several other

VFP Smedley<vfpsmedley@gmail.com>
We need Lots of Smedleys with flags for this !!!!
Tuesday 12/18 @ 2pm at the state house



Dear UMB and Joiner Friends, Students, Faculty, and Staff,

You're invited to join us next Tuesday, 12/18 at 2:00 p.m. at the Massachusetts State House for a presentation in front of the Boston Delegation, our local Boston-area State Reps and Senators. The Joiner, along with five other Centers and Institutes, will be advocating for the value of our mission to the campus and the Boston community. In the midst of serious budget cuts on campus the Joiner Institute along with other Centers and Institutes are being threatened with closure, harming the Joiner significantly starting this July. We would love to show support from our constituents, students, veterans, and teachers who have worked with us over the years and know the value of the Joiner mission, and that of our other urban Centers and Institutes.

Please RSVP to me if you are interested in joining us at the State House next Tuesday at 2:00 p.m. We will meet at 1:00 p.m. at the Black Seed Cafe on Tremont St next to Park St. station.

Hope to see some of you next week. Good luck with finals!

All best,


Mitch Manning
Associate Director
William Joiner Institute for the Study of War and Social Consequences 
UMass Boston
Office: 617-287-5863

A View From The Local Boston Left- U.S. WARS ABROAD INCREASE INEQUALITY AT HOME

WARS ABROAD, WARS AT HOME


U.S. WARS ABROAD INCREASE INEQUALITY AT HOME
The United States’ descent, since the late 1970s, into quasi-oligarchic levels of wealth concentration is a story of globalization, declining union membership, and technological change, among other factors. But one explanation is often missing from this list, and that is the fact that the United States is a country at war.  The U.S. military intervention in Afghanistan is currently in its seventeenth year. Together with the Iraq war and an array of “War on Terror” operations spanning the globe, such military engagement has cost the United States dearly in both blood and treasure. By one estimate, the United States’ post-9/11 military campaigns have cost the country all of $5.6 trillion. When a bill is that large, the means by which a country chooses to pay it will profoundly affect its economy, to the point of helping determine who gets rich and who stays poor…  U.S. leaders have preferred to finance war by borrowing money while cutting taxes. This method is politically expedient, but it exacerbates inequality by benefitting wealthy citizens while burdening those with lower incomes. Unfortunately, there is little indication that lawmakers will embrace a different funding method anytime soon.    More

Here's why Green New Deal advocates should address militarism
Even those congresspeople who want to seriously address the climate crisis, however, fail to grapple with the simultaneous crisis of militarism. The war on terror unleashed in the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attack has led to almost two decades of unchecked militarism. We are spending more money on our military than at any time in history. Endless wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, Yemen, Syria and elsewhere are still raging, costing us trillions of dollars and creating humanitarian disasters. Old treaties to control nuclear arms are unraveling at the same time that conflicts with the major powers of Russia and China are heating up. Where is the call for the New Peace Deal that would free up hundreds of billions from the overblown military budget to invest in green infrastructure? Where is the call to close a majority of our nation’s 800-plus military bases overseas, bases that are relics of World War II and are basically useless for military purposes? Where is the call for seriously addressing the existential threat posed by nuclear weapons?  More

Image result for cartoon citizens angry against wall streetWALL STREET, BANKS, AND ANGRY CITIZENS
In today's global economy, financial security is increasingly the property of the 1%. No surprise, then, that, as a sense of economic instability continued to grow over the past decade, angst turned to anger, a transition that -- from the U.S. to the Philippines, Hungary to Brazil, Poland to Mexico -- has provoked a plethora of voter upheavals. In the process, a 1930s-style brew of rising nationalism and blaming the “other” -- whether that other was an immigrant, a religious group, a country, or the rest of the world -- emerged…  Ultimately, what transcends geography and geopolitics is an underlying level of economic discontent sparked by twenty-first-century economics and a resulting Grand Canyon-sized global inequality gap that is still widening. Whether the protests go left or right, what continues to lie at the heart of the matter is the way failed policies and stop-gap measures put in place around the world are no longer working, not when it comes to the non-1% anyway. People from Washington to Paris,London to Beijing, increasingly grasp that their economic circumstances are not getting better and are not likely to in any presently imaginable future, given those now in power.   More

Elizabeth Warren’s strategic partnership with House Democrats for Progressive Bills
Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) is pushing three big ideas — cracking down hard on DC lobbying, giving workers more of a say in how corporations operate, and creating 3 million new affordable housing units — and now she has found partners for all of them among key House Democrats. This week, Warren and House Democratic members introduced two of her sweeping bills in the House — the Accountable Capitalism Act, and the American Housing and Economic Mobility Act — to complement ones she has already introduced in the Senate. Her third bill, a broad anti-corruption bill called the Anti-Corruption and Public Integrity Act, was introduced in the House a few weeks ago.   More


*   *   *   *
NEW WARS / OLD WARS – What Could Possibly Go Wrong

Senate Fingers Saudi Bin Salman as Image result for cartoon us war yemenMurderer, Demands End of Yemen War
Seven Republicans joined the Democrats in the Senate in voting for resolutions that 1) assigned the blame for the murder of the dissident Saudi journalist and Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi to Saudi crown prince Mohammed Bin Salman and 2) invoked the War Powers Act of 1973 in calling for an end to US military involvement in the Saudi-led war on Yemen… Just so Trump and his Secretary of Defense, James Mattis, get the message right off the bat, the resolution is entitled “To direct the removal of United States Armed Forces from hostilities in the Republic of Yemen that have not been authorized by Congress.”  The Senators point out that under article I, section 8, clause 11 of the United States Constitution, the Senate has the sole power to declare war, and go on to point out rather testily that Congress has not declared war on Yemen nor was it ever consulted about the US entering the fray against the Houthis or Helpers of God in the Republic of Yemen.   More

The New York Times published a long and heart-wrenching rort on the destruction and suffering in Yemen:

PEACE ACTION: Senate Passes Historic Bill Directing End U.S. Role in Yemen War
“The Trump administration needs to listen to the growing bipartisan consensus in Congress that U.S. support for the Saudi-led war in Yemen must end without delay. With this strong bipartisan action in the Senate, Republican leadership in the House needs to stop blocking the will of the majority and allow a vote in the House without delay. If the Trump administration does not act to end the unconstitutional U.S. role in Yemen, the incoming Congress will move to force its hand next year. “This vote is the culmination of years of work by champions in the Senate like Senators Bernie Sanders (I-VT), Chris Murphy (D-CT), and Mike Lee (R-UT), by peace groups, human rights groups, and political groups from across the political spectrum, and by grassroots activists across the nation demanding Congress take action to end the unconstitutional U.S. role in Yemen. This vote is a testament to the power of political activism, and a reminder that we must continue the struggle for a just and responsible foreign policy, because that struggle makes a difference.”   More

Latest Odds of a Shooting War between NATO and Russia
There has been a proxy war within Ukraine since 2014, with NATO backing Poroshenko’s Ukrainian government and Russia backing the dissidents and armed separatists who speak Russian and identify as Russian in Ukraine’s southeastern Donbass region. But in the Kerch Strait the hostilities are between Russia and Ukraine, with NATO behind Ukraine.  A shooting war will begin if it escalates to where NATO soldiers shoot and kill Russian soldiers or vice versa. Whoever shoots first, the other side will feel compelled to respond, and then there’ll be a war between Russia and NATO or Russia and a NATO nation. We don’t know whether NATO would feel compelled to respond as one if Russians fired on soldiers of individual NATO nations—most likely UK soldiers since the UK is sending more of its Special Forces and already has the largest NATO military presence in Ukraine.   More


12/31 13th annual First Night Against the Wars!

Charlie Welch<cwelch@tecschange.org>
Join us at our 13th annual First Night Against the Wars!

To be held across from Copley Square, Boston, MA.
****NOTE: We will be right in front of the old entrance to the Boston
Public Library, facing the park.****
1 to 6 PM

Invite your friends, make Boston history. We are fighting the biggest
war of all against Washington. Stop the Wars on Afghanistan, Iraq,
Yemen, Syria, Russia, Iran; wars against workers, immigrants, people of
color, LGBTQ folks, women, the environment...this list goes on and on,
so bring your message to Copley as we try to bring in a new year where
we can work together to end war and imperialism. Food will be provided
by Food for Activists!

Co-sponsored by Boston Food for Activists, the Boston May Day Coalition,
the Coalition to Stop the Genocide in Yemen, and Veterans for Peace Boston.

Co-sponsors are welcome!

https://www.facebook.com/events/327877544471442/
<https://www.facebook.com/events/327877544471442/#>
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12/15 "Fighting the Undeclared Emergency in India"

Charlie Welch<cwelch@tecschange.org>
Dorotea Manuela <dorotea.manuela@gmail.com> writes


Globally we are witnessing the rise of tight wing and fascist movements
and governments in response to the failed neoliberal capitalist polices
of the western powers. Working and oppressed Peoples are increasingly
rising to defend themselves and to defeat fascism.

*/Please join encuentro5 community and friends to hear about the
liberation struggles in India. Workers are fighting back and resisting
exploitation, oppression. Our comrades Padma, Pratyush and Somnath will
share their compelling experiences while recently in India. /*
*/
/*
*_When_*: Saturday, December 15^th  at 7pm

*_Where_*: encuentro 5   9A Hamilton Pl,  Boston across from Park Street
Train Station (Green/Red lines) and next to Orpheum Theater

to view flyer http://encuentro5.org/home/

Workers, peasants, Dalits, Muslims, indigenous people and activists are
underattack because of the Indian government’s undeclared emergency.
Dalit activists, intellectuals and human rights lawyers recently have
been arrested under a draconian “anti-terrorist” act. Adivasis
(indigenous people) and peasants, who have been fighting for a fair
price for their crops, have been assaulted and killed. Several people of
Muslim faith and Dalits have also been lynched with political
complicity. As unemployment continues to increase, workers are leading a
precarious existence. Despite the odds, Dalits, Muslims, peasants,
women, workers, and Adivasi continue to resist the increasing fascist
policies of the Indian government. The speakers will focus on this
resistance of the people of India.

*Padma *will talk about the sensational arrests of prominent human
rights activists, lawyers and intellectuals this year using fabricated
charges under the draconian ‘anti terrorist’ laws in India that have
been largely used to suppress dissent.

*Somnath* will discuss some of the everyday crises that the rural poor
face as more and more natural resources are being appropriated by
corporations and the political elite and how communities are coping with it.


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Dear Friend, You will find attached, a PDF of fliers for my January poster exhibits. If you are in the market for political posters, one source is the Syracuse Cultural Workers. They also have other political gifts for sale'


Dear Friend,

You will find attached, a PDF of fliers for my January poster exhibits.

If you are in the market for political posters, one source is the Syracuse Cultural Workers. They also have other political gifts for sale'
Another source of posters is Robbie Conal. I met him in Cambridge Massachusetts, just prior to George Bush invading Iraq. A group of us put up posters, opposing the invasion, around Boston and Cambridge.