This space is dedicated to the proposition that we need to know the history of the struggles on the left and of earlier progressive movements here and world-wide. If we can learn from the mistakes made in the past (as well as what went right) we can move forward in the future to create a more just and equitable society. We will be reviewing books, CDs, and movies we believe everyone needs to read, hear and look at as well as making commentary from time to time. Greg Green, site manager
Friday, October 10, 2014
***Songs
To While The Time By- The Roots Is The Toots
A
YouTube clip to give some flavor to this subject.
Over
the past several years I have been running an occasional series in this space
of songs, mainly political protest songs, you know The Internationale, Union Maid, Which Side Are You On, Viva La Quince
Brigada, Universal Soldier, and such entitled Songs To While The Class Struggle By. And those songs provide our
movement with that combination entertainment/political message that is an art
form that we use to draw the interested around us. Even though today those interested
may be counted rather than countless and the class struggle to be whiled away
is rather one-sidedly going against us at present. The bosses are using every means
from firing to targeting union organizing to their paid propagandists
complaining that the masses are not happy with having their plight groveled in their
faces like they should be while the rich, well, while away in luxury and
comfort.
But
not all life is political, or rather not all music lends itself to some kind of
explicit political meaning yet speaks to, let’s say, the poor sharecropper at
the juke joint on Saturday listening to the country blues, unplugged, kids at
the jukebox listening to high be-bop swing, other kids listening, maybe at that
same jukebox now worn with play and coins listening to some guys from some
Memphis record company rocking and rolling, or adults spending some dough to
hear the latest from Tin Pan Alley or the Broadway musical. And so they too
while away to the various aspects of the American songbook and that rich tradition
is which in honored here.
This
series which could include some protest songs as well is centered on roots
music as it has come down the ages and formed the core of the American
songbook. You will find the odd, the eccentric, the forebears of later musical
trends, and the just plain amusing here. Listen up-Peter Paul Markin
NEW
WARS / OLD WARS – Are You Feeling Safer Now?
A
case could be made that US intervention in Iraq – at the request of its
government – might be legal (if misguided), should the US Congress resolve to
approve it. However, with or without the assent of the Congress, the attacks
inside Syria are violations of international law, regardless of any “coalition
of the willing” outside of UN Security Council agreement. But, lawful or not, it
is still very foolish. . .
STUPID
STUFF: America's Never-Ending War in the Middle East
While
President Obama continues – at least for now – to resist redeploying large
numbers of U.S. soldiers to fight the Islamic State on the ground, the military
components of the anti-Islamic State strategy he has laid out effectively
recommit the United States to its post-9/11 template for never-ending war in the
Middle East. In the end, such an approach can only compound the damage that has
already been done to America’s severely weakened strategic position in the
Middle East by its previous post-9/11 military misadventures… Without doubt,
there needs to be a regional strategy for dealing with the Islamic State. Obama
and his senior advisors pay lip service to this idea. But their notion of a
regional strategy encompasses only established and unrepresentative Sunni
regimes dependent on Washington for their security – e.g., Saudi Arabia, the
rest of the Gulf Cooperation Council, Egypt, and Jordan. More
Here’s
Everything Wrong with the White House’s War on the Islamic State
…with
scarcely a whisper of serious debate, Obama has become the fourth consecutive
U.S. president to launch a war in Iraq—and in fact has outdone his predecessors
by spreading the war to Syria as well… This
was no minor escalation. According to the Washington Post, the United States and
its Arab allies dropped more explosives on Syria in their first engagement there than
U.S. forces had dropped over all of Iraq in the preceding month. It was the
largest single U.S. military operation since NATO’s intervention in Libya was
launched back in 2011… It should bother you that this war is illegal and
constitutional. But even if you’re fed up with the legal niceties of the UN
Security Council and the U.S. Congress, there’s simply no reason to believe that
might is going to make right here… Despite Congress’ approval of $500 million in
new funds to train and arm other Syrian rebels, the CIA—which has been already
been conducting a smaller-scale program in Jordan to do just that—is reportedly
deeply skeptical about the plausibility of this plan, with one member of
Congress reporting that CIA sources had described it as a “fool’s errand.”
More
Question
for Obama’s Syria plan: Who are the 'moderate' rebels?
The
FSA is currently the weakest force on the ground in Syria, a result not only of
inadequate foreign backing compared with that of rival Islamist and extremist
factions, but of its own internal divisions, byzantine leadership structure
(based in Turkey) and rampant corruption…Even some of the FSA’s top commanders admit the group no
longer enjoys the confidence of Syria's political opposition. In an interview
with the Washington Post, one commander called U.S. efforts to patch together the FSA’s disparate
brigades into a united army a "cut and paste of previous FSA failures."
…Many
Syrians who detest Assad are nonetheless unconvinced by any of the armed groups
waging the war, which has claimed nearly 200,000 lives, a toll that is climbing. FSA
brigades have been accused of human rights abuses, such as executing its
prisoners and looting. And, Syrians say, the rebels’ military strategy has
increasingly involved destroying the country’s infrastructure, alienating even
many anti-Assad Syrians. More
U.S.,
anti-Assad rebels in Syria remain at odds over role of al Qaida’s Nusra
Front
To
the United States and its allies, the Nusra Front is a fearsome al Qaida affiliate whose extremist
ideology has no place in a future Syria. To many Syrian rebels, however, Nusra
fighters are vital warriors in the battle to topple President Bashar Assad, even
if the moderates don’t share the group’s end goal of a religious state. This
disconnect has existed since the early days of the Syrian conflict, when the
Obama administration first designated Nusra a foreign terrorist organization…
The moves infuriated rebels and puzzled some analysts, who questioned the wisdom
of attacking groups that, however distasteful, remain the vanguard of the
anti-Assad fight… The risk of empowering an al Qaida affiliate is a small price
to pay for Nusra’s contributions on the battlefield, said Jeffrey White, a
former senior Defense Intelligence Agency analyst who’s now with the
[AIPAC-founded] Washington Institute for Near East Policy… The U.S.-backed
opposition coalition’s leader called on the United States to reconsider the
designation, more than two dozen rebel factions signed a petition of support for
Nusra, and thousands more took to the streets in protest, some carrying signs
that read, “We are all Nusra Front.” More
Beheadings
v. Drone Assassinations
Why
do Americans hate beheadings but love drone killings? What accounts for our
irrational response to these two very different forms of illegal execution, one
very profitable and high-tech, usually resulting in many collateral deaths and
injuries, and the other very low-tech, but provoking fear and righteous
condemnation from the citizens whose country prefers the high-tech?
…there’s
reason to question that being killed by drone bombs is any less horrible then
death by beheading. Some drone pilots have talked about watching those they’ve
hit try crawling away with severed limbs or lie bleeding to death for hours.
More
The
War the Pentagon Was Hoping For
As
the U.S. escalates its bombing campaign against ISIS (or IS or ISIL), U.S.
officials seem to have found an enemy we can all love to hate and fear. ISIS
beheads hostages, conducts brutal ethnic cleansing and has links to Al-Qaeda.
DC power players have eagerly embraced a small war made to order to restore
America's wounded military pride after the first Iraq debacle. The contrived
nature of the narrative presented by U.S. officials was evident from the outset
if one cared to look behind the propaganda screen… For
Americans, this campaign brings together many of the familiar themes of the
history of U.S. military expansion since the end of the Cold War, and it raises
many of the same questions and problems. U.S. officials are evidently
encouraged by similarities to the 1991 First Gulf War, a model they revere but
have failed to replicate: an unpopular enemy; a limited objective; domestic
political support; a broad international coalition to do the fighting and pay
for it; and the promise of "victory" over a villainous enemy to win the acclaim
of a grateful world.More
Defense
Contractors Are Making a Killing
Stock
prices for Lockheed Martin, General Dynamics, Raytheon and Northrop Grumman set
all-time record highs last week as it became increasingly clear that President
Obama was committed to a massive, sustained air war in Iraq and Syria. It’s
nothing short of a windfall for these and other huge defense contractors, who’ve
been getting itchy about federal budget pressures that threatened to slow
the rate of increase in military spending. Now, with U.S. forces literally
blowing through tens of millions of dollars of munitions a day, the industry is
not just counting on vast spending to replenish inventory, but hoping for a new
era of reliance on supremely expensive military hardware. More
Dog
Bites, Workplace Accidents Killed More Americans Than Terrorism Last
Year
With
the Middle East grabbing headlines, many Americans are concerned about
terrorism. A CNN poll [3] from earlier this month found that 53% of
Americans are concerned that there will be terrorist attacks, up from 39% in
2011. But while fear of terrorism has skyrocketed, the facts are that few
Americans are ever injured or killed by an act of terror, and our country has
blown the threat of violence from terrorists way out of proportion. In fact, dog
bites actually killed more Americans last year than terrorism—with 32 fatalities from dogs [4] logged by non-profit DogBites.org
and eight fatalities from domestic terror attacks [5] (according
to the University of Maryland Global Terrorism Database) and 16 from
attacks overseas [6] (according to the State Department).More
The
War Against ISIS Could Cost American Taxpayers $1.5 Billion A
Month
"On
an annual basis, I estimate the operations will cost somewhere between $15 and
$20 billion," Gordon Adams, a professor of U.S. foreign policy at American
University, told The Huffington Post… The majority of the $15 to $20 billion
total comes from airstrikes, which Adams estimates will cost about $8 billion a
year… On Thursday, the Pentagon estimated the cost of U.S. military operations in
Iraq and Syria to be roughly $7 million to $10 million per day -- or about $210
million to $300 million per month. More
We
Could Have Hired 10,000 Teachers– Instead, We Got a War
Our
war against ISIS has already cost between $780 and $930 million so far,
according to the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments. That is enough
money to hire 10,000 teachers to work for a year. That, of course, represents
only a fraction of the money we will spend on a operation President Obama warned
could take years. Depending on the style of the military engagement the center
estimates this latest war could cost ‘as little’ as $2.4 billion a year, if it
is only low intensity air operations, or as much as $22 billion a year if it
requires a large ground contingent. More
Why
Obama’s assurance of ‘no boots on the ground’ isn’t so reassuring
Here’s
what “no boots on the ground” apparently doesn’t mean: It doesn’t mean that no
U.S. troops will be sent to Iraq or Syria. Reportedly there are already 1,600 U.S. military personnel in Iraq. True, they’re present
in an “advisory” role, not in a combat role — but surely one lesson of Iraq and
Afghanistan is that combat has a habit of finding its way to noncombat
personnel… It’s also hard to know what publicly reported troop numbers really
mean. When the Pentagon issues a Boots on the Ground report (known colloquially
as a “BOG report”), it often excludes military personnel on “temporary duty” in
combat areas, even though temporary duty may mean an assignment spanning five or
six months. Similarly, Special Operations personnel assigned to work under CIA
auspices are often left out of the BOG numbers. This makes it hard to know just
who’s being counted when officials say there are 1,600 military personnel in
Iraq. More
Poll:
70% of troops say no more boots on the ground in Iraq
As
the tide of war rises again in the Middle East, the military’s rank and file are
mostly opposed to expanding the new mission in Iraq and Syria to include sending
a large number of U.S. ground troops into combat, according to a Military Times
survey of active-duty members... The reader survey asked more than 2,200
active-duty troops this question: “In your opinion, do you think the U.S.
military should send a substantial number of combat troops to Iraq to support
the Iraqi security forces?” Slightly more than 70 percent responded: “No.”
“It’s their country, it’s their business. I don’t think major ‘boots on the
ground’ is the right answer,” said one Army infantry officer and prior-enlisted
soldier who deployed to Iraq three times. More
OPPOSING
PLUTOCRACY, ENDLESS WAR and A DESTROYED PLANET
TODD
GITLIN: As the Globe Warms, So Does the Climate Movement
Less
than two weeks have passed and yet it isn’t too early to say it: the People’s
Climate March changed the social map -- many maps, in fact, since hundreds of
smaller marches took place in 162 countries. That march in New York City, spectacular as it may have been with its 400,000 participants, joyous as it was, moving as it was
(slow-moving, actually, since it filled more than a mile’s worth of wide avenues
and countless side streets), was no simple spectacle for a day. It represented
the upwelling of something that matters so much more: a genuine global climate
movement. More
WAR
AND CLIMATE CHANGE: Time to Connect the Dots
In
the decade between 2001 and 2011, global military spending increased by an
estimated 92 percent, according to Stockholm International Peace Research, although it fell by
1.9 percent in real terms in 2013 to $1,747 billion. At the same time, according
to the draft of a new study from the International Peace Bureau (1), almost 10
gigatons of carbon dioxide equivalent has been released into the atmosphere.
According to the Global Carbon Project, 2014 emissions are set to reach a
record high. Could there be some connection between rising military expenditures
and rising carbon emissions? …there
can be no climate change mitigation without peace and no peace without moving
swiftly to provide the poorer parts of the world with the resources needed to
adapt to climate change and build resilient economies. The trillions that are
spent on weapons rob national treasuries of the resources needed to provide
funds for climate mitigation and adaptation.More
Why
Have Policymakers Abandoned the Working Class?
Why
do we hear so much about the need to raise interest rates now rather than later,
or get the deficit under control immediately despite the risks to households who
are most vulnerable to an economic downturn? Those who are most in need – those
least able to withstand a spell of unemployment or other negative economic
events – have the least power in our political system. With the decline in
unions and other institutions that used to give workers a voice in the political
process along with rising inequality that gives even more power to those at the
top, the problem is getting worse. No wonder policy has been tilted so much in
favor of those at the top. Fiscal policy in particular has been far too
responsive to the interests of those with political power rather than those in
greatest need. If we are going to be a fair and just society, a society that
protects those among us who are the most vulnerable to economic shocks, this
needs to change. More
The
middle class is poorer today than it was in 1989
The
economy has gotten bigger, but much of that growth hasn't reached the middle
class. Indeed, the top 1 percent grabbed 95 percent of all the gains during the recovery's first three
years. And that's not even the most depressing part. Even adjusted for household
size, real median incomes haven't increased at all since 1999. That's right: the middle
class hasn't gotten a raise in 15 years. But one of the biggest, and least
appreciated reasons Democrats might be struggling, is that the middle class
is poorer, too. Median net worth is actually lower, adjusted for inflation, than
it was in 1989. Even worse, it's kept falling during the recovery. Yes, even
after the economy started to grow again, and the stock market started to boom,
and housing prices began to bounce back, the median net worth of the average
American household continued to decline. More
CHOMSKY:
Corporations and the Richest Americans Viscerally Oppose Common
Good
For
those whom Adam Smith called the "Masters of Mankind,” it is important that we
must become the stupid nation in the interests of their short-term gain, damn
the consequences. These are essential properties of contemporary
market fundamentalist doctrines. ALEC and its corporate sponsors understand
the importance of ensuring that public education train children to belong to the
stupid nation, and not be misled by science and rationality… There are
solutions, but they do not fit the needs of the Masters, for whom the crises are
no problem. They are bailed out by the Nanny State. Today corporate profits are
breaking new records and the financial managers who created the current crisis
are enjoying huge bonuses. Meanwhile, for the large majority, wages and income
have practically stagnated in the last 30-odd years. By today, it has reached
the point that 400 individuals have more wealth than the bottom 180 million
Americans… One consequence is that by now, the poorest 70% have literally no
influence over policy. As you move up the income/wealth ladder influence
increases, and at the very top, a tiny percent, the Masters get what they want.
More
Americans
have no idea how the government spends money
Pew
asked respondents which program the government spent the most money on: Social
Security, transportation, foreign aid, or interest on the national debt… The
most popular answer was foreign aid at 33 percent, followed by interest on the
debt, at 26 percent. Twenty percent named Social Security, and an additional 4
percent named transportation… Responses to this question show how Americans'
understanding of their world is deeply influenced by their political leanings
and preconceived notions. Foreign aid is consistently rated as the least popular spending category by Americans, even though it
accounts for roughly 1 percent of the federal budget. Several years of hysterics
surrounding the debt and deficit have also clearly convinced people that debt
spending takes up a larger share of the budget than it actually
does.More
NOT
ENOUGH TAXATION AND TOO MUCH REPRESENTATION
Since
2013, at least 14 U.S. corporations have relocated their headquarters abroad,
according to Reuters, with 10 making the move this year alone. The most
recent example is Burger King, which announced in late August that it would
merge with the Canadian chain Tim Hortons and move its headquarters to Canada,
which has a lower corporate tax rate than the U.S. does. That month the U.S.
fruit company Chiquita Banana decided to move its headquarters to Ireland. The
pharmaceutical company AbbVie moved abroad in June, and Pfizer is contemplating leaving behind its U.S. status… Obama
and concerned members of Congress are right to demand that corporations doing in
business in the U.S. should be made to pay their fare share and abide by the
responsibilities that come with that privilege. But more than that, at a time
when businesses’ civic investment grows weaker and weaker, we should be
examining ways to limit undue corporate influence over our democratic system.
More
ELECTION
DAY, November
4:
One
Million Massachusetts Workers Need the Right to Earned Sick Time!
Raise
Up Massachusetts,which
is leading the campaign, writes:
Our
friends
at Massachusetts
Peace Action are
pitching in:
You
can join Massachusetts Peace Action's work on this effort
in several ways. 1) Volunteer for shifts at regional call centers in many towns
around the state using the state of the art HubDialer system, which guarantees
many contacts with voters. 2) Use your own phone and a computer at home to do a
shift using HubDialer (after simple web based training in using the system). 3)
Call from an old fashioned paper list. 4) Join door to door canvasses to reach
likely supporters. 5) Reach out to family, friends, co-workers and in your
community to those and ask them to sign a pledge a vote for Yes on 4.
And
DORCHESTER
PEOPLE FOR PEACE
is committed to turning out
at the polls for Question 4 on Election Day – and also for our local ballot
QUESTION 5 to say “we want to get big money out of our
politics!”
We
need your help on Election Day, November 4. Can you cover a morning or evening
shift (or both)? Can you work the same shift you worked in September? Would you
like a new time and place? Were you busy on Primary Day but can work Election
Day? Please email at sgbilodeau@gmail.com or call me at 617-504-1645 Here are
the ballot questions: 1. Earned Sick Time. Our ally, New
England United for Justice, has been working for the right to earned sick time
for all Massachusetts workers for seven years. In November it will be a binding
question on the ballot. Many people haven't heard about it but will support it
if we let them know.
2. Getting Big Money Out of Politics. Recent
Supreme Court decisions have allowed billionaires and corporations to spend
unlimited amounts in elections, treating corporations as ‘Persons’ with free
speech rights. To show that our elected officials that voters do not agree,
Sydney and Hayat led a drive that put a non-binding question on the ballot in
Dan Cullinane’s district. The ballot question calls for an amendment to the U.S.
Constitution to saying that corporations are not people and money is
not a form of speech – it must be regulated in political
campaigns.
The polling places are, in priority order with double
precincts and heavier-voting precincts first: Dorchester Academy (the
former Woodrow Wilson School), 18 Croftland St, Codman Hill (Ward 17, Precincts
4 and 11) Mildred Avenue School, Mildred Ave, Mattapan (Ward 17, Precinct 10
and Ward 18, Precinct 2) Lower Mills Library, Richmond St (Ward 17, Precincts
13 and 14) Groveland Community Room, Franklin Field (Ward 18, Precincts 1 and
4) Chittick School, 154 Ruskindale Road between Cummins Highway and River St
(Ward 18, Precincts 6 and 21) Adams Street Library, near Ashmont St (Ward 16,
Precinct 8) Florian Hall, 55 Hallet St (Ward 16, Precinct 11) Charles H.
Taylor School, 1060 Morton St (Ward 17, Precinct 12) Mattahunt School, 100
Hebron St (Ward 18, Precinct 3) Hassan Apartments, 705 River St (Ward 18,
Precinct 5)
The shifts are: 7-9 am, 5-8 pm (or 5-7 if you can't
stay the whole time)
Please
sign up now so
we can cover all these polling places. And thanks!
Vets Win Expansion Of Freedom Of Speech and Right To Assemble
Above: Veterans and allies pose at the end of the 2014 antiwar memorial service at Vietnam Veterans Memorial in New York City. They are holding photos of David George whose pictures are also on the wall behind them. Photo by Ellen Davidson.
Veterans For Peace Three Year Campaign Removes Curfew as Vets and Allies Protest the Wars, Honor The Dead
Each October 7 for the last three years, the date of the US invasion of Afghanistan, members of Veterans For Peace and their allies have gathered at the Vietnam Veteran’s Memorial in Lower Manhattan for a soulful ceremony. Their purpose: to mark another year of a war in Afghanistan and call for peace, to honor all whose lives are destroyed by war and to expand the First Amendment right to peaceably assemble.
This year, they were finally able to do so without facing a small army of police threatening arrest if the ceremony went past the arbitrary 10 pm curfew placed on the memorial.
Jacob David George
And this year, veterans and allies had more reasons to gather: to protest new wars being waged by President Obama without approval of Congress or the United Nations and to remember the much-loved Jacob David George, a veteran of three tours in Afghanistan, who died of ‘moral injury’ three weeks before.
Jacob was only 19 when he went overseas to Afghanistan for his first tour. He grew up in the mountains of Arkansas and was a talented poet and musician. After his tours, he struggled to survive in the United States, surrounded by war culture. He set off to bicycle around the country to speak about the realities of war and the need for peace, a trip that he called “A Ride til the End.” He sang “Soldiers Heart”:
“I’m just a farmer from Arkansas, there’s a lot of things I don’t understand, like why we send farmers to kill farmers in Afghanistan. I did what I’s told for my love of this land. I come home a shattered man with blood on my hands.
“Now I can’t have a relationship, I can’t hold down a job. Some may say I’m broken, I call it Soldier’s Heart. Every time I go outside, I gotta look her in the eyes knowing that she broke my heart, and turned around and lied.
“Red, white and blue, I trusted you and you never even told me why.”
“Soldier’s Heart” is a Civil War phrase used to describe what we now know as Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Jacob wrote that Soldiers Heart “more accurately describes my wounds and what I experienced.” “Moral injury,” which Jacob wrote was a major component of PTSD, leads to 22 veteran suicides a day.
Jacob was with members of Veterans for Peace and thousands of others in Freedom Plaza in Washington, DC for the tenth anniversary of the Afghanistan War in October, 2011. He had spent part of the summer in Afghanistan with the Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers. Jacob performed that night in Freedom Plaza and the Afghan Youth joined the event from Afghanistan by Skype. After that, he continued to travel in his search for healing and to participate in the Occupy Movement. In the summer of 2012, he marched 99 miles with the Guitarmy from Philadelphia to New York City. Ending the Nightmares of War
The Veterans Peace Team and Occupy Faith stand between police and the people. Photo by Ellen Davidson
Although most war memorials throughout the United States are open to the public 24 hours a day, seven days a week, the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in New York ‘closes’ at 10 pm, that is, if you are expressing First Amendment rights.
There is no good reason to close the memorial since is located on a plaza surrounded by office buildings. It isn’t really possible to close this memorial anyway. It is used as a walkway for pedestrians and dog walkers at all hours of the day and night. The veterans believe there should be no curfew as the nightmares of war don’t know curfews and they often surface late at night. War memorials should be a place of peace and refuge for those who need it without threats of intimidation or arrest by police.
The curfew has only been enforced when people are exercising their right to peaceably assemble. Tarak Kauff, a board member of Veterans For Peace, first noted the curfew at a 2012 May Day assembly by Occupy Wall Street. Tarak describes the assembly as “what you would want to see in a democracy, people gathering to discuss solutions to community problems.” Troops of NY police confronted the assembly. Members of the Veterans Peace Team stood between the police and people; and were arrested. This constitutionally permitted, democratic gathering was stopped for no good reason.
Nightmares of War Do Not End at 10PM. Photo by Ellen Davidson.
Kauff brought the idea of a campaign to open the Memorial to Vets For Peace who embraced it, holding their first memorial service on October 7, 2012. Hundreds gathered at the memorial for a powerful ceremony. Father George Packard, Chris Hedges and veterans from World War II through the wars of today spoke, read poems and sang. Participants read names of New Yorkers who were killed in war and of civilians in Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan who were also killed. After every 20 names, a gong was struck and flowers were placed in 11 vases, one for every year in Afghanistan.
As the ceremony continued, the police presence began to grow. When 10 PM arrived, the reading of the names was interrupted by a police captain with a bullhorn warning that if the crowd did not disperse, arrests would be made. Undaunted, veterans and allies persisted in reading names and honoring the dead as some in the crowd moved to the margins of the park. One by one, 25 people who continued the memorial were arrested. Those arrested included a decorated World War II Veteran and a Vietnam War Medic for whom the nightmares of holding the wounded in his arms have never ceased. The police were placed in an uncomfortable position – arresting veterans reading the names of the dead to enforce a capricious curfew.
A friend of Jacob George, Brock McIntosh, also an Afghanistan veteran described the feelings of Jacob and many vets:
“Jacob did all he could as a warrior to speak and to warn about the dangers of war. Jacob spoke to me often of moral injury, and he once told me about meeting a Vietnam veteran who felt that every war was his war, who blamed himself for not stopping each war that happened, one after the next. Jacob felt that burden.”
Vets link together facing arrest at Vietnam Memorial October 2013. Photo by Ellen Davidson.
Veterans and allies returned in 2013 to protest the deep war culture embraced by the United States. To make that point, among the war dead remembered were Indigenous peoples slaughtered in the “Indian Wars.” That year several of the veterans refused to be removed easily. Firm in their belief that they had a right to be there, that the memorial was created to honor the dead and that nothing should interfere with that, five veterans linked themselves together with thick plastic handcuffs and lay down in front of the memorial when the police arrived to arrest them. Altogether, nineteen were arrested.
Jacob was there that year. One vet who stood with him recounted that Jacob was very distressed to see his comrades being arrested for protesting the wars and honoring the dead.
The veterans and allies who were arrested had two goals. They wanted to use the judicial process to end the curfew at the Memorial and to introduce the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights to expand the definition of Freedom of Speech to meet the international standard rather than the narrow and shrinking US standard.
Instead, charges were dropped for many of the arrestees and 14 who spent a week in trial were denied justice. The judge refused to entertain the expanded definition of free speech and found them guilty but then dismissed the charges “in the interest of justice,” undermining their ability to appeal.
Fourteen of the second year arrestees had their charges dismissed and the five who linked themselves together had their charges downgraded against their will to avoid a jury trial. The judge also found them guilty but gave them conditional release.
Each time the vets appeared in court, police offers shook their hands, thanked them and told them they supported what they were doing. The memorial services were having an added effect of dividing the police. Victory is bittersweet
This year, the veterans won the right to stay at the memorial without interference from the police. In a letter to the mayor, the veterans outlined their intent to hold the vigil again and their desire that the memorial remain open at all hours. They thanked the mayor for his statement, after the Flood Wall Street protest two weeks before, that First Amendment Rights were more important than traffic and invited him to join them on October 7. The mayor’s office responded by saying that the curfew would be lifted for the night.
Singing songs of Jacob George and antiwar ballads at the Vietnam Veterans War Memorial, October 7, 2014. Photo by Ellen Davidson.
The mood at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial this year was bittersweet. There was palpable relief that we were free to express ourselves without police intimidation and that we could choose when to leave under our own terms. But there was also greater sadness than years before because a week after the President began bombing Iraq again and then Syria, Jacob George took his life. Some suspect the trauma of watching another US war begin, knowing that more soldiers and innocent civilians would die or be forever traumatized and seeing the Masters of War succeed in manipulating the public to support war was too much to bear.
Jacob wrote:
“With our choice to join the US military, we soldiers gained great insights into the effects of war. During basic training, we are weaponized: our souls are turned into weapons. This intentional adjustment of the moral compass seems to be the onset of Moral Injury. Basic training demands the dehumanization of the enemy.
“Through my personal healing from PTSD, I’ve discovered it’s not possible to dehumanize others without dehumanizing the self.”
We gathered that night to speak, read poems and sing together once again. We remembered Jacob and all who are devastated by war. Large photos of Jacob were placed on the memorial wall. ‘Taps’ was played.
One vet read a statement about the damage war does and the toll it takes on families, remembering his nephew, a vet who also committed suicide:
“Not only was he profoundly affected by war, but so was his entire family. The pain will be felt by those who loved him for generations. That is what war does. It causes deep wounds that cut across generations. His father, a Vietnam Veteran, is having a very difficult time and has withdrawn, buried in grief. He already suffered from PTSD, and this has made things much worse. His mother, my sister, is racked with guilt and blames herself for not being able to help [her son].”
A poem by Vets For Peace poet laureate, Doug Rawlings, called “We Need Not Go There Again: A tribute to Jacob George, was read:
Over 100 years of shooting into a mirror thinking they were squashing the other – first the Hun, then the Nip, then the gook, and now the sand niggers — the old war mongers remain insatiable in their self-delusion
Freudian analysts can’t get them off their couches: moral cripples they never sense that something is awry
How could they? It is not the blood of their daughters and sons pours back into their hands slippery with the stench of their calculated ignorance
They will continue to worship at the alter of Pontius Pilate to wash their hands in the trough of our passivity
until we gather in the streets until we bring down the walls of the Pentagon singing the choruses of Jacob George
Participants in antiwar memorial circle of hugs. Photo by Ellen Davidson.
We formed a circle and one by one, we walked the circle and hugged each other. Members of the Guitarmy led us through songs written by Jacob. We also sang Down By the Riverside and Lean On Me. We read names of the dead, raised our fists and shouted “Presente” in unison after each name. Afterwards, we talked quietly in small groups. And when we were ready, we left the memorial.
It took three years to win the right to vigil at the war memorial. The next task is to change the policy so that it remains open at all times and is there for those who need it. Members of Veterans for Peace are committed to seeing that task through. We hope this campaign encourages others to find ways to expand our rights.
Though it is important to choose particular days to gather for remembrance and protesting these illegal and unjust wars, the work for peace is a daily task. Those who are not fooled by the propaganda or by persuaded by partisanship can best honor those who have died and those still living who have served by speaking out regularly for an end to war.
In his song called Support the Troops, Jacob wrote:
“I’m tellin’ you, don’t thank me for what I’ve done. Give me a hug and let me know we ain’t gonna let this happen again because we support the troops and we’re gonna bring war to an end.”
Margaret Flowers and Kevin Zeese are organizers of Popular Resistance. They participated in the campaign to end the curfew at the NYC Vietnam Veterans Memorial. They can be followed @KBZeese and @MFlowers8.
This article was originally published on MintPress News.
Guitarmy Travels Staten Island to ZuccottiJacob George singing with the Guitarmy on July 12, 2012, Jacob is in the front playing Banjo
Vets Win Free Speech Victory Tarak Kauff interviewed by Luke Rudkowski of We Are Change
But
even though organizers acknowledge the uphill battle, some say there’s cause for
optimism. There was some Congressional opposition to arming Syrian rebels to
fight the Islamic State. The authorization to help rebels passed the House by a
273-156 vote; the Senate opposition amounted to only 22 votes. “This war is far
less popular than either the Afghanistan or Iraq War at their outset at this
time period. And it’s worth remembering that inevitably what happens, no matter
where these wars start, they always end at the same place, which is incredibly
unpopular,” Win Without War’s Miles told me. So where does the anti-war movement
go from here? Ali Issa, the national field organizer with War Resisters League,
says the key is connecting struggles against militarism to other movements.
More
ISIS in
WASHINGTON: Inside the American Terrordome
…
the chorus of hysteria-purveyors, Republican and Democrat alike, nattered on, as
had been true for weeks, about the "direct," not to say apocalyptic, threat the
Islamic State and its caliph posed to the American way of life… Terror as the
preeminent danger to our American world now courses through the societal
bloodstream, helped along by regular infusions of fear from the usual
panic-meisters. On that set of emotions, an unparalleled global security state has been built (and funded), as well as
a military that, in terms of its destructive power, leaves the rest of the world in the dust… In this context, perhaps we
should think of the puffing up of an ugly but limited reality into an
all-encompassing, eternally “imminent” threat to our way of life as the final
chapter in the demobilization of the American people. Terror-phobia, after all,
leaves you feeling helpless and in need of protection. The only reasonable
response to it is support for whatever actions your government takes to keep you
"safe." More
FIGHTING
THE ISLAMIC STATE - HOW MUCH WILL IT COST?
Even
bigger than the direct costs of the new campaign against the Islamic State is
the dramatic U-turn in the political mood toward military spending. Twelve
months ago, the wartime culture of "endless money," as former Defense Secretary
Robert Gates dubbed it, with its endless "emergency" funding from Congress
(nearly $2 trillion in more than 30 special funding bills) - was finally coming
to an end… But now that's all so-last-fiscal-year. The new trend is ramping up
Pentagon spending. More
BOMBING
AND BIGOTRY:
The
Wars Abroad, the Wars at Home
Martin
Luther King:“The
bombs that are falling [overseas] are exploding in our cities”
Saturday,
October 18
NU4J
COMMUNITY CONNECTIONS STREET FAIR
12-4pm
- Our friends at New England United for Justice have invited DPP to participate
in their event on Tilman St. in Dorchester and DPPers will have a table and a
version of the leaflet at the right. Please come!
Tuesday,
October 21
DPP
Standout at Ashmont T Station
4-6pm
– Please join us! We’ll have the same flyer, making the connection between the
new US war in Syria/Iraq and the violence and repression in our own
neighborhoods.
UJP to march in
HONK! Parade with Drone replica.
When: Sunday, October
12, 2014, 12:00 pm to 6:30 pm
Where:
Davis Square •
Elm Street • Somerville
The
Somerville-based HONK! Parade of Activist Street Bands will take place
on Sunday, October 12 at noon, and once again UJP's Eastern Massachusetts
Anti-Drones Network (EMAD) will march carrying signs and its eye-catching Drone
replica. The group's message is encapsulated in the banner it will carry: "No
Killer Drones! No Spy Drones!" The U.S. Government must stop surveilling its
citizens and killing people from other countries with drones.
The HONK! Parade
is the culmination of the annual weekend-long HONK! Festival. Dozens of bands,
community, artist and activist groups, including Veterans For Peace, will march
from Davis Square down Elm Street, Beech Street and Massachusetts Avenue to
Harvard Square, where they'll join forces with the Octoberfest celebration.
Thousands of people view the parade, and last year, EMAD's Drone replica and
anti-drones message were well-received. This year, EMAD's participation
coincides with the first Global Action Day Against the Use of Drones for
Surveillance & Killing, called by the KnowDrones.com network.
We welcome
marchers to join our contingent. Join us at the Parade gathering place in Davis
Square at 11:30 am.
As The 100th
Anniversary Of The First Year Of World War I (Remember The War To End All Wars)
Continues ... Some Remembrances-Poet’s Corner
A CHANT OF LOVE FOR ENGLAND
A song of hate is a song of Hell; Some there be that sing it well. Let them sing it loud and long, We lift our hearts in a loftier song: We lift our hearts to Heaven above, Singing the glory of her we love,-- _England!_
Glory of thought and glory of deed, Glory of Hampden and Runnymede; Glory of ships that sought far goals, Glory of swords and glory of souls! Glory of songs mounting as birds, Glory immortal of magical words; Glory of Milton, glory of Nelson, Tragical glory of Gordon and Scott; Glory of Shelley, glory of Sidney, Glory transcendent that perishes not,-- Hers is the story, hers be the glory, _England!_
Shatter her beauteous breast ye may; The spirit of England none can slay! Dash the bomb on the dome of Paul's-- Deem ye the fame of the Admiral falls? Pry the stone from the chancel floor,-- Dream ye that Shakespeare shall live no more? Where is the giant shot that kills Wordsworth walking the old green hills? Trample the red rose on the ground,-- Keats is Beauty while earth spins round! Bind her, grind her, burn her with fire, Cast her ashes into the sea,-- She shall escape, she shall aspire, She shall arise to make men free: She shall arise in a sacred scorn, Lighting the lives that are yet unborn; Spirit supernal, Splendour eternal, ENGLAND!
_Helen Gray Cone_
AT ST. PAUL'S
APRIL 20, 1917
Not since Wren's Dome has whispered with man's prayer Have angels leaned to wonder out of Heaven At such uprush of intercession given, Here where to-day one soul two nations share, And with accord send up thro' trembling air Their vows to strive as Honour ne'er has striven Till back to hell the Lords of hell are driven, And Life and Peace again shall flourish fair.
This is the day of conscience high-enthroned, The day when East is West and West is East To strike for human Love and Freedom's word Against foul wrong that cannot be atoned; To-day is hope of brotherhood's bond increased, And Christ, not Odin, is acclaimed the Lord.