Wednesday, May 29, 2013

***A Remembrance On Memorial Day- The Road Less Traveled

From The Pen Of Frank Jackman

Staff Sergeant John Prescott in the adjacent room, “Johnny P.” to his pals gathered around a small table drinking sodas and coffee, was a quiet, unassuming guy, a guy with just that barebones patriotism that animated many working- class kids to “do their duty” and join up when America was in danger, no questions asked. Not quite “my country, right or wrong” but pretty close when all was said and done. And that call came as the early 1960s, a time of high school fun and frolic and for ace football star Johnny P, fun and frolic with one fetching Chrissie O’Shea and their flaming romance that was the talk of the Class of 1964 at old North Adamsville High, turned to mid-1960s and that clarion drumbeat the country was in danger in some place called red-infested Vietnam. Johnny, and not just Johnny, answered the call. And here, gathered around a small table, in early May 1968 his old corner boys from in front of Salducci’s Pizza Parlor “up the downs,” as they called the small stores and shops that made up the area, were chatting away like mad.

Suddenly, Frank Riley, fabled Frankie, the king of the be-bop Salducci’s night in those fresher days, that early 1960s time when the world was young and everything seemed possible, yelled to no one in particular but they all knew what he meant, “Remember that night after graduation when Tonio threw us that party at the pizza parlor.” And all the other five gathered at the table became silence with their own memories of that night. See, Tonio was the king hell owner and zen master pizza maker at Salducci’s and a guy who treated Frankie (and therefore most of Frankie’s friends) like a son. So Tonio put out a big deal party right on the premises, closed to all but Frankie, his friends and hangers-on (and girls of course). Tonio, at least this is what he said at the time, appreciated that Frankie brought so much business his way what with his corner boys, their corner boys, and the, ah, girls that gathered round them and who endlessly fed the juke box that he had to show his appreciation in such a way. And everybody had a great time that night, with the closed door wine, Tonio-provided wine, flowing like crazy and nobody, no authorities or parents the wiser for it.

Part of that great time, the part the guys around the 1968 table were remembering just then, the part of that great gun-ho 1964 time occurred late that night when, plenty of wine under their belts, Frankie and the corner boys, talked “heroic” talk. Talked about their military service obligations that was coming up right on them. And this was no abstract talk, not this night, for not only was this a party put on by Tonio to show his gratitude but a kind of going away party for ace football player and part-time corner boy (the other part, the more and more part, with one fetching Chrissie O’Shea), Johnny Prescott, who had decided to sign up right after graduation and would be getting ready to leave for “boot camp” at Fort Dix, New Jersey in a few weeks. So everybody was piling on the bravery talk to Johnny about “killing commies” somewhere, maybe Vietnam, maybe Germany, hell, maybe Russia or China. And Johnny, not any rum-brave kind Johnny, not any blah blah-ing about bravery, football or war, Johnny just kind of sat there and let the noise go by him. His thoughts then were of Chrissie and doing everything he could to get back to her in one piece.

Of course heaping up pile after pile on the bravery formula was one Frankie Riley, ever the politician as well as the king of the corner boy night, who had so just happened to have landed, through a very curious connection with the Kennedy clan, a coveted slot in a National Guard unit. So, Frankie, ever Frankie, could be formally brave that night in the knowledge that he would be far away from any real fighting. His rejoinder was that his unit “might” be called up. The others kidded him about it, about his “week-end warrior” status, but just a little because after all he would be serving one way or another. Also kind of silent that night was Fritz Taylor just then on the unannounced verge ready to “do his duty” after having had a heavy-duty fight with his mother about his future, or lack of a future, and her “hadn’t he better go in the service and learn a trade” talk.

Most vociferous that night was Timmy Kiley. Yes, Timmy, the younger brother of the legendary North Adamsville and later State U. football player “Thunder Tommy” Kiley. He was ready to catch every red under every bed and do what, when and where to any he caught. Timmy later joined the Navy to “see the world” and saw much of some dreary scow in some dry-dock down in Charleston, South Carolina. Even Peter Paul Markin, Frankie’s right-hand man, self-described scribe, and publicly kind of the pacifist of the group, who usually got mercilessly “fag-baited” for his pale peace comments was up in arms about the need to keep the “free world” free as the tom-toms of war in Southeast Asia were seeping through and getting down to the places where the cannon fodder, ah, kids who would do the actual fighting lived. Places exactly like North Adamsville. But that was just the way he talked, kind of a studied hysterical two-thousand facts diatribe then. Markin, student deferred, at that 1968 table had just gotten notice from his friendly neighbors at the North Adamsville Draft Board that upon graduation he was to be drafted. And he was ready, kicking and screaming about some graduate school project that the world really needed to know about, to go. That was the way it was in the neighborhood. Go or be out of step, be different, be a red or pink maybe. Frank Ricco, the so-called token Eye-talian, of the Irish-laden Salducci’s corner boy night (and a kid that Tonio actually hated, some kind of Mafioso, omerta thing with his father) also displayed super-human brave talk that 1964 night but he, at least, was credited , not so many months later, with not only going in the Marines but of seeing some heavy-duty action in jungle-infested Kontum, and some other exotic and mainly unpronounceable places farther south in the water-logged rice paddles of the Mekong Delta of Vietnam.

Quiet, quieter than Johnny Prescott when he was thinking of Chrissie in the old corner boy night, or Fritz, then sullenly furious at his mother or at his hard-scrabble fate, or both, was Johnny Callahan. Johnny no stranger to corner boy controversy, no stranger to patriotic sentiments, at least publicly to keep in step with his boys, secretly hated war, the idea of that war in Vietnam coming up and was seriously hung up on the Catholic “just war” theory that had been around since at least Saint Augustine, maybe earlier. See Johnny had a grandmother (and also a mother, but less so) who was an ardent Catholic Worker reader and adherent to their social philosophy. You know, Dorothy Day and that crowd of rebel Catholics wanting to go back to the old, old days, the Roman persecution days, of the social gospel and the like.

And grandmother had the “just war”theory down pat. She had been the greatest knitter of socks for “the boys”during World War II that the world may have ever known. But on Vietnam she was strictly “no-go, no-go, no way” and she was drilling that in Johnny’s head every chance she got (which was a lot since Johnny, having, well let’s call it“friction” with his mother, the usual teenage angst friction, sought refuge over at grandma’s). Now grandma was pressing Johnny to apply for conscientious objector status (CO) but Johnny knew that as a Catholic, a lapsing Catholic but still a Catholic, the formal “just war”theory of that church would not qualify him for CO status. He wanted to, expected to, just refuse induction. So that rounded out that party that night. Hell, maybe in retrospect it wasn’t such a great party, although blame the times not Tonio for that.

Just then, as each member at the table thought his thoughts, started by Frankie’s remembrance someone from the other room called out, “pall-bearers, get ready.”

Postscript: Staff Sergeant John Phillip Prescott made the national news that 1968 year, that 1968 year of Tet, made the Life magazine photo montage of those killed in service in Vietnam on any given week. Johnny P.’s week was heavy with casualties so there were many photos, many looks of mainly working-class enlisted youth that kind of blurred together despite the efforts to recognize each individually. And, of course, Johnny P.’s name is now etched in black marble down in Washington, D.C. John Patrick Callahan served his two year “tour of duty” as federal prisoner 122204, at the Federal Correctional Institution, Allentown, Pennsylvania. The road less traveled, indeed.


While there is a lower class, I am in it;
while there is a criminal element, I am of it;
while there is a soul in prison, I am not free.
- Eugene Debs
Please take a moment to join Pete Seeger, Desmond Tutu, Dick Gregory and thousands of others. Get ten of your friends to sign the petition for compassionate release today.

It is devastating, totally unbelievable. Is this in a democracy, the only superpower? I am sad. I will sign. Praying God’s blessing on your efforts.
- Desmond Tutu

Lynne Stewart should be outa jail.
- Pete Seeger
Write Lynne today, and visit
lynnestewart.org
Lynne Stewart
53504-054 CARSWELL
FEDERAL MEDICAL CENTER
P.O. BOX 27137
Fort Worth TX, 76127
To Donate please send your gift to:

Lynne Stewart Organization
1070 Dean St.
Brooklyn NY 11216

(for gifts that need to be tax deductible call or email
ralph.poynter@yahoo.com 917-853-9759)
Emergency Alert: Lynne Stewart In Grave Danger
Just last week the warden of Carswell FCI agreed to forward the compassionate release petition to the DOJ. The time to increase the heat is now.
Dear Friends and Supporters:
One month ago I made a request for compassionate release which was honored by the warden at Carswell Federal Medical Center. Today the papers are still on a desk in Washington, D.C. even though the terminal cancer that I have contracted requires expeditious action.
Although I requested immediate action by the Bureau of Prisons, I find it necessary to again request immediate action from you, my friends, comrades and supporters to call the three numbers listed below on Thursday, May 30 and request action on my behalf.
This could result in my being able to access medical treatment at Sloan Kettering so that I can face the rest of my life with dignity surrounded by those I love and who love me.
Please do this.
Yours truly
Lynne Stewart FMS CARSWELL-53504-054
& Ralph Poynter
Lynne Stewart Defense Organization
Attorney General Eric Holder - 1 202 514 2001
White House President Obama – 1 202 456 1414
B.O.P. – Director Charles Samuels – 1 202 307 3198 ext 3
Lynne Stewart Must Be Free! Lynne Stewart and her husband Ralph Poynter.
Compassion demands that Lynne Stewart be released immediately from prison so she and her family can fight for her life. Lynne Stewart, is political prisoner and a renowned human rights lawyer who is currently serving a ten year sentence at FMC Carswell TX.

Please go to lynnestewart.org get active and sign the petition for compassionate release.

Lynne Stewart Defense Organization
1070 Dean St. Brooklyn NY 11216
917-853-9759, ralph.poynter@yahoo.com
Over 12,000 and counting sign the petition! Please add your voice!
If you have already signed the petition, please write a letter. They have the power to release Lynne now and must be encouraged to do so. Please write to:

Mr. Charles E. Samuels, Jr., Director
Federal Bureau of Prisons
320 First Street, NW
Washington, DC 20534

Re: Lynne Irene Stewart, #53504-054 Compassionate Release

District Judge John G. Koelte
United States Courthouse
500 Pearl St.
New York, NY 10007-1312

Re: Lynne Irene Stewart, #53504-054 Compassionate Release
Lynne Stewart Defense Organization
1070 Dean St. Brooklyn NY 11216
917-853-9759, ralph.poynter@yahoo.com
The World Can't Wait
Stop the Crimes of Your Government
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Progress on fundraisingLast Thursday in The New York times. Donate towards publishing the Close Guantanamo Now statement in alternative & international media.

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Alfred,

The most significant trial ever of a whistleblower against U.S. wars will start Monday in a military court at Ft. Meade, MD. Bradley Manning came to the world's attention three years ago, when, as an Army Private in intelligence, he was jailed by the military in Kuwait, and, for almost a year, held in solitary confinement at Quantico VA at the Marine base.

Bradley Manning is in prison for telling the truth
Worldwide protest erupted against his cruel imprisonment, before charges, and he was subsequently moved to Ft. Leavenworth, KS. In 2012, the government charged him with very serious crimes, which could possibly carry a death sentence. Last February, Bradley accepted responsibility for sharing some information with Wikileaks. (LEAKED AUDIO)
Watch Collateral Murder
Collateral Murder is the military's own video of 12 Iraqis being shot and killed from a US helicopter circling above. No one has been charged in connection with these killings. However, Pfc. Bradley Manning is going on trial because of it — he is accused of leaking this incriminating video to Wikileaks. World Can't Wait is distributing copies of this harrowing video so that many more people in the US see what is being done in their names. Click here to request a copy.

Revolution newspaper, in High Stakes in the Cruel and Unjust Trial of Bradley Manning explains that,
“the basis of the charges against Manning is the accusation that he leaked almost 500,000 classified government documents, which were then published by the website WikiLeaks. Many of these documents and files revealed war crimes committed by the U.S. government and its military in Iraq and elsewhere. The documents Manning is charged with leaking include the Collateral Murder video, Afghanistan War Logs, Iraq War Logs, U.S. State Embassy cables, and Guantánamo files. All of them contain damning evidence of U.S. atrocities, cover-ups, and deceit.”
Everyone who cares about humanity, and opposes the unjust, immoral and illegitimate U.S. wars since 9/11, owes a debt to Bradley for sharing information on the crimes associated with those occupations. Daniel Ellsberg writes:

An appeal from Daniel Ellsberg

“During the Vietnam War I worked in the Pentagon under Robert McNamara. In Vietnam, my background as a Marine officer allowed me to walk with the troops in combat and see the war up close. What I found was a costly, immoral war that could not be allowed to continue.

“My decision to reveal the top secret Pentagon Papers to the American public was an act of conscience. These documents showed that we were in a destructive, wrongful war, and that we had entered that war under false pretenses. My hope was that, armed with this truth, the American people could act to end that war.”

Continue reading, and hear his call for support of Bradley Manning...

Get on the busJoin events worldwide to support Bradley Manning, and especially at Ft. Meade Saturday June 1

Click here for bus tickets from various east coast cities to Ft. Meade


Obama Promise Represents No “fresh start” for Guantanamo prisoners

by Curt Wechsler, Editor, FireJohnYoo.org
Much has been made recently of the President’s moral angst over dereliction of leadership in restoring the fundamental right to due process, and his attribution of blame for the barbaric experiment of indefinite detention displayed at America’s premiere torture camp:

“…history will cast a harsh judgment on this aspect of our fight against terrorism and those of us who fail to end it. Imagine a future -- 10 years from now or 20 years from now -- when the United States of America is still holding people who have been charged with no crime on a piece of land that is not part of our country. Look at the current situation, where we are force-feeding detainees who are being held on a hunger strike… Is this who we are? Is that something our Founders foresaw? Is that the America we want to leave our children?”

But what consequence, if any, does Obama’s self-indulgent exploration of personal accountability hold for the future of the men suffering the ultimate price of imperial subterfuge, the torture of force-feeding employed to postpone the public relations nightmare of prison death?

The answer to the President’s question “Is this who we are?” is a resounding NO. The broad range of individuals signing World Can’t Wait’s call to Close Guantanamo NOW confirms the presence of a large mass of people who refuse to accept the crimes being committed in their names.

1665 days since voters first delegated responsibility for Guantanamo to Barack Obama
113 days of prisoner hunger strike
6 days since Barack Obama said again that he wants to Close Guantanamo
4 prisoners have died under his administration of that shameful experiment in illegal detention.
Of the 166 remaining, 157 have never been charged with any crime. 86 men have been cleared but denied release.
The Close Guantanamo NOW statement is more relevant than ever. Be part of sending that message. Sign it and donate towards publishing it very soon in alternative and international media.
Debra Sweet, Director, The World Can't Wait
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***Reflection On A Veterans For Peace Memorial Day 2013 - A Remembrance Worthy Of The Day




From The Pen Of Frank Jackman

To The Fallen-In Lieu Of A Letter

The mere mention of the name Veterans For Peace evokes images of hard-bitten ex-servicemen and women, many old, ramrod straight holding their beloved black and white peace dove-emblazoned banners flying proudly in all weathers. Of images of quickly written urgent and militant calls for withdrawal of American military personnel from conflicts somewhere in the bewildering number of places that this American government has planted its forces. And too images of relentless exposure of the thousand and one ways that this American government (and not just this government) tries to hide its atrocities against overwhelmed opponents and the innocent civilians who get caught up in the juggernaut. Those exercises of our democratic and moral obligations are what drives VFP most days but I want to put politics aside this day, or put them aside at least long enough to speak of another role that we have taken on over the past several years here in Boston on Memorial Day, a day of remembrance for our fallen.

Others can address, and eloquently, the origins and purposes of the day, a task that usually would come easily to this writer. Others will throw symbolic flowers into our beloved homeland the sea, into Boston Harbor, to give somber recognition to the fallen of current conflicts. Still others in other commemorations can, and will, speak of valor, honor, duty and unquestioned obedience to orders accompanied by the far-away tattoo of drums, the echo of the distant roar of cannon, cannon headed to some unmarked destination, and the whish and whirl as an unseen overhead airplane unloads it sacrilegious payload.

Today I choose though to speak of long ago but not forgotten personal remembrance, and to give name to that remembrance. To give name, James Earl Jenkins, old North Adamsville rough-house Irish neighborhoods friend and fellow of many boyhood adventures not all fit for public mention, a name now blood-stone etched in Vietnam War memorial black marble down in Washington, D.C. To give name, Kenneth Edward Jackman, my brother and James’ friend also, a name not etched in black stone but a causality of war nevertheless who, despite his fervent desire, “never made it back to the real world” from his tour in “Nam and spent his shortened lonely life reliving the past.

James and Kenneth, what happened to each of them and why, take on special meaning today as I utter their names publicly from the misty past for the first time in a long time because those names link to those we remember today. Not just those, like James, who served under whatever conditions and for whatever personal reasons, those seem beside the point just now served died, but those like my brother, those who do not show up in any official casualty report but all those nevertheless damaged by the close-hand experience of war.

But enough of this, as it only brings another saddened tear. But, as well, enough of war.
***Why I Will Be Standing In Solidarity With Private Bradley Manning At Fort Meade Maryland On Saturday June 1st At 1:00PM- A Personal Note From An Ex-Soldier Political Prisoner

From The Pen Of Frank Jackman





A couple of years ago (2011) I wrote a little entry in this space in order to motivate my reasons for standing in solidarity with a March 20th rally in support of Private Bradley Manning at the Quantico Marine Base in Virginia where he was then being held. I have subsequently repeatedly used that entry, Why I Will Be Standing In Solidarity With Private Bradley Manning At Quantico, Virginia On Sunday March 20th At 2:00 PM- A Personal Note From An Ex-Soldier Political Prisoner, as a I have tried to publicize his case in blogs and other Internet sources, at various rallies, and at marches, most recently at the Veterans For Peace Saint Patrick’s Day Peace Parade in South Boston on March 17th.

After I received information from the Bradley Manning Support Network about the latest efforts on Private Manning’s behalf, an International Day Of Solidarity on June 1st at Fort Meade, Maryland as he prepares for his June 3rd trial date scheduled for April 24th and 25th in Washington and Fort Meade respectively I decided that I would travel south to stand once again in proximate solidarity with Brother Manning at Fort Meade. As one would expect when the cause is still the same, Bradley Manning's freedom, unfortunately most of the entry is still in the same key. And will be until the day he is freed by his jailers. And I will continue to stand in proud solidarity with Brother Manning until that great day.
*****

Of course I will be standing at the front gate to the Fort Meade , Maryland on April 25th because I stand in solidarity with the actions of Private Bradley Manning in bringing to light, just a little light, some of the nefarious doings of this government, Bush-like or Obamian. If he did such acts they are no crime. No crime at all in my eyes or in the eyes of the vast majority of people who know of the case and of its importance as an individual act of resistance to the unjust and barbaric American-led war in Iraq. I sleep just a shade bit easier these days knowing that Private Manning (or someone) exposed what we all knew, or should have known- the Iraq war and the Afghan war justification rested on a house of cards. American imperialism’s gun-toting house of cards, but cards nevertheless.

Of course I will also be standing at the front gate of Fort Meade, Maryland on April 25th because I am outraged by the treatment meted out to Private Manning, presumably an innocent man, by a government who alleges itself to be some “beacon” of the civilized world. Bradley Manning had been held in solidarity at Quantico and other locales for over 500 days, and has been held without trial for much longer, as the government and its military try to glue a case together. The military, and its henchmen in the Justice Department, have gotten more devious although not smarter since I was a soldier in their crosshairs over forty years ago.

Now the two reasons above are more than sufficient for my standing at the front gate at Fort Meade on April 25th although they, in themselves, are only the appropriate reasons that any progressive thinking person would need to show up and shout to the high heavens for Private Manning’s freedom. I have an additional reason though, a very pressing personal reason. As mentioned above I too was in the military’s crosshairs as a citizen-soldier during the height of the Vietnam War. I will not go into the details of that episode, this comment after all is about brother soldier Manning, other than that I spent my own time in an Army stockade for, let’s put it this way, working on the principle of “what if they gave a war and nobody came”.

Forty years later I am still working off that principle, and gladly. But here is the real point. During that time I had outside support, outside civilian support, that rallied on several occasions outside the military base where I was confined. Believe me that knowledge helped me get through the tough days inside. So on April 25th I will be just, once again, as I have been able to on too few other occasions over years, paying my dues for that long ago support. You, Brother Manning, are a true winter soldier. We were not able to do much about the course of the Iraq War (and little thus far on Afghanistan) but we can move might and main to save the one real hero of that whole mess.

Private Manning I hope that you will hear us and hear about our rally in your defense outside the gates. Better yet, everybody who reads this piece join us and make sure that he can hear us loud and clear. And let us shout to high heaven against this gross injustice-Free Private Bradley Manning Now!
From The Boston Bradley Manning Support Committee Archives (April 2012)












Standing In Solidarity With Private Bradley Manning In The Boston Area On Friday April 27th In Davis Square, Somerville And Saturday April 28th At Park Street Station In Boston


We of the anti-war movement were not able to do much to affect the Bush- Obama Iraq War timetable but we can do much to save the one hero of that war, Bradley Manning.

According to the Private Bradley Manning Support Network (see link above) there are a series of actions planned next week in Washington, D.C at the Justice Department on April 24th and at Fort Meade, Maryland on April 25th and 26th in connection with the next round of legal proceedings in his case. I had originally intended to travel down from Boston to take part in those events that week but some other obligations now prevent me from doing so. Nevertheless there are two on-going activities in the Boston area where those of us who support freedom for Bradley Manning can show our solidarity during this week.

Every Friday from 1:00 -2:00 PM there is an on-going solidarity vigil for Brother Manning at the Davis Square Redline MBTA stop in Davis Square, Somerville.

Every Saturday from 1:00-2:00 PM there is an on-going peace vigil/speak-out in our struggle against the war (or wars) of the moment being orchestrated by the American government and its allies at the Redline MBTA Park Street Station in Boston (Boston Common). Bradley Manning’s case is a natural extension of those struggles.

Here is a little comment that I have made previously whenever the call to defend Private Manning in the streets has been issued as motivation for standing in solidarity with him in his time of need:

Of course I will be standing in solidarity with Private Bradley Manning in Davis Square and at Park Street Station on April 27thand 28th respectively because I stand in solidarity with the alleged actions of Private Bradley Manning in bringing to light, just a little light, some of the nefarious war-like doings of this government, Bush-like or Obamian. If he did such acts they are no crime. No crime at all in my eyes or in the eyes of the vast majority of people who know of the case and of its importance as an individual act of resistance to the unjust and barbaric American-led war in Iraq. I sleep just a shade bit easier these days knowing that Private Manning may have exposed what we all knew, or should have known- the Iraq war and the Afghan war justifications rested on a house of cards. American imperialism’s gun-toting house of cards, but cards nevertheless.

I will also be standing in solidarity with Private Bradley Manning because I am outraged by the treatment meted out to Private Manning, presumably an innocent man, by a government who alleges itself to be some“beacon” of the civilized world. Bradley Manning had been held in solidarity at Quantico and other locales for over 500 days, and has been held without trial for much longer, as the government and its military try to glue a case together. The military, and its henchmen in the Justice Department, have gotten more devious although not smarter since I was a soldier in their crosshairs over forty years ago.

These are sufficient reasons to stand in solidarity with Private Manning and will be until the day he is freed by his jailers. And I will continue to stand in proud solidarity with Brother Manning until that great day. Please plan to attend either or both of these events on Friday April 28th (Davis Square) and/or Saturday April 29th (Park Street) to stand in solidarity with Bradley Manning.
***Boston Private Bradley Manning Stand-Out As Part Of An International Day Of Solidarity -Saturday June 1stPark Street Station – 1 PM



Let’s Redouble Our Efforts To Free Private Bradley Manning-President Obama Pardon Bradley Manning -Make Every Town Square In America (And The World) A Bradley Manning Square From Boston To Berkeley to Berlin-Join Us At Park Street Station In Boston On June 1st At 1 PM For A Stand-Out In Solidarity Before Bradley’s June 3rd Trial


Plan to go to Fort Meade outside of Washington, D.C. on June 1st for an international day of solidarity with Bradley before his scheduled June 3rd trial. Check with the Bradley Manning Support Network http://www.bradleymanning.org/for information about going to Fort Meade from your area.

If you can’t make it to Fort Meade come to Park Street Station on June 1st in support of this brave whistle-blower.

*Contribute to the Bradley Manning Defense Fund- as the trial date approaches funds are urgently needed! The government has unlimited financial and personnel resources to prosecute Bradley. And the Obama government is fully using them. We have a fine defense civilian lawyer, David Coombs, many supporters throughout America and the world working hard for Bradley’s freedom, and the truth on our side. Still the hard reality of the American legal system, civilian or military, is that an adequate defense cost serious money. So help out with whatever you can spare. For link go to http://www.bradleymanning.org/

*Sign the online petition at the Bradley Manning Support Network (for link go to http://www.bradleymanning.org/ )to the Secretary of the Army to free Bradley Manning-1000 plus days is enough! The Secretary of the Army stands in the direct chain of command up to the President and can release Private Manning from pre-trial confinement and drop the charges against him at his discretion. For basically any reason that he wishes to-let us say 1000 plus days is enough. Join the over 25,000 supporters in the United States and throughout the world clamoring for Bradley’s well-deserved freedom.

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

***Brother (Or Sister), Can You Spare A Dime?


For C.M., North Adamsville Class Of 1964

From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
Banks and country economies are failing left and right, being bought up by bigger banks up the food chain or being bailed out by some multi-national entity enhancing the “too big to fail” or“two small to let everything up the chain fail” syndromes that got us into this economic mess in the first place. Unemployment is still way up, and staying steadily up as jobs worldwide, working people jobs, have been replaced by computer-generated productivity and factory workers in Europe and America have gone the way of the town crier, the hand-loom weaver, and the lamplighter. The plight of international youth is so stressful, hell, let’s call a thing by its right name, desperate, that the long term repercussions are almost frightening. Housing values are down on the floor, and after heading to the basement are now only on a slight uptick, with no real upswing, meaning people buying homes rather than investors going in for the kill, in sight what with overstocked, unfinished housing and foreclosures still glutting the market. A retirement account, the previously much vaunted savings for the “golden years,” are subject to the daily twists and turns of the financial markets sensitive to global economic pressures and so that term retirement may become like some quaint word no longer in use out the middle ages.

And that is the grim news factor on an average day. Other days just ratchet up the doom and gloom from there. And some of those other days just turn off the television, radio, computer, horoscope, tarot cards or however you learn the news of the day. The whys and wherefores of that news, however, is not what this writer wants to comment on though. One of the very few virtues of growing up "dirt poor," 1950s dirt poor in the “golden age” of the post-World War II American economic boom, first in an old jerry-built housing project which were provided in order to ease returning veterans back into civilian life and give them a leg up on that aforementioned dream in old tired working- class Adamsville and then across town in an old shack of a house on the wrong side of the tracks on Maple Street near the North Adamsville High School is that even now I am personally inured to the vicissitudes of the economy. Hell, when I was young hard times were the only times, except maybe harder times around the Jackman household. I did not, except by rumor, know there were any other kinds. That knowledge came with a certain resentment and attitude.

All of the above is by way of making this point. I have been broke more times than I could shake a stick at, both by choice and by the fickleness of fate. The fickleness of fate (and my own stupidity or angst) having a slight edge. I have been flat broke, dead broke, broke six ways to Sunday, and every kind of broke you can think of. At one time I almost make a religion of it, dressing it up in an eloquent moral and philosophical covering. I have been in the clover a few times too, but those have always been very near things and provided by the largesse of other (meaning usually I latched on to some sugar mama whose family had dough and I was able to ride that wave for a while).

Let me put it this way. I have leisurely strolled across the Golden Gate Bridge, some companion in hand to while away the time, taking in the sea salt breezes and the spectacular views. I have also slept huddled, in solemn and fearful aloneness with a tattered newspaper for a pillow, under the Golden Gate Bridge having ill-advisedly burned some other bridges behind and found out about the hardness of that size of existence. I have eaten at restaurants where one does not ask the price, or need to. I have also eaten free-for-all stews and watered-down coffee, gladly, from Salvation Army soup lines. I have sat idly on hopeless park benches in nameless forsaken towns another town’s newspaper for a pillow, too many nameless forsaken towns. I have also sat idly, ice-cubed drink in hand, in a beach chair on some deck watching the surf rise and fall on the rocks at Bar Harbor. I could go on in this vein but you get the idea. Here is my accumulated wisdom though-it is much better to have the dough.

See you don’t have to be some high theory radical or socialist equalizer to figure out that down on the mean streets, down there at the edge of society, down where the jack-rollers and con men meet the fragile working drudges in battle that the struggle for existence, for the daily bread, is too hard and time-consuming to the neglect of other more healthful existences. Some days just getting from point A to nearby point B takes all the effort and pluck of some superhuman angel mad monk. There, frankly, has to be a better way to organize the ways of the world. But until that day and just in case the times get even worse than they are now I am keeping in shape. Keeping my long ago dirt poor wanting habits in check. I will just bone up on the mantra of the hard mean outlaw streets, cup in hand if it comes to it later. Brother (Or Sister), Can You Spare A Dime?
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"Brother, Can You Spare a Dime," lyrics by Yip Harburg, music by Jay Gorney (1931)

They used to tell me I was building a dream, and so I followed the mob,

When there was earth to plow, or guns to bear, I was always there right on the job.

They used to tell me I was building a dream, with peace and glory ahead,

Why should I be standing in line, just waiting for bread?

Once I built a railroad, I made it run, made it race against time.

Once I built a railroad; now it's done. Brother, can you spare a dime?

Once I built a tower, up to the sun, brick, and rivet, and lime;

Once I built a tower, now it's done. Brother, can you spare a dime?

Once in khaki suits, gee we looked swell,

Full of that Yankee Doodly Dum,

Half a million boots went slogging through Hell,

And I was the kid with the drum!

Say, don't you remember, they called me Al; it was Al all the time.

Why don't you remember, I'm your pal?

Buddy, can you spare a dime?

Once in khaki suits, gee we looked swell,

Full of that Yankee Doodly Dum,

Half a million boots went slogging through Hell,

And I was the kid with the drum!

Say, don't you remember, they called me Al; it was Al all the time.

Say, don't you remember, I'm your pal?

Buddy, can you spare a dime?