Thursday, March 19, 2015

The Latest From The Cindy Sheehan Blog

 



http://www.cindysheehanssoapbox.com/

A link to Cindy Sheehan’s Soapbox blog for the latest from her site.

Markin comment:

I find Cindy Sheehan’s Soapbox rather a mishmash of eclectic politics and basic old time left-liberal/radical thinking. And of late  (2014) a fetish for running for office whatever seems to be worth looking at. This year it was the Governor's race in California. Other years it has been for President and for Congress. That Congressional race made sense because it was against Congresswoman and Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi who at one time was a darling of the liberals and maybe still is. But electioneering while necessary and maybe useful is not enough. So while her politics and strategy are not enough, not nearly enough, in our troubled times they do provide enough to take the time to read about and get a sense of the pulse (if any) of that segment of the left to which she is appealing.

One though should always remember, despite our political differences, Ms. Sheehan's heroic action in going down to hell-hole Texas to confront one President George W. Bush in 2005 when many others were resigned to accepting the lies of that administration or who “folded” their tents when the expected end to the Iraq War did not materialize in 2002-2003 after we had million in the streets for a few minutes. Hats off on that one, Cindy Sheehan.

*************

Additional Markin comment:

I place some material in this space which I believe may be of interest to the radical public that I do not necessarily agree with or support. One of the worst aspects of the old New Left back in the 1970s as many turned to Marxism after about fifty other theories did not work out (mainly centered on some student-based movements that were somehow to bring down the beast without a struggle for state power) was replicating the worst of the old Old Left and freezing out political debate with other opponents on the Left to try to clarify the pressing issues of the day. That freezing out , more times than I care to mention including my own behavior a few times, included physical exclusion and intimidation. I have since come to believe that the fight around programs and politics is what makes us different, and more interesting. The mix of ideas, personalities and programs, will sort themselves out in the furnace of the revolution as they have done in the past. 

Off-hand, as I have mentioned before, I think it would be easier, infinitely easier, to fight for the socialist revolution straight up than some of the “remedies” provided by the commentators in these various blogs and other networking media. But part of that struggle for the socialist revolution is to sort out the “real” stuff from the fluff as we struggle for that more just world that animates our efforts. So read on. 
***********
Another note from Frank Jackman  

There are many ways in which people get “religion” about the issues of war and peace, about the struggle to oppose the imperial adventures of the American government.  Learn that it is our duty to oppose those decisions as people who are “in the heart of the beast” as the late revolutionary Che Guevara who knew about the imperial menace both in life and death declared long ago. My own personal “getting religion” and those who I have worked with in such organizations as Vietnam Veterans Against The War (VVAW) and later Veterans For Peace (VFP) came from a direct confrontation with the American military establishment either during or after our service. Those were hard confrontations with the reality of the beast back in those days and it is no accident that those who confronted the beasts then are still active today. Remain active as a whole new threat to world peace emanates from Washington into the Middle East highlighted by the air wars in Syria and Iraq and the now new lease on life in Afghanistan.     

In a sense the military service confrontation form of “getting religion” on the issues of war and peace is easy to understand given the horrendous nature of modern warfare and its massive weapons overkill and disregard for “collateral damage.” Less easy to see is the radicalization of older women, mothers, mothers of soldiers like Cindy Sheehan in reaction to the senseless death of their loved ones. As pointed out above whatever political differences we have I will always hold Ms. Sheehan’s heroic actions in confronting on George W. Bush then President of the United States and the “yes man” for the war in Iraq started in 2003 (the various aspects of the Iraq saga have to be dated since otherwise confusion prevails) in high regard. She took him on down in red neck Texas asking a simple question-“if there were no weapons of mass destruction, not even close, why did my son die in vain?” Naturally no sufficient answer ever came from him to her. There she was a lonely symbol of the almost then non-existent anti-war movement. And then she started, as this blog of hers testifies to, to put the dots together, “got religion,” got to understand what Che meant long ago about that special duty radicals and revolutionaries have “in the heart of the beast.” And she too like those hoary military veterans I mentioned is still plugging away at the task.      

***********

China's Migrant Workers: humanity's greatest migration?

China Discussion Group

China's Migrant Workers
Thursday, March 12th - 7pm
Center for Marxist Education, 550 Mass. Ave., Central Square, Cambridge

A Presentation and Discussion led by Luo Xiaoping
Assistant professor, Zhejiang Ocean University, China

Over the past 30 years, around 300 million men and women have moved from China's farms to its factories, industrial plants and construction sites, in one of humanity's greatest migrations. Luo Xiaoping, a graduate of the Academy of Marxism, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and currently a visiting scholar at Boston University, and herself a child of farmers, will examine this phenomenon, some of the extraordinary challenges that have accompanied it, and efforts to address them.
www.facebook.com/events/899271303426562 

PLEASE FORWARD

 
 
Join Hatem Abudayyeh, Susan Abulhawa, Pam Africa, Abayomi Azikiwe, Ajamu Baraka, Medea Benjamin, Lamis Deek, Steve Downs, Bernadette Ellorin, Glen Ford, Sara Flounders, Bruce Gagnon, Teresa Gutierrez, Lawrence Hamm, Chris Hedges, Joe Iosbaker, Charles Jenkins, Antonia Juhasz, Chuck Kaufman, Kathy Kelly, Jeff Mackler, Christine Marie, Ray McGovern, Cynthia McKinney, Michael McPhearson, Malik Mujahid, Lucy Pagoada, Lynne Stewart, David Swanson, Clarence Thomas, Ann Wright, Kevin Zeese & many more at ...
 
A national conference to connect all the issues:
 
“Stop the Wars at Home & Abroad!”
(to register now, click the link below)
 
The United National Antiwar Coalition (UNAC) invites you to attend the “Stop the Wars at Home & Abroad!” conference, to be held May 8-10, 2015, in Secaucus, N.J, just outside New York City.
 
More and more, we can see how all the problems of the world are connected. The trillions of dollars being spent on wars-for-profit abroad could be used here at home to rebuild our cities, educate our youth, employ our jobless, repair damage to the environment – and try to make up for the endless suffering the Pentagon is inflicting on people around the world, most of them people of color, the vast majority of whom have nothing to do with threatening us or anyone else.
 
Some of the connections are even more striking. Some of the very same kinds of military equipment used in Iraq was seen this past summer on the streets of Ferguson, Mo. Surveillance drones developed for use by the military are now being used by domestic police departments. The endless “war on terror” is being used to justify taking away our civil liberties here at home. Wars for oil in the Middle East keep fossil fuels flowing, accelerating the climate change that threatens all humanity.
 
This conference will be an opportunity to meet and network with activists from across the country and learn about the many struggles going on today, both at home and around the world. Speakers with decades of experience will be joined by members of the new generations of activists who are bringing fresh energy and ideas into the movement. Together, we will learn from and inspire each other.
 
Most conferences cost many hundreds of dollars to attend, but UNAC organizers are doing their best to keep this one affordable for young activists and working people. Don’t miss this unique opportunity to expand your knowledge, make many new progressive friends and build the movement for fundamental social change. 
 
 
Stop the Wars at Home & Abroad!
For more information and to register for the conference, see: 
 
To place an ad in the conference journal, see:
 
UNITED NATIONAL ANTIWAR COALITION (UNAC)
P.O. Box 123, Delmar, NY 12054  ●  Ph:  518-227-6947
Email:  UNACpeace@gmail.com  ●  Web:  www.UNACpeace.org
 
To view this email in your browser, please go to: http://nepajac.org/blast.html
click here to donate to UNAC
Click here for the Facebook UNAC group.



To add yourself to the UNAC listserv, please send an email to:
UNAC-subscribe@lists.riseup.net
 
NATO Through The Looking Glass: A Personal Journey From Naivety Towards Lucidity

 

By Marcus Godwyn

 

It was chilly March evening as a Russian teacher of English and I stepped out into the night on the University Embankment of Vasilevsky Island in Saint Petersburg in 2004.  We were colleagues in the same private language school which worked in conjunction with the Philological Faculty of the State University in that city. The pavement thronged and massed with students, other teachers and administrative staff as these courses were very popular and chucked out at 9 PM. We were going in different directions so we paused for a brief conversation.

 

He looked at me, sighed and said “The world is becoming a dangerous place!”

 

I looked at him askance. “What do you mean?” I said.

 

“NATO jets will soon be in Riga just five hundred kilometers away," he responded.

 

All three Baltic States were in the final processes of joining up to NATO.

 

I was living at the time, by choice, without any media at home. No TV, radio or internet.

 

I was aware of this development and didn't see any problem with it. In fact I thought that Russia itself would probably if not become a fully fledged member then at least make some kind of affiliation agreement in the relatively near future.

 

I knew that many Russians including many in the government remained highly suspicious of this organization but I blithely assumed that these were just old Soviet psychological cobwebs that would soon be gently dusted away into the half forgotten annals of history. I was genuinely surprised by his trepidation, especially as this person had taken the trouble to study to become an English teacher, had traveled in the USA and in general knew a lot about the Anglo-Saxon world.

 

I launched into an improvised monologue that I would often find myself repeating over the following years. I told my friend that this was nothing to worry about. That these jets weren't going to do anything bad to him or to his mother or to his Motherland. I enthusiastically explained that NATO was a force for peace and stability in the world because that is what I actually believed back then.

 

After all hadn't NATO succeeded in ending Soviet communism without a shot being fired? Where would be now if the USSR and Warsaw Pact had “won” the cold war. Isn't it true I continued that we are having this free and easy conversation on the street thanks to NATO! This wasn't possible when I had visited the Soviet Union except in the presumed privacy of one's own home. His daughter was living nonchalantly in America now with no problems on either side thanks to NATO! He had visited her there without complications thanks to NATO. He had been on holiday to Greece thanks to NATO. He had free, uncensored internet and could study anything he wanted to thanks to NATO. He could buy or read any book he so desired thanks to NATO. He could now buy and try any food from around the world, build his country house with top quality German tools and Finnish products and all sorts of other advantages and improvements in lifestyle all of which were thanks to NATO!

 

While my interlocutor didn't come up with any concrete facts to refute my observations I could feel that he remained distinctly unimpressed and somewhat despondent. We were both children of the cold war but from different sides and I put it down to mental habit, while not questioning my own of course, and to piqued pride at a lost empire (The Baltic States had been “incorporated”into the USSR in 1940 and were a popular holiday destination during Soviet times.)

 

This was, obviously, in itself an “imperialist” way of thinking as many foreigners, especially Americans often accused we Brits of having the same problem: something I had personally never felt. We chatted about some other stuff for a few minutes and said our goodbyes. As I walked home, across the Lieutenant Schmidt Bridge, along the English Embankment to the English Prospect were this Englishman was at the time living, I mulled over my colleague's worries but my conviction that my rosy view of NATO and Russia's future cooperation with it was based on solid foundations soon lead my thoughts to more important matters: such as dinner.

 

As time went by the subject would come up with increasing regularity among friends, students and from the Russian television which I had begun to imbibe. As I watched the ever increasing amount of amazingly surreal spats between the British and Russian governments over the next ten years I put it all down to bad advisers in the Foreign Office and MI5 or 6.

 

Strange, I thought, though as in Margaret Thatcher's time she seemed to have been very well advised on the USSR. It must just be less important now, I supposed.

 

When it came to the increasingly suspicious attitude taken towards NGOs working in Russia by the Russian government and media, I put it down to the residues of Soviet paranoia. After all, weren't countries like Britain and France full of NGOs, many of them foreign funded, without it seeming to be such a big problem? Even the “missile defense systems” the US was planning to install in Poland and Romania and that Obama initially promised to scrap on coming to office still seemed innocent enough to my believing mind. In spite of the fact that I had seen very clearly that the western media had, on mass, as if to order, started to report Russia in a very negative and false light as soon as the Soviet Union collapsed, and that their coverage of the country had nothing in common with the reality of my life there since 2003, nothing prepared me for the total “breakdown” of the main stream press in August 2008, when it universally painted Georgia's gun-ho invasion of South Ossetia as an unprovoked Russian invasion of Georgia. I was on holiday at the time and didn't really get the whole picture until my arrival in Britain a few weeks later which is probably why I was still able to convince myself that it was simply a mistake on the part of a press who's main attention since the end of the cold war had been elsewhere.

 

More and more Russian friends from all walks of life (and I know people here from pretty much all walks of life) were telling me that the US and NATO were encircling Russia, preparing to bring about regime change or even to attack her and dismember her in order to rape her natural resources and ensure that she could never challenge US hegemony. It all still sounded “a bit extreme” to me and there was also a not so small minority of Russians, some of whom I knew, who believed the West remained the “good guys” and this was all Putin's fault.

 

My main reason, dear reader, for not understanding what was coming was that I couldn't see how any of the suspicions expressed by my Russian friends and acquaintances, if true, were in the real interest of western nations such as the UK and the USA et al!  In other words I still believed that our governments were working, albeit sometimes falteringly or misguidedly, for our best interests. Some of you may well laugh but many Western friends and acquaintances to this day still cite that as the main reason for refusing to believe me now when I tell them that if we are on the verge of a third world war, it is almost entirely the fault of the west!

 

After all, I told myself and all these worried Russians that the fundamental interests of Russia and other western nations were basically the same as we shared the same life styles, same historic, cultural and religious ties and obviously could find huge mutual advantages in cooperating with each other. The Cold War had been an aberration caused by Bolshevik terrorism and now we could reunite Europe without any more strife. Couldn't we? After all, we were no longer in the Nineteenth Century when every European country and Empire was in direct and sometimes aggressive competition with every other. Were we? It would be absolutely insane to pick a war with modern Russia when in our age, there is palpably nothing to pick a war about; wouldn't it? Our leaders simply wouldn't do that now erm, would they?

 

The blinkers finally came off my eyes during the months of February and March 2014. The anti Russian propaganda of the MSM reached unparallelled peaks of rabidly racist hysteria timed to coincide with the Winter Olympics in Sochi. At the same moment in Kiev Ukraine, after mass killings of protesters and police by anonymous snipers the mob took over on Maidan Square vapourising an agreement that had been hammered out the day before and president Yanukovich fled for his life. Some say that this was also timed to coincide with the Winter Olympics in Sochi.

 

If I have been around Russian people for thirty years and lived in Russia for ten, I have also been around Ukrainian people for twenty years and am no stranger to the internal tensions and divisions that have been inherent in that country in their current form way back into Soviet times.

 

I am also no stranger to the particularities of Ukrainian nationalism.

 

However. At first I had some sympathy with this Maidan protest for the reasons stated above and as Ukrainian friends had left me in no doubt as to the incredible levels that corruption has reached there but I found their tendency to blame Russia for all their problems ridiculous as I knew this simply couldn't hold water as a serious argument.

 

The Soviet Union, maybe, and then, but modern Russia was not the Soviet Union and it alarmed me to see that some Ukrainian friends made absolutely no distinction between the Russian Empire, the USSR and the Russian Federation.

 

According to them it was all just Russia and was-had been bad for Ukraine.

 

I also became increasingly nervous about the level of support this Maidan protest seemed to be garnering from Western politicians and unelected EU leaders who had always been very unimpressed with mass public disorder in their own countries.

 

I couldn't understand why the EU was forcing Ukraine to chose between one side or the other. It seemed to me not to be rocket science to let those who wanted to look towards Europe and trade with it to do so and those who gravitated towards Russia to do so likewise. 

 

I knew it to be utterly insane to try to cut Ukraine off from Russia with such huge and deep rooted familial, cultural, historical and economic ties.

 

Ukraine and Russia are much more intimately entwined that England and Scotland; even if some western Ukrainian nationalists refuse to accept that fact because it's not their history.  Also, the perceived and actual differences between many Ukrainians and Russians are considerably less than those between Essex man and Yorkshire man for example.

 

“If that kind of pressure continues it could lead to a civil war!” I told myself and others at the time. Surely our leaders must know that. They have advisers and experts, don't they?

 

I then remembered watching flabbergasted as in 2008, at the time of the Georgian war, as British Foreign Secretary Milliband flew off to Kiev in order, as the BBC put it “to create an anti Russian front” in spite of the fact that half of Ukraine was very pro Russian and that Russia had not done anything to merit such a response.

 

In retrospect this was just a rehearsal for the events now unfolding.

 

Furthermore, all over western and then central Ukraine, government buildings, police stations and arms depots were being taken over by well armed and well trained nationalist mobs as I could see online; but none of this ever seemed to appear in western media outlets.

 

On social sites I noticed Russian and Ukrainian friends beginning to divide into camps, pro or anti Maidan (but not along national lines).

 

After the change of regime in Kiev, came the reunification of Crimea with Russia and the explosion of alarmist fear mongering from the new Kiev rulers, Washington, London and Brussels. “Putin must be stopped,” “ He is the new Hitler,” “He'll be at the channel ports in weeks if we don't do something”.

 

Yes, the media coverage of the Maidan protests had been biased but not totally. There had been “some” mention of the fact that the half of the country who had voted for Yanukovich did not want the EU or NATO and preferred to remain close or get even closer to Russia.

 

There had been “some” mention of ultra right wing forces involved in the protests and even of US interference. Not much but some. The minute it became clear however that Russia and Crimea were not going to let the Ukrainian nationalist paramilitaries onto the peninsular and above all that they were going to organize a snap referendum on whether or not Crimea should return to Russia, the Western press (British, American and French media that I was personally watching) and by account all other western media too, switched en mass and on cue to a total demonology of Putin and his country and an equally total adulation of the new Kiev government in true totalitarian style.

 

How is that possible, on mass, in supposedly free and independent countries with supposedly free media? The brutal answer to that question seems to be that it is not possible and therefore it follows that we are no longer living in free or independent countries and that we no longer have a free and independent media.

 

The twenty first century actually began on one of  those forty eight hours in Kiev from February 20th to the 22nd 2014 at the moment of the sniper shooting on Maidan leading to the successful overthrow of the Ukrainian government.

 

Exactly one hundred years after the nineteenth century disappeared into the conflagration of the First World War and revolution ushering in the real Twentieth Century, in 2014 we have seen our world stood on its head and seemingly at lightening speed.  Even though, as a hundred years ago, the underlying problems and causes have existed and have been festering and fermenting for a long time. Their sudden eruption over our old world seems to to have caught so many of us by surprise.

 

I don't know about you but when it comes to this 21st century, so far, I'm distinctly not a fan!

 

In Ukraine we are witnessing the greatest level of mass psychosis in the very heart of Europe since the death of Stalin and the Nuremberg rallies. Far from trying to help extinguish what is a hugely dangerous and destructive phenomenon, the USA, EU and NATO have relentlessly poured petrol onto the fire and fanned the flames cynically using the resulting inferno to serve a totally deluded conception of what the West's interests actually are.

 

This is quite literally the radicalization of hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians, especially the young, just as with Islamic fundamentalists, only this time into into extreme Russophobe nationalism .

 

The cause may have a different name but the mental, psychological process is identical. The result too! Western governments backing Kiev know this perfectly well.  How to spot a Ukrainian who has succumbed to mass psychosis? This is the litmus test. If they start saying that “Ukraine is utterly united as one country. All people who oppose the new Maidan government are not Ukrainians but Putin's spies, spetsnats operatives and Russian fighters who have sneaked across the border with the ultimate purpose of killing all Ukrainians.”

 

Then they use the phrase “the aggressor” categorizing the above but basically meaning Russia in its entirety.  They are in the grip of mass psychosis.

 

You don't have to be an expert on Ukraine to understand the insanity of this.

 

Is your own country utterly united? Is your own town or city utterly united? Your family? You with yourself? Ukraine, even before independence from the USSR has been one of the least united countries on Earth!

 

I was dumbfounded when the first Ukrainian friend said this to me. Then I began to hear it with increasing regularity from friends, acquaintances and from media interviews. The same identical phrases always hurriedly spat out and repeated over and over.

 

If we transmute this into US politics, it is as if the Republican Party suddenly started to say that there are no Democrats in America. “America is utterly united behind us.” All these “ so called” Democrats are all in fact Cuban spies and soldiers who have been sent across the border to kill all Americans. They then proceed with an “anti terrorist operation” bombing and shelling Democrat areas of the States in order to subdue them or wipe them out!

 

It is really very frightening to see people, and intelligent, well educated and formerly lucid people, some of whom are close friends of mine and with whom it was possible to have rational conversations about the future of Ukraine as little as a year ago, seemingly willfully switching off their own inner light one after another and leaping into the black writhing pit of mass stupor.

 

One of the most obvious results of this is that the US backed Kiev regime's politicians and spokespeople are pathologically deluded liars; yet everything they say is reported by the Western press as if it were Gospel truth with zero cross questioning.

 

This is also  the main reason why the Ukrainian army has proved so ineffective in action.

 

Their entire raison d'etre is based on totally false foundations, false beliefs and empty slogans where as the Donbass self-defense fighters, even if some cling to old childhood illusions (admiration for Lenin and sometimes Stalin etc.) remain lucid about the current situation and know exactly what they are fighting for and why.

 

To bring radicalized individuals back to consciousness is a costly, delicate and time consuming business and recent history shows that not everybody makes it back.

 

In this situation I can't see anything good coming for Ukraine for a very long time, regardless of what happens in the ground.

 

Extreme nationalism is simply a recipe for lack, disintegration, poverty and ultimately destruction and death anywhere in the world at any time in history! Always has been and always will be.

 

Furthermore, in US-controlled Ukraine, Western agro-business multinationals are moving into Europe's greatest expanses of fertile soil with genetically modified food and fracking plans. This, by the way, is one of the main reasons why the Donbass people have to be subjugated or got rid of . Royal Dutch Shell signed an agreement with the Yanukovitch government to start fracking in Donbass. The population there don't want or need this as their brothers across the border are swimming in cheap natural gas. Kiev, Washington and Brussels do want this as not only can they make a fortune out of it, but shale gas from Donbass would help to reduce dependency on Russia for supplies and further undermine the Russian economy. Fracking is extremely unpopular in Europe and North America but US backed Ukrainian leaders have repeatedly described the people of Eastern Ukraine as insects, beetles, terrorists and subhumans so they will just have to put up with it, move away or die.

 

The most frightening fact of all is that every word and accusation that comes from this radicalized government in Kiev is designed to bring NATO and anybody else who will “help” into the armed conflict in the east on their “side” and that they think it is completely normal for the whole world to sacrifice itself, even to the point of a nuclear holocaust, to support their insane delusion of not only a Ukraine “utterly” united around Lenin, Stalin and Khrushchev's artificial borders but for many, a Ukrainian empire stretching all the way to Vladivostok.

 

NATO, that force for peace and stability that I used to believe in, has become a very aggressive force for instability in Europe and the world.

 

It is headed by jerky puppet like “hollow men, headpieces full of straw” who spout fallacies and double speak at every opportunity. It has become the private army of the Western military industrial complex and it is the largest and best equipped fighting force the world has ever seen with only the most tenuous connection to any form of democratic decision on its use.

 

In fact, NATO seems to be an exact mirror image of what it used to be at the time of the Cold War.

 

As stated, twelve years ago I thought I perfectly understood why many states in Eastern Europe wanted to join NATO but it has turned into a deeply poisoned chalice, a mirror image of its former self, fermenting nationalism and bringing them much closer to exactly what it was, in their minds, supposed to protect them from: a major war with Russia and the resulting devastation of their lands and people.

 

The mirror is in many ways a perfect metaphor for this whole crisis and for the “brave new world” in which we find ourselves. It really seems to be the exact opposite of the Cold War world into which I grew up. Western “democratic” politicians have publicly heaped praise on those who launch petrol bombs at unarmed policemen and forcibly take over police stations and other state buildings without ever seeming to consider that this would inevitably return to haunt them one way or another.

 

When the people of eastern Ukraine did exactly the same thing, in order to protect themselves against the ultra nationalists who had been installed in their capital and whom they had long known hate them with a radical vengeance, that was considered by those same politicians and their press as criminal and terrorist.

 

Ukraine has in fact been invaded by the USA albeit without “many” American boots on the ground for the time being.

 

This is never mentioned.

 

Crimea's return to Russia however is portrayed as a violent occupation even though not a shot was fired and there was no invasion because Russian forces were already legally there including with the right of rotation.

 

This event of deep spiritual significance for Crimeans and Russians (while for Crimeans it was also a matter of survival). It is, however, being painted as a breach of international law while the US-instigated coup d'eatat in Kiev is not.

 

The principle of self determination is never mentioned either although this was one of the foremost justifications for Britain liberating the Falkland Islands from Argentina and for refusing IRA terrorist pressure in Ulster because a violent minority was trying to force its will onto the majority.

 

If Crimeans and Russia had not acted as they did in what was a brilliantly executed operation there would be genocide and ethnic cleansing in Crimea too now just as in Eastern Ukraine, plus the possibility of the Russian and Ukrainian troops stationed there having started to engage one another. Not to mention the US navy sailing out of Sevastopol and setting up as the kings of the Black Sea, which of course was another of the main reasons for the whole regime change operation in the first place.

 

The West now seems to have a totalitarian press resembling that of the pre Gorbachev USSR and Nazi Germany, a situation absolutely without precedent as far as I can see, and true to style it constantly accuses the Russian press of being exactly what it itself has become.

 

Apart from some occasional moments of self sabotaging insanity, the Russian press has become, in truth, considerably more objective than that of the West today. The difference is that, for the most part, it is the government speaking to you; openly without any cover up. Everybody knows this and assesses what they see, hear and read as they see fit.

 

At least up until last December when I was last there, Russia's internet remains freer than that of the UK to name but one example.

 

The Anglo Saxon world, with a possible question mark over New Zealand, has been the victim of a silent putsch.

 

Although many “ordinary” people's lives do not seem to have changed much for the time being, our mainstream political parties have all merged into one and do the bidding of the CIA and military industrial complex and their financiers while still maintaining the appearance of having alternative agendas. Result? There is no real opposition anymore to question and censor. But we are supposed to go out and vote anyway. Massively controversial policies such as waging war with Russia meet with almost total acquiescence from politicians and media alike with only an ever dwindling number of elder states-persons, former ambassadors and aged experienced commentators to raise their voices of wisdom in the wilderness of this “moronic inferno”.

 

We have massive government surveillance of our own citizens and everybody else. Freedom of speech is being drastically curtailed under the guise of such dubious ideologies as political correctness and career prospects take a turn for the worst if people publicly express nonconformist views! Twelve years ago at the time of the US, the UK led invasion of Iraq some major European countries were clearly still independent of US control. Chillingly and insidiously, this situation has changed and it now seems that all the major countries of Europe are in the clutches of the new American reality and out of those who have attempted to escape the encircling coils even for a moment, not one has so far succeeded.

 

Having lived in France and Russia for many years I always resisted the anti-Americanism that is so often expressed in these countries.

 

It always seemed to be largely the result of petty jealousy and spleen about America's position in the world and of course, a “left wing” ideology in which I could never find any satisfactory answers.

 

I was not blind to many of the USA's downsides and as a child I was always for the Indians and not the “vulgar” cowboys but America's positive contribution to the Twentieth Century seems to me to have been literally staggering.

 

As I observed however, last spring and summer, the way Obama and his administration were relentlessly pushing for confrontation, upping the ante, making absolutely untrue, propagandistic pronouncements about the people of Donbass and Russia's actions and intentions, whipping up the initially very reluctant Ukrainians (apart from the ultra nationalists) to start shooting each other and actually goading Putin into invading eastern Ukraine, I could literally feel, as a distinct physical sensation in my brain, my hardly used, painfully narrow, “anti-American” neural pathways opening up.

 

I realized that US government policy was trying to destroy everything I believed in and had hoped was already somewhere in sight. A genuinely united Europe with free trade and liberty of thought, expression (but not to blindly insult others) and freedom of movement throughout the continent and further. A multi polar abundant world without loser countries and without anymore massive wars. This is really not so difficult to achieve. How could it be that we had not learned the lessons of the twentieth century and that above all it was now the “democratic victors” of the Cold War who were becoming the undemocratic enemy faster than it was possible to keep up with.

 

I repeat: I've been around Russians for thirty years, Ukrainians for twenty and have lived in Russia for ten years.

 

Obama and Kerry's mendacious declarations and the mass media distortions were not going to pull the wool over my eyes.

 

It struck me immediately that I only had general knowledge about north Africa, Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan. I have never been to those places, I don't know anybody there and don't speak their languages.

 

What would I have thought about US, NATO policy in there if I had?

 

Only now that this had touched a part of the world I know intimately did I begin to truly see through all the massive lies and deceptions and I could hardly believe just how massive and how deceitful they actually were.

 

The next realization was of course that most people at home who did not have any detailed, on the ground knowledge, of Russia and Ukraine or any of the other countries where the US, NATO and the IMF have sown death and destruction would almost certainly continue to believe their televisions and newspapers.

 

This seems to have been born out by my own experience talking to people in Britain and France. The media's reporting on other matters, domestic and international seems, as far as I can tell, to those of us who have only general knowledge of the matters being discussed, to be more or less normal. Certainly less blatantly slanted.

 

Many organizations such as the BBC or the New York Times have well seasoned, established reputations and pedigrees so most people find it hard to believe that what they are being told about Russia and Ukraine is so totally untrue. Now tell me that is not a conspiracy! Well! Yes! There you have it! I've used the “C” word but that is a worthy subject for a whole separate article.

 

It seems that one of the things we all find hardest to accept is change and this the main reason why this propaganda is working and the world is heading for a new, all out war.

 

The USA looks like the new USSR with Britain functioning as the new Soviet Bulgaria (the local hit man).

 

Most citizens of these countries seem blissfully unaware of their new “ Brezhnevian” situation.

 

Germany looks like the new Soviet Romania posing as independently minded sometimes but always conforming to the will of the master state when the chips are down. Merkel, while having made a show of being a negotiator for domestic voter consumption, has in fact relentlessly pushed for war and sanctions in unison with the US in this crisis until now.

 

At the time of finishing this personal account of my own experience of massive change I am receiving some good news and some bad news. The bad news is that I have seen some reports from New Zealand that seem to indicate that they are also well down the road to police statehood. Yet to be confirmed however. The good news is that over the last two weeks, since Minsk II was signed, there seems to be a genuine rift emerging between Europe and the US.

 

In fact, to be more accurate, between the Anglo Saxon world and the non-English speaking European nations and, just possibly “really and truly” including Germany this time, on how to proceed with the crisis and above all concerning the question of whether to arm the Kiev government, something that would make a major war in Europe and maybe a third world war infinitely more likely.

 

It is too soon to make any predictions but it could be just the first hint of sanity returning to the “old European world.”

 

Insanity reigns supreme among the leaders of the English speaking peoples which, as I am proud to be one of them, leaves me desperately sad and very frightened.

 

It is nothing less than cognitive, intellectual collapse. Will they forge ahead with their regime change plans in Russia anyway, which is the big reason behind all the other reasons for the entire Ukrainian crisis, or will enough heads stand up for just accepting what is and allowing the emerging economies to take their place in the new world and just simply benefit from that rather than fighting it? It's really not rocket science after all.

 

All we can do is to speak out, every voice makes a difference. And pray.

 

I want to pray for and thank the people of Donbass who have borne the brunt of the fighting and destruction that they absolutely did not ask for or incite. Many, fighters and civilians alike, have perished, been maimed and wounded. They are not separatists! How can they be when they are at home protecting their own lands and homes from external attack? They are most certainly not terrorists either. They are fighting against terrorism.

 

They are quite literally at the very cutting edge of a struggle of world wide importance and historical significance between the total take over of the New World Order- IMF financial slavery- and the possibility of a multipolar positive economy and an abundant world.

 

If they fail, the lights will go out not only all over Europe but over the entire globe.

 

I am far from being the first to point out that we all underestimated the people of Donbass. I certainly did, largely because of my frustration with nostalgia for Soviet communism. Their stoicism, tenacity and organizational ability and sheer grit has become a historic example to all of us and to future generations.

 

Of course they are being helped! They must be. I guess. Although I am certainly not alone in having no proof of that. Not to help them would be a crime against humanity in itself but they have clearly understood why that help has to be, for the time being, surreptitious and so much less that they must so desperately have hoped for. They accepted the world situation, looked it in the face and fought on for their survival, regardless.

 

I dedicate this article to the people of Donbass, fallen and alive and kicking. Also to those killed or maimed on the so called “Ukrainian side” be they conscripted by the force of others, or conscripted by the force of their own loss of lucidity. In what is yet another utterly pointless and futile waste of human life and potential at the behest of the machinations of unconscious manipulators thousands of miles away on what they, over there, seem to believe is another planet.

 

 

 

Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space
PO Box 652
Brunswick, ME 04011
(207) 443-9502
http://www.space4peace.org 
http://space4peace.blogspot.com  (blog)

Thank God men cannot fly, and lay waste the sky as well as the earth. - Henry David Thoreau

Resistance to the Vietnam War - The history the Pentagon does not want you to know or remember

 
 
 
 
When: Saturday, March 28, 2015, 10:00 am to 4:30 pm
Where: MIT, Stata Center • 32 Vassar Street • 32-141 (AM) and 32-123 (PM) • Cambridge
People's History of the Vietnam War Teach-In: Resistance to the Vietnam War
The history the Pentagon does not want you to know or remember on the 50th anniversary of the 1965 teach-ins on the Vietnam War
featuring Noam ChomskyLouise BruynCarl Davidson and other resisters
Registration fee: $5 in advance, $10 at the door.  Register here: http://vietnam-teachin.bpt.me/
Voices from the Movement to End the Vietnam War - Speaking out Then and Now
A People's History - covering Draft Resistance, Resistance within the Military, a Vietnamese Perspective, SDS, Agent Orange, Vietnam today, building a movement, persevering and working for peace, justice and social change
10 AM Panels/Discussions in 32-141
History of the Vietnam War - Four Perspectives
Paul Shannon is a staff member of the American Friends Service Committee and helps coordinate the Budget for All project. During the war he participated in numerous anti-war mobilizations including the Daily Death Toll project, the Committee to Free Saigon’s political prisoners, the Indochina Peace Campaign, and the peoples Blockade Committee. For 20 years he was the Editor of the Indochina Newsletter.
Carl Davidson was twice elected to SDS national leadership--as Vice-President in 1966-67 and as National Inter-Organizational Secretary in 1967-68. After that, he worked at the Guardian as a staff writer, news editors, and the paper's representative to several national antiwar coalitions. More recently, he was a steering committee member on United for Peace and Justice (UFPJ) and local peace groups in Chicago and Pittsburgh. He is a national co-chair of Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism and a member of USW Local 3657.
Louise Bruyn, author, She Walked For All Of Us.  "Someone ought to walk to Washington to tell the government to stop to stop this war!"  Louise Bruyn did just that in 1971.  She walked from Newton, Massachusetts to the Capitol in Washington, where then-Senator Edward Kennedy and then-Rep. Father Robert Drinan met her on the steps.  Forty years later, she published a book based on her diary.
Nguyen Ba Cheung, Association of Vietnamese Patriots
Wayne Smith, Vietnam Veteranwho since 1976 has played a leading role in efforts for normalization of relations with Vietnam, justice for veterans, and peace.
Pat Hynes, Traprock Center for Peace and Justice in Western Mass, is a retired environmental engineer and Professor of Environmental Health who worked on multi-racial and low-income issues of the urban environment (including lead poisoning, asthma and the indoor environment, safe housing, community gardens and urban agriculture); environmental justice; and feminism at Boston University School of Public Health.  She recently conducted an investigation of the ongoing legacy of Agent Orange in Vietnam and has created the Vietnam Peace Village Project to support scholarships for 3rd and 4th generation Agent Orange victims.

Poems with Doug Rawlings from Veterans For Peace (VFP poet of the year!)
Lunch Break - 12:30 - 1:30 - Lunch places are nearby or you can bring your own, food is not provided by the organizers!
2:30 PM  Panel on Resistance to the Vietnam War in 32-123
Professor Noam Chomsky, MIT.  Noam Chomsky is one of the foremost public dissidents in the U.S. and has been for more than 50 years.  His books and articles criticizing U.S. policies are read around the world.
John Bach - draft resistance.  In 1967 John Bach dropped out of college to lose his student deferment which he considered racist and classist.  He spent three years in federal prison which he views as three of the freest years of his life.  A very committed Quaker, he has tried to be faithful to that trajectory ever since.
Susan Schnall - resistance within the military.  Susan Schnall was an active duty Navy nurse during the American conflict in Vietnam.  In 1969 she was tried and found guilty by general court martial for:  conduct unbecoming an officer for dropping anti war flyers over military bases in the San Francisco Bay area and wearing her uniform in the GI and Veterans March for Peace demonstration in San Francisco.  She has been active in the Medical Committee for Human Rights, Medical Aid for Indochina and the GI coffeehouses of the 1960s.  Susan Schnall is a member of the core of the Vietnam Agent Orange Relief and Responsibility Campaign, Veterans for Peace and Vietnam Veterans Against the War.
Judy Norsigian - linking in the Women's Movement of the era.  Judy Norsigian is a co-founder of Our Bodies Ourselves - the book that revolutionized women's health care. She is an internationally renowned speaker and author on a range of women's health concerns, her areas of focus include women and health care reform, abortion and contraception, childbirth (especially the role of midwifery), genetics and reproductive technologies, and drug and device safety.
Anti war music of the time with Chris Nauman, a long time peace activist who lately has been leading standing room only Pete Seeger singalongs!
Link to Resistance Documents of/about  the time:www.dropbox.com/s/d3jfoodnj9ztqmb/Resistance-Documents%20%281%29.pdf  
Registration fee: $5 in advance, $10 at the door.  Register here: http://vietnam-teachin.bpt.me/
Sponsored by United for Justice with Peace
Hosted by MIT Technology and Culture Forum
Supported by Survival Education Fund 

St. Patrick’s Parade: Paying Homage to VFP, Gay Inclusion

A photo of the Veteran's for Peace at the St. Patrick's Peace Parade last year, when no LGBT group was allowed to march.  Photo: Pat Westwater-Jung
The Veteran’s for Peace at the St. Patrick’s Peace Parade last year, when no LGBT group was allowed to march.
Photo: Pat Westwater-Jung

By: Christine Nicco*/TRT Reporter—

OUTVETS and Boston Pride’s participation in the less exclusive South Boston St. Patrick’s Day Parade, organized by the Allied War Veterans Council, AWVC, is a move towards inclusivity, as reported by most media in and around Boston, Mass. However, little fanfare has been attributed to the organization serving as the probable catalyst for the organizations’ acceptance into the AWVC St. Patrick’s Day parade this year, according to Veterans for Peace, VFP.
VFP has stood on the front lines, fighting on behalf of the LGBT community and other social and economic justice groups since 2011, when they launched the first St. Patrick’s Peace parade. Serving as an alternative parade for groups that have been purposefully excluded by the AWVC, VFP has given LGBT organizations and others an outlet to openly be visible during a St. Patrick’s Day parade, an option that otherwise would not have been available.
“In 2011, we (VFP) had applied to be in the [AWVC] Parade and we were denied,” said Pat Scanlon, a decorated Vietnam Veteran and Immediate Past Coordinator of VFP Chapter, Smedley D. Butler Brigade. “We were told they didn’t want the word ‘peace’ associated with the word ‘veteran.’ For 20 years, the LGBT community had been denied approval to march and we were denied too, so we pulled a permit and in three weeks, we had 500 people on the street, two bands and a Duck Boat. We reached out to the LGBT community and said: ‘they [the AWVC organizers] denied you 17 years ago, we just bought a permit, how would you like to walk with us?’” 
Despite the inclusion of OUTVETS and Boston Pride by the AWVC this year, VFP and many other groups are still left behind, denied by the traditional parade organizers, while others who once stood united in solidarity with VFP now have marched ahead without them.

And walk is what the LGBT community did alongside other groups dedicated to peace, equality, and social and economic justice, until now.
Despite the inclusion of OUTVETS and Boston Pride by the AWVC this year, VFP and many other groups are still left behind, denied by the traditional parade organizers, while others who once stood united in solidarity with VFP now have marched ahead without them.
Although VFP is glad of the two LGBT organizations history-making moment, this historical evolution is also poignant.
“I personally had encouraged Sylvain [Bruni] to apply to be in the traditional parade this past January. It was not until the morning prior to the release of their press release on March 13 that both Sylvain and Linda [DeMarco] called me to let me know that they were informed that Boston Pride could walk in that parade,” said Scanlon. “As I told Sylvain and Linda, I celebrate their inclusion into that parade but their decision is a little bittersweet for me personally. I celebrate their inclusion but can’t help but feel some sense of being left on the battlefield. …We have a saying in the military, ‘no one is left behind’ and at first, I felt our friends were leaving us behind.”
Lara Hoke, US Navy veteran, VFP member and minister of the Unitarian Universalist Congregation, Andover, was surprised by BP’s decision, but understood its historical significance.
“It’s an important step toward a more inclusive parade, so it was definitely an exciting development and something to celebrate,” said Hoke. “Solidarity is very important when doing social justice work. Veterans For Peace was always very clear that we would refuse to march in the ‘main’ parade unless the LGBTQ community was invited to march as well.”
BP evoked similar sentiments of solidarity to VFP and other groups being left behind from AWVC’s parade too, just a year ago, via an official press release from the organization.
“We speak with one voice regarding this issue and urge the traditional St. Patrick’s Parade organizers to accept the Veterans for Peace and all other honorable and peace-loving groups to be in the traditional parade,” the release read. “It would not be enough for us, just to win the right for the LGBTQ to march in the traditional parade. We will not leave our sisters and brothers from Veterans for Peace behind.”
However, despite VFP’s denial to be included again in the AWVC parade, BP received their approval letter by mail earlier this week, according to the organization.
“While we recognize there is still much work to be done to protect the rights of the LGBT community both here and around the world, and to ensure everyone’s rights to express themselves and to celebrate, we are aware of how symbolically important it is for members of our community to be proudly out among their friends and neighbors as a part of this historic parade,” stated BP’s president, Bruni, through the organization’s official press release announcing why they would march in the parade this year.
For other supporters, the inclusion of Boston Pride and its subsequent decision to march is reason to celebrate but evokes other concerns.
“This situation is fraught with potential for divisiveness and we don’t want to make it worse,” said Gerry Scoppettuolo, Stonewall Warriors and VFP/Peace Parade supporter. “I had great hopes that the Pride Committee would continue to show solidarity with the vets as it has in recent years and honor the anti-war roots of pride and we continue to hope for this.”
When the AWVC allowed the exclusive inclusion of these two LGBT groups, Boston Mayor Marty J. Walsh, Gov. Charlie Baker, Lieutenant Governor Karyn Polito, Mass. Treasurer Deb Goldberg, US Senator Edward J. Markey, U.S. Congressmen Stephen F. Lynch, and U.S. Rep. Seth Moulton also marched in the parade. The Boston Globe reported that “much of the Boston City Council was present as well as State Rep. Nick Collins.”
Mayor Walsh indicated his intentions, via a former press release immediately made available after the first LGBT group, OUTVETS, was approved to march.
“We’re very pleased to hear that OUTVETS will be marching in this year’s parade,” said Kate Norton, the former press secretary for Mayor Walsh, in a statement. “Mayor Walsh has been advocating for an inclusive parade for quite some time. We’re thrilled to hear that the South Boston Allied War Veterans Council has decided to make the 2015 parade an inclusive event.”
Allowing only two LGBT groups to participate in Southie’s traditional St. Patrick’s parade may still be too traditional to allow all LGBT, labor, environmental and peace groups to join the event. The Rainbow Times submitted its application to march over a month ago to the AWVC but were not given an answer as to the application status, even after placing numerous calls and e-mails to the organization. 
“Mayor Menino would not march in this parade for many years because it excluded people and discriminated [against them]. Mayor Walsh, for many years when he was in the state house, did march. But, last year as mayor, he didn’t.”—Sarah Wunsch of MA ACLU

“We never received an answer, not even to let us know we were not allowed to participate,” said Nicole Lashomb, The Rainbow Times’ editor-in-chief.
Sarah Wunsch of MA ACLU explained that the AWVC has a right to exclude people as a privately held parade, but “the mayor is the mayor of the whole city,” she said in an NECN interview. “Mayor Menino would not march in this parade for many years because it excluded people and discriminated [against them]. Mayor Walsh, for many years when he was in the state house, did march. But, last year as mayor, he didn’t.”
In contrast, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio decided to continue to support equality and did not participate in this year’s Saint Patrick’s Day parade, according to a Care2.com story.
This year, in the parade, “only one group [was] permitted to carry an LGBT-themed banner.” Mayor de Blasio felt it wasn’t “enough.”
“We need something more for it to really feel like we’ve turned the corner. A lot of people feel – I think, rightfully – that that is too small a change to merit a lot of us participating,” Mayor de Blasio said in a recent statement.
Wunsch echoed Mayor de Blasio’s sentiments by stating that Boston mayor Walsh should not have marched, just as the NYC Mayor has refused to march in the traditional St. Patrick’s Day parade. “I think this is still a discriminatory parade,” she said.
Many media and leaders disagree with Wunsch.
A Boston Globe story headline read today: “Gays in parade, but Veterans for Peace shunned.” Its author, Kevin Cullen, writes “Walsh worked long and hard to make Sunday happen. He hopes Veterans for Peace are included next year.”
Scanlon said that the decision made by BP is a decision that they, VFP, would not have made, “but it might just possibly be for the best.”
“The proof of the success of their decision will not be so evident this year, but next,” Scanlon said. “Will the Allied War Veterans Council allow other LGBT organizations to march with OUTVETS and Boston Pride next year? What will they do if other legitimate LGBT organizations such as Mass Equality, or GLAD, the Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders, or Dignity, a Catholic LGBT group, BAGLY, the Boston Alliance of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Youth, Rainbow Warriors or The Rainbow Times are prohibited from joining them? That will be their real test.”
Other organizations are hopeful that the inclusion seen this year will mean that more is to come.
“Unity Pride of greater Boston is excited that spectators of the 114th Annual South Boston St. Patrick’s Day Parade will experience the LGBT Community by allowing OutVets and Boston Pride to march,” said Henry Paquin, Co-Chair, Unity Pride. “We hope that the entry of these two groups is the first step towards a fully inclusive parade.”
Scanlon and Wunsch believe a solution to the problem could be for the city of Boston to reclaim its St. Patrick’s Day parade.
“The city should take back this parade and make it open and welcoming for all. That is our position,” Scanlon said. “But, this discriminatory and exclusionary practice, especially for vets that have served this country and many of which have given blood for this country, not to be able to walk because, after what we’ve seen and experienced, we are working for peace? It is an insult and they are degrading veterans of the United States military.
Wunsch continues. 
“I hope that Boston Pride will remember to stand with others who are being left out, still. As the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. said, ‘Until all are free, none are free.’ Or, put another way, ‘nobody wins unless everybody wins.’ I believe that.”—Lara Hoke

“I agree with Pat,” she said. “I think the city ought to take back the parade it ran for many years, and have it be open to all people who want to celebrate St. Patrick and Irish culture. It should be open to all.”
Hoke is, nonetheless, “ happy for Boston Pride that they will march this year.” An open lesbian, Hoke hopes that BP “will work for the inclusion of other LGBTQ groups in the parade, and that they will speak out for VFP to be included as well.”
“I sincerely doubt that OUTVETS and Boston Pride would be marching in the South Boston parade had it not been for the efforts of VFP,” said Hoke. “I hope that Boston Pride will remember to stand with others who are being left out, still. As the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. said, ‘Until all are free, none are free.’ Or, put another way, ‘nobody wins unless everybody wins.’ I believe that.”
Efforts to contact the AWVC for this story were in vain.
About the St. Patrick’s Day Parade in Boston: The traditional Parade organizer’s, the Allied War Veterans Council, AWVC, emboldened by a 1995 U.S. Supreme Court ruling, had continually denied marching permission for LGBT and peace veterans groups as a matter of First Amendment, free-speech rights. After much controversy and loss of many main supporters last year, the AWVC seems to have had a partial change of heart in 2015 by allowing the two organizations to march in their Parade.
*Quotes and excerpts of this story were gathered by Chris Gilmore.
Also From The Web

JeJu Island: South Korean Activists to Speak and Show Film "The Wind is Blowing" on Struggle to Oppose US Militarism

When: March 18, Wednesday, 7 pm
Where: Friends Meeting House, 5 Longfellow Park, Cambridge (near Harvard Square)
Two young Koreans active in the campaign to stop the construction of the  huge new naval base are touring to provide information and build support.  The new base will serve both South Korean and US warships such as guided missile destroyers and aircraft carriers. The base is key element of the "pivot" strategy to expand US military presence in Asia/Pacific.  A principal US goal is to contain rising Chinese power.  Construction is also damaging a pristine marine environment.  Korean peace, environmental and religious activists have built a major grassroots campaign and seek international support.
Hee Eun "Silver Park" has been active in the Gangjeong Village Peace School, Save Our Seas team, and inter-island solidarity for peace.
Paco Michelson is a radical reconciler with a small Korea-founded community network The Frontiers, and is active is arts and media work.
Cosponsored by: American Friends Service Committee, United for Justice with Peace
Endorsed by MAPA
National tour sponsors:  Peaceworkers, Nodutdol, Korea Policy Institute, Channing & Popei Liem Education Foundation
For more information contact jgerson@afsc.org or mcfarland13@gmail.com