Day of / Day After
Protests When the US Starts Bombing Iraq.
IN THE EVENT of U.S.
bombing of Iraq, choose the best protest location in your city/town, and call on
people to go there at 5:00 pm the day of the attack, or, in the case of an
evening attack, the next day at 5:00 pm.
Post your event on Facebook.
Post your event at worldcantwait.net.
Stop the
U.S. from doing what it's threatening! U.S. bombs, military aid in support its
Maliki government will surely make things worse. This is the message World Can't
Wait is distributing:
U.S. bombings, economic strangulation through sanctions, and occupation over
23 years are responsible for uncounted deaths – possibly over 1 million –
leaving a third of the population displaced, in need of emergency aid or
dead.
Above: protests
against more war on Iraq
Watch video by Stan Heller from protest in NYC Tuesday in
front of an Obama fundraiser.
The current problem is NOT that the
U.S. finally withdrew military forces in 2012, but its illegitimate invasions
in 1991 and 2003. The USA's occupation of Iraq was conducted in a
lawless way, destroying their education, legal, medical, water, sewage, security
and electrical systems. When Iraqis rebelled, Bush's “surge” in 2007 handed out
arms to Sunni and Shia, supporting death squads on both sides to set them
against each other.
The U.S. withdrawal in 2012 left what had been a
relatively secular country split along sectarian lines, with a weak puppet
government, and a huge opening for Islamic fundamentalists to push for religious
rule.
No party in this fight, not Islamic militias, not the Maliki
government — paid for by the U.S. — and certainly not the war machine of the
U.S. itself, has "right" on its side. Tomahawk missiles fired from US
carriers in the Persian Gulf, drone strikes and bombs can only bring
unimaginable suffering to the Iraqi people.
We in the U.S. must speak out
against any U.S. attacks on Iraq. By exposing and standing against the lies
and crimes of our government, whether by Bush or Obama, we can make a difference
in how people see what's going on.
Saturday is Day 500 of the Guantanamo
prison hunger strike, begun February 2013.
Thanks to
Center for Constitutional
Rights:
779 men and boys, all of them
Muslim, have been imprisoned over time at Guantánamo since January
2002.
86%*
were sold to the United States during a time when the U.S. military was offering
large bounties for capture; commonly, $5,000 offered per
man.
629 men have been
transferred.
149 men remain
detained.
88 of them are from Yemen.
78 have been
cleared for release for years but remain imprisoned.
58
of those who are cleared for release are Yemenis, but they continue to be
detained because of their citizenship.
There have been 0
transfers to Yemen since June 2010.
Reprieve, who is representing prisoner Abu Wa'el Dhiab in a federal lawsuit
against the government, to stop its force feeding of prisoners, reports:
More from Andy Worthington in The Latest News on the Guantanamo Force-Feeding Videotapes, and
the Prisoners' Ongoing Legal Challenges.
Our friend L. Michael Hager
contributed an excellent New York Times letter to the editor on the
force-feedings:
Re “U.S. Judge Decides ‘Anguishing’ Case on Force-Feeding” (front
page, May 24):
Americans need to know what is being perpetrated in their name.
Judge
Gladys Kessler of Federal District Court, in her decision (reversing an earlier
order) regarding the Guantánamo Bay hunger striker Jihad Ahmed Mujstafa Diyab,
effectively allowed force-feeding, a painful procedure internationally condemned
as torture. To excuse such a procedure as lifesaving ignores a more likely
political reason: to keep a prisoner’s starvation from attracting the world’s
outrage.
Americans should see force-feeding for what it is: another
example of Guantánamo’s shameful abuses.
L. MICHAEL HAGER Eastham, Mass., May 24, 2014
The
writer is co-founder and former director general of the International
Development Law Organization in Rome.
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World Can't Wait Conversation
TONIGHT Thursday, June 19 10pm
Eastern / 7pm Pacific
Topic for discussion: Iraq, Syria -- What is going
on? What are the "interests of the United States" as defined by Obama, and what
are our interests in this situation?
— CALENDAR —
Thursday June 19
Washington, DC Thursday June 19 at
1pm The National Press Club, Lisagor Room 529
14th St. NW, 13th Floor Press Conference: Iraq Veterans Warn Obama Against
Military Action with Ross Caputi, Matt Southworth, Tim Kahlor, Ray
McGovern
Philadelphia, PA Thursday, June 19, 1PM 15th and Market St.
New YorkTHURSDAY June 19 at 7pm An Evening for Chelsea Manning TheaterLab (357 W 36th St, 3rd
Floor)
Friday June 20
Chicago, IL Friday, June 20, 5 pmWater Tower Michigan Ave. & Pearson St.(1 block north of Chicago Ave.)
New
OrleansFriday June 20 4:00 to 5:30 Protest at Duncan Plaza in front of City Hall at 1300
Perdido Street
Albuquerque, NM Fri., June 20, 6PM UNM
Bookstore (intersection of Central & Cornell)
New York,
NY Friday, June 20, 6pm Harlem Armed Forces Recruitment Center 76
W. 125th St (2/3 trains)
Saturday June 21
Washington, DC Saturday June 21, 1pm White House 1600 Pennsylvania Ave
Los
Angeles, CA Sat., June 21, 1PM Pershing Square (Corner of 5th & Hill) Downtown
LA
San Francisco, CA
Sat., June 21, 12noon Corner
of Powell and Market Sts
Sacramento, CASat., June 21, 1PM Arden Way &
Heritage Ln.
Eureka, CASat. June 21, 12 Noon County Courthouse, 5th &
I St.
Fresno, CA Saturday, June 21 10am - 1pm Peace Corner -
Blackstone & Shaw
Auburn, CA Sat., June 21, 5PM At the Fire Pit Corner of Lincoln
Way & High St.
Tallahassee, FL Sat., June 21, 12:30PM Florida State Capitol 400
South Monroe Street
New Haven, CT Saturday, June 21, 11AM College & Chapel
Streets
Boston, MA Saturday, June 21, 1PM Boston Common outside Park
St. Station
Sunday June 22
Seattle, WA Sunday, June 22, 1PM Westlake Center 400 Pine
St.
Austin, TX Sunday, June 22, 3-5PM Texas State Capitol 1300
North Congress
Monday June
23 Raleigh, NC Monday June 23 at 4pm Morgan St. side of Capitol
Building
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