Archive for the ‘Anti-militarism’ Category

Veterans for Peace Civil Disobedience to End War at White House

More of this please!

Bay Area Planning for Public Bodies Antiwar Resolutions Campaign‏

From US Labor Against the War:

WHEN: SATURDAY, AUGUST  14th FROM 10:30 A.M. TO NOON (library opens at 10am)
WHERE: BERKELEY PUBLIC LIBRARY, 3rd FLOOR MEETING ROOM, 2090 Kittredge Street (between Shattuck and Milvia, two blocks from Downtown Berkeley BART)

It’s growing increasingly difficult in the Bay Area to find people who don’t believe our nation is on the wrong course and that we need a new set of priorities.  As the fiscal crisis gripping state and local governments deepens, those who were not already convinced of that, including may fiscal conservatives who do not consider themselves part of the antiwar movement, have come to recognize we truly cannot afford both “guns and butter.”

Around the country, there is a growing movement that demands we end the wars and bring our tax dollars home where we can put them to work creating jobs, reviving the economy, meeting human needs, restoring social services, and repairing local government budgets. Continue reading »

Courage to Resist Mailing Party

From SF demonstration on the 7th anniversary of invasion of Iraq in March

Courage To Resist is hosting a mailing and pizza party this evening. If you are in the Bay Area, feel free to stop by any time from 3pm-10pm and help stuff some envelopes and enjoy good company. This is how CTR gets the majority of its funding to do all their awesome work.  Office is located at 55 Santa Clara Ave., Suite 126.

If you can’t make it this time, consider donating.  Also, I’m sure many of you have already seen War Made Easy. If not rent it soon! Either way, here’s the trailer to remind us of this dark beast.  Courage to Resist supports those who have refused to continue feeding the beast.

Pull the Root: Berkeley Passes War Resister Amnesty Resolution

Sign from antiwar demos on the 7th Anniversary of the Iraq Invasion in SF, March 19, 2010

Berkeley’s City Council passed a Resolution on Tuesday recommending “Universal and Unconditional Amnesty for Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan War Military Resisters and Veterans Who Acted In Opposition to the War for Matters of Conscience.”

It recommends forgiveness for all convictions or pending charges of desertion, Absence Without Leave (AWOL), and Unauthorized Absence (UA), or who have been convicted of charges related to their exercise of free speech concerning opposition to the illegal war in Iraq, Afghanistan, and/or Pakistan. It also recommends amnesty for those with less than honorable discharges for absence offenses and applies to all service-members serving since October 7, 2001. Continue reading »

I hereby submit my objection: Reflection on 7th Anniversary of Iraq Invasion

So we have arrived at yet another anniversary of the United States invasion and occupation of Iraq. Again we observe milestones of inhumanity. We’ve reached over 1000 U.S. soldiers dead from our occupation of Afghanistan. We read weekly reports of the murder of innocent civilians by U.S. soldiers, war planes, and unmanned drones.

Again we headed to (a few) city centers and registered our complaints. In my heart I was really hoping we’d have a robust turnout on March 20 like the March 4 Day of Action for Education.  But in my head I knew that the anti-war movement has mostly shrunk to the point where it consists mostly of the core activists.

The march and rally wasn’t puny, but it wasn’t significant either.  The local CBS headline ran, “100′s Protest…”  Once the march began, it was closer to a couple thousand, but, well, you get the idea. A couple hundred, a couple thousand, apples and more apples. The point is it should be millions, along with coordinated direct actions and strikes.  We saw a glimpse of the possibility 2 years ago when the west coast longshoreman stage a strike on the 5th anniversary, stopping the ports at least for a time. That’s the sort of thing decision-makers notice.

Shortly after I arrived, Daniel Ellsberg spoke, after having keynoted at the Plumber’s Hall down Market Street. Two years previously, on the 5th anniversary, I had been in jail with Ellsberg, after multiple direct actions broke out across the city. The turn out that year was tremendous.  Yet much of it was anchored around anti-Bush sentiment. Perhaps that anger and that personality was something more people could organize around. Its perhaps much harder to organizer for peace under Obama.

Not to say that there wasn’t a good size and diverse group. This year, unions and teachers and Latin American activists were represented.  Churches, and families, and schools made their appearance. I was happy to note Lake Merritt neighborhood association against the war and a SF Pentecostal church were pounding the pavement.  The marchers met up with the striking workers at Hilton in solidarity half-way.

But I’ve racked my brain trying to figure out why so few show up, why the peace movement is much smaller than it should be. I know there is lots of frustration out there. Was it lack of interest? Is war and occupation passe’? Are the majority of people merely passive consumers now rather than active citizens? Afterall, more people turn out to shop at Westfield Mall than to support a sane, peaceful foreign policy.  Why protest war when you can play Call of Duty? More people turn out for Michael Jackson vigils or sign up for celebrity gossip alerts than peace list-serves.

Or is it actually support for the “good war” in Afghanistan and a mistaken perception that the war in Iraq is winding down? Is it the dampening effect of Obama-philia? Afterall, we have a peace president, right? Perhaps people have other things on their mind, like finding a job. Or keeping the crappy one they have to work overtime to pay the rent in the Bay Area. Perhaps the organizing was simply poor? Perhaps the main fragments of the peace movement can’t agree. Perhaps the main “host”-ANSWER Coalition–turns some people off?

Protest has become routinized, as Naomi Wolf has put it. It has become ritual.

Or maybe people just think they won’t make a difference regardless of what they do. How often have you heard, “What difference will it make?” It’s a good question. Then again, so is the rejoinder, “What difference will not protesting make?”

Perhaps people have come down with a nasty case of protest fatigue. After 8 years of protesting under Bush and now over a year under a President who is continuing and increasing militarism, it’s no wonder some are pretty damn tired. Obama has signed the biggest military budget ever, he has escalated the wars/occupation in Afghanistan, he is expanding military bases in Columbia, he is increasing money for nuclear weapons, he has been silent (in his actions) on the Palestinian issue–all this should be sufficient to shake any peace-minded Obama-voters out of their hope-cage.

Trust me, I completely understand. I too feel it. In fact, I was fairly unenthusiastic about going on March 19 to the rally and march.

Yet, in the end, I couldn’t not go because I have to at the very least say to myself and whoever else is listening,”I do not accept this! I refuse to allow normalization of a permanent war economy. I reject these values and stand for something more humane, more just. I hereby submit my objection.”

Under the Radar: Oakland Event Picks of the Week

During this week leading up to the Spring Equinox, find your balance with a mix of cultural, artistic, political, and relaxing events.

Once in a while a week comes along when a handful of worthy events conspire to share the same time slot, leaving one with no other alternative than to toss a coin to determine which one to attend.  This week it seems Thursday is that night.

Every day is Earth Day: We’ll start with two eco-related events on Thursday.  The first is the premier of a fascinating 4-part series called “Ecology Emerges” by Shaping San Francisco that kicks-off at the Humanist Hall Thursday night at 7:30pm. The series gives an overview of the development of ecology activism in the Bay Area over the past 50 years based on a collection of 23 oral histories gathered by local historian Chris Carlsson.

The second is Rainforest Action Network’s 25th Anniversary Kick-off Celebration from 7:00pm – 10:30pm at Lake Chalet Seafood Bar & Grill on Lakeside Drive.

Speaking in Tongues: Alternatively, you can appreciate diversity and explore multi-lingualism with the free Diversity Film Series. This week’s showing is Speaking in Tongues, which follows the stories of four San Francisco public schoolchildren enrolled in Chinese and Spanish language-immersion programs while grappling with the debate over bilingual education. It from 7-9:00pm at Wildwood School Auditorium in Piedmont.  Finally, the Oakland Food Policy Council‘s meets from 5-7:30 Thursday at City Hall. On the meeting’s agenda is a review of the outline of OFPC’s first “Strategic Plan for Transforming the Oakland Food System”. Continue reading »

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