Category Archives: Uncategorized

GPUS National Convention News

I will be giving a workshop at the Green Party of the United States National Committee meeting in Tuscon (July 27-30) on July 27, as a member of the GPUS Eco Action Committee. Other committee members will also be giving workshops. Additionally, Kathy Dopp, Desert Greens Green Party of Utah candidate, will be providing a presentation on the Diebold Voting Machine issue. I have provided times and descriptions below.

The Facts of Nuclear Testing and Waste Transportation – It Affects Us All!
Thursday, July 27, 2005 at 1:00pm – 2:30pm
presenters: Deanna Taylor, Tom King – Utah
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Iraq Civilians: 50,000 Dead– But Who’s Counting?

Common Dreams has posted this piece by Juliana Lara Resende about the death toll of Iraqi Civilians and how the Pentagon is now coming out with figures, even though they have been saying they “don’t do body counts”.

Last year, Bush asserted that, “30,000, more or less, have died as a result of the initial incursion and the ongoing violence against Iraqis.”

In terms of population size, this would be equivalent to 570,000 U.S. citizens killed in the same period of time, noted the Jun. 25 LA Times article.

Iraq Body Count estimates an average of 36 violent deaths per day – about twice the amount of the first year of the invasion.

Today in history

(Sources: Peace Buttons, War Resisters League, and the Peace Center.)

July 9

1623
English negotiate treaty with Potomac River tribes; after a toast symbolizing eternal friendship, Chiskiack chief & 200 followers drop dead from poisoned wine.


1917
During World War I, Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman, leaders of the No-Conscription League, spoke out against the war and the draft. Both were found guilty in New York City of conspiracy against the draft, fined $10,000 each and sentenced to two years’ imprisonment with the possibility of deportation at the end of their terms.

1955

Albert Einstein

Albert Einstein, Bertrand Russell and seven other scientists warned that the development of weapons of mass destruction had created a choice between war and survival of the human species. The Russell-Einstein Manifesto was published in London .

read the manifesto


Bertrand Russell

1963

Arinell Ponder of SCLC & 5 students arrested & beaten for using white Trailways bus bathrooms, Winona, Miss.


1984

150,000 march in London, England for nuclear disarmament, protest Cruise missiles.

1993

Police ban vigil of Women in Black, Belgrade, Serbia.


U.S. Begins to Replace Aging Nuclear Weapons

I heard this, and you can listen to it, on yesterday’s Talk of the Nation: Science Friday on NPR.

Talk of the Nation, July 7, 2006 · The U.S. nuclear weapons stockpile is aging and, according to the government, the older weapons are ready to be retired. New weapons are in the planning stages, but bans on certain forms of weapons testing leave weapons scientists with a challenge: is it possible to build a nuclear bomb and be so certain it will work that physical tests will never be necessary? Guests discuss the next generation of nuclear weapons.

Guests:

  • Geoff Brumfiel, physical sciences correspondent; Nature magazine
  • Robert W. Nelson, senior scientist, Union of Concerned Scientists, visiting member of the research staff, Program on Science and Global Security at Princeton University
  • Ambassador C. Paul Robinson, chief negotiator and head of the U.S. delegation to the U.S./U.S.S.R. nuclear testing talks in Geneva; former director of Sandia National Laboratories

    What happened to the Treaty on the Non-proliferation of Nuclear Weapons? So much for disarmament.

  • Bush and Rice coming to SLC

    It’s kind of funny how the media picks up on things.

    Last year I and Tom were part of the organizing committee that planned a tremendous program, which Tom emceed, to protest Bush’s appearance in SLC at the VFW convention. (see my account here)It took us only 5 days to develop a program and publicity that attracted over 3,000 people. Rocky Anderson was invited to be a speaker, which he accepted. It was a great program and Rocky was a tremendous part of that. Rocky got the credit for the rally, which was inaccurate, but that’s o.k.

    When word got out yesterday that Bush and Condi Rice will be in town for the American Legion convention in August, members of the same committee stepped into action. We already have preliminary planning going on and meetings set up. Media folks contacted us almost immediately and some are in on our planning discussions.

    So in today’s news:

  • Deseret News, the headline article (online) is Rocky may protest Bush – If asked, he’ll speak again at a rally when president visits S.L. One of our committee organizers, our media spokesperson, is quoted:

    One of the organizers of last year’s protest, Eileen McCabe-Olsen, said among the goals of this year’s protest is “to reach out to diverse constituencies to build support in this election year to pressure Congress to end the war in Iraq . . . and restrain this imperial presidency.”

  • Salt Lake Tribune: Rocky vows cool welcome for Bush
    Coming in August: The president is scheduled to attend American Legion convention in SLC

    Anderson said Friday he planned to meet with organizers of past protests. He foresees an anti-Bush alliance linking environmentalists, seniors, peace activists, health advocates and others.
    The mayor said the United States has an opportunity for “building relations with nations around the world, to joining the world’s movement toward a non-fossil-fuel economy, to creating better, healthier, safer communities. They’re all unfortunately being ignored and undermined” by Bush.

    Be assured that plans are in progress for a rally. I am part of this planning process for this event and will supply updates here as plans develop.

  • Summer hiking

    Yesterday we took another spectacular hike, this time to a lake called Lake Blanche. We hiked up a 2.8 mile trail that ended at the lake and two other lakes, Lakes Florence and Lillian, a short walk just to the west of Lake Blanche. Spectacular views of Sundial and Dromedary Peaks could be seen for much of the hike, but especially at these lakes. The wildflowers were prolific and stunning and there were waterfalls everywhere.

    We think we will take a backpacking trip there later this summer.

    The photos at my personal website speak for themselves, but here are a couple:

    More hiking

    Yesterday we took another spectacular hike, this time to a lake called Lake Blanche. We hiked up a 2.8 mile trail that ended at the lake and two other lakes, Lakes Florence and Lillian, a short walk just to the west of Lake Blanche. Spectacular views of Sundial and Dromedary Peaks could be seen for much of the hike, but especially at these lakes. The wildflowers were prolific and stunning and there were waterfalls everywhere.

    We think we will take a backpacking trip there later this summer.

    The photos at my personal website speak for themselves, but here are a couple:

    Today in history

    (Sources: Peace Buttons, War Resisters League, and the Peace Center.)

    June 8

    1917

    The Women’s Peace Crusade organized a Sunday mass demonstration in Glasgow; from two sides of the city processions wound their way toward Glasgow Green accompanied by bands and banners. They merged into one massive colorful demonstration of some 14,000 people protesting World War I.

    1859

    Vietnamese guerillas ambushed two U.S. “advisers,” making them the first U.S. casualties since 1946 in Vietnam.

    1965

     

    Roy Wilkins became the executive director of NAACP, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. He had edited the organization’s magazine, Crisis, for fifteen years, and was one of the most articulate of civil rights leaders.

     

     

    the Roy Wilkins Memorial in Minneapolis


    1996
    The International Court Of Justice declared that in almost all circumstances use of nuclear weapons is illegal.

    Michael Franti’s Concert

    Yesterday was fabulous. I got to the Gallivan Center around 1:00pm with a handful of other folks and by 1:30 had staked out my spot for the first concert in the annual Twilight Concert Series of the season, featuring artist Michael Franti & Spearhead.

    The highlight for me was meeting Michael.
    Continue reading

    Today in history

    (Sources: Peace Buttons, War Resisters League, and the Peace Center.)

    July 7

    1863
    First military draft by US (exemptions cost $100).

    1903
    Labor organizer Mary Harris (“Mother”) Jones led the “March of the Mill Children” over 100 miles from Philadelphia to President Theodore Roosevelt’s summer home in Oyster Bay, Long Island, New York to publicize the harsh conditions of child labor and to demand a 55-hour work week. It is during this march, on about the 24th, she delivered her famed “The Wail of the Children” speech. Roosevelt refused to see them.


    “Fifty years ago there was a cry against slavery and men gave up their lives to stop the selling of black children on the block. Today the white child is sold for two dollars a week to the manufacturers.”
    from Mother Jones’s autobiography


    1957
    Scientists held their first peace conference in the village of Pugwash, Nova Scotia, Canada. The mission of the Pugwash conference was to “… bring scientific insight and reason to bear on threats to human security arising from science and technology in general, and above all from the catastrophic threat posed to humanity by nuclear and other weapons of mass destruction….”

    1977


    The United States conducted its first test of the neutron bomb. The neutron bomb was a tactical thermonuclear weapon designed to cause very little physical damage through limited blast and heat but was designed to kill troops through localized but intense levels of lethal radiation.

    a neutron bomb explosion at a test site

    1979
    2,000 American Indian activists and anti-nuclear demonstrators marched through the Black Hills of western South Dakota to protest the development of uranium mines on native sacred lands.

    1988

    The first of many syringes, blood vials & other hospital souvenirs — some contaminated with the AIDS virus — washes ashore on Long Island, forcing the closing of miles of beaches in the midst of the worst East Coast heat wave of the decade.