Category Archives: Uncategorized

Iraq War 5 year Anniversary Events

See photos and links to news articles from this week’s vigils

Please participate in the activites in Logan today and tomorrow:

Logan – Friday, March 21 and Saturday, March 22, 2008
Cache Valley Peace Works invites the public?s participation in the following events on March 21 and March 22 marking the 5th anniversary of the Iraq War.

Events will include a display of boots representing fallen U.S. servicemembers from Utah as well as shoes representing Iraqi civilians, an award-winning movie about peace activism, a panel discussion and a peace march.
March 21

  • 9 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.
    American Friends Service Committee?s Eyes Wide Open Exhibit ? Utah
    USU Taggart Student Center, International Lounge or outside plaza
  • 6:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.
    Closing ceremony of Eyes Wide Open Exhibit
    7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
    Logan Premiere of ?A Soldier?s Peace,? a documentary about a local soldier?s peace walk USU Eccles Science Learning Center Auditorium
  • 8:30 p.m.
    Moderated panel discussion on ?Activism, an American Heritage? USU Eccles Science Learning Center Auditorium
    March 22
  • 1:30 p.m.
    Peace rally and walk starting and ending at Historic Cache County Courthouse 199 N. Main Street. Speakers include: Marshall Thompson, Thad Box.
  • 3 p.m.
    Second screening of ?A Soldier?s Peace? at Logan City Council Chambers 255 N. Main Street
  • Sponsors of the events include: Cache Valley Peace Works, USU departments of Journalism and Communication, Political Science, History, Sociology/Social Work/Anthropology, Women and Gender Studies Program, Honors Program, USU College Democrats, Logan Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers), Cache Valley Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, Laughing Sangha of Cache Valley (Buddhist), and Mormons for Equality and Social Justice of Cache Valley, and Utah Poineers.
    INFO: Cache Valley Peace Works, AFSC, and A Soldier’s Peace.
  • Winter Soldier Hearings March 13 – 16: Watch/Listen to the broadcast

    Winter Soldier: Iraq and Afghanistan

    Winter Soldier will feature testimony from U.S. veterans who served in those occupations, giving an accurate account of what is really happening day in and day out, on the ground. The four-day event, March 13-16, will bring together veterans from across the country to testify about their experiences in Iraq and Afghanistan — and present video and photographic evidence. In addition, there will be panels of scholars, veterans, journalists, and other specialists to give context to the testimony. These panels will cover everything from the history of the GI resistance movement to the fight for veterans’ health benefits and support.

    How to Access Winter Soldier Broadcasts

    TV BROADCAST — LIVE COVERAGE

    (1) Free Speech TV: March 14 and 15, 9:00am – 9:00pm EST

    • On the DishNetwork: Channel 9415

    Free Speech TV is a full-time national satellite channel that reaches over 20 million homes in the United States via satellite broadcast on the DishNetwork. They will carry two full days of Winter Soldier.

    (2) Link TV: March 14th and/or 15th (times to be announced)

    • On the DishNetwork: Channel 9411
    • On DirectTV: Channel 375

    Link TV has yet to determine how much of Winter Soldier they will broadcast and at what times. Check the IVAW website for exact times.

    (3) Your local public access channel via Free Speech TV
    Public access television stations across the the country have been supplied with consumer DishNetwork satellite dishes and setup units that enable them to receive Free Speech TV programming. Already there are over 150 cities that downlink DishNetwork satellite broadcasts and rebroadcast the programming on their cable channels. All cable systems — Time Warner, Comcast, Adelphia, etc. — are required by franchise agreements to provide public access channels to local communities as part of their basic package. Contact your local public access cable channel and ask them to carry all or part of Free Speech TV’s Winter Soldier broadcast. If your local public access channel has not acquired a DishNetwork satellite system yet, they can easily and inexpensively do so by ordering an installation of the system from the DishNetwork.

    (4) Direct from Satellite
    Many colleges and universities, public access cable stations and media centers have KU Band digital satellite dishes. They can tune their satellite dish to the following coordinates and bring in the signal live from Washington, DC. Local news channels can also pick up the broadcast by tuning their satellite dishes to the following coordinates:

    Satellite: HORIZONS 2 (Ku) Dig
    Transponder: 16 – Ch C
    Orbital Slot: 74° WL
    Bandwidth: 9 MHz
    Downlink Freq: 11984.5 (H)
    Carrier Access: Intelsat America (800)631-3562
    Satellite Time: 9:00-21:00 ET

     

    RADIO BROADCAST — LIVE COVERAGE


    KPFA, the Pacifica Radio Network’s station in the Bay Area, will be broadcasting live coverage of the hearings on this schedule (all times times are east coast):

    Friday, March 14 from 10 am to 7 pm
    Saturday, March 15 from 9 am to 7 pm
    Sunday, March 16 from 10 am to 4 pm

    Pacifica will also be uploading the broadcast to their KU satellite, so any radio station that has access to the KU satellite or a KU webstream mirror should also be able to download that live broadcast. Radio stations that are part of the Pacifica affiliate program should all have access to the KU satellite. If your local station does not have access, or if they are not sure, please contact us at organizing@unitedforpeace.org so we can help them make the necessary links.

    LIVE WEB STREAMING


    (1) Streaming video will be accessible at ivaw.org from Thursday, March 13, through Sunday, March 16.

    (2) Streaming audio will be accessible at KPFA.org from Friday, March 14, through Sunday, March 16

    .

    Life

    Sometimes it takes the miracle of birth to put everything into perspective.  I was priveleged enough to witness the birth of my second grandchild last week, a boy.  What an experience.  An experience that confirms my convictions more than ever to do my little part during my lifetime to stand up against the injustices to life and the planet and work towards a better world for the life with which it is inhabited.

    Female Blogger Contest


    Women's Voices. Women Vote.
    In celebration of Women’s History Month, Women’s Voices. Women Vote is honoring women in the blogosphere, through our Women’s Voices Making History contest.

    We’re inviting people to nominate their favorite female bloggers through March 21. After the nominating period, we will list the top 10 female bloggers at www.wvwv.org and ask you to vote for your favorite.

    Check out the form and vote for your favorite blogger today, and encourage your readers to do the same. We’ve created a button for your site that will take your readers directly to the voting form.

    Click here to nominate your favorite female blogger today!

    Thank you-

    Sarah Johnson
    Communications Director
    Women’s Voices. Women Vote

    Nader Announces Bid for Presidency


    Ralph Nader announced his third bid for President of the United States today on Meet the Press.  Nader will run as an Independent.
    View Nader’s campaign site

    From today’s Washington Post:

    Consumer advocate Nader starts presidential bid

    Reuters
    Sunday, February 24, 2008; 10:02 AM

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Consumer advocate Ralph Nader said on Sunday that he is launching another long shot independent campaign for president of the United States.

    Nader, who will turn 74 this week, announced his presidential bid on NBC’s “Meet the Press” saying that neither the Democrats nor the Republicans are addressing the problems facing Americans.

    Nader also ran for president in 2000 when he got about 2.7 percent of the national vote as the Green Party candidate and played a role in deciding the final presidential outcome. He also ran as an independent in 2004 and got only a tiny fraction of the vote.

    Many Democrats blame Nader’s participation in the close race between Democrat Al Gore and Republican George Bush in 2000 for tipping the election in favor of Bush. They believe that but for Nader’s name on the ballot in Florida, Gore would have been the clear winner and president today instead of Bush.

    Nader called Washington “corporate occupied territory” that turns the government against the interest of its own people.

    “In that context I have decided to run for president,” Nader said. (Reporting by Donna Smith; Editing by David Wiessler)

    (To read more about the U.S. political campaign, visit Reuters “Tales from the Trail: 2008” online at http://blogs.reuters.com/trail08/)

    More news on Nader’s Announcement

    Earthquake in Utah

    I felt the effects of an earthquake this morning and am quoted in this article:
    Quake hits NE Nevada, has buildings swaying in downtown Salt Lake City
    By Bob Mims and Erin Alberty
    The Salt Lake Tribune
    Article Last Updated: 02/21/2008 08:50:06 AM MST

    Updated: 8:49 AM- A northeastern Nevada earthquake of 6.0 magnitude shook buildings some  200 miles away in downtown Salt Lake City this morning. The seismic event had buildings  swaying for several minutes.
      Detective Sgt. Donald Burnum of the West Wendover, Nev., Police Department said there  had been numerous called from concerned area residents. No damage had immediately been  reported in his city, but heavily damaged buildings, fires and propane leaks were being
    reported in nearby Wells, Nev.
        Wells Mayor Rusty Tibo confirmed to 2News that “some of our older historic buildings  have collapsed, I’m told” and that water main ruptured and some propane leaks were  reported — but fortunately, no injuries were immediately reported. Wells schools are
    closed as a precaution.
        The seismic event, reportedly with an epicenter 42 miles west of Wendover and 11  miles east-southeast of Wells, struck at 7:16 a.m., had buildings swaying for several  minutes. The Salt Lake Tribune’s seven-story building the Gateway Mall shook in an
    east-to-west fashion; light fixtures swayed about six inches to a foot.
        Sheryl Peterson of the University of Utah Seismograph Stations confirmed the quake  had been felt throughout the area. Reports of the quake being felt extended as far north  as Preston, Idaho, and south through the Salt Lake Valley into Utah County.
        In Salt Lake City, Deanna Taylor was at her desk at City Academy, 555 E. 200 South,  when the quake rolled through the area.
        “I was sitting at my desk . . . and all of a sudden the floor under me started  shaking and things on my desk started rattling and all the hanging plants in my office – and throughout the building, were swaying,” Taylor said.
        Taylor says she first learned it had actually been an earthquake when she quickly  accessed The Salt Lake Tribune’s Web site, “after I calmed myself, and saw your post.”

        Spencer Johnson of Preston in southeastern Idaho told the Tribune that he “distinctly  felt the earthquake this morning at my home. The cords on my blinds were swaying lazily  about an inch to either side.
        “It was gentle enough that I wasn’t sure whether I was feeling an earthquake or  whether I was just going dizzy for some reason. But my suspicions were confirmed when I  checked your website 15 minutes later,” he added.
        Don Nash of Wendover, Utah, said the quake “Wigged out our dog. We received rattling  and some shaking but, mostly minor stuff. “

    Sometimes Davey Wins

    Let’s hope Davey wins in this case.  Residents are opposed to zoning changes for a Wal-Mart supercenter to be built in a building it currently owns due to the change in the neighborhood such a center would create.  It won’t stop Wal-Mart from operating a store there, but if the zoning change isn’t approved it will put a damper in Wal-Mart’s plans.

    I’m glad residents are standing up against the giant.  I wish, though, that other things about Wal-Mart would be brought forth in its practices, such as only hiring part time employees to avoid paying benefits and this:

    Grocery Baggers In Mexican Wal-Mart Receive No Pay Or Benefits

    Wal-Mart Does Not Pay A Dime To Baggers In Mexico – Tips Only.

    Read information on this site about The Real Facts About Wal-Mart

    Here is the article from the Deseret News today about the Wal-Mart here:

    Wal-Mart zone change opposed in Sugar House

    McKinney seeks access to Georgia’s presidential ballot

    She’s baaaaaaack! But not to run for Congress.

    Former Georgia congresswoman Cynthia McKinney, now seeking the presidential nomination of the Green Party, was campaigning in Washington Tuesday and told our colleague Scott MacFarlane of Cox Broadcasting that she’s working to get her name on Georgia’s 2008 presidential ballot.

    McKinney, a former Democrat, lost her bid for a seventh congressional term in 2006 after she got into an altercation with a Capitol police officer. She left Georgia shortly after that, bound for California.

    Still, there were those in Dekalb County who wondered – Hoped? Feared? – if she’d return to Georgia to challenge the man who took her seat, Rep. Hank Johnson. But McKinney now says that’s not going to happen.

    “There are a lot of people in the state of Georgia who’d like to see me go back to Congress,” McKinney said. “But what I’m learning is that there are a lot of people in New York, Massachusetts, California, and Wisconsin who’d like to see me do this job first.”

    The Green Party needs 40,000 petition signatures to get its nominee on Georgia’s ballot. So far, it has fewer than 3,000.

    Green Presidential candidate Cynthia McKinney addresses Maryland crowd

    Scene and Heard: Seeing Green in Nyumburu

    Chidinma Okparanta

     2/20/08

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    Leading Green Party presidential candidate Cynthia McKinney urged a small but enthusiastic crowd of students and faculty to exercise political freedom in the upcoming presidential election and vote for “real change” at a talk Tuesday in the Nyumburu Cultural Center.

    During her approximately 30-minute appearance, the former Georgia Congresswoman criticized the current two-party system, the Iraq war, the high cost of education and advocated the need to protect the environment. She spoke for about 15 minutes before opening the floor to audience questions.

    “The two-party system has failed to serve the needs of the internally displaced,” McKinney said, referring to the government’s negligence in dealing with Hurricane Katrina of which she is especially critical.

     

    For senior journalism major Matt Johnson, McKinney’s rally was an affirmation of long-held personal beliefs.

    “[McKinney] represents a shift toward a new political system in the United States,” Johnson said. “It’s about the idea that change cannot occur within the current two-party system,” he said, adding, “the marginalization of candidates like Kucinich shows the priorities of the Democratic Party.”

    Sophomore government and politics major Matt Mora, who campaigned actively for Sen. Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio), agreed.

    “Hillary and Obama don’t represent what I stand for,” Mora said. “What they say sounds good, but their voting records say something else,” he said. “Obama and other candidates talk about change, but they can’t bring change within the current political structure.”

    For senior sociology major Darla Bunting, a registered Democrat and Barack Obama supporter, attending the event was a conscious attempt to keep her options open.

    “I’m open to finding out more about different parties and different candidates,” Bunting said. “I’m currently supporting Obama, but that doesn’t mean I’m not open to researching others,” she said. “I feel that McKinney has been an example of someone who is not afraid to speak up against things that are wrong.”

    During her speech, McKinney was critical of the war in Iraq, essentially calling it a waste of money in light of other problems such as poverty that continue to grip the nation in what she calls “Hurricane America.”

    “If we can spend $720 million a day on war, then certainly we can put a huge dent in the poverty that is experienced in this country,” McKinney said.

    She faulted both the president and the Democrat-controlled Congress for questionable decisions involving not only the war, but tax cuts and infringement on civil liberties.

    She also criticized the government for not lowering the cost of college education.

    “It is totally unnecessary that students should graduate from college with $100,000 in debt,” she said, adding that money used to fund the war in Iraq could instead be channeled toward education.

    She voiced a strong desire for single-payer healthcare and went on to discuss the need to protect the environment, a founding principle of the Green Party.

    “We need to change the way we live,” she said, and jokingly added, “and war is not an acceptable energy policy. … We now know that those who were maligned as tree-huggers are now right.”

    She avoided making comments direct comments regarding the two Democratic front-runners, Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) and Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.), only urging the audience to thoroughly research the voting records and corporate ties of their candidates of choice before making a final decision.

    She did, however, reference former Democratic candidate Kucinich, whose proposal for a Department of Peace she strongly supports.

    The former congresswoman remarked favorably on the cultural diversity of the audience, calling it necessary for change.

    “The powers that be are afraid of a room like this,” McKinney said. “We need to make them afraid. … We need a movement in this country, and a movement can’t be built without culture.”

    In light of the Democratic presidential contest, where much emphasis has been put on the historical precedents set by having the first viable black and female candidates, McKinney, who embodies both, said her race and gender remain second to the issues.

    “I think other people pay far more attention to that than I do,” she said.

    And among her supporters, McKinney is viewed a transformative figure in spite of her race and gender, not because of them.

    “The importance of this event was to show people that she does have good ideas and can appeal to students and happens to be a woman and black,” Johnson said.

    McKinney also made clear that her goal is not necessarily to win the presidential election, but rather to make a dent in the electoral process.

    “I think a more appropriate goal would be to get 5 percent of the electorate,” McKinney said, referring to the proportion of votes it takes to gain major party status. “You can call it a 5-percent campaign, which will make a huge different in terms of institutionalized politics. It gives the people another seat at the table.”

    okparanta@gmail.com

     

    Utah’s Ballot Access

    The Green Party of Utah (Desert Greens) has been working to achieve ballot access.  The deadline was February 15.  Despite several paid petitioners and loads of volunteers, we came close but did not obtain the required amount of signatures to be able to have a ballot line in the 2008 elections.  Therefore the Green Party of Utah will not appear on this year’s ballot.

    The Green Party of Utah will still run the GPUS Presidential Candidate in Utah, but as an Independent.  That nominee will be voted on at the GPUS National Meeting in Chicago in July.  After that time we will need to collect 1,000 signatures for that candidate, with the deadline of September.

    Although it helps financially and educationally to grow the party with a ballot line, it’s not significantly detrimental at this point in time in Utah, the reddest state in the nation.  There are other ways to get the party’s name and values out in the public.  With new locals being formed and other activities, the Green Party of Utah will continue to work towards rebuilding itself and educating the public on the values upon which its platform is built.