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ImageSTOP THE WAR~FIRE THE LIARS! NO MORE LIES – NO MORE DEATHS – NO MORE DOLLARS – BRING THE TROOPS HOME
STOP THE WAR~FIRE THE LIARS!
NO MORE LIES – NO MORE DEATHS – NO MORE DOLLARS – BRING THE TROOPS HOME
A series of Stop the War events to demand a stop to the war and the lies and to remember those that have died as a result. These events are being held in solidarity with national actions on and around the 4th anniversary of the Iraq Invasion.
LIARS CONVENTION!
HOW TO MAXIMIZE YOUR LYING PROFITS BY LYING FOR WAR!
Saturday, March 17
3:00pm Liars Convention at the Federal Building Plaza
7:00pm Free Film Screening of Military Myths at Free Speech Zone (2144 South Highland Drive) At the Convention Plaza, particpants will:
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WALK FOR PEACE
In Recognition of the 4-year Anniversary of the Iraq War
Join your friends and neighbors in a call to end this war and bring our troops home
Saturday, March 17 from 1-3pm
Beginning & ending at the County Court House 199 N Main Street, Logan
There will be speakers & music at the courthouse after the march
Sponsored by: Cache Valley Peace Works, Logan Friends Meeting (Quakers), Mormons for Equality and Social Justice, People for Peace & Justice of Utah, Veterans for Peace
Contact: 792-3713 or loganpeace@hotmail.com
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STOP THE WAR FILM SCREENING:
THE GROUND TRUTH~THE HUMAN COST OF WAR
Sunday, March 18 ~ 2:00pm
Downtown Salt Lake City Library Auditorium
200 East 400 South

THE GROUND TRUTH stunned filmgoers at the 2006 Sundance and Nantucket Film Festivals. Hailed as “powerful” and “quietly unflinching,” Patricia Foulkrod’s searing documentary feature includes exclusive footage that will stir audiences. The filmmaker’s subjects are patriotic young Americans – ordinary men and women who heeded the call for military service in Iraq – as they experience recruitment and training, combat, homecoming, and the struggle to reintegrate with families and communities. The terrible conflict in Iraq, depicted with ferocious honesty in the film, is a prelude for the even more challenging battles fought by the soldiers returning home ? with personal demons, an uncomprehending public, and an indifferent government. As these battles take shape, each soldier becomes a new kind of hero, bearing witness and giving support to other veterans, and learning to fearlessly wield the most powerful weapon of all – the truth.
(Read more at The Ground Truth) Following the film there will be a roundtable discussion with all present on the film itself, the current state of affairs, and what we as citizens in Utah can do.
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PEACE PROCESSION AND MEMORIAL VIGIL
Monday, March 19
Listen to the PSA Dress in black and bring lumination (candle, flashlight- some candles provided).
7:00pm Silent Walk to City Creek Park (North Temple State Street) where 60 luminaries will be launched representing killed Afghans, Iraqis and Utahns.
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Sponsors of the above events:
BY OTHER COMMUNITY GROUPS
“No More Business As Usual” on
Monday March 19 – March/Rally To End the War in Iraq
11:00 – gather at Pioneer Park
12:00 – March
1:00 – Speeches on Washington Square, including Salt Lake Mayor Rocky Anderson
Salt Lake City – Pioneer Park to Washington Square (400 South State Street)
For more info, email: Cory at rambova@riseup.net, Kim Spangrude at kimspangrude@mac.com
6:00pm-6:15pm
Library Square Amphitheater
Downtown Salt Lake Library
200 East 400 South
Contact: Karen
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged afghanistan, anti-war, iraq, military, peace, politics, Utah
The corporate-ness of anti-war organizing
What’s the difference between grassroots organizing and “other” types of organizing?
Money.
When groups organize events, rallies, and protests, they usually solicit “sponsorship” from other organizations. I have a problem with the word “sponsorship” because it implies financial backing – a concept completely antithetical to grassroots organizing. Nonetheless, the groups with which I participate use that word even though we do not ask for money. Most groups I know of around the country also use “sponsorship” in the same vein as our groups. I prefer to use the words “participating organizations” or “endorsers”. I am going to try to be more aware of this as I continue my activist activities.
Recently I learned of a group organizing protests that has been soliciting funds from various groups and businesses. I learned that the group has a tiered level of sponsorship: Gold, Platinum, and Silver.
Additionally, some groups are charging as much as $100 tabling fee for the privelege of doing outreach at events, rallies, and protests. Further, I was also recently informed that it’s not good “business or marketing sense” to use the word “solidarity” in publicizing our events.
It seems to be that some organizing is going corporate and grassroots concepts are being tossed for the big bucks. Money is what gets the big names. Money is what gets the best advertising in the newspapers and radio ads.
But does money stop the war and occupation? In the end, when it is all said and done, what is it REALLY that makes/will make the difference and the most impact?
The Bushites and other corporate whores will not be stopped until there is an uprising BY THE PEOPLE. I’m talking direct action. People need to realize that all the money spent on rallies and protests, in the end, does not stop anything. At least so far. I have never seen any direct actions coming out of the rallies and events here. Orrin Hatch and Bob Bennett are still supporting the war effort.
And now Hillary Clinton says she will continue the Iraq Occupation if elected president.
So sure, money buys things but so far hasn’t made a difference.
What happened to the concept of passing the hat, of doing grassroots fundraising? Are people really convinced that all the glamour and glitter of the big things money can buy will attract more people and, more importantly, get people inspired enough to do direct action? Are masses of people boycotting businesses, turning off their televisions, getting rid of their cars because of the corporate-type rallies?
No. People get their feel-goods by attending rallies in their crisis-driven mentalities but then crawl back into their comfortable lifestyles and do not, as a general rule, get out and get active.
I learned yesterday of a woman in Salt Lake who has never ever orgnanized anything in her life. But something snapped this time and she has organized a small, brief vigil for folks after work on Monday night. I wrote to her and told her way to go. This is what is needed – more folks taking on actions in small steps – with no money needed, just the power of the people.
It’s the grassroots that will make a difference. Not money.
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Activism, anti-war, corporate politics, government corruption, peace, politics
(Heel of Hand to Head)It’ Not Community, Stupid – It’s All About the Money! (Sugarhouse, cont’d)
Owner/Developer Craig Meachum is evicting local merchant tenants from their building in a matter of months. Meachum owns the building outright, yet claims it’s “his turn” since he supposedly has given these businesses “a break” (see article below). His “turn” for what? He not only owns that block, he also owns high rise buildings east of that block. This seems to me like the same old story – the rich getting richer at the expense of those who strive to build small, local-based community. So…….
SUPPORT THE BUY-COT OF SUGARHOUSE BUSINESSES!
Patronize the businesses that are being forced to move from historic Sugarhouse!
Beginning the first Saturday in April, the 1st and 3rd Saturdays of each month there will be a merchant festival until July when the businesses have to leave.
“We are going to make this a Wake instead of a Funeral” – Andy Fletcher of Orion’s Music
Here are links to recent articles and interviews:
http://www.kcpw.org/article/3147
Bottomline Rewind: Master Plan and Zoning at Odds in Sugar House
Mar 12, 2007 by Lara Jones
Successful Small Biz Fall Victim to Redevelopment
(KCPW News) Today’s Bottomline panel talked about changes in the Sugar House business district. Concentrated on the southwest corner of 2100 S. and 1100 E., a new round of redevelopment may see neighborhood favorites like Orion’s Music, Luna’s Italian Ice and the Free Speech Zone close as property owners demolish and rebuild a mixed-use project featuring ground-floor retail with offices and residential condominiums in their place. While the old merchants are welcome in the new project, the higher rents owners will be able to charge will most likely prevent them from staying. Salt Lake City Councilman Soren Simonsen, whose district includes Sugar House, says the area suffers from a disconnect between master plan goals and current zoning — with small businesses paying the price:
http://www.kcpw.org/article/3149
Sugar House Developer Says ‘It’s My Turn’
Mar 13, 2007 by Lara Jones
Media Unfairly Painting Him Unsympathetic to Small Biz
(KCPW News) The Sugar House business district is experiencing another wave of redevelopment, which means small locally-owned businesses clustered at the intersection of 2100 South and 1100 East face expulsion as property owners and real estate investors take advantage of a hot economy. In the process, developer Craig Meacham says he’s been unfairly portrayed by the media as someone out to make a buck at the expense of small businesses:
“I’ve tried to be very fair and equitable with these tenants; many of these tenants have been there for an extended period of time at a reduced rate,” says Meacham. “I think that I’ve been more than fair with these tenants and if their business plan is going to work, they know by now. So I kind of feel that it’s my turn, frankly.”
Meacham has owned a stretch of buildings on the west side of 1100 East, south of 2100 South, for the last 15 years. He says he’s seen business go through several up and down cycles, and now is the right time to redevelop his property:
“We anticipate taking down this property – which is very old, very dilapidated and frankly needs to come down – and we want to replace it with something much nicer. It would be an office complex and some condominiums, and retail on the ground floor.”
Rents will be much higher, Meacham admits, meaning many current tenants won’t be able to afford it. He still needs to finalize construction plans and go through the city permitting process, but Meacham says he hopes to begin demolishing property by summer or fall of this year. As a result, many merchants are getting eviction notices.
Utah’s Delegation says Stop-Loss is Necessary
Pennsylvania’s Rep. John Murtha has introduced legislation to end the Stop-Loss Policy which requires soldiers to extend their commitments to the military. But it’s hitting walls to support it – even amongst Utah’s Delegations.
Murtha, a Pennsylvania Democrat and Vietnam combat veteran, attached the stop-loss legislation to a host of other training, funding and deployment provisions he acknowledged were designed to bring an end to the war in Iraq.
That put the plan on the wrong side of many Republicans and made it a “nonstarter” with conservative Democrats such as Utah Rep. Jim Matheson.
The former Marine colonel is said to be reworking his pitch.
But many members of Congress – including Utah’s delegates – appear reluctant to support an end to the stop-loss scheme, even as a stand-alone issue.
Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Activism, government corruption, iraq war, military, politics, Utah
Hannity Producers Change Minds About Having Rocky on Show
Claiming there were “other things that needed to be discussed”, producers of Sean Hannity’s “Hannity & Colmes,” show last Thursday made a last minute decision to calcen Salt Lake Mayor Rocky Anderson appearance on the show to address the impeachment of George W. Bush.
Hannity has proposed flying to Salt Lake to debate Mayor Anderson sometime this spring.
Read Mayor Anerdson’s A Compelling Case for Impeachment of President George W. Bush
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged Activism, bush regime, government corruption, politics, Utah
Celebrating Peace Communities
I participated in the first annual Salt Lake County Community of Peace Celebration yesterday, an initiative taken on my SL County’s Mayor Peter Corroon. A national initiative, SL County is the first county to fully implement the components of a Community of Peace. There were lots of awards given out and Gov. Huntsman gave an award to Mayor Corroon for taking the lead on this. The County Diversity Council, Created by Mayor Corroon, organized yesterday’s celebration.
The event was held at the Utah Cultural Celebration Center in West Valley.
Articles in the news on the Community of Peace Celebration.
Salt Lake County is officially designated nation’s first Community of Peace
Photos I took of the event:
Continue reading
The Eviction of Sugarhouse Shops – Support the “Buy-cot”
They knew it was coming.
About a month ago the Craig Mecham of Mecham Management, owner of a building that houses the heart of Sugharhouse businesses, dropped off eviction notices to those businesses and then left town for two weeks. The area is being redevloped to allow for chain stores to barge their way in and 8 story high buildings to be built, changing the entire look and feel of Sugarhouse as we know it.
In the Deseret News articleSugar House shops forced out, Orion Music Store, Andy Fletcher, owner and other Sugarhouse business owners say this was inevitable and is devastating, but shop owners are facing the music: It’s time to move on. It is likely that some businesses will not be able to survive this change. Fletcher has indicated that Orion Music is facing an end to its business.
To that end, Fletcher has called for a “buy-cot” of these businesses.
“Rather than having a funeral for Sugar House and bemoaning the fact that it’s going away — because it is going away, and there’s nothing anyone can do about it now. The decisions have been made, and the wheels are in motion — I’m advocating a ‘buy-cot,”‘ Fletcher said. “We’re inviting the public to come down, and we’ll have live music and information available so that people understand not just what happened, but where people are moving. It’ll be a festival, not a funeral. “If people want to help, if they want to do something, they should come down and buy that CD they’ve been wanting. They should buy that cup of coffee or that Italian ice, or that card from Blue Boutique. Because if it’s not financially a possibility for these businesses to move, they’ll close. But if they have some money in their pocket, and they know that the people around them will support them when they move, I’d say that most of them will continue to look very hard at finding a solution.”
I spend a lot of time in that area since my friend and sister radical cheerleader owns the radical infoshop, Free Speech Zone there, where we have are practices and where I help organize film showings and other events. I’m still having a hard time knowing that in a matter of months we will no longer have that place to do these things. I really like Fletcher’s call to action to make a bad situation into a good one for the affected businesses.
Mesopotamia Wetlands: Victim of War
“War is never an isolated act.”
(Clausewitz, 1831)
The effects of war are far more widespread than the average person considers.

Eden in the Line of Fire
By María Amparo Lasso *
Ninety-three percent of the wetlands have disappeared in Mesopotamia, the great oasis of the Middle East. Now, war threatens to destroy what little remains.
A recurring nightmare is troubling environmentalists worldwide: the firepower being used in the second Gulf War devastates what little is left of the wetlands of Mesopotamia, a place that many believe was the setting of the Bible’s Garden of Eden.
War is not a simple concept. War not only kills people, it is having devastating effects on our earth. The immediate death and destruction resulting from war often becomes forgotten as cities and territories are rebuilt. But the longterm consequences are even more frightening.
Home to millions of birds, the marshes of what is modern-day Iraq are among the most important in the Middle East. As a regional oasis, these marshlands for centuries provided fertile land and clean water for millions of people.
“I hope the images of the environmental catastrophe of the first Gulf War are not repeated in 2003,” ornithologist Mike Evans told Tierramérica, recalling how he saw thousands of aquatic birds die after Iraqi troops set fire to more than 600 oil wells as they withdrew from Kuwait in 1991.
A photo of a little grebe bird blackened by petroleum was seen by people around the world at the time, and became a symbol of the worst oil spill in history.
Such oil disasters might not happen this time around, but it is still relatively early in the war.
The marshlands of Mesopotamia (Al Ahwar, in Arabic), where civilizations of the Babylonians and Sumerians flourished, are today extremely fragile — and they are in the line of fire (see infograph).
The ecosystem forms part of the Tigris and Euphrates river basin, which gives sustenance to Iraq, Turkey, Syria and Iran.
But the heart of the wetlands lies in southern Iraq, along the border with Iran and near big cities like Basra, which is currently suffering a profound humanitarian crisis, following the overwhelming attack launched by the United States and Great Britain Mar 20.
There, too, the first oil well fires of this war burned. Around a dozen total, but now apparently they have been brought under control.
The more than 1,600 oil wells in Iraq represent a time bomb for the marshes, as well as the potential contamination of the ecosystem by the use of conventional weapons as well as weapons of mass destruction, the passage of hundreds of war vehicles through the surrounding desert and the mass mobilization of refugees.
But the bulk of the damage has already been done. Thrashed by the impact of human activities over the years, just seven percent of the original extension of the marshlands remain, around 20,000 square km.
When Hassan Partow visited the area in 2002, along the Iran-Iraq border, he was heartbroken. Where recently one of the most impressive natural spectacles had been recorded — millions of exotic migratory birds filling the skies — he found a desert landscape, one that had been depopulated and was now highly militarized.
Partow is a member of a team of specialists from the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) which in the days after the beginning of the U.S.-led attacks issued a new alert about the tragic disappearance of 93 percent of Mesopotamia’s wetlands since 1970.
“It is incredible to think that an ecosystem that took millennia to be formed could be destroyed in so few years,” Partow told Tierramérica.
This fast pace of destruction has one main cause: the ambitious ongoing water and drainage projects of Iraq and its neighbors that share the river basin, particularly Turkey, which has built 30 dams.
But the series of armed conflicts in the area (the Iran-Iraq War from 1980 to 1988 and the 1991 Gulf War) also played a part. Explosive mines were placed throughout the watershed, which sustains a half-million Ma’dan, the original inhabitants of the marshlands, and the habitat of numerous plant and animal species, particularly birds, some of which have already become extinct.
UNEP says that if urgent action is not taken, the wetlands of Mesopotamia could disappear completely within five years.
“Water is more important than oil.”
Wetlands destruction “is the most serious environmental problem in the area today, both in terms of biology and in the population’s access to safe water. In the Middle East, water is more important than oil,” Jonathan Lash, president of the Washington-based World Resources Institute (WRI), said in a conversation with Tierramérica.
Until recently, the marshes sustained the region’s multi-million-dollar freshwater shellfish industry and supplied 60 percent of the Iraqi freshwater fish market.
The thousands of ducks and geese that filled local markets — a crucial source of protein for Iraqis since the post-Gulf War embargo began — also came from those marshlands.
The wetlands also purified the waters of the Tigris and Euphrates, which flow into the Persian Gulf, a body of water that is renewed by currents from the Indian Ocean only every three to five years.
The destruction of the marshes, say experts, may also affect the region’s climate, with grave consequences for the habitat of nearly 400 bird species.
Although no species has been declared globally extinct, at least three of incomparable beauty, have disappeared from Iraq: the sacred ibis, the African anhinga and the goliath heron.
Ornithologist Evans, of the Britain-based non-governmental BirdLife International, says experts are worried about several species, particularly the aquatic birds, “because they are more vulnerable to chemical and oil spills than land birds.”
At least eight percent of Iraq should be declared a protected area for birds, says BirdLife International.
Wetlands devastation has also hurt the arable lands of southern Iraq. The idyllic oasis inhabited by the Ma’dan during the past 5,000 years has collapsed. Left landless and caught in the crossfire, the descendants of the Sumerians have had to move elsewhere. Of the 95,000 refugees displaced from their homes from 1991 to 1993, 40,000 were Ma’dan.
Today, many live in misery in encampments in Iran or in Iraq’s cities.
With or without the direct effects of the current war, a flow of water from reservoirs in Iran and Iraq would be needed in the short term to restore the wetlands, says UNEP’s Partow.
However, only an integrated management plan that involves Iran, Iraq, Turkey and Syria could prevent the extinction of the area’s marshes, he adds.
Efforts of the past decades were in vain. Iraq has failed to sign important international agreements like the 1971 Convention on Wetlands (signed in Ramsar, Iran) and the 1992 Convention on Biological Diversity. Baghdad has also refused field studies of the area, meaning that the existing research is based largely on satellite images.
“In 1994, when we drew up f the first report on wetlands, we tried to involve Iraqi scientists, but it was not possible. We must re-establish dialogue to achieve the equitable use of the river basin,” Jean-Yves Pirot, head of the wetlands and water resources division of the Worldwide Fund for Nature, told Tierramérica.
UNEP will head up environmental assessments in post-war Iraq. But nobody dares hope that the environmental question will be at the center of the post-war debate.
“I know people at USAID (U.S. Agency for International Development) and the State Department who are concerned about these issues, but whether they will be given top priority, that is something I can’t predict,” said WRI president Lash.
* María Amparo Lasso is editorial director of Tierramérica.
You can view a satellite image of these wetlands through the Visible Earth Project of NASA.
