Tag Archives: Activism

Imagine Peacefest yesterday

I have been involved in planning this year’s Imagine Peacefest in Salt Lake City.  Here is the article that appeared in today’s Deseret News:

Panelists discuss forming U.S. Department of Peace

Published: Sept. 23, 2007 12:21 a.m. MDT

Community members gathered at the downtown Salt Lake City Library on Saturday to discuss the establishment of a U.S. Department of Peace.

In conjunction with the U.N.-sanctioned International Day of Peace and the city’s second annual “Imagine Peacefest,” three university professors, a Hindu priest and a Moab Realtor debated the validity and timing of the proposal, currently being considered by Congress. They loosely defined what they believe the department’s role should be in domestic and international spheres.

“There is a great need for creative nonviolence,” said Bonnie Tyler, a University of Utah professor and member of Mormons for Equality and Social Justice. “We can’t just pull the troops out (of Iraq) ? it has to go beyond that.”

Panel members agreed that in order to establish lasting worldwide peace, the process should begin with the most basic building block of society ? public education.

“We need to be a peaceable culture,” said Michael Minch, a professor of peace and conflict studies at Utah Valley State College. “The ways peace is waged can be taught. None of this is a mystery ? it can be done and it should be done.”

The panel discussed the need for the proposed department to remain autonomous and nonpartisan. The group also considered how to establish relationships between existing domestic peace programs, such as gang-prevention groups. And the panel weighed in on the abolishment of nuclear weapons and the potential department’s role in international affairs.

The panel discussion was only a portion of the day’s activities. A tree was decorated with ornaments, symbolizing peace, created by local schoolchildren. Live music, face painting, films and a children’s choir also were featured at the daylong festival.

Deanna Taylor, one of the founders and organizers of the event, was thrilled at the amount of community support it received. Despite its infancy, she said, the yearly festival has received much community support and planning for next year’s activities is already under way.

“We want it to be a fun, family-oriented, artful event that expresses their ideas of a more peaceful world,” Taylor said.

When asked how international peace can be achieved, Taylor said the answer is found on an individual level.

“It starts with yourself ? first of all, you have to feel deep down inside yourself that peace is possible,” Taylor said. “It branches out from there.”

For information on next year’s “Imagine Peacefest,” e-mail: info@blueskyinstitute.org. For additional information about the establishment of a U.S. Department of Peace, visit: www.thepeacealliance.org.


E-mail: nhale@desnews.com


The One Voice Children’s Choir sings Saturday at the Main Salt Lake City Library as part of the city’s “Imagine Peacefest.” (Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret Morning News)

9/11 – “Safe” vs. “Dominated”

Today is the 6th anniversary of the assault on the World Trade Center in New York City which killed thousands of people.  It was a day that will be remembered throughout history no doubt.  But not JUST for the incident itself.  It was a day that began a dark chapter in U.S. history.

Normon Solomon, author of the newly released Made Love, Got War: Close Encounters with America’s Warfare State”, has written the piece Six Years of 9/11 as a License to Kill

It evokes a tragedy that marks an epoch. From the outset, the warfare state has exploited “9/11,” a label at once too facile and too laden with historic weight — giving further power to the tacit political axiom that perception is reality.

“Sept. 11 changed everything” became a sudden cliche in news media. Words are supposed to mean something, and those words were — and are — preposterous. They speak of a USA enthralled with itself while reducing the rest of the world (its oceans and valleys and mountains and peoples) to little more than an extensive mirror to help us reflect on our centrality to the world. In an individual, we call that narcissism. In the nexus of media and politics, all too often, it’s called “patriotism.”

What happened on Sept. 11, 2001, was extraordinary and horrible by any measure. And certainly a crime against humanity. At the same time, it was a grisly addition to a history of human experience that has often included many thousands killed, en masse, by inhuman human choice. It is simply and complexly a factual matter that the U.S. government has participated in outright mass murders directly — in, for example, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Panama, Yugoslavia, Afghanistan, Iraq — and less directly, through aid to armies terrorizing civilians in Nicaragua, Angola, East Timor and many other countries.

Today should serve as a reminder that our world is not any safer than before September 11, 2001.  The U.S. government has seen to that.  “Safer” isn’t the word.  “Dominated”, yes.


Significance of Today

This was a horrible week in the world’s history.  Earlier this week I posted links to news articles about the 62nd anniversary of the U.S. Bombing of Hiroshima.  Today marks the 62nd anniversary of the U.S. Bombing of Nagasaki.

photo
The mushroom cloud that rose above Nagasaki following the atomic attack on the city on Aug. 9, 1945.

Hiroshima


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Today’s significance

On this day in history one of the most horrible atrocities occurred in our world, the bombing of Hiroshima.

My good friend the Reverend Daniel Webster sent this to me today:
Today on the church calendar we celebrate the Feast of the Transfiguration. On the human calendar we mark the anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima. I offer this to you today:

Property Tax Rates in Utah

Earlier this week I saw an article in the Desert News about Utah Property Tax Rate Hikes.

Increases are being sought by at least 22 of the state’s 40 school districts, 25 of its 242 cities and towns, five of its 29 counties and 14 special districts.
Many increases proposed this year are huge. For example, five local governments are proposing to at least double their tax rates beyond levels needed to produce the same revenue as last year.
They are: Kanarraville (365 percent, or $173 on a $200,000 home); Garden City (344 percent, or $89); the Uintah Highlands district (183 percent, or $57); the West Millard Mosquito Abatement District (121 percent, or $24); and Woodland Hills (113 percent, or $167).

The reasons cited are because property taxes haven’t increased in these communities for quite some time. While this may be true, it is also important to note that the Bush administration has continued to provide tax breaks which have primarily benefitted the most wealthy in this country, leaving states with less federal monies which trickles on down into the tiniest of communities. So the recourse is to increase taxes locally that effect the majority of working people.

I favor everyone being taxed at rates that are fair for the income people have so that tax money can be then used for providing much needed services for our people. I do not, however, favor this type of sudden tax increase because of the travesty of the current administration in our federal government (after all, this is the root cause of all of this). While the wealthiest people and their corporations in our country enjoy the benefits of not having to pay taxes – or fewer taxes, the rest of us bear the burden of having to make up for the lack of those taxes with absurd sudden fluctuations so that our communities can provide services to citizens.

It’s just not right.

Endings and Beginnings

Last weekend we helped my friend Raphael move everything out of her shop in Sugarhouse, Free Speech Zone, to her new location closer to uptown Salt Lake.  The new shop will not be open for a couple of months while we work to get the property into compliance with current commercial zoning laws.

It was sad to be taking down all the stuff from the walls and having to tell folks that stopped by about the closing.  The entire block is nearly all boarded up now in preparation for the building’s demolition and gentrification of the area.  All of the locally owned businesses were displaced due to this.

Nonetheless, FSZ is moving forward and will open when the building is approved for business.  The new address will be
411 South 800 East.



 

Bus Boys and Poets

After we were finished with our activist activities on D.C. on July 23rd, we decided to eat lunch at a restaurant we had been to before there – Bus Boys and Poets – on V and 14th.  Not only is the food superb, but it is a great hangout for activists, with a book store (operated by Teaching for Change) that sells great literature from well known figures and a room for activist activities such as poetry slams, concerts, discussions/talks, etc.  They even let you bring in your signs you’ve used during a march from the day!

Here are some photos:

Outside was a display by CodePink Women for Peace on casualties in Iraq.  The box is filled with shoes symbolic of those killed, with names engraved all around the box:

March with Cindy Sheehan – videos

Here are some amateur videos we took with our cameras of our experience in the March to Impeach on July 23, 2007 with Cindy Sheehan, including a speech by Cindy just before the final leg of the march to Congressman John Conyers office to demand Impeachment Hearings:

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March with Cindy Sheehan

Tom and I participated in the march in Washington, D.C. on July 23, along with 300 other activists from around the country, from the Arlington National Cemetery to the capitol in an effort to demand that Impeachment be put back on the table.  60 people were arrested in John Conyers’ office that day in a sit-in to get Conyers to comply with the demand.

Articles:
Should Impeachment Be Off the Table? A Debate with Peace Mom Cindy Sheehan, Ex-CIA Analyst Ray McGovern and Democratic Strategist Dan Gerstein
The political meaning of the conflict between Cindy Sheehan and the Democratic Party
Iraq war opponent Cindy Sheehan arrested at Democratic Congressman’s office
Cindy Sheehan Occupies John Conyers’ Office: gets arrested

My photos (Tom and I had taken our IMPEACH NOW! banner that we made in Salt Lake and carried it in the march.):


A group of counter protestors, called “Freepers” (meaning they represent a group called Free Republic):

The March:


Below in photo two photos at left is Col. Ann Wright,
retired United States Army (green shirt) and Medea Benjamin, CodePink Women for Peace founder (pink shirt).  Medea also is in the photo at the right. 

The March continues over the Potomac River:

Barbara Cummings, activist extraordinaire from San Diego…..participates in all major actions around the country.

Ray McGovern, retired CIA Analyst

“The Rev” – Reverend Lennox Yearwood, CEO of the Hip Hop Caucus


Cindy Sheehan – in front of the Capitol – addresses the crowd

Below are the final photos of the march into the House Building where Congressman Conyers’ office is.  Tom and I did not go in since we had too much “stuff” that we would have to leave outside (you have to go through security there to get in).  We stayed outside a bit and held our sign and then left.

This is a display by a man named Carlos, whom we have met before at Cindy Sheehan events.  His son was killed in Iraq.  When the officials showed up at his home to inform them of his son’s death, he was mowing the lawn and in his anguish, he threw gasoline at them and accidentally threw some at himself and caught himself on fire.  Since then, he has this display he takes around the country, including a flag draped casket (which is also seen in above photos):