Tag Archives: military industrial complex

The World Can’t Wait

Yesterday, in over 234 cities and towns across the U.S., protests and events were held to support the goals of the World Can’t Wait campaign.

In Salt Lake about 30 people attended the noon protest outside the City County Building at Washington Square. About 15 people attended the 5pm vigil in the pouring down rain. The good news is that there were folks at both events who have never or often haven’t attended any protests.

The World Can’t Wait website has and Updates page with photos and accounts of the protests.

Press Coverage of the WCW Events.


A Soldier’s Peace Update

Marshall Thompson has walked 4 days, has 23 to go. He has walked 82 miles and has 418 miles remaining in his journey.

A woman along the route is having a “Just Desserts” potluck in honor of Marhshall’s pursuit. You can registier for it at:

Potluck.

One Utah has a post on the Recent developments indicating the USA will be ready to launch a strategic bombardment of Iran two weeks before Election Day.

Ira Churnus writes Neocons may be Down, not Out, with a Nuclear Iran where he predicts that the U.S.’s plan is to engage in a cold war where Iran is now the boogie-man.

The World Can’t Wait – Salt Lake City One of 180 cities Protesting Tomorrow

MEDIA RELEASE October 4, 2006

For information Contact: Tom King: phone 801-502-8556
People for Peace and Justice of Utah Phone: 801-502-8556 Email: info@utahpeace.org
Websites: http://www.utahpeace.org; http://www.worldcantwait.net

PEOPLE FOR PEACE AND JUSTICE OF UTAH
WORLD CAN’T WAIT– DRIVE OUT THE BUSH REGIME
Thursday, October 5: 5-7pm 100 South State Street

In Solidarity with Nationwide Protests In 143 Cities and Towns
SALT LAKE CITY AMONG 180 CITIES TO PROTEST OCT.5

WHERE: At 100 South State Street in Salt Lake City (one of over 180 communities across US and Canada)
Continue reading

A Soldier’s Peace Update

Day 1 and here, October 2
Day 2, October 3

A Soldiers Peace

Not surprisingly, I didn’t see anything in the two largest Utah papers about Marshall Thompson’s first day on the road in his 500 mile walk across Utah which began yesterday.

There were some news items about it in other news sources, however:

  • Man Begins Walk Through Utah to Protest War: KSL TV
  • Iraq veteran starts goal to walk across the state: Provo Daily Herald

    Marshall has a journal on his website that I anticipate will be updated soon.

  • A Soldiers Peace Walk Begins Today

    Today is the day that Marshall Thompson of A Soldiers Peace begins his 500 mile walk across Utah. Thompson is the former Army Journalist who spent a year in Iraq. His message:

    Bring the Troops Home

    The goal is to walk from the Utah/Idaho border to the Utah/Arizona border in 26 days, that’s one day for every 100 soldiers who have died in Iraq. The trip will cover almost 500 miles and I’ll have to average about 20 miles a day.

    Walking, in and of itself, is worthless. In the end, it’s just a stunt to raise awareness of a problem and encourage rational people to make a change. I might also shed a few unwanted pounds, but you won’t hear me complaining about that.

    I chose to walk Utah in particular for two main reasons. One, it’s my home state and it’s one of the most beautiful places in the world. If, for some crazy reason, you’ve got to walk 500 miles, it would be nice to do it in the natural wonder of Utah. And two, Utah is often called “the reddest state in the nation.” It seems to be a stronghold for those who advocate simply staying the course. I hope the walk will soften hearts and open minds to the idea of a responsible and timely withdrawal of troops. Plus I’d like the politicians to realize that even in good old Utah, people are demanding change.

    I don’t know if the walk will get the troops home. If nothing else, however, I’ll know that I did everything I could to save the lives of my brothers and sisters in Iraq.

    Army Recuriter Forges Parent Signature of Teen in Utah

    The Assoicated Press has reported that a Recruiting Officer forged signatures for Utah minor
    Army recruiting: Cases of wrongdoing have jumped since 2004 as the war has made enlisting more difficult

    Here is the article:

    By Russ Bynum
    The Associated Press

    SAVANNAH, Ga. – When Pfc. Steven Price of Utah volunteered to join the Army in January, he couldn’t do it alone. Because he’s 17, recruiters needed his parents to give their written permission.
    Now, an Army spokesman says a Utah-based recruiter has admitted forging the signatures of Price’s parents to enlist him.
    Price reported for duty at Fort Stewart in southeast Georgia in June after he completed basic training. He credits the Army with restoring his pride after a troubled adolescence but said that doesn’t justify his recruiters’ actions.
    ”There was harm and foul play on their part,” the Ogden teen said. ”It was very deceiving what they did.”
    After he called the Army, recruiters visited Price last winter at a juvenile prison in Ogden, where he was serving a one-year sentence for stealing a gun from his father.
    Officials at the Mill Creek Youth Center allowed recruiters to take Price from the prison in January for a physical examination, written test and, finally, to be sworn into service after the recruiters showed a parental-consent form.
    The form, dated Jan. 10, had signatures in the names of Price’s divorced parents, Dean Price and Lisa Jensen, as well as that of a witnessing recruiter, Sgt. 1st Class Jason Stape.
    The parents, who live 89 miles apart, have denied signing the form.
    Continue reading


    Marshall Thompson of A Soldier’s Peace who also table at the Imagine Peace Festival last weekend, was interviewed by Amy Goodman on Monday. The interview appeared on today’sDemocracy Now!.

    Army reservist Sergeant Marshall Thompson spent a year in Iraq working as a military journalist. He reported from across Iraq, interviewing thousands of US soldiers. Now back home in his native Utah, he is planning a 500-mile walk across the state to protest the war and call for a withdrawal of US troops. [includes rush transcript]

    His goal is to walk from the Utah/Idaho border to the Utah/Arizona border in 26 days, that’s one day for every 100 soldiers who have died in Iraq. He’ll have to average about 20 miles a day.

    I spoke with Sergeant Marshall Thompson on Monday in Salt Lake City in his first national broadcast interview. He began by talking about why he was planning the walk.

    It’s an election year. His approval ratings are dropping. So it makes sens that Bush admits the CIA runs secret prisons: He says interrogations have thwarted attacks against U.S.. Now Bush is asking that Congress look into article 3 of the Geneva Convention and specifically define it stating that it is “vague and undefined.” What he is attempting to do is to get excused from violating international laws:

    Nearing the fifth anniversary of Sept. 11, Bush pressed Congress to quickly pass administration-drafted legislation authorizing the use of military commissions for trials of terror suspects. Legislation is needed because the Supreme Court in June said the administration’s plan for trying detainees in military tribunals violated U.S. and international law.

    Administration officials said they were concerned the ruling left U.S. personnel vulnerable to be prosecuted under the War Crimes Act because the language under the Geneva Conventions was so vague.

    An administration-drafted legislation would authorize the defense secretary to convene a military commission with five members, plus a judge to preside. It would guarantee a detainee’s access to military counsel but eliminate other rights common in military and civilian courts. The bill would allow reliable hearsay and potentially coerced testimony to be used as evidence in court, as well as the submission of classified evidence “outside the presence of the accused.”

    But some senators have drafted another idea:
    Republican Sens. John Warner, John McCain and Lindsey Graham have drafted a rival proposal. Unlike the administration’s plan, the senators’ proposal would allow a defendant to access to all evidence used against them. The plan by Warner, chairman of the Armed Services Committee, also would prohibit coerced testimony.

    Ironically,
    Also on Wednesday, the Pentagon put out a new Army field manual that spells out appropriate conduct on issues including prisoner interrogation. The manual applies to all the armed services but not the CIA. It bans torture and degrading treatment of prisoners, for the first time specifically mentioning forced nakedness, hooding and other procedures that have become infamous during the war on terror.

    Democracy Now! has, as its lead story today, an analysis of Bush’s speech.