Tag Archives: peace

Cynthia McKinney Seeking Green Party Presidential Nomination

I had the great fortune of seeing Cynthia McKinney speak at the Annual National Meeting of the Green Party of the United States this past summer and then meeting her at the SOA Watch event last weekend.  She will be working with me and others here in Utah towards a visit in the spring of 2008.  Below are videos and photos of her appearance at the SOA Watch event last weekend.

Cynthia’s websites:
All Things Cynthia McKinney
McKinney for President 2008

Cynthia McKinney, who is seeking the Green Party of the United States Presidential Nomination, attended the School of the Americas Watch Event on Sunday, November 18, 2007. She was a featured speaker on the stage. She was also among those who led the funeral procession after the funeral service.

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School of the Americas Watch Event – My Experience

There is so much to tell it’s hard to know where to start. The good news is that five Latin American countries are now officially School of the Americas “dropouts” (they will not be sending any more of their military to the SOA for training). The bad news: It’s still open and operating. But it’s getting closer and closer to closing down. Only about 6 more U.S. representatives are needed to vote to close it.

My experience is best told through photos and videos. I have posted videos at
Green Party Peace Network.
You can also view my videos at Youtube – search for “deesdotes”.

Photos Tom and I took can be viewed at the SOAW page of the Green Party Peace Network.

Here are a few things for “taste” of what I experienced:
Father Roy Bourgeois, Founder of the SOA Watch

Funeral Procession






School of the Americas Watch Event to Close the SOA

I will be posting photos here of my experience at the School of the Americas Watch Event last weekend.

In the meantime, you can see photos here.

Boston Veterans Day Parade – Veterans for Peace March, Get Arrested

The weekend’s demonstrations

This past weekend, there were regional demonstrations across the U.S. to demand in end to the Iraq War, along with a series of other demands, organized by United for Peace and Justice.

Here is Salt Lake about 800 – 1,000 people attended the regional gathering which was to included Utah, Montana, Idaho, Wyoming and Colorado. (More on my take on demonstrations in another post).

Here are links to this weekend’s activities.

Nationally
Other sites can be accessed from these sites….
Green Party Peace Network
ImpeachBush.org
United for Peace and Justice

Locally
Salt Lake Tribune
Deseret News

It’s not easy being Green candidate

It’s not easy being Green candidate

C. Fraser Smith
The Baltimore Sun, October 14, 2007

Maria Allwine thinks Baltimoreans are hungry for change but too beaten down by generations of Democratic rule to imagine change is possible.

The Green Party’s candidate for City Council president presses her case in the face of those who say she’s wasting her time contesting the machine.

She goes into the general election campaign with very little on her side. She has no campaign money, rejecting funding from the well-heeled corporate interests as a matter of Green Party principle. Baltimore has even fewer registered Greens than registered Republicans – and Republicans are outnumbered 8- or 9-to-1 by Democrats.

Still, she’s challenging that Democratic establishment to show a scintilla of understanding that current approaches to city problems have done nothing to combat crime or to
reverse the erosion of Baltimore’s quality of life.

She knows that even if she doesn’t win, she’s one of the few aspects of this campaign that make it a campaign. She’s not likely to get much attention from her opponent, City Council President Stephanie C. Rawlings-Blake, but she’s daring the incumbent to step forward and be accountable for the government that Baltimore has had under Democrats.
A veteran peace activist, Ms. Allwine has run for office before. This time, she says, she’s more serious.

In a sense, Ms. Allwine is waging two campaigns at the same time: for an end to the war in Iraq as well as for council president.

The buttons on her green velour jacket one recent morning made clear her displeasure with the Bush administration and the war.

Then there’s the one that says, “If you’re not outraged, you’re not paying attention.”

That declaration might work in both her endeavors, ending the war and winning the
election.

By many accounts, the 54-year-old legal secretary was the star of the primary campaign, offering thoughtful, passionate and detailed answers to questions during candidate forums.

Yet Democratic voters showed in the primary that they’re not particularly interested in change. The incumbent council president, Ms. Rawlings-Blake, easily turned back challenger Michael Sarbanes. Many had seen Mr. Sarbanes as the sort of change agent Ms. Allwine aspires to be.

She believes he did not offer enough specific ideas – or sharp enough criticisms – to win over those who are unhappy and looking for new answers.

With no real competition in most of the general election races, there is a virtual vacuum of discussion about critical issues.

“We can’t talk education and crime until we talk poverty,” she says. “We need a comprehensive job training program that jump-starts the city out of its entrenched poverty.”

She would require developers to offer training programs as the price of doing business in the city – particularly, she says, those developers who get tax advantages for local projects.

She would institute a series of audits, imposing accountability and looking for money that could be redirected to things such as community centers for young people.

Ms. Allwine wants a council of neighborhood groups that reflect ordinary people’s concerns.

“We have public policy that doesn’t reflect public opinion or public need,” she says. If
government were serious about improving the city, she says, it would come forth with ideas more challenging than a bill banning baggy pants – an idea advanced recently in the City Council.

“Baggy pants? It just shows the utter lack of vision. How are we ever going to change?

“If you don’t have the courage to say we need to take another direction, you don’t belong in public office,” she says.

C. Fraser Smith is senior news analyst for
WYPR-FM. His column appears Sundays in The Sun.
His e-mail is fsmith at wypr.org

Imagine Peace

The biggest online peace event.
On October 9th 2007, John Lennon’s birthday.
IMAGINE PEACE as Yoko Ono unveils the IMAGINE PEACE TOWER.

Raising our Voices – End the Empire!

A Green Party colleague from Maine was so inspired by the speech I gave in LA that he came forward to share his speech from 2005 and gave me permisson to post it, so here it is:

It has been at least 35 years since I had the occasion to deliver a rousing speech on the moral monstrosity called The Draft, one of the most putrid violations of progress toward civilization ever invented by those sinister, morally retarded people in power. Upon birth, the universe gives us a tiny sliver of time out of its billions of years of evolution with which to live out a life. That times belongs to each of us individually. The idea that our very lives belong to this or any government is infinite obscenity. This infinite obscenity purports to require us to donate our children as human sacrifices to their god of war and mindless accumulation of wealth for a tiny few of this marvelous planet’s human inhabitants.

The innate love for our children is betrayed by those in high office, including, I must say in all truth, some Democratic liberals who propose conscription as an antidote to the existing poverty Draft which targets children of the poor. This poverty Draft is connected to the export of jobs policies of this adminstration. But to say that the way to correct the class inequalities of the poverty Draft is by instituting conscription is just like saying in 1860 that since slavery of black people is immoral and unjust, that therefore we must enforce slavery on white people too! Same argument! Don’t buy it! All conscription would do is increase the power of tyranny by giving them yet another weapon to use against us who yearn for truth, justice, and peace. Why would we agree to that? The Draft is human sacrifice, not with a single hapless individual as in some primitive societies, but by thousands at a time–a barbaric relic that has no place in real civilization.

The Draft is a death sentence from which one may get a reprieve, depending on luck of the draw. The Draft IS the supreme example of involuntary servitude, prohibited by the 13th Amendment to our Constitution, which reads, “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as punishment whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.” (like Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib)
If our goal is to alert vulnerable young people about this devastating issue, it is imperative that the effort be increased exponentially. The central task is getting information directly into the hands of students, drop-outs, and recent grads. Lots of information is available from folks of my generation. To them, I say if you can work with us older folks to make this happen, then we can create an avalanche of truth and justice.

Concluding, it is up to us, the people, the ultimate sovereign for whom this government was created, to enforce the meaning of “No involuntary servitude.” We cannot expect the current corporate government to be on our side. Those who, no matter of what party, seek to impose a military Draft in whatever name they call it, including “national service” are calling upon our young people to become hi-tech gladiators (kill or be killed) for their wealth accumulation. Those people are truly as Dylan said forty years ago in his song of the same name, Masters of War. About those, the Halliburtons, the Bechtels, and so on–he said, “Not even Jesus could forgive what you do.” Indeed, promoters of those who persist in imperial aggression have already betrayed the spirit of Jesus who declared, “Blessed are the peacemakers.” He did not say “Blessed are the Dow-Jones averages for corporate munitions makers.”
Brothers and sisters of all ages, WE are the Paul and Paula Reveres of our time. We must warn our fellow citizens: “Take cover and prepare to resist. The imperialists are coming!”

When the warmakers say, “But we need more personnel to carry out the mission,” what should we say? Our answer must be: “That mission has no truth, no honor, no justice! END THE EMPIRE!

Jon Olsen 3/19/2005

October 27 demonstrations – Salt Lake and around

United for Peace and Justice has called for mass actions on October 27 around the country. Salt Lake City is serving as one of the cities where an action will occur.

I have been contacting the folks who are organizing the event in Salt Lake City for over a month now to request at that the Green Party, a coalition member of UFPJ, be well represented with a speaker. My request has been stalled and finally I got an answer over the weekend – NO. Even after I pointed out that I have been speaking nationally on behalf of the Green Party of the United States and that the Green Party is overwhelmingly welcomed at all other events around the country.

The excuse given to me is that there are many “out of state” people speaking. I was then invited to “buy” tabling space for the Green Party at this event. (Note – at all the national actions I have been to, never has there been a request for people to “pay” for tabling space. People and organizations are invited to just show up with their tabling stuff – and warmly welcomed to do so.)

The fact that Utah organizers are shutting out Greens in this event as a strong visible presence in Salt Lake City is gravely disappointing. They are not being inclusive have THE ONLY PEACE PARTY be able to be a rousing addition to the program. I was so enthusiastically received in LA with my speech that I couldn’t even leave the stage before many participants were approaching me with such positiveness that I knew I had said the right things to be so inspiring.

I am hoping the Utah organizers change their minds and decide to include Greens as part of the October 27 event that will happen in Salt Lake City.

March and Rally in LA

Approximately 1,000 people participated in the Anti-War March and Rally in downtown Los Angeles Saturday, September 29, 2007. The event was organized by the Troops Out Now Coalition. Messages centered around withdrawing troops from Iraq immediately, stopping an impending war with Iran, freeing the Jenna 6, getting Greens elected to office, and diverting funds from war to services for people in the United States.

Deanna Tom GPAX banner
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