Tag Archives: peace

Elegy to George Carlin – an original piece by Utah poet

My friend Eileen McCabe wrote this piece.  She was scheduled to perform it at the Utah Arts Festival last night.  She altered the F-word, although she “had every intention of performing it with glee” (her words) at the Festival.

George Carlin said “F**k Hope”

“F**k Hope?”
F**k no, George!
You gave me more hope than
any holy trinity of bloviating control freaks.

Hope and ranting rage
against Nixon, Reagan, Catholic dogma and injustice.
Hope and the courage to be despised and taunted
and alone in the support of principle.
Hope and permission to commit trespass 
and sit in lockup under guard of gas masks and attack dogs.
Hope and the knowledge of the effect of language
to push boundaries and open hearts.

Hope isn?t the milk and cookies before bedtime
that lures you into a false sense of security.
Hope is the rudderless, whiskey-barrel boat
that sails on a windy wing and a prayer for guidance.
Hope lies not in feel-good speeches and on-line petitions
but in feather boas and bombast, human shields and barricades.
Hope is that itching, fist pumping irritation
that upthrusts middle finger and taunts you into action.

We used to shout at Nixon, ?Make Love not War!?
Let us joyfully copulate with hope;
make lots of little hopes
little black, brown, red, yellow
pink, blue and white hopes
who will go and f**k more hopes
till we breed away lethargy and despair.

Rest in hope, George,
and rest in peace –
as if that were possible.
F**k.

Green Party of Utah Joins Call to Greens for Collection Effort for Homeless

MEDIA RELEASE – GREEN PARTY OF UTAH

PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATING CONVENTION TO HIGHLIGHT HEALTH CARE, HOMELESSNESS, ENVIRONMENT, DRUG REFORM, IRAQ WAR

COLLECTION EFFORT FOR UTAH SHELTERS AND FOOD BANKS WILL BE HELD LOCALLY

Contact information: Deanna Taylor, 801.631.2998, gpu@gput.org

Green Party of Utah Delegate to Attend National Meeting in Chicago; Food and Clothing collection efforts will take place in Chicago and Utah; Presidential Candidate to be nominated

06.25.07 Salt Lake City – The Green Party of the United States Annual National Meeting, “Live Green Vote Green”, will be held in Chicago July 10 – 13, where the candidate for President for the GPUS will be chosen. The convention will serve as a public forum for discussion on a variety of major issues including nuclear power, single payer health insurance, homelessness, the war on drugs and the Iraq War.

Moab Green Party Local Member Harold Shepherd will be representing the Green Party of Utah at the Convention. “I am very excited to be a representative for the GPUT,” says Shepherd, a consultant for Red Rock Forests in Moab and Executive Director for the Center for Water Advocacy. “Utah is one of the states that is being hit most directly with climate change, energy development, water conflicts and other environmental and social justice issues and is far behind most other states in addressing these issues. I think the GPUT and the National Green party have a chance to be leaders in going beyond mere talk and actually reversing the tide of the social and environmental crises in the West.” Shepherd has over 25 years working with Indian Tribes, conservation organizations and activists on water and natural resources related topics.

Pat LaMarche of Maine, 2004 Green Party Vice Presidential Candidate and 2006 Candidate for Governor of Maine is launching a collection effort for homeless shelters during the National Convention for Chicago shelters. Utah will join that effort locally.

“Political parties have a tendency to drop into a location for a gathering or convention, occupy some of the more affluent areas of the city and completely overlook the constituency in that area that most needs a better government. I’m proud that every time I’ve put out the call to my Green counterparts around this country to help others in need; they have responded quickly and generously. I can’t thank the Greens of Utah enough for answering this call,” says LaMarche, author of Left Out in America: The State of Homelessness in the United States, which tells the stories of many homeless Americans during her 14-day journey in homeless shelters throughout the country where she witnessed firsthand the condition of the homelessness crisis.

“Homelessness effects everyone,” states Deanna Taylor, Co-Coordinator of the GPUT. “The National Alliance to End Homelessness estimates approximately 600,000 families and 1.35 million children experience homelessness in the U.S., making up about 50 % of the homeless population,” explains Taylor. “According to its 2007 report, The Road Home, Utah’s largest homeless shelter, all shelters served an unduplicated 3, 862 individuals for a total 222,581 nights of shelter last year. The total number of shelter nights is up by 8,207 from last year.” Taylor further adds, “There is no reason why anyone should be without food, clothing and shelter. This is not only a problem, it’s an epidemic that must be addressed by our leaders, our communities, and our citizens taking action to demand a system where homelessness becomes an issue of the past.”

The GPUT is joining the national collection effort to collect items for local shelters and food banks by asking Utahns to bring clothing, personal and food items in labeled bags or boxes during July to The Free Speech Zone, 411 South 800 East, Salt Lake City or The Utah Peace House Project, West Jordan (call ahead – 801.631.2998) or arrange a drop off/pick up by calling 801.209.0219 or 801.631.2998 or writing to gpu@gput.org

2008 Green National Convention: Live Green, Vote Green http://www.greenparty2008.org

Green Party News Center http://www.gp.org/newscenter.shtml

Green Party of Utah http://www.gput.org, http://www.desertgreens.org

Contact: Utah: Deanna Taylor, 801.631.2998, gpu@gput.org

Maine: Pat LaMarche, 207.671.0190, patlamarche@hotmail.com

50th Anniversary of the Peace Symbol Celebration

Yesterday I held a peace celebration at a local coffee shop, A Cup of Joe, in Salt Lake City, to honor the 50th anniversary of the peace symbol.  We had small numbers but had a great time.  I developed a slide show with music, which included photos representative of the past 7 years of the peace movement in Utah.  It was a big hit and I’ve been asked to show it in other venues.

Channel 4 news came and took footage and interviewed me and it aired on its 5:30pm show.

We had peace vendors:
ByPopularDemand.net (peace magnet ladies!)
Free Speech Zone
Peace Art by Sel
Peace Art by Scott

I also had customized soaps made with a dove stamp in them that are being offered to raise funds for the Utah Peace House Project

Some of us had also brought peace memorabilia to share.

Finally, we had music by Scott Fife and Eileen McCabe had the art project of collaging a table with peace items at A Cup of Joe.

Here are some photos:

Kucinich Presents 35 Articles Of Impeachment Against Bush

PTSD: Untold Stories

 I saw an article in one of our local papers this week abou the suicide rate of soldiers in Afghanistan and Iraq.  Coincidentally, a Utah member of Military Families Speak Out sent me this account of a family affected by soldier suicide:

http://eiswert.family.tripod.com
Florida MILITARY FAMILIES SPEAK OUT

 

“When someone says my son died fighting for his country, I say,

“No, the suicide bomber who killed my son died fighting for his country.”

Father of American Soldier Lance Cpl. Chase J. Comley, USMC, KIA in Iraq

 

Sometimes we wonder just how to be sure an email is read.

We are all overwhelmed with the volume of mail, the importance of the issues, and the urgency of spreading our message.

Today we come to you with news that we hope will slow you down a bit, give you pause, and open your heart to the power of our shared labors of love on behalf of our soldiers and their families.

Tracy Eiswert and her three little daughters entered their home on May 16th to find her husband Scott, their father, had shot himself.  Scott’s suicide followed on the heels of his return from Iraq a year and a half ago, where he served with the National Guard, and his deepening and untreated PTSD.  When he learned his unit would be deploying again soon, the pain was just too great. 

Scott demonstrated almost all of the symptoms of someone suffering from severe PTSD:

withdrawal, angry outbursts, sadness, depression, isolation.  He had early treatment for PTSD but it was deemed unhelpful and was discontinued.   The National Guard offered no resources to this family – no support group, no outreach to wives of returning soldiers, no pre-deployment orientation so they would know what to expect while their soldiers were gone.

Stacy sought help following Scott’s suicide and every door was slammed in her face.

She and her little girls are living in their basement, unable to go back into the rooms where the memories of their father are just too overwhelming. 

A friend of Stacy’s found out about MFSO and contacted our national office in Boston and the call was referred to Stacy Hafley, Mid-West coordinator for MFSO.  Stacy’s husband served in Iraq in the National Guard.  She has three small children.  Her family continues to struggle with the deep wounds of PTSD.   She has a breadth of experience dealing with many of the same issues pouring into the lives of the Eiswert family.  And Stacy is an unstoppable networker of awesome proportions!

Calls to local churches, law enforcement, funeral homes, the YMCA, and just about every other group or individual in the Greeneville, Tennessee telephone book that she thought might be of help kept Stacy on the phone for days.  In the course of her tireless efforts to relieve some of Stacy’s burdens, Tracy shared what was going on with sister MFSO Board Member and Southeast regional coordinator Beverley Wiskow who lives in Central Florida.

Finally a Jeffers Mortuary in Greeneville offered to cover the costs of Scott’s funeral and his military service was held on May 23rd.   The local community college will be offering art therapy for the children.  The YMCA will host them for swimming lessons this summer.  IVAW members in the region are forming a work team to go to Greeneville to assist Stacy in preparing her home for sale – she and her girls simply cannot live there any longer.  Calls to 15 churches yielded no offers of assistance.  The National Guard was AWOL throughout the week after Scott’s death.  And Stacy pressed on, unwilling to take no for an answer.

Strangely, very strangely, Beverley attended two town hall meetings in central Florida this past Thursday as a representative of MFSO where she challenged Florida Senator Bill Nelson for his continued support for the war.  One of her specific questions to the Senator was about the staggering increase in the number of soldier and veteran suicides resulting from the Iraq occupation and the conflict in Afghanistan.  He offered his typical lip service and placations but did allow that he would be willing to meet with Iraq Veterans Against the War and would listen to what they have to say.  Coincidentally, that night the MSM flooded TV news with reports on the dramatic increases in suicides in the military.  Just that day Beverley had asked Senator Nelson if he was aware that the number of soldiers and veterans dying from suicide each week outstrips the number dying in the desert.

Leaving the town hall, driving through the sweltering Florida drought-plagued countryside, Beverley saw only the tiniest glimmer of hope because the Senator said he would sit down with IVAW and listen.  Other than that, thinking about the tragedy of the Eiswert family, the seeming hopelessness of politicians ever stepping up and being leaders, the muddied priorities of a nation more concerned about who marries whom than about the illegal and immoral occupation of Iraq and our failures in Afghanistan, she was emotionally exhausted and discouraged.

As always, Beverley was wearing her MFSO tee shirt, the one that says “Funding the War Is Killing Our Troops,” when she pulled into a Wal-Mart in Bushnell, Florida to buy a nearly $4 gallon of milk.  Accustomed to people commenting on her shirt, she wasn’t surprised with a very thin man with a bit of an edge in his soft voice said, “I like your shirt.” 

She turned to him and asked if he had a soldier in his family.  He said, “We did.”   Those were chilling words and she gathered herself to ask if they had lost their soldier in the war.  He said, “No, our son-in-law committed suicide.”  The pain, the rage, the fear, the confusion in the faces of this gentle man and his petite wife were palpable.  I asked if their daughter lived in Florida, thinking MFSO might be able to be of assistance to their family.  They said no, that she lived in Tennessee. 

Beverley was quite literally spinning when she asked Clif and Kathy if their daughter’s name was Stacy.  Their eyes widened as they said, “Yes, but how…..”  She then asked if their son-in-law’s name was Scotty?  At that point these three people, standing in the aisle of a supercenter in the middle-of-nowhere Florida realized that everything that had happened in the last several days had occurred with absolute precision to bring them together there beside the pots and pans.   

When the initial shock of realizing she was speaking with Tracy’s parents and their amazement that they were speaking with someone in this MFSO group, about which they had just learned, and that was doing so much to support their daughter – when that bizarre confluence of unlikely events registered, they hugged and talked for nearly an hour about Tracy, their grandchildren, how terrified and traumatized they are, and how desperately Tracy needs help, how she literally tore up her Masters Degree certificate in her grief, and of course they exchanged email information. 

Tracy’s father is a Vietnam Veteran.  Clif is in the last stages of stomach cancer, “unofficially” related to his exposure to the still dirty little secret called Agent Orange.  Kathy, Tracy’s soft-spoken and spunky mother is preparing for her husband’s death with a profound peace and strength.  She also cares for Clif’s brother and her mother, both of whom are disabled.  Both Clif’s health and the realities of finances make a trip to Tennessee to be with their daughter and their grandchildren simply impossible.  Clif and Kathy said they want to be part of MFSO, another American military family ready to speak out !

So Beverley left the store and immediately called the MFSO office in Boston, heart still pounding about the synchronicity of the astounding encounter with Clif and Kathy.  Ryan answered the phone in Boston and was quite literally speechless.  He said he would call Stacy in Missouri to tell her.  Within a matter of minutes, Kathy called her daughter and shared with her this incredible meeting at the local Wal-Mart.  Kathy called Stacy in Missouri to tell her what neither of them could believe. 

Here we are 48 hours later.

  • We have created a website for the Eiswert family.  It is a tribute to Scott as well as what we hope will be a growing resource for other military families whose soldiers are suffering from PTSD.
  • WEBSITE:  http://eiswert.family.com  Please share this address with everyone you know that might be able to assist this young family OR who is dealing with the agony of PTSD!   Linked to the full testimony of Cpl. Jeff Lucey’s parents, Joyce and Kevin Lucey!
  • Donations can be sent to the Memorial Fund for the Family of E-4 Scott Eiswert through a PalPal link on the website or mailed to the bank address also available on the website.
  • A bank account has been set up in Tennessee to receive donations for Tracy and her family.
  • The manager of the local Wal-Mart in Greeneville cut through some formidable red tape to get a gift card to Tracy last night so she could buy food.  The girls had ice cream today – doesn’t sound like much but it made their day!
  • Beverley’s husband, an assistant manager of Wal-Mart in Dunnellon, FL, even secured a gift card for Tracy’s parents!
  • VFP and IVAW continue to coordinate resources to help Tracy with the transition to a new home – she’s looking for a place to move into as soon as possible – any realtors out there with TN connections?
  • There are substantial debts, including a small amount still owed to the mortuary
  • Counseling has begun with Tracy and the little girls.
  • You National Guardsmen out there: where are Scott’s commanding officers, his fellow soldiers, other families?  We need your help waking up the Tennessee 278th Army National Guard!
  • Friends, relatives, connections in Eastern Tennessee?  Please let us know!
  • Stacy and her daughters have prepared a thank you note for the local Wal-Mart manager and have made calls to a number of MFSO people today to thank them!  In the midst of her grief and with so many concerns, her sweet heart is filled with gratitude.  This is a young woman who was definitely “raised right” as we say in the South!

Most of all know this: every single phone call, every letter to the editor, every hour you spend on the computer, every article you write, every person you meet and talk with about MFSO, every family that is scouring the internet for information while their soldier is still serving or who has returned home changed, one of those suffering from invisible wounds to his or her soul, every time you nervously stand up to speak in front of a not-so-friendly crowd about the necessity of bringing all of our soldiers home now and caring for them when they return, every time you spend money you don’t have to make copies of flyers, or to buy gas to drive to a meeting or an event on the other side of your county, every night you can’t go to sleep because of all that is still to be done, your mind spinning with how you’ll manage to get a project finished on time, every time you’re your home phone and your cell phone batteries wear out because you’ve been doing the work of MFSO, every day you wonder why we continue to plod through the quicksand of a broken and corrupt political system, a failed government, a shredded Constitution, a neglected military, and a VA that is totally unprepared to deal with the casualties of this continuing nightmare – every time you think we are little more than a tiny drop of water trying to move a giant stone, remember Stacy and Unity, Breanna, and Cristina.   Remember Clif and Kathy.

Remember we are where we are supposed to be.

Remember we are doing the work we are meant to be doing.

Remember we are family – all of us. 

When your child suffers, all of us cry. 

When your daughter is hurting, all of us feel her pain. 

When your husband’s pain takes his life, all of us mourn. 

When your son is in a coma in Kansas City, all of us – in Maine, in North Carolina, in Oregon, Las Vegas, at Ft. Hood, in Alabama are watching over him and seeing him whole and healed.

And when you or your soldiers have a need, all of us are only a phone call or an email away.

They say you can choose your friends but you can’t choose your family.  Who knew our MFSO family would be precisely the friends we would have chosen!

Our new sister-daughter-granddaughter Tracy and for her little ones have many needs right now.  Scott served and was grossly neglected by the country and the Army he trusted.  MFSO will do better for his beloved family.  And Tracy is already “one of us” – read her post on her Facebook page and on the website.  She is already reaching out to other families, hoping to save them the loss she has suffered.

Florida MILITARY FAMILIES SPEAK OUT

 

“When someone says my son died fighting for his country, I say,

“No, the suicide bomber who killed my son died fighting for his country.”

Father of American Soldier Lance Cpl. Chase J. Comley, USMC, KIA in Iraq


Photos of Bush Protest – preview

Yesterday about a dozen people came to the venue where Bush held his private luncheon in the Avenues in Salt Lake City.
I have not had time yet to process all the photos and movies I took, but here is one photo as a preview.  I cannot access LJ at my work, so I will be getting the photos up here as soon as I can after work hours.

Pictured below are  Eileen McCabe, Jenni Killpack-Knutsen and Shea Wickelner – we are all in Pom Poms Not Bomb Bombs (Utah’s Radical Cheerleaders) together.

Spend this Memorial Day honoring living veterans

By Pat LaMarche

Memorial Day – what does it mean to you? Barbecues and family get-togethers and the seasonally granted freedom to wear white shoes?

It’s also a time when many folks head over to the cemetery or the town park or the VFW hall and remember those who’ve died.

Some celebrations combine all three — although I can vouch for the fact that planting flowers at your mom’s grave can be tough on those white slacks.

I’ve got an idea: Let’s change the holiday a bit. How about this year we change the name of our spring holiday from Memorial Day to Honorarium Day? That way we could revere folks while they’re still alive.

I actually got the idea when I overheard a couple of older guys talking. Both former military, they discussed a young soldier one of them had seen at a veterans center earlier that week. One of the fellas said, “Oh, yeah, this country loves it soldiers. They love us when we’re fighting and love us when we’re dead. It’s the time in between that they don’t much care about us.”

He’s right. We do put yellow ribbons on the backs of the cars for the troops. If the yellow ribbons show support for soldiers, maybe we need different colored ribbons to show support for veterans when they get home.

So here are a few color suggestions.

And if you’re some enterprising entrepreneur, feel free to start selling them. I make only one request, if you take my ideas and run with them: Please have the decency to give a percentage to the veterans themselves. See, with extremely rare exception, the money that folks spend on those yellow car magnets doesn’t help the troops at all.

Prototype No. 1: the bricks-and-mortar ribbon. You can slap one of those on your car to show support for homeless veterans. You may remember a few months ago I mentioned the 400,000 homeless veterans in our country. Well, guess what, they’re still homeless! You aren’t surprised, are you? Why? Did you write to your congressperson and tell them to do something about fixing the problem? No? Did you think somebody else would do it?

I’ve got an idea. Go get that yellow ribbon off your car right now. I mean even before you finish reading this column. You can put it back on after you do something about the 200,000 who slept in the street just last night — and not a moment sooner.

Then there’s the ball-and-chain ribbon, for incarcerated veterans. The National Coalition for Homeless Veterans, the same folks who gave us the statistic on veterans living in the streets, tell us that veterans are more likely than any other inmates to serve time for violent crimes. Maybe if we buy enough ball-and-chain ribbons we can find therapeutic solutions for our soldiers — after our military has honed their violent tendencies — so that they can reassimilate into society when our government’s done using them.

Prototype three: the pink-slip ribbon. This little bright spot on the back of your bumper will honor the returning veterans who can’t find a job. According to Military.com, the U.S. Bureau of Labor statistics found the 2005 jobless rate for returning Iraq and Afghanistan veterans to be three times the national average; a whopping 15 percent for our heroes between the ages of 20 and 24.

And lastly there’s the gold-watch ribbon. Heck this one’s so nice you could get two and put one on your fridge so that you can think of a wounded veteran whenever you grab a snack. Otherwise these ribbons on your car just remind the folks driving behind you of their obligation to care for our valiant men and women.

The gold-watch ribbon highlights all the active-duty service personnel whom the U.S. government retires to keep from getting full benefits. A 2007 news expose by KABC in Los Angeles explained, “Veterans, facing medical troubles, are trying to deal with their injuries, and find that they can’t get the care they want, because they’ve been forced out of active duty.”

If you’ve lost someone you love, then every day is Memorial Day.

This year let’s honor those still with us.

Pat LaMarche of Yarmouth is the spokesperson for the Evergreen Mountain Resort & Casino referendum campaign and the author of “Left Out in America.” She may be reached at PatLaMarche@hotmail.com.

“Welcome” Bush to Salt Lake City

I was invited to help organize a rally to protest Bush being in SLC on Wednesday.  The organizing is taking place through Rocky Anderson’s non-profit organization, High Roads for Human Rights Advocacy Project.  Although I am happy that some type of event is being held and that Daniel Ellsberg will be a featured speaker, I chose not to continue my participation in organizing that event.  Instead, I and a number of other folks, feeling a need to do something more than just stand around and listen to speakers at a time of day when GW won’t even be around, organized an opportunity for folks to actually make a statement.  Below is the result of our organized response to Bush being in Salt Lake City to raise funds for John McCain at two high priced dinners

If you want to make a statement, attend the mid day protest. 

To listen to speakers and music, attend the evening rally.


Resident Bush and Mitt Romney will be in Salt Lake City Wednesday, May 28 to engage in fund raising for the presidential campaign of John McCain. They will be doing a fund raising luncheon at or near the Grand America Hotel in downtown Salt Lake early in the afternoon that day and a more high priced affair at the private home of MItt Romney that evening. The following day Bush plans to meet with LDS officials.

Come out to “welcome” George W. Bush on Wednesday:

Meet Wednesday at 11:00 a.m. at the fountain on the west side of the City/County building at Washington Square (500 South State Street). We will be just a short walk from where the luncheon is supposedly going to be held and we can get set up with signs for the cavalcade’s arrival that way.

If you don’t want to meet – that’s cool too, just show up at the Grand America whenever your intuition tells you would be the most effective time (I’m guessing a little before noon).

Bring signs and your great energy!!
Tell everyone!

There will be another rally at 5:30 at Washington Square with guest speakers. You can view the details of that event at:
http://peaceandhumanrights.com

   
   

Utah Phillips

Utah Phillips’ music has been part of my library and inspiration for many years.  Utah died peacefully at his home in California Friday night after a period of illness.

I saw Utah in concert in Ogden several years ago.

Utah’s legend will live forever. 

Here is a list of links to articles about his passing:
Folk music legend Utah Phillips dies (TheUnion.com)
Folk singer Utah Phillips dies at 73 (MercuryNews.com)
Singer Utah Phillips left a colorful legacy
(sacbee.com)
Folksinger, Storyteller, Railroad Tramp Utah Phillips Dead at 73
(Central Valley Indy Media)

https://i0.wp.com/www.artplusradio.org/imglib/aug07/utah_phillips2.jpg

Mother’s Day: Reclaiming and Standing With women Globally

Arise then…women of this day!  Arise, all women who have hearts!  Whether your baptism be of water or of tears!Say firmly:”We will not have questions answered by irrelevant agencies,Our husbands will not come to us, reeking with carnage,For caresses and applause.  Our sons shall not be taken from us to unlearn  All that we have been able to teach them of charity, mercy and patience.  We, the women of one country,Will be too tender of those of another country  To allow our sons to be trained to injure theirs.” From the bosum of a devastated Earth a voice goes up withOur own. It says: “Disarm! Disarm!The sword of murder is not the balance of justice.”Blood does not wipe our dishonor,Nor violence indicate possession.As men have often forsaken the plough and the anvil at the summons of war,Let women now leave all that may be left of homeFor a great and earnest day of counsel.Let them meet first, as women, to bewail and commemorate the dead.Let them solemnly take counsel with each other as to the meansWhereby the great human family can live in peace…Each bearing after his own time the sacred impress, not of Caesar,But of God -In the name of womanhood and humanity, I earnestly askThat a general congress of women without limit of nationality,  May be appointed and held at someplace deemed most convenientAnd the earliest period consistent with its objects,To promote the alliance of the different nationalities,  The amicable settlement of international questions,  The great and general interests of peace. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if on some distant Mother’s Day, the wishes of Julia Ward Howecould be fulfilled and the human race could celebrate a day when, all over the world, nomother would have to mourn the death of her child lost in war or terrorist attacks… To all of the mothers whose children are fighting in wars – and to mothers whosechildren are growing up with wars raging around them or with terrorism threatening theirsafety… Wishes of strength, peace and hope for this Mother’s Day…

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we are standing for the world's children and grandchildren, and for the seven generations beyond them. We dream of a world where all of our children have safe drinking water, clean air to breathe, and enough food to eat. A world where they have access to a basic education to develop their minds and healthcare to nurture their growing bodies. A world where they have a warm, safe and loving place to call home. A world where they don't live in fear of violence - in their home, in their neighbourhood, in their school or int heir world. This is the world of which we dream. This is the cause for which we stand.

Please stand with us for five minutes of silence at 1 p.m. your local time on May 11, 2008, in your local park, school yard, gathering place, or any place you deem appropriate, to signify your agreement with the statement below.  Please stand at a different hour with a different time zone if 1 p.m. is not your preferred time.We ask you to invite the men who you care about to join you.  We ask that you bring bells to ring at 1 p.m. to signify the beginning of the five minutes of silence and to ring again to signify the end of the period of silence.  During the silence, please think about what you individually and we collectively can do to attain this world.  If you need to sit rather than stand, please feel free to do so.  Afterwards, hopefully you and your loved ones can talk together about how we can bring about this world.

WILL YOU STAND WITH US?