Tag Archives: politics

March on the Pentagon Photos

Digital Grace has stunning photos of last week’s March on the Pentagon in Washington, D.C.

War and Taxes

I have about had it!

The Bush Criminal Mob is asking Congress for $123 billion more dollars to fund their total demolition of Iraq and their future crime sprees in such places as Iran and perhaps, Syria.

 

Despite the notable and courageous actions of such Congress Reps as Barbara Lee (D-Ca), Lynn Woolsey (D-Ca), Maxine Waters (D-Ca), Dennis Kucinich (D-Oh) and John Lewis (D-Ga ), it looks like the supplemental bill is going to sail through Congress with the backing of the Dem leadership who blocked the adding of any amendments reining in Bloody George to the supplemental funding.

The ungodly evil rhetoric of ?supporting the troops? to defend their support of this new pile of blood money is immoral and insupportable?especially considering the fact that our VA hospitals are falling apart and returning Vets are committing suicide because they can?t get the help they need to throw some water on the fire of their PTSD. And we know that Congress, better than anybody, knows who really gets these billions of dollars, because some of that money trickles down into many of their own pockets: the War Machine.

Besides the stranglehold that the War Machine has on our government and our lives, the weasly Dem leadership is using the flesh of our flesh as political pawns in their high-stakes game of presidential politics. The Dems are frightened by the fact that if they bravely bring our troops out of the mess that they are mired in, thereby ?losing? the war in Iraq, that the Dems will lose the presidency in 2008.

There is so many things wrong with that stinkin? thinkin.? First of all, there is not one hair breadth of difference between a Republican and someone who votes, talks, and acts like a Republican. Secondly, our troops should be treated like they are human beings, with tender loving care knowing that each and every one of them is precious to somebody. They should not be used as cold political calculations.

The last two reasons are obvious and I know that they Dem leadership is as aware of these reasons as I am: the occupation of Iraq was lost as soon as the first tank rolled over the border and the first smart bomb was dropped on innocent people in Baghdad. It was fated to be a monumental failure because its foundation was feebly pasted together on lies, deception and greed and citizens of a country have more at stake to overcome occupiers and in the whole history of this planet an occupation has never been successful and always profoundly weakens the imperial occupiers.

If the Dems would step out and lead out of their humanity and not with their greed for money/power like the Bush Mob, then there would be a landslide in 2008 and we Americans could revel in authentic and reasonable leaders, not mourn another administration of craven cowards.

This supplemental funding bill will pass, and I believe that giving George Bush a blank check for more killing is reprehensible and I refuse to support these crimes against humanity with my own funds.

I urge every American with a heart, compassion, and a sense for justice and a return to moral based leadership to join me in withholding our money from this murderous and callous government.

Give your money to peace or justice groups instead. Give your money to homeless shelters; grass-roots Katrina recovery efforts; create a ?Peace Scholarship? at your local college to reward a young person who doesn?t want to join the military to pay for college; give to Veteran?s groups who are advocating for better care for our veterans or a group like IVAW which is a group of returning vets who are actively trying to stop the war; give to War Resisters to support legal aid for our active duty soldiers who refuse to go to war; give to Camp Casey; give to your local peace group.

I am sure there are thousands of places to put our money besides the pockets of the Military Industrial Complex. So many people and groups have been damaged because of our war economy. A lot of good could be done with our tax dollars instead of funding continued killing.

Our elected officials have failed us miserably. We elected them to oppose George and his war, not support him. We are not being represented properly and I, for one, refuse to be taxed by them.

Think about it. Reflect.

Google: ?War Tax Resistance? for tons of good information.

Cindy Sheehan is the mother of Spc. Casey Sheehan who was killed in Bush?s war of terror on 04/04/04.
She is the co-founder and president of Gold Star Families for Peace and The Camp Casey Peace Institute.

Rocky hits the New York Times – will be on call-in show today

There is lots of news nationally about Salt Lake City Mayor Rocky Anderson’s outspoken stance on the U.S. Administraton and the Iraq War.  One Utah has  post on Rocky and Bill O’Reilly.

I received word this morning that  Rocky Anderson will appear on KCPW‘s Midday Metro show today, Friday, March 23, at 10am MST.  He will be taking your calls at:   801- 359-5279.

Rocky will also be the guest of a nationally syndicated NPR program on Monday.  Anderson will be the featured guest of “On Point,” which airs at 11 am exclusively on KCPW.

 Anderson will tape the program from the KCPW studios on Monday morning, March 26th.

Rocky will likely be addressing impeachment on both shows.

Here is a piece that appeared on Common Dreams yesterday. 

Published on Thursday, March 22, 2007 by the New York Times
by Kirk Johnson
 

SALT LAKE CITY — Rocky Anderson may not be the most liberal mayor in America. But here in the most conservative state, he might as well be.


Mayor Rocky Anderson has become a national anti-Bush spokesman. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)

Just being himself is enough to galvanize, divide or enrage people who have followed his career as Salt Lake City’s mayor, and who are now watching him become, in the twilight of his final term, a national spokesman for the excoriation and impeachment of President Bush.

[“President Bush is a war criminal,” Mr. Anderson, a Democrat, said at a rally here on Monday marking the fourth anniversary of the war in Iraq. “Let impeachment be the first step toward national reconciliation — and toward penance for the outrages committed in our nation’s name.”]

Mr. Anderson, a 55-year-old lapsed Mormon and former civil litigator with a rich baritone and a mane of patrician-silver hair, is no stranger to strong talk and political stances that leave his audiences breathless with exasperation, admiration or sometimes a mixture of both.

He has presented his densely footnoted constitutional argument against Mr. Bush’s presidency in speeches from the Washington Legislature to peace rallies in Washington, D.C., making him a favorite punching bag of conservative talk show hosts and bloggers well beyond his home state. [He went on Bill O’Reilly’s show on Fox News on Tuesday, for example, and Mr. O’Reilly promptly called him “a kook.”]

Mr. Anderson cheerfully conceded in an interview in his office that he had no hope whatsoever of a statewide political future in Utah because people outside Salt Lake City — who are far more likely to be conservative, Republican and members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints — are likely to hate him. But in what has been a trademark of his seven years in office, he can seem equally disdainful of those who disdain him.

“There’s a real resistance to change and an almost pathological devotion to leaders simply because they’re leaders,” he said, in describing fellow Utahans who do not share his views and who in large numbers support the president (and gave him 72 percent of their vote in 2004). “There’s a dangerous culture of obedience throughout much of this country that’s worse in Utah than anywhere.”

Critics and supporters alike agree that Mr. Anderson — whose given name is Ross but who is known by almost everyone here as Rocky, with no last name necessary — is genuinely passionate and devoted to the causes he has brought to the mayor’s office, including global warming, genocide in Darfur, gay and lesbian rights and the war in Iraq.

But those efforts, many people say, have sometimes made him seem like more of a mayor to the world than a fix-the-potholes, sweep-the-sidewalks business-booster for this city of 180,000 people.

And in pursuing those political interests with the same confrontational style that he has brought to the fight for impeachment in recent months, Mr. Anderson has left burned bridges behind him the way other people leave fingerprints.

“What he’s doing lets people know that free speech is alive and well in Salt Lake City,” said K. Eric Jergensen, a member of the City Council, which, like the mayor’s office, is formally nonpartisan, though Mr. Jergensen described himself as a Republican.

“But it seems we’ve lost our ability to sit down amicably and discuss things,” Mr. Jergensen added. “When we step to the rhetorical sidelines and all we do is spit venom and fire, it isn’t effective.”

Mr. Anderson, who described himself as an exacting boss — others say workaholic micromanager — has gone through City Hall employees with blazing regularity, including at least five chiefs of staff.

In 2001, he alienated the Republican-controlled Legislature by joining with environmentalists and mass-transit advocates in a lawsuit to block a major north-south highway project that Mr. Anderson said would harm air quality and wetlands near the Great Salt Lake.

He rarely went to the Capitol after that to lobby on the city’s behalf, City Council members and former staff members said, because everybody knew it would be counterproductive.

Even some fellow Democrats say the city probably suffered from the anti-Rocky backlash.

“He is one of those politicians who people love to hate, and sometimes he gave the Legislature a great excuse not to do their jobs where Salt Lake City was concerned,” said Nancy Saxton, a Democrat and City Council member who is running for mayor in the November election.

Mr. Anderson announced last July that he would not seek a third term, saying he wanted to devote the rest of his life to grass-roots organizing involving human rights and global warming. He said in the interview that he had not made specific plans.

One of the mayor’s former chiefs of staff, Deeda Seed, who was fired in 2005, described her former boss this way: “I used to be good friends with him. He’s incredibly intelligent. He is delightful to talk to. He can be a really, really good friend. He could just benefit from a little therapy.”

(Ms. Seed said Mr. Anderson fired her after they disagreed on policy issues, including how to handle the news media. He said she was “almost a complete disaster as an employee and I had no choice but to fire her.”)

Supporters say Mr. Anderson has made Utah more interesting, at the very least, by highlighting the political diversity that exists at the state’s heart, in the state’s capital and largest city. He first won office in 1999, and re-election in 2003, essentially by winning the votes of non-Mormons, who constitute about 55 percent of the city’s population. (Statewide, Mormons constitute about two-thirds of the population.) In his last election, he got 54 percent of the vote, even though about 80 percent of Mormons voted against him, he said.

Those election patterns — non-Mormons mostly for Mr. Anderson, Mormons mostly against — set the rhythm for a mayoral administration that many people say has isolated Salt Lake City even more by emphasizing that the city’s political and cultural distinctiveness is also about religion and that being non-Mormon is synonymous with being liberal and urban and different.

“It’s embarrassing for the rest of us; Mayor Anderson is so over the top, nobody wants to be associated with him,” said Matthew R. Godfrey, mayor of the nearby city of Ogden. Mr. Godfrey said Mr. Anderson had not worked well with other mayors across the state and that he was out of step with fellow Utahans.

Mr. Anderson, who has been married and divorced twice, with a son now in college, said he believed that divisiveness could be a virtue. For too long, he said, Democrats have run toward the center, away from confrontation. And in a conservative place like Utah, he said, he just has to push harder.

“If you take a principled point of view and people fall down on one side or the other, you can either be characterized as being principled or being tough,” he said. “Or you can be dismissed as being divisive, and I think if that’s the definition of divisive, we need more people in politics who are divisive.”

Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company

March 17 LIARS CONVENTION

Saturday’s Liars Convention was great fun and a very different way of protesting. I helped organize the event and I also played the part of Rob Bennett.
See photos of the Annual Liars Convention

STOP 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:

  • Stroll through the Gallery of Lies!
  • Attend the Liars Academy Awards Ceremony!
  • Participate in thbe Liars Parade Finale!
  • Hear Keynote Liar Orrin Hatch!
  • Hear a Perfomance by Elvis!
  • See the Appearance of Honorary Liar of the Year, George W. Bush!
  • Audience participation – Come as your favorite Liar!
  • Participate in the culminating activity: The Liars Parade!
  • and much, much more! (sponsored by Fox News)
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    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
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    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.
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    PEACE PROCESSION AND MEMORIAL VIGIL

    Monday, March 19
    Listen to the PSA Dress in black and bring lumination (candle, flashlight- some candles provided).

  • 6:30pm: Gather on the sidewalk at the Federal Building in Salt Lake City (100 South State Street)
    7:00pm Silent Walk to City Creek Park (North Temple State Street) where 60 luminaries will be launched representing killed Afghans, Iraqis and Utahns.
  • If you cannot attend this event, please place a light in your window or on your porch beginning at 6:30pm. Info: 801-631-2998 or info@utahpeace.org
    ————————-
    Sponsors of the above events:
  • Operation Democracy, Salt Lake Council
  • Free Speech Zone
  • Salt Lake Code Pink
  • Students for Freedom and Democracy (SFD)
  • Committee for War Criminal Prosecution (CWCP).
  • Desert Greens Green Party of Utah
  • ADDITIONAL ACTIVITIES BEING ORGANIZED
    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
  • Monday March 19 – After work silent candlelight vigil
    6:00pm-6:15pm
    Library Square Amphitheater
    Downtown Salt Lake Library
    200 East 400 South
    Contact: Karen
  • 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.

    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

    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

    “Rocky”-ing the Boat

    Salt Lake Mayor Rocky Anderson is rocking the boat!

    Salt Lake Mayor calls for Washington Legislature to support resolution to impeach President Bush
    Rocky testifies against ‘war criminal’ Bush, makes case for impeachment
    Rocky rips Bush at “impeachment” rally
    Statement of Ross C. “Rocky” Anderson, Mayor of Salt Lake City – Before the Washington State Senate – Governmental Operations Committee-March 1, 2007
    A Compelling Case for Impeachment of President George W. Bush

    Desert Greens in the Media

    The Desert Greens Green Party of Utah got some media attention today, in repsonse to Desert Greens, Green Party of Utah Celebrate Cancellation of Divine Strake Test and The Desert Greens, Green Party of Utah applauds Governor Huntsman’s efforts
    to support both Utah farmers and the development of renewable energy in Utah
    :

    Red-letter week buoys Utah Greens
    By Lee Benson
    Deseret Morning News

    Eileen McCabe is trying hard. She really is.
    But it’s obvious she hasn’t had much practice at this sort of thing.
    I’m talking about celebrating.
    Eileen is a card-carrying member of the Green Party, one of two people in Utah assigned as a delegate to the national party, and she and her Green peers have just gone through one terrific week.
    First there was the announcement from the federal government that it was abandoning its plans to detonate the Divine Strake explosion upwind in Nevada — something the Desert Greens, which is what Green Party members in Utah call themselves, have been laboriously campaigning for.
    Next there was Sunday night’s Academy Awards, where Al Gore’s documentary about global warming, “An Inconvenient Truth,” won two Oscars.
    And finally, as a kind of organic cherry on top, there was Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman’s announcement this week of his support for Utah farmers and the development of renewable energy in Utah.
    Right now, it sure is great to be green.
    Eileen knows this, and as she takes a break from her day job in Murray for a short interview with the media, meaning me, she says so with an emphatically redundant, “Oh it’s great, it’s great.”
    But that’s it. There are no back flips, no gushing speeches, no Toyota hybrid jumps, no plans for a big victory bash.
    The best Eileen can do is speculate that when she and her fellow Greens next get together in person — after Thursday’s regular anti-war vigil in front of the Federal Building in downtown Salt Lake perhaps — they might stop long enough for a toast with union-made beer.
    “We’re really into union-made beer,” she explains. “The only one I know of is Pabst Blue Ribbon, so we’ll probably get together with some Pabst Blue Ribbon and toss back a few.”
    But beyond that, no plans other than to keep on keeping on.
    “Honestly, we’re not used to this,” she says, meaning the winning.
    Then she quickly adds, “And the battle might be over, but the war isn’t.”
    “An Inconvenient Truth” may have won an Oscar, but lots of people are still driving SUVs. Divine Strake may have been cancelled, but the federal nuclear program is still going strong. And then there’s that situation in Iraq.
    “If they cancelled the (nuclear) program and ended the war in Iraq and didn’t start one with Iran,” says Eileen, “then maybe we’d take the week off.”
    And Pabst Blue Ribbon wouldn’t know what hit it.

    Lee Benson’s column runs Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Please send e-mail to benson@desnews.com and faxes to 801-237-2527.