I’ve long been a fan of noted blogger clammyc. He is a tireless and eloquent patriot blogging for the cause. He is also a pioneer in the field of blog radio and a soon-to-be new father. After following his writing for a year or more I finally met him face to face at YKOS in Chi-town this past August. In the course of our conversations there he mentioned that he had a trip to Atlanta coming up in the fall. I told him to get in touch if he had any free time.
Tag: Peace
Nov 26 2007
For antiwar Yellow Dog Democrats, 1968 looms again
Six months ago, I was confidently telling people that if the Democrats couldn’t win the presidency in 2008, we should just disband the party.
Lately, I have started hedging my bets.
And an hour with the front section of Sunday’s New York Times was enough to make me think that we are headed for another heartbreaking and unnecessary loss.
What did we learn today from the “liberal media?”
1. Violence is on the decline in Iraq.
2. One brigade of US troops has started to pull out.
3. The troop surge has not produced the political progress that was promised, so the Bush administration is simply downsizing its goals, to make it look like progress.
4. The Democratic presidential candidates appear ready to soften their stances, or at least their language, on Iraq and change the subject to domestic issues.
Here we go again.
We will be fooled again, it would appear.
Which brings us to the question: What is an antiwar Yellow Dog Democrat to do, after reading that one of Hillary Clinton’s foreign policy advisors, Michael O’Hanlon, is saying:
“The politics of Iraq are going to change dramatically in the general election, assuming Iraq continues to show some hopefulness,” said Michael E. O’Hanlon, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution who is a supporter of Mrs. Clinton’s and a proponent of the military buildup. “If Iraq looks at least partly salvageable, it will be important to explain as a candidate how you would salvage it – how you would get our troops out and not lose the war. The Democrats need to be very careful with what they say and not hem themselves in.”
Nov 19 2007
Six million turn out to protest Iraq war
OK, that headline is only true in my dreams.
But on a per capita basis, the equivalent happened on Iraq Moratorium #3 last Friday in Hayward, Wisconsin.
Hayward, a city of 2,129 in northwestern Wisconsin, is better know as the Musky Capital of the World than as a center of antiwar activism.
But 40 people turned out for a vigil to call for an ending the war and bringing our troops home.
If people in Milwaukee turned out in equal numbers, as a percentage of the population, there would have been 12,000 at the downtown rush hour vigil Friday night. Instead, there were perhaps 100 at most.
In New York City, there would have been 160,000 in the streets. In Houston, 42,000. In San Jose, 18,000. And that’s without including any suburban populations.
This inspiring photo, which graces the Iraq Moratorium website, is not from Hayward, but from Sewanee, Tennessee, with a population of 2,335. You can count about 30 people in that small community at last month’s Moratorium. Its turnout is almost on a par with Hayward’s.
Those kinds of successes, in small town America, are what inspire activists in the antiwar movement and help to keep hope alive as the senseless, endless war continues.
Nov 17 2007
What if there was an antiwar movement and no one reported it?
This can’t be blaming the messenger, because the complaint is that they aren’t bringing any messages.
But one can’t help but wonder whether the antiwar movement in this country might grow a little faster if the news media reported on it.
Currently, there is an almost total blackout on coverage.
Case in point: Friday’s Iraq Moratorium.
In small towns and big cities across the country, people held events to call for an end to the war in Iraq. Some were small vigils, but others were clearly newsworthy and video-friendly.
Want to guess how much coverage there was, either before or after?
Nov 16 2007
Feeling guilty? Buy an M-Day indulgence
Happy Moratorium Day, Bucko.
What’s that? You say you’re not planning to do anything today for the Moratorium; too stressed out, overbooked, busy, sick, exhausted and who knows what all?
And if you weren’t in sad enough shape, you’re feeling just a teensy bit guilty about not doing something, anything to stop the war today?
Well, Bucko, we’ve got just the solution for you: Buy yourself an indulgence.
Simply go to the Iraq Moratorium website and make a contribution. A one-time donation of any amount counts as doing something. And the Moratorium desperately needs the dough.
Of course, if you don’t intend on doing anything on the third Friday of coming months, either, you might want to consider a monthly pledge — sort of a plenary indulgence that will keep you in the state of grace right on through.
Nov 15 2007
Tomorrow’s the day; What’s your excuse?
Tomorrow is Iraq Moratorium #3.
Is there a reason you can’t participate?
Too busy?
Too burned out?
Too sophisticated?
Too cynical?
The bloodshed never takes a day off.
The Pentagon operates 24/7/365.
So why not join the growing number of people who take the pledge to do something on the third Friday of the month to call for an end to the war?
Nov 14 2007
Bridge players speak out; Can you trump this?
A U.S. team of world-class bridge players, tired of being asked to defend their country’s indefensible actions, disavowed George W. Bush’s policies — and risked their livelihood. All sorts of penalties are being threatened.
All they did was hold up a handmade sign saying, “We did not vote for Bush.” But they did it at a public event in China.
In the polite, refined world of duplicate bridge, it rivals the black power salute of Tommie Smith and John Carlos at the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City.
Which leads to the question: If they can do that, what are we going to do Friday, Iraq Moratorium Day #3?
Nov 13 2007
Iraq Moratorium Friday: Do something!
Friday is the third Iraq Moratorium.
Organizers ask people to do something — anything — to call for an end to the war in Iraq.
Cynics say it won’t do any good.
But I am participating because it seems obvious that doing something is infinitely more likely to have an impact than doing nothing.
It’s a largely unstructured, grassroots event, designed to continue to grow, expand and escalate. It recognizes that it’s going to be a long haul to stop the war, and is digging in for a prolonged effort. It happens on the third Friday of every month.
There’s no shortage of ideas of things you can do. A few suggestions:
Nov 12 2007
Waking up the silent antiwar majority
On Friday, Nov. 16, antiwar activists will take the “Anti-Torture Train” to San Jose, Calif., where more than 20 groups are sponsoring a march, picket, and news conference in front of a corporation that organizers say profits from illegal kidnappings and torture by handling the logistics for the CIA’s so-called “extraordinary rendition” flights — torture flights.
On the way, they will leaflet Caltrain passengers to educate them about U.S. torture policy, the CIA’s “extraordinary rendition” of suspects to other countries for abusive interrogation, and efforts in Congress to end the practice.
In New York City, a morning rush hour action at Union Square will feature hand-painted Pietas and black-clad leafleters.
Protesters in a number of cities will bang pots and pans in front of Congressional offices, as part of the Raise Hell for Molly Ivins campaign, inspired by the late progressive columnist and activist.
In Minneapolis and St. Paul, a student walkout is planned at a number of schools and campuses at noon, with an all-day teach-in and workshops, reminiscent of the 1969 Vietnam War Moratorium, at Macalester College.
It’s the third Iraq Moratorium Day.
Nov 12 2007
Humanity’s Blood. Our Hands.
What I need to say has already been said a thousand ways, a thousand times a thousand times, yet I still keep hoping to find the one way to say it right, and make people understand.
Does it matter to you if this man is Jewish, Palestinian, Iraqi or Anglo?
Nov 11 2007
A disease of the soul.
One of my favorite concise summations of what’s wrong with this country came from film director Philip Kaufman, in a 1990 article in Time Magazine. Kaufman’s film Henry and June had been slapped with an X rating for excessive eroticism, despite the fact that said eroticism was a fundamental part of the story, about the writers Henry Miller and Anais Nin, and Miller’s wife, June. Ironically, of course, Miller’s books had also been censored by the officious false morality of Puritanical America. But Kaufman understood that something larger, and more insidious, was at play:
“You can cut off a breast,” says Kaufman, “but you can’t caress it. The violent majority is dictating to a tender minority.”