Saturday, November 29, 2008

Protesting Anti-Muslim Hate Crimes

This is a short article describing an Anti-Islamophobia protest at UMass Amherst that was to raise awareness about the hate crimes that happened in Ohio back in September. There was a diverse coalition of people that got together for this protest, including C.A.N., M.S.A., I.S.O., etc.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

SOA? Tear it down!

The following is a speech I might have given at the School of Americas protest this weekend, if I had had the time to really plan out a speech. I ended up giving the first two paragraphs while standing on a barrel right in front of the gates of Ft. Benning, GA.

Brothers and Sisters!

We can all agree that the people of Columbia and Ecuador, of Nicaragua and El Salvador, are occupied people – occupied by their own US armed, funded, and trained governments, and by the extra-legal terrorist arms of those governments, the Paramilitary death squads. Only an unjust and illegal occupier would need to maintain control of the people through torture, disappearances, and murder – in short, through acts of terrorism against their own people.

However, we must also recognize that, in a much less deadly way, the US people are in a way occupied as well. From the repression seen at the DNC and RNC – where peaceful demonstrations were brutally disrupted with teargas and batons, pepper spray and horses, concussion grenades and snow plows, and also where the voice of the media was stifled and the healing hands of the medics handcuffed; to the case of the Hempstead 15 - where Iraq and Afghanistan vets were brutalized outside the final presidential debate as they tried to ask the candidates questions, where they and their peaceful supporters were trampled by horses causing one vet to sustain serious injuries to his skull and then denied proper medical attention by the Nassau County police; to the widespread government and corporate infiltration and surveillance of all manner of social justice and peace groups, from the RNC Welcoming Committee all the way to a group in Maryland organizing against the Death Penalty; from these cases and many more we can see that the current government is not one “Of the people, by the people, and for the people” but rather one set in opposition to the People!

The State claims a monopoly on violence – it controls the police who set up these fences and watchtowers, it controls the Army which trains the Latin American terrorists at the SOA/WHINSEC, it controls the electric chairs and lethal injection tables. What we must show the State is that all its violence, all its oppression, is useless in the face of mass nonviolent direct action. Together, we take to the streets of Denver, of St. Paul, of Columbus – together, we can tear down the fences and walls that separate us – together, we can tear down the SOA! Their jails cannot contain our numbers – we masses are not huddles and yearning for freedom, but are instead rising, as one, breaking the chains of oppression and injustice.

We stand today outside the gates of Ft. Benning with the people of Latin America, fighting a far more deadly struggle than the one we wage here. But we also stand with the people of the Congo and Darfur, of Palestine AND Israel, of Iraq, Iran, and Afghanistan, of Pakistan and Chine; we stand with people across the globe occupied and repressed by each other, by their governments, and by the multinational corporations who destroy the global economy through their greed and then demand to be bailed out – we stand here today, and we declare,

“When People are Occupied
Resistance is Justified!”

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Student Walkout Against War

This article made me smile because it is good to see some activity with the antiwar movement!

Monday, November 17, 2008

The Hempstead 15 go to Court

They're our brother, they're our sisters, we support war resistors! And look who is in the picture!!! NATE!!!

Anti-war Groups Hold March on Campus

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Anti-War Protesters Rally Against Iraq and Afghanistan

I cut this story out of the DI on Friday, so I have the full length thing... including the picture of Duane with the caption having his last name being Zinton...

Anti-War Groups Creates Display

ROTC branches hold POW/MIA vigil on quad

I actually saw this when I was going to class on Friday. At first, I thought it was the Army doing recruting, so I was going to start questioning them, but then I saw the wall that people were signing for POW MIA, and that they were reading off names of those who have been killed. This teaches me, and we can all take this away from this situation, that we need to look closer before we judge things (we all know that already, though, right?).

Proposition 8 Protest Calls for Equal Rights

Monday, November 10, 2008

The Occupiers' Faltering Status in Iraq

The Real Story of the Occupiers

This article just gives you a little taste of the new book, Winter Soldier: Iraq and Afghanistan. Our own Nate Peld is on the cover, and I believe his testimony is in there. This is an important preview for our own Winter Soldier event that will be happening this Thursday, November 13. Nate should be attending.

Rebellion of Italy's Students

To extend on the on-going strife in Italy, this article also talks about the strikes. It outlines the reasons why the students are protesting--- the huge cuts in education, and the beginning of the privatization of education. Also, a more disturbing outcome of the basically facist Berlusconi government is the evident racism. Immigrants are facing all kinds of discrimination, namely in the education sector. Children are being discriminated against!!! As an anti-war group that calls for the end to racism, and the right of people to organize, we should stand in solidarity with the students in Italy.

I have actually been talking to my Italian teacher about it, and she really is afraid about the fate of her country. She has expressed to me how much she wants to be there with the students, protesting. It is amazing, and I am glad I got to connect with her, and know that I agree with her stance in this struggle.