Friday, October 17, 2008

Protester Who 'May Have Received a Minor Injury'


Meet the Protester Who 'May Have Received a Minor Injury' at the Hofstra Debate

by Cheryl Biren-Wright
http://www.opednews.com/author/author3644.html

Wednesday night Americans waited for presidential candidates, Senators Barack Obama and John McCain, to take the stage at Hofstra University for the final debate before the elections. Outside the debate "15 protesters" were arrested. Oh, and "one person may have received a minor injury." That, according to the Associated Press.

Meet Nick Morgan, Iraq War Vet Nick Morgan (photo by Bill Perry)

This is Nick's fractured face after being trampled by mounted police at Wednesday's peaceful protest.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

NY SAVE THE GUARD


NY SAVE THE GUARD is part of a national campaign (www.bringtheguardhome.org) to defederalize the National Guard, bring them home now and stop deploying our state militia to Iraq. The New York State National Guard must be at home to protect its residents in a time of local disaster. We need our National Guard at home and the equipment that has been needlessly sent overseas.

Friday, September 26, 2008

Vets For Peace Drop Banner in DC

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

September 20

On Saturday, September 20, thousands of volunteers across the U.S. will knock on a Million Doors for Peace.

As veterans, your voice is necessary to spread this message of peace and justice!

IF YOU ARE PARTICIPATING, LET US KNOW!

What will happen?

This Saturday, over 25,000 people will go door to door with a petition encouraging people to sign it calling for an end to the war and occupation of Iraq.

Read why VFP Veteran Member Bruce Berry will be participating with Million Doors for Peace:

"The visilibility of veterans at each door will make the case for peace and justice much more solid! Those that door knock should wear something indicating that they are a veteran, including the VFP logo!"


How can I get involved?

Sign up today! You must sign up in advance. Try to do this by Wednesday, September 17 (tomorrow!)

Why are we doing this?

Years of marching has not worked. So this Saturday, we are going to find people who agree with us, but are not yet involved! This is not an attempt to activate the active, but reach out to those who agree but are not yet active.

Do I work alone or with a group?

You can do either. If there is a group in your area, Million Doors for Peace will email you. If you do not have a group, grab a neighbor, friend, or a member of Veterans For Peace and hit the streets!

What will happen when I sign up?

Million Doors for Peace will send you a list of 40 voters in your neighborhood. The goal of 1 million doors would be reached if each person went to 40 households gathering signatures.

What will the petition say?

The petition is short, but too long for this email.

OKAY - I am convinced! What do I do now?

1. Click here to sign up for Million Doors for Peace.

2. Then tell VFP you are participating! We want to be able to share how amazing our members are!

3. You will get an email from Million Doors for Peace with the signing material, petition, and a list of neighbors to visit.

4. On Saturday, visit neighbors and ask them to sign the petition. They will then be collected by Million Doors for Peace for follow up.

5. Let us know how you did! Email Betsy at betsy@veteransforpeace.net with your pictures and stories.

We thank you in advance for participating in this important action!


VETERANS WORKING TOGETHER FOR PEACE AND JUSTICE THROUGH NON-VIOLENCE.

Friday, September 12, 2008

Dear Friends of Peace and Justice,

We ask your support for a highly-visible, non-violent, direct action in defense of our Constitution, and in demanding accountability for the Bush Administration’s criminality. Although it was originally announced in June, the action will take place in Washington, DC, soon after the Republican Convention.

Eleven men and women––veterans or military family members—will send a message of resistance and a call to justice by occupying a prominent public location for twenty-four hours. The message—conveyed with a huge banner, public address system, and printed material—is to demand the arrest of George W. Bush and Richard B. Cheney for War Crimes and Crimes Against Humanity. During the occupation, participants will fast to honor and remember those who have needlessly suffered and died due to the criminal excesses of the Bush administration.

While we thank those who have already given support, we still need financial assistance for equipment, printing, and the likelihood of fines and legal fees. (Arrests are probable. Legal observers on the scene will record possible instances of police overreaction, which we hope will not occur.)

In a public statement of intention to be distributed on the day of action, we state:

Our action today is intended to raise public awareness to the crimes of George W. Bush and Richard B. Cheney and the need to hold them accountable; to motivate Congress to begin the impeachment process; and to induce the mainstream media to focus on the misdeeds and consequences of the current administration instead of exclusively the promise of the next.

We want to emphasize that accountability extends beyond impeachment to prosecution for war crimes even after their terms of office expire.

Through this action, we honor the wisdom and foresight of those original patriots who crafted the original document of our great nation, as we also honor all those who, since 1787, have sacrificed to support and defend this law of the land.

Please understand that we would risk endangering the action by being more explicit about time and place. The action will be documented by at least two independent filmmakers. So, you’ll be able to see it online after the event.

Please consider a generous, tax-deductible (VFP is a 501-C3 non-profit) contribution.
Write your check to “Veterans for Peace,” with the memo, “Vets Direct Action,” and send to:

Baltimore Veterans for Peace
325 East 25th St., Baltimore MD 21218.

Thanks so much for doing your part to save our democracy!

Towards the goal of a just and peaceful world,

Diane Baker, Ellen Barfield, Elaine Brower, Kim Carlyle, Tarak Kauff, Fred Nagel, Diane Wilson, Col. Ann Wright, Doug Zachary

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Counterattacking Army recruiting

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008
Alternative News

By Mitch Weiss | Sally Ferrell bounded from the truck and grabbed a posterboard sign that read: “War is not the Answer.”

Over the years, she’s organized dozens of peace vigils like this one being set up in a parking lot. Find common ground, she has always preached, and any conflict can be resolved.

But she’s now engaged in a conflict of her own — a dispute over military recruiting in high schools that has polarized rural Wilkes County.

For three years, Ferrell, 63, has asked permission to distribute pamphlets and other materials that warn students to think twice before joining the military. But the school superintendent has stopped her, calling her activities unpatriotic. The American Civil Liberties Union, calling it a First Amendment issue, has threatened to sue.

“The students need to know there are alternatives to the military,” said Ferrell, a Quaker. “But they’re not getting the other side.”

Recruiters have turned to high schools to help fill the ranks of the all-volunteer military. And they need them more than ever. After five years of fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan and longer deployments, the military has been hard-pressed to meet recruitment demands. They say U.S. casualties — more than 4,600 soldiers killed and 64,000 wounded in both wars — have dampened recruiting.

In recent years, thousands of people like Ferrell have joined dozens of counter recruiting groups. They say recruiters have given young people misleading information about military service and often target high schools in poor and rural areas where options for graduating students are limited; the activists want students to know they have prospects besides the military.

Most schools have allowed counter recruiters inside. Wilkes County’s opposition could trigger a legal battle.

“Are we going to pursue litigation? I think it’s pretty clear that the school board isn’t giving us any choice to do anything else,” said Katherine Parker, legal director of the ACLU’s North Carolina chapter.

Recruiters say the controversy has made it more difficult for them to do their job.

Before Ferrell’s campaign, they had unfettered access to schools and students. Now, they can only visit twice a semester. And when they do, they have to stand at a table outside the cafeterias.

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Military Recruitment Practices Violate International Standards

Military Recruitment Practices Violate International Standards, Says ACLU
New Report Also Details U.S. Failure To Protect Foreign Child Soldiers

NEW YORK - May 13 - The United States has failed to uphold its commitments to safeguard the rights of youth under 18 from military recruitment and to guarantee basic protections to foreign former child soldiers, according to an American Civil Liberties Union report released today. The report, “Soldiers of Misfortune,” charges that U.S. military recruiting practices that target children as young as 11, the lack of protections for alleged foreign child soldiers in U.S. military custody, and the denial of protection to former child soldiers from other countries seeking asylum violate the Optional Protocol on the Involvement of Children in Armed Conflict that the U.S. ratified in 2002.

“The Unites States is failing to protect its own youth from abusive military recruitment, and is simultaneously failing to protect the youth of other countries who have already been forcibly involved in armed conflict,” said Jamil Dakwar, Director of the ACLU Human Rights Program. “The United States should take immediate action to bring its policies and practices on military recruitment and treatment of former child soldiers in line with internationally accepted standards.”
The ACLU submitted the report to the U.N. Committee on the Rights of the Child, which oversees compliance with the optional protocol. The Protocol mandates countries to protect children under 18 from military recruitment and guarantees basic protections to former child soldiers. The committee will review the ACLU report before questioning a U.S. government delegation on its compliance with Protocol obligations on May 22 in Geneva.

According to the report, the military regularly targets youth under 18 for recruitment and disproportionately targets poor and minority students. The ACLU charges that exaggerated promises of financial rewards and coercion, deception and sexual abuse by recruiters nullify the so-called “voluntariness” of recruitment. A 2007 survey of New York City high school students by the New York Civil Liberties Union and other organizations found that more than one in five students, including students as young as 14, reported the use of class time by military recruiters.
“Military recruitment tools aimed at youth under 18, including Pentagon-produced video games, military training corps, and databases of students’ personal information, have no place in America’s schools,” said Jennifer Turner of the ACLU Human Rights Project. “The United States military’s procedures for recruiting students plainly violate internationally accepted standards and fail to protect youth from abusive and aggressive recruitment tactics.”

The report also criticizes U.S. detention of children at Guantánamo and U.S.-run facilities overseas without recognizing their juvenile status or observing international juvenile justice standards. Highlighted in the report is the case of Omar Khadr, a Canadian citizen in Department of Defense custody since he was 15, detained at Guantánamo on charges that include alleged crimes committed when he was 10 years old. The ACLU charges that military commission proceedings against Khadr allow the admission of coerced evidence that may have been obtained through torture.

Also included in the report are details of the U.S. denial of asylum status to former child soldiers under immigration provisions intended to bar those who victimized them. Some former child soldiers who were the victims of serious human rights abuses and cannot safely return to their home countries are being denied protection in the U.S.

The report calls on the United States to ratify the Convention on the Rights of the Child, the most comprehensive treaty on children’s rights and the most universally accepted and least controversial human rights treaty that has been drafted. Of 195 countries in the world, only the U.S. and Somalia have not ratified or acceded to this treaty.

The ACLU report to the Committee on the Rights of the Child is available online at: www.aclu.org/intlhumanrights/gen/35245pub20080513.html

The Optional Protocol on the Involvement of Children in Armed Conflict is at: www2.ohchr.org/english/law/crc-conflict.htm

The report of the NYCLU and Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer on military recruitment in New York City public schools is available online at: www.nyclu.org/node/1348

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Eli came back from Iraq

"For Eli"

By Andrea Gibson

Eli came back from Iraq
and tattooed a teddy bear onto the inside of his wrist
above that a medic with an IV bag
above that an angel
but Eli says the teddy bear won't live
and I know I don't know but I say, "I know"
cause Eli's only twenty-four and I've never seen eyes
further away from childhood than his
eyes old with a wisdom
he knows I'd rather not have
Eli's mother traces a teddy bear onto the inside of my arm
and says, "not all casualties come home in body bags"
and I swear
I'd spend the rest of my life writing nothing
but the word light at the end of this tunnel
if I could find the fucking tunnel
I'd write nothing but white flags
somebody pray for the soldiers
somebody pray for what's lost
somebody pray for the mailbox
that holds the official letters
to the mothers,
--------------fathers,
--------------------sisters,
and little brothers
of Micheal 19... Steven 21... John 33
how ironic that their deaths sound like bible verses
the hearse is parked in the halls of the high school
recruiting black, brown and poor
while anti-war activists
outside walter reed army hospital scream
100, 000 slain
as an amputee on the third floor
breathes forget-me-nots onto the window pain
but how can we forget what we never knew
our sky is so perfectly blue it's repulsive
somebody tell me where god lives
cause if god is truth god doesn't live here
our lies have seared the sun too hot to live by
there are ghosts of kids who are still alive
touting M16s with trembling hands
while we dream ourselves stars on Survivor
another missile sets fire to the face in the locket
of a mother who's son needed money for college
and she swears she can feel his photograph burn
how many wars will it take us to learn
that only the dead return
the rest remain forever caught between worlds of
shrapnel shatters body of three year old girl
to
welcome to McDonalds can I take your order?
the mortar of sanity crumbling
stumbling back home to a home that will never be home again
Eli doesn't know if he can ever write a poem again
one third of the homeless men in this country are veterans
and we have the nerve to Support Our Troops
with pretty yellow ribbons
while giving nothing but dirty looks to their outstretched hands
tell me what land of the free
sets free its eighteen-year-old kids into greedy war zones
hones them like missiles
then returns their bones in the middle of the night
so no one can see
each death swept beneath the carpet and hidden like dirt
each life a promise we never kept
Jeff Lucey came back from Iraq
and hung himself in his parents basement with a garden hose
the night before he died he spent forty five minutes on his fathers lap
rocking like a baby
rocking like daddy, save me
and don't think for a minute he too isn't collateral damage
in the mansions of washington they are watching them burn
and hoarding the water
no senators' sons are being sent out to slaughter
no presidents' daughters are licking ashes from their lips
or dreaming up ropes to wrap around their necks
in case they ever make it home alive
our eyes are closed
america
there are souls in
the boots of the soldiers
america
fuck your yellow ribbon
you wanna support our troops
bring them home
and hold them tight when they get here

Time to gather our forces for peace!

We vets have a unique role to play in advocating for peace. We have been there. We have seen war's futility. Our fellow soldiers bear the scars, if they came back at all. Enough of lies and blood. The next generation will not be sacrificed like ours.