Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

USING ART TO HEAL FROM WAR IN BROOKLYN

Saturday, April 16th, 2011

Earlier this week, one of our local treasures, Claudia Lefko, was featured in an article about her work with a local artist, John Goodman, with whom she worked to create a marvelous poster using photogravure techniques. From the outset, Claudia has been using art to help the children of Iraq heal from the devastating and traumatizing experiences of war. Now in today’s NY Times you can read about a man who has been devoting his time and energy to helping veterans use their artistic talent for the same purpose. His bunker in Brooklyn is filled with the artwork of his fellow veterans, many from the War in Vietnam and many continuing to be victims of PTSD as a result of their service. Here’s his and their story:

A BUNKER SETS THE SCENE FOR VETERANS TO EXHIBIT ART
By DAVID GONZALEZ
Published: April 15, 2011

On a tranquil side street in brownstone Brooklyn, where the biggest battles are over takeout menus and strollers, looms a jarringly martial sight: dozens of olive-drab sandbags piled high under a saw-toothed zinc roof.
Enlarge This Image
Librado Romero/The New York Times

“The Ho Chi Minh Trail,” by Robert Gulley, is a wood-and-leather elephant trudging through a thicket of grass fashioned from broom bristles painted green.
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Librado Romero/The New York Times

A painting by Domingo Vega.
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Librado Romero/The New York Times

John Coffiel at the Prophecies gallery, where some of his works, left, including a self-portrait, are being shown.

This week, Lenny Goodstein has transformed his Park Slope art and antiques gallery into a bunker — a fortified haven for a different sort of exhibit. On the walls, from floor to ceiling, he has hung paintings, photographs and sculptures by military veterans, many of whom survived combat only to confront another struggle as they readjusted to civilian life.

Mr. Goodstein, himself a Vietnam veteran, says these men and women have been discarded. He knows something about spotting diamonds in the dirt, having once built a thriving antiques business by salvaging furniture and knickknacks that New Yorkers had kicked to the curb without a thought.

But as he met more veterans from past and current wars, he was alarmed to find that many were gifted artists toiling in obscurity while the wolf — or an impatient landlord — stood at the door. He considers the exhibit, which will run from April 30 to May 31 at his gallery, on President Street, his most ambitious reclamation yet, helping to give these men and women some recognition and a few dollars, too.

“They need help, and often there’s nothing,” said Mr. Goodstein, who completed his fortress on Thursday night. “So you know what? This is the most exciting thing I can be doing. This is not about art, but something deeper.”

His gallery is called Prophecies, which is fitting, given the flowing white hair and beard that make him look like a seer — albeit one who speaks in rapid-fire Brooklynese. Mr. Goodstein, 63, returned to Park Slope nine months ago, having tired of a 12-year sojourn in Puerto Rico, where he owned a restaurant near one of the island’s most notorious slums.

Back in the borough of his birth, he began to have troubling memories of his late-1960s Army tour in Thailand, where he transported ammunition to air bases, supplying bombs that would rain down during raids against the Vietnamese enemy.

“I used to write ‘Love, Lenny’ on these bombs,” he recalled. “What do you know when you’re 19 and you’re the kids they don’t want? I started to get a little depressed thinking about what I had done over there, so I went for therapy.”

He had finished a therapy session a few months ago at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center on 23rd Street when he met Domingo Vega, a more recent veteran who was deep into painting. The work — naïf-style scenes of battlefields, visions of the afterlife and more — stayed with Mr. Goodstein.

“This guy, all he does is draw all day long,” he said. “Deep stuff, intense stuff. It inspired me. I knew I had to do something.”

As if on cue, he bumped into Barry Campbell, a 30-year V.A. employee who helps veterans navigate the bureaucratic maze to get benefits.

“I know so many vets who have talent and you never heard of them, man,” Mr. Campbell said. “We needed to give a show somewhere. Then Lenny came up to me and told me how he had an art gallery. I said, ‘It’s on.’ ”

Through word of mouth and fliers, artists sought out Mr. Goodstein. Among them was Robert Gulley, a formally trained sculptor whose lanky frame, deep-set eyes and gaunt, bearded face make him look like a figure painted by El Greco. Mr. Gulley was a radio operator in Vietnam, came home “pretty messed up,” he said, and knocked about until he enrolled in college, studied art and pursued it as a career.

“I came to New York in 1980 with big ambitions,” he said. “At the time, you could walk into a gallery and meet dealers. I never realized you needed to sell yourself, to have a lot of charm. So I worked as a carpenter doing apartment renovations, and once in a while my sculpture got in a show.”

He was sidelined from work two years ago, when his knees gave out and he developed arthritis. He is fighting eviction from the Lower East Side apartment where he has lived for 30 years.

“I’m a senior citizen with a low rent,” Mr. Gulley, 63, said. “I’m a real danger to the landlord.”

His pieces are displayed prominently in the gallery: a helicopter made from an office chair, and a work titled “The Ho Chi Minh Trail,” a wood-and-leather elephant trudging through a thicket of grass fashioned from broom bristles painted green. Selling his work has been difficult, he said, but he has modest hopes for the exhibit.

For other artists, the show is more about camaraderie than about need. Phil Tolvin, who served in a light-infantry brigade in the late 1960s and retired from managing a commercial photo studio, knew Mr. Goodstein through a mutual friend in the antiques business. Mr. Goodstein learned only recently that Mr. Tolvin was also a photographer, whose work includes recent scenes of the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge and vintage shots of Washington Square Park.

“It’s good to participate in an art show with all my brothers,” Mr. Tolvin said. “There is a bond among the guys you served with, an affinity. You don’t know what it’s like unless you were there. I mean, I couldn’t even say the word Vietnam for 20 years.”

With his work safe in the bunker, it is time for others to be speechless. On Friday morning, the gallery’s neighbors encountered the wall of sandbags, craning their necks in bewilderment.

“This one lady came by and said, ‘I’ve never seen anything like this on the street,’ ” Mr. Goodstein said. “Well, I’ve seen plenty of them. Now all I need is an M60 machine gun.”

WHY YOU SHOULDN’T HOLD A WOLF BY THE EARS

Sunday, April 3rd, 2011

I was moved by an op-ed piece in the Daily Hampshire Gazette last week and I wanted to obtain permission from its author since he is a local writer and teacher. Joe Gannon called to tell me I could go ahead and share his writing with you. It appealed to me on numerous levels starting with his referencing two quotes from former presidents. The title quote by Jefferson is a favorite. It appears in the first few minutes of Ken Burns “Civil War” video, the first hour of which I show to my 6th graders since it shows how the enslavement of African people was the central cause of the war. Jefferson recognizes the impossibility of the circumstances surrounding the positions of southern slaveholders and northern abolitionists when he compares the horrendous institution to holding a wolf by the ears. That the second quote you will encounter in Mr. Gannon’s piece is by Lyndon Johnson and pertains to the utter disaster that was the Vietnam War made my desire to share this with you even stronger. It was clear by the third paragraph that the Guest Column was grappling with a wide range of issues and it just kept getting better as Mr. Gannon moved on to connect the quotes to what’s been happening in Iraq and Afghanistan, Gulf of Mexico, the Middle East, and Japan. He frames his commentary around the central question: “What’s a superpower to do?” and goes on to challenge our government, our people to “muster the courage and imagination” to face the challenges ahead and he acknowledges that “history is no comfort”. See what you think…

WHY YOU SHOULDN’T HOLD A WOLF BY THE EARS
by Joe Gannon
Recent tumultuous events from the Middle East to Japan have brought to mind two infamous quotes from American presidents. They express the kind of soulful, hard-won wisdom which should be chiseled into some prominent building so that passersby and school children can read them and be forewarned.
They are not inscribed anywhere because the sayings are testaments to the impotence of the presidency, and the incompetence of our democracy when it comes to solving complex problems which require courage and imagination.
Of the pernicious problem of slavery which would unleash the bloodiest war we ever fought, Thomas Jefferson said, “It is like holding a wolf by the ears. We can neither afford to let go nor continue to hold on.” Of the deepening Vietnam quagmire which destroyed his Great Society program and his presidency, Lyndon Johnson said, “I feel like a hitchhiker in a Texas hail storm: I can’t run, I can’t hide and I can’t make it stop.”
The shockwaves set off by the people power revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt have toppled the walls of pretense that the United States is either the Mother of all Democracies or the Last Great Superpower. During the glory days of January’s peaceful protests the Obama Administration sat on the sidelines watching the old order based on Arab dictatorships crumble while it pooh-poohed the march of history and asked, Can’t we all just go slow? (Precisely the advice rejected by those hot-heads of 1776. )
But the clamor for freedom spreads like a slow-moving tsunami and is turning bloody. Now the White House claims to be on the side of freedom in Libya but won’t muster the nerve to act alone, doesn’t have the influence to create an international consensus for action, and can’t assemble the military power to ground Qaddafi’s murderous air force. What’s a superpower to do?
In tiny Bahrain Defense Secretary Robert Gates parachuted in to counsel restraint and negotiations (and protect a US naval base), but was promptly spurned by once subservient allies who instead invaded the kingdom in the one move likely to turn a protest for freedom into a sectarian bloodbath between Bahrain’s Sunni minority and Shiite majority. (Iraq: the sequel anyone?)
It’s hailing in Texas and the United States can’t run away from the fact that our wars in Afghanistan and Iraq destroyed a regional balance of power that America’s debased credibility and overstretched military cannot put back together again. The US can’t hide from the fact that its strategic interests as a superpower completely trumped any real or even imagined support for the greatest outbreak of freedom since the collapse of communism. And it can’t stop the Arab masses yearning to be free, by either the ballot or, now, the bullet.
In Japan, the devastating earthquake and tsunami has been almost pushed from the front pages by the equally destructive nuclear catastrophe still unfolding. But unlike the geological cataclysm that was over in minutes or hours, the nuclear disaster might go on for years.
Last year, President Obama had hardly called for more offshore drilling when BP’s platform exploded; as his call for safe nuclear power in his State of the Union speech was followed almost immediately by the meltdown(s) in Japan. (Talk about a hitchhiker in a hailstorm.)
The slow-moving tsunami of global warming, fueled by our addiction to unlimited energy, is Jefferson’s wolf we hold by the ears. We cannot continue to consume energy as we do while having only poisons (oil, coal, nukes) to feed that consumption. We cannot continue to hold onto this snarling wolf – it will free itself and consume us all.
Now is the time for Obama to declare an end to the era of the internal combustion engine that is choking the life out of us. But can we muster the courage and imagination to actually do so? History is no comfort.
What Jefferson foresaw was that the slave states would meet with force any compromise on slavery because they knew, rightly, that the free states would vote slavery out of existence. America’s “peculiar institution” thus festered as too difficult to solve until it exploded into a destruction of Biblical proportions. . Sound familiar?
It’s enough to make you feel like a hitchhiker holding a wolf by the ears in a Texas hailstorm.

Joe Gannon, a writer and teacher, lives in Northampton. He can be reached at ganvolp9@cs.com

MALALAI JOYA IS COMING THANKS TO PEOPLE POWER!!!

Saturday, March 26th, 2011

Yes! A public outcry has made it possible for a woman speaking truth to power about what’s really happening in Afghanistan to come to the U.S. and Malalai Joya will be at Smith College Monday evening at 7:30 at the Neilson Browsing Room. I wholeheartedly urge you to hear what she has to say. Below is the story of how she got the visa she was being denied as well as the schedule of her U.S. tour. I have posted about her recently so if you want more info you can go to:

http://www.vietnamwardraftstories.com/blog/2011/03/04/afghan-woman-activist-wants-u-s-to-leave-her-nation-now/

I hope I see some of you on Monday evening.

YOU DID IT! MALALAI JOYA ON HER WAY TO STATES!
by Ralph Lopez

After an escalating citizen’s call campaign to the State Department demanding that Afghan women’s activist Malalai Joya be granted a visa, the administration has relented and is allowing her into the country for her book and speaking tour. Joya was denied a visa previously even though a number of US congressmen had objected. Anti-war activists speculated that the decision had to do with her unequivocal call for the withdrawal of American troops in Afghanistan, and her message that the US military presence is actually doing more harm than good, especially for women.

This undermines the preferred narrative and an important crutch for the occupation that if the US withdraws, the Taliban will take over and women’s rights will be dealt a setback. Instead, Joya tells us, the taunt of foreign troops on Afghan soil strengthens the very Taliban we are trying to defeat. Strengthen civil society instead, with jobs and infrastructure projects, and break the grip of the warlords who profit and thrive when there is war. Best of all, such a strategy would far less than one-tenth of the $100 billion per year we are dumping into the war. Corruption is not a problem if the programs which are known to work and be well-run are the vehicle, such as Afghanistan’s National Solidarity Program.

So central is the official narrative that Time Magazine caused a ruckus when they hit people over the head with it, with the now-famous cover photo of Biba, whose nose was cut off by for trying to run away from an abusive husband.

All credit for this victory goes to the folks who made the calls to the State Department and their senators and representatives. Don’t ever think you can’t make a difference! The U.S. is honored to have as a visitor this courageous woman who has survived five assassination attempts because she insists on telling the truth about what is taking place in Afghanistan, who once as the youngest member of parliament looked around the room and called many of the men she saw warlords to their faces. Rather than denying visas, we should be rolling out the red carpet. Be sure to hear the bravest woman in Afghanistan, which is to say the bravest woman in the world, speak.

Malalai Joya’s speaking schedule

(RESCHEDULE) NEW YORK

What: Address to the Congregation of the Historic Riverside Church in Harlem
When: Sunday , March 20, Morning Service, 10:45 am
Where: 490 Riverside Drive (near W. 120th St)
For more info: TBA

What: Closing Plenary at the Left Forum with Luciana Castellina, Carlos M. Vilas, and John Nichols
When: Sunday, March 20, 5:30 pm
Where: Pace University, 1 Pace Plaza, NY
For more info: www.leftforum.org.

(RESCHEDULE) NEW JERSEY

What: “A Woman Among Warlords: Malalai Joya” a fundraiser for Afghan Women’s Mission
When: Monday, March 21st at 7 pm
Where: Riverside Lounge at the SAC (Student Activities Center) at Rutgers University, New Brunswick Campus
Co-sponsor: BAKA: Students United for Middle Eastern Justice
For more info: contact baka.rutgers@gmail.com

(RESCHEDULE) WASHINGTON DC

What: Book reading
When: Tuesday March 22 from 6:30 to 8 pm
Where: Busboys and Poets – 14th St. In the Langston Room
Co-sponsor: Teaching for Change
For more info: http://bbpbooks.teachingforchange.org/…

(RESCHEDULE) MARYLAND

What: WOMEN IN WAR: OBJECT/SUBJECT – WGSX ANNUAL COLLOQUIUM
When: Thursday March 24 at 8:15 pm
Where: St. Mary’s College of Maryland, 18952 E. Fisher Rd, St. Mary’s City, MD 20686-3001. Event will be in the Cole Cinema building
Co-Sponsors: Arts Alliance of St. Mary’s College of Maryland, and others.
For more info: Sahar Shafqat, email:sshafqat@smcm.edu, Phone: 240-895-4910, web: http://www.smcm.edu/…

MASSACHUSETTS

What: Malalai Joya and Noam Chomsky: The Case for Withdrawal from Afghanistan
When: Friday March 25 5:30 pm
Where: NOTE: VENUE HAS CHANGED TO ACCOMMODATE A LARGER AUDIENCE – NEW LOCATION IS MEMORIAL CHURCH, 1 HARVARD YARD.
Co-sponsor: Haymarket Books, UJP Afghanistan/Pakistan Task Force, Massachusetts Peace Action, UNAC
For more info: Rsvp and invite friends on Facebook. Seating is first come, first served. Contact: sarah@haymarketbooks.org

What: Malalai Joya: Liberating Afghan Women
When: Saturday, March 26, 3-5 pm
Where: First Church in Jamaica Plain, 6 Eliot St, Jamaica Plain
Co-sponsors: Jamaica Plain Forum, Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom-Boston Branch
For more info: www.jamaicaplainforum.org or call Liz at 617-477-8630 x 301

What: On Ending the Occupation of Afghanistan
When: Monday March 28 at 4 pm
Where: 106 Thompson Hall, Univ. of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA
Co-sponsors: Western Massachusetts American Friends Service Committee , Media Education Foundation, Peace and World Security Studies, American Friends
For more info: Call 413-584-8975 or email office@afscwm.org

What: On Ending the Occupation of Afghanistan
When: Monday March 28 at 7:30 pm
Where: Neilson Library Browsing Room, Smith College, Northampton MA
Co-sponsors: Smith College Anthropology Department, Smith College Global Studies Center, Five College Program in Peace and World Security Studies (PAWSS), Alliance for Peace and Justice, Western Massachusetts.
For more info: Call 413-584-8975 or email office@afscwm.org

VERMONT

What: Malalai Joya and the Case for Withdrawal from Afghanistan
When: Sunday March 27 at 5 pm
Where: Davis Student Center, University of Vermont Campus Burlington VT
Co-sponsors: International Socialist Organization, Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, Stop the F-35 Coalition.
For more info: Email jramey1979@gmail.com, 802-309-4824

NEW HAMPSHIRE

What: Afghanistan: Nearly Ten Years Into the US War
When: Tuesday March 29 at 6 pm
Where: University of NH, Memorial Union Building, 83 Main Street, Durham NH
Co-sponsors: Organization sponsoring the event: UNH Peace and Justice League & Seacoast Peace Response
For more info: Email freid.alex@gmail.com, or call 603-608-9859, or visit www.seacoastpeaceresponse.org.

PENNSYLVANIA

What: Malalai Joya: A Woman Among Warlords
When: Wednesday March 30 from 4-6 pm with book signing at 3 pm
Where: Villanova University, 800 E. Lancaster Avenue Villanova, PA 19085 (Bartley 1011, is in a corner building across the street from free parking on the South side of Lancaster Pike.)
Co-sponsors: TBA
For more info: email Joe Betz at joseph.betz@villanova.edu, or call 610-519-4708.

What: Malalai Joya: A Woman Among Warlords
When: Wednesday, March 30, 8:00-9:30pm
Where: Arch St Meeting House, 4th & Arch Sts., Philadelphia, PA
Co-sponsors: Central Philadelphia Monthly Meeting of Friends and the Arch St. Friends Meeting
For more info: Email Marge Van Cleef mvc@igc.org, or call 267-763-1644 or call Elisabeth at 215-382-1531

ILLINOIS

What: Malalai Joya: A Woman Among Warlords
When: Thursday March 31 at 7 pm
Where: Chopin Theatre, 1543 West Division, Chicago, IL (Division/Ashland/Milwaukee, Division Blue Line, #70Division bus #9Ashland bus, #56Milwaukee bus)
Co-sponsors: Haymarket Books and TruthOut.org
For more info: sarah@haymarketbooks.org

MINNEAPOLIS

What: Malalai Joya: A Woman Among Warlords
When: Friday April 1 at 7 pm
Where: St Joan of Arc Church, 4537 3rd Ave South, Minneapolis, Minnesota
Co-sponsors: Women Against Military Madness and the Twin Cities Peace Campaign.
For more info and tickets (@$10 each): contact TCPC at 612-522-1861 or 612-827-5364 or visit www.worldwidewamm.org

OREGON

What: “A Women Among Warlords”: An Afghan Woman Tells her Story
When: Sunday April 3 at 7 pm
Where: Willamette University, 900 State Street, Salem, OR 97301
Co-sponsors: Lilly Foundation
For more info: Email mduerkse@willamette.edu

WASHINGTON STATE

What: Malalai Joya: A Woman Among Warlords – Bellingham
When: Monday April 4, 12-1:20 pm
Where: PAC Concert Hall, WWU, 516 High St, Bellingham
Co-Sponsors: Peace Action of WA, WWU/Fairhaven College World Issues Forum
For more info: Fred Miller, email: freefred@comcast.net, phone: 206 453-4471

What: Malalai Joya: A Woman Among Warlords – Lynnwood
When: Monday April 4, 3:30-5:00 pm
Where: Black Box Theatre, Edmonds Community College, 20000 68th ave W, Lynnwood
Co-Sponsors: Peace Action of WA, Snohomish Co. Peace Action, Edmonds Community College
For more info: Fred Miller, email: freefred@comcast.net, phone: 206 453-4471

What: Malalai Joya: A Woman Among Warlords – Seattle
When: Monday April 4, 7 pm
Where: Seattle First Baptist Church, 1111 Harvard (at Seneca st.), Seattle WA
Co-sponsors: Sponsors: Peace Action of WA, Seattle First Baptist, Partners in Peacemaking, Seattle NOW
For more info: Fred Miller, email: freefred@comcast.net, phone: 206 453-4471

What: Malalai Joya: A Woman Among Warlords – Tacoma
When: Tuesday, April 5, 7 pm
Where: William Phillip Hall, UW Tacoma campus
Co-sponsors: Peace Action of WA, UW/T MLK Jr. Institute for Social and Economic Justice
For more info: Fred Miller, email: freefred@comcast.net, phone: 206 453-4471

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA

What: Ending the Afghan War: A Lecture by Malalai Joya
When: Thursday April 7, 1:30 – 3 pm
Where: Cal State Los Angeles campus, University Student Union LA room
Co-Sponsors: Afghan Women’s Mission, KPFK
For more info: email info@afghanwomensmission.org, call 626-676-7884.

What: Ending the Afghan War: A Lecture by Malalai Joya
When: Thursday April 7 at 7 pm
Where: University of Southern California Campus, Taper Hall of Humanities (THH) Rm 201
Co-Sponsors: Political Student Assembly, Afghan Women’s Mission, KPFK
For more info: email info@afghanwomensmission.org, call 626-676-7884.

What: Ending the Afghan War: A Lecture by Malalai Joya
When: Friday April 8 from 12 noon – 2 pm
Where: MCC Lounge, University of California Santa Barbara
Co-Sponsors: Multicultural Center, Mellichamp Fund – Department of Religious Studies, Afghan Women’s Mission, KPFK
For more info: Call 805 893 8411.

SAN FRANCISCO

What: Ending the Afghan War: With Malalai Joya
When: Saturday April 9 from 7-9 pm, 6-7, reception/light refreshments
Where: Episcopal Church of St. John the Evangelist, on the corner of 15th St and Julian (between Mission and Valencia), San Francisco (by the 16th St BART).
Co-Sponsors: Women’s International League for Peace & Freedom (WILPF/SF)
For more info: Email sfjoya@gmail.com

What: Rally Against the Wars at Home and Abroad
When: Sunday April 10, 11 am onwards
Where: Assemble at Dolores Park in San Francisco at 11 am, rally at 12 noon, march at 1:30 pm.
Co-Sponsors: United National Anti-war Committee (UNAC) and hundreds of social justice organizations
For more info: Visit www.unacpeace.org, email unacnortherncalifornia@gmail.com, or call 415-49-NO-WAR

KUCINICH AT IT AGAIN – TELLING IT LIKE IT IS ABOUT WAR AND THE ECONOMY…

Friday, March 18th, 2011

From Madison, Wisconsin to the halls of Congress to the White House the message is to cut the budget and the only differences are who to blame and what to cut. Meanwhile, yesterday Dennis Kucinich once again made it clear that our country is not without resources and that’s all about a gargantuan misappropriation in which war and the defense department repeatedly win out over all else. His voice of reason amidst the warmongers and Obama apologists succeeded in persuading close to 100 of his colleagues in the House to vote to end the War in Afghanistan and bring our troops home by the end of the year. And eight of those joining Kucinich were Republicans! Still the measure lost when over 300 Congresspeople chose to remain completely out of step with the American public. Just as those in power continue to argue in favor of relicensing aging nuclear power plants (some on fault lines not unlike the ones that caused the current crisis in Japan) and building new ones, the desire to continue the war despite overwhelming evidence of its failure to secure a democratic Afghanistan as well as undeniable proof that it has done horrible damage to our economy are proof of the folly of our policies. It is way beyond time to end the madness and Kucinich knows it and tells it like it is…

AMERICA’S NOT BROKE, WISCONSIN’S NOT BROKE; WE’RE JUST WASTING MONEY ON WAR…
Published on Friday, March 18, 2011 by The Nation
by John Nichols

“There is simply no rationale for continuing American involvement with no end in sight, rising deaths for civilians and our brave soldiers, declining public sentiment, and serious economic pain at home,” Ohio Congressman Dennis Kucinich explained to his fellow House members during Thursday’s debate on ending the U.S. occupation of Afghanistan. “Continuing our involvement in Afghanistan is not affordable, it’s not just, and it hurts American foreign policy interests. It’s time to go.” [Rep. Dennis Kucinich speaks in favor of withdrawing troops from Afghanistan last week at a Capitol Hill press conference. (Sabrina Eaton/The Plain Dealer)] Rep. Dennis Kucinich speaks in favor of withdrawing troops from Afghanistan last week at a Capitol Hill press conference. (Sabrina Eaton/The Plain Dealer)

That message, long true but truer now than ever, resonated with 92 other members of the House, who joined Kucinich in voting for a new bill to bring an end to the war in Afghanistan by the end of 2011.

At a time when President Obama and Republican congressional leaders are both peddling different versions of the fantasy that America is broke, an when Republican governors are claiming that states are facing such hard times that only busting unions will balance budgets, Kucinich and his colleagues have found the missing money. It’s being wasted on a war of whim in Afghanistan.

As Kucinich explains, “There is simply no rationale for continuing American involvement with no end in sight, rising deaths for civilians and our brave soldiers, declining public sentiment, and serious economic pain at home. Continuing our involvement in Afghanistan is not affordable, it’s not just, and it hurts American foreign policy interests. It’s time to go.”

“While Congress pulls unemployment benefits from suffering Ohio families and proposes slashing health care benefits, vital children’s programs, and veterans’ services all because we’re “broke,” it continues to fund a war that has cost us more than $455 billion. We are told we should cut funding for assistance to low-income families with one hand, while with the other hand tens of billions of dollars are approved for a war that does nothing to further our national security. The Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation estimates that the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan cost the average American family of four almost $13,000 last year,” adds Kucinich, who says: “Our priorities are simply out of sync. Desperately needed unemployment benefits were filibustered last year because the costs to provide them were not offset with spending cuts or revenue increases. But we are not required to offset the costs of war, even when the war is completely funded by borrowed money – money we have to pay back with interest on the backs of our children and grandchildren.”

That argument gained favor with 85 Democrats, including ranking members such as John Conyers of Michigan, Barney Frank of Massachusetts, Bob Filner and George Miller and Henry Waxman of California, and Charles Rangel of New York. Congressional Black Caucus chair Barbara Lee, D-California, joined them, as did Congressional Progressive Caucus co-chair Raul Grijalva of Arizona and Keith Ellison of Minnesota.

Eight Republicans voted for the resolution, as well. In addition to long-time opponents of unnecessary wars, such as Texas Congressman Ron Paul and Tennessee Congressman John Duncan Jr., a number of younger GOP conservatives with Tea Party ties, such as Utah’s Jason Chaffetz backed the proposal to remove the troops from Afghanistan.

The bipartisan support for the resolution was satisfying, if insufficient. The measure still lost 321 to 93. Especially disappointing was the vote of House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-California, who sided with Republican leaders in voting “no.”

Still, the increased level of opposition to the war was notable, as it put more members of Congress in synch with the American people.

“The U.S. Congress continues to lag far behind American public opinion on the war in Afghanistan. Evidence from opinion surveys reveals that Americans have greatly shifted their opinion on the war, with a two-thirds majority now opposing the war,” notes Kucinich. “Nearly three-quarters — an overwhelming majority — want to withdraw substantial numbers of troops by this summer. The vote today illustrates that Congress is unfortunately out of step with the American people on the issue of the Afghanistan war. Nevertheless, the number of Members of Congress voting in favor of the resolution to end the Afghanistan war grew appreciably over a similar vote last year. Most of the increase was due to Democratic members who switched their position. Most new Republican Members of Congress unfortunately opposed the resolution, in spite of the considerable costs of the war.

“The cost of the war, both in terms of blood and treasure is unsustainable. We will renew our struggle to bring U.S. policy in line with American public opinion, and ensure that American lives are not put at risk, Afghan civilians are not put at risk and our ability to address the fiscal needs of America here at home are not put at risk.”

AFGHAN WOMAN ACTIVIST WANTS U.S. TO LEAVE HER NATION – NOW!

Friday, March 4th, 2011

Maybe it’s just the websites I go to, but this morning I even checked out www.cnn.com to see what is “playing” and there was an excellent article all about the history of the labor movement and its contributions to the creation of a middle class as its existence is being threatened all across our country. But the article below needs no explanation or introduction since it tells the story of what is happening in Afghanistan in stark terms focusing particular attention on the plight of women who our government has consistently pointed to as a defense for our occupation. I will let you read it without further comment.

Published on Thursday, March 3, 2011 by CommonDreams.org
THE AFGHAN WAR IS BRUTAL, EXPENSIVE, UNPOPULAR AND INEFFECTIVE – SO WHY ARE WE SPENDING BILLIONS ON IT? LEADING AFGHAN FEMINIST WANTS THE U.S. AND NATO TO LEAVE HER NATION…
by Sonali Kolhatkar

“The sad truth is that Obama’s war policies have turned out to be even more of a nightmare than I expected.” – Malalai Joya, A Woman Among Warlords

While millions of Americans are experiencing unemployment, wage stagnation, rising tuition, dwindling social services, and poverty at levels not seen since the Great Depression, an unjustifiably large proportion of our taxes are being used to cause death and destruction in Afghanistan. With Afghanistan being the longest war the U.S. has ever officially waged, we should carefully examine the costs of the war – financial and otherwise – and ask ourselves, is it really worth it? [Afghan activist and former Member of Parliament, Malalai Joya, wants the U.S. and NATO out of her country. She will soon embark on a new US speaking tour to help reinvigorate the war debate.] Afghan activist and former Member of Parliament, Malalai Joya, wants the U.S. and NATO out of her country. She will soon embark on a new US speaking tour to help reinvigorate the war debate.

The war costs taxpayers between $500,000 to $1 million per soldier in Afghanistan every year. Since President Obama deployed thousands of more troops than Bush, the escalating war has come with a bloated price tag. So far, we have spent $336 billion on the war, and if Congress approves a request for additional funding, that number will go up to $455.4 billion – nearly half a trillion dollars. According to CostofWar.com, just the $120 billion in additional funding could fund 1.6 million elementary school teachers for a year, 1.9 million firefighters for a year, or $5,550 Pell Grants for 19.3 million students. A single month’s expenses on the Afghanistan war could pay for 46.9 billion meals for the hungry each month. Six months’ worth of Afghanistan war expenses could pay for school supplies for every single child in the world.

In addition to its financial price, the Afghanistan war is costing real human lives. Over the course of the entire war, at least 1,400 U.S. troops have been killed and over 10,000 wounded. The rate of deaths is also increasing, as more than a third of the total troops killed (499) died just during the past year. The price paid by ordinary Afghans is even greater. Not counting so-called insurgents, at least 2,412 civilians were killed and 3,803 were wounded in just the first 10 months of last year – these are most likely conservative estimates. The rate of Afghan civilian deaths is up 20 percent compared to the year before, directly corresponding to the increased troop levels under President Obama. In fact, over the course of the war, U.S.-led military actions have resulted in more direct civilian deaths (5,791 – 9,060) than “insurgent”-led actions (4,949 – 6,499).

Meanwhile, the U.S.-backed government in Afghanistan has no more legitimacy than Egypt’s embattled Mubarak regime. The 2009 elections in which President Hamid Karzai claimed victory were condemned internationally as fraudulent. Released documents showed that 100% of votes from dozens of polling places in provinces like Kandahar were for Karzai. Afghanistan’s Electoral Complaints Commission received thousands of complaints of fraud. Journalists easily purchased voter registration cards on the black market. Despite documentary evidence of criminal activity implicating top government officials and Karzai himself, the U.S. continues to legitimize the central government as the only alternative to the Taliban. There is also little criticism beyond vague assertions of “corruption” of members of the Afghan Parliament. Many Afghan MPs have a history of bloody war crimes, particularly during the post-Soviet era of the early 1990’s when tens of thousands of civilians were maimed, raped, and killed often with U.S.-supplied weapons. Today, those same men, considered the Taliban’s ideological brethren, control private militias, suck up millions of dollars of aid for their private gain, terrorize civilians, and are neck-deep in the drug trade.

It is no wonder then that leading Afghan activist and former Member of Parliament, Malalai Joya, wants the U.S. and NATO out of her country. Having come face-to-face with the brutality of war and the power that U.S.-backed war criminals wield, Joya has been demanding an end to the occupation for years. In her book, A Woman Among Warlords, just out in paperback, Joya explains the situation of ordinary Afghans: “[w]e are caught between two enemies – the Taliban on one side and the U.S./NATO forces and their warlord allies on the other.” She goes on to say that “for our people, Obama is a warmonger, like Bush. He follows the same disastrous policies, only with much more determination and force.”

Joya is the most outspoken Afghan to have been elected to Afghanistan’s Parliament. She is beloved by her people for daring to speak out against U.S.-backed war criminals that dominate the government and is targeted by those very warlords. In fact, Joya has survived at least 4 assassination attempts. She represents a majority of Afghans that want neither a foreign occupation with its fundamentalist lackeys in government nor their enemies the Taliban and Al Qaeda. Despite this, her opinions are rarely reflected in U.S. media.

By most accounts, violence is increasing. According to the Afghanistan NGO Safety Office (ANSO), attacks in Helmand and Kandahar rose by 124% and 20% last year compared to 2009. Furthermore, the violence has now spread to parts of the previously more peaceful North and East, but the U.S. military and its spokespeople continue to cast their failures as successes. For example, in a recent letter to U.S. troops, General David Petraeus said, “Throughout the past year, you and our Afghan partners worked together to halt a downward security spiral in much of the country and to reverse it in some areas of great importance.” He went on to cite specific progress in the Afghan capital Kabul as well as the traditional Taliban strongholds of the Helmand and Kandahar provinces, ignoring the fact that the number of attacks there are increasing. The ANSO, which provides security advice for organizations operating on the ground in Afghanistan, said in its quarterly report, “No matter how authoritative the source of any such claim [of progress], messages of this nature are solely intended to influence American and European public opinion.” As Malalai Joya says in her book, “It is all a lie – dust in the eyes of the world.”

Like Malalai Joya, most Afghans are painfully aware of the war’s spiral into violence and mayhem: a November 2010 survey by the Afghan Center for Socio-Economic and Opinion Research found that favorable opinions of the U.S. have hit an all-time low of 43% among Afghans. More than twice as many Afghans now blame the U.S. and NATO for violence compared to a year ago. Afghans are also less optimistic about the availability of jobs and economic opportunities, freedom of movement, and the rights of women compared to a year earlier. Americans share the Afghan opinion that the troops should leave. A CNN Opinion Research poll last December found that 63% now oppose the war.

In the last chapter of her book, Joya details her recommendations on how the world can really help Afghans, the first of which is to the end the U.S.-NATO war. She also explains the real humanitarian needs of the Afghan people that the international community could fulfill, and how this would have to go hand-in-hand with disarmament, especially of the warlords that have enjoyed foreign support for so long. Finally, Joya ardently demands all foreign troops to withdraw from her country, making a strong case for how any outbreak of civil war could be minimized through responsible international diplomacy.

According to Joya, “the truth about Afghanistan has been hidden behind a smoke screen of words and images carefully crafted by the United States and its NATO allies and repeated without question by the Western media.” Joya will speak directly to American audiences this spring in a nationwide tour intended to expose the brutality and futility of the war and clear the smoke screen. Her speaking tour comes ahead of a major push by antiwar activists to organize bi-coastal events protesting the Afghanistan war on April 9th and 10th 2011. Starting in mid-March, Joya will begin her tour in New York. From there, she heads to New Jersey, Washington D.C., Maryland, Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Minnesota, Oregon, Washington state, and California. Joya’s tour will culminate with her participation in San Francisco’s April 10th Antiwar Demonstration. Details of Malalai Joya’s Spring 2011 tour are online at www.afghanwomensmission.org.

Joya’s words can help Americans clear the “dust from our eyes” and face the reality that for all our sakes, the Afghanistan war must end sooner rather than later.
Sonali Kolhatkar

Sonali Kolhatkar is Co-Director of the Afghan Women’s Mission, a US-based non-profit that supports women’s rights activists in Afghanistan. Sonali is also co-author of “Bleeding Afghanistan: Washington, Warlords, and the Propaganda of Silence.” She is the host and producer of Uprising, a nationally syndicated radio program with the Pacifica Network.

WHERE YOUR MONEY GOES – and HOW MUCH GOES TO THE PENTAGON!

Wednesday, March 2nd, 2011

This time the story comes from a man who not only lives in Northampton, but also attended the Smith College Campus School. Chris Hellman now works for the National Priorities Project and he has done the necessary research to expose just how much of our treasury and our tax dollars are funding the Pentagon and the U.S. war machine – and it is beyond sobering and disturbing…and undeniable. The only number he comes up with that is worth questioning is the amount – a staggering $3,887 – for each man, woman and child that goes to the Defense budget. If you take away all but the taxpayers, that figure rises to $8,000 given a workforce of about 150 million folks – even more disquieting and outrageous. And the governor of Wisconsin wants to exact the toll for this folly from working people! How much more will it take before we say, “No more war?” How much more proof do we need that we are contributing mightily to the downfall of our country? Thanks goes to Chris and to NPP for yet another invaluable contribution to our truly knowing what is happening with our tax dollars. The title of the article makes it even clearer how much the government doesn’t want us to know about this. And, in the end, the question that remains unanswerable is: Are we any safer for having spent $1.2 trillion dollars a year on “defense”?

$1.2 TRILLION: THE NATIONAL SECURITY FIGURE NO ONE WANTS YOU TO SEE
by Chris Hellman

What if you went to a restaurant and found it rather pricey? Still, you ordered your meal and, when done, picked up the check only to discover that it was almost twice the menu price.

Welcome to the world of the real U.S. national security budget. Normally, in media accounts, you hear about the Pentagon budget and the war-fighting supplementary funds passed by Congress for our conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. That already gets you into a startling price range — close to $700 billion for 2012 — but that’s barely more than half of it. If Americans were ever presented with the real bill for the total U.S. national security budget, it would actually add up to more than $1.2 trillion a year.

Take that in for a moment. It’s true; you won’t find that figure in your daily newspaper or on your nightly newscast, but it’s no misprint. It may even be an underestimate. In any case, it’s the real thing when it comes to your tax dollars. The simplest way to grasp just how Americans could pay such a staggering amount annually for “security” is to go through what we know about the U.S. national security budget, step by step, and add it all up.

So, here we go. Buckle your seat belt: it’s going to be a bumpy ride.

Fortunately for us, on February 14th the Obama administration officially released its Fiscal Year (FY) 2012 budget request. Of course, it hasn’t been passed by Congress — even the 2011 budget hasn’t made it through that august body yet — but at least we have the most recent figures available for our calculations.

For 2012, the White House has requested $558 billion for the Pentagon’s annual “base” budget, plus an additional $118 billion to fund military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. At $676 billion, that’s already nothing to sneeze at, but it’s just the barest of beginnings when it comes to what American taxpayers will actually spend on national security. Think of it as the gigantic tip of a humongous iceberg.

To get closer to a real figure, it’s necessary to start peeking at other parts of the federal budget where so many other pots of security spending are squirreled away.

Missing from the Pentagon’s budget request, for example, is an additional $19.3 billion for nuclear-weapons-related activities like making sure our current stockpile of warheads will work as expected and cleaning up the waste created by seven decades of developing and producing them. That money, however, officially falls in the province of the Department of Energy. And then, don’t forget an additional $7.8 billion that the Pentagon lumps into a “miscellaneous” category — a kind of department of chump change — that is included in neither its base budget nor those war-fighting funds.

So, even though we’re barely started, we’ve already hit a total official FY 2012 Pentagon budget request of:

$703.1 billion dollars.

Not usually included in national security spending are hundreds of billions of dollars that American taxpayers are asked to spend to pay for past wars, and to support our current and future national security strategy.

For starters, that $117.8 billion war-funding request for the Department of Defense doesn’t include certain actual “war-related fighting” costs. Take, for instance, the counterterrorism activities of the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development. For the first time, just as with the Pentagon budget, the FY 2012 request divides what’s called “International Affairs” in two: that is, into an annual “base” budget as well as funding for “Overseas Contingency Operations” related to Iraq and Afghanistan. (In the Bush years, these used to be called the Global War on Terror.) The State Department’s contribution? $8.7 billion. That brings the grand but very partial total so far to:

$711.8 billion.

The White House has also requested $71.6 billion for a post-2001 category called “homeland security” — of which $18.1 billion is funded through the Department of Defense. The remaining $53.5 billion goes through various other federal accounts, including the Department of Homeland Security ($37 billion), the Department of Health and Human Services ($4.6 billion), and the Department of Justice ($4.6 billion). All of it is, however, national security funding which brings our total to:

$765.3 billion.

The U.S. intelligence budget was technically classified prior to 2007, although at roughly $40 billion annually, it was considered one of the worst-kept secrets in Washington. Since then, as a result of recommendations by the 9/11 Commission, Congress has required that the government reveal the total amount spent on intelligence work related to the National Intelligence Program (NIP).

This work done by federal agencies like the CIA and the National Security Agency consists of keeping an eye on and trying to understand what other nations are doing and thinking, as well as a broad range of “covert operations” such as those being conducted in Pakistan. In this area, we won’t have figures until FY 2012 ends. The latest NIP funding figure we do have is $53.1 billion for FY 2010. There’s little question that the FY 2012 figure will be higher, but let’s be safe and stick with what we know. (Keep in mind that the government spends plenty more on “intelligence.” Additional funds for the Military Intelligence Program (MIP), however, are already included in the Pentagon’s 2012 base budget and war-fighting supplemental, though we don’t know what they are. The FY 2010 funding for MIP, again the latest figure available, was $27 billion.) In any case, add that $53.1 billion and we’re at:

$818.4 billion.

Veterans programs are an important part of the national security budget with the projected funding figure for 2012 being $129.3 billion. Of this, $59 billion is for veterans’ hospital and medical care, $70.3 billion for disability pensions and education programs. This category of national security funding has been growing rapidly in recent years because of the soaring medical-care needs of veterans of the Iraq and Afghan wars. According to an analysis by the Congressional Budget Office, by 2020 total funding for health-care services for veterans will have risen another 45%-75%. In the meantime, for 2012 we’ve reached:

$947.7 billion.

If you include the part of the foreign affairs budget not directly related to U.S. military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as other counterterrorism operations, you have an additional $18 billion in direct security spending. Of this, $6.6 billion is for military aid to foreign countries, while almost $2 billion goes for “international peacekeeping” operations. A further $709 million has been designated for countering the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, combating terrorism, and clearing landmines planted in regional conflicts around the globe. This leaves us at:

$965.7 billion.

As with all federal retirees, U.S. military retirees and former civilian Department of Defense employees receive pension benefits from the government. The 2012 figure is $48.5 billion for military personnel, $20 billion for those civilian employees, which means we’ve now hit:

$1,034.2 billion. (Yes, that’s $1.03 trillion!)

When the federal government lacks sufficient funds to pay all of its obligations, it borrows. Each year, it must pay the interest on this debt which, for FY 2012, is projected at $474.1 billion. The National Priorities Project calculates that 39% of that, or $185 billion, comes from borrowing related to past Pentagon spending.

Add it all together and the grand total for the known national security budget of the United States is:

$1,219.2 billion. (That’s more than $1.2 trillion.)

A country with a gross domestic product of $1.2 trillion would have the 15th largest economy in the world, ranking between Canada and Indonesia, and ahead of Australia, Taiwan, the Netherlands, and Saudi Arabia. Still, don’t for a second think that $1.2 trillion is the actual grand total for what the U.S. government spends on national security. Former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld once famously spoke of the world’s “known unknowns.” Explaining the phrase this way: “That is to say there are things that we now know we don’t know.” It’s a concept that couldn’t apply better to the budget he once oversaw. When it comes to U.S. national security spending, there are some relevant numbers we know are out there, even if we simply can’t calculate them.

To take one example, how much of NASA’s proposed $18.7 billion budget falls under national security spending? We know that the agency works closely with the Pentagon. NASA satellite launches often occur from the Air Force’s facilities at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California and Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. The Air Force has its own satellite launch capability, but how much of that comes as a result of NASA technology and support? In dollars terms, we just don’t know.

Other “known unknowns” would include portions of the State Department budget. One assumes that at least some of its diplomatic initiatives promote our security interests. Similarly, we have no figure for the pensions of non-Pentagon federal retirees who worked on security issues for the Department of Homeland Security, the State Department, or the Departments of Justice and Treasury. Nor do we have figures for the interest on moneys borrowed to fund veterans’ benefits, among other national security-related matters. The bill for such known unknowns could easily run into the tens of billions of dollars annually, putting the full national security budget over the $1.3 trillion mark or even higher.

There’s a simple principle here. American taxpayers should know just what they are paying for. In a restaurant, a customer would be outraged to receive a check almost twice as high as the menu promised. We have no idea whether the same would be true in the world of national security spending, because Americans are never told what national security actually means at the cash register.

To listen to Timothy MacBain’s latest TomCast audio interview in which Hellman explains how he arrived at his staggering numbers, click here, or download it to your iPod here.

[Note on Sources: The press release from the Office of The Director of National Intelligence disclosing the Fiscal Year 2010 $53 billion intelligence budget consists of 138 words and no details, other than that the office will disclose no details. It can be found by clicking here (.pdf file). An October 2010 analysis by the Congressional Budget Office entitled "Potential Costs of Veterans' Health Care" projects rapid cost growth for Veterans Administration services over the next decade as a result of spiraling health care costs. To read the full report, click here (.pdf file). To see all the federal agencies that contribute to homeland security funding, click here (.pdf file)]
© 2011 Chris Hellman
Chris Hellman

Christopher Hellman is communications liaison at the National Priorities Project in Northampton, Massachusetts. He was previously a military policy analyst for the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation, a Senior Research Analyst at the Center for Defense Information, and spent 10 years on Capitol Hill as a congressional staffer working on national security and foreign policy issues. He is a frequent media commentator on military planning, policy, and budgetary issues.

Wisconsin and Afghanistan – If Only We’d Connect the Dots

Saturday, February 19th, 2011

There is something stirring in Wisconsin and some folks have tried to connect it to what’s happened in Egypt. Unionized workers and their many supporters are in danger of losing their right to bargain collectively and the uprising that it has led to among the citizenry is definitely causing consternation among Republican lawmakers and the Republican governor. The comparison to Egypt – of people standing up to governmental efforts to limit their rights – is certainly understandable, but I have been wanting to express another connection that I feel deserves consideration since it is directly responsible for what is happening in Wisconsin, which is just the tip of an iceberg that threatens to take down our republic. The article below by Robert Greenwald details what I have been knowing and feeling since I heard about the Madison uprising – that the money we have been spending in Afghanistan is causing the crisis. He says it even more forcefully and concretely in the title in which he equates the monetary shortfall in Wisconsin with the return of 151 troops from the ill-fated war. That’s all it would take to save those whose livelihoods are being threatened and whose right to collectively bargain for their future contracts are in jeopardy. Greenwald, filmmaker and creator of the RETHINK AFGHANISTAN documentary, connects the dots much as the NATIONAL PRIORITIES PROJECT has done in letting us know what the true cost of this war is for each of our communities and each of us as individuals taxpayers. That each soldier costs our country $1 million a year (which doesn’t include the cost of healing those who come back with physical, mental, emotional and spiritual wounds) means that the money Governor Walker is trying to take back from the workers in his state – $151 million – could be restored with the return of those 151 troops. Then multiply that by all of the states which are in similar budgetary crisis already and those that are fated to experience a similar reality and the true cost of this futile war is evident. Greenwald connects the dots. If only we could get our national and local government to do the same. At the end of the article he invites the reader to join RETHINK AFGHANISTAN (http://rethinkafghanistan.com/). If you’ve not checked out their website I strongly encourage you to do so. We’re not getting the story it tells from our mainstream media…

Published on Saturday, February 19, 2011 by Rethink Afghanistan
BRINGING HOME 150 TROOPS FROM AFGHANISTAN WOULD FIX WISCONSIN’S BUDGET “CRISIS”
by Robert Greenwald
Wisconsin’s Governor Scott Walker is using phony budget projections to manufacture a staged “fiscal emergency” in his state so that he can whack programs and political opponents, but even his fake “emergency” pales in comparison to the cost of the Afghanistan War to his state. In fact, the U.S. would only have to bring home 151 troops from Afghanistan to save more money than Walker’s ridiculous union-busting plan. Better yet, ending the Afghanistan War altogether would save taxpayers in Wisconsin $1.7 billion this year alone, more than ten times the amount “saved” in Walker’s attack on state employee rights.

One might ask, “Isn’t Walker’s fake budget crisis a state budget issue? How would ending the Afghanistan War pay for that?” We get this question a lot when we talk about the cost of war to a state’s taxpayer. Keep in mind that state budgets are tangled with federal spending. That’s especially true over the past couple of years, as state budgets have relied on federal Recovery Act funds to balance their books during the recession. Spending decisions at the federal level are therefore doubly important, as they not only affect the national budget, but also what funds are available to help preserve state-level public structures.

That brings us to Walker’s slash-and-burn approach to the state budget. 

“Under Walker’s plan, most public workers – excluding police, firefighters and state troopers – would have to pay half of their pension costs and at least 12 percent of their health-care costs. They would lose bargaining rights for anything other than pay. Walker, who took office last month, says the emergency measure would save $300 million over the next two years to help close a $3.6 billion budget gap.”

So on average, Walker’s slash-and-burn attack on the unions in his state would save $150 million per year for two years. But if Wisconsin is truly in a state of fiscal emergency, as Walker claims, why is he not demanding the president withdraw troops from Afghanistan and make the savings available as fiscal aid to states? Every troop deployed in Afghanistan costs the U.S. $1 million per year, so simply bringing home 151 troops would save more money than his plan. And, with fiscal 2011 Afghanistan War spending alone to top $1.7 billion for Wisconsin taxpayers, an end to the war would free up more than ten times his plan’s cash, which the president could use for state fiscal aid.

Of course, the end of the Afghanistan War would mean that people with whom Walker is cozy would lose some important revenue streams. Remember Wackenhut, the war contractors that disgraced us by holding drunken, nude firelight romps in Afghanistan on the State Department’s dime? Walker got them a sweet privatized state security contract in a prior fit of “cost-savings” that failed to add up. But who needs to rein in death, destruction and obscenity when you can take a whack at the unions, right? Walker’s not actually interested in fixing a supposed emergency. He’s interested in paying off allies and zinging enemies, and you can tell that by his silence on war spending that’s bleeding his state taxpayers dry.

At any rate, state politicians in Wisconsin and beyond are going to have to face a moment of truth when federal stimulus aid runs out at the end of this year. Their citizens hate the Afghanistan War, and they won’t go along with draconian cuts to vital public structures or attacks on collective bargaining. They can either wise up and join the chorus of people calling for an end to the war, or be ready to face tens of thousands of fed-up protesters and angry voters. Your move, folks.

If you’re fed up wit this war that’s not making us safer and that’s not worth the cost, join Rethink Afghanistan on Facebook and Twitter.

© 2011 Rethink Afghanistan

Robert Greenwald is a producer, director, political activist, and Brave New Films founder and president. He is currently focused on the ReThink Afghanistan (2009, RethinkAfghanistan.com) documentary and campaign which addresses the misguided U.S. policy in Afghanistan. He has also produced and distributed short viral videos and campaigns like Sick For Profit (SickForProfit.com), Fox Attacks videos (FoxAttacks.com) and The Real McCain (TheRealMcCain.com), which were seen by almost a million people in a matter of days.

Reagan’s 100th – No More Myth-information!

Wednesday, February 2nd, 2011

As we approach the 100th birthday of Ronald Reagan and the accompanying pomp and homage, I want to do my part to provide a counter to all of the glorifying and edifying that is going to take place. That Sarah Palin has been asked by the committee organizing the main event to give the keynote speech only adds to my sense of the utter absurdity of many in this country who have conspired to keep the wool firmly pulled over the eyes of a wide swath of America as regards Reagan’s true legacy. But we must realize that by having prevented the real story of Reagan’s awful two terms in office and all of the lasting damage his policies have resulted in from being put forth to counter the mythology that has him as one of the great presidents of history, we run the risk of having the myth become reality.

So here’s a corrective. Please share it with anyone you think might be imbibing from the mythical wine of Reagan as savior, as conqueror of the Soviet Union, as driver of the economic engine, etc… It’s just so not true and whenever we allow delusion to reign we do a disservice to ourselves and subsequent generations. Here’s the piece with a brief bio of Mr. Borosage at the end:

THE REAGAN RUINS
By Robert Borosage
February 1, 2011 – 1:46pm ET
The celebration of Ronald Reagan’s 100th birthday doesn’t come until early March, but the devotions have been going on for years. For conservatives, Reagan is the lodestar, the genial demigod to whom all must avow fealty. In a Time cover story, Michael Scherer and Michael Duffy suggest that Obama considers Reagan “The Role Model.” Richard Norton Smith, writing about the “Reagan Revelation,” attributes Obama’s uptick in the polls because he’s been “acting positively Reaganesque,” reaching out to the business community, scoring bipartisan victories on tax cuts, delivering a sermon in Tucson that Smith calls “worthy of the Great Communicator at his most consoling.”

This is more than a bit ridiculous. (Who knew that Bill Daley, most recently JP Morgan’s lead lobbyist,” and GE’s Jeffrey Immelt, who has shipped more jobs abroad than most CEOs, had such sway on public opinion?). But it will get much worse, as conservatives weigh in to suggest Reagan revived America, brought us together, dispatched communism with a speech and a lot of military spending, etc.

Before we go too far down this road, it is worth a reality check. Reagan, no doubt, was a transformational president. His presidency marked the beginning of 30 years of conservative domination of our politics, although Rick Perlstein argues persuasively that Nixonland tilled the soil of racial and cultural division that Reagan cultivated. (Not by accident did Reagan open his campaign in the unreachable Philadelphia, Mississippi, previously known only as the site of the infamous murders of civil rights workers Schwerner, Goodman and Chaney, where he announced his belief in “state’s rights”).

But take a good look at the conservative mantra that Reagan championed: less spending, low taxes, deregulation, free trade, strong military, family values. On all of these, the Gipper and conservatives got it wrong.

Less spending was perverted, since Reagan doubled the military budget in peacetime (up 50 percent in real terms). He somehow didn’t believe military spending added to deficits. (Reagan never introduced a balanced budget in his presidency.) Less spending turned out to mean slash programs that support the weak and the vulnerable. Reagan opened the campaign against government domestic spending that leaves us with an aged infrastructure that is dangerous to our health, schools that put children at risk, and record numbers struggling simply to feed their families. Poverty levels began rising under Reagan and have remained high, other than in the couple years of the Clinton presidency when full employment began to lift all boats.

Low taxes turned into successive tax cuts for the rich. Reagan believed in the voodoo of the Laffer Curve, that cutting top-end taxes would generate more revenue. One thing it generated was inequality. The great leveling that marked the post-Cold War years came to an end under Reagan, as the wealthiest Americans began capturing ever greater portions of the nation’s income. Today, the wealthiest 1 percent captures about 23 percent of the income, and control more wealth than the bottom 90 percent of Americans, and captured a staggering two-thirds of the rewards of growth in the last “recovery” form 2002-2007. This is the true Reagan legacy.

Free trade was the label affixed to a trade policy defined by and for multinational companies and banks. Under Reagan, America began shipping jobs rather than goods abroad. When Reagan fired the PATCO strikers, he signaled to corporate America that it was open season on unions. The combination was lethal for America’s manufacturing base — and for the family wage that was the signature of America’s broad middle class.

Deregulation gutted consumer protection, environmental protection, workplace safety and the right to organize under Reagan. It led to many scandals that made his administration one of the most corrupt in history, with a record 138 officials investigated, indicted or convicted. But the biggest change was deregulation of banking, which led to successive financial wildings and crashes that have cost taxpayers literally trillions. The first was the Savings and Loan debacle that followed on Reagan’s reforms that empowered banksters to gamble with other people’s money, with their losses guaranteed by the federal government.

Strong military entailed wasting literally hundreds of billions of dollars on weapons we did not need and could not use, from reviving battleships to building new generations of missiles. The most notable folly was Reagan’s Star Wars fantasy, which continues to waste tens of billions each year, throwing money into a program that does not work against a threat that does not exist. It is heresy for any Republican to question this folly (Rand Paul, the world awaits). The military remains the largest source of waste, fraud and abuse in the nation’s budget — yet even Barack Obama promises a freeze to domestic discretionary spending, leaving out the military, even though we’re spending about as much as the rest of the world combined.

Combined with the strong military was a lawless devotion to the national security state, the belief captured by Nixon, that in the area of national security, when the president does it, it is legal. This doctrine of presidential license found expression under Reagan most notably in the Iran-Contra scandals, where the president created a secret fund and a secret army in direct violation of the laws of the land. He avoided accountability by professing ignorance and confusion.

Family values, the Republican reach to the evangelical right, were cynically used to divide Americans, not unite them, targeting blacks, women (or feminazis in Rush Limbaugh’s lingo), and gays. Reagan, steeped in the ways of Hollywood, was the utter cynic. He was the only divorced man to occupy the White House, was at best a distant parent, and generally avoided going to church. While he pandered to the Christian right, he was never very serious about pursuing their agenda.

Today, America is more unequal, its middle class is weaker, its manufacturing sector is hollowed out, its bloated military, laden with baroque weaponry, can start wars but not win them. Under the banner of conservatism, predatory corporate interests — Big Oil, Big Pharma, Wall Street, global corporations, agribusiness — have fleeced taxpayers while feathering the nests of the few.

So let’s celebrate Ronald Reagan’s style. He was a great communicator, an aw shucks American original, a genial optimist. He was a transformational president who launched America on a misguided, 30-year experiment with market fundamentalism. But let’s not forget the reality. His race bait politics of division were inherited from the dark side of Nixon. And his conservatism has cost this country dearly.
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Robert L. Borosage is the founder and president of the Institute for America’s Future and co-director of its sister organization, the Campaign for America’s Future. The organizations were launched by 100 prominent Americans to develop the policies, message and issue campaigns to help forge an enduring majority for progressive change in America.

Mr. Borosage writes widely on political, economic and national security issues. He is a Contributing Editor at The Nation magazine, and a regular blogger on the Huffington Post. His articles have appeared in The American Prospect, the Washington Post, the New York Times and the Philadelphia Inquirer. He edits the Campaign’s Making Sense issues guides, and is co-editor of Taking Back America (with Katrina Vanden Heuvel) and The Next Agenda (with Roger Hickey).

TWO COMPELLING PIECES – ABOUT SAFETY AND MYTH – THAT GO TOGETHER

Saturday, January 22nd, 2011

With much happening as always it has been challenging to find the right moment, but the two articles I am including in this post have propelled me to re-connect to my blog. The first is an effort to carry forth the kind of work that the NATIONAL PRIORITIES PROJECT does in connecting the dots vis a vis the money we’re spending on the so-called defense of our county and the cost of the wars in which we remain irretrievably mired. Tom
Engelhardt asks in his title the simple question, “Do You Feel Safer Yet?” and proceeds to tell some of the ways our treasury is being diverted from the profound needs of our people to carrying out war and making often poorly planned and executed efforts to improve life for the peoples whose lands we’re occupying. It is a tale of woe for both Afghanistan and America.

The second article talks about how we get ourselves into such fixes – Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan to name the worst examples. It focuses on the myths we are fed so effectively by the powers that be and the ways in which our unquestioning belief in and adherence to them perpetuate perpetual war. Here’s the myth of conservatives that keeps so many of our fellow Americans encased in a reality that prevents seeing the deep, historical and distressing social ills requiring program funding, innovation and commitment here at home:

Why should I give my hard-earned money to the government so they can hand it out to strangers who, for all I know, are good-for-nothing loafers and mooches? I want to be free to decide what to do with my dough and I’ll give it to responsible people who believe in taking care of themselves and their families, just like me. I’ll give my money to the government only to protect us from strangers in distant lands who don’t believe in the sacred rights of the individual and aim to take my freedom and money away.

This insidious myth has been promoted for decades by our government and our leaders to keep our country focused elsewhere and it works astonishingly well. Despite living in an increasingly divided society in which the rich keep getting wealthier and everyone else increasingly struggles to make ends meet, this myth allows the focus of our citizenry to remain on the “other” in foreign lands who we are convinced is out to destroy us. With such a myth spending endless amounts of our treasury to sustain unwinnable wars makes sense. How tragic and how likely is such a myth to result in the demise of our country. And as we go down, our freedoms, our rights and our hopes are being undone in the name of safety, which the first article tells us is not possible given the course we’re on. What a paradox…

DO YOU FEEL SAFER YET?
by Tom Engelhardt

In New York City, my hometown, as in so many cities across the country, a hard-pressed local government and a desperate transit authority are cutting back on services while hiking prices for a deteriorating subway and bus system. For night workers and those out in the lonely, dark early morning hours, some bus lines are simply being eliminated. Meanwhile, in one small settlement of 14,000 people in embattled Helmand Province in southern Afghanistan, a single marine platoon is spending on average $400,000 a month on “reconstruction projects.” The Marines have, according to a BBC reporter who visited, “put up street lights, cleaned irrigation channels, handed out radios, paved the bazaar, built bridges, and are currently building a new school.” Do I feel safer?

In the U.S., policemen and firemen are being laid off, and the budgets of police and fire departments cut back or, in a few small places, eliminated. In Afghanistan, the U.S., having already invested $20 billion in building up the Afghan police and military, is now planning to spend $11.6 billion more this year alone, $12.8 billion in 2012, and more than $6 billion a year thereafter. According to Washington’s latest scheme, the Afghan security forces will be increased to 378,000 men in a poverty-stricken land, which means committing U.S. tax dollars to the project into the distant future. Do you feel safer?

In the United States, teachers are being laid off, class-sizes are on the rise, and tuition at public colleges is soaring. In Afghanistan, the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) claims to have built or refurbished 524 schools and to be completing another 130 of them. Do you feel safer now?

In the U.S., basic infrastructure has been fraying, bridges collapsing, natural gas pipelines exploding, and projects like a commuter-rail tunnel connecting New Jersey to New York City are being canceled or put off. In Afghanistan and Pakistan, giant American-funded building projects are revving up (for which locals are being hired), especially a giant embassy/citadel in Kabul at the cost of $511 million (with nearly $200 million more going to the expansion of consular establishments elsewhere in that country). Meanwhile in Islamabad, Pakistan’s capital, another monster U.S. citadel-cum-regional-command-center is being built for nearly three-quarters of a billion dollars. Do you feel safer yet?

In the United States, according to the director of the Argonne National Laboratory, the aging national power grid “resembles the patchwork of narrow, winding, badly maintained highways of the 1920s and 1930s” before they were rebuilt as the interstate highway system and cries out for “strategic upgrading.” In Afghanistan, USAID has just awarded the Black & Veatch Corporation “a no-bid contract worth $266 million… to pump more power into Kandahar and Helmand provinces.” Meanwhile the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is investing $227 million in diesel-generator power plants and electrical-system upgrades for southern Afghanistan. Finally feeling a little safer?

Oh, and in case you think that these reconstruction projects are actually making Afghans feel safer, many of them are ill-built, visible boondoggles, and already crumbling. The cost of 15 large-scale reconstruction programs in Afghanistan studied by McClatchy News ballooned from slightly more than one billion dollars to just under three billion dollars “despite the government’s questions about effectiveness or cost.” A previous Black & Veatch project to build a diesel-fueled power plant in Kabul for $100 million, for instance, ended up costing $300 million and was a year behind schedule. Schools have reportedly been constructed so shoddily that they would have no hope of withstanding an earthquake and, according to the Washington Post, “roads, canals, and schools built… as part of a special U.S. military program are crumbling under Afghan stewardship.” Does anyone feel safer?

Think about this and then consider what TomDispatch regular Ira Chernus calls America’s myth of national insecurity.
© 2011 TomDispatch.com

Tom Engelhardt, co-founder of the American Empire Project, runs the Nation Institute’s TomDispatch.com. He is the author of The End of Victory Culture: a History of the Cold War and Beyond, as well as of a novel, The Last Days of Publishing. His most recent book is The American Way of War: How Bush’s Wars Became Obama’s (Haymarket Books).

HOW THE POWER OF MYTH KEEPS US MIRED IN WAR:
WHY ARE WE STILL IN AFGHANISTAN?
by Ira Chernus

When I try to figure out why we are still in Afghanistan, though every ounce of logic says we ought to get out, an unexpected conversation I had last year haunts me. Doing neighborhood political canvassing, I knocked on the door of a cheerful man who was just about to tune in to his favorite radio show: Rush Limbaugh. He was kind enough to let me stay and we talked.

Conservatives are often the nicest people — that’s what I told him — the ones you’d like to have as neighbors. Then I said: I bet you’re always willing to help your neighbors when they need it. Absolutely, he replied.

So why, I asked, don’t you to want to help out people across town who have the same needs, even if they’re strangers? His answer came instantly: Because I know my neighbors work hard and do all they can to take care of themselves. I don’t know about those people across town.

He didn’t have to say more (though he did). I knew the rest of the story: Why should I give my hard-earned money to the government so they can hand it out to strangers who, for all I know, are good-for-nothing loafers and mooches? I want to be free to decide what to do with my dough and I’ll give it to responsible people who believe in taking care of themselves and their families, just like me. I’ll give my money to the government only to protect us from strangers in distant lands who don’t believe in the sacred rights of the individual and aim to take my freedom and money away.

What a story it is — a tale of mythic proportions! As an historian of religions, I was trained to appreciate, even marvel at the myths people tell to make sense out of the chaos of their lives. So I can’t help admiring the conservative myth: so simple yet all encompassing, offering clear and easy-to-grasp answers that cut through the everyday complexities besetting us all.

Of course, the answers are far too simplistic, as stupid (in my opinion) as they are dangerous. But I was also trained to be non-judgmental and to admire the power of a myth even when I find it morally abhorrent. And this one is impressive, with its classic good-guys-versus-bad-guys plot line turned into a stark political tale of freedom versus slavery.

White Americans, going back to early colonial times, generally assigned the role of “bad guys” to “savages” lurking in the wilderness beyond the borders of our civilized land. Whether they were redskins, commies, terrorists, or the Taliban, the plot has always remained the same.

Call it the myth of national security — or, more accurately, national insecurity, since it always tells us who and what to fear. It’s been a mighty (and mighty effective) myth exactly because it lays out with such clarity not just what Americans are against, but also what we are for, what we want to keep safe and secure: the freedom of the individual, especially the freedom to make and keep money.

The President Trapped in a Myth and a War

No politician who aspires to real influence on the national level can afford to reject that myth or even express real doubts about it, at least in public, as Barack Obama surely knows. Not surprisingly, President Obama has embraced the myth in his most important speeches: The bad guys are always out there. (“Scripture tells us that there is evil in the world.”) The good guys have no choice but to fight against the evildoers. (“Force may sometimes be necessary.”)

Because every myth has variants, though, politicians can still make choices. In Obama’s version of the myth, the federal government can be a force for good. So he has a domestic fight on his hands every day against right-wingers who cast the government as an agent of darkness.

He’s not likely to stand a chance of winning that battle if he tries to take on the myth of national security as well. Bill Clinton once put it all-too-accurately: “When people are insecure” — which is exactly when they rely most on their myths — “they’d rather have somebody [in the White House] who is strong and wrong than someone who’s weak and right.”

That’s a truth everyone in the room undoubtedly had in mind back in the fall of 2009 when the top military field commanders came to the White House to talk about Afghanistan. Where else, after all, could our military act out the drama of civilized America staving off the savages? And what better-cast candidates for the role of savages could there be than the Taliban and al-Qaeda?

The generals who run the war also had to confront another vital question: Could they still act out some contemporary version of the myth of good against evil? They’ve given up on the possibility of victory in Afghanistan. So there’s no real chance to go for the classic version of the myth in which the good guys totally vanquish the bad guys.

But since the Cold War era, the myth has demanded only that the good guys don’t lose — that they merely “contain” the evildoers who “hate our freedoms” (especially our freedom to make and keep money) and will swoop down to destroy us if we give them the chance.

These days the generals must sense that even the containment version of the myth is in trouble. Their predecessors failed to enact it in Vietnam, and though the judgment of history is still out on the Iraq War, it’s looking ever more dim, too. If the U.S. loses in Afghanistan, the American public might abandon the myth that justifies the military establishment and its gargantuan budget. As a result, the generals prefer to fight on eternally.

President Obama is trapped at this point. He risks losing both a war and a presidency. Yet if he tries to ease up on the war accelerator, he knows he’ll be pilloried by an alliance of military and right-wing forces as a “cut-and-run” weakling.

If he’s ever tempted to forget that domestic political reality, the mass media are always ready to remind him. Just glance at the 145,000 Google hits on “Obama wimp.” Even his liberal friends at the New York Times have asked in a prominent headline, “Is Obama a Wimp or a Warrior?”

Within the confines of the national insecurity myth, of course, those are the only two options. If pressure is ever going to develop to get U.S. troops out of Afghanistan, progressives will have to offer a new option that actually speaks to Americans.

To Myth or Not to Myth

And there’s the problem. Myths are like scientific theories. No mountain of facts and logic, however convincing, can change believers’ minds — until a more convincing myth comes along.

A handful of progressive political thinkers are trying to persuade the American left to understand this truth and start offering new political myths (their technical term is “framing narratives”). George Lakoff is probably the best known. His books are bestsellers. His articles on websites invariably go to the top of “most read” and “most emailed” lists. Yet he can’t seem to make much of a dent in the actual policies and practices he’d like to change.

Progressives still shower the public with facts and arguments that are hard to refute, as (in the case of the Afghan War) the American people know. After all, more than 60% of them now tell pollsters that the war was a “mistake.” Yet the war goes on and progressives remain the most marginal of players in the American political game because they don’t have a great myth to offer. In fact, they’ve hardly got any good ones.

Political scientist David Ricci claims there’s not much progressives can do about it, precisely because they already have one very successful myth that prevents them — oh, the irony! — from taking the power of myths seriously. The progressive heritage, as he tells it, goes back to the eighteenth century Enlightenment, when the radicals of the day decided that fact and logic were the source of all truth and the only path to peace and freedom.

The Bible and all the other ancient tales bind us to the past, they argued. As a result, humanity was letting dead people lock us into the injustices that bred endless war and suffering. It was time to let human reason open up a better future.

If progressives believe they are myth-less, though, they’re blind to the one mythic plot they share with the rest of America: good against evil. Progressives act out that myth on the political battlefield every day, passionately fighting to defeat right-wing evildoers.

The problem is (and forgive me for repeating an old anti-left cliché of the 1960s, but it’s true here): the progressives’ political myth tells only what they’re against, not what they’re for.

In fact, deep down, most progressives do have a dim sense of their deepest principles: the Enlightenment ideals of peace, freedom, and equality based on the Romantic ideal of what Lakoff calls empathy, extended to all humanity and the biosphere as well.

But progressives don’t wrap their policy prescriptions in mythic language that says clearly, simply, and patriotically what they’re for. As a result, they can’t compete with the myth of national insecurity. They’ve got nothing to offer in its place, which is at least one reason why, despite growing opposition to the Afghan War, they can’t build a strong enough constituency to help — or force — Obama to end it.

All they can do is demand that he sacrifice his domestic agenda, and — no small matter for any politician — his second-term chances, on the altar of principle. As a result, they end up in a political never-never-land, which might feel good but isn’t going to save a single Afghan life.

No individual, much less a committee, can sit down and create a new myth. Myths grow organically from the life of a community. Progressives would find their myth emerging spontaneously if they just spent a lot more time thinking and talking about their most basic worldview and values, the underlying premises that lead them to hold their political positions with such passion.

A strong progressive myth could make it safer for a president to change course and perhaps save his presidency. Failure to stave off the bad guys destroyed Lyndon Johnson and gravely wounded George W. Bush. I suspect Obama would love to have a great progressive myth keep him from a similar fate. He won’t create it, but he’d probably be delighted to see it appear on the horizon.
© 2011 Ira Chernus

Ira Chernus is Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Colorado at Boulder. Read more of his writing on Israel, Palestine, and American Jews at http://chernus.wordpress.com. Contact him at chernus@colorado.edu

A CHANCE TO SPEAK YOUR MIND FOR PEACE – ON THE PHONE!!!

Monday, December 27th, 2010

Are you facing the prospect of entering the New Year with our country still at War in Afghanistan with dread? Are you concerned that our finances are being gutted by a war we not only can’t win, but should never have begun 9 years ago? Are you wondering how to express your anguish and disapproval? Here’s one forum to consider. On New Year’s Day people around the world are being asked to phone, skype, twitter, e-mail, FACEBOO one of the numbers listed below to say no to endess war. This is being supported by a group called AFGHAN YOUTH VOICES FOR PEACE and the phone calls, twitters, skype calls, etc… will go to the people of Afghanistan and as the article states so clearly: “You can let Afghan people know that their lives matter as much as yours. Assure them that the U.S. government’s war is unacceptable to you and that you are working to end it.” I hope this can happen for you…

DEAR AFGHANISTAN: A NEW YEAR’S CALL FOR PEACE
by Afghan Youth Voices of Peace

While the US may be the world’s single super power in military terms, it faces another super power: the voices of war-weary millions who detest violence and killing. In Afghanistan, in the United States, and among the populations of countries whose governments have joined the NATO coalition, millions of people are calling for an end to war in Afghanistan.

On New Year’s Day, 01/01/11, people around the world are invited to raise their voices, through Facebook, Twitter, Free Conference calls, Skype, and blogs at several websites in a massive refusal to accept this war any longer. Let your New Year’s resolution be to stand for the people and end wars by sending a digital or spoken peacemaking message to people in Afghanistan. By amassing millions of messages calling for peace, we can create yet another indication that ordinary people within and beyond Afghanistan have had enough of war.

Afghanistan’s people need food not bombs, health care not warfare and courage for peace, not war. In the words of Abdulai, an Afghan teenager whose father was killed by the Taliban, the “Dear Afghanistan” campaign offers an alternative to the Obama administration’s most recent review of the war. Abdulai’s experiences of impoverishment, bereavement, and discrimination highlight realities that Afghans face every day. The U.S. government’s December review paid no attention to these conditions.

You can let Afghan people know that their lives matter as much as yours. Assure them that the U.S. government’s war is unacceptable to you and that you are working to end it.

We can catch courage from one another, sparking a New Year’s momentum to put an end to war.

Follow the steps below to communicate the simple yet crucial demand: Stop the Killing in Afghanistan.

On New Year’s Day 2011, from 7.05 pm Eastern Standard Time on the 31st of December 2010 to 7.05 pm Eastern Standard Time on the 1st of January 2011, from wherever in the world, you can:

Call from your Mobile or Home phone by dialing (661) 673-8600 & access code: 295191#. Please arrange to talk by sending an email to CallAfghanistan@gmail.com
SKYPE: Please arrange to call Afghanistan by sending your Skype ID in an email to CallAfghanistan@gmail.com
Send an email message to DearAfghanistan@gmail.com
Text or sms by mobile at +93 7791 84146 or +1 727-248-0308 (001-727-248-0308 if text messaging from outside U.S.)
Facebook: Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers
@DearAfghanistan on Twitter
A note on timings for the NEW YEAR CALL:

Place Time Date
London 12.05 am to 12.05 am 1st Jan to 2nd Jan
EST 7.05 pm to 7.05 pm 31st Dec to 1st Jan
Pacific Std 4.05 pm to 4.05 pm 31st Dec to 1st Jan
Jordan 2.05 am to 2.05 am 1st Jan to 2nd Jan
Afghanistan 4.35am to 4.35 am 1st Jan to 2nd Jan


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