Posts Tagged ‘peace’

Killeen: Under the Hood Cafe to Protest 3rd ACR Deployment Friday

Thursday, July 29th, 2010
July 30, 2010
4:00 pmto6:00 pm
Friday from 4 to 6 p.m., Under the Hood will demonstrate opposition to the
upcoming deployment of the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment from Fort Hood,
Texas, scheduled to occur sometime next month.

After gathering at the Under the Hood Cafe, located at 17 S. College St. in
Killeen, we will march to the East Gate of Fort Hood to hold a rally in
support of the Troops being forced needlessly to suffer as a result of the
illegitimate and unwinnable occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan.

The 3rd ACR is notorious for repeatedly deploying wounded warriors. In
addition to demanding an end to the occupations, we are demanding an end to
the 3rd ACR’s policy of deploying Soldiers with PTSD (post-traumatic stress
disorder), TBI (traumatic brain disorder), MST (military sexual trauma) and
physical trauma. Soldiers suffering from such issues SHOULD NOT BE DEPLOYED
NOW OR EVER!!!

The military’s hold over its Soldiers is at the breaking point. More and
more, Soldiers are turning away from the lies of Empire and discovering what
real democracy and service looks like. Each time we publicly demonstrate in
the Fort Hood community, we see a surge of troops and family members in the
coffeehouse asking questions and making themselves a part of the
international struggle for peace. Visible resistance is a MUST if we are to
continue building support to end the occupations and secure justice for the
people of Iraq and Afghanistan, as well our own troops.

Come be a part of this exciting demonstration, and help the Under the Hood
community continue to support Soldiers removing their support for the wars!
For more information, call the coffeehouse at 254-449-8811, write to
underthehoodcafe@gmail.com, or visit underthehoodcafe.org.

http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#!/note.php?note_id=429599994216&id=1524611236&ref=mf

Austin: Million Musicians March for Peace, March 20

Sunday, March 28th, 2010

Photo from the web.  From Jose Ole:
Million Musicians March for Peace Braves Storm In Remembrance of the Costs of War…on the 7th Anniversary of the Invasion of Iraq.
Defying sub-freezing wind chill and wind gusts of up to 39 mph, hundreds of Austin musicians and non-musicians expressed their passionate support for an end to the Iraq occupation and ever-spreading war at the annual Million Musicians March for Peace.
This unique Austin event, held in conjunction with demonstrations in 700 cities worldwide, marked the 7th anniversary of George Bush’s invasion of Iraq, based on false information, resulting in the displacement, wounding, or death of millions of innocent civilians and thousands of U.S. troops, and draining the U.S. treasury.
The Million Musicians March for Peace is a musician-led all volunteer effort that takes months to organize every year and is paid for by passing the tip jar at fundraising music parties and out of organizers’ pockets. Their passionate support for a peaceful U.S. policy was very apparent Saturday.
Despite icy wind that cut through clothing, blowing over p.a. speakers, hats, signs…even blowing the bow out of one fiddleplayer’s hand…the show went on. Although the weather had a big effect on the size of the crowd, it also emphasized the sincerity of those present on Saturday.
The cold, lively crowd gathered for two hours at the steps of the Capitol to hear music from many artists including David Garza and Southpaw Jones, and words from Colonel Robert Bowman on the realities of war. Everyone then formed a parade behind the Minor Mishap Marching Band and parts of the Jericho Brass Band and marched and played it’s way through downtown Austin. The parade spontaneously grew as it passed through SXSW crowds, ending up at City Hall with a concert by Guy Forsyth, Carolyn Wonderland, Shelley King, and Bill Kirchen.
The Million Musicians March for Peace is organized by the Instruments For Peace network of musicians and friends. The organizers and participants in this year’s event want to thank all who helped to make this a successful event, including the Austin Center for Peace and Justice…and Texans For Peace, Texas State Representative Lon Burnam, Dallas Peace Center, Artists For Media Diversity, VoteRescue, Texas State Representative Elliott Naishtat, Happy Living with Justice, icon media, Austin Permanent Peace Protest, Institute to Honor Freedom of Conscience, Waco Friends of Peace, Denton Peace Action, Texas Labor Against the War, CodePink Austin, Code Pink Greater Dallas, Veterans For Peace, Vietnam Veterans Against the War, Monkey Wrench Books, and Health Care For All Texas.
“Everybody can be an instrument for peace.”
Thanks to Richard Bowden for this story.

Houston Peace Festival

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010
March 6, 2010
12:30 pmto8:00 pm

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=3965&id=1828946493&saved#!/event.php?eid=315668908027&ref=nf

Saturday, March 6, 2010, 12:30 pm – 8 pm

1318 W 26th Street, Houston, TX 77008
A day of celebration, party and networking with all the nuts, freaks, peaceniks, tree huggers, activist, hippies, rockers, woodstockers, generation X’ers, Y’ers, Z’ers, scenesters, vegeterians, animal lovers, meat lovers, people lovers, peace lovers, earth lovers, rebel rockers, zen marxist, budhist, christians, jews and muslims too.

Live Music by:
Macy McKinzie, Meghan Miller, Jordan Cervantez, and Micah Lamb
Zachary Ford – http://www.myspace.com/featuresyndicate
Tygaraja – http://www.myspace.com/tyagarajasong
Much Love -http://www.myspace.com/muchlovemusac
Spain Colored Orange – http://www.myspace.com/spaincolouredorange
listenlisten – http://www.myspace.com/listenlisten
Electric Attitude – http://www.myspace.com/electricattitude

Dance performance by:
Dancepatheatre – http://www.dancepath.com
The Brazilian Arts Foundation – http://www.brazilianarts.org & http://www.houstonbrazilianfest.org

Variety of food and kids activities.

For more information go to: http://www.friendshouston.org/announcements/peace-festival-march-6-2010

U.S. Labor Against the War Information Service Bulletin, January, 2010

Friday, January 29th, 2010

U.S. LABOR AGAINST THE WAR

A New Year’s Resolution

Our struggle continues

It’s never too late to make a resolution that in this new year you will dedouble your efforts for peace and justice.

We do it for the people of Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan.  We do it for our troops and their families.  We do it for our children and grandchildren, and generations yet unborn.  We do it for the unemployed, the homeless, those without health insurance, and for all those who could be helped with the resources now wasted on war.  And we must do it for our nation – to create real security that comes when our country inspires respect and admiration rather than instills fear and anger in the world.

Help USLAW to build a movement that can achieve these objectives.  Become an associate member.  Make a donation.  Consider becoming a sustainer of this important work.

Thanks for your continuing support.


Reports, resolutions, photos and more from the USLAW National Assembly

Check out the decisions made during the December 4-6 National Assembly in Chicago.

Learn what USLAW plans for 2010.  Read the resolutions, organizational and financial reports, and plan of work/action for the new year. You’ll find out all about it HERE.


Available Now!
“Why are we in Afghanistan?”

A new video produced in collaboration with the Center for the Study of Working Class Life at State University of New York-Stony Brook

Watch it on-line and order it at www.WhyAreWeInAfghanistan.org

News

The USLAW website has a wealth of news, information, videos and other resources – visit often.

Iraq

More news about Iraq . . . .

Afghanistan

More news about Afghanistan . . . .

Pakistan

More news about Pakistan . . . .

Iran

More news about Iran . . . .

Palestine/Israel

More news about the Israeli/Palestinian conflict . . .

Yemen (newly added)

Support USLAW’s Important Work with a DONATION!

Your contribution keeps labor’s antiwar movement going and growing.
DONATE HERE

NEW DATE: San Marcos, Texas State University: Escalate the Peace! Feb 10

Sunday, January 3rd, 2010
February 10, 2010
11:00 amto1:00 pm

Escalate the Peace!

A Day of Peace and Resistance

Wednesday, February 10, 2010, 11:00am – 1:00pm

http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=231199444930

Texas State University: Outside the Student Center

“In the great tradition of student protest, we will come together on Jan. 28 on Texas State’s campus to speak out against the criminal military actions of the United States government. With the recent escalation of the war in Afghanistan, the expansion into Pakistan and Yemen, and the continued occupation of Iraq, it is time to hold our leaders accountable. This day marks an opportunity to come together to discuss, to network, and to celebrate peace and resistance. As students, teachers, peace veterans, and musicians, we will make our voices heard against war. Not in our name!”

Everyone is welcome. Spread the word.

Hosted by CAMEO (Campus Anti-war Movement to End the Occupations)
cameo.txstate@gmail.com.

http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=231199444930

U.S. Labor Against the War Third National Assembly

Sunday, November 1st, 2009
December 4, 2009toDecember 6, 2009

Call to the Third USLAW National Assembly

December 4-6, 2009Wyndham O’Hare Hotel, Chicago, IL

6810 North Mannheim Road, Rosemont, IL 60018

An International Call to Labor for

World Wide Peace with Economic and Social Justice

in a Time of War and Economic Crisis

Featuring:

  • Iraqi Oil Worker Union Leaders
  • Pakistani Women, Youth & Labor leaders
  • Scholars and Policy Experts on Afghanistan
  • Antiwar Trade Unionists from Across the US
  • Iraq & Afghan War Veterans

We are at a turning point in US History. In 2008 the labor movement had a moment of triumph, playing a critical role in electing Barack Obama and a majority Democratic Congress. In 2009 we find ourselves still in the middle of a devastating economic crisis with wars and militarism standing between working people and the peaceful just world we seek and deserve.

This is a moment of both peril and promise. USLAW is challenged to develop a program and organizing strategy that will expand and deepen the influence and effectiveness of antiwar forces within the labor movement, while continuing to play a leading role within the broader antiwar movement.

This is the context in which USLAW will convene its third National Assembly in Chicago, December 4-6th.

The Assembly is open to delegates from USLAW affiliates as well as individual associate members. It is the highest decision-making body of USLAW where we debate and adopt resolutions on a range of issues that establish USLAW policy and strategic direction for the next three years. The Assembly will elect the leadership that will guide the organization, and has the authority to make changes in the By-Laws that govern USLAW.

In October 2003 at the historic founding Assembly of USLAW, the delegates adopted a visionary Mission Statement that calls for:

  • A just foreign policy
  • An end to U.S. occupation of foreign countries,
  • Redirecting the nation’s resources from inflated military spending to meeting the needs of working families
  • Supporting our troops and their families by bringing the troops home now
  • Protecting workers’ rights, civil rights, civil liberties and the rights of immigrants
  • Solidarity with workers and their organizations around the world

In the Fall of 2009, the need to organize based on these principles is greater than ever.

IRAQ

Despite hundreds of billions of dollars, more than 4300 US fatalities and an unknown number of Iraqi deaths and personal trauma, the people of Iraq and the US have little to show for it. Violence and economic devastation abound. More than 130,000 US troops and an even greater number of private contractors remain on Iraqi soil. Iraqi workers still have no right to union representation, as the US supported government clings to Saddams 1987 anti-union labor law. Global corporations hover over Iraq like vultures waiting for the opportunity to seize control of Iraqi resources

AFGHANISTAN

In Afghanistan, after 8 years of war the US faces another quagmire of death, dollars and destruction, with the added elements of drug lords, massive corruption and untold human dislocation and suffering. This is now President Obamas war – a war that threatens to undermine both Obamas and labors domestic agenda, much as Vietnam did to LBJ’s.

PAKISTAN

Meanwhile Pakistan, a country with 173 million people ruled by a corrupt regime with a nuclear arsenal, is threatened with dangerous destabilization as the US has turned it into part of a military battlefield in what is now a regional war.

MILITARISM

The giant sucking sound you hear is the US military budget of 2/3 of a trillion dollars that consumes 58 cents of every tax dollar as it drains away precious resources from meeting human needs.

Labor can never have a sustainable full employment economy, healthcare for all, an environmentally responsible energy policy, and humane immigration policy while billions of dollars and countless lives are squandered on unwinnable and unnecessary wars that make us no safer but make a small elite very rich. The Iraq and Afghan wars will distract from and overwhelm any possibility of implementing a progressive agenda.

USLAW has had a powerful effect in the labor movement since its formation in 2003, helping to alter how organized labor views foreign policy. But our mission is far from over. USLAW is the only voice of workers that brings them to the forefront in linking the struggle for a just society to the struggle for a just foreign policy.

U.S. labor needs a larger, more powerful and influential USLAW.

Our challenge is to refocus and re-energize our movement, to more clearly make the connection between the economic crisis, a national economy that operates in service to the military-industrial complex and a militarized foreign policy that puts our country at odds with most of the people of the world. We need to figure out how to make foreign policy a legitimate subject of discussion and an important concern to be addressed by our labor movement – in much the same way concern for the environment and a sustainable economy is now understood to be a legitimate focus for organized labor.

Our task is to expand the vision of the labor movement so that unions serve as more than instruments for reshaping our workplaces. They must become instruments for reshaping our world.

Come to Chicago to help

US Labor Against the War

Chart a Path to Peace with Justice

For registration and hotel reservation information,

Visit www.uslaboragainstwar.org/09Assembly

USLAW greets Obama victory, calls for continued mobilization to end war

Monday, December 15th, 2008

USLAW GREETS OBAMA VICTORY,

CALLS FOR CONTINUED MOBILIZATION TO END WAR
Declaración en Español
November 8th, 2008

The election of Barack Obama is a resounding repudiation of eight years of Bush administration policies of war, occupation, provocation and aggression, violations of constitutional liberties and civil rights, racism and imperial arrogance, personal and corporate greed, raids on the federal treasury, and massive fraud, mismanagement and waste of national resources.

The election is an historic victory for working people, people of color, the poor, women and youth. It is a victory for our democracy and the Constitution, a victory for tolerance, decency, civility and good will, a victory for peace and international understanding. It is a victory for the very concept of government, itself founded on the practice of community and solidarity.

The Obama campaign was launched and gained momentum based on his pledge to end the war. That was what distinguished Senator Obama from all his major primary competitors. The election reaffirms the mandate given to the Congress in the election of 2006, but which the majority in Congress chose to ignore. It is a mandate to end the war and occupation in Iraq, to remove all foreign military forces and mercenaries, bring them all home, and truly care for them when they return.

The election is also a mandate for change – but not just any kind of change – not change that takes us backward or keeps us trapped by the failed corporate agenda. It is a mandate to use the resources now squandered on the military and corporate giveaways to meet human needs: to create meaningful well paid jobs, to end chronic unemployment and poverty, to provide affordable universal healthcare and decent housing, to open the doors to higher education for all who want it regardless of means, to rebuild our failing infrastructure, to end our dependence on oil and develop alternatives that will sustainably serve society as they save our environment.

We celebrate with the rest of the world. We know that great presidents are made by how they meet the challenges they face, and by the movements that press them to do so. Obama’s victory was made possible by the labor, peace, women’s, civil rights, immigrant rights, civil liberties, environmental, student and youth movements, the movements for gay-lesbian-bisexual- and transgender equality, for universal health care and others.

We agree with AFL-CIO President John Sweeney, who wrote on the day after the election:

Last night was a time to rejoice, but now it is time to get back to work fighting for working families.

We are responsible for holding our elected leaders to the promises they made and providing public support for the tough legislative choices they will make on our behalf. The first challenge for Barack Obama, Joe Biden and the hundreds of great legislators we helped elect is to address the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression.

Hard-working families are losing jobs, homes, health care, retirement savings and hope. Hundreds of billions of dollars have been committed to rescuing Wall Street—but almost nothing has been done to rescue Main Street. People need help, and they need it now.

But none of the aspirations of working people and the poor will be met, the economic crisis will not be resolved and our nation can never be truly secure so long as our country continues to spend half of every tax dollar on the military and corporations that have enriched themselves based on war and aggression.

We want Barack Obama to be a truly great president. We intend to help him be that by holding him and the Congress accountable to meet the needs of millions who cast their votes inspired by the hope his campaign created and their aspirations for a decent life in a nation at peace.

We know that democracy may be exercised in the voting booth, but the content of democracy is created at the grass roots of society, in neighborhoods and communities, churches and union halls, and in the street. We will educate, agitate and organize for him and the Congress to fulfill the people’s mandate for change and to reject once and for all the failed, destructive and exploitative corporate agenda.

It is our continued mobilization and organizing, our continued determination to press for enactment of a people’s agenda for change that will give Barack Obama the opportunity to be a great president. We welcome that challenge and commit to meeting it.

Our work begins NOW!

US  Labor Against the War Co-Convenors

Kathy Black                Gene Bruskin

Maria Guillen              Fred Mason

Bob Muehlenkamp   Nancy Wohlforth