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March 27, 2003  
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new feature: Saying No to War

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Action

Tell Bush to Stop Considering Use of Nukes Against Iraq
Oppose the New Airline Passenger Profiling System
Put a Light in Your Window for Peace

Audio

Wednesday
Democracy NOW!

Independent Media Center Radio Network
The Washington Post and War
Laura Flanders/W.A. Radio

Wednesday
Jim Hightower

Wednesday
FreeSpeech News
December 6
CounterSpin

Video

Actors, Playwrights, Poets Dramatize Resistance to US War
Not In Our Name!
Western Corporations Arming Iraq, Illegal Detention of Immigrants, Rise in Demand for Emergency Shelters
Democracy NOW!
latest newsreal
indymedia

Essays

The Courage of Their Convictions
Steven Shults

We're all Americans:
Why the Europeans are
Against This War

Martin Schwarz

When Democracy Failed:
The Warnings of History

Thom Hartmann

Why I am Going to Iraq
Wade Hudson

Asleep at War's Brink
Brandon Faloona

Innocence Lost,
Wisdom Gained

David Matthew Huff

Self Evident
Ani DiFranco

The Climate Crisis
William Severini Kowinski

Seattle and Vicinity
Colette Brooks

Ashcroft Must Go
Wade Hudson
Happy Birthday, Bob
Wade Hudson
Toward Peace
Wade Hudson

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Headlines

U.S. Ambassador Walks Out of United Nations Debate
by AP Staff - New York Daily News/Associated Press

Jubilation Turns to Hate as Aid Arrives in Zubayr, Iraq
by Burhan Wazir - CommonDreams/Guardian/UK

Crimes Of War
How The U.S. Will Remain 'Unaccountable'

by Sean O'Driscoll - TomPaine.commonSense

As World Focuses on Iraq, Rest of World's Hotspots Get Hotter
by Ewen MacAskill, Chris McGreal an Nick Paton-Walsh - The Guardian (UK)

All in the Neocon Family
by Jim Lobe - AlterNet

Your Media At Work
by John Cory - TruthOut

Quote

The pictures made it look like we were bombing Baghdad. We were not bombing Baghdad.
-- Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, March 23 2003 - Despite Difficulties, Liberation of Iraq Is Certain, U.S. Embassy in Italy Website

Fact

The Bush administration has requested $75billion to pay for the war it has already started. Here are some other things $75billion could buy in 2003 dollars:

One year of health care for 50million people in developed nations
(based on current per-capita expenditures in Canada)

One year of basic health care for 5,122,950,820 (5.2billion+) people in developing nations. (based on estimates by Dr Lieve Fransen in 1997 with 2% inflation incorporated)

All undergraduate expenses (tuition and living) in America for:
- 2.7million private university students (4.1million tuition only)
- 5.8million 4-year public university students (18.4million tuition only)
- 7.2million community college students (43.2million tuition only)

(6) Habitat for Humanity homes for:
1.8million families in America
2.9million families in Hungary
3million families in Romania
29.5million families in the Democratic Republic of Congo
308million families in Sri Lanka
32.6million families in Papua New Guinea
35.7million families in Guatamala
41.8million families in India

Hire 688,206 top-notch U.N. weapons inspectors for one year.

-- What a War Can Buy, compiled by Jeremy Ross for Clamor Magazine

Weekly Recommendations

Webcast: Democracy Now:
Will Iraqi-americans Be Detained?
Book: Norman Solomon -
Target Iraq: What the News Media Didn't Tell You
Website: September 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows Film: The Life of David Gale
DVD: Three Kings Activity: Civil Disobedience
CD: Various Artists: Peace Not War

TV:

Now w/ Bill Moyers (PBS)

Current Topical Search

Search Google News   Anti-war Protests Continue in U.S. and Worldwide

Satire


courtesy WorkingForChange

Featured This Month

Saying No to War
Months before Bush's unprovoked, unconstitutional and illegal war on Iraq had started the protests against it, both in the U.S. and all over the world, far outsized any demonstrations against the Vietnam war. Surely the incredible worldwide mobilization against this war has a great deal to do with activists harnessing the power of the internet, but it has as much to do with the growing anger against the Bush administration's belligerent unilateral behavior and it's furthering of imperial U.S. policies on behalf of corporations, policies which have increased steadily over the last few decades.

Protests against this war have taken many forms. A few dozen activists, including Inlet.org's co-founder Wade Hudson, have gone to Iraq to be with the Iraqi people to let them know in person that American civilians are not their enemy. Other forms of protest have included marches, rallies, vigils, sit-ins, walkouts, using naked bodies to spell "Peace" and "No War" and form nude peace symbols, hunger strikes, boycotts, acceptance speeches, writing, leafleting, poetry, song, theatre, painting, advertising, lobbying, editorializing, cartooning, culture jamming and, the much more extreme forms of vandalism, rioting and even suicide. Voices saying no to this war include churches and ashrams, mosques and temples, liberals and conservatives, peace activists and retired four star generals, cab drivers and former presidents, students and celebrities, engineers and artists, soccer moms and anarchists, hippies and yuppies, U.S. veterans of four previous wars and pardoned draft dodgers, poor folks and rich people, city councils and labor unions, lawyers and grandparents, students and retired intelligence officers, and the majority of governments of the countries of this world.

Once the bombing began the demonstrations began to swell into planned and spontaneous civil disobedience. Corporate broadcast media outlets in the US mention these protests only in passing. When they do mention demonstrations the reports focus on violence and arrests, downplaying and misrepresenting the size of the protests and rarely if ever mentioning how many US cities are besieged with civil disobedience. Their reports give equal time to pro-war demonstrators and represent these tiny, sproradic groups as if they matched the magnitude and frequency of national and global anti-war demonstrations.

Rarely will US corporate media give even a nod to the massive protests in europe, asia and the mideast, and the only overseas demonstrations they do mention are those which involve violence. Worse, the reporters faces and voices are, more often than not, tinged with disdain when reporting protests, and sometimes stoop to outright ridicule. It's as if the corporate media is unaware that the democratic right to express dissent is the primary freedom which Bush claims to be defending with his unjust war.

U.S. corporate media has thus far utterly ignored the reality that this war is both unconstitutional and illegal under international law.

During the Vietnam War there were a few better-known organizations who were percieved as the leaders of mobilization against war, and here in the onset of the twenty-first century that aspect of the movement remains the same. In the U.S. the most visible organizations mobilizing people against the war on Iraq and related injustices have been United for Peace, Not in Our Name, Move On/Win without War, International A.N.S.W.E.R., Peace Action, Student Peace Action Network, Veterans Against the War, Veterans for Peace, Code Pink and September Eleventh Families for Peaceful Tomorrows. Just as during the Vietnam War, there are hundreds of local area groups and dozens more national groups who combine their efforts with actions organized by the larger groups. There are also, of course, organizations opposing this war all over the world.

Here are links to pages on a few sites which list national and international organizations opposing the War on Iraq and war in general:

Gallery



Festival of Resistance Flyer
by Direct Action Network et al.

Slideshow of Protests Against the WTO Ministerial Meetings in Seattle during late November and early December of 1999.

Photos and Captions by Steven Shults,
Co-Editor, Inlet.org
                                            Visit the Inlet Gallery

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