Wednesday, January 31, 2007

Delahunt in P-Town on Friday Night Let's chat about HR 508!

Petition for Congressman William Delahunt calling for him to co-sponsor, and sign on to HR 508!


Cape Cod Students for Peace, Cape Codders for Peace & Justice, Cape Cod Peace Bus, Vietnam Veterans Against the War Again, Progressive Democrats, and Independents and war-weary Republicans as well as independent non-affiliated citizens of Cape Cod.


H.R.508 Title: To require United States military disengagement from Iraq, to provide United States assistance for reconstruction and reconciliation in Iraq, and for other purposes.
Sponsor: Rep Woolsey, Lynn C. [CA-6] (introduced 1/17/2007)

Latest Major Action: 1/17/2007 Referred to House committee. Status: Referred to the Committee on Foreign Affairs, and in addition to the Committees on Armed Services, Veterans' Affairs, Rules, and the Judiciary, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.

Congressman Bill Delahunt will be in the district this Friday night at Napi's Restaurant Feb 2, 2007 from 5;30 pm - 7:30 pm for a "Fire Side Chat" Let's get folks out to speak to him about signing on to HR 508! Call John Bangert (508) 432-0545

Click here for Virtural Petition for HR 508

This just in from Mark Forrest congressional aide to William Delahunt. Thank you. But we also need and want our representative to join Barney Frank in the Massachusetts delegates to join on to HR 508 as well.

This was introduced today. HR 746
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sent from my BlackBerry Wireless Handheld


-----Original Message-----
From: Forest, Mark
To: Forest, Mark
Sent: Wed Jan 31 19:32:08 2007
Subject: DELAHUNT SPONSORS THE SAFE AND ORDERLY WITHDRAWAL FROM IRAQ ACT

Just wanted you to know that this bill was introduced today.

Delahunt is an original co-sponsor.

THE SAFE AND ORDERLY WITHDRAWAL FROM IRAQ ACT
Rep. James P. McGovern (MA-3)
110th Congress

1) 30 days after enactment, the U.S. shall begin the safe and orderly withdrawal of all U.S. Armed Forces from Iraq;

2) Withdrawal to be completed within 180 days;

3) Withdrawal will be paid for by already appropriated funds; and

4) Upon completion of the withdrawal, all funds for deployment of U.S. Armed Forces in Iraq shall be terminated.

Exceptions include:

1) Military personnel assigned to the security of the U.S. Embassy in Iraq and U.S. diplomatic personnel; and

2) At the request of the Government of Iraq, members of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers may remain in Iraq in order to complete reconstruction projects currently in process.

Other provisions of the legislation:

1) The number of troops may not be increased during the period of withdrawal;

2) Nothing in the bill restricts the locations outside of Iraq to which units and members of the Armed Forces may be redeployed, including nearby countries or Afghanistan/Operation Enduring Freedom;

3) U.S. facilities, bases, etc. will be transferred to the authority of the Government of Iraq as part of the orderly withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq;

4) The bill does not prohibit the Department of Defense from providing financial assistance and equipment to the Iraqi armed forces and/or to a multinational force, at the request of the Government of Iraq; and

5) Nothing in this act prohibits non-Defense Department funding for social and economic reconstruction.


Mark Forest
Chief of Staff
Congressman Bill Delahunt (Ma-10th)
mark.forest@mail.house.gov


Monday, January 29, 2007

March on the Pentagon

Saturday, March 17, 2007

~ 40th anniversary of the historic 1967 march on the Pentagon ~
~ 4th anniversary of the start of the Iraq war ~

Pentagon_250
Download flyers

On March 17, 2007, the 4th anniversary of the start of the criminal invasion of Iraq, tens of thousands of people from around the country will descend on the Pentagon in a mass demonstration to demand: U.S. Out of Iraq Now! 2007 is the 40th anniversary of the historic 1967 anti-war march to the Pentagon during the Vietnam War. The message of the 1967 march was "From Protest to Resistance," and marked a turning point in the development of a countrywide mass movement.

In the coming days and weeks, thousands of organizations and individuals will begin mobilizing for the upcoming March on the Pentagon. Organizing committees and transportation centers are being established to bring people to the March on the Pentagon.

The March 17 demonstration will assemble at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial (Constitution Gardens) at 12 noon in Washington, D.C.and march to the Pentagon.

Click here to read the full ANSWER statement on why we're marching.

Endorse the March on the Pentagon.
Organize transportation to the March.
Donate to help make the March a powerful success.
Sign up for email updates.
Download flyers to distribute in your area.

Initial endorsers include:

Ramsey Clark, former U.S. Attorney General
Maxine Waters, Congresswoman
Alice Walker, Pulitzer prize winning author
Cynthia McKinney, Congresswoman
Cindy Sheehan, co-founder Gold Star Families for Peace, author
Ron Kovic, Vietnam Veteran, author, Born on the 4th of July
Malik Rahim, Founder, Common Ground Collective, New Orleans
Bishop Thomas Gumbleton, Catholic Archdiocese of Detroit
Paul Haggis, Director of Crash, 2005 Academy Award for Best Picture
Elias Rashmawi, National Coordinator, National Council of Arab Americans (NCA)
Howard Zinn, Author, A People's History of the United States
Rev. Luis Barrios, St. Mary's Church
Heidi Boghosian, Executive Director, National Lawyers Guild
Chaplain James Yee, former Army chaplain, Guantánamo Detention Center
Mahdi Bray, Executive Director, Muslim American Society Freedom Foundation
Father Roy Bourgeois, Founder, School of the Americas Watch
Leonard Weinglass, Attorney for the Cuban Five
Eric LeCompte, National Office, School of the Americas Watch
Mara Verheyden-Hilliard, Co-founder, Partnership for Civil Justice
Brian Becker, National Coordinator, ANSWER Coalition
Mounzer Sleiman, TV commentator and Vice Chair, National Council of Arab Americans
Waleed Bader, Vice chair of the National Council of Arab American, Chair of NCA NY/NJ Chapter, Former President of Arab Muslim American Federation - NY
Ben Dupuy, Co-Director, Haiti Progres
Juan Jose Gutierrez, Executive Director, Latino Movement USA
Calvin Gipson, Former President, San Francisco LGBT Pride Committee
Rev. Graylan Hagler, Senior Pastor, Plymouth Congregational Church, Washington D.C
Kay Lucas, Director, Crawford Peace House, Crawford, TX
Iglesia de San Romero - United Church of Christ
Chuck Kaufman, Co-coordinator of the Nicaragua Network
Al Garcia, Alliance for a Just & Lasting Peace in the Philippines
Macrina Cardenas, Mexico Solidarity Network
Eugene Puryear, Howard University, student leader
Gloria La Riva, Coordinator, National Committee to Free the Cuban Five
CAAAV: Organizing Asian Communities
Nodutdol for Korean Community Development
Iglesia de San Romero - United Church of Christ
Da Urban Butterflies
KAWAN:
Korean Americans Against War and Neoliberalism
Justice Committee
Ed Asner, Actor
Shirley Knight, Actor
Debra Sweet, National Coordinator, World Can't Wait -- Drive Out the Bush Regime
Jennifer Harbury, Human Rights Lawyer, author
United Teachers of Los Angeles (UTLA)
Jim Lafferty, Director, National Lawyers Guild - Los Angeles
James Petras, Professor Emeritus, SUNY Binghamton (State University of New York)
Mimi Kennedy, Actor (Dharma & Greg)

Not One More Dollar, Day , or Death! Bring Them Home Now!

Today playwrite, Lee Roscoe, CCP&J, John Bangert, CCP&J, VFP, Margret & David Lilenthal, William "Billy"Stewart VFP, VVAW, meet with Congressman William Delahunt's congressional aide, Mark Forrrest in the conference room for over an hour today Lobby Day to discuss what we need to do and how we can work together to stop the madness of George W. Bush.

Also we asked Mr. Forrest if we could provide input help from our community at large. We also expressed our approval on his leadership on HR 18, HR 353 and HR 41 bills.

Over 130 folks traveled from Cape Cod to March on Washington, DC to
Bring Our Troops Home Now! Not One more Dollar! Not One More Day! Not One More Death!


A) We asked our Congressman through Mr. Forrest to consider supporting a call for the impeachment of George W. Bush!

B) To see if our Congressman will support and sign on to HR 508.

HR 508 Bring the Troops Home and Iraq Sovereignty Restoration Act of 2007

s. WOOLSEY (for herself, Ms. LEE, Ms. WATERS, Ms. WATSON, Mr. MCGOVERN, Mr. FRANK of Massachusetts, Mr. GRIJALVA, Mr. FATTAH, Mr. NADLER, Mr. CONYERS, Mr. CLAY, Mr. COHEN, Mr. HINCHEY, Mr. FILNER, Mr. KUCINICH, Mr. PAYNE, and Ms. JACKSON-LEE of Texas) introduced the following bill; which was referred to the Committee on Foreign Affairs, and in addition to the Committees on Armed Services, Veterans' Affairs, Rules, and the Judiciary, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned

A BILL

To require United States military disengagement from Iraq, to provide United States assistance for reconstruction and reconciliation in Iraq, and for other purposes.



We need to our community on Cape Cod to contact Congressman Delahunt's office at these telephone numbers.

Washington, DC
2454 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, DC 20515
202-225-3111
Fax: 202-225-5658

Cape and Islands Office
146 Main Street
Hyannis, MA 02601
508-771-0666
Toll-Free: 800-870-2626
Fax: 508-790-1959

Media Downplays Anti-War March Site & Attendance Counts

January 28, 2007

Media Downplays Anti-War March Site

By Danny Schecter

New York: January 28: This past weekend's anti-war march was big, say the organizers and I have no reason to doubt them.

They made this claim:


"Washington, D.C. -- In a massive showing of public opposition to the Iraq war, 500,000 people filled the streets around the Capitol today, completely surrounding the building. Participants converged on the National Mall from all over the country to voice their support for an end to the conflict in Iraq."


Three hundred buses rolled in early this morning, coming from more than 40 states and including at least 20 buses filled by New York City trade unions. United For Peace & Justice, the march coordinator, called this one of the the largest and most diverse demonstrations since the war began. According to UFPJ National Coordinator and veteran peace and justice leader Leslie Cagan,

"This is a decisive moment in the history of this country and of our peace movement. In November, the people of this nation voted for peace. We are here today, all ages, from all walks of life, to hold our elected officials to the mandate of the people."


Add in protests in the rest of the country and it was even bigger.


But is that the picture most of America received? I didn't see any report Saturday night on the front page of the Sunday NY Times online but by the morning in the print edition, the Times wrote:


"Tens of thousands of protesters converged on the National Mall on Saturday to oppose President Bush's plan for a troop increase in Iraq in what organizers hoped would be one of the largest shows of antiwar sentiment in the nation's capital since the war began." The story was carried as headline at the bottom of the page, not prominent positioning. No Photo. A story about tennis got bigger play.


This was not the coverage "organizers hoped" for. Actually the organizers said it WAS the largest show of force since the war began with 500,000. The Time only acknowledged "tens of thousands." Does this matter?


It doesn't if the numbers game doesn't matter, and sadly it does in country where perception trumps reality. Years, ago the National Park Service which initially always underreported crowd sizes and then began having aerial photos taken that were analyzed by experts using grids, decided not to provide police estimates which were routinely reported. Perhaps that's why the march did its own count.


Yesterday, the March claimed a half million---which IS "one of the largest shows of anti-war sentiment" (although I seem to remember the number of 750,000 used to quantify how many showed up in the big pre-war march of 2003). But the papers, maybe following the AP's earlier in the day estimated "tens of thousands." True to form, the Washington Post online edition reported "THOUSANDS." The Huffington Post headline: "Why The Anti-War March Won't Change Anything..."


Was this right on Or right off ? I wasn't there this time. My first anti-war march was in l965 so I have burned up my share of shoe or sneaker leather over the years as well as energy cheering some of the same speakers who turned up Saturday. I wasn't feeling well enough to make the trip this time, but reported on it anyway.


I support marches as PART of a bigger strategy, not as THE strategy. And at least this time, many activists were planning to lobby Congress.


As readers know by now, I think its kind of important to get this message out to the people through the media, and not just the message that there's opposition to the war bit that there's a movement opposing it. We need to show activism in action as a way for citizens to try to hold politicians accountable and participate in the process. Did that double message get through?


This approach requires a media strategy--and a challenge to the media--- beyond sending out press releases and getting on Pacifica radio outlets.


On Saturday morning, the United For Peace and Justice website announced (Watch live on C-SPAN!) Wow, I thought, you could see the March and Rally LIVE on CSPAN. At l:30, I tuned in just before the march was slated to start, and sure enough several cameras were in the crowed. The only commentary I heard then was that there were “thousands” there. Sounded small. All we saw was a rapper on the stage and people milling around, No interviews. No explanation. I guess I missed it.


Soon, a notice appeared on screen that CSPAN would switch away from the March to cover Hillary Clinton's first speech in Iowa. And so they did, off to East High School for a stump speech. I expected them to come back while the march was happening. They didn't.


Instead they rebroadcast last Friday's coverage of a National Review Institute conference on conservatism. Was CSPAN that nervous, that they had to preemptively “balance” the anti-war march? Instead of the ongoing march, we heard righter than right columnist Michelle Malkin complaining that the media didn't show the (throngs at a right to life march, but only a few counter demonstrators. (CNN had the 15 counter demonstrators at this one and an interview with a conservative critics ,but also a song by the raging grannies and a sound bite or two from well-known speakers like Jane Fonda.)


CSPAN promised to show it later, but when I tuned in, CSPAN l was running a session from the Memphis Media Conference earlier this month at 9:30 PM. (Later I received an email saying I was in it so I can't criticize that, can I?)


I am sure the anti-war rally will be rebroadcast but the format with its endless parade of speakers and torrent of rhetoric is not exactly a media or audience turn on.


My point is that there was no real live coverage on the main CSPAN channel that I saw in a culture with news channels that can't wait to go live. (When I worked at ABC, there was a term called SLR for Silly Live Remote referring to someone on freeway overpass (reporting live) on an ordinary rush hour where nothing was happening.) We have a media that will go "live" to the opening of an envelope, but not to anti-war marches.


Coverage is more than just showing it; it is reporting on it, commenting on it, interviewing people there etc.


I flipped to Fox. If there was coverage I missed it. They were spinning a statement by John Kerry to the effect that world public opinion does not support the US war. This was being presented as “anti-American.” What do you expect from Faux News?


CNN did have a report with a journalist who had been at the march discussing it, saying there were “tens of thousands,” not a half million. He was in the studio, not on the Mall, with an anchor who patronizingly referred to protesters as "the kind of people we seen before."The march was treated as ho-hummer with the only interest expressed about whether active duty soldiers were marching. The CNN man said he heard about there were but didn't see them.


It was then time for a standup from the White House lawn with a reporter discussing how the White House would respond to Congressional criticism of the war, as if the marchers didn’t exist. And then there was a replay of a soundbyte from President Bush under a graphic banner that said, can you believe, “THE SOUNDS OF DISSENT.”


AP reported "tens of thousands" not half a million.

Convinced this is their moment, tens of thousands marched Saturday in an anti-war demonstration linking military families, ordinary people and an icon of the Vietnam protest movement in a spirited call to get out of Iraq.


Andrea Hsu of NPR turned tens of thousands into: "Thousands of protesters gathered Saturday on the Mall in Washington, D.C." Thousands!


NPR reported January 27: "While some citizens have protested against the Iraq war ever since the invasion of March 2003, the movement has failed to mobilize large numbers of people in public spaces. Has that changed now that a majority of Americans oppose the war?"

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=7051538


For some reason, there seemed to be more movie stars speaking than usual. What signal does that send? Of course CNN ran images of Jane Fonda now and in North Vietnam in l973. There was a photo of Sean Penn marching.


Headline in a newspaper in Komo Washington: "Middle America meets celebrity glitter in anti-war march."


Some outlets, but mostly on the West coast noted that there were protests there too: "WASHINGTON" Anti-war protesters from around the country converged on Washington, Los Angeles, San Francisco and other cities today,


Don't the anti-war organizers see this as a problem? Don't they think they should try to do something about it as a problem and protest this ritualistic treatment? Shouldn't they make the media coverage a issue. Are they only listening to themselves?


I was on Air America in LA on Saturday afternoon and feisty host Bree Walker, a former TV anchor agreed. But the anti-war movement continues to pay lipservice to this problem, perhaps for fear of "alienating" the press.


Give me a break! This is a pattern, deliberate! Back in 2003, the Washington Posts own omsbudsman Michael Getler indicted his own newspaper for "downplaying protests." He now works for Public Television.


This coverage is deplorable, but worse: the anti-war movement has not made it an issue. With more than half the country opposing the war, the movement is still being under-reported and marginalized! And not doing much about it.


We still need a march on the media. Anyone with me?



Authors Website: http://www.Mediachannel.Org

Authors Bio: New Dissector Danny Schechter is ?blogger in chief? at Mediachannel.Org and author of "The Death of the Media and the Fight to Save Democracy" News. His new film is about numbers -- In Debt We Trust See Newsdisssector.org/store.htm. Comments to dissector@mediachannel.org

Sunday, January 28, 2007

Lobby Day Stop the War Click Below and virtually lobby your represenatives.

Contact Congressman William "Bill" Delahunt

Washington, DC
2454 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, DC 20515
202-225-3111
Fax: 202-225-5658

Cape and Islands Office
146 Main Street
Hyannis, MA 02601
508-771-0666
Toll-Free: 800-870-2626
Fax: 508-790-1959

South Shore Office
1250 Hancock Street
Suite 802-N
Quincy, MA 02169
617-770-3700
Toll-Free: 800-794-9911
Fax: 617-770-2984

Send the Congressman an Email



What Can you do today Monday January 29, 2006 Lobby Day!

Another Cape Soldier from Centerville, Killed In Action RIP!

By MARY ANN BRAGG
STAFF WRITER
CENTERVILLE - They were sweethearts since their early teens, married two years ago and expecting their first child in April.



Army St. Alexander Henry Fuller
(Cape Cod Times)
But late Thursday night, Anastacia Fuller, 19, of Centerville, MA on Cape Cod, learned that her husband, Army Sgt. Alexander Henry Fuller, 21, was killed in Iraq when a bomb exploded near his convoy.

Two military men came to the home the couple shared with her parents on Thread Needle Lane. It was 10:30 at night.

''He was the best damn soldier, I think, in the whole Army,'' Fuller said yesterday recalling her husband's quick rise to a military leadership position.

She sat in the kitchen surrounded by family, with plates of food wrapped in aluminum foil and a pamphlet about grieving on the counter. A bulky navy sweatshirt hid her pregnancy. Her face was wan and her eyes red.

''He was the best soldier,'' she repeated. ''He tried to make a difference.''

Alex Fuller, who was born in New Bedford, had hoped to be a police officer when he got out of the Army - even though he was also very interested in recording and writing rap music, his wife said. He met Anastacia, who at age 3 immigrated with her family from Russia, when she was 13 at a teen dance in Hyannis. They quickly decided they belonged together.

Alex joined the Army in 2004 after some bouncing around in his youth from Florida to Cape Cod, living with a friend at times and with Anastacia's family.

The couple was married Oct. 16, 2004, in South Yarmouth, between Army boot camp and Alex's first assignment in South Korea. He and Anastacia also spent a year in Colorado during his second assignment. He had been in Iraq since October and had recently seen his first photo of Anastacia's expanding stomach.

In a recent telephone conversation, Alex told his young bride he was ready to come home, Anastacia said.

''He was like a son to me,'' said Anastacia's mother, Irena Zinov. ''Every time he could, he tried to help with something around the house. ... I can't really count the ways, why he was so important. He was just like a son and it's an unimaginable loss that no mother should experience.''

Mary Ann Bragg can be reached at mbragg@capecodonline.com.

(Published: January 28, 2007)

The Boston Channel interview with Anastacia Fuller, 19 year old Cape Cod teenager, who quoted Alex's last conversation with her on Tuesday,......


" I got bad feelings... We're just dying over here, we shouldn't be here! "

-Army Sgt. Alexander Henry Fuller spoke out on Tuesday, January 23, 2007

He died on Thursday while we were in Earth House, making banners and posters for our march on Washington, DC

Cape marches on Washington



January 28, 2007


Click here to watch a video on this story!

By DOUG FRASER STAFF WRITER WASHINGTON, D.C.

Nauset Regional High School senior Sam Silver was honest about his reasons for going to Washington this weekend for what organizers hoped would be a massive rally against the war in Iraq.

(Staff photo by Paul Blackmore)

Brian Bilbo, 18, of Eastham participates in the protest against the Iraq war in Washington, D.C., yesterday. Two buses filled with Cape Codders left for D.C. Friday night.

He wanted to experience a big protest, hear the arguments against the war, and listen to how people wanted to go about ending it.

''I'm definitely not on the fence; I don't feel it's right,'' he said aboard a crowded bus that left Orleans Friday night. ''But I don't feel it's right to be vehemently one way or the other without having a good knowledge of the truth, although being anti-war seems like the way to go.''

Two buses left Cape Cod Friday night for Washington with more than 100 protesters on board.

In less than a week, 35 of Silver's peers signed on to pay $65 and spend 22 hours round trip on a bus for just eight hours marching and listening to speeches on the National Mall. Silver said many more expressed interest in going, but found it hard to arrange on just a week's notice.

''The pop culture tries to pass us off as being apathetic, but we're not,'' Silver said of America's youth.

The students' interest prompted the trip, said Jennifer Smith, one of the coordinators of the Cape caravan. The second bus was filled with members of Cape Codders For Peace and Justice.

Under sunny skies, the Mall warmed to 54 degrees yesterday, positively balmy to those who left the Cape's single digit temperatures Friday night. Gradually, the Mall filled up with protesters, although it was impossible for participants to get an accurate count of how many were there.

Thousands demonstrate

Trip organizer John Bangert said the march was expected to draw more than 300 bus loads of protesters, or about 150,000, plus those who walked or drove themselves. Protesters from more than 30 states were expected to make the trip.

The protest was largely organized by the group United for Peace and Justice, a coalition of 1,400 local and national organizations. Included in the coalition are the National Organization for Women, United Church of Christ, the American Friends Service Committee, True Majority, Military Families Speak Out, Iraq Veterans Against the War, the U.S. Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation, CodePink, MoveOn.org, and September 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows.

Police officials declined to provide crowd estimates, but Hany Khalil, a spokesman for United for Peace and Justice, said the protesters numbered around 400,000.

Counter-protesters also converged on the mall in far smaller numbers.

Demonstrators listened to speeches from a roster of politicians and entertainment figures including the Rev. Jesse Jackson, U.S. Rep. Dennis J. Kucinich, D-Ohio, a candidate for the presidential nomination in 2008, and U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif. Actors Jane Fonda, Susan Sarandon and Tim Robbins also addressed the crowd.

As speech after speech droned on, with bleachers filled with press photographers blocking their view of the speakers, a small knot of Cape Cod protesters dressed much like their parents probably did in the Woodstock era, moved through the crowd, looking for a little excitement.

''I came here because I believe that patriotism means standing

up for what you believe,'' said 17-year-old Whitney Bashaw of Orleans. Her long, flowing peasant dress, headband, dreadlocks and peace sign painted on one cheek would have fit seamlessly into the protest garb of another generation.

Bashaw said she reads the British Broadcasting Corporation news online because she believes it gives her a less biased view of the United States. Bashaw would like to see American leaders reduce their emphasis on military operations in Iraq and put more money into rebuilding the infrastructure of the country and help the Iraqi government function independent of U.S. influence.

Mimi McConnell of Cotuit said she was marching on Washington for her children and grandchildren.

McConnell said she felt there were deeper meanings to the protest than just ending the war. She worried what was happening to democracy and government in the United States, with Congress and the people allowing the war to continue along with domestic wiretapping and the torture of prisoners. With Democrats making significant gains in November's mid-term elections, McConnell said the time is ripe for change.

''Congress is finally waking up; maybe this (demonstration) will help stiffen their backbone,'' McConnell said.

Nauset Regional High senior Anna Struna, 17, said it was important for her generation to participate by voting and expressing opposition to policies with which they don't agree.

''We're the ones who have to pay for this,'' she said.

Struna said some of her friends were already paying a high price: Veterans in their 20s who have returned from the war changed forever by their harrowing experiences.

Adults, some of whom were veterans of Vietnam War protests, were thrilled to have the students onboard.

Jennifer Smith said student enthusiasm for the trip was a motivator for the adults, both the ones on the bus and the ones who couldn't go. Smith said she received scores of e-mails and phone calls from people who couldn't go because of health or scheduling. Many of those contributed money to help defray the costs, so the trip was more affordable for students.

''You are marching for those who are too ill and tired to march anymore,'' she told the students.

Like many teens who attended yesterday's protest, Whitney Bashaw said she would vote when she comes of age. For now, she is flexing her citizenship muscle united in a common cause.

Bashaw's group struck up an impromptu dance circle on the Mall, fueled by drums, guitars and even a jazz trumpet. A chant broke out that wasn't flattering to President Bush, but finally settled into ''Peace, Not War.''

Sophie Hatch, 16, of Eastham said she'd done research on the U.S. civil rights movement and the Vietnam War protests. She said her mother and father had participated in anti-Vietnam War rallies.

''It's in my blood,'' Hatch said.

Doug Fraser can be reached at dfraser@capecodonline.com.

(Published: January 28, 2007)









By KAREN JEFFREY
STAFF WRITER
Delight rang through Sarah Peake's voice when she heard that a bus load of Cape Cod


Nauset Regional High School sophomore Aneka Davidson, left, and junior Tory Meter prepare signs at the Earth House in Orleans for use in tomorrow's march in Washington protesting U.S. policy in Iraq.
(Paul Blackmore/Cape Cod Times)

teens will be going to Washington tonight for tomorrow's National Peace March.

''That's wonderful, just wonderful. Oh, I'm so glad,'' said Peake, during a telephone conversation from the Statehouse, where she recently began her first term representing the 4th Barnstable District.

''It is gratifying to see that young people are beginning to understand the repercussions of this war, that the cost of this war will continue long into their adult lives,'' she said.

Peake is not the only one gratified to discover young people want to express their views on the war.

''The response was nearly overwhelming,'' said Jennifer Smith, an Eastham resident and member of Cape Codders for Peace and Justice, which planned the trip.

The response from adults was no surprise, but the response from students at Nauset Regional High School was unexpected, she said. Within hours of sending out an electronic notice, Smith heard from almost 50 teens, thanks in part to Nauset teacher Lisa Brown, who mentioned the trip to some students.

Within two days, Smith was able to secure a bus, and with the help of some Lower Cape residents - who donated money to defray the cost - Smith had close to 30 students signed up. Parents are accompanying those 16 or under. ''We probably have 30 kids signed up. Not really room for any more on the bus. I just wish there was time to rent another bus because the interest has been that high,'' said Smith, who has four children and is a captain in the Eastham Fire Department. ''These kids are very knowledgeable, very articulate and very much want to be involved.''

Peake, a Democrat, will also travel to Washington for the rally. She is one of more than two dozen Cape residents - not including the teens - who will travel 11 hours on the Cape Codders for Peace and Justice bus.

Peake is going, she said, both as a private individual and as a representative of the 4th Barnstable District, which covers most of the Lower Cape. ''I am doing my part for the troops in voting in favor of benefits for veterans,'' she said, ''and now I will go to Washington as part of a nationwide movement to call for bringing our troops home, and ensuring they have a soft landing when they arrive.''

Karen Jeffrey can be reached at kjeffrey@capecodonline.com.

Anti-War March on Washington







CODE Pink Iraqi Shoe Memorial!










Activism | Media

Ah, yes, the obligatory "tens of thousands", as if that's anywhere near representative of the number of people marching in the streets. What? we just can't have hundreds of thousands of US citizens marching on the streets of the US Capital and cities across the country?...

Tens of thousands march against Iraq war
WASHINGTON - Convinced this is their moment, tens of thousands marched Saturday in an anti-war demonstration linking military families, ordinary people and an icon of the Vietnam protest movement in a spirited call to get out of Iraq. Celebrities, a half-dozen lawmakers and protesters from distant states rallied in the capital under a sunny sky, seizing an opportunity to press their cause with a Congress restive on the war and a country that has turned against the conflict...

Marching with them was Jane Fonda, in what she said was her first anti-war demonstration in 34 years. "Silence is no longer an option," Fonda said to cheers from the stage on the National Mall. The actress once derided as "Hanoi Jane" by conservatives for her stance on Vietnam said she had held back from activism so as not to be a distraction for the Iraq anti-war movement, but needed to speak out now.

The rally on the Mall unfolded peacefully, although about 300 protesters tried to rush the Capitol, running up the grassy lawn to the front of the building. Police on motorcycles tried to stop them, scuffling with some and barricading entrances. Protesters chanted "Our Congress" as their numbers grew and police faced off against them. Demonstrators later joined the masses marching from the Mall, around Capitol Hill and back.

United for Peace and Justice, a coalition group sponsoring the protest, had hoped 100,000 would come. Police, who no longer give official estimates, said privately the crowd was smaller than that.

At the rally, 12-year-old Moriah Arnold stood on her toes to reach the microphone and tell the crowd: "Now we know our leaders either lied to us or hid the truth. Because of our actions, the rest of the world sees us as a bully and a liar."

The sixth-grader from Harvard, Mass., organized a petition drive at her school against the war that has killed more than 3,000 U.S. service-members, including seven whose deaths were reported Saturday.

More Hollywood celebrities showed up at the demonstration than buttoned-down Washington typically sees in a month.

Actor Sean Penn said lawmakers will pay a price in the 2008 elections if they do not take firmer action than to pass a nonbinding resolution against the war, the course Congress is now taking.

"If they don't stand up and make a resolution as binding as the death toll, we're not going to be behind those politicians," he said. Actors Susan Sarandon and Tim Robbins also spoke.

Fonda was a lightning rod in the Vietnam era for her outspoken opposition to that war and her advocacy from Hanoi at the height of that conflict. Sensitive to the old wounds, she made it a point to thank the active-duty service-members, veterans and Gold Star mothers who attended the rally.

She drew parallels to the Vietnam War, citing "blindness to realities on the ground, hubris ... thoughtlessness in our approach to rebuilding a country we've destroyed." But she noted that this time, veterans, soldiers and their families increasingly and vocally are against the Iraq war.

The House Judiciary Committee chairman, Rep. John Conyers (news, bio, voting record), threatened to use congressional spending power to try to stop the war. "
George Bush has a habit of firing military leaders who tell him the Iraq war is failing," he said, looking out at the masses. "He can't fire you." Referring to Congress, the Michigan Democrat added: "He can't fire us.

"The founders of our country gave our Congress the power of the purse because they envisioned a scenario exactly like we find ourselves in today. Now only is it in our power, it is our obligation to stop Bush."

On the stage rested a coffin covered with a U.S. flag and a pair of military boots, symbolizing American war dead. On the Mall stood a large bin filled with tags bearing the names of Iraqis who have died.

A small contingent of active-duty service members attended the rally, wearing civilian clothes because military rules forbid them from protesting in uniform.

Air Force Staff Sgt. Tassi McKee, 26, an intelligence specialist at Fort Meade, Md., said she joined the Air Force because of patriotism, travel and money for college. "After we went to Iraq, I began to see through the lies," she said.

In the crowd, signs recalled the November elections that defeated the Republican congressional majority in part because of
President Bush's Iraq policy. "I voted for peace," one said.

"I've just gotten tired of seeing widows, tired of seeing dead Marines," said Vincent DiMezza, 32, wearing a dress Marine uniform from his years as a sergeant. A Marine aircraft mechanic from 1997 to 2002, he did not serve in Iraq or
Afghanistan.

About 40 people staged a counter-protest, including Army Cpl. Joshua Sparling, 25, who lost his leg to a bomb in Iraq.

He said the anti-war protesters, especially those who are veterans or who are on active duty, "need to remember the sacrifice we have made and what our fallen comrades would say if they are alive."

Bush reaffirmed his commitment to his planned troop increase in a phone conversation Saturday with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. The president was in Washington for the weekend. He is often is out of town during big protest days.

"He understands that Americans want to see a conclusion to the war in Iraq and the new strategy is designed to do just that," said Gordon Johndroe, a spokesman for the National Security Council.

Protest organizers said the crowd included people who came on 300 buses from 40 states.

Friday, January 26, 2007

MARCH ON WASHINGTON DC CAPE COD PEACE FLEET

Confirmed Speakers and Performers for Jan. 27th Rally


Who, What Where to Go, Maps, Program

William Penn House


Washington DC Metro Map Links

Things to Bring on Jan. 27th



Walk in Their Shoes
A recent John Hopkins report revealed that over 655,000 Iraqis have died since the U.S. invasion, and polls show that the overwhelming majority of Iraqis want the U.S. to leave. Shoes help people visualize the unspeakable pain and suffering this war has inflicted on the Iraqi people.

Join CODEPINK and Iraqi Voices for Peace to create a massive and powerful Walk in Their Shoes installation. Bring shoes to contribute throughout the weekend! Help create the installation! www.walkintheirshoes.org For more info, contact Liz at lizkimmerly at gmail.com or 310 460 9082.

We Will Not Be Silent: White Roses
"We Will Not Be Silent" was a statement of the White Rose resistance movement in Nazi Germany. Today, a group of artists/activists is building a national campaign based on that message. They are encouraging us all to bring white roses to the Jan. 27th mobilization as part of the message we will be delivering to Congress. It will be a symbolic gesture to demand that Congress end the occupation of Iraq and bring to justice those responsible for a U.S. policy of torture and illegal detentions. At the end of the march we will gather the thousands of white roses your bring to Washington as a symbol of our strength. For more information contact: www.thecriticalvoice.org

Other items to bring to help send our message to Congress:

  • signs and posters that include where you are from

  • flags and banners that express your ideas

  • puppets and other theatrical items

  • drums and horns and any musical instrument you play

  • any other noise makers you can carry

Drums and Other Noisemakers: To help make this march a spirited, energizing, and powerful event, bring drums, tambourines, and other noisemakers. Improvise -- pots, pans, and plastic tubs all make great percussion instruments. Drum sticks for drumming are OK.

Banners, Signs, and Sticks: We will have posters available in the assembly area to promote the key messages of the march, but we encourage you to bring your own signs and banners, identifying the community or constituency you represent and/or expressing your reasons for why the war and occupation in Iraq must end. NOTE ABOUT STICKS: Sticks are OK for posters, if they are more like slats than sticks, i.e., relatively thin and rectangle-shaped. Posters can also be attached to cardboard tubes.


Speakers, in alphabetical order

Mayor Rocky Anderson, Salt Lake City

Moriah Arnold, 12-year-old sixth-grader from Harvard, MA

Carlos Arredondo, Gold Star Families for Peace

Medea Benjamin, founder of CodePink

Leslie Cagan, National Coordinator, United for Peace and Justice

Eve Ensler, playwright

Jane Fonda, actress, author

Kim Gandy, President of the National Organization for Women

Danny Glover, actor/activist

Reverend Graylon Hagler, Plymouth Congregational Church, Washington, DC

Reverend Jesse Jackson, RainbowPUSH Coalition

Jonathon Hutto, active-duty member of the U.S. Navy

Representative Dennis Kucinich (D-OH)

Rabbi Michael Lerner, Tikkun Magazine

Kevin Martin, Executive Director, Peace Action

Tim Robbins, actor/activist

Susan Sarandon, actor/activist

Bob Watada, father of Lt. Ehren Watada, first officer to refuse deployment to Iraq

Representative Maxine Waters (D-CA)

Representative Lynn Woolsey (D-CA)

Ann Wright, retired Army Colonel, former State Dept. diplomat

Confirmed but speaker to be announced:

Iraq Veterans Against the War

Veterans for Peace

Cape Codders for Peace & Justice

Music

“Emma’s Revolution”

Bedouin - rapper

Choir from Plymouth Congregational Church, Washington, DC

“Raging Grannies,” from California to New York



Thursday, January 25, 2007

Peace Prayers for all Religions!

Jainist Prayer


Peace and universal love is the essence of all the Gospels.
Forgive do I creatures all,
and let all creatures forgive me.

Jewish Prayer


Oh come let us go up to the mountain of the Lord,
that we may walk the paths of the Most High.
And we will beat our swords into ploughshares
and our spears into pruning hooks.

Shinto Prayer


We earnestly wish that the wind will soon puff away
all the clouds hanging over the tops of the mountains.

Native African Prayer


For you are one who does not hesitate to respond to our call, you are the cornerstone of peace.

Native American Prayer


Give us the wisdom to teach our children to love,
to respect and to be kind to one another,
so that we may grow with peace in mind.

Muslim Prayer


Praise be to the Lord of the Universe,
who has created us and made us into tribes and nations
that we may know each other,
not despise each other.

Baha'i Prayer


Be a breath of life unto the body of humankind,
a dew upon the soil of the human heart,
and a fruit upon the tree of humility.

Sikh Prayer


Know that we attain God when we love,
and only that victory endures in consequence of which
no one is defeated.

Christian Prayer


Love your enemies,
do good to those who hate you,
bless those who curse you,
pray for those who abuse you.
Blessed be the Peacemakers,
for they shall be called the Children of God.

Buddhist Prayer for Peace


May all beings everywhere plagued with sufferings of body and mind quickly be freed from their illnesses.
May those frightened cease to be afraid
and may those bound be free.
May the powerless find power,
and may people think of befriending one another.
May those who find themselves in trackless,
fearful wildernesses - the children, the aged, the unprotected - be guarded by beneficent celestials,
and may they quickly attain Buddhahood.

Zoroastrian Prayer for Peace


We pray to God to eradicate all the misery in the world:
that understanding triumph over ignorance,
that generosity triumph over indifference,
that trust triumph over contempt, and
that truth triumph over falsehood.

Yellow Line

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

PEACE TRAIN & BUSSES TO DC





Click on me to Hear Peace Train

by the artist formerly know as Cat Stevens - now Yusuf Islam!

Now I've been happy lately, thinking about the good things to come
And I believe it could be, something good has begun

Oh I've been smiling lately, dreaming about the world as one
And I believe it co

uld be, some day it's going to come

Cause out on the edge of darkness, there rides a peace train
Oh peace train take this country, come take me home again

Now I've been smiling lately

, thinking about the good things to come
And I believe it could be, something good has begun

Oh peace train s

ounding louder
Glide on the peace train

Come on now peace train
Yes, peace train holy roller

Everyone jump upon the peace train
Come on now peace train

Get your bags together, go bring your good friends too
Cause it's getting near

er, it soon will be with you

Now come and joi

n the living, it's not so far from you
And it's getting nearer, soon it will all be true

Now I've been crying lately, thinking about the world as it is
Why must we go on hating, why can't we live in bliss

Cause out on the edge of darkness, there rides a peace train
Oh peace train take this country, come take me home again




Community members including - students, parents, members of CCP&J, and other progressive folks have procured another Bus leaving on Friday after supper January 26th from Orleans, Staples Shopping Center at 7:pm ! Riding and sleeping all night getting into Washington, DC Saturday Morning and then following the March returning by Peace Bus overnight for 12 Noon arrival in Orleans on Sunday January 28th!

All Aboard - the Cape Cod Peace Bus.




Use may us PayPal to reserve!
Send $ 65. to PayPal account or stop by The Earth House in Orleans. If we have enough interest we will be able to go. Anyone under 18 must have a parent or guardian present when applying. We must also have a signed parental permission slip and rules will be applied. Dr. Nancy Clarke, and Jennifer Smith will be bus captains as well as John, Gail, Claire & Bangert on board.

mailto:jjbangert@comcast.net




Call
Jennifer Smith (508) 255-3468

or The Bangert's
(508) 432-0545

or email us
jjbangert@gmail.com


The Cape Cod Peace Bus Round Trip $65. from Orleans!

THE AMTRAK PEACE TRAIN


AMTRAK Cost Range $ 108. 00 - $ 188.00
each way from Rt 128 and South Stations



Everyone can take the train instead of flying.

Step 1- Write a letter to your Representative in congress.

Step 2 - Get your train tickets to Washington DC for the last week in January, 2007:



Step 3 - Get or make something you can wear onboard that says PEACE TRAIN to DC on it.


Newswire Services

Peace March Expected to be Among Largest Since War Began

MoveOn.org, National Organization for Women, Labor Unions Mobilize Members; Buses and vans coming from 30 states and 111 Cities.

Salt Lake City Mayor Rocky Anderson, Reverend Jesse Jackson, Jr., Members of Congress, Military Families, and Soldiers to Speak.

NEW YORK, NY -- Americans angered by Bush's plans to escalate the Iraq war will flood the streets of Washington on Saturday, January 27, in a massive national peace march organized by United for Peace and Justice (UFPJ). Marchers will call on Congress to listen to the voters, not Bush, by using its power to end Bush's war and bring the troops home. The last three national marches organized by UFPJ each attracted between 300,000 and 500,000 people.

MoveOn.org has called upon its 3.2 million members to join UFPJ, describing the march as potentially a "turning point for the war" comparable to how "Martin Luther King Jr.'s March on Washington in 1963 was a turning point in the fight for equality and civil rights." The National Organization for Women (N.O.W.) is mobilizing its chapters to participate. Local antiwar groups in cities and towns across the nation are mobilizing.

Monday, January 22, 2007

This is bigger than the Super Bowl It's About Peace In Our World!

Huddle Up!
http://www.davidswanson.org/?q=node/703
By David Swanson

Team, huddle up. Huddle UP! Now, listen. I'm not going to even tell you what to do in the second half unless you understand what you did in the first half. Do you?

You think you're tired and worn down and you got beat bad, right? Is that what you think? When you pulled off the most powerful offensive attack in league history on February 15, 2003, putting millions of people in the streets against this war, you think no points went up on the board, right?

You need to understand that you sidelined three-quarters of their lineup. They've been using the same players without a break ever since. You sent most of the nations on the globe and the United Nations out of the stadium.

You left them with a couple of skinny Brits and a fat Italian as substitutes, and that's it. Now, do you think you're the ones who are dog tired? Their uniforms look bright and clean, but they're hurting bad.
And what about your defense? Have you seen them move into North Korea or Iran or Syria yet? You're holding them to the little stuff.

They're losing the ability to think and adjust. And when you thumped them in the November 7, 2006, elections in the final seconds of the half, you could see the fear in their eyes. They're running on rubber legs, they're spitting blood, and they're scared. And look at your bench! You could each play a half a minute and go home. You've recruited two-thirds of the stands onto the team. You've also put the refs on your side by calmly and relentlessly exposing their cheating. The cards are in your hands, and this is your game to lose.

Now, I'm going to talk about the second half and we're going to go out there and finish this thing right. But first you're going to give me 100 pushups. Now! You think you're tired? You think you're ready and wasting energy?

The more energy you use the more you're going to have. We're playing for the world here, and we have the world to work with. Don't think about saving resources. We've got resources you can't drill for in any wilderness. You can only find them in a crowd. You can only find them on a team. There you go! Faster! 2 – 3 – 4! Push it! Don't stop! It's making you stronger! Strong enough to walk out there and win this thing with a look.

Stand up! If you think you've struggled, you don't know your history. And you don't know the misery of your opponents' victims. Pain is not the worst thing you can face. Pain together for the better good of all is a pleasure you should value. You're not going to win a field full of virgins in paradise. But nobody else is either. You're going to win something that actually exists. You're going to win peace and life and freedom – and before any of that you're going to find solidarity.

Did you know that protesting is good for your health? It is the brotherhood and sisterhood. It nourishes your soul. It brings you in from your masochistic exurban mansions of isolated media intake and puts you into action with others. You will get stronger the longer you struggle. And it's going to be a struggle. They haven't exhausted their playbook yet. They're going to open the second half with a defensive formation called the Democrats.

Pay attention. This is when you strike hard and long. This defense is misleading. You move into it and it gives way, but it cushions your blow and then moves you to the side, to the side, to the side, and endlessly out of bounds. You start out right up the middle demanding an end to funding the war. They are going to counter with a claim that bringing our men and women safely home is an attack on those troops. You'll think you've heard them wrong, but you cannot pause.

They're just throwing sand in your eyes. They're about to hit you with an escalation and an opposition to the escalation, and they'll have the fans getting into the opposition too. And you'll find yourself sliding out of bounds unless you stay in the middle and cut off the funding for the war. If you do that, you'll slowly gain traction, and if you hit them hard with articles of impeachment they'll be on their backs wondering which way up is.

Their offense is still going to look like a standard corporate media assault on free thought, but it's going to overreach and commit more errors. Your best defense is a good offense. Turn to the independent media and build it, and play tough with the corporate corrupters of communication. You can shut them down and turn them around. They need you much more than you need them.

Our opening drive is January 27th in Washington, D.C. If you are not there you are letting down the team. If you are not there you will feel shame when your grandchildren ask you about your life. If you are not there you are not in solidarity with the people of the world who do not know what Americans think because not enough of us are there. Get up! There are no excuses. No, not even that one. No, not that noble one. Not that personal one. Not that strategic one. NO excuses.

You need to be in Washington, D.C., on Saturday, January 27th. If ifs and buts were candy and nuts you could just go buy a trophy and put it on your television. You've got to EARN IT, my friends. You've got to get your ass to Washington, D.C., this Saturday, or you can join the other team. We don't need you. We'll win without you. Have a nice glass of oil with your steak. Or come and eat and march and sing and share and laugh with us as we turn this world on its axis.
We're going to march past the U.S. Capitol, and it's surrounded by Capitol Police, but they are on our team and they know we're marching for them too.

We're marching to tell Congress what it has to do. But we're also going to march past Fox News, and this is where we throw a screen pass and go long. We're going to hit Fox News with a protest so loud that deep within their studios a guest will seize his throat and some truth will come out. We're going to rock the opposition's two key players, Fox News and the U.S. Senate, to the ground. We're going to demand an end to this war now: http://www.unitedforpeace.org/
And then we're really going to start. Then we're going to reach way back into our playbook and drag out of our memory what really happened in Washington, D.C., the last time it was run by a man named Dick.

The antiwar movement last time around built the momentum for an impeachment movement, which gave Congress the nerve to end the war, and then the threat of impeachment stopped Nixon from vetoing the bill that cut off the war funding, and the exhilaration of doing the decent thing and cutting off the war funding drove impeachment to the goal line.

You can come to Washington on Saturday and march, but you can't go back home. We need you on Sunday as we train and prepare:http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/january27
And we need you on Monday as we lobby Congress to cut off the money and start the investigations:http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/node/16562

We need you for three days. Three key days. Then you can climb back on any cross you choose. This game is within our reach, but they're tough and determined and devilishly slippery. They can't beat you, but they can and will drive this into overtime.

On February 5th you will hit them hard all over the country with nonviolent and creative occupations of congressional offices:http://vcnv.org/project/the-occupation-project
When you walk out of those offices it will be because you have won, and you will walk out with a smile, a handshake, a hug, and friendship for our newest teammates: your congress members.
Now, put your hands together here! Who's going to win this game? The people! Are we going to win it for the Gipper? Hell no! Are we going to win it for Halliburton? Hell no! Are we going to win it for Hillary Clinton? Hell no! Are we going to win it for our grandchildren's grandchildren and their loved ones? Hell yes! Are we going to win it for the people? Hell yes! Get out there!