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  • BAUAW NEWSLETTER
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    Thursday, June 16, 2005
     

    BAUAW NEWSLETTER-THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 2005

    ************************************************************

    COLLEGE NOT COMBAT PETITION CAMPAIGN
    16TH & MISSION STREET
    SATURDAYS, 12:30 P.M.
    TUESDAYS AND THURSDAYS, 5 & 7 P.M.

    ************************************************************

    Venezuela: The Revolution Will Not Be Televised
    plus an Eyewitness from Venezuela: Sonia Zerpa
    Film Showing: The Revolution Will Not Be Televised
    With comments by Sonia Zerpa, a citizen of Caracas,
    Venezuela on the dynamic days of the US backed coup.
    Bethany United Methodist Church
    1268 Sanchez Street (at Clipper ) in San Francisco in
    Noe Valley neighborhood
    7:00 PM, Friday, June 17, 2005
    $5 General, $3 Seniors, Students, Unemployed
    Benefits: San Francisco Hands Off Venezuela
    For more information about the film:
    http://www.chavezthefilm.com/index_ex.htm
    Hands Off Venezuela
    www.handsoffvenezuela.org
    For more information about this call Adam Richmond at
    415-864-3537.

    ************************************************************

    BAUAW MEETING: SATURDAY, 11:30 A.M.
    474 VALENCIA STREET NEAR 16TH STREET
    WE WILL PETITION AFTER OUR MEETING!

    ************************************************************

    SAN FRANCISCO MIME TROUPE
    AND BAY AREA UNITED AGAINST WAR
    PRESENT:
    "DOING GOOD"
    Based loosely on the book,
    "Confessions of an Economic Hit
    Man", by John Perkins
    July 4, DOLORES PARK
    MUSIC: 1:30 P.M.
    SHOW: 2:00 P.M.
    FREE!
    COME HELP GATHER SIGNATURES FOR THE
    COLLEGE NOT COMBAT PETITION!

    ************************************************************

    SAVE THE DATES: AUGUST 4, 5 & 6, 2005 FOR
    PRESENTATION OF HOWARD ZINN'S ONE MAN SHOW,
    "MARX IN SOHO" PERFORMED BY JERRY LEVY
    LOCATION TO BE ANNOUNCED
    TO BENEFIT BAY AREA UNITED AGAINST WAR
    WWW.BAUAW.ORG
    (FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL: 415-824-8730)

    ************************************************************

    Gang Way of Life
    by Tim Tuomey
    PHOTO OF IRAQI CHILDREN NOT SHOW:
    Job 1 is to kill until the killin
    is done, says veteran Tim Tuomey. If you were told to
    kill these youngsters, could you do it? If you did, could you
    live with yourself?
    This link has the full text of a statement only partially given by
    Tim Tuomey, a veteran, to the San Francisco Board of Education at
    their March 17 meeting. He was allowed only a minute. But the board
    members, mesmerized by his quiet voice and the power of his words
    were captivated and let him go on for at least another minute before
    they realized his time was up. They cut him off in mid-sentence.
    http://www.sfbayview.com/032305/gangway032305.shtml

    ************************************************************

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
    BAUAW NEWSLETTER THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 2005
    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    1) Cheney: U.S. Not Aiming To Close Guantanamo
    Other Republicans Say Prison Is a Liability
    By Marc Kaufman
    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Monday, June 13, 2005; A02
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/12/
    AR2005061201265_pf.html

    2) Born on the Fourth of July:
    The Long Journey Home
    By Ron Kovic
    AlterNet Posted on June 13, 2005,
    http://www.alternet.org/story/22181/

    3) Uncle Sam Really Wants You
    By BOB HERBERT
    June 16, 2005
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/16/opinion/
    16herbert.html?n=Top%2fOpinion%2fEditorials%20and%20Op%2dEd%2fOp%2dEd%2fC
    olumnists%2fBob%20Herbert

    4) Formation of September 24
    National Coalition
    for the March on Washington DC
    All Out to Stop the War in Iraq -
    Bring the Troops Home Now!
    End Colonial Occupation
    from Iraq to Haiti to Palestine and Everywhere

    5) The CIA and the Bombing of Cubana Flight 455
    Why Bush Wants to Harbor Posada Carriles
    By TOM CRUMPACKER
    http://www.counterpunch.org/crumpacker06162005.html

    6) The New CIA Revelations About Posada
    Extradition US-Style
    By RICARDO ALARCÓN
    June 14, 2005
    http://www.counterpunch.org/alarcon06142005.html

    7) San Francisco Labor Council Opposes Military
    Recruitment in Schools
    [Resolution adopted unanimously by San Francisco
    Labor Council Delegates' Meeting on June 13, 2005
    (To help gather signatures to get the proposition on
    The ballot, come to 16th and Mission Street Saturdays
    At 12:30 p.m. and Tuesdays and Thursdays at 5 & 7 p.m.)
    SUPPORT for "COLLEGE NOT COMBAT"

    8) Playing Chicken: Ghana vs. the IMF
    by Linus Atarah , Special to CorpWatch
    June 14th, 2005
    http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=12394

    9) CONGO: Anvil Mining Hammered
    Over Military Assistance
    by Peter Gonnella , MineWeb
    June 8th, 2005
    "PERTH -- Just days after AngloGold
    Ashanti fended off allegations
    of paying bribes to militia groups
    in the Democratic Republic of Congo,
    Anvil Mining has come under intense
    scrutiny over its supply of air and
    ground transport to the DRC army
    for an operation that led to the
    alleged slaughter of more than
    100 people last October."
    http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=12361

    10)*** PLEASE FORWARD WIDELY ***
    http://www.BooksNotBars.org/petition
    Books Not Bars has launched an
    ONLINE PETITION to Governor
    Schwarzenegger to CLOSE
    THE NOTORIOUS AND ABUSIVE YOUTH
    PRISONS OF THE CALIFORNIA
    YOUTH AUTHORITY (CYA). Books Not
    Bars is campaigning statewide
    to replace the CYA's warehouse
    youth prisons with HUMANE,
    COMMUNITY-BASED ALTERNATIVES
    AND PROGRAMS designed for
    rehabilitation that help youth in trouble
    to get their lives back on track.
    The petition urges Governor
    Schwarzenegger to close these notorious
    warehouse prisons. You can sign
    the petition from anywhere in the
    nation, even if you're not in
    California! People throughout the country
    must act together in signing
    the petition and making a statement!
    Click the link for full information
    about why this is so urgent and important.
    http://www.BooksNotBars.org/petition
    To contact Books Not Bars about this petition,
    e-mail petition@ellabakercenter.org

    11) California Reins In Clinics Using Marijuana
    for Medical Purposes
    By DEAN E. MURPHY
    June 15, 2005
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/15/national/
    15marijuana.html?hp&ex=1118894400&en=0e8927fd68ebe4ab&ei=5094&partner=
    homepage

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    1) Cheney: U.S. Not Aiming To Close Guantanamo
    Other Republicans Say Prison Is a Liability
    By Marc Kaufman
    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Monday, June 13, 2005; A02
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/12/
    AR2005061201265_pf.html

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    2) Born on the Fourth of July:
    The Long Journey Home
    By Ron Kovic
    AlterNet Posted on June 13, 2005,
    http://www.alternet.org/story/22181/

    Editor's Note: Ron Kovic served two tours of duty
    during the Vietnam War. He was paralyzed from the chest
    down in combat in 1968 and has been in a wheelchair
    ever since. Along with Oliver Stone, Kovic was the
    co-screenwriter of the 1989 Academy Award-winning film
    based on his book, Born on the Fourth of July (Akashic
    Books). The following is the introduction to the new
    edition of the book.

    It was exactly forty years ago this past September that
    I left my house in Massapequa, New York to join the
    United States Marine Corps and begin an extraordinary
    journey that was to lead me into a disastrous war which
    would change my life, and others of my generation,
    profoundly and forever. There are times in the lives of
    both individuals and nations when we cross certain
    thresholds where there is no going back, no return to
    the innocence we once knew; the change is utter and
    irreconcilable. We often sense these moments. I know I
    did that day.

    I can still remember leaving my house that morning,
    saying goodbye to my mother, my father driving me down
    to the Long Island Railroad station with only a few
    words being said between us--Dad was always that
    way--and then that long and contemplative ride into the
    city, being sworn in at Whitehall Street, holding my
    right hand up proudly with all the other young men,
    taking the oath of enlistment, and swearing our
    allegiance to the Constitution of the United States.

    The fall of 1964, September 2, a lifetime ago. That
    last bright and beautiful morning when everything was
    to change forever, that last moment of lighthearted
    innocence and youth, of Massapequa and the backyard
    before the shock, the chaos, and the deluge. I had just
    turned eighteen that summer, and there are some old
    black-and-white photographs of me from those days. It's
    amazing that I still have them, considering I have
    misplaced them many times over the years, thinking them
    lost forever, only to later find them in some
    unexpected place, like a deeply disturbing dream that I
    have been trying to repress.

    I remember seeing those photos on several occasions
    after I came home from Vietnam and each time having
    terrible nightmares that shook me badly. I couldn't
    look at them, could not face that young man I had been
    before the war and my injury. I would always promise
    myself to never look at them again. My trauma was still
    very deep, and that beautiful boy, that body, had been
    destroyed, defiled, and savaged. My wounding in Vietnam
    both physically and emotionally haunted me, pursued me,
    and threatened to overwhelm me.

    I wrote Born on the Fourth of July in the fall of 1974
    in one month, three weeks, and two days, on a $42
    manual typewriter I had bought at Sears & Roebuck in
    Santa Monica, California. It was like an explosion, a
    dam bursting, everything flowed beautifully, just kept
    pouring out, almost effortlessly, passionately,
    desperately. I worked with an intensity and fury as if
    it was my last will and testament, and in many ways I
    felt it was. I continued to suffer from nightmares,
    constant anxiety attacks, severe heart palpitations,
    and a powerful, almost obsessive feeling that I would
    not live past my thirtieth birthday. I was living each
    day as if it were my last, as if everything had been
    compressed together by the war, and now every second
    counted.

    I wrote all night long, seven days a week, single
    space, no paragraphs, front and back of the pages,
    pounding the keys so hard the tips of my fingers would
    hurt. I couldn't stop writing, and I remember feeling
    more alive than I had ever felt. Convinced that I was
    destined to die young, I struggled to leave something
    of meaning behind, to rise above the darkness and
    despair.

    I wanted people to understand. I wanted to share with
    them as nakedly and openly and intimately as possible
    what I had gone through, what I had endured. I wanted
    them to know what it really meant to be in a war--to be
    shot and wounded, to be fighting for my life on the
    intensive care ward--not the myth we had grown up
    believing. I wanted people to know about the hospitals
    and the enema room, about why I had become opposed to
    the war, why I had grown more and more committed to
    peace and nonviolence.

    I had been beaten by the police and arrested twelve
    times for protesting the war, and I had spent many
    nights in jail in my wheelchair. I had been called a
    Communist and a traitor, simply for trying to tell the
    truth about what had happened in that war, but I
    refused to be intimidated. I loved the night and I
    would write for hours as if no time had passed at all.
    I was exhausted and my back ached, but none of that
    seemed to matter. I felt wonderful inside, tired but
    completely consumed by my writing.

    I would drink a couple cups of coffee and then with a
    new surge of energy work for another hour or so as the
    bright lights of the morning began to fill the room.
    I'd neatly stack all the pages next to the typewriter
    after holding them proudly in my hands, then go to my
    bedroom and transfer out of my wheelchair onto a
    mattress on the floor. I remember thinking to myself
    one morning that if I died in my sleep, someone would
    come into the apartment and find those pages next to
    the typewriter and know that I was not a victim, but
    someone who had been trying to move beyond his terrible
    tragedy and the terrible injustice of that war.

    With the exception of that initial burst of writing and
    rare moment of stability in Santa Monica in the fall of
    1974, I continued to be extremely restless back then,
    frantically moving from one place to the next, living
    on the edge, racing in cabs to the airport, flying from
    city to city on my monthly compensation check, suddenly
    showing up at friends' houses in the middle of the
    night and sleeping on their couches--always carrying
    the manuscript with me and always frightened,
    desperately needing to escape the demons that were
    closing in on me.

    Over the next year and a half I wrote several
    additional chapters of Born on the Fourth of July. Some
    of the stories were ones I had told my mother when I
    first came home from the hospital and would lay on our
    couch in the living room when I couldn't sleep, which
    was often back then. Night after night I would repeat
    the story of how I was wounded that day in Vietnam,
    describing every single detail. My dear mother would
    sit patiently in her chair, listening to her son who
    had come home paralyzed from the war, trying her best
    to understand.

    I attempted to write at my friends Skip and Ginny's
    place on Mohegan Lake, in their laundry room, but
    couldn't seem to get started. I wrote most of the
    chapter about my childhood at a little hotel not far
    from Sproul Plaza in Berkeley, and the ambush chapter,
    the most painful but one of the best, at Connie's
    apartment in L.A. I wrote the Memorial Day chapter one
    afternoon in San Francisco at the Sam Wong Hotel on
    Broadway, just down the street from Enricos Cafe in
    North Beach. I can still remember the open window of my
    hotel room and the noise of passing cars and trucks in
    the street below, the fumes, the honking horns, but
    that became a very beautiful chapter and I still enjoy
    reading it to this day.

    I dictated the very first page of the first chapter to
    my friend Roger at the Chateau Marmont Hotel in
    Hollywood, and the remainder of the chapter up in
    Mendocino where he and Mary were living at the time. I
    had driven all the way up in a used car I had just
    bought in L.A. and later abandoned in their driveway.
    It was deep in the woods, quiet and peaceful, so very
    different from the war and the hospitals and all that I
    had been through. The air was fresh and there was a
    pond behind their cottage where I dictated to Roger,
    and I remember feeling exhausted as he held me in his
    arms and I began to cry in the midst of all that
    stillness. It was a painful but beautiful birth.

    I am extremely grateful to Akashic Books and its
    publisher, Johnny Temple, for bringing out this new
    edition of Born on the Fourth of July at such a crucial
    moment in our nation's history. For the past two years
    we have been involved in a tragic and senseless war in
    Iraq. As of this writing, over 1,500 Americans have
    died and more than 11,000 have been wounded, while tens
    of thousands of innocent Iraqi civilians, many of them
    women and children, have been killed.

    I have watched in horror the mirror image of another
    Vietnam unfolding. So many similarities, so many things
    said that remind me of that war thirty years ago which
    left me paralyzed for the rest of my life. Refusing to
    learn from our experiences in Vietnam, our government
    continues to pursue a policy of deception, distortion,
    manipulation, and denial, doing everything it can to
    hide from the American people their true intentions and
    agenda in Iraq. The flag-draped caskets of our dead
    begin their long and sorrowful journeys home hidden
    from public view, while the Iraqi casualties are not
    even considered worth counting--some estimate as many
    as 100,000 have been killed so far.

    The paraplegics, amputees, burn victims, the blinded
    and maimed, shocked and stunned, brain damaged and
    psychologically stressed, now fill our veterans
    hospitals. Most of them were not even born when I came
    home wounded to the Bronx V.A. in 1968. The same
    lifesaving medical-evacuation procedures that kept me
    alive in Vietnam are bringing home a whole new
    generation of severely maimed from Iraq.

    Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), which afflicted
    so many of us after Vietnam, is just now beginning to
    appear among soldiers recently returned from the
    current war. For some, the agony and suffering, the
    sleepless nights, anxiety attacks, and awful bouts of
    insomnia, loneliness, alienation, anger, and rage, will
    last for decades, if not their whole lives. They will
    be trapped in a permanent nightmare of that war, of
    killing another man, a child, watching a friend die ...
    fighting against an enemy that can never be seen, while
    at any moment someone--a child, a woman, an old man,
    anyone--might kill you. These traumas return home with
    us and we carry them, sometimes hidden, for agonizing
    decades. They deeply impact our daily lives, and the
    lives of those closest to us.

    To kill another human being, to take another life out
    of this world with one pull of a trigger, is something
    that never leaves you. It is as if a part of you dies
    with them. If you choose to keep on living, there may
    be a healing, and even hope and happiness again--but
    that scar and memory and sorrow will be with you
    forever.

    Some of these veterans are showing up at homeless
    shelters around our country, while others have begun to
    courageously speak out against the senselessness and
    insanity of this war and the leaders who sent them
    there. During the 2004 Democratic Convention, returning
    soldiers formed a group called Iraq Veterans Against
    the War, just as we marched in Miami in August of 1972
    as Vietnam Veterans Against the War. Still others have
    refused deployment to Iraq, gone to Canada, and begun
    resisting this immoral and illegal war.

    For months leading up to the invasion of Iraq, citizens
    here in the United States and around the world marched
    and demonstrated in growing opposition to our
    government's reckless plan to launch an attack. I
    proudly participated in protests in Los Angeles, San
    Francisco, and Washington, D.C., doing countless
    interviews and speaking out wherever people would
    listen to me. Many prominent world leaders, including
    Nelson Mandela and Pope John Paul II, began to raise
    their voices against the terrible and ill-fated foreign
    policy. This extraordinary opposition culminated on
    February, 15, 2003, when more than 30 million citizens
    in over 100 nations participated in the most massive
    demonstration on behalf of peace in the history of the
    world. Never before had so many human beings come
    together before a war had even begun to say no to the
    insanity and madness.

    Many of us promised ourselves long ago that we would
    never allow what happened to us in Vietnam to happen
    again. We had an obligation, a responsibility as
    citizens, as Americans, as human beings, to raise our
    voices in protest. We could never forget the hospitals,
    the intensive care wards, the wounded all around us
    fighting for their lives, those long and painful years
    after we came home, those lonely nights. There were
    lives to save on both sides, young men and women who
    would be disfigured and maimed, mothers and fathers who
    would lose their sons and daughters, wives and loved
    ones who would suffer for decades to come if we did not
    do everything we could to stop the forward momentum of
    this madness. We sensed it very early and very quickly.
    We saw the same destructive patterns reasserting
    themselves all over again as our leaders spoke of "bad
    guys" and "evil-doers," "imminent threats" and
    "mushroom clouds," attempting to frighten and
    intimidate the American people into supporting their
    agenda.

    The Bush administration seems to have learned some very
    different lessons than we did from Vietnam. Where we
    learned of the deep immorality and obscenity of that
    war, they learned to be even more brutal, more violent
    and ruthless, i.e., "shock and awe." Sadly, the war on
    terror has become a war of terror. Where we learned to
    be more open and honest, to be more truthful, to
    expose, to express, to shatter the myths of the past,
    they seem to have learned the exact opposite--to hide,
    to censor, to fabricate, to mislead and deceive--to
    perpetuate those myths.

    Instead of being intimidated or frightened, many of us
    became more outraged and more determined than ever to
    stop these ignorant, arrogant men and women who never
    saw the things we saw, never had to grieve over the
    loss of their bodies or the bodies of their sons and
    daughters, never had to watch as so many friends and
    fellow veterans were destroyed by alcoholism and drugs,
    homelessness, imprisonment, neglect and rejection,
    torture, abandonment and betrayal, in the painful
    aftermath of the war. These leaders have never
    experienced the tears, the dread and rage, the feeling
    that there is no God, no country, nothing but the
    wound, the horrifying memories, the shock, the guilt,
    the shame, the terrible injustice that took the lives
    of more than 58,000 Americans and over two million
    Vietnamese.

    We had to act. We had to speak.

    I am no longer the 28-year-old man, six years returned
    from the war in Vietnam, who sat behind that typewriter
    in Santa Monica in the fall of 1974. I am nearly 60
    now. My hair and beard are almost completely white. The
    nightmares and anxiety attacks have all but
    disappeared, but I still do not sleep well at night. I
    toss and turn in increasing physical pain. But I remain
    very positive and optimistic. I am still determined to
    rise above all of this. I know my pain and the horrors
    of my past will always be with me, but perhaps not with
    the same force and fury of those early years after the
    war.

    I have learned to forgive my enemies and forgive
    myself. It has been very difficult to heal from the war
    while living in America, and I have often dreamed of
    moving to neutral ground, another country. Yet I have
    somehow made a certain peace, even in a nation that so
    often still seems to believe in war and the use of
    violence as a solution to its problems. There has been
    a reckoning, a renewal. The scar will always be there,
    a living reminder of that war, but it has also become
    something beautiful now, something of faith and hope
    and love.

    I have been given an opportunity to move through that
    dark night of the soul to a new shore, to gain an
    understanding, a knowledge, an entirely different
    vision. I now believe I have suffered for a reason, and
    in many ways I have found that reason in my commitment
    to peace and nonviolence. My life has been a blessing
    in disguise, even with the pain and great difficulty
    that my physical disability continues to bring. It is a
    blessing to be able to speak on behalf of peace, to be
    able to reach such a great number of people.

    I saw firsthand what our government's terrible policy
    had wrought. I endured; I survived and understood. The
    one gift I was given in that war was an awakening. I
    became a messenger, a living symbol, an example, a man
    who learned that love and forgiveness are more powerful
    than hatred, who has learned to embrace all men and
    women as my brothers and sisters. No one will ever
    again be my enemy, no matter how hard they try to
    frighten and intimidate me. No government will ever
    teach me to hate another human being. I have been given
    the task of lighting a lantern, ringing a bell,
    shouting from the highest rooftops, warning the
    American people and citizens everywhere of the deep
    immorality and utter wrongness of this approach to
    solving our problems, pleading for an alternative to
    this chaos and madness, this insanity and brutality. We
    must change course.

    I truly feel that this beautiful world has given me
    back so much more than it has taken from me. So many
    others that I knew are gone, and gone way too young. I
    am grateful to be alive after all these years and all
    that I've been through. I am thankful for every day.
    Life is so precious.

    Ron Kovic, Redondo Beach, California March 2005

    (c) 2005 Independent Media Institute. All rights
    reserved. View this story online at:


    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    3) Uncle Sam Really Wants You
    By BOB HERBERT
    June 16, 2005
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/16/opinion/
    16herbert.html?n=Top%2fOpinion%2fEditorials%20and%20Op%2dEd%2fOp%2dEd%2fC
    olumnists%2fBob%20Herbert

    With the situation in Iraq deteriorating and the willingness
    of Americans to serve in the armed forces declining,
    a little-known Army publication called the "School
    Recruiting Program Handbook" is becoming increasingly
    important, and controversial.

    The handbook is the recruiter's bible, the essential
    guide for those who have to go into the nation's high
    schools and round up warm bodies to fill the
    embarrassingly skimpy ranks of the Army's basic
    training units.

    The handbook declares forthrightly, "The goal is
    school ownership that can only lead to a greater
    number of Army enlistments."

    What I was not able to find in the handbook was
    anything remotely like the startlingly frank comments
    of a sergeant at Fort Benning, Ga., who was quoted
    in the May 30 issue of The Army Times. He was
    addressing troops in the seventh week of basic
    training, and the paper reported the scene as follows:

    " 'Does anybody know what posthumous means?'
    Staff Sgt. Andre Allen asked the 150 infantrymen-
    in-training, members of F Company, 1st Battalion,
    19th Infantry Regiment.

    "A few hands went up, but he answered his own
    question.

    " 'It means after death. Some of you are going
    to get medals that way,' he said matter-of-factly,
    underscoring the possibility that some of them
    would be sent to combat and not return."

    That's the honest message recruits get once
    they're in. The approach recommended by the
    recruiting handbook is somewhat different. It's
    much softer. Recruiters trying to sign up high
    school students are urged to schmooze, schmooze,
    schmooze.

    "The football team usually starts practicing in August,"
    the handbook says. "Contact the coach and volunteer to
    assist in leading calisthenics or calling cadence
    during team runs."

    "Homecoming normally happens in October," the handbook
    says. "Coordinate with the homecoming committee to get
    involved with the parade."

    Recruiters are urged to deliver doughnuts and coffee
    to the faculty once a month, and to eat lunch in the
    school cafeteria several times a month. And the book
    recommends that they assiduously cultivate the
    students that other students admire: "Some influential
    students such as the student president or the captain
    of the football team may not enlist; however, they
    can and will provide you with referrals who will enlist."

    It's not known how aware parents are that recruiters
    are inside public high schools aggressively trying
    to lure their children into wartime service. But not
    all schools get the same attention. Those that get
    the royal recruitment treatment tend to be the ones
    with students whose families are less affluent
    than most.

    Schools with kids from wealthier families (and
    a high percentage of collegebound students) are not
    viewed as good prospects by military recruiters.
    It's as if those schools had posted signs at the
    entrances saying, "Don't bother." The kids in those
    schools are not the kids who fight America's wars.

    Now, with the death toll in Iraq continuing to mount,
    it's getting harder to sign up even the less affluent
    kids. So the recruitment effort in the target
    schools has intensified. Recruiters, already driven
    in some cases to the brink of nervous exhaustion,
    are following the handbook guidelines more
    rigorously than ever.

    "If you wait until they're seniors, it's probably
    too late," the book says. It also says, "Don't
    forget the administrative staff. ... Have something
    to give them (pen, calendar, cup, donuts, etc.) and
    always remember secretary's week, with a card or
    flowers."

    The sense of desperation is palpable: "Get involved
    with local Boy Scout troops. Scoutmasters are
    typically happy to get any assistance you can offer.
    Many scouts are [high school] students and potential
    enlistees or student influencers."

    One of the many problems here is that adolescents
    should not be hounded by military recruiters under
    any circumstances, and they shouldn't be pursued
    at all without the full knowledge and consent of
    parents or guardians.

    Let the Army be honest and upfront in its recruitment.
    War is not child's play, and warriors shouldn't be
    assembled through the use of seductive sales pitches
    to youngsters too immature to make an informed
    decision on matters that might well result in
    their having to kill others, or being killed
    themselves.

    E-mail: bobherb@nytimes.com

    Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    4) Formation of September 24
    National Coalition
    for the March on Washington DC

    All Out to Stop the War in Iraq -
    Bring the Troops Home Now!

    End Colonial Occupation
    from Iraq to Haiti to Palestine and Everywhere

    On September 24, we will show the deepening opposition that
    is leading to the political isolation of the warmakers. As
    during the Vietnam War era, the people of the United States
    from all communities are actively entering the political
    process through the mobilizing efforts of a genuinely broad
    and mass antiwar movement.

    Since the A.N.S.W.E.R Coalition issued the call for a mass
    mobilization in Washington DC on September 24, a large number
    of national organizations have endorsed and committed energy
    and resources with the aim of building the largest
    possible united demonstration.

    The September 24 National Coalition for the March on
    Washington, therefore, represents a coming together of
    national organizations and communities who are committed
    to building opposition to the Bush Administration's war
    and occupation of Iraq. These organizations oppose war
    and colonial-style occupation, not only as it pertains
    to Iraq, but in Palestine, Haiti and everywhere. Support
    for self-determination means standing with the people
    in their effort to achieve sovereign control over their
    land, labor and resources. Recognizing the
    inextricability of the struggle of the Palestinian
    people from the anti-war movement, the September
    24 National Coalition supports the Palestinian people
    and the inviolability of their Right to Return to the
    homes from which they were evicted.

    The leadership of the September 24 National Coalition
    includes the A.N.S.W.E.R Coalition, National Council
    of Arab-Americans (NCA), Muslim American Society (MAS)
    Freedom Foundation, Haiti Support Network, Alliance
    for a Just and Lasting Peace in the Philippines, and
    the National Lawyers Guild.

    On March 20, 2004, many of the same organizations
    worked tirelessly to build a united front that brought
    more than 100,000 people into the streets of New York
    City under the banner "Bring the Troops Home Now!
    End Colonial Occupation from Iraq to Palestine to
    Haiti and Everywhere!" The decision to form the
    September 24 National Coalition in support of the
    call to action initiated by the A.N.S.W.E.R Coalition
    is a renewed sign of a reciprocal commitment to work
    together and build a mass movement opposing war for
    Empire. We believe that rather than excluding communities,
    building valid unity in the United States requires
    embracing the rights and contributions of all,
    primarily the very recipients of the ravages of war.

    The people of the United States are witnessing a
    vicious attack against working class communities by
    the Bush Administration and the Military-Industrial
    Complex. While the government has allocated more than
    $300 billion to make war against the people of Iraq,
    it cries 'poverty' when it comes to funding education,
    healthcare, housing, jobs and job training, and other
    programs and services that meet the needs of working
    people. Bush claims that there is a lack of funds
    to maintain Social Security while the National
    Treasury is plundered to finance the endless imperial
    war. Instead of offering young people a decent
    education and decent jobs with decent wages, the
    government has deployed an army of military recruiters
    to snare young people into the armed forces. Bush
    and the corporate and banking elites view young
    people in the United States as nothing more than
    cannon fodder in the war for Empire.

    September 24 is a day when people from all over
    the country will be joining together to speak with
    one voice against war and racism. Marching together
    we will show the growing power of the antiwar
    movement. Join us in spreading the word in the
    weeks and months ahead.

    Get Involved in the September 24 Mass March
    * Read the Call to Action
    * Demands of the demonstration
    * Press Coverage
    * Endorse
    * View Endorsers
    * List Transportation
    * Spread the word - Downloadable flyers
    * Donate
    * More information

    A.N.S.W.E.R. Coalition
    Act Now to Stop War & End Racism
    http://www.ANSWERcoalition.org
    info@internationalanswer.org
    National Office in Washington DC: 202-544-3389
    New York City: 212-533-0417
    Los Angeles: 323-464-1636
    San Francisco: 415-821-6545
    For media inquiries, call 202-544-3389.

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    5) The CIA and the Bombing of Cubana Flight 455
    Why Bush Wants to Harbor Posada Carriles
    By TOM CRUMPACKER
    http://www.counterpunch.org/crumpacker06162005.html

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    6) The New CIA Revelations About Posada
    Extradition US-Style
    By RICARDO ALARCÓN
    June 14, 2005
    http://www.counterpunch.org/alarcon06142005.html

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    7) San Francisco Labor Council Opposes Military
    Recruitment in Schools

    [Resolution adopted unanimously by San Francisco
    Labor Council Delegates' Meeting on June 13, 2005

    (To help gather signatures to get the proposition on
    The ballot, come to 16th and Mission Street Saturdays
    At 12:30 p.m. and Tuesdays and Thursdays at 5 & 7 p.m.)

    SUPPORT for "COLLEGE NOT COMBAT"

    Whereas the SF Labor Council strongly supported
    Proposition N, the policy statement on behalf of San
    Francisco residents in firm opposition to the Iraq
    War; and

    Whereas, economic circumstances and active
    government policy make the young people of San
    Francisco and this nation potential cannon fodder
    for the war machine and the misadventures in Iraq
    and elsewhere; and

    Whereas the San Francisco Labor Council supports
    real economic opportunity for young people and thus
    supports opposition to this predatory economic
    draft;

    Therefore be it resolved that the San Francisco
    Labor Council give early endorsement to the
    initiative "College Not Combat"; and

    Be it finally resolved that the SFLC will aid in the
    circulation of the College Not Combat initiative in
    its attempts to qualify for ballot status.

    ********************

    [Text of Petition -- to be placed on the Nov. 2005
    ballot in San Francisco - 9,000 more signatures
    needed!]

    College Not Combat Declaration of Policy

    Whereas, over 1500 American soldiers have died and
    tens of thousands have been injured physically and
    psychologically in Iraq; and,

    Whereas, a study by the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg
    School of Public Health, Columbia University School
    of Nursing and Al-Mustansiriya University in Baghdad
    estimates that 100,000 Iraqis have died as a result
    of the U.S. invasion and occupation; and,

    Whereas, the U.S. government is forcing soldiers to
    serve in Iraq for longer than their contracts
    require with such devices as "stop-loss" orders;
    and,

    Whereas, the "No Child Left Behind Act" forces all
    high schools that receive federal money to give
    personal records of all children to the military for
    the purposes of recruiting; and,

    Whereas, the federal Solomon Amendment specifically
    orders colleges and universities that receive
    federal money to violate their own legal policies of
    non-discrimination against gays and lesbians by
    allowing recruiters for the military, which bars
    gays and lesbians from serving openly, on campus;
    and,

    Whereas, a de facto "economic draft" forces tens of
    thousands of low and middle-income students to join
    the military in order to get money to go to college
    or get job or technical training; and,

    Whereas, the Pentagon budget, over $400 billion per
    year, plus $300 billion more over the last three
    years for the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan,
    is draining desperately needed resources for
    schools, health care and jobs; and,

    Whereas, the people of San Francisco voted by 63% to
    pass Proposition N in November of 2004 calling on
    the Federal government to "bring the troops safely
    home now;" and,

    Whereas, the Federal government shows no sign of
    ending the occupation of Iraq or bringing the troops
    safely home and, in fact, is threatening military
    action against other nations; now, therefore, be it

    Resolved, that the people of San Francisco oppose
    U.S. military recruiters using public school,
    college and university facilities to recruit young
    people into the armed forces. Furthermore, San
    Francisco should oppose the military's "economic
    draft" by investigating means by which to fund and
    grant scholarships for college and job training to
    low-income students so they are not economically
    compelled to join the military.

    * To visit your group on the web, go to:
    * http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MOOS-BAY/
    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    8) Playing Chicken: Ghana vs. the IMF
    by Linus Atarah , Special to CorpWatch
    June 14th, 2005
    http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=12394

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    9) CONGO: Anvil Mining Hammered Over Military Assistance
    by Peter Gonnella , MineWeb
    June 8th, 2005
    "PERTH -- Just days after AngloGold
    Ashanti fended off allegations
    of paying bribes to militia groups
    in the Democratic Republic of Congo,
    Anvil Mining has come under intense
    scrutiny over its supply of air and
    ground transport to the DRC army
    for an operation that led to the
    alleged slaughter of more than
    100 people last October."
    http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=12361

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    10)*** PLEASE FORWARD WIDELY ***
    http://www.BooksNotBars.org/petition
    Books Not Bars has launched an
    ONLINE PETITION to Governor
    Schwarzenegger to CLOSE THE
    NOTORIOUS AND ABUSIVE YOUTH
    PRISONS OF THE CALIFORNIA
    YOUTH AUTHORITY (CYA). Books Not
    Bars is campaigning statewide
    to replace the CYA's warehouse
    youth prisons with HUMANE,
    COMMUNITY-BASED ALTERNATIVES
    AND PROGRAMS designed for
    rehabilitation that help youth in trouble
    to get their lives back on track.
    The petition urges Governor
    Schwarzenegger to close these notorious
    warehouse prisons. You can sign
    the petition from anywhere in the
    nation, even if you're not in
    California! People throughout the country
    must act together in signing the
    petition and making a statement!
    Click the link for full information
    about why this is so urgent and important.
    http://www.BooksNotBars.org/petition
    To contact Books Not Bars about this petition,
    e-mail petition@ellabakercenter.org

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    11) California Reins In Clinics Using Marijuana
    for Medical Purposes
    By DEAN E. MURPHY
    June 15, 2005
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/15/national/
    15marijuana.html?hp&ex=1118894400&en=0e8927fd68ebe4ab&ei=5094&partner=
    homepage

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