| Friday, March 18, 2011. Chaos and violence continue, The Diane Rehm Show  self-embarrasses over the airwaves, Iraqi forces in Baghdad beat protesters,  Iraqi forces in Falluja vow they will "hunt down" the protesters there,  Americans with ethics gear up for tomorrow's protests against the wars, KPFK may  be the only Pacifica station that remembers the wars, and much more.   A CBS news reporter was attacked and sexually assaulted while stationed in  Egypt to cover the events there.  We'll call her "Ms. Logan" for right now --  that's not an insult to Logan and you'll understand after an excerpt why we're  doing that.  The February 24th snapshot  noted that Diane Rehm  asked Al Jazeera's Abderrahim Foukara about the fact that "Al Jazeera Arabic did  not cover" the assault on Logan.  He begged off at the time and stated he'd be  happy to address it at a future date, after he was able to pursue the topic and  gather some information. On The Diane Rehm Show  (NPR) this morning, that  day finally arrived during the second hour.  Diane Rehm: Abderrahim, the last time you were on this program, we  asked you about why the sexual assault of Laura Logan in Egypt was not reported  by Al Jazeera  You said you'd give us an answer the next time you came  on.   Abderrahim Foukara: So, I mean, I'd be happy to report my findings,  so to speak. What I've been told is that there was some debate about how the  Laura Logan story should be reported and if it should be reported at all.  For  Al Jazeera English, there were people who wanted to, in one way or another,  report the story. And there were others who thought that the focus should remain  the revolution in Egypt rather than what happened to an individual journalist,  although many other journalists had come under attack in Cairo.  There are  actually people who knew -- there's one particular individual who is the  managing director of Al Jazeerra English, who knew Sarah Logan personally from  his time at CBS.  He knew her personally.  She's a former collegue of his.  And  the decision eventaully was made that because Al Jazeera English broadcasts to  120 different countries, not just the United States, that they would go with the  revolution at the focus not what happens to individual  journalists.     Diane Rehm: Abderrahim Foukara. He's Washington bureau chief for Al  Jazeera Arabic.  When we come back, we'll open the phones, read our e-mail, look  at our Facebook postings and your Tweets.     First, let's note that in the previous conversation -- which was now being  'updated' -- it was agreed by both that Al Jazeera English had reported on  Logan's assault but Al Jazeera Arabic had not.  Second, Al Jazeera -- either  English or Arabic -- was not going to have an exclusive interview with Logan.   All they were going to do was a 30-second headline in a series of headlines.   That would not have changed the focus.  Foukara's a damn liar and Diane's a damn  fool.  Al Jazeera was posting Nir Rosen 's 'reporting' days after his apology  tour.  Don't pretend the two weren't connected.  And don't pretend that a "f**king fool" (ABC News correspondent) who refers  to "Laura" and "Sarah" Logan did a damn bit of research on anything.  L-A-R-A.   Not "Laura."  And that brings us to the idiot that is Diane Rehm (though at CBS  News, she's being called worse than "idiot" right now).  She made a point to  raise the issue.  And she didn't know the woman's name.  Lara Logan's name was  given three times on the third hour of The Diane Rehm Show and neither the host  nor the guest knew Lara's name.     How stupid can you be?  Diane's been all over the media in the last weeks,  talking about how NPR needs tax payer money to continue the high quality  journalism.  Diane, you can't even get Lara Logan's name correctly.  You want to  pretend you're offering high quality journalism?  Really, Diana Reeves?     What a stupid, stupid woman.  Is it any wonder that as the Iraq War's eight  anniversary arrives, Diane-Diane-Dana can't find Iraq for week five?  Week  six?   Yet, as Ava and I noted at Third  Sunday , last week Diane Rehm wanted to grand stand and present guests who  claimed -- in a discussion of the costs of wars -- that the American people had  forgotten the Iraq War.  No, the American Gas Bags have forgotten Iraq.     On March 19, 2003, U.S.-led forces invaded Iraq in an attempt to  force the oil-rich country to accept imperialist rule. "National defense" and  "building democracy" were simply lies to mask the real aim of the war: the  de-nationalization of Iraq's oil. Eight years later, over 1 million Iraqis are  dead, millions are refugees and living conditions have deteriorated to the point  that last year Baghdad was rated the least livable city in the  world.
 Although the invasion began in 2003, Iraq has been the target of  U.S. aggression since 1991, when tens of thousands of civilians died in the  "Gulf War." This was followed by genocidal sanctions that led to 1.5 million  deaths, including half a million children under the age of 5.
 
 This  brutality, however, did not succeed in forcing the Iraqi people to surrender  their sovereignty. Starting in 2002, the Bush administration began a racist,  fear-mongering campaign to drum up support for an outright invasion. The claim  that Iraq was harboring terrorists or developing weapons of mass destruction  were obvious lies, but nevertheless politicians from both the Republican and  Democratic parties overwhelmingly voted to authorize the war.
 
 Although  Baghdad fell just a few weeks after the invasion, popular Iraqi resistance  bogged down occupation forces and challenged the U.S.-backed regime. The  fighting escalated and in 2007 the Bush administration announced the "surge,"  involving increased troop levels and cash payments to buy off the formerly  anti-occupation Awakening Movement. Violence declined but the Iraqi people never  fully accepted foreign rule.
 
 The war continues today, by virtue of both  the physical presence of U.S. forces and the economic and social devastation  caused by nearly a decade of occupation. Although combat operations have  officially been declared "over," 50,000 U.S. troops remain in the country.
 
 While the withdrawal from Iraq is supposed to be completed by the end of  2011, Defense Secretary Robert Gates has strongly hinted that the deadline will  be ignored. Rep. Adam Smith, a high-ranking member of the Armed Services  Committee, said that the number of troops still in Iraq after the end of this  year "could be 20,000." Permanent U.S. bases and compounds are set to  remain.
 
 Occupation brings death and suffering
 
 The Iraq war has led  to a staggering number of deaths. According to the results of a 2008 study by  the UK-based Opinion Research Business, 1,033,000 people have died as a result  of the war. This is consistent with the findings of a study conducted by The  Lancet, one of the oldest and most respected scientific journals in the  world.
 
 But even this figure does not truly convey the magnitude of the  human suffering caused by the invasion and occupation. According to the United  Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, 4.7 million Iraqis, about 15 percent of  the population, have been forced to flee their homes. 2.7 million are internally  displaced and 2 million have left the country entirely; 5 million Iraqi children  are orphans.
 
 Corruption is rampant at all levels of the illegitimate  Iraqi government. A 2009 document issued by the Iraqi Commission on Public  Integrity reported 5,031 complaints of corruption the previous year. However,  out of over 3,000 cases sent to courts, only 97 officials, less than 3 percent,  were convicted. Iraq was ranked the fourth most corrupt country in the world in  2010.
 
 Excluding Baghdad, about 30 percent of the population does not have  access to potable water. In the capital the figure is slightly lower, around 25  percent, but much higher in some rural areas, at roughly 50 percent. Iraq is  only capable of producing slightly more than half of the electricity it needs,  leaving most Iraqis without power on a regular basis.
 
 Outright  unemployment stands at 15 percent, but rises to 43 percent if the underemployed  are included. Young people are especially affected by joblessness and 23 percent  of the population lives on less than $2.20 a day.
 
 Iraq is now poisoned  with the remnants of depleted uranium and chemical weapons. Staggering levels of  birth defects, cancer, and infant mortality has labeled parts of Iraq with a  fallout "worse than Hiroshima" -- or, worse than the worst fallout in history.
 
 Those who fantasized that somehow U.S. intervention would create a  better life for the Iraqi people than under the government of Saddam Hussein are  left looking at the biggest humanitarian crisis in the Middle East and civilian  casualties at genocidal proportions.
 
 
 You could have turned the above into five hours of discussion easily if you  gave a damn about the Iraq War but, clearly, Diane Rehm doesn't.  Tomorrow  A.N.S.W.E.R . and  March Forward!  and others will be  taking part in these action: 
 March 19 is the 8th anniversary of  the invasion and occupation of Iraq. Iraq today remains occupied by 50,000 U.S.  soldiers and tens of thousands of foreign mercenaries.   The war in Afghanistan is raging.  The U.S. is invading and bombing Pakistan. The U.S. is financing endless  atrocities against the people of Palestine, relentlessly threatening Iran and  bringing Korea to the brink of a new war.   While the United States will spend  $1 trillion for war, occupation and weapons in 2011, 30 million people in the  United States remain unemployed or severely underemployed, and cuts in  education, housing and healthcare are imposing a huge toll on the people.   Actions of civil resistance are  spreading.   On Dec. 16, 2010, a veterans-led  civil resistance at the White House played an important role in bringing the  anti-war movement from protest to resistance. Enduring hours of heavy snow, 131  veterans and other anti-war activists lined the White House fence and were  arrested. Some of those arrested will be going to trial, which will be scheduled  soon in Washington, D.C.   Saturday, March 19, 2011, the  anniversary of the invasion of Iraq, will be an international day of action  against the war machine.   Protest and resistance actions  will take place in cities and towns across the United States. Scores of  organizations are coming together. Demonstrations are scheduled for San  Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington, D.C., and more.     Last night The Lawyer's Guild  (KPFK ) devoted significant time to the Iraq War.  (Click  here  for the archives, scroll down and you have 58 days from today to listen  to it before it goes offline.)  Public radio could use a lot more Jim Lafferty  and a lot less Diane Rehm.  Jim's guests included March Forward's Mike Prysner,  an Iraq War veteran.  Excerpt:  Jim Lafferty: Mike Prysner, let's get you into this discussion, my  friend. Both you and Dick Becker [A.N.S.W.E.R.'s Richard Becker] of, as I  mentioned, protests this coming Saturday against the US wars and occupations in  Iraq and Afghanistan -- And, by the way, listeners, I'm proud to say that here  in LA, KPFK is the media sponsor for the March 19th antiwar protest.  The war in  Iraq's now eight years old, the war in Afghanistan ten -- the longest war of our  country. I can't help but wonder, Mike, if  these wars would have gone on for as  long as they have or ever been started in the first place if so many of those  Middle Eastern countries weren't run by governments beholden to the United  States anyway.  Do you have a thought on that?   Mike Prysner:Uhm, well, yeah.  I mean basically the goal of the  United States in the region, we know that the Middle East is home to the vast  majority of oil and natural gas reserves.  And the United States, whether it's  through directly military intervention, whether it's through backing  dictatorships or enacting sanctions to try to overthrow independent countries,  the main goal in the region is controlling the oil and the natural gas  reserves.  And there's a variety of different tactics used to do that but that's  the primary goal of US domination in the region.  That's what its military is  used for.  That's the purpose of the wars.  The purpose of every other  client-state that it backs there.   Jim Lafferty: Sure. Well two-thirds, Mike, two-thirds of the  American people, as you well know, think the war in Afghanistan is not worth  fighting, that we should get out, that's been true for some time now.  So a fair  question for somebody dropping in from another planet might be, so why is it  that in this supposed democracy the government of the people keeps on fighting  the war they don't want?   Mike Prysner: Absolutely.  We never really got to vote on whether  or not we [should] invade Iraq.  In fact, the actual voting was done in the  streets when there was the largest anti-war demonstration in history, when there  was the biggest outpouring of people ever to stop the war from happening.   That's where the real was happening.  But, you know, these decisions of who we  bomb, who we go to war with -- you know, if we're going to bomb Libya, if we're  going to stay in Afghanistan -- these are decisions that we have no say in at  all.  These are decisions that are made behind closed doors with virtually all  the same people who were there during the Bush administration -- are retained  through the Obama administration, all the generals and civilian advisors in the  Pentagon.  So essentially we don't really have a democracy. What we have is a  rule of the rich, a government that serves the interests of those oil giants and  those Wall Street CEOs that stand to gain billions of dollars in profits from  having access.    Jim Lafferty: Mmm-hmm. And yet as we proved in Vietnam -- and I for  one believe we can still prove again -- we can overcome that -- what we might  call, that deficit of democracy or that lack of democracy -- overcome that with  a long enough and a hard enough fight, a militant fight, a fight that finally  builds enough of a massive movement both within the armed services themselves --  and certainly you're going to talk about that in a minute -- within the armed  services themselves there's little stomach for these wars, build a massive, big  enough movement in the streets over and over again so it finally becomes  impossible.  I noticed even today that in this new Congress, [Dennis] Kucinich  was able to pick up another 22 or 26 votes to the 40 or 50 or whatever it was  votes that he got last time for getting out of Afghanistan.  So even there  there's a certain weakening of will, if you will.  Mike, I understand though  that this year the protests focus a great deal on the sky rocketing cost  of  these wars at a time when so many Americans are out of work and social services  are being so drastically cut.  Will that be true of the demonstration here in  LA, Mike Prysner?   Mike Prysner: Absolutely. And, you know, since the economic crisis  in 2008 there's been a really accelerated attack on working people.  You know,  our rights and our benefits and our pay, these are things that were always under  attack but, of course, when there's an economic crisis for the richest people in  the country, that burden has to be shifted to the people who are the most  vulnerable.  So in the past two years or in the past three years, you know,  unions, public sector workers, workers in general have lost their jobs, have  lost their benefits, have lost their pay increases, have lost access to health  care.  Students, we know, we saw massive demonstrations last year, students are  having tuition go up.  Upwards of 40% in some places and this is really  ridiculous.   Jim Lafferty: Yep.   Mike Prysner: And all the while, while things keep getting harder  and harder at home, we're watching upwards of $700 million every single day  being spent on the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan alone.  You know, this  doesn't even count the entire military budget to sustain this network of 800  military bases around the world.  And so, absolutely, we have to make these  connections. These issues are absolutely linked.  They're inextricably linked.  That all of the attacks against working people at home and all of the cuts to  benefits, health care and education are coming because this government needs all  this money to do other things -- to bail out the banks and to fund these  criminal wars abroad.   Jim Lafferty: Yeah. Well in fact -- I know for a fact, I mean it's  no secret -- that the entire deficit, the total deficit of all 50 states  combined is about 127, 129, billion dollars.  That's a tidy sum, to be sure, but  chump change when compared with the one trillion dollars [$1,000,000,000,000.00]  spent on Iraq and Afghanistan.     The LA protest starts at noon at Hollywood & Vine.  And as Jim pointed  out KPFK is the official media sponsor.  They are the only, THE ONLY, Pacifica  radio station to promote the protest all week long on the main page of their  website.  Ron Kovic will be among those participating in the LA action and you  can find more details at the LA A.N.S.W.E.R. website .  KPFA isn't  promoting the Bay Area protest on their website, WBAI is not promoting the NYC  event at their website (and someone needs to explain why the Left Forum thought  this was the weekend to compete with the NYC event -- we'll again note the NYC  event at the end of this snapshot).  A KPFA friend has passed on numerous  complaints that the station is receiving and Ava and I will probably include  those in some way in a piece we write for Third on Sunday.  KPFA's silence is  not accidental and it has not gone unnoticed by the listeners whose money they  are desperate for. Don't worry, there's always time for the Bay Area  Entertainment calendar, just not time for peace news despite the fact that peace  issues were the sole reason Pacifica Radio was created.  KPFA and WBAI are about  as far from their roots these days as a bottled blond.  Tomorrow's the anniversary of the invasion of Iraq. Eight years ago, the  illegal war began and it continues. Despite claims that it has ended (that was  the press coverage that ended, not the war), despite claims that it ends at the  end of the year. While so many are silent, the must-read report today is  Lara Jakes (AP) report : "Despite a security  agreement requiring a full U.S. military withdrawal by the year's end, hundreds  if not thousands of American soldiers will continue to be in Iraq beyond  2012."     Alsumaria TV reports,  "Hundreds of Fallujah residents demonstrated on Friday calling to release  detainees who have not been charged. A police source in Diwaniya province  reported on the other hand that two Katyusha missiles hit a US military base,  western Diwaniya, without revealing the death toll or extent of damages." Aswat al-Iraq reports  that  protesters were forcibly dispersed and a curfew has been imposed. Al  Mada reports  that those rallying in Baghdad called for the  release of detainees ahead of the protests on Facebook. This was how the 2011  protests in Iraq began, with families and friends of the imprisoned speaking out  against the lack of trials, the secret prisons, the inability to meet with their  loved ones. Al  Mada also notes  that the Anbar Salvation Council announced  yesterday that they would be joining the Baghdad protests and ASC's Hamid  al-Hayes explains that they joined with Baghdad because they want to raise  attention of the issues in Anbar Province.  David Ali (Al Mada) reports  "hundreds" turned out in Baghdad's Liberation Square today calling for an end to  corrpution and poor basic services as well as an end to torture, prison reform  and the release of detainees.  Iraqi forces cut off roads leading to the  gathering with barbed wire and Iraqi forces and military vehicles.  The Iraqi  forces ordered the protesters to stop their demonstration and, when that did not  happen, the forces began beating peaceful protesters with batons while firing  bullets into the air and arresting many of them. Those arrested have been taken  to detention centers where they will likely be tortured if the past experiences  repeat.  After being tortured, they'll be forced to sign a statement declaring  that they weren't tortured and then released.  That's how it goes in 'free' and  'liberated' Iraq under the US-installed puppet government.   Dar Addustour reports that in mosques  Friday morning, religious clerics again stated their support for the protesters  and peaceful demonstrations.  Of the Baghdad protest, the paper notes Nouri  al-Maliki's name came up in chants as did the governor of Baghdad's name in  calls for people to resign.  They quote a reporter present in Liberation Square  stating, "The riot police called for the demonstrators in Tahrir Square to leave  and then used batons on them and began arresting them."  The paper notes that in  Falluja, Iraqi forces are attempting to "hunt down" the people who organized  today's Falluja demonstration. In Falluja, Iraqi forces prevented the reporters  from having access to the protest and from speaking to the protesters.  The  assualts on journalism and a free press just never end in Nouri al-Maliki's  Iraq.   Reuters must be related to Diane Rehm -- they file nothing from Iraq  today.  Poor little scared puppies.  But violence took place in Baghdad as  peaceful protesters were attacked, it took place around Iraq.  Aswat al-Iraq notes  a Kirkuk bombing  claimed the lives of 2 children while leaving a third injured.Falah Torch asks, "Why continue  demonstrations? " (Kitabat )  and answers because they force the realities to the surface, the truth about the  corruption, the government that fails to perform for the people, the  displacements, the killings, the denial of dignity, all of it is forced to the  surface when the Iraqi people take to the streets and protest. In addition, it  makes the government uncomfortable and forces resignations. The essay argues  that these resignations will continue for as long as the protests  do. Apparently dispatched by the Iranian government, Moqtada al-Sadr  returned to Iraq weeks ago, attempting to circumvent the protests. He has called  on people not to protest but that tactic didn't work. Another delaying tactic  was to insist that a refendum needed to be held first to detrmine what Iraqis  wanted -- perhaps Moqtada was unable to read the banners the protesters were  carrying? Al Mada reports  that the results of  the refernedum are now known, that 327,000 voted in Basra and that the voters  support the right to protest. Yes, that is shocking. (That was sarcasm.) Alsumaria TV adds  3  million people across Iraq participated (Iraq's population is estimated to be 26  to 28 million) and that "Most participants believe the services in Iraq are  deteriorating and stressed the necessity to protest in order to improve services  in the country." Moqtada declared this week that Iraqis should be  protesting what's taking place in another country (Bahrain) and that plays like  yet another attempt by Moqtada to derail the protests. In addition, yesterday  the  Parliament announced they'd take a ten day vacation -- pinning their sloth and  inability to focus on Bahrain by declaring they were taking a ten day break to  show solidarity with Bahrain. Gee, kind of thought the people of Bahrain were  standing up and fighting, not hiding or going on holiday. Of course,  eight days prior, Parliament made a big to-do in announcing they wouldn't take a  brief break in April but would instead work straight through May 14th. That was  then. And what better time to take a break when Iraqis are decrying the  government's refusal to govern and provide basic services? Or when the country  is still without a Minister of Interior, a Minister of National Security or a  Minister of Defense. The posts were supposed to be filled long ago. And the  whispers were that Nouri would name them yesterday. That didn't happen.  Al Mada prints  the latest round of  whispers that Nouri was missing approval for one name and didn't want to  announce two without the third.  A poem at Kitabat notes: Barack, Barack, Barack It is impossible to die, Iraq It is impossible to die, Iraq Do not back downRobert Olson (Lexington Herald-Leader) observes ,  "While the Obama administration and the Pentagon have stated that U.S. combat  troops will be withdrawn by the end of 2011, most Middle East analysts think up  to 20,000 combat troops and other security personnel will remain. The State  Department and Bureau of Diplomatic Security intend to employ another 10,000 to  12,000 security contractors. This indicates the U.S. plans to have a substantial  presence in Iraq for the foreseeable future, including air bases."   Peace Mom Cindy Sheehan has a must read column --  no excerpt because it's humorous (and pointed) and I don't want to risk stepping  on the laugh line in an excerpt.  (We'll no doubt pick something from it to  excerpt in a Truest at Third on Sunday.) Wait, we will do an excerpt.  It'll  give us a transition.  Remember, Cindy's being sardonic, she's not become a cult  member who is okay with anything done so long as it's done by a Democratic  president:   I also must admit that  I used to spend a lot of time worrying about Pfc Bradley Manning being  incarcerated and tortured at Quantico for allegedly dumping info about US policy  to Wikileaks. Now, I believe that if he did that to my wonderful president, he  must deserve the treatment he is getting. Manning, that traitor, is lucky  President Obama (D) hasn't just decided to drop a Hellfire missile on him from  one of those righteous drones he loves to use! Additionally, if Obama (D) says  that Manning's treatment is "appropriate," I believe him now. Worrying about  Bradley was keeping me up at night and now I wish I had the money back that I  incorrectly donated to his legal defense fund so I can send it to the Committee  to Re-Elect the President.    Background on Bradley  Manning . Monday April  5th , WikiLeaks released US  military video  of a July 12, 2007 assault in Iraq. 12 people were  killed in the assault including two Reuters  journalists Namie Noor-Eldeen and  Saeed Chmagh. Monday June  7th , the US military announced that they had arrested Bradley Manning  and he stood accused of being the leaker of the video. Leila Fadel  (Washington Post) reported  in August that Manning had been  charged -- "two charges under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. The first  encompasses four counts of violating Army regulations by transferring classified  information to his personal computer between November and May and adding  unauthorized software to a classified computer system. The second comprises  eight counts of violating federal laws governing the handling of classified  information." Manning has been convicted in the public square despite the fact  that he's been convicted in no state and has made no public statements --  despite any claims otherwise, he has made no public statements about the charges  against him. Manning has been at Quantico in Virginia, under military lock and  key, for months. Earlier this month, David S. Cloud  (Los Angeles Times) reported   that the military has added 22 additional counts to the charges including one  that could be seen as "aiding the enemy" which could result in the death penalty  if convicted. David E. Coombs  is Bradley's attorney and he provided a walk through on Article 104 .  Like many, Sophie Elmhirst  (New Statesman) emphasized   the possibility of the death penalty. Today the Center for Constitutional  Rights issued the following statement:  Coalition of Human Rights Activists, Musicians, and  Actors Send Letter to President, Sec. Gates Protesting Abuse of PFC Bradley  Manning Treatment of solider "brings back memories of the  abuses committed in Abu-Ghraib" Rallies to be held around the world this  weekend    press@ccjustice.org 
 Washington, DC -- Top human rights organizations, actors,  musicians and activists, including Viggo Mortensen, Roseanne Cash, Amnesty  International and the Center for Constitutional Rights, sent a letter today to  President Obama and Secretary Gates asking for immediate action into the  inhumane treatment of PFC Bradley Manning, the U.S. Army private accused of  disclosing classified materials.   The letter urges officials to "stop the cruel treatment of an  American soldier." Full text of letter can be found here (link) and below.   This weekend, supporters from Washington to Berlin to Montreal and  at Quantico are holding rallies protesting his abuse. Please find a complete  list of locations here.   Top editorial boards around the country including The New York  Times, Los Angeles Times and San Francisco Chronicle have also blasted  Manning's treatment.   Signatories to the letter include: Rosanne Cash; Daniel  Ellsberg; Shepard Fairey; Danny Glover; Jane Hamsher; Tom Morello; Viggo  Morstensen; Jesselyn Radack, Government Accountability Project; Michael Ratner,  Center for Constitutional Rights; Vince Warren, Center for Constitutional  Rights; Angela Wright, Amnesty International.   To read the letter, click the PDF link below. 
   It's encouraging to see the people uprisings abroad and in our own  country.  The Egypt revolt really sparked something, and, on its revolutionary  heels, the workers of Wisconsin came to life and fought Gov. Walker's efforts to  strip them of their rights.  People in other states being subjected to the same  onslaught rose into action, also.  It seems as if we might be on the cusp of  meaningful fightback in the U.S. against the new robber barons who don't give a  damn about you and me but are only interested in swelling their over-bloated  portfolios to even greater obscene proportions.   This is a supremely  opportune time to apply this welcome surge of People  Power to the anti-war movement.  We in the peace  movement who have been conducting our futile struggle for almost 8 years  to prevent, then end the wars in Iraq and  Afghanistan, must grab this moment to  pursue our cause with greater force.  This does not take anything away from the  battle to protect workers rights -- to the contrary, it is a wonderful support.   Bring the troops and the war dollars home, and fix our broken economy.  Remove  all justification that way for cutting benefits and salaries -- then, the greedy  scoundrels would have no rationale for busting the unions. Accordingly, I urge all those within travel distance of New York  City who will not be going to the Washington rally on March 19 to attend  our adjunct protest on the same day, coordinated by the local Chapter 34 of the  Veterans for  Peace and by Grandmothers Against the War.  As we did on Dec. 16 in  support of that day's protest at the White House, we will meet at the Times  Square recruiting station at 5:00 pm.  In December, 131 people were arrested in  D.C. and 11 of us were arrested in New York.  We will again carry out  non-violent civil  disobedience in our continuing efforts to thereby keep the issue alive  and, hopefully, to nudge the sleeping citizenry with the urgent need to end  these immoral and tragic wars. Let's turn out in massive  numbers in Washington and in the Big Apple.  They are doing it in Wisconsin,  Indiana, Ohio, and other locales.  We can, we must, get out on the streets, too,  and finally stop the killing! DATE AND TIME:  5-6 pm, Sat., March 19 PLACE:  Times Square recruiting station, Broadway at  44th St. SPEECHES BY PEACE LEADERS, ENTERTAINMENT AND NON-VIOLENT CIVIL  DISOBEDIENCE  endorsed  by    Big Apple  Coffee Party; Brooklyn For Peace; Catholic  Workers; Chelsea Neighbors United to End the War; Grandmothers Against   the War;  Granny Peace Brigade; Gray  Panthers; Pax Christie of  Metro New  York; Peace Action Bay Ridge Interfaith Peace Coalition; Peace  Action Manhattan; Raging  Grannies; Veterans for Peace Chapter 34 (NYC);   War  Resisters League     |