Wednesday, August 25, 2004

Swift Boat Vet and NM Vets to Call on Bush to Denounce Smear Campaign Today

On Wednesday, August 25, Wade Sanders, who commanded swift boat PCF-98 in Vietnam from 1968-1969, will lead a group of NM veterans in demanding that George W. Bush denounce the Republican-backed smear campaign against John Kerry, and urge his supporters to stop running the ads during his visit to New Mexico. Sanders patrolled the delta in patrols alongside John Kerry near the Cambodian border. General Mel Montaño (retired) of New Mexico, State Sen. (and veteran) Richard Romero, and Jim Buhaug, New Mexico Coordinator of Veterans for Kerry will lead the group of veterans.

WHEN: Wednesday, August 25, 2004; 11:00 AM MT.

WHERE: Bernalillo County Metropolitan Courthouse, 401 Lomas NW, Albuquerque

WHY: Across New Mexico veterans are outraged of the lies being broadcast by George W. Bush’s supporters. Their claims have been discredited, yet their attacks continue.

Kerry supporters and others concerned about the truth are urged to attend this event. If you have any questions, please feel free to call the NM Victory 2004 Coordinated Campaign (505) 256-2570.

About Wade Sanders: Former Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Navy, distinguished combat veteran, and retired Navy Captain, is much published on matters of national security in major newspapers and the Naval Institute Proceedings. He is also a news commentator for NBC News. His imaginative and innovative initiatives were key elements in the transformation of the Reserve Components of the Armed Services from Cold War mobilization assets to relevant providers of contemporary support. He presently is senior partner of a law firm dedicated to matters of corporate governance, ethics, and specializing in employee owned companies, as well as providing government relations assistance to major corporations.

August 25, 2004 at 09:02 AM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0)

Tuesday, August 24, 2004

Bush's Superficial Wounds in the Vietnam Era

bushguardIf you don't check out Juan Cole's website, "Informed Comment," regularly, you're missing an excellent source of news and opinion. He's a history professor at the University of Michigan and an expert on the Middle East with lots of contacts there. His very popular website reveals alot of day-to-day details about what's really happening in Iraq. In this piece, he comments on the Swiftboat Vets situation and compares Kerry's experiences during the Viet Nam war with those of young Georgie:

The debate that a handful of Texas multi-millionnaires close to the Bush family have cleverly manufactured over John Kerry's war record is absurd in every way. The charges that they have put some vets up to making against Kerry are false and can be demonstrated by the historical record to be false. Most of those making the charges have even flip-flopped, contradicting themselves. Or they weren't eyewitnesses and are just lying.
But to address the substance of this Big Lie is to risk falling into its logic. The true absurdity of the entire situation is easily appreciated when we consider that George W. Bush never showed any bravery at all at any point in his life. He has never lived in a war zone. If some of John Kerry's wounds were superficial, Bush received no wounds. (And, a piece of shrapnel in the forearm that caused only a minor wound would have killed had it hit an eye and gone into the brain; the shrapnel being in your body demonstrates you were in mortal danger and didn't absent yourself from it. That is the logic of the medal). Kerry saved a man's life while under fire. Bush did no such thing.
What was Bush doing with his youth? He was drinking. He was drinking like a fish, every night, into the wee hours. For decades. He gave no service to anyone, risked nothing, and did not even slack off efficiently.

Click here to read the rest of this story, including an NPR interview with people who worked at the campaign in Alabama where Georgie worked while allegedly on National Guard duty down there: Juan Cole: Informed Comment

August 24, 2004 at 01:36 PM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (6)

Monday, August 23, 2004

Battleground State Bonanza!

Here are the results of the latest Zogby Battleground States Poll of 16 states conducted August 16-21. In New Mexico, Kerry is 5.6 points ahead of Bush. Bush is up in only two of the states --- West Virgina and Ohio. Of course most of the races are still tight, with many within the margin of error. But still, this is very good news! Note that this polling was done while the swiftboat liars were pumping their venomous lies.

Check it out: Zogby Battleground Poll

Thanks to Kathy Flake for passing this along.

August 23, 2004 at 07:42 PM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (0)

Saturday, August 21, 2004

Listen to your Granny

Grannie_D__018

I was reminded recently of this piece by Doris "Granny D" Haddock when I learned she was running for a Senate seat in New Hampshire. Joe Trippi, Dean's campaign manager, has agreed to manage her campaign pro bono. She celebrated her 94th birthday this past January.

You may remember Granny. As her website explains, she began her walk across the U.S. to demonstrate her concern for the issue of campaign reform on Jan. 1, 1999, at the age of 89. Starting from Pasadena, CA, she walked 10 miles per day for 14 months, arriving in Washington, D.C. on Feb. 29, 2000. She was hospitalized once, in Arizona, with dehydration and pneumonia. She walked 3,200 miles.

In October of 2003, she launched a voter registration effort directed at America's working women. She did so with a speech at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government and then traveled over 22,000 miles. When she returned home in June, 2004, she was just in time to run for the U.S. Senate when the presumed Democratic nominee dropped out of the race days before the filing deadline, leaving the incumbent unopposed.

Click here to visit her campaign website: Granny D Site

And if you get frustrated, tired, angry, depressed or hopeless about your volunteer activities or our prospects for November 2nd, I hope you'll read this to feel revived and inspired once more:

harryforgranny

Soil of Good Democracy
by Doris "Granny D" Haddock

May 16, 2004 | I am on a long journey to take a good, long last look at my beautiful country and to encourage as many people as I can to take up the ballot and to brighten up the colors in our fast fading democracy. It has been a long journey for me. While I enjoy making so many new friends along the way, I would rather be back in my home in New Hampshire and walking for leisure instead of in desperate search for a few more good Americans to do the right and necessary thing.

My life has been long and grand, and I am about done with it, but I am determined to not say goodbye to all of this until I can go to my rest in the soil of a good democracy.

I know that many of you are working hard to speak the truth and speak for justice, and to bring America back to some more sensible path. But I am asking you now to do something more. This advice comes from what I have seen along the 20,000 miles I have traveled since I left home in October.

The good news I bring you from a thousand places is that Americans who have resisted voting in the past do want to vote this year. They are motivated, and even in places where they are afraid their votes will not be fairly counted, they are determined to vote anyway. And here is some more good news: you do not have to believe the polls that say the election will be close. It will not be close. The pollsters do not reach the many millions of people who do not have regular phones. Many of the people I met in housing projects, in workshops, in music clubs, have only cell phones or no phones at all to answer pollster questions. They all have strong opinions on the election and they all are preparing to vote. That is the story everywhere we have gone, from the Overtown and Little Haiti neighborhoods of Miami to the Great Lakes.

On my way here I stopped in Battle Creek to visit the grave of Sojourner Truth. There is also a statue of her with her words: "Lord I have done my duty and I have told the truth and kept nothing back."

Now, friends, it is time for us to do our duty--to tell the truth and hold nothing back. For it is not enough that people want to vote; they must have good information.

You all get so many emails and read so many good columns and articles that are sent to you--Krugman, Dowd, Cronkite, Ivins, Hightower, Palast, Friedman and the few other heroes left in our otherwise silent news media. You read them and send them to other members of our little choir.

That is not enough; You must print them out and give them to your neighbors and family members. You must run them off by the hundreds and give them out at bus and train stations until they ask you to leave. Then you must come back with more. The masses of our neighbors are not getting the truth and we cannot expect them to vote wisely unless we wise them up ourselves. No one can do this for us. No presidential campaign can do more than spread around a few slogans and accusations. The news media will not do it for us, as they are no longer in the truth business. There is only you and me. We need to do a massive voter education project, starting right now. I will have many of these little fliers on my website soon for you to print off, or you can make your own from all the material that comes your way.

Remember that many of us lefties are authority-averse and we like to make our own political decisions. Many others, however-including many of our neighbors and friends-are authority-dependent and, before changing their opinions, need to hear the truth coming from the pens and mouths of people they trust. So when Walter Cronkite writes a good piece, put his picture on it and take it around to everyone who remembers him from his days as the most trusted television newsman in America.

There are a few more things we must do.

We must meet with our awakened friends weekly--and I suggest that Tuesday would be a good evening--to go out to the malls and the streets and the fast-food restaurants to register young voters. It is a fun evening, and you will be making a bigger difference than you can imagine. Also take some of your issue fliers and you will do double duty. Don't get permission, don't set up a table, don't take a clip board if it gets you kicked out. Just go up to young workers and say you are distributing voter registration forms to the workers in the area, and ask them if they need to register to vote for president. And check out the situation regarding people with criminal convictions: many young people think they cannot vote, but they can. Many of the young people in Cabrini Green were amazed to know that their police records would not prevent them from voting. We have tremendous work to do.

There is another suggestion that I would like to share with you.

Invite your neighbors to an election night party, and do it soon. Call it a landslide party if you want to cheer up your Democrat neighbors and confuse your Republican friends. Start building toward that evening. Have them sign-up to bring food and drinks. Start sending them issue papers. Make sure everyone is registered. Make sure everyone has a ride to the polls, or has an absentee form. Help someone in a lower income neighborhood or housing project organize a landslide party, too. Have your neighbors organize some food and maybe some school and art supplies for the children in that other neighborhood. Consider having some events soon to get people involved and thinking ahead to the election. This is what I mean when I sometimes say that we must put the party back in party politics. It has become so deadly. It is literally deadly, as we see in the news how people are dying all over the world for our lack of creative leadership and justice. It must come first from our hearts, then into our neighborhoods and outward from there.

No political party or candidate or government can do it for us. It is our democracy, but we must live it if we are to have it.

In spreading around the reprints of good newspaper articles, simply assume that voters want good information about the issues, and give it to them without feeling that you are being partisan.

I am as non-partisan as I can manage in a time when the truth itself is partisan. I am for any candidate or party who will uphold the Bill of Rights and the Constitution, who would never use lies to lead us into war, who will use our common resources for the benefit of our children and all of our people, and who will keep our homeland secure by protecting its mountains, streams, lakes, forests, and air, and who will make the United States of America a proper and respected symbol and an advocate for justice, freedom and peace in the world. How could anyone say that my specifications are anything but American, and that they should describe any candidate offered by any serious and reputable political party? If my specifications are partisan today, shame on any who made them so.

We must not think we are being partisan when we speak and share the truth with our fellow citizens, and when we help them register to vote. We will do so where we please as citizens, and let no corporation tell us that their aisles or sidewalks are not free speech zones where our Constitution somehow does not apply. The Articles of our Constitution trump their articles of incorporation. Let us take back our rights as citizens to create public space where we choose. The corporations cannot invite us to come as customers but not as citizens, for we are citizens first.

And choose we must, and choose to act now--this week, next week. We Cannot live in peace and justice, love and prosperity if we sit reading email and shaking our heads in dismay. We must rise to our great positions as the men and women of the community, who organize, who see things, who speak the truth, who lay shame on those who would ruin our communities and our lives. It is time we stopped waiting for government to bring love and justice into our communities and we began doing the work that needs to be done. The sooner we do this, the sooner the elections will go our way, because organizing is organizing, and it has a progressive result.

Millions of people like you and I are now connecting with all the organizations that are working toward November. This is the evolution of a new kind of politics--a human-scaled politics--and it must extend long past the election and change the way we live. It must be the rise of human beings against institutions that have become useless or oppressive. It must be an awakening to the beauty and freedom of life itself. So we shall reinvent the parties. We shall reinvent the news media with our flyering and speaking and emails, we reinvent the economy-making it local, healthy and sustainable. And in doing so, the corrupted press, the big box stores, and the old and unrepresentative political systems can and will roll under the soil as our new shoots emerge.

What you are doing here with Instant Runoff Voting is a part of that necessary revolution. I encourage you to make it work here, and then spread it to other communities from here.

I wish it were in place for this election!

In that regard, let me urge those who think Mr. Nader is a better candidate than Mr. Kerry not let their high opinions of their own political correctness cause the deaths of thousands of people in the world over the next four years and the loss of our civil liberties, which would be the real result of such selfish narcissism. According to Bruce Ackerman's wonderful editorial in the New York Times last week, Mr. Nader can avoid risking this outcome if he will name the same Electoral College electors as Mr. Kerry. Votes will register for Mr. Nader, but they will apply to Mr. Kerry if Mr. Nader has insufficient votes to win. It is a way Mr. Nader can, in this way, create a sort of Instant Runoff Voting system by a clever use of the system.

If he will not do this, I cannot vote for him, in good conscience. For I do not want to face the survivor of some family whose members were tortured and killed by our forces a few years from now and say, yes, I could have stopped it, but I was too selfish: I wanted the satisfaction of voting for the better candidate, and that satisfaction was more important to me than the lives of your children and your spouse. I cannot do that and call myself a progressive or even an American. I cannot become the kind of ideologue who lets other people die for my precious beliefs.

Yes, we have to be practical if we are to improve the real world. We All have work to do to get to November and to move into the years ahead. Let us make it joyful and selfless work.

On the night of November 2nd we will go to bed, and the next day the World will have gone one of two very different ways. I will be home in New Hampshire. And if it goes right, I will feel like resting. And I haven't felt like I could rest for a long while.

I hope my journey has resulted in some ideas that will be useful to you. I know you are dedicated to this better world we see ahead. It is not beyond our grasp.

Finally, let me say what many of you sense: the Iraq War is over as of this week, as the fiction of the invasion's moral premise is now so completely disrobed. There is nothing for the US to do now but come home, and that will begin soon. Further, we are seeing the self-destruction of the big-lie Bush war machine. The soul-searching that will now begin in America will be an important time for all of us--a teachable moment if we progressives are up to it.

If we are to push forward a vision for a better society and a real democracy, we have good soil to 'til now. But it is going to be work-joyful but hard. Expect a landslide but do not stop a second in assuring it. And think past the election to the work of organizing a fair and beautiful world. Nothing happens without organizing and work, and we are fortunate that our work is so satisfying and joyful.

Thank you.

Thinking Peace

August 21, 2004 at 06:14 PM in Candidates & Races, Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (3)

Friday, August 20, 2004

Swift Boat Liars Exposed

NotaSIngleMomentofTruth_lgDaily Kos, one of the most popular political blogs out there, summarizes and provides links to today's long and detailed NY Times article that strongly debunks the claims of the "Swift Boat Veterans for Truth" and provides a clear picture of the Bush- and Rove-related people funding the anti-Kerry group. Kos also has links to a handy graphic that charts the connections of the funders of Swift Boats for Gutter Politics. Go to: Daily Kos Entry

Here's some of what the NY Times has to say:

A series of interviews and a review of documents show a web of connections to the Bush family, high-profile Texas political figures and President Bush's chief political aide, Karl Rove. Records show that the group received the bulk of its initial financing from two men with ties to the president and his family - one a longtime political associate of Mr. Rove's, the other a trustee of the foundation for Mr. Bush's father's presidential library. A Texas publicist who once helped prepare Mr. Bush's father for his debate when he was running for vice president provided them with strategic advice. And the group's television commercial was produced by the same team that made the devastating ad mocking Michael S. Dukakis in an oversized tank helmet when he and Mr. Bush's father faced off in the 1988 presidential election.

If anyone saw Hardball last night, Chris Matthews eviscerated Larry Thurman, one of the main liars in the plot to undermine Kerry's reputation, as well as a right-wing "journalist" who was intimating that Kerry shot himself in Viet Nam. The Hardball transcript can be found here: Hardball Transcript

If you haven't heard about the Freeper connections of Jerome Corsi, the co-author of the Swift Boat "truth" book, here's a rundown of a few of his bigoted posts dug up by Media Matters for America: Media Matters. If you rummage around this site there are lots of other facts debunking stories as covered by our megacorporate media. I check in often.

I'm pleased that Kerry finally has started to hit back against the BushCo smear tactics. His speech to the International Association of Firefighters yesterday was hard-hitting. Check it out: Kerry Speech


August 20, 2004 at 10:14 AM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (2)

Tuesday, August 17, 2004

To Have a Seat, You Must Support War?

hiroshima

From the BBC, found on .

TO HAVE A SEAT, YOU MUST SUPPORT WAR?

The Japanese Constitution approved by America as an occupying power after WWII renounces war to resolve conflicts.

Japan wants a permanent seat on the UN Security Council.

Colin Powell tells the Japanese that if they want a permanent seat on the UN Security Council, Japan will have to review their constitutional prohibition against armed conflict. The Secretary:

Mr Powell told Japan's Kyodo news agency that the US supported Tokyo's quest for a permanent seat at the Security Council. But he added that: "If Japan is going to play a full role on the world stage and become a full active participating member of the Security Council, and have the kind of obligations that it would pick up as a member of the Security Council, Article Nine would have to be examined in that light." --BBC

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

Of course, the national American media have let this story just blow by without a whisper. I did a Google search for "Security Council" + "Article Nine" + Japan. I found stories by the BBC, the Daily Times (Pakistani), Yahoo! news, Reuters (the UK branch), Channel New Asia, Jang Group (Pakistan), Al Jazeera, Kuwait Times, Reuters (the US edition... but clicking on it brought me to a blank page), and United Nations News. I looked at the first 50 stories, and not a single one of them (they are arranged in order of how popular the link is) was from a national American news outlet. Unless you want to count Yahoo, which got its story from Reuters International.

John McAndrew
Democracy for Santa Fe
Santa Fe, NM

P.S. If you'd like to complain about the lack of coverage of this story by US media, contact them. CapWiz makes it easy. Here's a link to their media page:

CapWiz Media

And you can read the Japanese Constitution with its eloquent renunciation of war at:

Japanese Constitution

August 17, 2004 at 05:41 PM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (3)