Saturday, June 03, 2006

Empty Boots and Baby Shoes

Empty Boots and Baby Shoes


By Stacy Bannerman
t r u t h o u t | Perspective

Saturday 03 June 2006
In the wake of the rising tide of allegations claiming that US forces executed a sort of vigilante justice by staging murderous attacks on Iraqi civilians, General Chiarelli, second in command in Iraq, stated his belief that it's important for troops to "take time to reflect on the values that separate us from our enemies." The Marines who were reportedly involved in the Haditha rampage were on their third deployment. Some soldiers are on their sixth tour of duty. Many have spent more time in Iraq than they have at home in the past few years, scooping up body parts of friends and "friendlies." When, precisely, does the General think our soldiers will have a little down time to reflect?

More importantly, why haven't our elected leaders taken the time to reflect, discuss, and decide on a clear exit strategy that would prevent more empty boots and baby shoes from being added to the growing pile of casualties in Iraq every day?

It has been more than a month since leaders of the US House of Representatives declared that they would convene a "full and lengthy" debate on the war. Theoretically, that debate would address questions pertaining to the legality of a confrontation that was initiated on false information and in violation of virtually all modern conventions and standards of warfare.

Presumably, that conversation would explore the morality of a conflict that has become a civil war in which 90% of the casualties are unarmed civilians, and the short- and long-term impacts of multiple deployments on troops already stretched to the breaking point.

One might suppose the discussion would address what the "noble cause" is, and whether or not it is within the purview of the United States Armed Forces to build a democracy (which is not what Congress or the American public were told they were paying for). One might also surmise that a dialogue would take place about whether that might be something better left to a regional, if not international, coalition of statesmen and diplomats. It may be difficult to appeal to the United Nations for assistance, but, as the wife of a National Guardsman who has already served a year in Iraq, I assure you, it would be no trickier than having your loved one sent off to fight in a war based on lies.

Which begs the question: If you support the troops, can you name one? If not, why aren't you signing up to become one? With an increasing number of Americans opposed to the war in Iraq, why aren't we doing anything about it? Why aren't our Representatives? It smacks of hypocrisy to ask our soldiers to do what we, from the comfort of our couches or the halls of Congress, won't. Namely, to align our morals with our actions.

If Congress waits until November to act, it is likely that 350 or more US soldiers will die, along with countless Iraqi children, women, and men. Since March 2003, on average, over two service men and women and nearly 20 Iraqi citizens have been killed in each day of the war.

Perhaps when what's left of the troops on the ground in Iraq are done with their values training, they can all come home and teach us. Until then, I suspect that the poem I wrote while participating in the Bring Them Home Now Tour (September, 2005) as a member of Military Families Speak Out, will continue to be relevant:

EMPTY BOOTS AND BABY SHOES

I am so tired of standing at memorials for soldiers; tired of weeping for the victims of this war.

I am tired of watching parents plant crosses for their dead children, day after day after godforsaken day.

I am tired of placing flowers in empty boots and baby shoes; of the way my body shakes at the first readings of the names that were added to the casualty count this week.

What's wearing me out is bearing witness to this war. This foreverness of death, and the unrelenting loss.

It drains my spirit to meet the widow's eyes; to watch the fathers falter, falling to their knees. Christ, that makes me weak.

To stand at the lip of the mouth of a grave that will never get enough

catching mothers tears, a nation driving by the dead, is exhausting to my soul.

I am deathly tired today.
--------

Stacy Bannerman is a contributor to Foreign Policy In Focus and is on the Advisory Board of Military Families Speak Out. She is the author of When the War Came Home: The Inside Story of Reservists and the Families They Leave Behind, (Continuum Publishing, March 2006). Her husband deployed to Iraq with the Army National Guard 81st Brigade in March 2004, and returned home on March 11, 2005.

Ava - At 'Peace Takes Courage' Has 3 New Flash Video's Up

5/29/2006
Memorial Day is here yet again
(Ava notation - I created this animation last year so the numbers are off.)


5/29/2006
New Animation
We Will Never Forget



5/30/2006
New Animation
YearlyKos Promo

Friday, June 02, 2006

Peaceful Tomorrows - Sharing a NewsLetter



September 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows Quarterly Newsletter - Volume 10 Spring 2006
Dear Friends,
As the fifth anniversary of September 11th draws closer, Peaceful Tomorrows continues to call attention to the human cost of terrorism, violence and war. Learn more about our major organizing event to establish a cooperative global network for peace, planned for the week leading up to September 11th, 2006. Also, read about our participation in the powerful Eyes Wide Open display on the National Mall in Washington, DC in May. Peaceful Tomorrows members continue to travel the world spreading our message that the cycle of violence can and must be broken--read reports from recent travels to Italy and Japan.
Thank you--
David and Nabil
The staff of Peaceful Tomorrows
Establishing a Cooperative Global Network for Peace
Peaceful Tomorrows will bring together at least 30 members of organizations comprised of those who have lost family members in armed conflicts from at least 20 countries. The event would build upon initial planning carried out with eighteen international advisors who met in Bologna, Italy in September 2005. Our organizing event will begin on September 5, 2006 with a three-day private gathering at the Garrison Insitute, north of New York City. It will continue with public sessions in New York City on September 8-11, including a celebratory event at Cathedral of St. John the Divine, and panels at other locations around the city. Read More
Silence of the Dead, Voices of the Living
In March, 2005 Eyes Wide Open (EWO), a project of the American Friends Service Committee, was travelling to San Francisco. The exhibit consisted of 1,525 boots tagged with the name, age, rank and home state of every soldier killed in the Iraq war. At the same time, the toll incurred by Iraqi civilians was represented by a relatively small number of unmarked shoes. Peaceful Tomorrows decided to join with the AFSC in increasing the size of the civilian shoe display in an effort to more accurately represent the true human cost of the war for the people of Iraq. Read More
Please support Peaceful Tomorrows!
Peaceful Tomorrows is a project of the Tides Center, a 501c3 non-profit organization. We receive no money from 9/11 disbursements or charities, and depend entirely on individual and foundation grants to continue our work. Please support Peaceful Tomorrows with a one time or recurring tax-deductible contribution.
If you'd like, you can buy a copy of our new DVD, Beyond Retribution, taped in Oklahoma City on the 10th anniversary of the Murrah Federal Building bombing. You can view streaming video and order here. Thank you for your support, and please spread the word about our organization!
--September 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows

In This Issue:


1. Peaceful Tomorrows in Washington, DC: Silence of the Dead, Voices of the Living
Gallery 1
Gallery 2
Gallery 3
Gallery 4
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


2. PT member John Titus goes to Italy to Meet with Peacemakers and Students
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


3. PT member Talat Hamdani goes to Japan to Address the New Japan's Women's Association (Shinfujin)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


4. Join Peaceful Tomorrows in Signing the Declaration of Peace

Thursday, June 01, 2006

The Man From Haditha

Higher Up Officers Must Be Discharged/Booted Out and Charged, the Least being Neglect!! The 1% Bad leave the 99% In Much More Danger and Retaliation Ensues!! That 1%, if it gets Bigger, Leaves Security Null and Void!!!!!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Man From Haditha
Robert Dreyfuss
June 01, 2006
Robert Dreyfuss is the author of Devil's Game: How the United States Helped Unleash Fundamentalist Islam (Henry Holt/Metropolitan Books, 2005). Dreyfuss is a freelance writer based in Alexandria, Va., who specializes in politics and national security issues. He is a contributing editor at The Nation, a contributing writer at Mother Jones, a senior correspondent for The American Prospect, and a frequent contributor to Rolling Stone. He can be reached through his website: Robert Dreyfuss.

The murderous rampage by U.S. Marines in Haditha last November is likely to be remembered a century from now as the emblem of America’s criminal war in Iraq. Its repercussions are only just beginning to be felt at home, as the stunning reality of an hours-long outburst of cold-blooded killing by U.S. troops starts to penetrate the American psyche. But in Iraq, the anger is already building. The mayor of Haditha, a village astride the Euphrates River, calls what happened “a day of human catastrophe” for his city, accusing the United States of “war crimes.”
The hand-picked Iraqi prime minister, Nuri al-Maliki, plans an inquiry. “We will ask for answers not only about Haditha but about any operation ... in which killing happened by mistake and we will hold those who did it responsible,” said Maliki. He suggested that U.S. actions not only in Haditha but in other cases would be investigated by the Iraqi authorities—including the notorious attacks last March when U.S. and Kurdish forces raided a Shiite mosque in Baghdad. Indeed, the nightmare for the Pentagon is “two, three, many Hadithas.”
And, as I found out, unexpectedly, Haditha has a special meaning for the man assigned to represent Iraq in Washington.
Yesterday, at a forum on Iraq arranged by the U.S. Institute for Peace, I asked Samir al-Sumaidaie, Iraq’s ambassador to the United States, about Haditha. In answering, he stepped out of his objective, diplomatic cadence—because Haditha, for Sumaidaie, is personal. “What happened in Haditha is a huge tragedy, for Haditha and for the United States,” he began. “I am from Haditha. I know the people, I know the neighborhood. One of my cousins in Haditha was killed by the Marines in Haditha not long before this.” Quiet and well-spoken, Sunni but not sectarian, Sumaidaie seemed ready to hold the Marines accountable not only for the November, 2005, atrocity but for the killing of his cousin and for other deaths in the town.
“The people of Haditha are squeezed between two huge threats,” he said. On the one hand, they face religious-extremist terrorists, “and on the other hand, there are the Marines, fighting them, shooting, going around killing people.” When he was asked if the revelations about the events of November would make him reevaluate what happened to his cousin, he answered in a steely voice. “I already know what happened to my cousin,” he said. “It might help others to reevaluate what happened.”
Though tens of thousands, at least, lie dead in Iraq as the result of the 2003 U.S. invasion, though dozens more are butchered every day in Iraq’s sectarian civil war and by U.S. forces determined to enforce President George W. Bush’s will in that war-torn country, sometimes it takes the flesh and blood of real people to help make sense of the grim statistics. With Haditha, it is grim indeed.
Lance Cpl. Roel Ryan Briones, the first of the Marines who took part in the massacre to speak out, told the Los Angeles Times: “They ranged from little babies to adult males and females. I'll never be able to get that out of my head. I can still smell the blood.” Added his mother: “He called me many times about carrying this little girl in his hands and her brains splattering on his boots. He'd say, ‘Mom, I can't clean my boots. I can't clean my boots. I see her.’” From The Washington Post account of the atrocity, there is this:
The Marines moved to the house next door. … Inside were 43-year-old Khafif, 41-year-old Aeda Yasin Ahmed, an 8-year-old son, five young daughters and a 1-year-old girl staying with the family, according to death certificates and neighbors. The Marines shot them at close range and hurled grenades into the kitchen and bathroom, survivors and neighbors said later. Khafif's pleas could be heard across the neighborhood. Four of the girls died screaming.
As unspeakable as the Marines crimes in Haditha are, it’s safe to say that Haditha is not an isolated case. Indeed, were it not for Time, we might never have learned about the massacre. Yesterday I went back and read the coverage of Haditha in the U.S. media last November, and it is chillingly barren, a mere recitation of the U.S. military’s lying official version. From The New York Times, of November 21, 2005:
The Marine Corps said Sunday that 15 Iraqi civilians and a Marine were killed Saturday when a roadside bomb exploded in Haditha, 140 miles northwest of Baghdad. The bombing on Saturday in Haditha, on the Euphrates in the Sunni-dominated province of Anbar, was aimed at a convoy of American Marines and Iraqi Army soldiers, said Capt. Jeffrey S. Pool, a Marine spokesman. After the explosion, gunmen opened fire on the convoy. At least eight insurgents were killed in the firefight, the captain said.
That’s it.
After Time broke the Haditha story a few weeks ago, I went back in my blog, The Dreyfuss Report, to take a look at what I’d written about another reported massacre that drifted in and out of the news not long ago. Michael Georgy of Reuters, visiting the scene of another alleged atrocity in the town of Ishaqi, north of Baghdad, interviewed several witnesses and filed this report about the aftermath of another U.S. attack:
"We heard a barrage of shooting for 20 minutes and then we heard bombs," said Thiya Hussein, who said his cousin was killed. "After the Americans left we went to the house and found 11 people lying in blood together in one room. Five of them were children. They were bound in plastic handcuffs and shot."
"The baby, Husam, who was six-months-old, was shot dead. A 75-year-old woman was shot in the head," he told Reuters. Another neighbor, Abbas Abid, said: "The house was damaged and the family was shot and lying in one room.
And from MSNBC, yesterday:
Two Iraqi women were shot to death north of Baghdad after coalition forces fired on a vehicle that failed to stop at an observation post, the U.S. military said Wednesday. Iraqi police and relatives said one of the women was about to give birth.
So far, there have been a series of disturbing reports that the Haditha massacre has failed to anger Iraqis. Appearing on Amy Goodman’s Democracy Now on Tuesday, the bureau chief for Knight-Ridder in Baghdad, Nancy Youssef was asked about the reaction in Iraq, and she replied:
Surprisingly quiet. I think there is a feeling here that there are a lot of people being killed every day in this country, whether it be by U.S. forces or by militias or by gangs. And it hasn't sort of gained a sort of energy or anger that you're hearing in the U.S. On the contrary, it's been quite quiet. The Parliament met the day before yesterday and did not even mention this case.
Other reports, in The Washington Post and elsewhere, suggest that Iraqis are too stunned by the continuing violence, occupation and civil war to react to the specific story from Haditha. But I disagree. My hunch is that Iraqis will respond with bitter anger over the story of Haditha, and that it will kick the last remaining props out from under those Iraqi politicians who continue, however half-heartedly, to support the continued presence of the American occupation. I also find it remarkable that Iraq’s ambassador in Washington would speak so personally about a story that, as it unfolds, could devastate whatever remains of the moral case for the United States staying in Iraq.
I asked Ambassador Sumaidaie about how he learned of the atrocity, and whether the Iraqi government knew about it before the report in Time. “Yes, we did. I knew it myself soon afterward,” he said. Sumaidaie learned of the events in Haditha from friends and family, by telephone, but he refused to believe it. “It sounded incredible,” he added. “But frankly, without concrete evidence, I did not raise it.” Haditha, he said, is controlled by the Iraqi resistance, and in November there were effectively no Iraqi police, no army and no government in the town. “But,” he said, “I found it hard to believe that a group of highly trained Marines would go into peoples’ homes and shoot women and children.”
He believes it now. And his comments provide striking testimony about the utter invisibility of the government of Iraq in large parts of the country, where power is exercised by U.S. forces and by the paramilitary, sectarian armies and militias.
Permit, if you will, a devilish comparison. Saddam Hussein, at present, is on trial for his role in the alleged murder of dozens of residents of a small Iraqi city. In the wake of an attempted assassination of Saddam by members of the (now ruling) Dawa party of Iraq, Iraqi forces under Saddam’s command reportedly murdered men and young boys. In Haditha, in the wake of a roadside bomb that killed a Marine, other Marines—under the command of George W. Bush—reportedly murdered dozens, including children and babies. Perhaps, when the Saddam trial is over, Ramsey Clark will have a new client?

U.S. Still Solidifying Dictators,

One Who Is Harbering An Extremely Dangerous Arms Dealer, In Our War{?} Against Terrorism{?}!!!!!
Nothing Changes While Rethoric Is Lie Based!!
You may want to listen to this Report, click link to visit NPR site!!!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Khan Nuclear Network Survives Despite U.S. Efforts



by Mary Louise Kelly
Morning Edition, June 1, 2006 · A.Q. Khan, a Pakistani engineer who bought and sold nuclear knowledge and supplies in the international black market, appears to be safe from prosecution. Pakistan isn't pursuing charges against him, and cases in Germany and Switzerland are languishing. Meanwhile, experts say Khan's network is still up and running.

Wednesday, May 31, 2006

KNOW WAR

ATTENTION EVERYONE WITH STRONG FEELINGS ABOUT THIS WAR,


On Saturday, June 3rd photographer Zach Gold will be making a single
photograph of the exact number of Americans that have died in Iraq. 'Know War'
aims to depict the human cost of the Iraq War by transforming the American
death toll into a visible reality. The photograph will be created so that
it can stay up to date with the casualty number until the war is over.
Please join us and 2,500 other concerned citizens, veterans, students,
activists, and military families on June 3, to remember those we have lost.


'Know War' will be shooting the Iraq War Memorial on Saturday June 3, from 2pm
- 6pm. The location is Mystery Mesa, Santa Clarita, California. Please
bring lunch, an ample supply of water, and sunscreen. Once everyone is
gathered on location, it is anticipated the shoot will take less than three
hours. Please wear solid colors in neutral, earthy tones, and try to avoid
wearing white, bright or wildly patterned clothes. This request is in an
effort to homogenize the color and tone of the subjects to be photographed.
Also, please wear comfortable shoes.


Those interested in participating in the project can sign up on our website,
Know War If you wish to represent your
organization and publicly distribute information while you're there, we will
have a tent set up for representatives. Please contact Ann Malinowsky,
917.716.3416, to be added to this list.


Lastly, we kindly request that you FORWARD this to anyone you think might be
interested in helping us accomplish this historic project. Please send any
questions to info@knowwar.com


Thank You,
Know War

From the Site

An Iraq War Memorial
2465 American Casualties, 5-31-2006


Know War

Sign Up to participate
Imagine a photograph of more than 2,400 Americans strewn across a vast, desiccated expanse of desert. Know War is an ambitious non-profit project that aims to depict the human cost of the Iraq War by transforming the casualty number into a visible reality. This undertaking by renowned photographer, Zach Gold, will create an image that makes death come to life.
Know War intends to raise continued public awareness by enabling people to visually understand the American death toll. There has been overwhelmingly positive response so far, including veterans associations across the country, necessary vendors to execute a project of this size, as well as many individual volunteers. Dialogue has also begun with high-level advertising executives to aid in creating an ongoing public campaign. But Know War needs more help. We seek subjects for the photograph, volunteers to assist in organizing, food vendors, and everyone who stands for an end to this war.
The shoot date for this project is June 3, 2006 from 2pm - 6pm, the location is Mystery Mesa, Santa Clarita, California. Both a 30-second Public Service Announcement and a documentary will be developed in tandem with the photo shoot.
For more information, please contact info@knowwar.com.

Press Release & Directions. to download, right click and 'Save target as'

Know War Poster. to download, right click and 'Save target as'

To make a donation to Know War, Please send checks to:

Know War
74 South 1st St. Ground Floor
Brooklyn, NY 11211

718 384 6986 phone
646.452.3390 fax
Know War
info@knowwar.com

Tuesday, May 30, 2006

The Haditha Massacre

Keep in mind, we have a Despot Ruler, on Trial in his Country, which We Occupy, that is being tried for Killing Innocent People! He didn't do the Killing, those connected to his Rule and Country Did, On His Orders!!!!!!


Marjorie Cohn |
The Haditha Massacre


"Regardless of how those who may ultimately be charged with murder fare in court, a more significant question is whether George W. Bush, Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld will be charged with war crimes on a theory of command responsibility," writes Marjorie Cohn.


FOCUS |
Dahr Jamail: Countless My Lai Massacres in Iraq


Dahr Jamail argues that "just like Abu Ghraib, while the media spotlight shines squarely on the Haditha massacre, countless atrocities continue daily, conveniently out of the awareness of the general public. Torture did not stop simply because the media finally decided, albeit in horribly belated fashion, to cover the story, and the daily slaughter of Iraqi civilians by US forces and US-backed Iraqi "security" forces had not stopped either.


The Cycle of Death

U.S. soldiers are dying in Iraq,
so that U.S. oil companies can
gouge U.S. citizens at the pump.
This eventually puts more poor
people on the streets. This poverty
causes more people to join the military.
U.S. soldiers are dying in Iraq...


Mike Hastie
Vietnam Veteran
May 27, 2006

Monday, May 29, 2006

On This 'Memorial Day'

Garett Reppenhagen | One Soldier's Story on Memorial Day
Garett Reppenhagen: "Memorial Day is a painful reminder of our failed mission in Iraq. My experiences there changed my view of this war. Before I was deployed, I - like many other Americans - thought that military intervention was the only way to protect America's security. But after I spent some time in Iraq, I came to question our reason for being there. I came to realize that this war is not making America a safer place."


Bloody Scenes Haunt a Marine
Lance Cpl. Roel Ryan Briones says he is tormented by two memories of November 19, 2005, in Haditha, Iraq. The first is of the body of his best friend and fellow Marine blown apart just after dawn by a roadside bomb. The second is of the lifeless form of a small Iraqi girl, one of two dozen unarmed civilians allegedly killed by members of his Camp Pendleton unit - Kilo Company, 3rd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division.


For Soldier, Pacifist, a Marriage of War and Peace
For the warrior, the badge is an insignia that he saw action and risked his life for his country. The anti-warrior feels just as proud - and patriotic - when she borrows his cap and wears his badge on her long march for peace.


Iraq War Widows Seek Strength Amid Loss
Those who lost husbands early have been living their grief, raising children without fathers and building futures with memories of hard men who turned soft with children. For those recently widowed, grief chokes out the hope.


On the Homefront: War Takes Its Toll on Overburdened Military Families
Two new books about the Iraq War have given a 21st-century recasting to the war wife. Stacy Bannerman's "When the War Came Home" and Kristin Henderson's "While They're at War" provide vivid descriptions and heart-wrenching details of the way war reaches into every aspect of the lives of soldiers' spouses.


Last Week's Military Deaths
The Defense Department last week identified American military personnel killed in Afghanistan and Iraq or who died at a US hospital of their injuries.

Baghdad ER

This documentary will be Re-Aired tonight on HBO at 10pm.

I caught the following interview, on NPR's Fresh Air, at lunch today.

Fresh Air from WHYY
May 29, 2006

HBO
'Baghdad ER:' The Wounded and the Healers
The new documentary Baghdad ER goes inside the 86th Combat Support Hospital in Iraq, the Army's premier medical facility in Iraq. Shot over two months in 2005, the film tells the stories of the hospital's doctors and wounded soldiers.

Wether you already saw it last Sunday, or haven't seen it yet, you may want to visit the Fresh Air site link, above, and listen to the Interview.


Information Clearing House has the full 60min HBO Documentary - Baghdad ER - at the site, this is link to home page.

Baghdad ER
HBO Documentry Video - 60 Minutes
BAGHDAD ER is an emotional, devastating and honest account of modern-day war

12-time Emmy® Award winner producer/director Jon Alpert and Matthew O'Neill capture the humanity, hardships and heroism of the US Military and medical personnel of the 86th Combat Support Hospital, the Army's premier medical facility in Iraq. Sometimes graphic in its depiction of combat-related wounds, BAGHDAD ER offers an unflinching and honest account of the realities of war. Click here to watch. Windows media

“Silence of the Dead, Voices of the Living.”


Light A Candle For
Peace, Tolerance, Understanding
and For The Children - Innocence Lost!



“Silence of the Dead, Voices of the Living.”

Photo: Terry Foss / AFSC
See a slideshow of the Washington, DC events.



Remember And Resist
by James Carroll, The Boston Globe
Honor the fallen, not the war.



Dying For A Mistake
by Paul Rogat Loeb , TomPaine.com
What does it mean to die in a war so founded on deception?



"My Soldiers, My Veterans"
by John Nichols, The Nation
On this day above all others we should understand that wars are conceived by presidents and prime ministers, not soldiers.
After the bloodiest and most divisive of America's wars, the poet Walt Whitman offered a dirge for two soldiers of the opposing armies -- Civil War veterans, buried side by side. As John Nichols writes, his poem is an apt reminder that, when the fighting is done, those who warred against one another often find themselves in the same place. It is appropriate that we should garland each grave, understanding on this day above all others that wars are conceived by presidents and prime ministers, not soldiers.



Remembering the Survivors on Memorial Day
05.28.2006 Jon Soltz
We Iraq veterans will spend Memorial Day thinking about our friends we lost in battle, but also about those who survived them.



Wanna Make Over 100 Grand,THINK FIRST!!!!


Morning Edition, May 26, 2006
Part 2 Civilian Contractors With PTSD, Neglected!!
Civilian Drivers Feel Neglected After Working in Iraq

All Things Considered, May 25, 2006
Part 1 KBR Getting Millions Of No-Bid Tax Payer Monies. NOT Protecting Their Employees!!
The Trucker's War: On the Road in Iraq

Sunday, May 28, 2006

An Hispanic Immigrant Asks....

After losing his Child to Iraqnam!

FOCUS | Fernando Suarez del Solar: Memorial Day - What Is this Special Day?

Fernando Suarez del Solar wonders what has happened to Memorial Day: "In spite of all of the wars that have taken thousands of our soldiers and millions of innocents, especially children, the world is still at war, and people everywhere suffer under unjust political systems where there is no freedom."

Memorial Day - What Is This Special Day?
By Fernando Suarez del Solar
t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

Sunday 28 May 2006

According to tradition, it is a day to remember those who have fallen in US wars. The stated goals of those wars were peace, freedom, democracy, and justice. But what has really happened? In spite of all of the wars that have taken thousands of our soldiers and millions of innocents, especially children, the world is still at war, and people everywhere suffer under unjust political systems where there is no freedom.

Why has all of this blood been spilled? To show us that war is not the way to the noble ideals for which many have died. Today in Iraq, more than 2300 young men and women from the US have died, as have thousands of innocent Iraqis. How many more must die?

On this day, I invite you to reflect on how to honor those lost souls by working through non-violence for real peace and justice.

How ironic that thousands of Latino and Latina soldiers and marines have died in the name of the stars and stripes, and today the government represented by that flag offends Latinos in the United States by militarizing the border and passing discriminatory laws. Are we to ignore the contributions made by immigrants to this great nation?

On any of the many war monuments to past wars we can find hundreds if not thousands of Latino names. Each served with pride and each was praised by politicians at the time. But what is happening now? Not only are they dishonored, but abusive and immoral proposals for immigration reform insult their relatives and families.

On this day, to recall the thousands of lost lives is to remind ourselves that wars only produce more hate, more destruction, more injustice, more grieving families, and more rage. This cycle must be stopped by acts of peace. No more names of the dead on monuments, no more holidays to honor the fallen, no more wars that incite the hatred of other peoples and religions. We ought to abolish Memorial Day.

Until then, let us use this day of remembrance and sadness to begin a new culture that respects human rights and all life. Let us tell Bush and those who will come after him that wars are not a path to peace. In honor of our fallen soldiers, let us raise our voice as one to say "Enough!"

Memorial Day - a day of mourning, tears, and reflection.



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The author, Fernando Suarez del Solar, is the father of Marine Lance Cpl. Jesus A. Suarez del Solar, killed in action in Iraq by a US cluster bomb. Fernando Suarez del Solar is the director and founder of the Guerrero Azteca Peace Project.

REMEMBRANCE 5/29/06

What are your plans for Memorial Day? Are you like the greater majority who just take it as a Holiday with little or no Remembrance of those who have fallen. Or are you one who at least takes a moment to give Honor, wether for War and/or Military, or in Opposition to Unjust and Illegal Conflicts, to Honor those who Serve and Especially those who give of life and limb for Country, while the Majority do little for same. There are many ways to Serve ones Nation and Society, the Most Honorable is Working for a Peaceful World by Remembering the Past Mistakes and Not Repeating!!

Personally I can't think of any who have not been touched by the many Wars, of man on man. Wether a family member on our long family trees, friends, living in the heart of conflicts, observing from afar, the list goes on. Everyone is touched by War's, no matter the Definitions we give to each, they are All Destructive Behavior of Humans against Fellow Humans, supposedly the Smartest Beings on this Planet, but acting like the Animals We Really Are!


Standing in the rain
In a company formation
Of ramrod-straight strangers—
Flags, salutes, speeches,
“Taps” on a trumpet,
The militant martial air
Trumps the Ten Commandments,
Salutes the sacrifices made to war—
The sons (some daughters)
Who died in killing fields,
None free to say I disagree
With this mission, sir:
Move up, move out—
No talking, silence
In the ranks…

The surviving vets
Standing mute witness
In the rain

Jan Barry








NPR's Weekend America had a short report on, yesterday, that speaks of how we Remember.
Remembering Traditions
America will be divided this weekend. Some of us will be headed to barbecues and picnics, while others will be at a graveside or a parade to honor fallen soldiers. When did Memorial Day shift from being a day of remembrance, to being a weekend of celebration? Weekend America's Krissy Clark finds out that this divide has existed longer than one might think—since the holiday first began.
You Can Listen to this Report Here and visit the links below, mentioned in the report, for further information

The White House Commission on Remembrance
The White House Commission on Remembrance is an independent government agency whose missions include:
**Promoting the spirit of unity and remembrance through observance of The National Moment of Remembrance at 3 PM local time on Memorial Day;
**Ensuring the nation remembers the sacrifices of America's fallen from the Revolutionary War to the present;
**Recognizing those who served and those who continue to serve our great nation and reminding all Americans of their common heritage.

Biography of Grover Cleveland




Below is the VFP Memorial Day Press Release for Memorial Day 5-29-06
For Immediate Release
Veterans For Peace
NEWS ADVISORY CONTACT:
David Cline: (201) 320-9755
Michael T. McPhearson: 314 303 8874
May 26, 2006 Veterans For Peace Remembers and Commemorates the Sacrifices Made by the Nation’s Fallen Service Men and Women, Memorial Day 2006 Who: Veterans For Peace, a national organization of military veterans including men and women from World War II, Korea, Vietnam, the Gulf War, the Iraq War, other conflicts and “peacetime.”
What: Memorials, vigils and solemn programs.
Why: To remember the fallen and educate the public about the human cost of war. Across the nation, veterans, military families and friends will gather on Monday May 29, 2006 to remember fallen loved ones, comrades and all service members who have died in defense of our nation. Veterans For Peace will commemorate these women and men who have made the ultimate sacrifice with vigils and solemn programs.
Several chapters will display temporary cemeteries to represent the over 2,400 fallen in the current conflict in Iraq. Other chapters will lay wreaths, flowers; have speakers, readings and march in parades.
Veterans For Peace National Executive Director Michael McPhearson stated, “It is not enough to simply remember and mourn. If we are able, we must also act. As we remember and mourn, we should use this occasion to motivate ourselves to work towards ending the madness and horror of war. We have a responsibility to educate the public on the human cost of war, the lives shattered, broken and lost. We stand as witnesses to this terrible cost and we say to our fellow citizens that there is a better way. Join us as we walk the path of peace.”
For more information, please visit Veterans For Peace .
Veterans For Peace is a national organization founded in 1985. It is structured around a national office in Saint Louis, MO and comprised of members across the country organized in chapters or as at-large members. The organization includes men and women veterans from World War II, Korea, Vietnam, the Gulf War, other conflicts and peacetime veterans. Our collective experience tells us wars are easy to start and hard to stop and that those hurt are often the innocent. Thus, other means of problem solving are necessary.
Veterans For Peace




Listen and Watch Tom Chelston, of Tom Songs, dedication Song/Flash Video to Veteran's and visit Tom's Site for his other songs and video's






Information Clearing House has the full 60min HBO Documentary - Baghdad ER - at the site, this is link to home page.
Baghdad ER
HBO Documentry Video - 60 Minutes
BAGHDAD ER is an emotional, devastating and honest account of modern-day war

12-time Emmy® Award winner producer/director Jon Alpert and Matthew O'Neill capture the humanity, hardships and heroism of the US Military and medical personnel of the 86th Combat Support Hospital, the Army's premier medical facility in Iraq. Sometimes graphic in its depiction of combat-related wounds, BAGHDAD ER offers an unflinching and honest account of the realities of war. Click here to watch. Windows media




And also from Information Clearing House:
Number Of Iraqi Civilians Slaughtered In America's War As Many As 250,000?

Number of U.S. Military Personnel Sacrificed (Officially acknowledged) In Bush's War 2464

The War in Iraq Costs $283,944,713,065 See the cost in your community





Thanks to MFSO Member Stacy Hafley who has the below posted at the Veterans For Peace site.
Happy Memorial Day!
I just wanted to send out some information about Memorial day and how we can observe it respectfully!
Memorial Day, also called Decoration Day, is a patriotic holiday in the United States. It is a day to honor Americans who gave their lives for their country. Originally, Memorial Day honored military personnel who died in the Civil War (1861-1865). The holiday now also honors those who died in any war while serving the United States.
I would like to invite all of you to observe Memorial day and honor our soldiers by promoting peace. Lets make sure that this is not just another "shopping" or "SALE" day lets speak out!!!
10 Ways to Celebrate Memorial Day
Memorial Day is a day for remembering those who have laid their lives in the nation's service. . Here are some ways to celebrate the patriotic spirit of this day:
1. Donate to families of soldiers who are wounded or have lost their lives.
2. Observe the National Moment of Remembrance. The Moment occurs on Memorial Day, 3 PM, local time, for 1 minute. You can choose to observe this moment in any way you like. It is the sentiment that counts.
3. Visit a grave site and offer flowers to those U.S. Troops who have died in the nation's service.
4. Support a local Memorial day event in your community.
5. Teach small children the importance of this holiday!
6. donate your time to a Veteran that may need some help ie: mowing lawns or helping with projects around the house.
7. Visit a Veterans Hospital and spread some good cheer!
8. THANK A VET! Write a card of thanks to your local veterans org. Vets for Peace and VFW's are a some good examples! You could always send a care package to the troops! (They LOVE getting mail)
9. Wear patriotic gear! Wear a shirt that shows you support our troops! Even better one that says bring them home NOW!!!
10. Hang an American Flag
Stacy Hafley
MFSO Missouri






There will be many shows, news reports, parades etc., to supposedly give Honor to those the day is set aside for, how many people will Actually take the moment, or more, to Remember? There are many Memorials, around the country, that one can visit. There are many cemetaries, for veteran's alone, or family plots that may have a family member, who served, and now has passed on, will they get visited? There are Memories of many we all know who were family members, friends, schoolmates, whatever, we they be thought of? There are the Innocents, slaughtered in all conflicts, will they be Remembered?
All those I served with in Vietnam, that I worked with or met, and most I have have met since, Stated than and Since that we would never allow that to happen again, We Failed!!

Now there is a New Generation living the Destructiveness of a Conflict that should Never Have Happened, in a Quagmire that can and will only bring about More Destruction, in a Split Society where More are Understanding that this Country has Once Again Allowed the Few to Lie their Way into the Devestating Destructiveness of War, taking our young, and so many innocents, and forceing to fight for Survival! Most of these Few not only have Never Experianced the Hell of War but Have No Understanding of Same, as they observe, and care less, from Afar!
Teach your children the meaning of Memorial Day, and the Real Lessons of what War Is, for if we don't, Once Again, this Behavior will only be Repeated again and again!!

A Country and Flag In Distress!!
If this Country wants to be a Leader we Must Lead by Example, a Peaceful Example!!