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Today's Stories

May 27, 2004

Rampton / Stauber
Banana Republicans: Pumping Irony

May 26, 2004

Ron Jacobs
Goodbye, David Dellinger: He Was a Friend of Ours

Robert Fisk
The Things Bush Didn't Say in His Speech

Zeynep Toufe
New Draft UN Resolution Permits Perpetual Occupation

Conn Hallinan
Bush and Sharon: the Oil Connection

Tom Stephens
2 + 2 is On My Mind: More Morons and War Crimes

Derek Medley
Protesting Gov. Bigot

CounterPunch Wire
FBI Abducts Artist; Seizes Art

Andrew Cockburn
The Trail to Tehran

 

 

May 25, 2004

Joe Bageant
The Covert Kingdom: On Earth as It is in Texas

Col. Dan Smith
A Question of Human Dignity

Gary Handschumacher
Visiting Lori Berenson: Time to Bring Her Home

Toni Solo
A Developing War in the Andes

Marc Estrin
September Song: Disturbing Questions About 9/11

Stephen Banko, III
A Vietnam Vet on "Supporting the Troops"

Website of the Day
The Wizard of Whimsy

 

May 24, 2004

Ron Jacobs
Dan Senor is Safe!

Kurt Nimmo
Dirty Tricks & TortureGate: the Missing Taguba Pages

Sam Hamod
Gen. Zinni: "Wrong War, Wrong Place, Wrong Time"

Mike Whitney
The Wedding was a Bomb

Stan Goff
Open Season on MAMs

Image of the Day
A Photo from Abu Ghraib We Didn't See on the Front Page of the NYTs

 

 

May 22 / 23, 2004

Paul de Rooij
Colin Powell, a Political Obituary

Jeffrey St. Clair
When War is Swell: Bush and the Carlyle Group

Elizabeth Weill-Greenberg
Her Son Was Told He Wouldn't See Combat; Now He's Dead: an Interview with Sue Niederer

Brian Cloughley
America is Committing War Crimes in Iraq

Saul Landau
Democracy in Latin America: Great for Investors; Not So Good for People

Brandy Baker
Feminists Stand By Their Man: Abortion, Judges and Kerry

Randall Robinson
Bushwhacked in the Caribbean

Uri Avnery
The Rape of Rafah

Ben Tripp
Assume the Worst

Bruce Anderson
News from Ecotopia: the Truth About the Wine Business

Josh Ruebner
Why I Burned My Israeli Military Papers

Peter Wolson, Ph. D.
Exhibitionistic Revenge at Abu Ghraib

Chloe Cockburn
In Defense of "Troy": What Hector Could Teach Rummy

Linda Burnham
Sexual Domination in Uniform: an American Value

Adrien Rain Burke
War of the Necrophiliacs: Spc. Sabrina Harman and Her Corpse

David Krieger
Charting a New Course for US Nuclear Policy

Ron Jacobs
Turnaround

Poets' Basement
Ford, Albert & LaMorticella


May 21, 2004

Ray Close
The Canards of the Apologists

Christopher Brauchli
"The Object of Torture is Torture"

Amira Hass
Darkness at Noon

Jack McCarthy
Camilo Mejia: Can the Son of a Sandinista Get a Fair Trial from the US Army?

Bill Kauffman
Nader v. Bush

Omar Barghouti
No More Tears for America

Ghali Hassan
Moral Failure of the "Free World" in Gaza

Christopher Reed
How the CIA Taught the Portuguese to Torture

Website of the Day
Eric Idle on the Bush Administration: Fuck You, So Very Much

 

 

May 20, 2004

Andrew Cockburn
The Truth About Chalabi

Kathy Kelly
A Visit from the FBI

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
Brown and Bored of Education in India

Tom Stephens & John Philo
The War Crimes of Bush, Cheney & Co.

Sam Bahour / Michael Dahan
Genocide by Public Policy

Robert Ovetz
Ending the Race for the Last Turtle

Billy Wilson
The Most Important Thing I Learned at School This Year

Website of the Day
Rafah Today

 

May 19, 2004

Elizabeth W. Corrie
Caterpillar Should Do the Right Thing, Now

Bill and Kathleen Christison
The US Can't Win

Vijay Prashad
For Whom the Polls Toll: the Indian Elections of 2004

Ray Hanania
Israeli War Crimes: Who to Believe, AIPAC or Amnesty Intl.?

Greg Moses
Man President Kisses Up at AIPAC

Michael Gillespie
Who is Kenneth deGraffenried?

Josh Frank
Homes Destroyed; Death Toll Mounts: But Where's John Kerry?

Gary Corseri
Out of Iraq and Plato's Cave

Kevin Alexander Gray
If Malcolm Were Alive

 

 

May 18, 2004

Neve Gordon
The Gaza Debacle

Doug Stokes
Imperial Policing: Why Abu Ghraib Shouldn't Surprise Us

Bob Wing
The Color of Abu Ghraib

Vanessa Jones
Man on a Leash

Thomas P. Healy
Chemical Trespass: the Body Burden

Zeynep Toufe
Torture and Moral Agency: the Soft Bigotry of Low Expectations

Kenneth Roth
Mistreatment of Detainees in US Custody: a Letter to Bush

Elaine Cassel
Pre-empting the Bill of Rights: The Other War, One Year Later

Website of the Day
Truth Against Truth

 

May 17, 2004

Kurt Nimmo
The John-John Ticket: Kerry Woos McCain

Laura Santina
Military Conditioning and Abu Ghraib

Mickey Z.
With Friends Like These: More Election 2004 Madness

Frederick B. Hudson
Police Terror: Three Mothers Search for Justice

Shakirah Esmail-Hudani
Inside Abu Ghraib: the Violence of the Camera

Boris Leonardo Caro
The Revelations of Mr. W.

Alex Dawoody
Iraq: From Saddam to Occupation

Victor Kattan
On Watching the Execution of Nick Berg

Ron Jacobs
Rumsfeld's Sovereignty Shell Game

 

 

May 15 / 16, 2004

Alexander Cockburn
Green Lights for Torture

Douglas Valentine
ABCs of American Interrogation: Phoenix Program, Revisited

John Stanton
Kings of Pain: UK, US and Israel

Ben Tripp
Torture: a Fond Reminiscence

Brian Cloughley
Where are You Heading, America? Taking a Closer Look at the Patriot Act

Justin E. H. Smith
Islam and Democracy: the Lesson from Turkey

Brandy Baker
Equal Opportunity Torture: Lynddie England, the Right and Feminism

John Chuckman
Peep Show on Capitol Hill: Sex, Lies and Videotape

Bill Glahn
RIAA Watch: Goon Squad

John Holt
Fencing the Sky

Ron Jacobs
The Power of Patti Smith

Brian J. Foley
Why the Outrage Over Abu Ghraib?

Robin Philpot
Re-writing the History of the Rwandan Genocide

Eric Leser
The Carlyle Empire

Ray Hanania
From Abu Ghraib to Nick Berg: There's No Such Thing as a Good War Crime

Jeff Halper
Dozers of Mass Destruction

Joe Surkiewicz
Inside the Baltimore Detention Center

John Whitlow
Iraq Goddamn

Michael Leon
Invitation to a Beheading: Why Bush Should Watch the Berg Video

Poets' Basement
Krieger, Ford, LaMorticella, Smith and Albert

 

 

May 14, 2004

Dr. Susan Block
Bush's POW Porn

Ron Jacobs
Secret History of the War on Drugs

William Blum
God, Country and Torture

Michael Donnelly
The People v. Corporate Greed: A Victory on the North Coast

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
India Shines

Stephen Gowans
Building Democracy in Iraq and Other Absurdities

 

 

May 13, 2004

Dave Lindorff
Where is Kerry?

Colm O'Laithian
Torture and Degradation: Revenge American Style?

Saul Landau and Farrah Hassan
Wal-Mart: Scrooge with Hi-Tech Accounting Practices

Ralph Nader
An Open Letter to Bush on the Inhumane Treatment of Iraqi Prisoners

Willliam James Martin
Deir Yassin Massacre Recalled

Marc Salomon
Reality TV Bites

Forrest Hylton
Law 'n Order in La Paz: All Quiet on the Southern Front?

May 12, 2004

Blanton / Kornbluh
Prisoner Abuse: Cheney Warned in 1992

Virginia Tilley
So, Who's to Blame?

Bruce Jackson
James Inhofe, the Dumbest Senator of Them All

Thomas P. Healy
No Enemies: Making Peace with Bert Sacks

Linda S. Heard
Racism and Ignorance: a Lethal Cocktail in Iraq

Norman Solomon
Spinning Torturegate

Lisa Viscidi
The People's Voice: Community Radio in Guatemala

Jack Heyman
View from the Bay Bridge: Longshoremen Plan Mass Workers March on DC

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
Rummy's Reprieve

CounterPunch Wire
Teamsters Corruption Scandal: Hoffa Exec. Assistant Alleged to Have Quashed Investigation into Mob Influence

Christopher Brauchli
Detention Camp, USA

William S. Lind
Bush's Waterloo?


May 11, 2004

Mark Engler
On the "Necessity" of Torture

Ray McGovern
More Troops? A March of Folly

Kurt Nimmo
Dirty Nukes and Jefferson's Grand Experiment

Mickey Z.
Less Than Hero

Christopher Reed
Torture on the Homefront: America's Long History of Prison Abuse

Dennis Hans
When John Negroponte was Mullah Omar

Bruce Jackson
Pete Seeger at 85

Mike Whitney
Killing al Sadr

Simon Helweg-Larsen
Shrinking the Guatemalan Military

William A. Cook
The Unconscious Country: Righteous Indignation, Nakedly Displayed

 

May 10, 2004

Robert Fisk
From Hollywood to Abu Ghraib: Racism and Torture as Entertainment

Wayne Madsen
The Israeli Torture Template: Rape, Feces and Urine-Soaked Cloth Sacks

Col. Dan Smith
The Shame of Abu Ghraib

Joe Bageant
John Ashcroft, Keep Your Mouth Off My Wife!

Ron Jacobs
Rummy's Prisongate Blues: Don't Leave Mad; Just Leave

Ben Tripp
Getting in Touch with Your Inner Savage

Ray Hanania
Why They Hate Us: Racism, Bigotry and Abuse

Reza Fiyouzat
"
Mishandled" Invasions

Diane Christian
Images & Abstractions & Genitals

Website of the Day
Crushing Iraqi Skulls with Tanks for Sport?

May 8 / 9, 2004

Cockburn / St. Clair
Torture: as American as Apple Pie

Adam Jones
America's Srebrenica: What About the Hundreds of POWs Suffocated and Shot at Kunduz?

Douglas Valentine
Who Let the Dogs Out?: Torture, the CIA and the Press

Kurt Nimmo
Rush Limbaugh and the Babes of Abu Ghraib

Brian Cloughley
Humpty Dumpty is Falling

Lucia Dailey
Forbidden Games

Joanne Mariner
* * * *: Redacting Moussaoui

Mickey Z.
Please Forgive U.S.? (There Are No Innocent Bystanders)

John Chuckman
The Thing with No Brain

Doug Giebel
Someone Knew: There Were No WMDs

Norm Dixon
How the Bush Gang Exploited 9/11

Sam Bahour
A Guiding Light Falls on Ramallah

Susan Davis
Disorderly Conduct as Fine Art

Dave Marsh
In a Pig's Eye: Alan Lomax, Dead But Still Stealing

Laura Flanders
Life with Dick and Lynne

Dave Zirin
Fans Push Spiderman Off Base

Carolyn Baker
Why I Won't Vote in 2004

Prince
"Ain't No Sense in Voting"

Dr. Susan Block
Onan for Two: Liberating Masturbation

Poets' Basement
Smith, Sleeth, Ford, Albert and Saska

 

May 7, 2004

Human Rights Watch
10 Prisons; 9,000 Prisoners: US Detention Facilities in Iraq

Ron Jacobs
UnAmerican? I Wish It Were So

Robert Fisk
An Illegal and Immoral War

Ahmad Faruqui
The 50th Anniversary of Dien Bien Phu

Alexander Zaitchik
From Terrell Unit in Texas to Abu Ghraib: Doesn't It Ring a (Prison) Bell?

Mike Whitney
The Price of Victory

Norman Solomon
This War, Racism and Media Denial

M. Shahid Alam
A Comic Apology

 

May 6, 2004

Jeffrey St. Clair
They Did It for Jessica: Smeared with Shit; Kicked to Death

Kathy Kelly
May Day in Pekin Prison: Prison Labor for the War Machine

Werther
The Sunk Cost Fallacy: War as Vegas Casino Game

Lawrence Ferlinghetti
Totalitarian Democracy

Robert Fisk
"Smoke Him": Video Shows Wounded Men Being Shot by US Helicopter

John Janney
Torturing the Way to Freedom?

Christopher Ketcham
Outlaw Heterosexual Marriage Now!

Alan Farago
Dead Oceans: So Long, Thanks for the Fish

Sam Hamod
Bush on Arab TV: Worthless and Demeaning

James Brooks
Sullen Spring

William S. Lind
On the Brink of Defeat in Iraq

 

 

May 5, 2004

Maj. Gen. Antonio M. Taguba
Complete US Army Report on Abuse of Iraqi Prisoners

Kathleen and Bill Christison
Kerry: a Lost Cause for Progressives?

Will Youmans
Deal with the Devil: a Palestinian Zionist and the End of the World

Patrick B. Barr
Terrorists R Us: the Powerful are Exempt from the Label

Lawrence Magnuson
Nightline's All-American Morgue

Greg Moses
Pocketbook of Denuded Ideals

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
Tormenting Prisoners, Torturing Truth

Lee Ballinger
Cinco de Mayo and Unity

Gilbert Achcar
Bush's Cakewalk into the Iraq Quaqmire

Website of the Day
Operation Phoenix & Iraq

 

 

 

 

 

 

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May 27, 2004

Remembering Dave Dellinger

A 1993 Interview

By DOWNTOWN MAGAZINE

(This interview with Dave Dellinger, who died on May 25, 2004, appeared in Downtown Magazine in 1993. Thanks to Bob Feldman for reminding us.)

What are your most vivid memories of what happened on the streets and in the parks of Chicago during the 1968 anti-war protests outside the Democratic National Convention?

DELLINGER: Inevitably, the most vivid memory I have is of busloads of police driving up to where we would be gathered, jumping out, getting into formation and marching into the crowd, goose-stepping as they marched. Slapping their sides with their clubs and shouting: `Kill! Kill! Kill! Kill! Then they would go in and hit everybody that they could over the head--or jab their clubs into people's groins.

How seriously were people hurt by the Chicago police?

Many people were very seriously hurt. Not only by the clubs, but by mace. I guess the tear gas wasn't that serious, but it certainly had all of us coughing and gasping for breath.

Who was responsible for that violence? Some people I speak to, they say `Well, the antiwar movement of the '60s provoked the confrontation and was responsible for the violence.' Is that true?

No. First of all, the mass of protesters were overwhelmingly nonviolent. After the first attacks by the police, some people--but only a small minority--began to lapse into the unproductive approach of calling the police `pigs.' But, actually, we circulated a leaflet--handed it out to the police--which said that we did not blame them for what they are doing. And saying that we supported them in their attempts to get overtime pay. If I remember correctly, the police had been in negotiations and in some kind of temporary strike shortly before the Convention. But all that was laid aside.

I think, for example, of a time in front of the Hilton Hotel--where a lot of the action took place. I think of a guy by the name of Fred Gardner--who had organized the first coffeehouses for GIS in which we had tried to explain to the GIs our friendly attitude toward them despite our militant opposition to the Vietnam War.

In the 1967 siege of the Pentagon--which was the last major national action before Chicago--we had agreed on a slogan and used it in bullhorns and person-to-person, saying: `You are our brothers. Join us. You are victims, too. Join us.'

Fred Gardner had played a key role in that kind of approach to the GIs, and together we tried to apply it to the policemen in Chicago. Fred Gardner, Phil Ochs and I climbed on the roof of a car and Fred and I spoke to the police. First, though, Phil Ochs--who was probably the most popular folksinger of the day--sang to them.

How did the police respond? It wasn't too effective, was it?

Well, the fact is that a lot of the Black police responded. And in our trial--which came a little more than a year later--one of the people who testified for us--although he was not allowed to say most of what he wanted to say to the jury--was Renault Robinson, the head of the African-American Policemen's Association. He told us that many of the Black policemen were so upset by the unnatural violence against us that they spoke up about it. As a result, they were relieved of duty during that period, as part of the mayor's attempt to be sure that the police would be as violent as they were.

Probably, readers won't know that a presidential commission was appointed to look into the roots of the violence at Chicago. And they unanimously ruled that most of it had been `a police riot.' They gave examples of police not only beating up demonstrators, but going on to porches where people were sitting outside their apartments watching what was going on. Going up there, dragging the people down and clubbing them.

Now why was the Democratic Convention seen as an appropriate site for an antiwar protest?

First of all, you should understand that it was more than an antiwar protest. The original plan was that we would hold an alternate political convention in which we would lay out a broad platform. We had separate meeting places for a variety of issues: women's rights, Native Americans' rights, the schools, the environment, the economy. All that kind of thing.

You see, it's a bit of a paradox. On the one hand, we felt the importance of going there with the antiwar message. We knew that the media would be there and at least some attention would be focused on it because it was a time of great uncertainty, confusion and disillusionment in the country about the war.

The paradox was that, on the one hand, we thought it was terribly important to carry the antiwar message, but, on the other hand, the main organizers--at least from the National Mobilization Committee--had in mind showing that Vietnam was not an accident. That Vietnam represented attitudes towards human life and human beings that extended into the whole culture and society, domestically as well as in foreign relations.

Now what happened was that we had tried to get permits for people to sleep in Lincoln Park, as the Boy Scouts and the Elks and various other groups had been able to do. And that was particularly important for the young people. But, for others also, who couldn't afford the price of hotels and didn't, perhaps, know people in Chicago that they could stay with. But we couldn't get the permits and were ordered to leave the park every night at a certain hour. We decided to do that, but on the first night, as we were walking out of the park, at whatever the hour was, I felt somebody tug at my sleeve, my right sleeve. I turned around, and it was the mayor's youth commissioner. He and I had met several times, in prior attempts to work things out amicably, and we had become, at least up to a point, friends.

He said, `Dellinger. When you get out of the park turn to the left and get away from there as quickly as you can. Because the police are going to attack from the right.' And that's exactly what happened.

When the nonviolent protesters dutifully left the park when the time came that they were supposed to be out of there, the police were waiting for them and waded into the crowd.

How did you come, personally, to lead the antiwar protests in Chicago?

Well, I think it's very important to recognize that there were many leaders. You know that one of the problems in the society is that certain people are focused upon as being the `leaders'. And this was intensified in the case of Chicago because afterwards--actually not until the Nixon Administration came in and John Mitchell, who ended up in jail himself for perjury--the government thought it needed to intimidate the Movement.

So it selected what it thought of as the leaders of various sections of the Movement: the militant Black movement, Bobby Seale--who hadn't even had anything to do with the demonstrations. Tom Hayden and Rennie Davis, from the Students for a Democratic Society--who were thought of as the leaders of it. Although, actually, by then they had, to some extent, been pushed aside by the younger students. But they were the best known.

I was considered, I guess, the leader of the adult nonviolent movement.

But I think that things would have been very much the same in all of those movements, with or without the presence of Tom, Rennie, and myself. If I played a role, I think it was, first of all, in stressing the importance of nonviolence at a time when some very vocal people--some of them agents provacateurs--were saying that the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. had proved that nonviolence doesn't work. Interestingly, they didn't say that the assassination of Malcolm X proved that violence doesn't work.

Secondly, within the adult coalition--which was a very complex coalition of forces--I played somewhat of a mediating role. Because I didn't believe that there was any single tactic or strategy that everybody should follow. One of my firm beliefs is that we have to have not only the kind of cultural diversity that people are talking more about today, but that even within cultures, we have to have people whose individual lives, personalities, etc., call for different ways of acting.

There was a rumor that you and Tom Hayden thought you might be assassinated if you failed to call off the planned demonstrations. Was that true? Was there pre-demonstration terror directed against you?

Well, after Martin Luther King was assassinated and there were Black riots all over the country it seems that the Chicago police acted with a little more common sense and sensitivity than they sometimes had in the past. At that time, Mayor Daley bawled them out and issued an order that, in similar demonstrations in the future, they must `shoot to kill' anyone who was thought to be in the act of committing a felony. And `shoot to maim' anybody who might be committing a misdemeanor. And that was trundled out and used over and over again against us, for a month or more before the convention.

But as far as the specific assassination threats are concerned, what I remember better is that in 1972--when some of us were going to the Miami Republican and Democratic Conventions with similar ideas in mind to those we had had at Chicago--I received a call from the lawyer of a retired <F.B.I>. agent. One who had resigned to protest against the infiltration and violence that they were trying to instigate the Movement to take. And I was told--on the authority of this <ex-F.B.I>. agent who had just recently resigned--that Rennie Davis and I were going to be assassinated in Miami.

When the polcie came to Miami, they came under the guise of fellow protestors. They were organized in `Red Star Cadres'--which it later turned out, had all been organized by the <F.B.I>. They brought guns to Miami and kept trying to get us to use them. When I spoke against this, they said: `Well, you're just a pacifist. And you have no right to let other people be killed because of your nonviolence.'

Fortunately, the Vietnam Veterans Against The War came to the convention, and, although I had not told most people about the threat--because I didn't want to have a panicky situation--I told some of their leaders. And they formed an honor guard around me and Rennie for the rest of the convention. Wherever we went, we were circled by them. So that some of them would have had to be shot in order to shoot us.

So that's much clearer in my mind than the general feeling that we might be assassinated in Chicago.

You mentioned Rennie Davis. Now Rennie Davis and Jerry Rubin were charged with you in the post-Convention `Conspiracy Trial,' yet they seemed to retreat from antiwar activism in the '70s. Can you speculate as to why that happened?

Well, it's an uphill fight and one has to develop means, I think, of replenishing one's energies and spirit. Some people just became so obsessed with the urgency of ending the war that they never had time to do anything else. They spent years of emergency living on the barricades. And they didn't have time--I say this in my book, From Yale To Jail--they didn't have time to climb a mountain, read a novel, go to a concert or an art gallery, walk in the woods, do any of the things that keep one, in a sense, sane. Things that help one to avoid becoming either self-righteous or monomaniacal, in the sense that `this is the exact thing that everybody must do right now.'

And I remember Rennie in that connection, one time when we were recruiting for a demonstration after Chicago. He and I were speaking on the same platform and he said that `The next six weeks will determine the future of Western Civilization.'

So it was that kind of exaggerated preoccupation with the immediate present, I think, which led to some of this backing off later.

And one also has to say, in all honesty, and perhaps particularly with some people more than others, that because the media focused on our trial--even though there were other trials that were just as important and just as unwarranted. And because the government picked us seven white males and one Black male--when there were many women and other people who deserved the honor of being indicted as much as we did. With all that attention and all that `groupie' adulation which happened, I think that all of us were thrown off balance more than we should have. And, in a certain sense, one might say that Jerry Rubin made certain attempts to keep in the limelight by doing other things. And that's understandable.

But I never publicly criticized Jerry, no matter how much I advocate and try to follow a different path than the one he has taken. Because what I remember is that he and all the other ones who were indicted made a joint decision that we would face 10 years in jail, rather than try to win the case on a technicality. Instead of using technical excuses and methods in conventional lawyerly fashion, we would do our best to put the government on trial in our trial.

You mentioned women who were involved. What role did women activists, also African-American activists and lesbian and gay male activists, play in helping to organize the Convention protests?

The role of the three groups were quite different. The Black leadership in the Mobe and in the antiwar movement generally decided basically to stay away from Chicago and not be involved. The main exception was Ralph Abernathy and the Southern Christian Leadership Council [SCLC], which came with a mule train. But even though were were on good terms and friends, they basically did not take part in the planning or in the decision for our nonviolent marches. They wanted to have a purely symbolic presence with the mule train and did not talk about nonviolent marches as a whole--or possible civil disobedience by sitting down if we were stopped on our marches.

What about women activists? The women's liberation movement?

Well, women were very active. Now I'm generally listed as the `chairman' of the National Mobilization Committee To End The War. And I was backward enough to have accepted that title for a short time. And then I insisted that I would not be chairman unless there was a co-chairperson who was a woman and a co-chairperson who was an Afro-American. But the women played a very important key role in all of the events at Chicago. As for lesbians and gays, a lot of people who later came out of the closet also played key roles in Chicago. But I don't remember any public calls there for the rights of homosexuals.

Now you mentioned a book. What have you been up to in recent years? And were you involved in writing a book, also?

For about a year I had been working intermittently on writing what I called From Yale To Jail: A Memoir. I was a little shocked when Pantheon released the book a couple of months ago [in 1993] and changed the subtitle, so that it now reads: From Yale To Jail: The Life Story Of A Moral Dissenter. Which I think is a little pretentious. I never would have approved of it if I had known that they were going to do that.

My preferred approach is think globally, act locally. And I was doing a lot of local acting before the Vietnam War came along. I just felt that I had to go beyond my local community in order to oppose it and--I think because of my peacemaking role amongst the various objectors to the War--was almost forced into the position of becoming chair and later co-chair.

So I am working with a number of groups here in Vermont: The North Country Coalition for Peace and Justice. Several peace and justice campaigns. I've been a member of the Vermont Rainbow, which finally ceased to exist because we insisted on being democratic. And Jesse Jackson, in his attempt to win the presidency, decided that he had to control the whole organization and even appoint the state chairs and executive committees.

And we've been active, until recently objecting to the manufacture of Gatling guns in the General Electric plant in Burlington, Vermont. Gatling guns which fire--I think it's four or five hundred bullets a minute--and were taken down to Central America to be used by the <U.S.-trained> and supported death squads in El Salvador. Also, for several years, by the <U.S.-trained> and equipped and financed Contras in Nicaragua.

What do you think are now the major political issues for pacfists, now that the Cold War has ended?

Well,as I have said, one of the reasons we went to Chicago was to get away from the idea that there were only two issues that were central, namely, stopping the war in Vietnam and civil rights. That was why we wanted the alternate convention, which would lay out other things. And I think that now we are in that situation.

We're in a situation where we've gone ahead a little, even though some people who are in favor of ending war and gaining civil rights still drag their feet against gay and lesbian liberation and against full equality for women.

But on the whole a lot of progress has been made. Instead of two issues, it's like Heinz: there are practically 57 different variets of issues that are getting more attention than they did in the '60s. Personally I think that one of the important things is for people to have at least one or two of those issues in which they are active in a consistent, long-term way.

But also, I think it is important to get the broader picture. And to understand what some of the reasons are why in every area of life people are taught to compete with other people in order to rise `higher.' To get more power, money, fame, beauty--whatever it is--than other people. And I think that at the root of that is the military-corporate complex and the economy. So I think that people have to understand the economic ties with all of these 57 areas, whether it's the environment or women's rights or Black rights or any of the other places where people are not treated with respect, dignity and as equals.

Finally, I prefer to call myself a nonviolent activist for justice--or justice and peace--rather than a pacifist. Because too often pacifists treat the violence of war and weaponry as more deadly than the violence of our economic institutions. But more people die every week because of the poverty caused by our economic institutions than the total number of GIs killed in the entire Vietnam War.


Weekend Edition Features for May 22 / 23, 2004

Paul de Rooij
Colin Powell, a Political Obituary

Jeffrey St. Clair
When War is Swell: Bush and the Carlyle Group

Elizabeth Weill-Greenberg
Her Son Was Told He Wouldn't See Combat; Now He's Dead: an Interview with Sue Niederer

Brian Cloughley
America is Committing War Crimes in Iraq

Saul Landau
Democracy in Latin America: Great for Investors; Not So Good for People

Brandy Baker
Feminists Stand By Their Man: Abortion, Judges and Kerry

Randall Robinson
Bushwhacked in the Caribbean

Uri Avnery
The Rape of Rafah

Ben Tripp
Assume the Worst

Bruce Anderson
News from Ecotopia: the Truth About the Wine Business

Josh Ruebner
Why I Burned My Israeli Military Papers

Peter Wolson, Ph. D.
Exhibitionistic Revenge at Abu Ghraib

Chloe Cockburn
In Defense of "Troy": What Hector Could Teach Rummy

Linda Burnham
Sexual Domination in Uniform: an American Value

Adrien Rain Burke
War of the Necrophiliacs: Spc. Sabrina Harman and Her Corpse

David Krieger
Charting a New Course for US Nuclear Policy

Ron Jacobs
Turnaround

Poets' Basement
Ford, Albert & LaMorticella

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