Mikael of ImpeachforPeace Empowering citizens to hold our elected (or otherwise in power) servants accountable

March 25, 2007

Candidates not Supporting Impeachment aren’t Running for President, they are Running for Unitary Executive

Filed under: Impeach for Peace — Mikael @ 10:36 pm

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(by: Sgt. Daniel Fearn, “The Impeachment Grunt”)

Voice: “The Divide” (official video)

Filed under: 9/11 — Mikael @ 5:25 pm

A musical tribute to mark the 5th anniversary of the terrorist attacks of september 11th 2001. On 911 a great divide began throughout the world… you’re either with us, or you’re with the terrorists.

As found HERE on Google Video.

911: The Divide (video)

Filed under: 9/11 — Mikael @ 4:18 am

Iraq Veterans Against the War Occupy Washington D.C.

Filed under: Impeach for Peace — Mikael @ 1:12 am

Keynote speaker Army Lieutenant Ehren Watada had just stepped up to the podium at the 2006 Veterans for Peace annual convention last August 12th, when about two dozen of his fellow Iraq War veterans silently filed up to occupy the stage behind him in a spontaneous act of solidarity for his stand against the war, in effect saying: “We’ve got your back, Lieutenant”.

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©2006 Mikael Rudolph ~ Lt. Ehren Watada speaks at 2006 Veterans for Peace Convention

Lt. Watada’s refusal to redeploy to Iraq – the first commissioned officer to do so – has resulted in a highly publicized, as of yet unresolved court martial and led to family members becoming full-time D.C. lobbyists on his behalf.

Watada stoically paused for a full minute before resuming his speech (YouTube video) as the crowd of nearly a thousand military veterans from many wars stood to thunderously applaud again, just as they had when he was first introduced after dinner moments earlier on the final night of the conference, which was held in Seattle on the campus of the University of Washington.

This past Monday, March 19th in conjunction with other protest events in Washington D.C., around the U.S. and the rest of the world on the fourth anniversary of the Iraq invasion, many of the same members of Iraq Veterans Against the War ‘occupied’ our nation’s capital in an effort to illuminate what innocent civilians in Iraq experience daily during the occupation of their sovereign homeland by the military forces of the United States of America.

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©2007 by Jeff Paterson, Courage to Resist ~ Volunteer ‘insurgent’ taken into custody by IVAW

IVAW board chair Garett Reppenhagen, one of the organizers of the street theater project, was quoted on their website as saying: “We are calling Monday’s action Operation First Casualty because we believe that truth was the first casualty of this war. Our aim is to show the American public the truth of the US occupation in Iraq.”

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©2007 by Jeff Paterson, Courage to Resist ~ IVAW ‘on patrol’ by Capitol Building

Reppenhagen further clarified the mission of IVAW by stating: “It is time for the American people to know the truth so they will act to bring the troops home now.”

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©2007 by Jeff Paterson, Courage to Resist ~ IVAW ‘patrol perimeter’ of White House

Multiple actions were staged over the course of the day around D.C. with local activists volunteering to serve as civilians in authentic portrayals of what actually transpires between U.S. troops and Iraqi civilians.

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©2007 by Jeff Paterson, Courage to Resist ~ More ‘insurgents’ rousted by IVAW

The tables were momentarily turned, however, when some IVAW members were briefly detained by Secret Service and Park Police according to Indymedia. The activists, shown below with Reppenhagen in the foreground, stood “at ease” while the security agencies decided how to deal with these unarmed, uniformed veterans who had been expressing themselves in accordance with the First Amendment Constitutional Rights that they had sworn an oath to “Support and Defend” upon their induction into military service.

When asked for permission to utilize these photos in conjunction with an article about their activities, Reppenhagen responded: “You can pimp the action all you like. That would be awesome.”

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©2007 by Jeff Paterson, Courage to Resist ~ Awaiting D. C. Secret Service clearance to resume

Permission to use these copywrited photographs was granted by Jeff Paterson of Courage to Resist, an organization dedicated along with Lt. Watada, IVAW, VFP and ImpeachforPeace.org to supporting the troops who refuse to fight in a war they all denounce as illegal and immoral as stated on the IVAW website:

“Iraq Veterans Against the War was founded in 2004 to give those who have served in the military since September 11, 2001 a way to come together and speak out against an unjust, illegal and unwinnable war. Today, IVAW is made up of close to 400 members in 42 states, Washington, D.C., Canada and serving in bases overseas.

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©2007 by Jeff Paterson, Courage to Resist ~ Iraq Veterans Against the War in D.C.

IVAW gives its members the opportunity not only to connect with other veterans and active duty soldiers but also to speak with one voice. As members of IVAW, they go to colleges, middle schools, high schools, churches, libraries, and to the media – and give first-hand accounts of what is really happening in Iraq. As eyewitnesses and participants in the war on terror, they are viewed as credible sources that are able to explain why the war must end now.”

Another Open Letter to the Peace Movement

Filed under: Impeach for Peace — Mikael @ 12:42 am

Keith Ellison, who I just listened to speak at the Peace Rally in Loring Park last Sunday, voted with the mainstream Democrats in favor of the supplemental bill to continue funding the Iraq War, which passed the House 218-212. He, the most loyal peace politician we all know, voted to continue funding the war.

Ouch.

Our House Representative – MY Representative Keith Ellison did, however, participate with the national Democrats to narrowly pass a bill to call an end to this endless war at some point – a bill that the ‘resident has already pledged to veto anyway.

Am I disappointed with Keith Ellison, who I also supported above and beyond all other Democratic candidates long before he received the DFL endorsement?

No… but yes.

I called and asked his aides to tell him to vote against it, then I called and explained after the fact how I understood the choice Keith had made to vote for it.

Neither vote would have ended the war. Neither vote would have changed anything except in forcing the public dialogue – in framing the debate.

This ‘resident will not obey Congress so the passage of this bill means nothing to him. His veto is a guaranteed death to it. This ‘resident will not obey the Supreme Court, instead he simply has Congress pass a bill to legalize his lawbreaking after the fact (Military Commissions Act). This ‘resident will not be held accountable to the oversight of any purported “checks and balances” willingly.

This ‘resident considers himself a Unitary Executive. Do you understand what that means? Unitary = only. Executive = the person… in whom the supreme executive power of a government is vested.

HE CONSIDERS HIMSELF THE ONLY PERSON IN WHOM THE SUPREME EXECUTIVE POWER OF OUR GOVERNMENT IS VESTED.

This ‘resident has no-one above him. In his own mind he is a caesar. He does not consider himself to be a public servant. He considers himself the only authority – the only decider – after Cheney and Rove tell him what to think and what to say.

At least his reaction to the passage of this bill might reveal him to be what he is to a few of those for whom the visage is still a bit hazy.

He is the figurehead of an evil that simple protests or votes in Congress will never allay or thwart.

The only possible path to peace is through justice. He must have his power taken away from him.

Without impeachment, there will be no justice.

Without impeachment, there will be no peace.

Without impeachment, there may be the last war in human history in our lifetimes.

If you are trying to achieve peace without accountability your efforts are in vain. Keep burning the candle wax. Keep marching. Keep carrying the signs…

… but by all means don’t commit to holding him accountable. That might actually carry some weight and have some results.

… see you at next year’s peace rally?

March 17, 2007

An Appeal for Peace from Starhawk

Filed under: Articles — Mikael @ 4:33 pm

Four Years Ago Today

by Starhawk
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March 16, 2007

Four years ago today, I was in Nablus in the Occupied Territories of Palestine, volunteering with the International Solidarity Movement that supports the nonviolent movement among the Palestinians. I was also supporting my friend Neta Golan, an Israeli woman and one of the founders of ISM, now married to a Palestinian, who was about to give birth. I had spent a strangely idyllic day in a small village outside Nablus, where a group of ISM volunteers had gone because we’d received a report that the Israeli army was harassing villagers. When we got there, the army had left, the cyclamen and blood-red anemones were in bloom underneath ancient olive trees, and the villagers insisted we stay for a barbecue.

We were just passing through the checkpoint on our way back to Nablus when we got a call from Rafah, in the Gaza strip. Rachel Corrie, a young ISM volunteer, had trying to prevent an Israeli bulldozer from demolishing a home near the border. The bulldozer operator saw her, and went forward anyway, crushing her to death.

Rachel’s death was a small preview of the horrific violence that the U.S. unleashed, three days later, with the invasion of Iraq. In Nablus, we were gearing up for a possible Israeli invasion when the war began. I was working with another volunteer, Brian Avery, to coordinate the team that would maintain a human rights witness in the Balata refugee camp on the outskirts of Nablus. I was also praying that Neta would not go into labor at some moment when the whole town would be under siege and we could not get to a hospital, and boning up on such midwifery knowledge as I possess. Perhaps I prayed too hard—she showed no signs of going into labor at all, and finally, in an act of great unselfishness, sent me down to Rafah to support the team there that had been with Rachel. I offered such comfort as I could to volunteers who were young enough that most had never before experienced the death of someone close to them.

It was a strange spring. I made it back to Nablus to support Neta’s birth—but the joy of that event was tinged with horror, for the night before, Brian was shot in the face in Jenin by the Israeli military in an unprovoked attack on a group of international volunteers. All during Neta’s labor, the nurses (yes, thank Goddess, we made it to the hospital!) kept turning on Al Jazeerah which was showing scenes of the U.S. bombardment of Iraq. I kept turning it off. Even in a world full of war, I wanted her child to be born in a small island of peace.

I went to Jenin to support the team that had been with Brian, and then to Haifa to visit him where he was awaiting surgery. I spent much of the next weeks traveling frenetically, often alone, through the one piece of ground on earth most difficult to travel in, where checkpoints truncate every route. The olive trees broke into leaf, and the almonds swelled into fuzzy green pods which the Palestinians eat young. They taste lemony, sharp and poignant, like the moment itself.

I visited with the Israeli Women in Black in Jerusalem, and trained ISM volunteers in Beit Sahour. A young British volunteer, Tom Hurndall, went down to Rafah straight from the training. Walking on the border, near where Rachel was killed, he saw a group of children under fire from an Israeli sniper tower. He ran beneath the rain of bullets, pulled a young boy to safety, went back again for another child. The sniper targeted him, shooting him in the head. So I went back to Rafah, that surreal town of rubble and barbed wire, ripe oranges and bullet holes, to support the team that had been with Tom

Everywhere I went, the sun shone, the flowers bloomed, and the army seemed to melt away, as if I carried some magic circle of protection. I was a long distance witness to death, a support for grief without suffering the searing personal pain that comes with the loss of a child, a parent, a lover. My own grief hit later, when I was home, and safe, and cried for weeks.

I cry now, every spring, here in California as the daffodils bloom and the plum trees flower. The beauty of spring is forever tinged, for me, with the grief and wonder and horror of that time: Neta sweating in labor while the TV news shows images of war, blood staining the wildflowers a deeper red.

I cry, and then I get I mad. Four years have gone by, and the killing still goes on—in Palestine, in Iraq, and if Bush has his way, in Iran. Ghosts haunt the green hills, shimmering like heat waves under an unnaturally hot sun: all the uncounted dead of this uncalled-for war, all those yet to die.

I’ve got a garden to plant, and a thousand things I’d rather do, but once again this spring, I’m gearing up for action. The peace marches have become boring, strident and predictable. To be absolutely honest, I hate marching around in the street chanting the same slogans I’ve been chanting for forty years. I’m going, anyway. I’m so tired of die-ins and sit-ins and predictable speeches shouted over bullhorns that I could scream if I weren’t hearing in my ears the far more bitter screams of the dying. I’m even tired of trying to drum and sing and make the protest into a creative act of magic. It’s not creative—it’s a damn protest, and I have real creative work to do: books to write, courses to teach, and rituals to plan. Nonetheless, Sunday will find me trudging along on the peace march and Monday will find me lying down on Market Street in some picturesque fashion with a group of friends and our requisite banners.

Why? So I can look myself in the mirror without flinching, and answer to those hundred thousand ghosts. But more than that, because it’s time, friends. Public opinion has turned—now we must make it mean something real. It’s time to send the Democrats back to their committee meetings saying, “Hell, I can’t even get into my office—the halls are blocked and the streets are choked with people angry about this war.” Time to send the Republicans off to their caucuses murmuring quietly “If we continue to support this disaster we’re going to lose every semblance of power or popular support we once possessed.” Time to let the rest of the world know that dissent is alive and well here in the U.S.A. Time to regenerate a movement as nature regenerates life in the spring, with the rising energy that alone can turn our interminable trudging into a dance of defiance.

You come, too. You can skip out on the boring speeches and make cynical remarks—but get your feet out on the street this weekend, somewhere. There’s a thousand different actions planned around the country—and if you don’t know where to go or what to do, check the websites below.

Act because hundreds of thousands who are now alive are marked for death if this war goes on or expands into Iran. Act because every perfumed flower and every bud that breaks into leaf this calls to us to cherish and safeguard life.

Starhawk
www.starhawk.org

For a listing of actions, check:

www.unitedforpeace.org

or

www.declarationofpeace.org

Starhawk is an activist, organizer, and author of The Earth Path, as well as Webs of Power: Notes from the Global Uprising, The Fifth Sacred Thing; and eight other books on feminism, politics and earth-based spirituality. She teaches Earth Activist Trainings that combine permaculture design and activist skills, and works with the RANT trainer’s collective, www.rantcollective.org that offers training and support for mobilizations around global justice and peace issues.

Copyright (c) 2006 by Starhawk. All rights reserved. This copyright protects Starhawk’s right to future publication of her work. Nonprofit, activist, and educational groups may circulate this essay (forward it, reprint it, translate it, post it, or reproduce it) for nonprofit uses. Please do not change any part of it without permission. Readers are invited to visit the web site: starhawk.org

March 10, 2007

Is It For Freedom?

Filed under: Impeach for Peace — Mikael @ 8:22 pm

Film/Slideshow to an amazing song by Sara Thomsen. Warning: Graphic images of the Iraq War.

Tale of Three Georges

Filed under: Impeach for Peace — Mikael @ 7:49 pm

March 7, 2007

You can count on FAUXNews to be Fairly Imbalanced

Filed under: Impeach for Peace — Mikael @ 3:02 pm

This about says it all, doesn’t it?

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March 5, 2007

From Texas cell, Canadian, 9, pleads for help

Filed under: Impeach for Peace,News — Mikael @ 3:21 pm

Family in limbo after unscheduled stop in Puerto Rico
UNNATI GANDHI – Globe and Mail Friday, March 2nd, 2007
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(Kevin’s letter to his Prime Minister: ‘Dear Mr. Prime minister haper I don’t like to stay in this jail. I’m only nine years old. I want to go to my school in Canada. I’m sleeping beside the wall. Please Mr. Priminister haper give visa for my family. This place is not good for me. I want to get out of the cell. Just pleace give visa for my family. My home land is in Canada, My life is over there. I’m also sleeping beside wasroom. Mr. Priminister haper pleace bring me and my family to Canada. Thank you so much.’)

AUSTIN, TEX. — Even if you try to look past the eight-metre-high chain-link fence, beyond the scores of uniformed guards patrolling the perimeter and away from the cameras, metal detectors and lasers, there isn’t the slightest evidence of children inside the T. Don Hutto Family Detention Center.

No one is playing outside; there are no sounds of laughter.

But inside the thick, whitewashed walls of this former maximum-security prison in the heart of Texas are about 170 children — including a nine-year-old Canadian boy named Kevin.

Call it international limbo. Detained by U.S. Customs officials after their flight to Toronto made an unscheduled stop on American soil nearly four weeks ago, Kevin and his Iranian parents, Majid and Masomeh, feel they are being held hostage not only by the physical parameters of Hutto, but by the politics of nationality.

“We can’t go home because I am Canadian but my parents are not,” Kevin said in a telephone interview with The Globe and Mail — no personal interviews have been granted.

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