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

March 25, 2007

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
starmeijer2.sm.jpg
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?

libby_verdict.jpg

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
letter500donebig.jpg
(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.

(More)

March 4, 2007

An Open Letter about Impeachment to Rep. Jay Inslee (D-WA)

Filed under: Impeach for Peace — Mikael @ 6:50 pm

(Representing the district in Washington State I grew up in)

20475.jpg

Representative Inslee,

It has been with great pride that I have read of my original home state’s leadership in the growing movement across the nation to hold the Bush Administration accountable for their plethora of crimes and misdemeanors through the process of impeachment.

As one of three states – Vermont and New Mexico being the others – that have impeachment resolutions broiling in their capitals, Washington State‘s citizens are doing their patriotic duty to insist that their public officials honor their oaths of office to defend our nation against the domestic enemies to the Constitution of the United States of America currently residing in the White House.

As a native Bainbridge Islander, where you now reside, I am appalled by your stance against the impeachment resolution proffered by State Sen. Eric Oemig (D-WA) as being “a waste of time”.

Your political partner in this obstruction of justice mission at the behest of the national Democratic Party leadership, Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA) revealed her shallow knowledge of the impeachment bill, Senate Joint Memorial 8016 itself when she offered two words in opposition to it: “Dick Cheney”. Oemig’s bill calls for impeachment investigations to commence against both President Bush AND the Vice President.

Vice President Cheney, who has indicated he may ignore subpoenas, will be triple indicted for every ‘W’ crime revealed and could easily be convicted through ‘open source’ evidence discovered by a googling Bainbridge High School ‘C’ student.

As sympathetic as I am to Democrats wishing to move forward with their positive agenda, choosing to ignore the past six years would be as naive as a victim of domestic assault not wanting to press charges. The result will eventually be more of the same. You are just going to get beaten again, and probably much more viciously. It is not a matter of “if”, but “when” – maybe next time to death.

We were bitten by a snake. The wound must be lanced and the venom removed, or it will leech into our collective bloodstream and inevitably target our national heart. Allowing this wound to “heal over” not only won’t lead to a healthy future, it will assure the exact opposite.

Crimes have been committed. Not a few. Very, very many. Not just the break-in of a campaign office or a President getting lipstick on his cigar in the Oral Office. People have died because of these crimes – the lives of hundreds of thousands of families irretrievably destroyed. Some of these crimes are gross violations of the Geneva Accords and Nuremberg Principles – identical to those for which Nazis were convicted and put to death.
Our national treasury has been looted to the benefit of crony corporations – the largest surplus in U.S. history ‘mismanaged’ into the largest deficit, and we are still counting as news of billions of taxpayer dollars in cash having been shipped on crates into the Iraq War zone surface.
Our international reputation is in shambles with the “Coalition of the Willing” (to commit to the most heinous of International Crimes, that of a War of Aggression) having dwindled down to ourselves, the ancient Romans and the infamous National Socialists.
Our global Intelligence capabilities have been severely, treasonously compromised at the orders of our highest leaders as evidence and testimony brought forward in the I. Lewis ‘Scooter’ Libby trial has clearly revealed.
Anyone who has taken the time to read the Military Commission act as I have knows that the U.S. Constitution has had its throat cut and is lying in the gutter with no promise of a single Democratic Senator or Representative bending a knee to save its life.

The investigative work into prewar lies and related matters by Head of the House Judiciary Committee, Representative John Conyers, Jr. (D-MI), has already been comprehensively executed, it just needs to be spoken into the Congressional Record during impeachment hearings as published in George W. Bush versus the U.S. Constitution. More crimes are likely to be unearthed in the process as the antiseptic of truth throws light on this dark era.

The Center for Constitutional Rights, The Bush Crimes Commission, WorldCantWait.org, AfterDowningStreet.org, Democrats,com, Progressive Democrats of America and ImpeachforPeace.org, among others, have also laid out remarkably comprehensive reports on the crimes of George W. Bush, Dick Cheney and their Administration.

We are a nation of laws. No American is above the law. The appropriate remedy for the temporary resident public servants in these federal offices who violate the law is impeachment. We aren’t shopping for shoes here, Condi. This isn’t an optional step. This is prosecution of law deeply seated in the Constitution of the United States as it used to exist – indeed our very, inalienable moral fiber. To not enforce these laws is to set ourselves up for history to repeat itself in short order, as we are experiencing now at the hands of those not prosecuted for their Iran-Contra crimes.
To not undo the new preposterously overgrown Executive authority is to invite some future President – ANY future President – to snap his or her fingers and become a virtual dictator in a heartbeat. To “do nothing” would be a slap in the face of every patriot who bled for our freedoms. Give me liberty.

A waste of time? Consider this:

Senate Republicans, when handed a recommendation to impeach by the House will be faced with a very tough choice as the world watches them confront a most stubborn, arrogant and unrepentant Connecticut Cowboy President and his mephistophelian inner circle:
a). Fight impeachment and continue to be revealed as rubber-stamping, lick spittle enablers of Treasonous War Criminals who were intent on a heavy-handed crackdown and takeover of all things American. Vote “No” and get washed out in the second Blue Wave of 2008.
b). Play the “I had no idea all of this was going on” card to desperately distance themselves from Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Rice, Ashcroft, Abramoff, Ney, DeLay, et al, vote “Yes” and possibly hang onto their cushy position of power through the next election cycle.
Would you go down with this ‘soaring’ Hindenburg?

Impeachment isn’t a good or bad idea. Impeachment is a moral imperative. It is the proper remedy prescribed by our founding fathers for circumstances precisely such as these. Impeachment is essential for the hope of future health of our nation.

We the People must impeach those who regard America, its military, its electorate and sovereign foreign nations simply resources to exploit in order to fatten their bank accounts and expand their personal power.

Representative Inslee, leaders all over the United States of America are calling out for Justice. Lead, follow, or please have the decency to step down from your office. If you do not have the integrity to honor your oath to defend the Constitution against these vile enemies to it, then perhaps your constituents should see to it that you are Recalled and someone ready to honor their oath to defend the Constitution of the United States of America take your place.

With all due respect for your office and your public service,

Mikael Rudolph
Minneapolis, MN 55407-3612 (MN-5th – Keith Ellison’s district)

mikael_at_the_octobe_061214_0535.jpg

Please see: Evidence for Impeachment

~ Mikael Rudolph was born in the Winslow Clinic on Bainbridge Island on Father’s Day in 1958, graduated from Bainbridge High School in 1976 and Whitman College in 1984. He moved to Minneapolis, Minnesota in 1986 where he is an actor, mime artist, ballroom dance instructor and activist.

March 2, 2007

Peace

Filed under: Impeach for Peace — Mikael @ 5:06 pm

iraq-protest-small.jpg
from: USAToday

How do you ask a man to be the last man to die in Iraq?
How do you ask a man to be the last man to die for a mistake?
How do you ask a man to be the last man to die for a lie?

Filed under: Impeach for Peace — Mikael @ 4:23 pm

This was sent to me from a good friend I have yet to meet. Thus is the strange new world of internet relationships we now find ourselves in. Thomas T. Panto is, as you will see, a veteran of the Vietnam War who is deeply committed to seeing peace come to our world and to hold the enemies to that peace accountable for their crimes – thus his support of our work on this website. ~ Mikael

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

The War Protesters of the 60’s SAVED LIVES … Everyone’s Lives… Everywhere on Earth.

vietnam_protest_rs.jpg

I am a Viet-Nam veteran, and so, I thank the PROTESTERS and OBJECTORS who Stood up for Me while I was trapped in Viet-Nam and far too busy living to protest the insanity.

Bush can not lie to me. I, am an EYE WITNESS of that DEMONETIZATION that leads Humanity to SLAUGHTER.

I and Americans had, and still have ONLY the ”history books” written by the ”invading victors”… now I now have my own observations gathered by my own eyes to refute their words.

You may know that the penalty for disobeying an order inside a combat zone is DEATH. You must kill or be ”Hanged”.

Did you know that we, in Viet-Nam, as now in Iraq, were TOLD that we were killing “The Enemy”.

But it was WE who armed those citizens and rebels, the innocent people of Viet-Nam and Iraq, and we LIED to them about why they should murder their own brothers and sisters…

We TOLD those innocent rice farmers of Viet-Nam that ”capitolism” is ”good” and ”communism” is ”bad” and TOLD them to pick up OUR GUNS and KILL EACH OTHER, or else be SHOT for TREASON !!!!

Our Bullets DEMANDED that our victim take up arms and return fire.

… and so, the communists also LIED to the people of the North, telling them that Americans were no different than the French army that we were sent to replace…and they were right.

We, first the French, and then the Americans, (the slaves of capitalismcapitalism), and those Viet-Namese in the north, (the slaves of communism), USED those poor people as CANNON FODDER in OUR personal conflict over MERE POLITICS.

vietnam.jpg

In 1971 John Kerry saved more Lives in ONE DAY than our Battalion of American Tanks could murder in one year.

In 1971 Kerry told congress that the SOLDIERS, (like him and like me) were told LIES and then ORDERED to harm innocent people over POLITICS. Those ORDERS were “The Crime”.

Hear it for yourself

110104kerryjohnvietnamera.jpg

Right now, our soldiers in Iraq, ( and Lebanon, and Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia and Afghanistan ) , THINK they are fighting only the ‘enemy’.

But since 1948, we have been the ”Terrorists” and the ”Insurgents” in the middle east. Those are OUR TANKS that the children are throwing their rocks at on every inch of the Middle East.

Washington has been the INVADING Army. USING US. Washington is doing the killing of INNOCENT PEOPLE who were falsely accused in order for Bush to control, the ‘OUR OIL’ in THEIR REGION.

The New LIES, “Terrorists”, replacing the old LIES, “Viet-Cong” , but the ‘Evil’ is the SAME one.

640x480_iraq_postwar.jpg

The ATTACKERS of Life CREATED the DEFENDERS of Life.

We were the Liars and the Attackers in Viet-Nam, as we are now in Iraq.

– SP4 Thomas T. Panto – HHC 1st BDE 9 DIV Dong-Tam VN (1968)

God Bless the Protesters

iraq_protest_trim.jpg

February 25, 2007

Virginia lawmakers pass slavery apology

Filed under: Impeach for Peace — Mikael @ 2:03 am

By LARRY O’DELL, Associated Press Writer Sat Feb 24, 6:11 PM ET
slavery copy.jpg
RICHMOND, Va. – Meeting on the grounds of the former Confederate Capitol, the Virginia General Assembly voted unanimously Saturday to express “profound regret” for the state’s role in slavery.

Sponsors of the resolution say they know of no other state that has apologized for slavery, although Missouri lawmakers are considering such a measure. The resolution does not carry the weight of law but sends an important symbolic message, supporters said.

“This session will be remembered for a lot of things, but 20 years hence I suspect one of those things will be the fact that we came together and passed this resolution,” said Delegate A. Donald McEachin, a Democrat who sponsored it in the House of Delegates.

The resolution passed the House 96-0 and cleared the 40-member Senate on a unanimous voice vote. It does not require Gov. Timothy M. Kaine’s approval.

The measure also expressed regret for “the exploitation of Native Americans.”

(More)

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »

Powered by WordPress