Wednesday, December 31, 2008

New Year's Eve Potluck & Peace Sing-in at MOA

TO: MAUI PEACE ACTION & the Maui Interfaith-Community Peace Coalition
RE: Potluck and Peace Sing-in at the M.O.A. Center, 5-7pm December 31, a short get-together, early on New Year's Eve. Everyone's invited.

The World Peace Sing project of Maui Peace Action (www.mauipeace.org ) will be celebrated and "Let There Be Peace on Earth" and lots of other songs sung at a potluck and peace-song "sing-in" and sing-out from just 5:00 to 7:00pm on New Years Eve at the M.O.A. center, 164 Kamehameha Ave., Kahului (next to the Christian Science church and 2 doors down from the Kahului Library. Please bring the family, any dish to share, your preferred non-alcoholic beverages, and if you'd like, an acoustic instrument &/or your favorite songs. The M.O.A. center will provide dishes and serving utensils. If you can't stay until 7, drop by for a bite and a song with us.

Maui Peace Action and the Maui Peace Education Foundation thank all of our network of members and supporters for being part of our peace ohana between 2003 and 2008.

Wishing you all peace and hope for our world in the new year, we are -
The Maui Peace Action and Maui Peace Education Foundation boards and steering committees.
---------------------------------------------
ANNOUNCEMENTS:
First meeting of 2009: Monday, Jan. 12, 6pm MCC Ka Lama 102. Peace projects for 2009 will be planned.
First activity of 2009: Walk with us in the Dr. Martin Luther King Day March, Monday, Jan. 19. Details to follow.
--------------------------------------------
Maui Peace Action is on the web at www.mauipeace.org, and our voice mail is 808 573-3255.

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Cynthia McKinney Peace Mission/Relief Boat Attacked by Israeli Military

McKinney relief boat hit by Israeli ship
By CRAIG SCHNEIDER
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Monday, December 29, 2008

A boat carrying international peace activists, including former Georgia congresswoman Cynthia McKinney, and medical supplies to the embattled Gaza Strip sailed back into a Lebanese port on Tuesday after being turned back and damaged by the Israeli navy, organizers of the trip said.

The crowds on the docks in the Lebanese port city of Tyre were jubilant and cheering as they welcomed the vessel.

The boat, which set off from Cyprus Monday wanted to make a statement and deliver medical supplies to embattled Gaza. The trip’s organizers said the boat was clearly in international waters, 90 miles off the coast of Gaza, at the time of its close encounter with the Israeli navy.

“Our boat was rammed three times, twice in the front and one on the side,” McKinney told CNN Tuesday morning. “Our mission was a peaceful mission. Our mission was thwarted by the aggressiveness of the Israeli military.”

To read more, click here:
http://www.ajc.com/metro/content/metro/dekalb/stories/2008/12/29/cynthia_mckinney_gaza.html?cxntlid=homepage_tab_newstab&imw=Y

Monday, December 29, 2008

SHOES OF COMPREHENSIVE DESTRUCTION

THE SHOES WE LONGED FOR: The young journalist who took on Bush has become a unifying Iraqi symbol, a national hero
by Sami Ramadani

Within a few unlikely seconds, a pair of size 10 shoes have become the most destructive weapon the people of Iraq have managed to throw at the occupying powers, after nearly six years of occupation and formidable resistance. One Iraqi writer called the shoes, hurled by a journalist at George Bush, "Iraq's weapon of comprehensive destruction".

While the uprisings of Falluja, Najaf, Basra and Baghdad against the occupation will always remain as landmarks of a people resisting occupation, these incredible seconds have united Iraqis in the most dramatic fashion.

Contrary to most media coverage, the 28-year-old TV reporter Muntadhar al-Zaidi made history not by merely throwing a pair of shoes, the highest expression of insult in Iraqi culture, at the US president, but by what he said while doing so and as he was smothered by US and Iraqi security men. He groaned as they dragged him out of the press conference. They succeeded in silencing him - and according to his brother he was beaten in custody - but he had already said enough to shake the occupation and Nouri al-Maliki's Green Zone regime to their foundations.

Strip the words away, and his and the Iraqi people's cry of deep pain, anger and defiance would amount to no more than a shoe-throwing insult.

But the words were heard. "This is the farewell kiss, you dog," he shouted as he threw the first shoe. The crucial line followed the second shoe: "This is from the widows, the orphans and those who were killed in Iraq."

Once those words were heard, the impact of a pair of shoes became electrifying. A young journalist has put aside the demands of his profession, preferring to act as the loudest cry of his long-suffering people.

If one considers the torture and killings in Iraqi and US jails that Muntadhar often mentioned in his reports for al-Baghdadia satellite TV station, he was certainly aware he risked being badly hurt.

As the Iraqi and Arab satellite stations switched from the live press conference to reporting reaction to the event, the stunned presenters and reporters were swept away by popular expressions of joy in the streets, from Baghdad to Gaza to Casablanca. TV stations and media websites were inundated with messages of adulation.

The instant reply to any criticism of "insulting a guest" was: "Bush is a mass murderer and a war criminal who sneaked into Baghdad. He killed a million Iraqis. He burned the country down."

Expressions of support and demands for Muntadhar's immediate release have spread from Najaf and Falluja to Baghdad, and from Mosul in the north to Basra in the south. An impressive show of anti-occupation unity is developing fast, after being weakened by the sectarian forces that the occupation itself has strengthened and nourished, as Muntadhar himself used to stress.

No one asked after Muntadhar's religion or sect, but they all loved his message. Indeed, I have yet to come across an Iraqi media outlet or website that pronounced on his religion, sect or ethnicity.

The first I heard of his "sect" was through US and British media.

The reality is that Muntadhar is a secular socialist whose hero happens to be Che Guevara. He became a prominent leftwing student leader immediately after the occupation, while at Baghdad University's media college. He reported for al-Baghdadia on the poor and downtrodden victims of the US war. He was first on the scene in Sadr City and wherever people suffered violence or severe deprivation. He not only followed US Apache helicopters' trails of death and destruction, but he was also among the first to report every "sectarian" atrocity and the bombing of popular market places. He let the victims talk first.

It was effective journalism, reporting that the victims of violence themselves accused the US-led occupation of being behind all the carnage. He was a voice that could not be silenced, despite being kidnapped by a gang and arrested by US and regime forces.

His passion for the war's victims and his staunchly anti-occupation message endeared him to al-Baghdadia viewers.

And after sending Bush out of Iraq in ignominy he has become a formidable national hero. The orphan who was brought up by his aunt, and whose name means the longed or awaited for, has become a powerful unifying symbol of defiance, and is being adopted by countless Iraqis as "our dearest son".

* * *
Provided by RightsAction.org

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

New Year's Eve Potluck & Peace Sing-in at MOA

TO: MAUI PEACE ACTION & the Maui Interfaith-Community Peace Coalition
RE: Potluck and Peace Sing-in at the M.O.A. Center, 5-7pm December 31, a short get-together, early on New Year's Eve. Everyone's invited.

The World Peace Sing project of Maui Peace Action (www.mauipeace.org ) will be celebrated and "Let There Be Peace on Earth" and lots of other songs sung at a potluck and peace-song "sing-in" and sing-out from just 5:00 to 7:00pm on New Years Eve at the M.O.A. center, 164 Kamehameha Ave., Kahului (next to the Christian Science church and 2 doors down from the Kahului Library. Please bring the family, any dish to share, your preferred non-alcoholic beverages, and if you'd like, an acoustic instrument &/or your favorite songs. The M.O.A. center will provide dishes and serving utensils. If you can't stay until 7, drop by for a bite and a song with us.

Maui Peace Action and the Maui Peace Education Foundation thank all of our network of members and supporters for being part of our peace ohana between 2003 and 2008.

Wishing you all peace and hope for our world in the new year, we are -
The Maui Peace Action and Maui Peace Education Foundation boards and steering committees.
---------------------------------------------
ANNOUNCEMENTS:
First meeting of 2009: Monday, Jan. 12, 6pm MCC Ka Lama 102. Peace projects for 2009 will be planned.
First activity of 2009: Walk with us in the Dr. Martin Luther King Day March, Monday, Jan. 19. Details to follow.
--------------------------------------------
Maui Peace Action is on the web at www.mauipeace.org, and our voice mail is
808 573-3255.
Mission Statement: Maui Peace Action is a diverse group of citizens
committed to ho'omaluhia (making peace). We encourage disarmament through
peaceful international cooperation, protest pre-emptive aggression, promote
nonviolent solutions to world conflict, and educate for social justice.
(To unsubscribe from this list, reply with "unsubscribe" in the subject.)

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Cheney Admits Authorizing Detainee's Torture

Outgoing VP says Guantanamo prison should stay open until end of terror war, but has no idea when that might be

By David Edwards and Stephen C. Webster

December 16, 2008 "Raw Story" -- Monday, outgoing Vice President Dick Cheney made a startling statement on a nation-wide, televised broadcast.

When asked by ABC News reporter Jonathan Karl whether he approved of interrogation tactics used against a so-called "high value prisoner" at the controversial Guantanamo Bay prison, Mr. Cheney, in a break from his history of being press-shy, admitted to giving official sanctioning of torture.

Video is from ABC's World News, broadcast Dec. 15, 2008.

"I supported it," he said regarding the practice known as "water-boarding," a form of simulated drowning. After World War II, Japanese soldiers were tried and convicted of war crimes in US courts for water-boarding, a practice which the outgoing Bush administration attempted to enshrine in policy.

"I was aware of the program, certainly, and involved in helping get the process cleared, as the agency in effect came in and wanted to know what they could and couldn't do," Cheney said. "And they talked to me, as well as others, to explain what they wanted to do. And I supported it."

He added: "It's been a remarkably successful effort, and I think the results speak for themselves."

ABC asked him if in hindsight he thought the tactics went too far. "I don't," he said.

The prisoner in question, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, who the Bush administration alleges to have planned the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, is one of Guantanamo's "high value targets" thus far charged with war crimes.

Former military interrogator Travis Hall disagrees with Cheney's position.

"Proponents of Guantanamo underestimate what a powerful a propaganda tool Guantanamo has become for terrorist groups such as Al Qaeda, despite several Department of Defense studies documenting the propaganda value of detention centers," he said in a column for Opposing Views.

"For example, West Point’s Combating Terrorism Center has monitored numerous Al Qaeda references to Guantanamo in its recruitment propaganda materials," continued Hall. "Improvements to Guantanamo’s administration of judicial mechanisms will not make its way into Al Qaeda propaganda. Nothing short of closing Guantanamo will remove this arrow from its quiver."

President-elect Barack Obama has promised to close the prison and pull US forces out of Iraq. Cheney, however, has a different timeline for when Guantanamo Bay prison may be "responsibly" retired.

"Well, I think that that would come with the end of the war on terror," he told ABC.

Problematic to his assertion: Mr. Bush's "war on terror" is undefinable and unending by it's very nature, and Cheney seems to recognize this as fact.

Asked when his administration's terror war will end, he jostled, "Well, nobody knows. Nobody can specify that."

"Grumbles" - A Cartoon by James Burns

Click on the image below to get a closer look:

Bush in Afghanistan

President Bush said this morning for the corporate media to relay from Sea to Shining Sea, "Are there difficult days ahead? Absolutely. But are the conditions a lot better today in Afghanistan than they were in 2001? Unquestionably, undoubtedly they are better."

Unquestionably better?

There may be a million Afghanis dead as a result of the Bush invasion (according to some, although corporate media have buried any attempt to report deaths, the most important statistic in war), and heroin exporting has reached record levels. Women say that rape has become common outside of the capitol, now that criminal warlords are in charge of provinces. A primary difference in the landscape, Afghanis say, is that where there were once houses, there is now rubble.

A recent report by the Council on Security and Development said the Taliban currently hold a permanent presence across 72 percent of Afghanistan. Suicide bombings have claimed more than 4,000 lives this year alone in Afghanistan.

It's the Farewell Kiss, You Dog



The mass media are agog this morning about yesterday's shoe-throwing at President Bush by Iraqi journalist Muntazer al-Zaidi, following the bizarre statement by Bush that while the war in Iraq was not over "it is decisively on its way to being won." All over the Arab world this morning people are calling al Zaidi courageous and a hero.

Bush has been protected in public throughout his presidency, appearing only at controlled settings in which most of those attending were either staunch supporters, military people (a captive audience) or servile corporate media "journalists." Our own corporate press have spent eight years kneeling and kissing Bush's butt, which may be why there is so much surprise at the fact that Bush is one of the most hated people on the planet, inspiring such bitterness.

"Throwing the shoes at Bush was the best goodbye kiss ever... it expresses how Iraqis and other Arabs hate Bush," wrote Musa Barhoumeh, editor of Jordan's independent Al-Gahd Arabic newspaper.

Saddam Hussein's former lawyer Khalil al-Dulaimi said he was forming a team to defend Zaidi and that around 200 lawyers, including Americans, had offered their services for free. "It was the least thing for an Iraqi to do to Bush, the tyrant criminal who has killed two million people in Iraq and Afghanistan," said Dulaimi.

"All US soldiers who have used their shoes to humiliate Iraqis should be brought to justice, along with their US superiors, including Bush," said Ali Qeisi, head of a Jordan-based Iraqi rights group, calling for Zaidi's release.

"The flying shoe speaks more for Arab public opinion than all the despots/puppets that Bush meets with during his travels in the Middle East," said Asad Abu Khalil, a popular Lebanese-American blogger and professor at Stanislaus University in California.

Not reported in the corporate media is that three weeks ago, Huffington Post blogger Jamal Dajani noted that crowds of Iraqis "gathered in Ferdous Square, where Saddam Hussein's statue once stood" and pelted an effigy of Bush with their shoes, so there is nothing new in this.