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Politics : DON'T START THE WAR -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Raymond Duray who wrote (1688)1/17/2003 8:29:55 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 25898
 
What would King say about Iraq war?

By MICHAEL HONEY
PROFESSOR
Friday, January 17, 2003

President Bush seems determined to implement his new doctrine of pre-emptive war, this time against Iraq (next time, who?). What would Martin Luther King Jr. say?

Although King did not completely rule out the right to self-defense, it is almost certain that he would not define bombing and invading other countries as self-defense. Rather, he would warn us, as he did in his life, about the evils of war and its futility as a way of resolving conflict.

King said war inevitably wreaks havoc on civilians, accelerates violence and obscures its causes by demonizing people as enemies in order to justify killing them. His perceptive analysis of the Vietnam War shredded the fallacy that war brings peace. Government leaders put half a million American troops in Vietnam, terrorized the populace by dropping more bombs on a country the size of Florida than all the bombs dropped during World War II and called propping up dictators a war for freedom. They justified it all in the name of fighting communism, ignoring the cost of killing more than 2 million Vietnamese, countless other Cambodians and Laotians and some 60,000 American soldiers.

King did not think it surprising that dispossessed people in countries subjected to neo-colonial rule reacted to their impoverished conditions with bombs and suicide attacks. Defining them merely as enemies and using violence to destroy them, he said, made it impossible to ameliorate the conditions that breed violence. "Someone must have sense enough and morality enough to cut off the chain of hate," he said, but apparently that someone today is not the U.S. government.

The compassionate and self-critical scrutiny that King called for seems to be furthest from the minds of the Bush administration. King worried that such leaders "possess power without compassion, might without morality and strength without sight," and so should we today.

Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld may be counting on a "cakewalk" (his words) of a war, hoping that massive firepower against a vulnerable, decimated country will minimize U.S. casualties. An easy defeat of the Iraqi Army would not dispel King's moral objections, however. The United Nations has predicted a humanitarian disaster and Arab ministers have warned that U.S. war would "open the gates of hell" throughout the Mideast, precipitating more terrorism and violence.

King said during the Vietnam War that "Americans are forcing even their friends into becoming their enemies," and "in the process they are incurring deep psychological and political defeat." We seem to be doing much the same thing today.

King also warned that militarism fosters a pervasive atmosphere of violence at home. As we confront gang wars, school shootings and other senseless violence in our society today, how can we not be concerned about the massive, state-sponsored violence modeled by our own government, as it and American companies become arms merchants to the world?

And, as King warned in 1968, military power exhausts resources needed to create jobs, health care, housing, education and economic infrastructure. As millions of Americans stand in food lines and as AIDS and hunger proliferate across the globe, can't we imagine better ways to make and use money?

As America plays both world arms merchant and policeman, the quest for military control, as King put it, has placed us "on the side of the wealthy and the secure while we create a hell for the poor." It seems we truly are becoming a country where, as King warned, "machines and computers, profit motives and property rights are considered more important than people."

There is an alternative. Pursuing peace, economic redistribution and racial, ethnic and international fairness, King thought, could combat militarism, materialism and racism; it could insure that "the pursuit of peace will take precedence over the pursuit of war." We could become, as historian Howard Zinn says, "a humanitarian superpower" rather than a military juggernaut.

Why not try it? We ignore at our own great peril King's demand for reordering our priorities so that we live up to our moral ideals.
___________________________________________________

Michael Honey holds the Harry Bridges endowed chair of labor studies at the University of Washington and teaches American history and labor and ethnic studies at the UW-Tacoma. He is writing a book about the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., black workers and the Memphis sanitation strike.

seattlepi.nwsource.com



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (1688)1/17/2003 8:57:38 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 25898
 
Anti-war movement in America grows stronger

January 17, 2003

Let's make money, not war, say US protesters
From Tim Reid and Anne Dixey in Washington

timesonline.co.uk


IF GEORGE BUSH looks out of the Oval Office window tomorrow he will probably see the biggest peace demonstration in Washington since the Vietnam War.

But he will not see hippies or long-haired peaceniks. He will be looking instead at a huge cross-section of Middle America: doctors, corporate lawyers, chief executives, lorry drivers, nurses, military families, grandmothers, even families of September 11 victims. And they won’t be burning the American flag. They will be carrying it with pride.

Most Americans support President Bush and his desire to disarm Iraq, but polls show that they do not believe he has yet made the case for using military force, and across this vast nation there are deep misgivings about a war.

Every week surveys find a consistent number of between 60 and 70 per cent who oppose a war without UN backing or the discovery of a “smoking gun” by weapons inspectors in Iraq. Yesterday the Pew Research Centre reported that without clear evidence of Saddam Hussein’s weapons programme, only 29 per cent would support an invasion.

Until last June, Robert Hinkley was an international corporate laywer billing clients $500 an hour and earning more than $1 million a year.

He marched against a war in October, in Augusta, Maine, and has helped to organise nine busloads, 450 people, to make the 17-hour journey to Washington on Saturday from his home town of Bangor. “This thing is very mainstream, and it’s going to get bigger and more vociferous,” he said. “When I marched in October there were teenagers up to 80-year-olds, blue-collar and white-collar workers. People are very concerned about this war. But at the same time they are worried about appearing unpatriotic. Many have let the President go this far, but underneath it all, they are thinking: ‘Why are we really doing this?’” The problem for the peace movement is that it lacks a leader or a rallying point. It is as if it is somehow unpatriotic to criticise the President’s war aims. No leading politicians have been brave enough to oppose Mr Bush, particularly those Democrats running for president and terrified of being on the wrong side of the issue.

But there are signs that the anti-war movement, though still small, is gathering momentum as the threat of war increases, and as thousands of troops leave for the Gulf.

The anti-war movement of the 21st century communicates mainly through the internet and includes many middle-class conservatives who love their country but worry about its huge power and their President’s motives.

On Monday a group of prominent Republican business executives published a full-page letter in the Wall Street Journal headed “A Republican Dissent on Iraq”.

It began: “Let’s be clear. We supported the Gulf War. We supported our intervention in Afghanistan. We accept the logic of a just war. But Mr President, your war on Iraq does not pass the test. It is not a just war.” It continued: “The world wants Saddam Hussein disarmed. But you must find a better way to do it.”

United for Peace, the organiser of Saturday’s march, has brought together more than 140 organisations, and is backed by religious and civic organisations, including the National Council of Churches, Business Leaders for Sensible Priorities, Veteran for Common Cause and Physicians for Social Responsibility.

Many thousands of these protesters will come from America’s main trade unions.

“It shows that it’s not just a bunch of people in dreadlocks out there,” Jason Mark, an organiser, said. “Blue-collar people are seen as having a lot of salt-of-the-earth wisdom and legitimacy. They’re not the usual suspects when it comes to peace and justice issues.”

Like many business leaders, the unions are worried about the economic impact of a war. David Welsh, a former San Francisco postman, is worried about the estimated $200 billion cost of an Iraqi campaign.

“That could mean less federal spending on unemployment benefits, health care and other areas that affect working class people,” he said.

Many chief executives believe that Mr Bush should be focusing on the fragile US economy, not attacking a country 8,000 miles from Washington. This is hardly 1967. The message today is: “Make Money, Not War.”

Last month Win Without War, the most mainstream of the anti-war coalitions, announced its formation with a carefully worded mission statement: “We are patriotic Americans who share the belief that Saddam Hussein cannot be allowed to possess weapons of mass destruction. But we believe that a pre-emptive military invasion of Iraq will harm American national interests.”

In August Daphne Reed, a grandmother, founded Mothers Against War from her home in Massachusetts.

“The Government has used the horror of September 11 to strike fear into the hearts of the US people,” she said. “Do they think Americans are stupid? Because we are not . We love our country deeply. My father fought in both world wars. He taught me patriotism. This is not patriotism.”

On Capitol Hill, every senior Democrat voted for Mr Bush’s Iraqi war resolution.Few politicians will join tomorrow’s march.

Many Hollywood luminaries have opposed a war. Martin Sheen, the star of The West Wing, led a march of 10,000 in Los Angeles last weekend. Others are being told by their agents that to do so publicly would harm their careers. Michael Kieschnick, a march organiser, said: “When those millions get engaged, whether through street events, letter writing or visiting the representatives, Bush will have to pause.”