Supporting Military War -
Opposing Military War -
Suggestions to Do
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Below are
suggestions for opposing war in order to seek peace. |
Send Food Not Bombs
Support
Kennedy to Reconsider Bush War Authority
"Let the
Inspections Work" - MoveON
Contact United Nations Security Council
Send Food Not Bombs
Dear Friends,
There is a grassroots campaign underway to
protest war in Iraq in a simple, but potentially powerful way.
Please consider this approach from the Boulder Mennonite
Church.
Place 1/2 cup UNcooked rice in a small plastic bag (a
snack-size bag or sandwich bag work fine). Squeeze out excess
air and seal the bag. Wrap it in a piece of paper on which you
have written, "If your enemies are hungry, feed them. - Romans
12:20. Please send this rice to the people of Iraq; do
not attack them." Place the paper and bag of rice in an
envelope (either a letter-sized or padded mailing
envelope--both are the same cost to mail) and
address them to:
President George Bush
White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave. NW
Washington, DC 20500
Attach $1.06 in postage. (Three 37-cent stamps equal $1.11.)
Drop this in the mail. It is important to act NOW so that President Bush
gets the letters ASAP. In order for this protest to be
effective, there must be hundreds of thousands of such rice
deliveries to the White House. We can do this if you each
forward this message to your friends and family.
There is a positive history of this protest! In
the 1950s, Fellowship of Reconciliation began a similar
protest, which is credited with influencing President
Eisenhower against attacking China. Read on...
"In the mid-1950s, the pacifist Fellowship of
Reconciliation, learning of famine in the Chinese mainland,
launched a 'Feed Thine Enemy' campaign. Members and friends
mailed thousands of little bags of rice to the White House
with a tag quoting the Bible, "If thine enemy hunger, feed
him."
As far as anyone knew for more than ten years, the campaign
was an apparent failure. The President did not acknowledge
receipt of the bags publicly; certainly, no rice was ever sent
to China.
"What nonviolent activists only learned a decade later was
that the campaign played a significant, perhaps even
determining role in preventing nuclear war. Twice while the
campaign was on, President Eisenhower met with the Joint
Chiefs of Staff to consider U.S. options in the conflict
with China over two islands, Quemoy and Matsu. The generals
twice recommended the use of nuclear weapons. President
Eisenhower each time turned to his aide and asked how many
little bags of rice had come in. When told they numbered in
the tens of thousands,
Eisenhower told the generals that as long as so many Americans
were expressing active interest in having the U.S. feed the
Chinese, he certainly wasn't going to consider using nuclear
weapons against
them."
Submitted by
Gary Michaels
February 1, 2003
Kennedy Urges Senate to Reconsider Bush War Authority
Ask Your Senator to Reclaim
Senate Responsibility
The après
State-of-the-Union comments were interrupted with breaking
news: Sen. Ted Kennedy had just announced that the next day he
would go to the Senate floor to ask his colleagues to vote to
reclaim their right to give permission for war.
If we are to stand as a beacon of hope and democracy, then we
must honor our own democratic institutions and Constitution.
Being a U S Senator includes accepting the responsibility for
declaring war.
Wouldn’t it be
wonderful if all Senators were showered with requests from
their own constituents to vote with Kennedy on this? You can
help make that happen.
We all saw the
overwhelming standing applause from both sides of the aisle on
the war half of President Bush’s speech. A debate in the
Senate would not likely stop the war. But it would force our
Senators to be accountable. It would restore our
Constitutional protection against waging war without
representation.
Please contact your
own two Senators TODAY. Ask them to vote for Sen. Kennedy’s
motion. You can find their contact information on the Senate
web-site. You can find the contact information here:
http://www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/senators_cfm.cfm
or you can follow the news link menu on the left side of The
Modern Tribune homepage.
Please send an
email to your friends and family asking them to do the same.
Be an example of the courage you wish your Senators would
display.
It’s not too late –
yet.
Pennington Geis
January
29, 2003
"Let
the Inspections Work" - MoveON
Dear MoveOn supporters worldwide,
Yesterday, we launched a nationwide TV ad campaign in the
U.S.,
which has received a great deal of national and local media
attention. Our key message is "Let the Inspections Work."
You can see the ad itself on our home page at
http://www.moveon.org
I've also attached some news coverage of the ad below, which
describes the ad in some detail.
This ad is part of our campaign to communicate the depth and
breadth of opposition to an Iraq War, in the U.S. Although
the polls show very thin support for war, until now the media
has not widely reported this.
Our biggest surprise is how many members of the media around
the world are interested in this story. Apparently, the
American public is widely seen as moving lock-step behind the
most extremist members of the Bush administration.
Journalists
around the world seem surprised by the strength of opposition
in the U.S.
Please help us spread the word. If you know any members of
the press in your country who should know about our efforts,
please pass this note on to them.
We've posted our press release regarding the ad, still images,
audio, and video suitable for broadcast in our press room at:
http://www.moveon.org/pressroom.html
As a follow-on, this coming Tuesday, more than 7,000 MoveOn
members will be visiting their senators and members of
congress
in more than 400 local offices across the nation, asking them
to "Let the Inspections Work." Opposition to war in Iraq is
broad and deep in the U.S. and worldwide. Let's let everyone
know.
Thank you.
Sincerely,
-Wes Boyd
President, MoveOn.org
January 17th, 2002
P.S. I've also attached our recent alert to our U.S. audience
with more details on the campaign below. Our "Let the
Inspection
Work" petition has more than 300,000 signatories world-wide.
If you'd like to add your name and comment, go to:
http://www.moveon.org/winwithoutwar
_______________
Dear MoveOn Supporters,
Today's the day. Today we're launching a hard-hitting TV ad
across
the nation to underline our key message: "Let the Inspections
Work."
In December, we asked members to contribute $27,000 for a
print
ad in the New York Times. Within days, we had more than
$400,000
committed to our ad campaign. This allowed us to do several
print
ads, including an ad in USA Today. To follow up, we ran a
radio
ad created by Betsey Binet, one of our members. But once we
saw
the avalanche of support, we knew it was time to go to TV.
Over the holidays, we worked on the spot you'll see today.
Our
goal is to underline the risk of war and we've created a piece
intended to provoke discussion and controversy. Without
further
ado, you can view the ad on the main page of our website at:
http://www.moveon.org
The ad is airing on TV stations in Washington, DC, Los
Angeles,
San Francisco, Philadelphia, Chicago, Dallas, Miami, Boston,
Minneapolis, Phoenix, Cleveland, Portland and Seattle. The ad
buy is largely on cable networks, and will show heavily on
public
interest shows on channels such as CNN and MSNBC for the next
week.
At 10am today in each of these media markets, MoveOn
volunteers
will be running press conferences for the local media.
The press has already shown a great deal of interest in this
story. Dan Rather broke the story last night, and Eli will be
appearing on Good Morning America this morning. I've attached
below an Associated Press story that's just hit the wire.
The big story that's gathering steam is just how mainstream
and
broad the opposition to war is, as highlighted today in a
Boston
Globe article I've also excerpted below. That's exactly our
intent
with this ad. And just to drive the point home, more than
7,000
MoveOn members will be visiting more than 500 congressional
offices
across the county next Tuesday.
Please stay tuned. And thanks everyone,
- The MoveOn Team
Carrie, Eli, Joan, Peter, Randall, Wes and Zack
January 16th, 2002
P.S. By the way, for the congressional meetings this coming
Tuesday we asked for your help to get another 30,000
signatures
and hit the 200,000 mark. In 24 hours, you've given us three
times what we asked for -- we've gotten another 90,000,
putting
us well over a quarter-million. You don't just hit our goals,
you shatter them. Thanks.
_______________
Excerpt from AP article
ANTI-WAR GROUP REVIVES "DAISY" AD CAMPAIGN
January 15, 2003
By IAN STEWART
Associated Press Writer
Revisiting one of the most effective television commercials in
the annals of U.S. politics, a grassroots anti-war group has
produced a remake of the "Daisy" ad, warning that a war
against
Iraq could spark nuclear Armageddon.
The provocative 30-second commercial - released to the media
Wednesday and appearing in 12 major U.S. cities on Thursday
at a cost of $400,000, was prepared with the help of thousands
of donations to the Internet-based group MoveOn.org.
The original Daisy ad aired only once, during the 1964
presidential race. Produced by the campaign of incumbent
Lyndon B. Johnson, it depicted a 6-year-old girl plucking
petals
from a daisy - along with a missile launch countdown and then
a
nuclear mushroom cloud. The suggestion was that if elected
president, Republican Barry Goldwater might lead the United
States to a nuclear war with the Soviet Union. Goldwater lost
by a wide margin.
The 2003 version follows the same format, with an added
montage
of scenes of military escalation: burning oil wells, tanks in
the battlefield, wounded soldiers, chaotic protests in a
foreign
city and an ambulance racing through U.S. streets. Then, a
similar
mushroom cloud, and the screen goes to black, with a dire
warning:
"War with Iraq. Maybe it will end quickly. Maybe not. Maybe it
will spread. Maybe extremists will take over countries with
nuclear weapons. Maybe the unthinkable."
Then, another "10... 9... 8...," countdown, and a final
message:
"Maybe that's why the overwhelming majority of Americans say
to
President Bush: let the inspections work."
MoveOn.org's leaders hope the ad will enliven the debate on
the specter of war - and persuade Americans to oppose a
military solution in Iraq.
"We're playing with matches in a tinderbox," Eli Pariser,
MoveOn.org's international campaign director said. "We wanted
to run an ad that would highlight that very real possibility
and help encourage a national discussion about the
consequences
of war."
________________
Excerpts from today's Boston Globe
FOES OF A WAR IN IRAQ SPREAD THEIR MESSAGE
January 16, 2003
By Robert Schlesinger, Globe Staff
WASHINGTON - The ad starts with a little girl pulling petals
off
a daisy and ends with a mushroom cloud - a startling image
underscoring an appeal for peace. In an updated version of an
infamous 1964 political spot, modern-day activists are trying
to urge mainstream Americans to join the movement against
war with Iraq.
The 30-second television spot, which is scheduled to start
running
today in 13 cities including Boston, is illustrative of a
preemptive
peace movement that has been organizing against a war that
hasn't
started. The movement's leaders are using 21st-century tactics
to
spread their message beyond the traditional ranks of the
antiwar
movement.
"Our members don't really consider themselves activists," said
Eli
Pariser, international campaigns director for MoveOn.org, the
group
that funded and produced the ad. "It's the first time they've
been
involved in political issues. So getting out in the street for
them
is a scary thought, but making contributions and helping pay
for
an ad is something they're only too willing to do."
To produce and air the ad, MoveOn.org raised more than
$400,000
over the Internet from more than 14,000 members between Dec. 5
and Dec. 7, according to the group, which came into existence
in 1998 to advocate against impeaching then-president Bill
Clinton.
The group raised more than $26,000 from 1,000 donors in
Massachusetts.
...
"On Saturday, you will see many, many people in Washington,
D.C.,
and some of them will be our members,'' said Pariser. ''But
what's
exciting about this is we can get people who are housewives in
Arkansas or plumbers in Ohio also involved in the same
political
push. I don't think it's a change in tactics necessarily,
[so much as] adding new tactics that haven't been available in
the past to reach more mainstream audiences."
The television ad is calculated to get this movement noticed
by
mainstream America. Starting with the girl and the daisy, the
images shift to what peace activists say could result from a
war
in Iraq: burning oil wells, wounded soldiers, angry crowds.
"War with Iraq. Maybe it will end quickly. Maybe not. Maybe
extremists will take over countries with nuclear weapons," a
voice-over says.
The image returns to the little girl before flashing to a
nuclear
explosion. The final message in white letters over a black
background is: "Let the inspections work," referring to what
the UN weapons inspectors currently assessing Iraq's efforts
to develop weapons of mass destruction.
The ad mirrors the television spot "Daisy," which
then-president
Lyndon B. Johnson's campaign ran against Republian challenger
Barry Goldwater, suggesting that Goldwater was too dangerous
to
have control of the US nuclear arsenal. That ad ran only once
before being pulled, but it has been rerun countless times as
a classic of negative political advertising.
The new ad may mirror the old in more than just its theme:
MoveOn.org spent the relatively small sum of $185,000 on air
time, apparently hoping just a short run would generate media
attention.
"The 'Daisy' ad was this ad about the danger that we face as a
country and about the choices we have to make sure the worst
doesn't happen," Pariser said. "We felt like we're in a very
similar situation right now. With the prospect of this war
in Iraq, we are playing with matches in a tinderbox."
MoveOn.org is part of the Win Without War coalition, one of
several groups trying to organize a peace movement that
encompasses people who have in the past been slow to join.
David Cortright, the founder and staff coordinator of Win
Without
War, recalled that the group's genesis came during the October
antiwar protest in Washington. The rally, said Cortright,
"was all over the map politically and not very appealing to a
mainstream perspective." At dinner that night, he and a few
others
discussed forming a coalition that would be "more welcoming to
mainstream constituencies."
"We wanted to project a more mainstream, patriotic message.
We feel that the number-one concern about this whole policy is
that it's going to harm our country," Cortright said. "We
don't
go off and start wars, at least that's our tradition."
The Win Without War group, announced last month as a group of
"patriotic Americans who share the belief that Saddam Hussein
cannot be allowed to possess weapons of mass destruction" but
which also opposes a military solution, was the result. The
coalition includes groups ranging from the National
Organization
of Women to the National Council of Churches.
"It's an attempt to recognize that it's not just the liberal
left or the theological left or the political left that is
organizing," said Dr. Bob Edgar, a former House Democrat from
Pennsylvania who is now the general secretary for the National
Council on Churches. "It's just average, ordinary, common
people
who don't normally get excited about issues of war and peace,
but on this issue they believe that the administration has not
made its case." |