Famous Quotes
aboutWar&Peace
#48
"Our lives begin to end the day
we become silent about things that matter."
Martin Luther King, Jr.
On November 19th
Gilad Atzmon & the Orient
House Ensemble will play musiK
at the London Queen Elizabeth
Hall.
Online booking:
http://www.rfh.org.uk/main/events/116753.html?section=contemporary&file=
Telephone booking:
0870 401 8181
"Witty, wierd, bolshie and beautiful,
this is a great album". Time Out
"A potently expressive musical angle
on the world we live in". Jazzwise
"it's a taste well worth acquiring
because you realise what a profound, moving experience Atzmon's lone voice
raised in protest has been". The Observer
"...the work of an independent and
unruly spirit still in turbulent evolution. The Guardian
"This album feels like a spell in a
nightclub at the edge of oblivion". Evening Standard
"Atzmon is essentially a jazz man, and everything
emanates from his moodily lyrical playing-with the most telling moments
those closest to home. The Daily Telegraph
"His flow of ideas and coherent
marshalling of them makes for solos that are as exhilarating as they are
impassioned". The Herald
"...fantastiK" Sunday Tribune
for more information:
www.gilad.co.uk
January 20
demonstration against the war
At Least 100,000 Dead in Iraq
U.S. War is a Blood Bath for the Iraqi People
Pledge
to Take Action to End the War
In a medical study being
published today, scientists have concluded that the U.S. invasion
and occupation of Iraq has resulted in the deaths of at least 100,000
Iraqis, "and may be much higher." It further revealed that most
of the 100,000 Iraqis who died were killed in violent deaths,
primarily carried out by U.S. forces airstrikes. "Most
individuals reportedly killed by coalition forces were women and
children," according to the study. The study was designed and conducted by
researches at Johns Hopkins University, Columbia University and the Al-Mustansiriya
University in Baghdad (The Lancet, October 29, 2004).
The population of Iraq is approximately 25 million people. Were this
slaughter carried out on an equivalent scale in the United States, it
would be comparable to a death toll of one million people. Even the
youngest and most vulnerable have not been spared: as a consequence of the
U.S. war against the people of Iraq, infant mortality rose from 29 deaths
per 1,000 live births before the war to 57 deaths per 1,000 afterward.
The Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of
Genocide, 78 U.N.T.S. 277, executed in 1948, and ratified by
the United States, and which carries the binding force of the law of
nations, prohibits genocide or complicity in genocide. See, also,
18 U.S.C. 1091.
"In the present Convention, genocide means any of the following acts
committed with intent to destroy, in whole or part, a national, ethnical,
racial or religious group, as such:
(a) Killing members of the
group;
(b) Causing serious bodily or
mental harm to members of the group;
(c) Deliberately inflicting upon
the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical
destruction in whole or in part..."
This is a criminal war just as the Vietnam war was a criminal war.
It isn't enough to advocate that replacing Bush with Kerry should be the
goal of anti-war advocates. The Pentagon is preparing to rain down
their favored "shock and awe" violence on the devastated people of
Fallujah who have already been subject to terrorizing bombing
raids and the killings of entire families night after night for months. By
demanding the unconditional withdrawal from Iraq we are sending a message
to the Iraq people that we respect their right to determine their own
destiny and we send a message to the U.S. soldiers that their lives and
dignity are too important to be used in the commission of war crimes or to
serve as cannon fodder in a war that only benefits corporate and banking
elite.
Bush and Kerry have pledged to continue this violent occupation in
order to "win" in Iraq. The people of Iraq are desperately trying
to regain their sovereignty and right to determine their own futures
without outside intervention. While some feel that the "final stretch" is
in these next few days culminating at the polls, for the people of Iraq
and all those around the world who stand in solidarity with them, the
"final stretch" is from now until the U.S. troops and all occupation
forces are removed from that sovereign land.
We must deepen the fight in the United States to bring this war to
an end unconditionally. It is completely bogus to insist the
intervention must continue based on some humanitarian argument that since
U.S. intervention wrought so much devastation, the U.S. must now stay the
course in order to prevent "civil war," "chaos," or "a blood bath." These
were the same arguments that were used to justify the prolongation
of the U.S. war in Vietnam. The only thing that happened when the
U.S. finally left Vietnam was that the real blood bath ended.
That's why thousands of people are planning to take action
starting on November 3 and culminating in a
mass action all along the
route of the Inaugural parade on January 20 in Washington, DC.
Only the anti-war movement will end the criminal war in Iraq.
We
urgently need your support to carry out these activities to
stop the blood bath in Iraq.
Please
make a contribution now online through the secure server by clicking here.
Anti-war activists who are out in the streets, both before the election
fighting against racist disenfranchisement and after the election, are
prominently displaying the most important anti-war message of our time:
Bring the Troops Home Now! on
T-shirts, stickers and signs -- which you can get at the
VoteNoWar Resource Center, along with ANSWER's
beautiful own "End All Occupations" shirt by
clicking here.
Pledge now to support the
January 20 demonstration
against the war - no matter who is elected.
Click
here to endorse and say Bring the Troops Home Now!
