[Peace-discuss] were it not for the rack monster

Jenifer Cartwright jencart13 at yahoo.com
Tue Jan 31 13:00:03 CST 2012


     I've listened to every Republican debate so far (check YouTube for full debate for each date if you've avoided them so far) b/c it's the ONLY thing that makes me willing to vote for Obama,  and maybe (hopefully) it'd be ditto for you. Listen to the ones on foreign issues, OMG!!! Yes, it's great that Paul's views on those get a forum (hopefully Obama et al are paying attention to who's paying attention to Paul: the very voters who helped him win in 2008) -- but Romney or Gingrich will be the nominee (w/ the truly insane and terrifying Santorum as veep).      Re splinter groups: the Nadarites put Bush in the White House in 2000, and the Teabaggers further loused things up for everyone in 2010... So those unwilling to acknowledge- and vote for the significantly lesser of two terrible evils can do it again in 2012 (it's collateral damage I'm not willing to risk from the safety of my own ivory tower). --Jenifer  

--- On Mon, 1/30/12, Brussel, Morton K <brussel at illinois.edu> wrote:

From: Brussel, Morton K <brussel at illinois.edu>
Subject: Re: [Peace-discuss] were it not for the rack monster
To: "David Johnson" <dlj725 at hughes.net>
Cc: "Peace-discuss List" <peace-discuss at lists.chambana.net>
Date: Monday, January 30, 2012, 11:05 PM



 



No disagreement from me on this, but I am at skeptical that your admonitions can succeed under present conditions. Yet, I do favor such actions. 
You may be interested in what I wrote in response to Paul Street's article on what to do for the coming elections:



 http://www.zcommunications.org/reflections-on-the-quadrennial-extravaganza-by-paul-street. 



I wrote 



It takes time and special conditions to solve the problems we now face—injustice, inequality, and the attack on the globe's resources.
  In fact, there may well be no satisfactory solution at hand. None of the electoral alternatives discussed here seem desirable. I  for one could never in good conscience vote for the murderous militaristic corporate driven Obama administration. And I agree
 that a vote for a weak third party (as per Chomsky's strategy) in the current state of our rigged electoral system would be futile. I believe that conditions will have to get much more dire before any mass  popular awakening can occur. How remote this is I
 don't know. Something cataclysmic might trigger it.  What one wants of course is to convince others that they are truly suffering due to the present system, in the hope that an ever greater enlightened majority can upset that system with something far better. 



Is the OWS movement a step in the right direction? Yes, but it will have to stay the course and become much more organized and massive to "change the course of human events". The forces against it are formidable. How it will affect the coming elections is uncertain. 



--Mort




On Jan 30, 2012, at 10:35 PM, David Johnson wrote:




 "A good list for a fair society, but the question remains: How do we get there (or even partially there) from here? What is to be done? "

--mkb
 
Agitate, Educate, Organize, Occupy, Resist
 
 
David J.
 


----- Original Message -----

From: Brussel, Morton K
To: E. Wayne Johnson
Cc: Peace-discuss
Sent: Monday, January 30, 2012 10:08 PM
Subject: Re: [Peace-discuss] were it not for the rack monster



 A good list for a fair society, but the question remains: How do we get there (or even partially there) from here? What is to be done?
--mkb



On Jan 30, 2012, at 7:20 PM, E. Wayne Johnson wrote:




"I'd start a r[3vol]ution...if I could get up in the morning" - Aimee Allen



*

I found this piece in Common Dreams this morning and find several good points here,

and it might be an interesting discussion piece.





Published on Monday, January 23, 2012 by Common Dreams

Ten Steps for Radical Revolution in the US

by Bill Quigley

“I am convinced that if we are to get on the right side of the world revolution, we as a nation must undergo a radical revolution of values.” --Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. 1967
One. Human rights must be taken absolutely seriously. Every single person is entitled to dignity and human rights. No application needed. No exclusions at all. This is our highest priority.
Two. We must radically reinvent contemporary democracy. Current systems are deeply corrupt and not responsive to the needs of people. Representatives chosen by money and influence govern by money
 and influence. This is unacceptable. Direct democracy by the people is now technologically possible and should be the rule. Communities must be protected whenever they advocate for self-determination, self-development and human rights. Dissent is essential
 to democracy; we pledge to help it flourish.
Three. Corporations are not people and are not entitled to human rights. Amend the US Constitution so it is clear corporations do not have constitutional or human rights. We the people must cut
 them down to size and so democracy can regulate their size, scope and actions.
Four. Leave the rest of the world alone. Cut US military spending by 75 percent and bring all troops outside the US home now. Defense of the US is a human right. Global offense and global police
 force by US military are not. Eliminate all nuclear and chemical and biological weapons. Stop allowing scare tactics to build up the national security forces at home. Stop the myth that the US is somehow special or exceptional and is entitled to act differently
 than all other nations. The US must re-join the global family of nations as a respectful partner. USA is one of many nations in the world. We must start acting like it.
Five. Property rights, privilege, and money-making are not as important as human rights. When current property and privilege arrangements are not just they must yield to the demands of human rights.
 Money-making can only be allowed when human rights are respected. Exploitation is unacceptable. There are national and global poverty lines. We must establish national and global excess lines so that people and businesses with extra houses, cars, luxuries,
 and incomes share much more to help everyone else be able to exercise their basic human rights to shelter, food, education and healthcare. If that disrupts current property, privilege and money-making, so be it.
Six. Defend our earth. Stop pollution, stop pipelines, stop new interstates, and stop destroying the land, sea, and air by extracting resources from them. Rebuild what we have destroyed. If corporations
 will not stop voluntarily, people must stop them. The very existence of life is at stake.
We respect the human rights and human dignity of others and work for a world where love and wisdom and solidarity and respect prevail.
Seven. Dramatically expand public spaces and reverse the privatization of public services. Quality public education, health and safety for all must be provided by transparent accountable public
 systems. Starving the state is a recipe for destroying social and economic human rights for everyone but the rich.
Eight. Pull the criminal legal prison system up and out by its roots and start over. Cease the criminalization of drugs, immigrants, poor people and people of color. We are all entitled to be safe
 but the current system makes us less so and ruins millions of lives. Start over.
Nine. The US was created based on two original crimes that must be confessed and made right. Reparations are owed to Native Americans because their land was stolen and they were uprooted and slaughtered.
 Reparations are owed to African Americans because they were kidnapped, enslaved and abused. The US has profited widely from these injustices and must make amends.
Ten. Everyone who wants to work should have the right to work and earn a living wage. Any workers who want to organize and advocate for change in solidarity with others must be absolutely protected
 from recriminations from their employer and from their government.
Finally, if those in government and those in power do not help the people do what is right, people seeking change must together exercise our human rights and bring about these changes directly. Dr. King and millions of others lived and worked for a radical
 revolution of values. We will as well. We respect the human rights and human dignity of others and work for a world where love and wisdom and solidarity and respect prevail. We expect those for whom the current unjust system works just fine will object and
 oppose and accuse people seeking dramatic change of being divisive and worse. That is to be expected because that is what happens to all groups which work for serious social change. Despite that, people will continue to go forward with determination and purpose
 to bring about a radical revolution of values in the USA.

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