Old Radicals

Something happening here … – Los Angeles Times By Mark Rudd

Given that President Bush is now talking

about Iraq as only one skirmish in an unlimited struggle against a global Islamic enemy, a struggle comparable to

the titanic, 40-year Cold War against communism, shouldn’t a massive critique of the global war on terrorism already be underway?

Yet the [anti-war] movement has remained small and politically isolated since the original outpouring of opposition in the spring

of 2003, during the run-up to the war. In part, it was the victim of its own early success, the spontaneous demonstrations

involving millions of people in the streets here and around the world trying to stop the war before it began. When this initial outburst

failed, many became demoralized and hopeless. …

Let us remember that here, in our own

town, our fellow citizens gathered to protest the rush to war and were gassed and shot at. Bernalillo County Sherrif Darren White —

Bush’s local campaign manager — said, in effect, let me at them, I’ll show them justice, when he felt APD had been too lenient. Not to

mention the exhortations to (shut up and) “support the troops” and the slander of unpatriotism. The Radical Right did just what they

wanted: they shut us down harshly and quickly. Now Bush smears for not standing up to his strong-arm tactics, for going along at the

time. Like a bully who smacks you in the face with your own hand.

But building a movement can be done. To increase

our ranks, we’ll need to break through the too-common belief that change is impossible.

We’ll also need to take on the larger

war. As the next battle heats up, perhaps against Iran or Syria, the movement will have to ask the American people to look honestly at

who we are in the world. The antiwar movement will have to engage in the most difficult dialogue of our lives with our neighbors. …

[In the case of Vietnam,] we helped stop a war of aggression by our own country. This was American democracy at its best. I lived

through it, I saw it with my own eyes.

If all of us “gray-hairs” were to tell our stories, we might be able to make a

contribution. At least we could help people find hope in this dark time.

From “never trust anyone over

30” to ‘let the gray-hairs speak’ in just 40 years. That’s progress.

As for “American democracy at its best,” well, I saw it,

too. It seemed horribly inefficient and chaotic and unclear. I hope it wasn’t our best, though I do celebrate people demanding the

government follow us now and then.

I don’t begrudge Rudd the wisdom of his years, and I appreciate him speaking out and

encouraging others to do the same. Bush AND al Qaeda need to learn what Rudd knows: even when violence seems to get you what you want,

it’s never worth the price. mjh

PS: isn’t it interesting that the old radicals are middle class

grandparents preaching restraint while the new radicals are the evangelical Christians versus extreme Islamists.

Aside: we

graybeards do have our stories to tell. Years ago, I got a call from Columbia University. The caller asked if I would like to

participate in an oral history of radicals from the Sixties. “Sure,” I said, “I’d be honored.” I don’t know how long we went on before

we realized the miscommunication. They wanted a different Sixties radical. I get that a lot, as the husband of Merri Rudd (who jokes she

is Mark Rudd’s little sister). As if the wife of a Sixties radical would take his name.

Ain’t Gonna Study War No More

Surely the police and military (any difference anymore?) need non-lethal means for subduing rioters.

But even in the category of non-lethal means, some are meaner than others. Which is worse: tear gas or feeling your skin is boiling? Do

you want your local police department to add a virtual flailer to their arsenal, next to the machine guns, tanks and helicopters? mjh

virtual skin boiling machine

ABQjournal: N.M. Home to Nonlethal Weapon Work By Andrew Webb, Of the Journal

“There’s a lot of nonlethal research out

there,” Garcia said.

The Active Denial device has been scaled down to fit atop a military Humvee, and is expected to see early

field testing next year, said Garcia, who was one of its first test subjects in Albuquerque.

“It’s

incredibly painful,” he says. “I thought I could mentally override it, but it’s as if you’ve touched a hot iron.”

the goal of internal disarmament

A Simple Message Of Hope And Peace By

Mary Beth Sheridan, Washington Post Staff Writer

[The Dalai Lama] talked of love and hate, of religion and ethics, of global peace

and nuclear weapons.

He talked of malls.

“I like shopping centers,” the monk, in gold and crimson robes, confessed in his

stilted English, smiling as his audience roared. “Beautiful. When I go [to] these areas, I want this, I want that, I want that,” he said,

jabbing a finger in the air as though on a spree at Tysons Corner.

“Then, [I] ask myself, you really need that? The answer

is no.”

His main points, though, were more profound: the need for religious tolerance, the importance of carrying out

faith in daily actions and the goal of “internal disarmament” — combating one’s own hatred and anger.

GOP Senator-for- life Ted Stevens

Right wing starts to reap

the whirlwind By JOEL CONNELLY, SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER COLUMNIST

Of course, there’s Alaska’s temperamental,

vengeful GOP Senator-for-life Ted Stevens.

Stevens has just introduced a bill to roll back federal protection of Puget

Sound — clearing the way for more tankers and refineries.

The old bastard shakes down [Washington state’s] business interests

for $250,000 in donations whenever he seeks another term. And this is what we get in return.

Evil deeds backfire.

National Pork Service By Richard Cohen

after … a $223 million bridge from Ketchikan (population 8,900) to Gravina Island (population 50), was mocked as the “Bridge to

Nowhere,” Stevens properly turned the issue into one of virtual civil rights. He recalled the days when Alaska was a mere territory with

few of the usual rights of states and said that now, once again, it was being accorded second-class status: “It will not happen,” he

thundered. “It will not happen,” he bellowed.

The statue of Stevens will note that he was the first senator in American history to

take himself hostage. His threat to resign — an action of vast indifference to all of mankind with the possible exception of the 50

people on Gravina Island — would have deprived the Senate of a reverse Gold Rusher, someone who came down from Alaska to mine for gold

in Washington. His speech, in which over and over he bemoaned the pitiful nature of his state’s modest road system, made no mention of

how Alaskans pay no state income tax and are awarded a piece of the state’s oil revenue. The state is No. 1 in per capita federal aid,

which is a tribute of sorts to Stevens’s ability to game the system at the expense of us all. …

But it is his threat to resign

— “I don’t threaten people; I promise people” — that shall forever be memorialized. It is a model of insistence, of selfishness, of

seeing the government no differently than Huey, Dewey and Louie saw their uncle, the fabulously rich Scrooge McDuck.

This isn’t news

No one can

be surprised that the Pope believes in Intelligent Design. He believes he is god’s emissary on earth, for Christ’s sake.

However, his assault on atheists requires a response. Either he doesn’t understand those he disagrees with or, taking a page from the

Radical Right, he deliberately distorts the opposition’s views.

For what it is worth, this atheist — this anti-theist —

believes there is order to the Universe, as well as a lot of chance. There are laws governing it all. Those rules, however, need no god-

in-man’s-image. Why is that so hard to accept?

But, beyond me arguing with the Pope, note that ID supporters agree with him.

Again, no surprise. But it does take some of the edge off of one’s claims to supporting the scientific validity of ID if you offer as

support a papal aside. Or disingenuously hiding this Christian movement behind claims that the “designer” or “creator” could be

any faith’s. Yeah, right. Though this is one area where evangelical Christians and Muslims are arm-in-arm — god is great.

I

wonder how Catholics feel about Herr Schoenborn dismissing the casual remarks of the previous pope while they are told to hold the casual

remarks of the current one in high esteem. mjh

Pope: Universe created by ‘intelligent project’ By NICOLE

WINFIELD, Associated Press

VATICAN CITY – Pope Benedict XVI has waded into the evolution debate in the United States, saying the

universe was made by an “intelligent project” and criticizing those who in the name of science say its creation was without direction or

order. …

Benedict focused his reflections for the audience on scriptural readings that said God’s love was seen in the “marvels

of creation.”

He quoted St. Basil the Great, a fourth century saint, as saying some people, “fooled by the atheism that

they carry inside of them, imagine a universe free of direction and order, as if at the mercy of chance.”

How

many of these people are there today? These people, fooled by atheism, believe and try to demonstrate that it’s

scientific to think that everything is free of direction and order,” he said. …

His comments were immediately

hailed by advocates of intelligent design, who hold that the universe is so complex it must have been created by a higher power.

Proponents of the theory are seeking to get public schools in the United States to teach it as part of the science curriculum. …

Questions about the Vatican’s position on evolution were raised in July by Austrian Cardinal Christoph Schoenborn.

In a New

York Times op-ed piece, Schoenborn seemed to back intelligent design and dismissed a 1996 statement by Pope John Paul II that

evolution was “more than just a hypothesis.” Schoenborn said the late pope’s statement was “rather vague and

unimportant.”

christ’s canker

American Chronicle: Pat Robertson Curses Pennsylvania

Town By Del Williams

Pat Robertson, the televangelist from Virginia Beach has warned (cursed) the town of Dover, PA on his

show, “The 700 Club”. He said,

“I’d like to say to the good citizens of Dover: if there is a disaster in your area, don’t turn

to God, you just rejected Him from your city,” He went on to say, “And don’t wonder why He hasn’t helped you when

problems begin, if they begin. I’m not saying they will, but if they do, just remember, you just voted God out of your

city. And if that’s the case, don’t ask for His help because he might not be there.”

As a Christian I am offended that

this man is bent on presenting God as a hater and destroyer. …

I am not hearing the love in this

man, but animosity and anger. If you don’t vote the way he wants then your town is doomed. What nerve. This is one for senility

not God. I guess he overlooks the Scriptures that speak powerfully against wishing harm on another, because it will come to you instead.

Let me make this clear. Robertson is nothing more than a loud angry man who needs to go home and enjoy his

money. … Maybe God will do us all a favor and let him receive back the same kindness that he gave to the people of Dover, PA.

If it’s good enough for them, then it is good enough for him.