GI SPECIAL 4D5
“President
Bush Misguided My Son To His Death”

4000 March
In Atlanta: April 2, 2006 Photo:
pkbarbiedoll
From: Mary Ann
MacCombie
To: GI Special
Sent: April 02, 2006 10:58 PM
Attached is a copy of the presentation I made at the
march/rally at yesterday's demonstration in Atlanta, Georgia
which an estimated 4,000 protesters attended.
**************************************************
My son, Sgt
Ryan Montgomery Campbell, died while supporting Operation
Iraqi Freedom just south of Baghdad almost two years ago,
April 29, 2004. He and 7 other members of his battery were
targeted and killed by the driver of a vehicle bearing an
improvised explosive device.
A day has
not gone by that I have not cried for my son. He was my
child and my dear friend. I miss him so much.
And hardly
a day has gone by that I have not blamed President Bush for
my son’s death. I am so angry with Bush for deceiving us,
the world, and especially for deceiving my son and his
fellow troops.
My son arrived in Iraq in
April 2003 believing that he would be confronting a
well-trained, well-organized military resistance, believing
we invaded because Saddam had stockpiled weapons of mass
destruction, believing that Osama bin Laden was hiding out
in Iraq, believing it would be a one-year tour of duty at
the most and probably would be much less to complete the
overall mission.
Misinformation at best. Very
little military resistance, no weapons of mass destruction,
no connection between Osama and Iraq and a tour of duty
suddenly extended indefinitely.
Ryan was
killed in the 13th month of his tour of duty, having
launched mortars against the enemy exactly once during those
many months in Iraq. At the time of his death, he was on an
infantry mission. He never volunteered to serve in the
infantry. He was field artillery. If he had wanted to
spend his time on security patrols, he would have signed up
to serve in the infantry.
He was well trained in field
artillery both as a member of the army national guard and as
a volunteer in the regular Army.
But,
instead of firing cannons, my son became cannon fodder for
the Bush war machine.
My son
arrived in Iraq in the spring of 2003 with his vaccinations
and his government-issue gas mask, presumably equipped to
defend himself against weapons of mass destruction.
He died in
the spring of 2004, with no way to defend himself against
Bush’s weapons of mass deception.
We cannot bring my son back.
He rests in Arlington National Cemetery.
We can support our troops. We
can support our veterans. We can hold President Bush
accountable. We can hold accountable every official we have
elected or will elect to public office.
When he was a child, my son
and I cross-stitched a wall hanging with a line from this
quotation by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.:
“The means by which we live
have outdistanced the ends for which we live. Our scientific
power has outrun our spiritual power. We have guided
missiles and misguided men.” (Strength in Love (1963), Ch.
7)
When he was a soldier, my son
learned Dr. King’s lesson well.
President
Bush misguided my son to his death.

Atlanta:
Iraq Veterans March Against The
War
[Thanks to D for sending in the photo.]
Do you
have a friend or relative in the service? Forward this
E-MAIL along, or send us the address if you wish and
we’ll send it regularly.
Whether in Iraq or stuck on a base in the USA, this is
extra important for your service friend, too often cut
off from access to encouraging news of growing
resistance to the war, at home and inside the armed
services.
Send requests to address up top.
IRAQ WAR
REPORTS
Marine
Killed In Anbar

Marine Cpl. Brian St.
Germain died April 2, 2006, in
an accident in Al Anbar Province while serving his second
tour of duty in Iraq. (AP Photo/St.
Germain family )
New England
Soldiers Killed Overseas
April 4, 2006
The Boston Channel.
BOSTON -- Two Marines with New
England ties have been killed in Iraq, officials announced
Tuesday, one day after a Saugus
Marine killed overseas was identified.
NewsCenter 5's Liz Brunner reported
that the two Marines were killed when the truck they were in
rolled over during a flash flood in Iraq's Al Anbar Province
on Sunday.
The family of 27-year-old
Marine Lance Cpl. Patrick J Gallagher said they were
notified of his death on Monday. Gallagher, of Fairhaven,
was married with a 2-year-old son. He worked as a heavy
equipment operator.
Marine Cpl. Brian St.
Germain, 22, of West Warwick,
R.I., was also killed. St. Germain
was on his second tour of duty in Iraq. He was working as a
heavy equipment mechanic in the Marine Corps.
His death
is the third Rhode Island military casualty in the last nine
months.
On Tuesday, the family of Cpl.
Scott Procopio, 20, said that he
was killed in Iraq. Procopio was
about two years into a four-year duty with the Marines when
he was killed Sunday morning.
Procopio was a 2003 graduate of Saugus
High School.
Clint,
Texas Mourns Loss of Soldier Killed in Iraq
April 4, 2006
KTSM
Twenty-two year old Israel
Devora was killed Saturday
during his second tour of duty in Iraq.
Devora was a 2001 graduate of Clint
High School. Teachers and staff at the school are reeling
from the news of Devora's death.
During his last visit home,
Devora stopped by the campus to
talk to his old teachers and students in the Junior ROTC
program at Clint High.
Most of the teachers thought
Devora was safe since he had
finished his tour of duty. What they did not know is that he
had decided to sign up for a second tour.
Marine
From West Warwick Killed
April 4, 2006
By Eric Tucker, Associated Press
PROVIDENCE, R.I.: A
22-year-old Marine from West Warwick was killed in Iraq when
the truck he was in rolled over during a flash flood.
Marine Cpl. Brian St.
Germain died Sunday in an
accident in Al Anbar Province while serving his second tour
of duty in Iraq, the governor's office said Tuesday.
St.
Germain graduated from West Warwick High School in
2001. He was described as a hardworking honors student who
was an all-state hurdler on the school's track and field
team.
"His junior year, they had one
of the best track teams ever in West Warwick, and he was a
star on that," said William Izzi,
the high school's guidance department chair and one of St.
Germain's track coaches.
Izzi called St.
Germain a "wonderful boy from a wonderful family."
St.
Germain was working in the Marine Corps as a heavy
equipment mechanic and a martial arts instructor, according
to a Web site for car enthusiasts, j-body.org.
On the Web site, he lists his
hobbies and interests as "working on my truck, 4-wheeling
and shooting stuff." He also said he was involved in a
long-term relationship.
St.
Germain belonged to the 1st Marine Logistics Group,
1st Marine Expeditionary Group in Camp Pendleton, Calif. He
was promoted to corporal during his first tour in Iraq,
according to the governor's office.
At least
two other soldiers with ties to Rhode Island have died in
Iraq within the last nine months.
2 Army
Rangers Are Killed
March 22, 2006
The Seattle Times Company
Fort Lewis:
Two Army Rangers assigned to
this post south of Tacoma have been killed in Iraq, the
Department of Defense said Tuesday.
Staff Sgt. Ricardo
Barraza, 24, of Shafter, Calif.,
and Sgt. Dale G. Brehm, 23, of
Turlock, Calif., died March 18 in Ramadi, Iraq, when they
came under enemy fire, the department said in a news
release.
Both were assigned to the 2nd
Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment, a
special-forces unit.
Barraza enlisted in the military after
graduating from high school in 1999, his family told The
Bakersfield Californian on Monday. Relatives said he was
shot in the chest while helping evacuate a building in
Iraq. He had been in Iraq since 2002.
Brehm joined the military in 2001 after
graduating from Turlock Adult School. He had been married
for two years, and Tuesday would have been his 24th
birthday, according to the Modesto Bee.
Kentucky
National Guardsman Dies
March 27, 2006, (AP)
A Kentucky National Guard
soldier has been killed in Iraq, guard officials said today.
Thirty-year-old staff sergeant
Brock A. Beery, of White House, Tenn., died yesterday when
his armored vehicle encountered an improvised explosive
device near Al Habbaniyah, west
of Fallujah.
Beery was driving a fully
armored light medium tactical vehicle when the explosion
occurred. Two other soldiers were injured in the attack,
which happened in one of the most dangerous areas of the
war-torn country.
Beery was a member of the
Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 2nd Battalion, 123rd
Armor based in Bowling Green.
"Brock was a loving husband,
and a very devoted dad. He enjoyed his family, off road
four wheeling adventures, collecting guns and hunting,"
Beery's wife, Sara, said in a
statement. "Brock was devoted in the business of taking
care of his soldiers and meeting their needs."
Beery is
the ninth Kentucky National Guardsman to die in the Iraq war
since it began three years ago. He is survived by his wife,
Sara, and seven-year-old daughter.
There are about 550 Kentucky
Guardsmen in or on their way to Iraq, said Col. Phil Miller
of the National Guard.
Marine
From Valdosta Wounded
April 03, 2006
Kenna Walsh, South Georgia Media
[Excerpt]
VALDOSTA: Fourteen days ago
Cody Finniessee endured a
sleepless night. He strapped on gear and headed out on a
routine patrol in Fallujah, Iraq.
Like most nights,
Finniessee, a Valdosta native
and corporal with the 2nd Battalion, 6th Marines, was alert
and focused on the mission at hand.
Minutes after the clock struck
10 p.m. Finniessee’s view on the
reality of war changed.
He was team leader in a convoy
of six; four men in the back seat with a driver and
passenger in the front. The vehicle was en route to
Fallujah and had just passed a mosque when a loud explosion
rocked the convoy and thrust Finniessee
toward the front.
“I was forced to the front and
tried to get up when I realized my face had blood on it,”
Finniessee said. “I told the
team I was hit.”
His team members panicked, but
Finniessee remained calm and
told them to find his field dressing. He put a bandage on
the wound and applied pressure.
“I would stay calm and give
orders,” he said.
The convoy proceeded to a
medical center in Fallujah where
Finniessee was taken by helicopter to a larger
hospital.
Surgeons cleaned out shrapnel
and packed the wound, which stretched across the left side
of his face. His jaw was fractured.
Shrapnel from the explosion,
caused by an improvised explosive device, hit
Finniessee’s helmet and
shattered the microphone on the side of his face. A small
scar above his eye marks where his eyewear hit and nearly
missed his eye.
YOU DON’T
WANT TO BE HERE;
THEY DON’T
WANT YOU TO BE HERE:
SOLUTION
OBVIOUS:
GET THE
FUCK OUT AND COME HOME, ALIVE AND WITH ALL BODY PARTS INTACT
WHILE THAT
IS STILL POSSIBLE

A
U.S. Marine patrols near the Abu Ghraib prison, April,
2006. (AP Photo/Jacob Silberberg)
Kato
Soldier Wounded
April 03, 2006
By Dylan Thomas, The Free Press
MANKATO: When Ruth and Thomas
McNamara answered the phone the night of March 13, the Army
company commander on the other end of the line could only
provide sketchy details.
Army Spc. Jason McNamara,
their son, had been on a nighttime mission clearing
improvised explosive devices with his unit near
Aramadi, Iraq. They were called
to assist another Army unit taking enemy fire, and rushed
over in their armored Humvee.
“They no more than pulled up
to the scene ... and an IED went off,” Thomas said.
Jason was injured, the
commander told them. They wouldn’t know anything more until
the next day.
"It was devastating news,"
Kristin Conrad, Jason's sister, said. "We didn't know what
kind of condition he was in, just that he had been hit by an
IED."
In that moment, Conrad said,
she faced for the first time "the reality of the war." It
was a revelation news reports and even stories from two
brothers who had fought in the conflict could not bring
about.
Since March 19, Jason, 23, has
been recovering from serious injuries to both his legs at
Walter Reed Medical Center in Washington, D.C.
In fact, as readers pick up
the paper today, the 2002 East High School Graduate may be
undergoing another in a string of surgeries to repair his
shattered legs and ankles.
"I’m doing all right," Jason
said when reached by phone last week. "I just can't wait to
get out of here."
"I’m looking forward to coming
back home and just relaxing a little bit."
His parents, who traveled from
Mankato to stay with him at Walter Reed, said they don't
know when that day will come. He must stay off his feet for
three months, and likely has many weeks of recovery ahead.
"We got a tremendous amount of
support, phone calls from friends and family," Ruth said.
"That has just helped so much."
The McNamaras now know the
full story of the night Jason was injured.
He was riding in the gunner's
turret of the Humvee when it hit the IED. The explosion blew
the doors off the vehicle. The driver, who had joined the
unit only a few days earlier, was killed.
A large piece of shrapnel
fractured Jason's right leg in three places, and was tangled
in the sling that served as his seat in the turret.
"(Jason) said he couldn't see
his legs, he couldn't feel his legs," his father said. “He
ended up cutting himself free, and then the other soldiers
pulled him out of the back of the Humvee.”
On the way to an aid station,
two more IEDs exploded.
“I had a lot of close calls
before this one,” Jason said.
On two out of three missions,
he estimated, his unit made some kind of contact with enemy
forces.
The thought of her son’s
serious injury or death was never far from Ruth’s mind.
“Every day I was so grateful
that it was another day he remained safe, unharmed,” Ruth
said. “But, yes, it was a constant fear.”
It is a fear she said will
grow when her youngest son, Joshua, who is also in the Army,
deploys to Iraq for his second tour. That could happen as
soon as this fall.
“I felt that it will be even
scarier this time,” she said.
The oldest McNamara brother,
Ryan, shares her concern.
“It will probably be more
tense, because the threat will seem more real,” he said.
AFGHANISTAN
WAR REPORTS
Five U.S.
Troops Wounded
4.4.06 Wall St. Journal
Five U.S.
troops were injured by an Afghan IED.
Incredible Silly Bullshit:
“People Are
Going To See Us Here For A Long
Time To Come”
4.3.06 The
Associated Press
KABUL, Afghanistan:
Afghanistan's Taliban-led insurgency is likely to worsen
this year as new NATO troops replace battle-hardened
American forces in some areas and the government pushes
ahead with an aggressive anti-drug campaign, a senior U.S.
envoy said.
The warning by Richard A.
Boucher, the assistant secretary of state for South and
Central Asia, comes after an uptick
in attacks in recent weeks as spring weather melts snow on
high mountain passes the rebels use.
U.S. Ambassador Ronald
Neumann, speaking alongside Boucher, said the Taliban
have the impression that with
time, they will gradually wear out the patience of foreign
governments to keep their troops deployed here.
"There was a Taliban leader
who said to one of our folk that the coalition has all the
clocks, but we have all the time," Neumann said. "That is
the way they tend to see the world, that they can out-wait
the foreigners."
But Boucher
said U.S. forces were going to stay.
"People are
going to see us here for a long time to come," he said.
In
neighboring Helmand province Sunday, a firefight between a
group of insurgents and police left one officer and a rebel
dead, and two police wounded, said
Mohanned Qasin, a local
government chief.
TROOP NEWS

[Thanks to Phil G, who sent this in.]
My Boy:
GORDON
SHOULD NOT OF BEEN IN IRAQ, TO START WITH
[This
is a message to Americans from Rose Gentle. Her son Gordon
was killed in Iraq. She leads a campaign to bring all the
Scots and other troops home from
Iraq, now. Her words carry more weight, and contain more
truth, than 5000 pages of bullshit from the politicians. T]
From: Rose
Gentle
To: GI Special
Sent: April 04, 2006
Subject: my
boy
ARMY BOARD
OF INQUIRY INTO THE DEATH OF FUSILIER GORDON GENTLE:
THE
ECM EQUIPMENT WAS AVAILABLE ,BUT
HAD NOT YET BEEN FITTED.
THE
RHF HAD A PHONE CALL TO LIFT THE
EQUIPMENT.
ON THE
12TH OF JUNE, 04 BUT DID NOT GO
AND GET IT TILL THE 28TH
THE
DAY MY BOY
WAS KILLIED,
THE MOD
[Ministry Of Defense] HAVE NOW MADE 12 RECOMMENDATIONS FOR
THE FUTURE
SADLY,
NOTHING CAN CHANGE WHAT HAPPEND
TO FUSILIER GORDON GENTLE, I HOPE THE REPORT WILL HELP HIS
FAMILY UNDERSTAND THE
EVENTS OF
THAT DAY,
UNDERSTAND
I HAVE
TOLLD THIS
STORRY FOR 18MONTH
THEAT MY BOY DID
NOT HAVE
THE WRIGHT EQUIPMENT, MY BOY SHOULD BE HERE TO DAY
THE MOD
THINK THAT NOW I HAVE THE REPORT THAT I HAVE TO SHUT UP,
GORDON
SHOULD NOT OF BEEN IN IRAQ, TO START WITH ,
THAY
ARE AT FOLLT FOR GORDON
GETING
KILLIED
THE
EQUIPMENT SHOULD HAVE BEEN ON MY BOYS
SNACH LAND ROVER TO START WITH
NOT JUST 2
HOURS AFTER HE WAS KILLIED,
WHOT
GOOD ARE THE 12 RECOMMENDATIONS. TO MY GORDON,
ROSE
GENTLE M.F.S.O.
Rumsfeld
Babbles More Incoherent Bullshit
3/31/2006 M. Kane
Jeeves (sometimes credited as Ed
Naha), Mkanejeeves.com [Excerpt]
It was Donald Rumsfeld who
took first place in spin, last week, by blaming the media
for America’s current revulsion re: Operation Boondoggle.
After giving America’s propaganda effort to spread the good
news a “D,” Rumsfeld used a press briefing and the radio
airwaves to talk about Americans’ misconception of what’s
going on in Iraq and why the press should do more to
accentuate the positive.
Said Rummy:
“In a situation like exists in Iraq today, one measure of
what is happening is to note things that are not happening.
Admittedly, that’s a difficult thing to do. (Note: Even more
difficult to understand what the heck he’s saying.) “It’s
far easier to report about a bomb that goes off than to note
a bomb that doesn’t.” (Note: how about a plane that crashes
as opposed to a plane that lands?)
“A car bomb that kills Iraqis
outside a police recruiting station makes for a clearly
understandable story compared to the fact that hundreds of
Iraqis volunteer the next day, to step up to volunteer
despite that attack.” (Note: To get blown up in a second
attack.)
Rumsfeld pointed out: “If you
read the press and listen to the television around here
you’d assume that everything was just terrible, the whole
country was in chaos. Well, it isn’t in chaos.” (Note: Okay.
Can we agree on mere state of total pandemonium?)
As for why
all the bad news is so prevalent, he blames it on our
enemy’s spin machine. “It’s very difficult to compete with
people who lie consistently.”
[Wrong.
Rumsfeld lies consistently and anybody with an IQ greater
than that of a cup of coffee can spot it.]
MORE:
Rumsfeld
Wants Good News From Iraq?
OK
HERE IT IS!
3/31/2006 M. Kane
Jeeves (sometimes credited as Ed
Naha), Mkanejeeves.com [Excerpt]
Actually, I’ve been doing some
research and there ARE a lot of good news stories to be
reported.
The Iraqi real estate market,
for instance, is literally booming with many craters going
for as little as two chickens and a goat.
Work on the theme park
Depleted UraniumLand is near
completion with most of the rides not exactly hair-raising
as opposed to hair-losing.
The opening of the George W.
Bush Freedom High School has been delayed, unfortunately,
because of a problem with textbook quizzes. No matter what
the subject, all the answers read: “9/11.”
The first Fallujah Barbecue
Jamboree was held, with citizens providing the livestock and
the U.S. military dropping in with tons of white phosphorous
and MK-77 firebombs. You haven’t tasted beef until it’s been
liquefied. Yummm.
The first Iraqi “Iron Man”
competition, held at Abu Ghraib, is ready to take off. The
winner gets a pardon and complimentary medical treatment.
The Najaf 500 was recently
held, based on the Indy 500. The winner was the car that
didn’t blow-up.
The Little Theater of Baghdad
Theater troupe staged their production of Robert Lewis
Stevenson’s “Kidnapped.” It was considered a great success
until it was noted, by play’s end, a third of the audience
had gone missing.
A new, U.S.-sponsored Iraqi TV
network, Al-Bizarro, made it’s
debut, offering such quiz shows as “Truth or Consequences,”
“Jeopardy” and a revival of Groucho
Marx’s golden-oldie “You Bet Your Life.”
An Iraqi
version of the American TV show “Extreme Makeover” also
premiered, with players watching their existing homes
vaporized by U.S. bombs and, then, envisioning their new
home with no money nor tools to build it.
Sailors Get
(GASP) 12 Days Training On How To Survive As Desert Ground
Troops:
[Then,
It’s Off To Die In Iraq]
April 4, 2006
By Sandra
Jontz, Stars and Stripes
Sailors know the walk, when
it's from stem to stern. It's the walking in formation that
has some feeling like fish out of water.
With more
than 10,000 Navy "individual augmentees"
deployed around the world, of which 7,000 are in the U.S.
Central Command's combat zones, the Navy is training its
sailors like soldiers more than ever before.
"You take a sailor .
who has lived on a 564-foot ship,
and all of a sudden, you're integrating him into a ground
combat environment. It's night and day for us," said Master
Chief Petty Officer Anthony Evangelista, fleet master chief
for U.S. Naval Forces Europe/6th Fleet.
"We've done a phenomenal job
with taking a unit, prepping it, getting the ship ready,
deploying it, and bringing it back. What we haven't done so
well, and are fixing, is the individual
augmentee. We don't train to do that as an
organization."
Not until recently, that is.
With the Pentagon's call on
the Navy to provide forces to ease the strain on Army and
Marine Corps ground units, naval individual
augmentees are flocking to South
Carolina to learn the basics of ground combat.
During
the 12-day training program, sailors are taught lessons
that range from the proper way to carry weapons to basic
warfare marksmanship, convoy operations, urban
operations, battlefield first aid and land navigation,
said Lt. Col. Douglas Snyder, battalion commander of
Task Force Marshall and head of the Individual
Augmentee Training Course at
the Army's McCrady Training
Center, Fort Jackson, S.C.
The Navy's individual
augmentees deploy downrange
from, and return to, Fort Jackson, complete with necessary
gear and proper uniforms, to include the Army's new digital
battle uniforms, if they are heading to Army units.
Some
sailors, such as several Navy military dog handlers from
Naval Support Activity Naples Italy, have deployed to Iraq
with little or no training on how to survive in a ground
combat zones. [Right. And 12
days is oh so much better than “little or no training.” And
don’t miss the DVD of
Mutiny On The Bounty.
Or maybe
Battleship Potemkin.
Those films do teach very useful lessons indeed.]
“He Only
Lived A Short Time After That”
“But, That
Is What The Montgomery VAMC
Wanted In The First Place”
From: LG
To: Firebase
Sent: March 17, 2006
My Uncle,
who had Alzheimers, had a stroke
and the VA clinic in Pensacola would not help him.
We had to
get an ambulance to take him to Montgomery
VAMC.
In the
Emergency Room they tied him in a wheelchair and left him
against the wall for 3 hours.
Finally, my
Aunt got them to listen to her and had him put on a
gerny.
He laid
there another 4 hours.
My Aunt
called me in Pace, FL. I contacted the
VAMC, and our Congressman.
Finally,
the ER got a doctor to him. He only lived a short time
after that.
But, that
is what the Montgomery VAMC
wanted in the first place.
Got Your Back,
LG,
Misssissippi
Senate War
Profiteers Busy
April 4, 2006
The Hill
Sen. Thad
Cochran, Appropriations Committee chairman, and Sen. Trent
Lott earmarked $1 million in the FY 2006 defense
appropriations bill to qualify for military use a three-part
shaving system made in their state, Mississippi.
The money will go to the
Army's research and develop coffers to study the efficiency
of a shaving system that goes easy on facial bumps.
“March To
Redeem The Soul Of America”
Starts At Exxonmobil
Headquarters:
“Beatrice
Saldivar Held
A Picture Of Her Nephew Killed In
Iraq”

From: Charles Jenks, Traprock
Peace Center
To: GI Special
Sent: April 04, 2006
Subject: March to Redeem the
Soul of America Starts at ExxonMobil
Headquarters
The March to Redeem the Soul
of America was launched with press conferences and marches
in Irving, Texas on April 1 and Dallas on April 2, beginning
a 120-mile walk that will arrive in Crawford, Texas on
Thursday, April 13. The March will participate in "Easter
in Crawford" - with President Bush planning to take his
usual Easter vacation at his ranch - and the celebration of
the third anniversary of the Crawford Peace House.
The unifying themes of
speakers on the first two days was the need for citizens to
begin to get control of the combine of government and major
corporations - not only to stop the Iraq war, but to protect
human rights and civil liberties. The March organizers and
participants are asking communities to join their calls for
an end to war profiteering and an end to the occupation of
Iraq.
In Irving, people gathered
outside ExxonMobil's world
headquarters and called on the oil giant to work to end the
Iraq war and to spend $7 billion in undeserved 2005 war
profits to meet human needs related to the Iraq war and
ExxonMobil operations. Speaking
were Nick Mottern, Director,
ConusmersforPeace.org and the
ExxonMobil War Boycott campaign; Rev. Roy
Malveaux, Beaumont, Texas; State
Rep. Lon Burnam, Fort Worth;
Maureen Haver, Jumpstart Ford
Campaign; Hadi
Jawad, Crawford Peace House and
Dallas Peace Center; Rev. Peter Johnson, Dallas civil rights
leader; Margarita Alvarez, United Voices for Immigrants;
Judith Kaufman; and Valley Reed, chief organizer, March to
Redeem Campaign. The AP covered the press conference; it's
report was published by many newspapers.
Rev. Roy
Malveaux from Beaumont Texas explained how
ExxonMobil has rejected any
responsibility for severe health problems in his community,
located next to an ExxonMobil
Refinery.
Sunny Miller, Traprock Peace
Center, lead the song "Step by Step" as the press conference
ended and the March began with people marching past
ExxonMobil's main gate.
On April 2nd in Dallas, the
march held a press conference outside the County Courthouse
and Jail. Joan Cobici; American
Civil Liberties Union and Beatriz
Saldivar, Gold Star Families for Peace (her nephew
was killed in Iraq) joined Reed,
Mottern, Johnson and Jawad
as speakers.
Beatrice
Saldivar held a picture of her
nephew killed in Iraq and a picture of Rex
Tillerson, Chair and C.E.O. of
Exxon Mobile, saying, "Do you think Mr.
RexTillerson, the Chief and CEO of
ExxonMobil will ever go to
Iraq? Do you think he will ever put himself in a jail like
this where they are putting our Hispanics and our African
Americans."
Speakers at the Dallas Jail
said money is needed for programs and jobs for young people
to keep them out of jail. Money and management changes are
also needed to deal with serious health problems, such as
HIV and hepatitis, that are spread into
the community when prisoners go home, according to Rev.
Peter Johnson, Dallas civil rights activist. $3.3
billion in federal tax dollars has gone to the Iraq war from
Dallas County alone, according to the National Priorities
Project.
Texas has spent $25.6 billion
on the war.
Marchers then crossed the
Trinity River and met again outside the VA Hospital.
Marchers received an enthusiastic reception, with banners,
drumming (provided by Drums not Guns) and food (courtesy of
Food Not Bombs). Rev. Diane Baker, Dallas Peace Center; John
Fullenwider, High School teacher
(speaking on the cost of war); Michael McNeil, veteran of
Desert Storm (Marine Corps) and member of Code Pink; Jim
Goodnow, Veterans for Peace; and
John Wolf, founder of Crawford Peace House added their
voices.
Speakers addressed the need
for quality medical and psychological services for veterans,
and the under reporting of war casualties.
Nick
Mottern, Director of Consumers for Peace, said the
War Boycott is calling on ExxonMobil
to give $630 million directly to the Veterans Administration
to supply money for mental health care, prosthetics and
catastrophic care.
This is the amount in a
supplemental appropriations bill that was blocked by House
Republicans several weeks ago.
IRAQ
RESISTANCE ROUNDUP
Assorted
Resistance Action
Apr 4, 2006 (AP) & Times Daily
& KUNA & Middle East Online
A car bomb parked near the
home of a city council member in Samarra exploded as his son
was leaving the house about 8 a.m., police said. The son
was not harmed, but one of his security guards was killed,
and four other guards were wounded in the attack, police
Capt. Laith Mohammed said.
In southern Iraq, guerrillas
killed a policeman and wounded another as the two were
driving in the city of Basra, police said.
Assailants killed a judge
driving in eastern Baghdad and a receptionist who works at
the United Arab Emirates Embassy and his friend as they were
leaving the embassy in the upscale Mansour neighbourhood.
Two truck drivers from a US
base near Dujail were shot dead by rebels.
IF YOU
DON’T LIKE THE RESISTANCE
END THE
OCCUPATION
FORWARD
OBSERVATIONS
“The
Soldiers Groaned, Barely Able To Breathe”

MILITARIZED
STREETS is a fact-based novel banned by the Japanese
imperial government in 1930, and censored by the US
occupation authorities in 1945.
It has been fully translated
by Zeljko Cipris from the Japanese in D. Kuroshima, A Flock
of Swirling Crows & Other Proletarian Writings, published by
the University of Hawaii Press, 2005.
***********************************************
The scene:
a Japanese-owned match factory in Tsinan (Jinan), China
Time:
spring 1928, during a Japanese military intervention
Author:
Denji Kuroshima (1898-1943), a
soldier in Japan’s imperial army during the Siberian
Intervention who became a lifelong antimilitarist and
anti-imperialist
From Chapter 20
The worker
had gradually lost his fear of the soldiers. They formed a
circle around this man who smelled of garlic, fat, and
strange tobacco.
“Over there
near barrack is English hairnet factory. My young sister
work there, every day she breathe only hair dust and trash.”
Shih I-li resumed talking.
“Young sister smell like hair and trash. Her
chest, bad. TB. .. English
company, broker and police rob people... English, American,
German, Ja--” (Shih I-li
stopped himself) “...all make suffer China farmer, worker. Our
life, hard!”
“Ahem!” A
thundering cough and the rattle of a military sword and
shoes rang out right behind the soldiers. Lieutenant
Shigefuji had come up undetected and was standing behind
them. They started.
Shih I-li
fell as silent as a deaf-mute. The lieutenant was glaring
at him with steely eyes. Like a criminal, his head sadly
bowed, the Chinese stood up. Weakly shrugging his soldiers,
he left without a sound.
“So he’s come to fill your
heads with propaganda. Even in this factory there are Reds.
Letting someone like that brainwash you with communist
propaganda is a stain on your honor!”
“Lieutenant, sir, he was just
telling us funny stories. That Chink knows a little
Japanese,” Takatori said.
“Don’t you lie to me! I heard
him!” The lieutenant’s face turned suddenly fierce. “Stay
away from them, funny or not! Break it up! Break it up!
Break it up and go to sleep! You’d better be careful!”
“Sir. We will.”
The soldiers were drawn to
Shih I-li’s story and had
gathered around him. The lodgings were always dark. The
walls were crumbling. The place felt like a cave where none
but the oppressed and tormented gathered.
Were the soldiers and the
workers not twins with the same destiny? The harrowing
daily labor drove them both to utter exhaustion.
By bullying these Chinese
workers we’re tying a rope around our own necks. Bullied
workers only make the Oi
Corporation happy, nobody else. Takatori spoke of it
simply. Some skeptically shook their heads.
Takatori spoke again. He
elaborated. We come here thinking we’re serving our
country. We think we’re protecting our national interests.
So what policy does the fat bourgeoisie adopt? A
strategy that will fatten the bourgeoisie. They’ll
profit and squeeze the workers’ necks even harder. They
might slip some money to corrupt labor leaders. But the
best workers get choked more and more.
“What fools
soldiers are,” Takatori said with profound emotion. “Though
we’re poor farmers and workers ourselves, just because we’re
wearing uniforms with stand-up collars we’re trying to break
the workers’ and farmers’ resistance. We’ve been sent into
a colony and we’re risking our lives to make the bourgeoisie
richer and richer. We’re so blind we don’t understand what
on earth we’re doing! We’re actually strangling ourselves
with our own hands!”
All grew
serious and thoughtful.
“Perseverance!”
Kitani thought to himself. “We’ve got to duck the whip and
rise up from below.”
Life here seemed just as
painful as life in the factories and farming villages back
home, maybe worse. They knew that for a full month now the
workers had been forbidden to take a single step outside the
factory compound. They were not receiving wages.
Among the youngest child
workers, seven of them were just five years old. Five of
them had been bought in perpetuity for ten or twelve
yuan. Removing their jackets
from thin chests with ribs sticking out, diligently the
children were filling the boxes with matches. Their hands
were too small to wrap around a matchbox. Unless there was
an extra platform beneath their seats, they could not reach
the worktable.
“Come to think of it, we too
grew up with our parents telling us to work from about the
age of five or six,” thought Tamada,
recalling his childhood when he used to get up around one in
the morning to start working in the noodle shop. “But we
were never sold to anyone!”
Many of the Chinese workers
had come from the countryside. They had quit farming and
begun working in factories. The life of a peasant was even
more miserable than that of a worker. Taxed extortionately
by the ceaselessly feuding warlords backed by various
imperialist powers, plundered by outlaws and runaway
soldiers, the peasants could not make a living no matter how
hard they tilled the soil and watered the livestock. There
were droughts. There were plagues of swarming locusts.
Entire harvests were seized by armed men.
Some people sold off their
land, houses, and livestock, and emigrated to eastern
provinces. Migrants were everywhere. In the course of
migration many were set upon by soldiers on the march and
robbed of what little they had. They could not proceed to
their destination. Such people became factory workers.
Some people
left their families in the villages and came in search of
work. The families that remained behind gnawed on tree
roots and chewed blades of grass. Some even died eating
powdered stones.
“Even my mother, back in that
sooty house on the edge of town, barely gets enough to eat
by selling gloves,” thought the normally cheerful Takatori.
“She is sixty-two already... so covered with wrinkles even
a horny old man won’t come near her! She has no one!
How can she keep her stomach full just
by selling gloves?”
The soldiers found themselves
comparing their lives at home with the lives of the workers
here. Some recalled that wheat would soon be ripening in
the villages and wondered how their fathers, starting to get
slightly muddled with age, were managing.
“Wang Hung-chi wife give birth
woman child,” Shih I-li told the
soldiers, pointing to the good-natured Wang whose face
looked rather slack, despondent and bitter.
“Oh, she gave birth.”
The eyes of more than twenty
soldiers concentrated on Wang. Wang’s _expression turned
timid as though he were eager to hide.
“Wang, no money. Wife,
no money. Boss give no
money.”
“Hmm, the factory’s not
handing over the wages.”
“Mother Wang carry big child,
come to factory and cry. Factory man
say mother cannot meet Wang.”
“Hmm.”
“Cannot give money, have no
money.”
“Hmm.”
“Wife, no rice, cannot eat.
Milk no come out. Baby cry.”
“Hmm.”
“Baby cry six day. Wife,
hungry. Only drink hot water, hot water not enough.
Cannot walk. Ten day, morning,
baby no cry. She look. Baby
dead. Mother run to factory.
But police say cannot meet Wang. Mother talk outside
fence. Wang listen inside. Wang cannot go home. Boss say
nobody go out one step.”
“Hmm!”
Wang Hung-chi did not
understand Japanese. But he realized from the soldiers’ and
Shih’s strained expressions what Shih I-li
was telling them.
“Factory buy children, more
more bad,” Shih I-li
resumed.
“Children work, work, get
nothing. No haircut money. Cannot buy
towel. Only New Year get
fifteen sen. Children work one
year, two year, three year.
Always work. Always only New Year
fifteen sen. Always
cannot go out. Three year, eighteen children not go out one
day. Only work.
“Have no hope. Hope no more.
“Child,
only eight, nine, think better die. Take phosphorus, drink.
February, two children dead. March,
four children dead. Drink phosphorus, burn inside. Much
pain. Small children body, only skin and bone, leg
kick, kick... Factory man, boss laugh.
Say China people have no pride, die because spite. Have no
pride...”
“Hmm!”
The
soldiers groaned, barely able to breathe.
[Thanks to
the brother who sends in these selections. To be
continued. T)
OCCUPATION
REPORT
This Is Not A Satire:
Iraq’s
Interior Ministry Refuses To Deploy US-Trained Police
April 4, 2006 Jonathan Steele
in Baghdad, The Guardian
Iraq's
interior ministry is refusing to deploy thousands of police
recruits who have been trained by the US and the UK and is
hiring its own men and putting them on the streets,