Memorial Day is today. A lot of
thoughts wrap around my head on this day. A lot of individuals support war and others
hate war. War is a very destructive endeavor. At times, many folks forget about
the complex nature of war. Even great and sincere anti-war activists sometimes omit tidbits about the complicated nature about how wars come about. For example, anyone can say that I oppose war, but we should also know about the social, political, and economic origins of various wars (so we don't repeat the same conscious less errors of the past). Physical wounds are not just experienced by both
sides during the course of war. There were emotional or psychological wounds
experienced by the soldiers, the civilians, and all participants within the realm of war.
These wounds persist today in 2012. Some of the victims of war don't have adequate justice or real social care. This reality is exemplified in the
millions of victims and civilians who died during human history. Also, numerous
soldiers were unfairly treated when they came home from Vietnam. For example, a
lot of younger kids don't realize that Vietnam troops were assaulted, cursed
at, thrown objects at, and spat upon by people in America when they've arrived
home from Vietnam. That was wrong, because whatever your view of the Vietnam
War (I don't agree with the Vietnam War. There were many cases where the war
either couldn't transpire or a peaceful negotiated settlement among
all parties could exist. Although, the enemies of truth prevented a peace
settlement from happening during the late 1960's), all people should be treated
with dignity and respect. In fact, tons of the homeless once were Vietnam War
G.I.s. Some war veterans struggle to receive labor or other economic
opportunities. So, it is our responsibility to not worship war nor worship
jingoistic patriotism. It is our responsibility to promote policies that can
advance peace in the world, oppose torture, oppose imperialism, and give
soldiers opportunities to live their own lives once they come into America from
the various theaters of war. Any life lost including soldiers should receive sympathy by us, because a life lost is a tragic situation. Families suffer and we have to execute compassion toward human beings. Likewise, the civilian victims of war ought to
have compensation and real respect too. War crimes done in our name are
blatantly immoral. The victims of the war crimes (from the Belgium extermination of over 1 million black Congolese via the wicked King Leopold II, the Mai Lai massacre, and the firebombing of Dresden) by the Western imperialism are
found in Africa, Asia, the Americas, Australia, and even in Europe ironically
enough. I pull the cards of my enemy all day and everyday. I can't stop, because I won't stop. During this day, we shouldn't sugarcoat our fundamental thinking. We ought
to go out and speak the truth in season and out of season. One of my many
experiences is that I see some of the older generation (not all of them)
expressing apathy. The good news is that the vast majority of older human
beings reject the concept of apathy completely. I am young, so I refuse to
express apathy. I have hunger for hope. Hope is a basic tenet of not only
faith. Hope is a tenet that all of humanity should adhere to. It took hope to
advance the reforms of civil rights, environmental protection, and to
stridently & effectively make numerous positive acts in the world
society. Hope isn't about bashing men or bashing women (or damning nice people
or any individual with a non-conformist social disposition). It's about all of us showing the
tolerance of all human beings, believing in the unity of the human family, and the judging
of people based on their character (not on their skin color, not on their
personality, not on their physical appearance, not on their gender, not on their economic status, and
not on their background given to them at birth). I am tired of bigotry and you
are too. That is why my eyes are open. Hope means that we can finally end the
archaic anti-poor, anti-middle class economic philosophy whose hero is Ayn Rand
not Dr. Martin Luther King. Hope is basic and it is about having faith in God not
faith in the status quo or doubt. This Memorial Day represents to me about hope
for the future. I know that the future will be better. If we can end Jim Crow
and we can end various forms of discrimination among folks of all backgrounds,
then we can create a better, tranquil society. Internet freedom is great to advance. Various blogs and sites are under attack by various functions. It is great to witness a variety of human thought and human thinking. A continuation of activism and a
firm adherence to social justice are great prescriptions for having victories.
Yet, I will not beg another man for my freedom. I will embrace my freedom. You know what that means. I don't have to spell it out. Freedom should be free, but that isn't always the case. I am a believer in justice and I am an non-believer in oppression. My freedom is given to me
by no one, but my God at conception and especially after birth. I have to be controversial since that is my job. See, I will always make it plain, make it real, make it raw, and make it true on the real.
Our country has been through a lot of changes. A Presidential
election will come in November of 2012. We have 2 major choices of President
Barack and Mitt Romney. We have the right to vote for a third party candidate as well. If the President is reelected, some changes will occur.
The Democrats will control at least one chamber of Congress. There might be
some economic improvements or continued economic stagnation. The erosions of
our civil liberties will continue since the White House isn't going to rescind
the Patriot Act, the NDAA, etc. We still have high unemployment, high poverty,
and economic inequality. If Mitt Romney is elected President, the reactionary
Republicans could dominate either the House or the Senate. The agenda of the 1%
will take precedent over the agenda of the 99%. That is why it's silly for the
Tea Party crowd to call President Barack Obama as a socialist extremist when he
is at best a center-left political leader. Paul Krugman, the liberal Nobel
Prize-winning economist and New York Times columnist, recently described Obama,
whom he supports, as having ruled like "a moderate Republican circa
1992." Viewing the ultra-conservatives, African American professor and
left intellectual Cornell West detected "creeping fascism." Economic
inequality is facilitated by the two party system. This system is funded by big
money and the political elite have no vested interests in having true
democratic election reform. That is why the masses of people are opposing and
protesting the inequality of opportunity, the class war waged by the wealthy,
the wars, NATO, and other issues. Even some unions are protesting against the
nefarious policies of Wall Street. It is not just to see thirty years of
wage stagnation. The events in Wisconsin and the Occupy Wall Street
movement prove that real people want to deal with the excesses of capitalism in
the U.S. society. There were 15,000 people demonstrating against NATO in
Chicago during May of 2012. Some hope that these occurrences can allow a
bigger movement for social change to occur. Mitt Romney is
running on the position that the economic crisis is entirely the President's
fault. This is inaccurate, because our Great Recession's origin came from the
Bush Jr. & Clinton administration. The previous Presidential
administrations followed the policies of millionaire tax cuts (except for
Clinton), war spending, and huge deficits of Bush Jr. The Clinton
administration followed the deregulation of banking and Wall Street causing the
winner takes all economic system. Romney's
nonsensical economic speech in Iowa May 15 was an epic self-exposure. While
promising to cut social spending, increase the war budget and not raise taxes, he declared: “President Obama
is an old-school liberal whose first instinct is to see free enterprise as the
villain and government as the hero.... America counted on President Obama to
rescue the economy, tame the deficit and help create jobs. Instead, he bailed
out the public sector, gave billions of dollars to the companies of his friends
and added almost as much debt as all the prior presidents combined.” Romney
forgot to mention that the debt only gone up by about half under President
Obama. The President is barely a liberal on economic and foreign policy issues.
The President supports free enterprise capitalism. Mitt Romney disagrees with
the President on healthcare and the Afghan war when both men are nearly
identical ideologically on both issues. The President's healthcare plan is
based on the program Romney implemented as governor of Massachusetts. Both men
agreed with smart growth or the Sustainable Communities plan. If Barack Obama
is re-elected, the status quo will continue. If Mitt Romney is President,
austerity and war mongering will be on steroids. Frankly, political parties
can't make progressive change. It is dedicated efforts of individuals,
collective people, and organized mass movements that ended the Vietnam War,
ended Jim Crow, created an eight hour work day, and allowed women the
democratic right to vote.
The Democrats aren't anti-war as the Republicans believe. They
have been growing militarism. For example, the President escalated the war in
Afghanistan, supported NATO forces destroying Libya, issued airstrikes that
killed thousands of people in Pakistan, he ordered the killing of multiple American
citizens living abroad, and he expanded the war on terror in other places (like
Yemen, Somalia, etc.). The President issued military squads to fight the drug
war all over Latin America. Polls show that most Americans want the Afghan war
to come to an end. Most Americans want to cut the war budget. The military budget
costs 1 trillion dollars a year. The Pentagon accounts for $642 billion for
fiscal 2013. There is still not a radical anti-poverty program to end the
suffering. President Barack Obama finally talked about poverty, inequality, and
low wages. America is the most economically unequal of the top 20 advanced
industrialized capitalist nations in the OECD or the Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development. The U.S. pays its lowest wages as compared to the
nations in the OECD. Almost 25% of the American work force receives low
wages (about $10 an hour down to minimum wage and below), usually without any
benefits or healthcare. One in two Americans is low income or poor. The poor
account for one in seven people. About 47 million Americans require food stamps
to eat. Food stamps are the only "income" for six million of them.
The plutocracy and its puppets benefits greatly from this reality. The Obama
administration has promoted some stimulus as compared to the Republicans, but
it wasn't comprehensive enough. To be fair, the Republicans obstructed even a
mild proposal by the President to address stimulus, jobs, foreclosures,
bank regulations, or infrastructure. A coalition of liberals and conservatives
vote to promote indefinite detention of people. Why does the West claim to
advance freedom when it funds the harsh Sunni monarchy in Bahrain? It is hypocritical for the leaders of this nation to love to talk about justice, but they ally with the Saudi Arabian
theocrats. The Western elites claim to advance liberty, but it says nothing on the apartheid
going on in Israel (that even progressive Israelis and progressive Palestinians don't want). Africom is having a scramble for Africa, which I reject
completely.
The Syrian opposition is abandoning the UN Peace Plan. Now, the
West is outraged at the massacre in Houla Syria. Yet, the West doesn't
massively expose the atrocities of NATO along the Afghanistan and Pakistan
border for over decades. Hundreds of civilians have been murdered by U.S. drone
attacks alone. This murder is downplayed by the mainstream, corporate Western
media. This murder is called "killing suspected militants." The
problem with this assumption is that innocent men, women, and yes children have
been murdered as a product of these drone attacks. Any death in Syria is blamed
by the media on the Syrian government when they ignore the crimes committed by
the Syrian opposition groups. The Syrian opposition is opposing even an UN
brokered cease fire. The Syrian government played host to hundreds of UN
monitors. The international community takes all claims made by the opposition
at face value. Kofi Annan wants to make a regime change in Syria. The West
berated Syria for violating the ceasefire, but they openly arm and encourage
the rebels to continue with their rampage of violence. Reuters reported at one
point that the Syrian rebels were overtly
shifting to indiscriminate terrorist bombings during this “ceasefire,” which
have claimed scores of lives, and left hundreds maimed, mostly civilians.
Again, the UN and the “international community” gave only the vaguest
condemnations, never mentioning or addressing the opposition directly. These
bombs have even been directed at the UN monitors themselves, with the West, France
specifically, then inexplicably
condemning the Syrian government for not doing enough to provide security. The
Syrian government is blamed for the violence against Alawites, Christians,
Druze, and Kurds including Sunnis. The West wants regime change. This is why
they called the UN mission a failure before the first UN monitor stepped foot
in Syria. The mainstream media wants the Free Syrian Army and NATO to intervene
in Syria. The UN is losing credibility, because they fail to condemn the Syrian
opposition's open discarding of the UN's own peace plan. The Western media claimed
that the government killed 90 people in Houla, Syria near Homa. Later, they
admitted that the death squads mostly killed the victims. Al-Qaeda terrorists
are known to work side by side with the Free Syrian Army against Syrian troops.
In Libya, the military intervention moved fast. People in many cases didn't
know that the Libyan rebels were violent terrorists. People now see that the
Free Syrian Army is guilty of atrocities and using terrorist tactics in
violation of democratic principles. The UN is hypocritically to ignore the
rebels' atrocities (including their refusal to support a ceasefire) and obsess
with regime change in Syria. The West aiding the Syrian rebels will provoke bloodshed.
There have been a lot of protests as it relates to the Quebec
student movement. The government is trying to repress the Quebec student
movement, but people continue with massive protests. There was a huge protest
in Montreal on May 22. The protesters wanted student to possess the right for
free, quality public education and being against government repression. Some
400,000 people came to protest. It was the largest social protest in Canadian
history. There was a huge display of civil disobedience against the special law
that was made by the Quebec government (of trying to stop the strike of
students in the province). Some banners read the following words: “…100 days of
strike, 100 days of (government) contempt!” and “Block the sexist tuition fee
hike!” A massive banner of the militant, CLASSE student association was carried
overhead by hundreds of marchers and read, “May 22: This is only the
beginning!” There was a wide
spectrum of people at the march. The contingents included teachers, professors,
high school students, public service workers, and other trade unionists. The
students used the color red to represent their student movement (or assign
student indebtedness). Along with the route of the march, there were the
leaders of the three largest student associations held an impromptu press
conference. Léo Bureau-Blouin of the association of junior college (CEGEP)
students (the FECQ) told journalists, “We are united today in this huge
demonstration aiming not only to mark 100 days of the strike but also to
denounce the Charest (Quebec) government and the course of events following its
decision to choose repression over discussion...” The draconian bill 78 would
allow the Quebec to suppress the right of people to strike and protest. Gabriel
Nadeau-Dubois, a leader of CLASSE, the largest of the student federations, told
reporters that the law is “absurd and unenforceable. The proof of that is here
today, where the street is speaking forcefully.” Challenging Quebec's minister
of public security, he stated, “If the minister wants to be true to his law, he
will have to levy fines on tens of thousands of people.” There is a proposed 75
percent hike in post secondary tuition fees over the seven years. Now, the
Quebec government Premier Jean Charest wants to have talks with the student
associations on May 28. Some police detained protesters and didn’t give people
medical treatment according to witnesses. The protest movement is growing
despite the police threats and the police violence. The protesters want access
to education and real freedom. They want to express defiance of Bill 78. CLASSE
wants to continue with this policy. Some student and union leaders quietly
project an eventual, electoral outcome to the struggle over tuition fees and
the broader issues it has sparked. The opposition Parti Québécois, which is
supported by most trade union centrals, sits well in polls. The bourgeois
nationalist party says it would immediately repeal Law 78 if elected. So, the
people in Quebec wholeheartedly reject austerity and desire educational reforms
in Canada.
By Timothy
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