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5th anniversary Iraq war protest events - ALL WEEK — Brooklynian

5th anniversary Iraq war protest events - ALL WEEK

msmaven
edited November -1 in Park Slope
Anyone who is as heartsick as I am over this country's actions in Iraq may want to attend these events:

On March 19, the 5th anniversary of the invasion of Iraq, Brooklyn for Peace and MoveOn will hold a joint "Brooklyn Says No to War" march and vigil.

5:30: pm, press conference at Grand Army Plaza
6:00, march down Flatbush Avenue to the military recruiting station at 41 Flatbush Ave. (Livingston St.).
7:00, brief program with comments by Iraq war vets and members of military families, followed by a candlelight vigil.

On Saturday, March 22, Brooklynites will cross the river to join a citywide River-to-River Human Chain, spanning 14th Street in Manhattan from 1st Ave. to 11th Ave. Dozens of participating groups will send members who, along with thousands of other individuals, will line the street to call on Congress to end funding for the war and bring the troops home.

For more information: www.brooklynpeace.org/events/index.html or http://events.unitedforpeace.org/5yearstoomany/events/show/3307

Comments

  • these are dangerous people, not some peace loving protesters.

    March 19 War Anniversary Protest
    Evict the military recruitment station, cage the recruiters!

    When: Wednesday, March 19
    Rally: 6:00pm
    March: Departs at 6:30pm for the Military Recruiting Station
    Where: Meet at the dinosaur sculpture in front of Carnegie Library (4400 Forbes Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15213)

    This March 19 hundreds of cities across the U.S. will hold events to mark the anniversary of the war in Iraq and remember the tragic toll the world has and continues to pay; nearly 4,000 U.S. soldiers killed, 30,000 wounded, at least 100,000 Iraqis killed, four million displaced, and nearly a trillion dollars squandered.

    While there will be events in Washington, D.C. and elsewhere, members of Pittsburgh Organizing Group (POG) feel it is important that there be a local event connected to our community’s long-standing, successful efforts to use education and action to oppose the war and undermine the militarism that leads to perpetual war(s).

    On Wednesday, March 19, POG will be holding a torch-lit march to a modern day castle of abominations—our local military recruiting station. If the station remains open, we intend to evict it and everything inside of it, occupy the location, and transform it into something useful for the community. We’ll also be bringing a movable cage in which to confine military recruiters until they no longer pose a danger to our friends and neighbors.

    Of course, the station may be closed and recruiters may flee or hide behind the police apparatus that enables the war to continue. That is often the case, and we’ve seen in the past the overwhelming resources the state directs against these anniversary events because of their importance as a symbol of dissent. We believe in acting effectively, in confronting the war, at times and places of our choosing. When the state brings the resources necessary to suppress direct action against the war, it makes sense to hold a symbolic protest, and we still consider that a success, as it exposes the reality that it is ultimately on the local level that our countries war policy will be decided.
  • I'm distressed to learn that people are behaving that way in Pittsburgh.

    Please be aware that the Brooklyn group is a PEACE group pledged to nonviolent protest.
  • i wonder if someone posted about a march in support of the war that it would be stickied to the top as well?
  • metalnyc wrote: i wonder if someone posted about a march in support of the war that it would be stickied to the top as well?
    Not necessarily.
    Which should serve as a reminder to you that this is a site operated on someone else's dime, generously made available to the general public free of charge.
    Items get stickied at the discretion of the management and the moderators. The moderators are an unpaid krewe. I suppose one of the perks is the ability to highlight things with the Sticky function, just because they feel like it. It balances out some of the drudge work around here.
    :D
  • eggcream wrote: these are dangerous people, not some peace loving protesters.
    I've been a volunteer for United for Peace and Justice for 3 years and assure you that I am a peace loving protester who is not at all dangerous. We have no control over other groups.
  • msmaven wrote: I'm distressed to learn that people are behaving that way in Pittsburgh.

    Please be aware that the Brooklyn group is a PEACE group pledged to nonviolent protest.
    I would like to add that I've met the folks from Brooklyn and they are far from violent, they appear to be mostly a bunch of folks who have kids old enough to go to war.
  • Subject: GREAT...

    A Park Sloper protesting a war.

    This will change everything.

    H
  • There's plenty of reasons people go to a protest. A direct effect (ending the war that instant for instance) would be a childish expectation, and is probably not what anyone expects when they do symbolic political action. Still, symbolic political actions tend to add up and have real effect in the world. If nothing else, it changes the person who takes the action. bb3, I mention that for you.
    :D
    MoveOn just sent out a mailing with some events for Weds
    MoveOn wrote:
    Where: Flatbush Ave. & Livingston Street (in Brooklyn)
    When: Wednesday, Mar. 19, 2008, at 6:45 PM


    Tomorrow, MoveOn members are holding candlelight vigils in Brooklyn and around the country to commemorate the 5th anniversary of the tragic invasion of Iraq. We'll gather together to honor the fallen and call on our leaders to end the war and set new priorities for our nation.

    Click to RSVP
    for a New Priorities Vigil:
    http://www.moveon.org/r?r=3133&event_id=45607&id=12330-8696497-X_q3sf&t=1202

    P.S. Can't make this event? Here are a few other events near you:

    Sackman Street @ Eastern Pkwy, Brooklyn at 7:15 PM

    Madison Sq. Park - Broadway 23rd, New York at 7:00 PM
  • Subject: Understood Pipu:

    Pitu:

    Understood. It does change the person. What it seldom changes is the situation. But I do see your point.

    H
  • cool.
    The change thing is just supergradual. When I talk with people who lived through the civil rights movement I think it's all about staying the course and doing something anything to advance what you think is right. Just imagine, in 1967 it was illegal for people of different races to marry each other in some US states.

    Tonight, 5:30 @ Grand Army Plaza
    6pm, leaving Grand Army Plaza, walking down Flatbush Ave to
    7pm Flatbush at Livingston St, US Army Recruiting Station

    Make Love Not War

    image
  • And for those concerned about the anti-war activities today...

    THE DANGEROUS KNIT-IN!
  • AP wrote: War Protesters Halt Traffic, Recall Dead
    By SARAH KARUSH

    WASHINGTON (AP) — Protesters blocked traffic and government buildings in Washington, acted out a Baghdad street scene in Syracuse, N.Y., and banged drums in a parade through San Francisco on Wednesday to mark the fifth anniversary of the U.S. invasion of Iraq.

    In other, more somber observances, organizers set up a 2-mile display of about 4,000 T-shirts in Cincinnati, meant to symbolize the members of the U.S. military killed in Iraq, while in Louisville, Ky., demonstrators lined rows of military boots, sandals and children's tennis shoes on the steps of a courthouse.

    Laurie Wolberton of Louisville, Ky., whose son just finished an Army tour of duty in Iraq, said she fears the worsening U.S. economy has caused Americans to forget about the war.

    "We're not paying attention anymore," she said. "My son has buried his friends. He's given eulogies, he's had to go through things no one should have to go through, and over here they've forgotten. They just go shopping instead."

    On previous anniversaries, tens of thousands of people marched through major U.S. cities, and more than 100,000 gathered on several occasions leading up to the invasion.

    Only a few hundred mustered for one of Wednesday's largest gatherings, in Washington, the crowds' size perhaps kept in check by a late-winter storm system that stretched the length of the country.

    Dozens of people were arrested, most of them at demonstrations in San Francisco, Washington and Syracuse.

    At the Internal Revenue Service building in the nation's capital, about 100 protesters led by a marching band gathered at the main entrance. Several jumped barricades and sat down in front of the doors and were immediately detained. The demonstrators said they were focusing on the IRS, among other institutions, because it gathers taxes used to fund the war.

    Brian Bickett, 29, was among the first arrested. The high school theater teacher from New York City said he had never engaged in civil disobedience before.

    "We need to find lots of different ways to resist the war, and I decided to try this," he said.

    About 20 protesters were arrested about a block from the U.S. Capitol after blocking traffic. In some cases, police had to drag the protesters off the street.

    In Syracuse, police arrested 20 protesters who blocked traffic by creating a mock Baghdad street scene. One person dressed in camouflage lay on the ground. Another was covered in a white sheet with red markings and a woman leaned over as if grieving. They were from a group of more than 100 demonstrators who marched downtown in a steady rain over the lunch hour.

    In Chicopee, Mass., eight people were arrested when they blocked a gate at Westover Air Reserve Base, police said. Five people were arrested In Hartford, Conn., for blocking the front door of a federal courthouse.

    On the West Coast, San Francisco police arrested about 100 protesters by early afternoon for blocking traffic and chaining themselves to buildings, police said.

    The rallies, which drew hundreds to the city's busy financial district, were mostly peaceful, though some demonstrators threw glass Christmas ornaments filled with paint at police, said Sgt. Steve Mannina, a San Francisco police spokesman.

    Black balloons were tied to trees along San Francisco's main downtown thoroughfare, and protesters at a table offered coffee, oranges and "unhappy birthday cake" to passers-by.

    A few hundred protesters banging drums and waving banners that read "Was it worth it" took to the streets for a parade that blocked morning traffic.

    In Anchorage, Alaska, vandals dumped a gallon of red paint on a war veterans memorial, police spokesman Lt. Paul Honeman said.

    Demonstrators also converged in Ohio, where more than 20 vigils, rallies, marches and other events were planned.

    In New York City, women sang songs and counted out the war dead outside the military recruiting station in Times Square, which was recently the target of a bomb.

    Half a dozen war protesters in Miami dressed in black placed flowers outside the U.S. Southern Command during rush-hour Wednesday morning.

    Outside a military recruitment office in Washington, protesters were met by a handful of counterdemonstrators, one of several shows of support for the war and the troops.

    Colby Dillard, who held a sign reading, "We support our brave military and their just mission," pointed to some red paint that one of the war protesters had splattered on the sidewalk.

    "The same blood was spilled to give you the right to do what you're doing," said Dillard, who said he served in Iraq in 2003.

    Earlier, about 150 people, mostly with the group Veterans for Peace, marched down Independence Avenue. Many of them carried upside-down American flags, which they said symbolized a nation in distress.

    Daniel Black, who was stationed in Fallujah with the Marines in 2004, said he came to believe the war was a mistake after he returned.

    "The more I read the more it just didn't add up," said the 25-year-old, a student at Marist College in Poughkeepsie, N.Y.

    A couple of miles away at the American Petroleum Institute, protesters chanted "No blood for oil!" and tried to block traffic by sitting in the street and linking arms. At least once, they were dragged away by police.

    Vandals in Milwaukee damaged the front door of an Army recruiting center and spray-painted anti-war graffiti across its front windows. Milwaukee police said the vandalism occurred Monday night or Tuesday.

    The Iraq war has been unpopular both abroad and in the United States, although an Associated Press-Ipsos poll in December showed that growing numbers think the U.S. is making progress and will eventually be able to claim some success in Iraq.

    Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Karen Mahabir in Washington; Dave Collins in Hartford, Conn.; Laura Wides-Munoz in Miami; William Kates in Syracuse, N.Y.; Marcus Wohlsen in San Francisco; Dinesh Ramde in Milwaukee; Stephanie Reitz in Springfield, Mass.; Will Graves in Louisville, Ky.; and Deepti Hajela in New York.

    Copyright © 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
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