And the Beat Goes On: 100 Living Peace and Justice Leaders and Models, List 4, Part 3.

Poster at Rededication ceremony, Peace Abbey, July 29, 2018. Reprinted by permission.

by Kathie Malley-Morrison & Anthony J. Marsella

This fourth list of Living Peace and Justice Leaders continues our efforts to honor the life and work of Reverend Martin Luther-King, Jr.

These are increasingly dangerous times.  Peace and social justice activists like those cited in our four lists help us find ways to resist  rising fascism, racism, militarization, corruption, greed,  disregard for life, and utter contempt for a universal moral code like the Golden Rule.

These leaders and  mentors, and thousands of others like them, need followers but, even more than that, they need comrades–not comrades-in-arms but comrades advancing arm-in-arm  to work for causes that benefit all of humanity and indeed life on earth.  Learn more about these leaders.  Support their causes. Do not bow down to tyranny. Resist.

  1. Nyarwaya:  Eddy Kalisa Nyarwaya Jr. Executive Secretary of the Rwanda Institute for Conflict Transformation and Peace Building; President of the Alternatives to Violence Program
  2. Orlov: Dmitry Orlovpredicts cultural, financial, commercial, and political collapse in US and elsewhere.
  3. Pauli: Richard Pauli, climate activist  
  4. Pepper: William F. Pepper,  attorney, investigator of assassinations, represented MLK’s family in a wrongful death lawsuit
  5. Pitt: William Rivers Pitt,Teacher, writer, political activist
  6. Prasad: Surya Nath Prasad, writer, Transcend Media Services, supporter of universal peace education
  7. Prysner: Michael PrysnerS. army veteran, political activist
  8. Priest:  Dana Priest,investigative reporter, Washington  Post, Top Secret America book 
  9. Pulley: Aislinn Pulley,  Chicago Black Lives Matter, African American leader   
  10. Quam: Lois Quam, activist for health care and the environment. 
  11. Reimer: Kevin Reimerpeace psychology professor
  12. Richards: Cecile Richards, President of Planned Parenthood  
  13. Richtman: Max Richtman, President/CEO of the National Committee to Preserve Social Security & Medicare 
  14. Schindler: Stefan Schindler,  Peace scholar, poetry for peace activist 
  15. Seed: John Seed, Saving the Rain Forests 
  16. Stevenson: Bryan Stevenson, Slavery Museum
  17. Stone: Oliver Stone, film maker
  18. Sulik: Gayle Sulik, Breast Cancer Founder
  19. Sundarajan: Louise Sundarajan, Indigenous Psychologies 
  20. Tatour: Dareen Tatour, Palestinian citizen of Israel charged with inciting violence with her poetry. 
  21. Thapa: Lily Thapa, Single Women for Human Rights in Nepal
  22. Theoharis: Liz Theoharis Co-Chair of the Poor People’s Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival
  23. Todhunter: Colin Todhunter, writer, critic of international agribusinesses
  24. Toon: Brian Toon  climate research 
  25. Torres-Rivera: Edil Torres Rivera,  LatinoX  Counseling for Social Justice activist 
  26. Townsend: David Townsend, J.D., Attorney, Mediator, Activist
  27. Turbeville: Brandon Turbeville Writer for Activist Post, host of Truth on the Tracks, a weekly news roundup serving as a hub for activists, information, and solutions.
  28. Tverberg:  Gail Tverberg,    Energy and Peak Oil Analyst 
  29. Vitchek: Andre Vitchek, revolutionary, internationalist, and globetrotter fighting Western imperialism 
  30. Vilkomerson: Rebecca VilkomersonExecutive Director, Jewish Voice for Peace 
  31. Wagner: Richard Wagner, peace psychology pioneer.
  32. Wallace: Timmon Milne Wallis, Director of Peaceworkers UK.
  33. Ward: Eric K. Ward, long-time civil rights strategist
  34. Wedler: Carey Wedler, Editor, Anti-Media
  35. West: Doe West, Native American scholar, pastor, social justice activist, disability rights advocate.
  36. White:  James A. White Jr., Prisoner who started numerous educational programs for prisoners
  37.  Wolff: Richard D. Wolff,  Author, Marxist economist 
  38. Yumbo: Elisvan Greffa Yumbo, Peruvian activist fighting for protection of Amazon waters from oil industry.  
  39. Young: Andrew Young civil rights activist, U.S. Representative, Pastor, diplomat, mayor, educator.
  40. Zimoz: Sergey Zimov, climate change activist working to preserve life in the Artic
    And remember to vote in November.
    1. This week’s posts have been adapted from a longer one on Transcend Media Services. See https://www.transcend.org/tms/2018/08/100-living-peace-and-justice-leaders-and-models-list-4/

Can you do what they do? Living Peace and Justice Leaders, Part 4, List 2

Poster at Rededication ceremony, Peace Abbey, July 29, 2018. Reprinted by permission. Thanks to Lewis Randa.

By Kathie Malley-Morrison and Anthony J. Marsella

 There is a new spirit of encounter (e.g., Black Lives Matter; Me Too) in our times, a new spirit of protest against oppression and abuse, evidenced by national and local gatherings among and for women and minority groups!

There is a new spirit of communication and connection among free media critical of government, military, and wealth controls! There is a new spirit of protest against war and militarism, against the wasting of a nation’s wealth on weaponry and endless war!

There is a new spirit of concern for life and land, a concern especially regarding anthropogenic climate changes! Activists are protesting destructive developments and supporting climate change policies to limit Co2 release.

There is a new spirit of determination to expose abuses of privilege and position by select government officials who have politicized and weaponized laws for personal use (e.g., FISA Court).

These changes signal and sustain hope. Hope is the life blood of progressive change. Hope can be suppressed and oppressed, but it cannot be defeated. Hope endures because it is the very essence of life. Regardless of life form and species, hope is the evolutionary impulse to pursue survival, adaptation, and adjustment, free of oppression.

And hope is sustained and enlarged through the work of the brave activists being honored in our fourth list of living peace and social justice activists.

  1. Erakat: Noura Erakat, human rights attorney, writer, activist, specialist in Israeli-Palestinian conflict  
  2. Fisk:  Robert Fisk, war zone Guardian correspondent
  3. Flanders: Laura Flanders, author, journalist,
  4. Frompovich: Catherine Frompovich,  health rights advocate, journalist
  5. Gaynor: Maureen Gaynor,  disability activist, supporter of civil disobedience
  6. Gattinger: Malvin Gattinger, Transcend Media Services staff 
  7. Gold: Ariel Gold, Jewish mother, BDS activist, pro-Palestinian, Code Pink leader.
  8. Gonzalez: Naomi Emma Gonzalez,  leader in youth-led gun control  student movement. 
  9. Haque:  Umair Haque, inspirational writer
  10. Hightower: Jim Hightower, progressive political activist, supporter of sustainable agriculture 
  11. Huerta: Delores Huerta,  labor leader and civil rights activist. Worked with Caesar Chavez in founding United Farm Workers Union
  12. Jackson: Richard Jackson, Director of the National Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies.
  13. Johnson: Jake Johnson ,Common Dreams writer
  14. Jones: Preston Jones,  professor, peace activist on American Empire
  15. Kent: George Kent, Teaches human rights, on the Board of Directors of the International Peace Research Association Foundation.
  16. Klare: Michael T. Klare, Five College Professor of Peace & World Security Studies
  17. Kolhatkar: Sonali Kolhatkar, columnist for Truthdig, co-director of the Afghan Women’s Mission
  18. Kunstler: Barton  Kunstler,  Author, Nation of change.  
  19. Laurison: Hannah Burton Laurison, human rights activist.
  20. Lillard: Kwame Leo Lillard, Nashville civil rights leader 
  21. Loladze : Irakli Loladze,  professor, Environment of Food Supply
  22. McKay: Donna McKay, active with Physicians for Human Rights.
  23. McKibben: Bill McKibben, leading environmentalist in USA  
  24. Melamed: Barbara G. Melamed,  psychologist, promotes women’s peacebuilding, mediation
  25. Milton-Lightening: Heather Milton-Lightening international Indigenous Peoples advocate, activist for ending Gaza blockade. 
  26. Mingo: Erika MingoPast President, PSYSR; Racial Justice Action Group
  27. Munayyer:  Yousef MunayyerUS Campaign for Palestinian
  28. RightsMutaka: Christophe Nyambatsi Mutaka  key figure at the Groupe Martin Luther King; promotes active nonviolence,  human rights, and peace,  focuses on reducing sexual and other violence against women.
  29. Nair:  Keshavan NairGandhi scholar 
  30. Neville: Helen A. Neville, Professor, African-American Studies/Gender and Women’s Studies, University of Illinois,  Champaign-Urbana

Please support their efforts and ours.  And vote in November!

We Let Them Pull the Trigger

by

From sea to grieving sea. Reuters photo.

Another one. This time on Tuesday in Benton, Kentucky. Two teenagers killed, 18 injured – three shot in the head, and in critical condition. So much ghastly same old same old: Small close-knit town, people shocked and grieving, good kids and “sweet souls” who will be missed, police still searching for a reason for a 15-year-old to open fire, residents coming together in their pain to plan prayer vigils, politicians sending – yes, really – more thoughts and prayers. It was the 11th school shooting of the year, and it’s still January. It was barely a blip in the heedless news.

Maybe because the day before the Benton shooting at Marshall County High School, there was a shooting at Italy High School in Texas. Or because, the same day, someone in a pickup shot at a group of students in New Orleans. Or because, also on Tuesday, there were at least 81 other shootings around the country; they killed 28 more people and wounded 40 more. Or because, in the gruesome new normal, a quarter of U.S. parents fear for their children’s safety while they’re at school, which, by all grim accounts, they should. Or because, in the bloody wake of Benton, local pols could only talk up armed guards, not gun control, which would “politicize” the horror, and the NRA-backed Enabler-In-Chief had to be shamed before he even offered his own crappy bogus thoughts and prayers.

Moms and other gun control advocates are still demanding action. What, we wonder, will it take, besides Preston Cope and Bailey Holt? We need to say their names. “In our time,” writes Sandy Solomon in her “Little Letter to the Future”, published in Vox Populi, “we reckoned our dead in firearms” and “grew ill/from (our) excuses for poor, innocent guns.” In the end, she writes, “About death,/ you know. We knew too much.”

Little letter from the future

In our time we reckoned our dead in firearms—
handguns, rifles, automatic weapons;
in much-parsed constitutional clauses;
in politicians bought by lobbyists
and salesmen. In our time, we objected
most of us, but we couldn’t stop those guns.
They squatted beside the desperate, the guy
who craved suicide; they incited
wild-eyed murder, mass murder.
In our time, we just hoped we wouldn’t
be unlucky, that a sick boy toting
what we called an AR-15-style
Bushmaster semi-automatic rifle,
wouldn’t burst into another first-grade
classroom where our kids studied addition,
subtraction; or into another night club
where we celebrated Saturday night;
we just hoped that a stray bullet wouldn’t
cross Central Park to reach the shady
bench on which we sat talking with a friend,
that no cop would imagine our hand reaching
for a pistol instead of a wallet or a phone.
We had to calibrate for guns. And those
with darker skin had to calibrate
more (no talking back, no attitude,
no running away, no looking tough or strange
or hard, no looking like yourself most days).
We knew the slogans: people, not guns,
kill people, a gun in the hands of a good
guy trumps a gun in the hands of a bad
guy, and on and on. We grew ill
from those excuses for poor, innocent guns.
They were everywhere—inside the jacket
of a man at the next table, in the glove compartment
of the car beside us at the light. Ubiquitous
and lethal, they entered our wild logic
awake or asleep. In those days, we let
our toddlers discover a parent’s gun, safety
off, badly hidden under a pillow
or jammed, for our own protection, inside a bag
under a restaurant table, and when our sweet,
curious children wrapped their little fingers
around the gun’s shape so they could gaze
into its empty maw, while we looked
away or dozed, we let them pull the trigger,
we let them kill themselves. About death,
you know. We knew too much.

Sandy Solomon

shooting-diaz-1487823-640x360.jpg

American still life

Republished from Common Dreams 1/25/2018

Begging for War

(Photo: (stephan)/Flickr/cc)

By Robert C. Koehler

“There are no good options,” Brian Williams said the other night on MSNBC, launching a discussion about North Korea with the implication that war—maybe nuclear war—is the only solution to the problem it represents.

We’ve been cradling our own suicide for seven decades. The baby’s eyes open…

And Williams was right, though not in a way that he understood. When war—forceful domination, victory through threat, carnage and, if necessary, annihilation—is the ultimate limit of one’s consciousness, there are no good options. Even the peace negotiated in the context of war is bound to be temporary and grudging and therefore a bad option—sort of like the “peace” achieved at the end of the Korean War, after which both sides still, as Reuters reports, “have thousands of rockets and artillery pieces aimed at each other across the world’s most heavily armed border.”

Only beyond the context of war are there any options at all. Only beyond the context of war does humanity have any hope of avoiding suicide. And contrary to the consensus viewpoint of mainstream politicians and reporters, this is not completely unexplored territory.

Because Donald Trump is president, reaching for this trans-war consciousness is as crucial as it has ever been.

Maybe the best place to begin is by noting that there are some 22,000 nuclear weapons on the planet. This fact is almost never part of the news about North Korea, which has, as of this week, when it detonated an alleged hydrogen bomb, conducted six nuclear tests. The fact that Kim Jong-un’s tiny, unpredictable country is a member of the nuclear club is disconcerting, but the fact that there’s a “nuclear club” at all—and that its members are spending as much as a trillion dollars a decade to modernize their nuclear weapons—is even more disconcerting. And the fact that the modernization process is happening so quietly, without controversy or public debate (or even awareness) exacerbates the horror exponentially.

North Korea may be “begging for war,” as U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley exclaimed, but it’s not alone in doing so. None of the planet’s nuclear-armed nations have abided by the 1970 Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, which explicitly calls for complete nuclear disarmament. How easy this has been to ignore.

As Simon Tisdall wrote recently in the Guardian: “…the past and present leaders of the U.S., Russia, China, France and the U.K., whose governments signed but have not fulfilled the terms of the 1970 nuclear non-proliferation treaty, have to some degree brought the North Korea crisis on themselves. Kim Jong-un’s recklessness and bad faith is a product of their own.”

Preparing for war produces, at best, obedience, which usually comes with hidden resentments. Because North Korea has displayed defiance rather than obedience, the mainstream media have portrayed the country and its leader as, essentially, evil cartoon characters: a crazy country that doesn’t know its place and is therefore begging for war.

To reach beyond war, to reach toward the future and create the possibility that it will arrive—to create sensible options—first of all requires dealing with one’s enemy with respect and understanding. In the case of North Korea, this means revisiting the Korean War, in which some 3 million North Koreans died and, as Anna Fifield pointed out recently in the Washington Post, “the U.S. Air Force leveled the North, to the extent that American generals complained there was nothing left to bomb.

“Ever since,” she writes, “North Korea has existed in a state of insecurity, with the totalitarian regime telling the population that the United States is out to destroy them—again.

“It is in this context that, following the collapse of its nuclear-armed benefactor, the Soviet Union, the Kim regime has sought weapons of its own.”

She points out that this is not irrational behavior—certainly not for a small, isolated country in the crosshairs of the United States. On a planet with no good options, North Korea’s capacity to produce a little mutually assured destruction may be its best bet to curtail invasion. Indeed, no nuclear-armed nation has ever been invaded.

With that understanding in place, John Delury, a professor at the Yonsei University Graduate School of International Studies in Seoul, has some further advice to offer: “Now is the time,” he wrote in the Washington Post in April, “to jump-start a diplomatic initiative that reopens channels, lowers tensions and caps North Korea’s capabilities where they are. Then, working closely with the new government in Seoul and others, the United States should support a long-term strategy that integrates North Korea into regional stability and prosperity….

“By simply inflicting economic pain, threatening military strikes and keeping tensions high, the United States is playing into the worst tendencies of the North Korean system. Kim’s nuclear intentions will harden and North Korea’s capabilities will only grow. It’s time to reverse course.”

The time is now: to stop pretending that war will keep us safe, to stop cradling humanity’s capacity to commit suicide.

And the United States is not Donald Trump. Our collective consciousness is bigger than that of a bully. That means we have the capacity to understand that the threat posed by North Korea is a reminder that nuclear disarmament for the whole planet is long overdue. There are no good nuclear weapons.

Published on Thursday, September 07, 2017, by Common Dreams.

Robert C. Koehler

Robert C. Koehler

Robert Koehler is an award-winning, Chicago-based journalist and nationally syndicated writer. His new book, Courage Grows Strong at the Wound is now available. Contact him at koehlercw@gmail.com or visit his website at commonwonders.com.