Show Your Own UnKau Vow!
Get Your Own Shirt Here - UnKauInoa.org
Join the National Campaign to End the Korean War (www.endthekoreanwar.org) in a coordinated "online demonstration" -
1. Barrage the White House and State Department with emails and urge
President Obama and State Secretary Clinton to immediately stop the
joint U.S.-South Korean war maneuvers, and sign a Peace Treaty to end
the state of war that has existed for sixty years on the Korean
peninsula-
http://www.whitehouse.gov/contact
http://contact-us.state.gov
2. Post replies on online media sites and blogs where they are
discussing the issue and beat back the war-mongering rhetoric with
calls for de-escalation and a peaceful resolution. Refer to the
attached factsheet for talking points. Some suggested sites are-
www.cnn.com
www.nytimes.com
www.washingtonpost.com
www.huffingtonpost.com
www.npr.org
www.bbc.co.uk
www.news.yahoo.com
www.voanews.com
www.abcnews.go.com
www.foreignpolicy.com
3. Post links to articles calling for diplomacy on listserves, blogs, facebook-
• "North Korea's Consistent Message to the U.S."
By former President Jimmy Carter in the Washington Post, November 24, 2010
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/11/23/AR2010112305808.html
• “Retaliation, Retaliation"
by Paul Liem of the Korea Policy Institute, Nov 25, 2010
http://www.kpolicy.org
• "Crisis in Korea?"
by John Feffer, Co-director of Foreign Policy in Focus in the
Huffington Post, Nov 23,2010
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/john-feffer/crisis-in-korea_b_787639.html
• Tim Shorrock
Posted on the Daily Beast.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2010-11-24/korea-standoff-barack-obama-only-has-one-choice/?cid=hp:mainpromo1
• Tim Shorrock
on Democracy Now
http://www.democracynow.org/2010/11/24/tim_shorrock_direct_talks_with_north
• “A Return Trip to North Korea’s Yongbyon Nuclear Complex”
By Siegfried S. Hecker
http://www.nautilus.org/publications/essays/napsnet/reports/a-return-trip-to-north-korea2019s-yongbyon-nuclear-complex
• “Review U.S. Policy toward North Korea”
Bob Carlin and John Lewis
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/11/21/AR2010112102276.html
Part One: Two Hawaiian educators are fired and a community grieves. Anon-profit is also their Interim Local School Board, HookakooCorporation. They come to explain their non-negotiable decision. 00:03:06 Added on 11/24/10 162 views |
Aloha Everyone--
You're invited to the
Makahiki Season Solidarity Gathering for Hawaiian Prison Inmates
...thoughts and prayers of spiritual solidarity for Hawai'i's pa'ahao
Sunday Nov. 28 3:00 PM
University of Hawai'i at Manoa
On the Mall, outside Henke Hall/School of Social Work, adjacent to Hamilton Library
parking along East-West Road, Diamond Head side of campus
---Pule and 'Oli for the 2010 Makahiki at Waiawa CF, OCCC, Honolulu Federal Detention Center, and Federal DOJ Prisons FCI Safford/Arizona and FCI Sheridan/Oregon
---Guest Speakers:
Germaine Ka'apuni Bush and other former pa'ahao from the original 2003 Native Hawaiian Religion Lawsuit and first Makahiki Ceremony on the Mainland
---All are welcome to come to 'talk story' and learn more about Restorative Justice and offender re-entry work with Hawaii's incarcerated populations
---partaking of 'awa
Sponsored by the Pacific Justice and Reconciliation Center
contact: Dr. Rev. Kaleo Patterson, 330-6739 or Bryan Nakamura, 780-6823
Aloha PeacePals,
It was a shock for me to learn of the passing of UCB prof.
Chalmers Johnson on Saturday, Nov. 20. My first academic sparring with
him was back in 1972, when I wrote a critical essay on his book,
Nationalism and the Rise of Communist China. At that time he was a
conservative and a self-admitted "spear-carrier for the U.S. empire."
But since then, his research has turned him into one of the most
presient critic of the US empire. In fact, just made a request to the
Hawaii Library system to bring his latest book, Dismantling the
Empire(just published in August). to get a tast of this great academic
mind, here's a short excerpt from an interview with Amy Goodman of
Democracy Now, conducted in 2007. Your comments & feedback welcome.
Peace & Imua,
Danny
_______
AMY GOODMAN: Chalmers Johnson, you write in your book Nemesis, "Once
upon a time you could trace the spread of Imperialism by counting up
colonies. America’s version of the colony is the military base." Can
you lay out the global picture of American military bases, how many
there are, what does the map look like?
CHALMERS JOHNSON: Americans really wouldn’t believe it, to see it, but
according to the official count- it’s something called the Base
Structure Report, which is an unclassified Pentagon inventory of real
property owned around the world and the cost it would take to replace
it. There are right now, 737 American military bases on every
continent, and well over 130 countries. Some apologists from the
Pentagon like to say, "Well, this is false, that we’re counting Marine
guards at embassies." I guarantee you that is simply stupid. We don’t
have anything like 737 American embassies abroad, and all of these are
genuine military bases with all of the problems that that involves.
In the southernmost prefecture of Japan, Okinawa, site of the Battle
of Okinawa in 1945, there is a small island, smaller than Kauai in the
Hawaiian islands, with over a 1,300,000 Okinawans. There are 37
American military bases there. The revolt against them has been
endemic for 50 years. The governor is always saying to the local
military commander, "You’re living on the side of a volcano that could
explode at any time. It has exploded in the past. What this means is
just an endless, nonstop series of sexually violent crimes, drunken
brawls, hit-and-run accidents, environmental pollution, noise
pollution, helicopters falling out of the air from Futenma Marine
Corps Air Base and falling onto the campus of Okinawa International
University. One thing after another. Back in 1995, we had one of the
most serious incidents, when two Marines and a sailor abducted, beat
and raped a 12-year-old girl. This led to the largest demonstrations
against the United States since we signed the security treaty with
Japan decades ago. It’s this kind of thing. I first went to Okinawa in
1996. I was invited by then Governor Ota in the wake of the rape
incident. I have devoted my life to the study of Japan, but like many
Japanese- many Japanese specialists- I had never been in Okinawa. I
was shocked by what I saw. It was the British raj. It was like Soviet
troops living in East Germany, more comfortable than they would be
back at, say, Oceanside, California, next door to Camp Pendleton. And
it was a scandal in every sense. My first reaction–I’ve not made a
secret of it, that I was, before the collapse of the Soviet Union,
certainly a Cold Warrior. My first explanation was this is simply off
the beaten track, that people don’t come down here and report it. As I
began to study the network of bases around the world and the incidents
that have gone with them and the military coups that have brought
about regime change and governments that we approve of, I began to
realize that Okinawa was not unusual. It was, unfortunately, typical.
--
D.Li(MidPacPeaceActive)
HAS THERE BEEN ANY DEATHS ON THIS PROPERTY 5841 HAAHEO ST? FROM 1989?
OR WERE THERE ANY DEATHS BELOW THIS PROPERTY DURING THE 1800S.
ANY INFORMATION WILL BE APPRECIATED. ETHERIC BEINGS IN THIS HALE ARE VISUALLY CONTACTING ME....
CALL 635-8886.
MAHALO,
APPRENTICE KAHUNA PULE