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Volume1- Issue 6- October
2003
ISSN # - 154-889X
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Green Dove Zine will be published
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by the Green Dove Network. The Green Dove Network
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The
words above are from an open book titled "Peace Words"
located in the Indiana University Fine Arts Library.
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GREEN
DOVE NOTE
FROM THE EDITOR
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DEAR
GREEN DOVE
YOUR LETTERS
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| *NEW
GREEN
DOVE SHOP |
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BOOK OF
THE MONTH
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DEAR READER
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United
For Peace
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Not
in Our Name
NO War Without Limits
NO Detentions & Round-ups
NO Police State Restrictions |
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http://www.VoteNoWar.org
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War Resisters League
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MOVEON.ORG
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Bloomington
Volunteer Network - call 349-3433 to find out how you
can help
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"You can look at
war as a massing of arms and matérial and troops, but
you can also see it as something else--as a delicate web of
interwoven choices made by human beings, made out of a certain
consciousness. The decision to order an attack, the choice
to obey or disobey an order, to fire or not to fire a weapon.
Armies and, indeed, any culture that supports them must convince
the people that all the decisions are made already, and they
have no choice. But that is never true." The Fifth
Sacred Thing" by Starhawk
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Current Nuclear News
Click for full articles
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Click 1
or
2 for info on Nuclear Testing
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IERE
The IN Environmental Report
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NORML
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| What
Color is Community? UUC Task
Force - Contact Guy Loftmay, loftpeople@aol.com |
| UUC Government
- Watch Task Force - For information
contact David Wiley, dwiley@earthlink.net |
| The UUC Children's
Task Force - For more information contact Martha Nord, marthanord@hotmail.com |
Habitat for
HumanityGroup
at the Unitarian Universalist Church - Dorothy Sowell, dsowel@alumni.indiana.edu |
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links to
alternative news sources featuring local, national and global
news and Native American publications
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Alternet
is an independent news
coverage site of world events.
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Visit Hart Rock
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The Indiana Holistic Health
Network.
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Peace,
in the sense of the absence of war is of little value to someone
who is dying of hunger or cold. It will not remove the pain
of torture inflicted on a prisoner of conscience. It does not
comfort those who have lost their loved ones in floods caused
by senseless deforestation in a neighboring country. Peace can
only last where human rights are respected, where the people
are fed and where individuals and nations are free -
The Dalai Lama
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Green Dove
Magazine is a news and information publication
offering peace, environmental and community news from local
and world sources and a calendar of peace related local events
for Bloomington and Indiana. The web "zine" is published
by the Green Dove Network every 4-6 weeks, and in print whenever
donations make it possible.
Green Dove is dedicated to being a presence
for peace. It is a peace activist web network, presenting
a alternative news and information connecting individuals,
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topics and activist resources, information about peace work,
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books, education, green purchasing, sustainable living resources,
art and Poetry galleries and is currently home to Local
Food.
Green Dove is a non-profit network. Your donations contributes
to the cost of maintaining and developing Green Dove as a
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Please send your donation in the form of a check or money
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Please include your e-mail address and street address. To
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Volunteers -If you want to help Green Dove
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Wild Wowod
Furniture built by local craftsmen
from the finest Indiana hardwoods. Stools, benches and tables
in a variety of designs. Traditional joinery. Custom orders
considered. Available at By Hand Gallery in fountain Square
Mall (812)334-3255
Click image for larger view
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May
we sow seeds of peace, justice and freedom. May we be seeds
of peace, may we be seeds of justice, may we be seeds of freedom.
G.D.
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Breathe new life into your
old homeFor information call Rob at 812-331-0886
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Jeff
Cooney OMD DIPL.AC. (NCCAOM)
The Center for Wholism
2401 N. Walnut Street Bloomington, IN 47404-2069 812-332-4090
Acupuncturist since 1981. Providing pain management services
and a comprehensive system of healthcare and health maintenance |
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WFHB
91.3 and 98.1 FM
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Boxcar Books and Community
Center, Inc.
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Tea Party - A Journal
of Revolutionary Thought from the Center
for Sustainable Living
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WFIU
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The Ryder
- available in town
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Branches
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The Pinup
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| In
accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, and such (and all)
material on this site is distributed without profit to all those
who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the information
for research and educational purposes. For more information
on this topic click
here. |
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E'tokmit
e'k, rangimarie, hedd, pace, tutquin, shanti, vrede, paquilisli,
MNP, Onai rahu, amani, kev sib haum xeeb,salam, shalom, shaantiM,
hedd, gutpela taim, lalyi, pesca, damai, raha, fred, eirni,
pax, mir, peace, heiwa, amn, nabad, rauha, paz, frid, paco,
shAnti, paqe, danh tu, ittimokla, rahu, paix, beke, shalom,
mnonestotse, kapayapaan
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"The choice is not
between violence and nonviolence, but between nonviolence
and nonexistence." Martin Luther
King
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From
Cancun to the Miami FTAA Mobilization:
Victory¹s Strategic Momentum
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By Starhawk
Those
of us who went to Cancun to protest the World Trade
Organization¹s ministerial came back with pinkeye,
exhaustion, deep coughs, and heat rashes, but the
rosy flush of victory made all the rest worthwhile.
Sweet victory is rare in progressive, political work.
Generally, we end a mobilization reminding ourselves
that we are working for long term change, while the
policies we are contesting remain in force. Seldom
do we get to dance in the streets, celebrating an
immediate collapse of some undemocratic negotiation
or unjust institution.
Cancun was a double victory. First, the collapse of
the WTO ministerial, occasioned by the walkout of
countries from the global south, instigated by Kenya.
The many actions inside and outside the conference
center, in the streets and around the world, and the
powerful act of protest by Lee Hyung-Hai who took
his own life at the barricades, created an atmosphere
in which the delegates from developing countries could
take a strong stand strong. Only because of the actions,
delegates told us, did they feel they had the support
they needed to resist the bullying tactics of the
U.S. and E.U, who refused to consider the agricultural
issues which are vital to the survival of farmers
and indigenous cultures throughout the south, but
were pushing for expanded access for investors to
the resources of the developing world. The investment
rules under discussion could have opened Mexico¹s
forests to unbridled logging, removed the ecological
certification that many indigenous communities in
the area have worked hard to achieve, privatized communal
lands, fisheries and energy resources, and opened
services, and water resources to further privatization.
The walkout prevented the WTO from opening new rounds
of agreements that would have even more deeply undermined
the rights of countries to enact regulations protecting
their environment and resources, and labor force.
Second,
Cancun brought together activists from the global
south and the more affluent north, from a broad spectrum
of groupscampesinos, workers, indigenous people,
Mexican students, NGOs, peace and ecology groups,
and internationals. These groups had different organizing
styles, political cultures, histories, cultures and
languages. Vast differences in privilege and painful
historical relationships of oppression separated some
of us, yet we were able to take action together, support
each other, and come away with strengthened alliances
and deepened respect.
To understand the depth of this victory, we need to
think back to the political climate just four years
ago, before the Seattle ministerial. At that time,
the WTO and the forward march of neoliberal policies
seemed unstoppable, and to question them at all was
to ally with flat-earthers and others who just didn¹t
get Progress. Now, the most ambitious institution
of globalization, the WTO, has been stopped in its
tracks.
Yet there were some progressive voices who warned
against shutting down the ministerial. George Monbiot,
writing in The Guardian on September 2, said, "The
combination of (the rich countries) broken promises
and their outrageous terms could force the weaker
governments to walk out of the trade talks in Cancun,
just as they did in Seattle in 1999. They must know
that this will mean the end of the World Trade Organization.
And this now appears to be their (the U.S. and E.U.)
aim. Subverted and corrupted as the WTO is, it remains
a multilateral body in which the poor nations can
engage in collective bargaining and, in theory, outvote
the rich."
He admits, however, that "This never happens,
because the rich nations have bypassed its decision-making
structures."
A
subverted, corrupted, institution, which continually
promises advancement to the poor while actually making
rules that favor the rich, is not an effective instrument
for advancing the agenda of developing countries or
anyone else except profit-making transnationals. Holding
on to some faint hope of its transformation would
be a waste of energy and expose the world to the grave
danger that the WTO would continue to extend its destructive
policies while we await its potential democratic moment.
But Monbiot¹s warnings should not be ignored.
Cancun will not be a victory for developing countries
if they are left to the tender mercies of Robert Zoellick,
U.S. Trade Representative, or Senator Charles Grassley,
head of the Senate Finance Committee, who have promised
to shut dissenters out of U.S. favor. Poorer countries
can be picked off one by one, maneuvered into bilateral
or regional agreements in which they have limited
bargaining power. It will not be a victory for working
people, farmers, students, or the rapidly eroding
middle classes of the U.S. if corporations remain
free to race to the bottom,¹ roaming the
globe in search of the lowest labor costs and most
lax environmental standards.
The
upcoming summit in Miami November 19-21 for the Free
Trade Area of the Americas, the FTAA, will be the
next major test of the global corporate agenda. With
the failure to achieve a global corporate governance
through the WTO, regional trade agreements become
even more important. To build on and extend the victory
of Cancun, we need a major mobilization in Miami.
The FTAA would extend NAFTA, the North American Free
Trade Agreeement, throughout the hemisphere. Its draft
includes the same extension of investors¹ power
that was under dispute in the WTO, the same push toward
privatization and commercialization of services, and
a clause which allows corporations to sue governments
if they enact environmental, labor or safety standards
or other regulations which cut into profits.
The same splits between rich and poor, north and south,
exist in the FTAA as were present in Cancun. Brazil
is already talking about a counter-draft. The developing
countries may pressure for reforms or revisions, but
they could also walk out of the negotiations. If they
do, the FTAA too can be derailed before it is ever
put into place.
What happens on the street in Miami is vitally important.
A second walkout, so soon after Cancun, would change
the global configurations of power. It would be another
strike against the Bush administration¹s falling
prestige, and a heavy body-blow to the whole project
of corporate globalization. For developing countries
to take this step that could provoke enormous retaliation
from Bush¹s bully boys, they need to know that
there is strong opposition within the north and especially,
the U.S. The place to effectively demonstrate that
opposition is on the street.
We
need numbers: masses of people in Miami itself, gathering
together where they can be seen and counted, where
the media will be focued, and where they can directly
affect the delegates and the summit. And along with
legal, permitted marches and forums, we need actions
that go beyond: acts that directly withdraw our consent
from the summit and the policies it represents, broad
based nonviolent direct actions that attempt to disrupt
and derail these undemocratic proceedings.
Such a mobilization is indeed underway. United for
Peace and Justice, the huge antiwar coalition that
formed in opposition to the invasion of Iraq, is calling
on its membership to join in mass nonviolent direct
action. Labor is mobilizing, and expressing support
for direct action as well as for a massive march.
The broad range of groups that have continued to organize
around global economic issues, from NGOs to anti-capitalists,
will be there. Miami has the potential to surpass
Seattle in the breadth and depth of a mobilization
that can reunite teamsters and turtles¹
and link different facets of the movement, forge new
alliances and strengthen old ones, deepen the commitment
of those awakened to activism by the Iraq war and
reenergize those who have been on the front lines
for years.
Mobilizations
are also crucibles, where we forge the tools to build
that new world we keep saying is possible. We enact
our vision of what that world would be. We provide
food, shelter, medical care, legal support, education
and access to information. We carry our creativity
into the street with drums and puppets and dance.
In mobilizing, we claim an autonomous space, in which
we create a temporary but real new society that makes
visible the world we want to create.
Miami will not be an easy place to mobilize. We are
likely to face hostility from local reactionary forces
and possible police repression. Already the city council
is considering an ordinance that would outlaw everything
from bandannas to puppets to cameras.
But our movement has matured in the four years since
Seattle. We have vastly more experience in organizing
these actions and in facing potential repression.
We have learned hard and important lessons about how
to hold the tension of our differences and still act
together in solidarity.
And
because we have allies inside, our job is strategically
easier. In fact, just by showing up in Miami, we create
a dilemma for the opposition.
For if we are allowed to carry out our actions without
repression, we will make a strong statement to the
delegates inside and to the world, and create a climate
of support for the developing countries to walk out
of the negotiations.
But if the delegates are sequestered behind steel
fences in a militarized zone, every closed gate and
checkpoint will put the lie to the myth that these
policies promote democracy or general well being.
Every blow of a police baton, every cloud of tear
gas, will strengthen the world¹s perception that
the U.S. can only carry out these policies by using
brute force to quell dissent.
That is not always of immediate comfort if you are
the one on the wrong side of the police baton. What
does help, in the face of violence, is preparation
and training, which we will offer to all who come,
the support of our companero/as and the strength of
our group solidarity. In Miami, we have time to prepare,
to orchestrate the political and practical support
we need. We encourage people to form affinity groups
now, to come with your friends and allies, or to come
early and form groups there that can stand together
in action.
And
it is also possible that we will not face major police
violence. In Cancun, we expected police repression.
Two years before, students protesting the World Economic
Forum were brutally beaten. This time, police avoided
beating or arresting demonstrators, and treated us
overall with respect.
The Miami mobilization will include safe and legal
ways to protest. Direct action also requires support
people, to play vitally important roles that do not
expose them to the risk of arrest or police violence.
And
when we refuse to be intimidated, when we stand up
to fear, we claim back political space in which democracy
can flourish. We announce to Bush, Ashcroft, and all
the rest of them that they cannot take away our rights,
sell off our resources, take away our livelihoods
and undermine our communities without a struggle.
We feel good about ourselves, and we provide an example
of courage that can inspire others.
So come to Miami if you can, November 17-21. If you
don¹t think you can, think again. If work or
school responsibilities are keeping you away, consider
whether you will continue to have a job or whether
any public support for education will be left if these
policies go unchallenged. If you can¹t afford
to come, ask your community to chip in money to help
with your transportation and living expenses. If you
truly cannot come yourself, help someone else to get
there, from your home community or from the global
south.
And
after Miami, go on to Fort Benning Georgia to protest
the School of the Americas, November 22-23, where
the U.S. military trains torturers and assassins for
Latin America.
Miami
is a strategic moment to make a stand. We have every
chance of building on the victories of Cancun and
Seattle, and extending them to deepen the alliances
we need to build a fair and democratic system in the
U.S. and around the globe.
Check the following websites for information: www.unitedforpeace.org
<http://www.unitedforpeace.org/ >
www.stopftaa,org < http://www.stopftaa,org/>
www.ftaaresistance.org <http://www.ftaaresistance.org/
>
www.peoplesconsultation.org < http://www.peoplesconsultation.org/>
www.asje.org/march.html <http://www.asje.org/march.html
>
Resources
for nonviolent direct action training:
www.rantcollective.org
NGOs
organizing educational and permitted events:
http://www.citizenstrade.org/
http://flfairtrade.org/
Starhawk¹s
website: www.starhawk.org
Starhawk is an activist, organizer, and author of
Webs of Power: Notes from the Global Uprising and
eight other books on feminism, politics and earth-based
spirituality. She teaches Earth Activist Trainings
that combine permaculture design and activist skills,
and works with the RANT trainer¹s collective,
www.rantcollective.org that offers training and support
for mobilizations around global justice and peace
issues. To get her periodic posts of her writings,
email Starhawk-subscribe@lists.riseup.net and put
subscribe¹ in the subject heading. If you¹re
on that list and don¹t want any more of these
writings, email Starhawk-unsubscribe@lists.riseup.net
and put unsubscribe¹ in the subject heading.
Feel
free to post and forward this article widely. Starhawk
reserves all rights.
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