Thursday, September 01, 2005

nospray.org mailing list memberships reminder

This is a reminder, sent out once a month, about your nospray.org
mailing list memberships. It includes your subscription info and how
to use it to change it or unsubscribe from a list.

You can visit the URLs to change your membership status or
configuration, including unsubscribing, setting digest-style delivery
or disabling delivery altogether (e.g., for a vacation), and so on.

In addition to the URL interfaces, you can also use email to make such
changes. For more info, send a message to the '-request' address of
the list (for example, mailman-request@nospray.org) containing just
the word 'help' in the message body, and an email message will be sent
to you with instructions.

If you have questions, problems, comments, etc, send them to
mailman-owner@nospray.org. Thanks!

Passwords for cwolman.peace@blogger.com:

List Password // URL
---- --------
NoSpray@nospray.org kimaxa
http://nospray.org/mailman/options/nospray_nospray.org/cwolman.peace%40blogger.com

Fw: Threat of nuclear war by Tony Benn

 
----- Original Message -----
From: Karim A G
Sent: Thursday, September 01, 2005 12:16 AM
Subject: Bush is the real threat

 http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,,1559492,00.html

 

Comment


Bush is the real threat

Tony Benn
Wednesday August 31, 2005
The Guardian

 

Now that the US president has announced that he has not ruled out an attack on Iran, if it does not abandon its nuclear programme, the Middle East faces a crisis that could dwarf even the dangers arising from the war in Iraq.

Even a conventional weapon fired at a nuclear research centre - whether or not a bomb was being made there - would almost certainly release radioactivity into the atmosphere, with consequences seen worldwide as a mini-Hiroshima.

We would be told that it had been done to uphold the principles of the nuclear non-proliferation treaty (NPT) - an argument that does not stand up to a moment's examination.

The moral and legal basis of the NPT convention, which the International Atomic Energy Agency is there to uphold, was based on the agreement of non-nuclear nations not to acquire nuclear weapons if nuclear powers undertook not to extend nuclear arsenals and negotiate to secure their abolition.

Since then, the Americans have launched a programme that would allow them to use nuclear weapons in space, nuclear bunker-busting bombs are being developed, and depleted uranium has been used in Iraq - all of which are clear breaches of the NPT. Israel, which has a massive nuclear weapons programme, is accepted as a close ally of the US, which still arms and funds it.

Even those who are opposed, as I am, to nuclear weapons in every country including Iran, North Korea, Britain and the US, accept that nuclear power for electricity generation need not necessarily lead to the acquisition of the bomb.

Indeed, many years ago, when the shah - who had been put on the throne by the US - was in power in Iran, enormous pressure was put on me, as secretary of state for energy, to agree to sell nuclear power stations to him. That pressure came from the Atomic Energy Authority, in conjunction with Westinghouse, who were anxious to promote their own design of reactor.

It is easy to understand why president Bush might see the bombing of Iran as a way to regain some of the political credibility he has lost as a result of the growing hostility in America to the Iraq war due to the heavy casualties suffered by US forces there .

It is inconceivable that the White House can be contemplating an invasion of Iran, and what must be intended is a US airstrike, or airstrikes, on Iranian nuclear installations, comparable to Israel's bombing of Iraq in 1981. Israel has publicly hinted that it might do the same again to prevent Iran developing nuclear nuclear weapons.

Such an attack, whether by the US or Israel, would be in breach of the UN Charter, as was the invasion of Iraq. But neither Bush, Sharon nor Blair would take any notice of that.

Some influential Americans appear to be convinced that the US will attack Iran. Whether they are right or not, the build-up to a new war is taking exactly the same form as it did in 2002. First we are being told that Iran poses a military threat, because it may be developing nuclear weapons. We are assured that the President is hoping that diplomacy might succeed through the European negotiations which have been in progress for some months.

This is just what we were told when Hans Blix was in Baghdad talking to Saddam on behalf of the UN, but we now know, from a Downing Street memorandum leaked some months ago, that the decision to invade had been taken long before that.

That may be the position now, and I fear that if a US attack does take place, the prime minister will give it his full support. And one of his reasons for doing so will be the same as in Iraq: namely the fear that, if he alienates Bush, Britain's so-called independent deterrent might be taken away. For, as I also learned when I was energy secretary, Britain is entirely dependent on the US for the supply of our Trident warheads and associated technology. They cannot even be targeted unless the US switches on its global satellite system.

Therefore Britain could be assisting America to commit an act of aggression under the UN Charter, which could risk a major nuclear disaster, and doing so supposedly to prevent nuclear proliferation, with the real motive of making it possible for us to continue to break the NPT in alliance with America.

The irony is that we might be told that Britain must support Bush, yet again, because of the threat of weapons of mass destruction, thus allowing him to kill even more innocent civilians.

ยท Tony Benn will be talking about War; Religion and politics; and Democracy, at the Shaw Theatre in London on September 7, 8 and 9

Tony@tbenn.fsnet.co.uk

 

 

Fw: Waiting for a Leader - New York Times


----- Original Message -----
From: "Vaughn Mock, Janice" <JVaughnMock@Nossaman.com>

Sent: Thursday, September 01, 2005 8:55 AM
Subject: Waiting for a Leader - New York Times

September 1, 2005

Waiting for a Leader

George W. Bush gave one of the worst speeches of his life yesterday,
especially given the level of national distress and the need for words
of consolation and wisdom. In what seems to be a ritual in this
administration, the president appeared a day later than he was needed.
He then read an address of a quality more appropriate for an Arbor Day
celebration: a long laundry list of pounds of ice, generators and
blankets delivered to the stricken Gulf Coast. He advised the public
that anybody who wanted to help should send cash, grinned, and promised
that everything would work out in the end.

We will, of course, endure, and the city of New Orleans must come back.
But looking at the pictures on television yesterday of a place abandoned
to the forces of flood, fire and looting, it was hard not to wonder
exactly how that is going to come to pass. Right now, hundreds of
thousands of American refugees need our national concern and care.
Thousands of people still need to be rescued from imminent peril. Public
health threats must be controlled in New Orleans and throughout southern
Mississippi. Drivers must be given confidence that gasoline will be
available, and profiteering must be brought under control at a moment
when television has been showing long lines at some pumps and spot
prices approaching $4 a gallon have been reported.

Sacrifices may be necessary to make sure that all these things happen in
an orderly, efficient way. But this administration has never been one to
counsel sacrifice. And nothing about the president's demeanor yesterday
- which seemed casual to the point of carelessness - suggested that he
understood the depth of the current crisis.

While our attention must now be on the Gulf Coast's most immediate
needs, the nation will soon ask why New Orleans's levees remained so
inadequate.
Publications from the local newspaper to National Geographic have
fulminated about the bad state of flood protection in this beloved city,
which is below sea level. Why were developers permitted to destroy
wetlands and barrier islands that could have held back the hurricane's
surge? Why was Congress, before it wandered off to vacation, engaged in
slashing the budget for correcting some of the gaping holes in the
area's flood protection?

It would be some comfort to think that, as Mr. Bush cheerily announced,
America "will be a stronger place" for enduring this crisis. Complacency
will no longer suffice, especially if experts are right in warning that
global warming may increase the intensity of future hurricanes. But
since this administration won't acknowledge that global warming exists,
the chances of leadership seem minimal.

Judgment Day by Carol Wolman

 Judgment Day by Carol Wolman
 
The chickens are coming home to roost.  Hurricane Katrina, by wiping out the city of New Orleans and half the state of Mississippi, is God's way of telling us here in the US that global warming is real. 
 
Americans are suffering from devastating hurricanes because for 5 years we have tolerated a dictator who still refuses to recognize the problem of global warming, and to work with the rest of the world to do something about it.  In fact, Bush's policies, removing environmental restrictions on corporations, and making war, have greatly accelerated global warming.
 
Natural disasters do not only strike poor countries like India and Thailand.  The US is just as vulnerable.  As the sea level rises, and storms boil out of the atmosphere more fiercely, our many coastal cities will be flooded, as New Orleans is flooded right now. 
 
Psalm 98  9The LORD cometh to judge the earth: with righteousness shall He judge the world, and the people with equity.
 
Whether you believe it to be God's judgment, the law of karma, or the second law of thermodynamics, it's clear that the devastation caused by Katrina is a result of the refusal of the US government to curb carbon emissions, and its insistence on making war. These destructive policies, in turn, are the result of the US government's enslavement to corporate interests.  In other words, the worship of mammon is leading us to disaster.
 
We the people of the US are complicit in this folly, greed and selfishness as long as we allow the corporados to remain in office.  There are plenty of grounds for impeaching Bush and Cheney.  Many Americans are waking up to the fact that we must develop more sensible energy policies and we must have peace, before we render our planet uninhabitable.  To do this, we must replace the pirates who have hijacked our government with public servants who will promote the general welfare.
 
In the name of the Prince of Peace, Carol Wolman