Bring The Struggle Against War and Occupation Back Into The Streets
An International CALL From The TROOPS OUT NOW
COALITION:
No Matter Who Wins The Elections -- The War Will Go On
Bring The Struggle Against War & Occupation Back Into The
Streets
MARCH ON WASHINGTON D.C. & WORLDWIDE PROTEST SATURDAY, MARCH 17,
2007 - 4th Anniversary of the U.S. Invasion and Occupation of Iraq
The Troops Out Now Coalition calls on antiwar forces in the U.S. to unite,
rise up and take over Washington, D.C.; and antiwar forces across the world to
march as well on Saturday, March 17, the weekend of the fourth anniversary of
the criminal war and occupation of Iraq. TONC proposes that the period between
now and March 17th be viewed critically and strategically as a time to
reenergize, transform and strengthen the antiwar movement. As part of
TONC's preparations for this period, we will be convening a post U.S.
election's Summit Meeting in NYC on Saturday, Nov. 18. We are also
targeting, along with other forces, the Monday, Jan. 15, 2007 holiday in honor
of Martin Luther King Jr. as a day of nationwide actions against the war at
abroad and at home.
Endorse http://www.troopsoutnow.org/mar17endorse.html
Volunteer http://www.troopsoutnow.org/mar17volunteer.html
Donate http://www.troopsoutnow.org/donate.html
ALL COALITIONS SHOULD WORK TOGETHER FOR THE MARCH 17
PROTESTS
We must work for and fight for greater unity within the antiwar movement. It
is not necessary that the various coalitions and forces organizing against the
war have complete agreement on political outlook or tactics in the struggle.
What's important is that we work together, when and where doing so
maximizes our strength. TONC is appealing to all coalitions, at the national
and local levels, to work together for the March 17, 2007 march on Washington
D.C. What follows are TONC'S thoughts on the important issues, as we all
assess what we need to be doing between now and the spring.
NO MATTER WHO WINS THE ELECTIONS, THE WAR WILL STILL GO ON THE
MOVEMENT MUST GET BACK INTO THE STREETS
No matter what the outcome of the November elections in the U.S., the
occupation of Iraq along with more sanctions and war threats against North
Korea and Iran will continue. No doubt many will vote next month hoping that
somehow their vote will stop the war. But the vote won't stop the war; at
best it sends a message. We cannot vote against the war on Nov. 7 because there
is no such referendum on the ballot. Even if the Democratic Party wins a
majority in both houses of Congress, the war will go on because both the
Republican and Democratic parties are dedicated to the interests of U.S.
imperialism and not the people of the U.S. While they may differ on methods,
the politicians of both parties are dedicated to re-colonizing the Middle East,
robbing its oil, and depriving its people of the right to determine their
destinies.
IT'S TIME FOR THE U.S. ANTIWAR MOVEMENT TO GET SERIOUS
The two interrelated processes that will end this criminal war and
occupation are its defeat by the resistance of the Iraqi people on one hand,
and on the other the mass struggle of the people right here in the streets of
this country that refuse to tolerate the war any longer. The resistance of the
Iraqi people has virtually accomplished its part. The weakness in this equation
is the U.S. antiwar movement.
The people of Iraq, the Middle East and the entire world are waiting for the
people of the U.S. to rise up and stop the war. The problem is not convincing
people that the war is a crime. The overwhelming majority of the people in the
U.S. hate the war and occupation. In large part the crises that we must address
is the need for stronger, less fragmented, and a more determined antiwar
movement. At this juncture, our challenge as an antiwar movement has never been
clearer. The political system wants to dissipate, demoralize and channel the
mass anger of the people over the war into "safe" outlets that do not
threaten the status quo. As a movement, we will be of little use unless we
deliberately counter the schemes to pacify mass antiwar anger and help to unify
and liberate that anger through political consciousness raising, alliance
building, and most importantly, mass struggle. The antiwar movement can draw
inspiration, as well as a lesson about boldness, courage and the necessity to
take the struggle to a higher level from the example of the millions of
immigrant workers who left work across the country on May 1, 2006 to rally and
march for their rights.
FIGHT RACISM & NATIONAL OPPRESSION--IF WE DON'T, IT WILL
DIVIDE US
The more the system attacks the living standards of working people, the more
the political servants of the system are going to intensify racism and
repression with the aim of scapegoating, dividing and conquering all of us.
Solidarity amongst peoples and movements and forward motion in the struggle
will depend upon our movements' understanding of this, and whether or not
we consciously fight against racism and national oppression in our day-to-day
work and around all issues local, national and international.
BUILD ALLIANCES WITH THE MOVEMENTS FOR IMMIGRANT RIGHTS &
KATRINA SURVIVORS
A top priority for the antiwar movement must be building real alliances with
the movements against racism and national oppression here at home. Doing so
will require that the movement forges a far more serious and qualitative
relationship with the struggles of Black, Latin@, Asian, Arab, Native, and all
peoples of color, and in particular the struggle of undocumented immigrants and
workers for full rights and the struggle of the survivors of Hurricanes Katrina
and Rita for justice, the right of return, self-determination and
reconstruction.
WE MUST MERGE THE STRUGGLE AGAINST THE WAR WITH THE STRUGGLE OF WORKERS
It's not enough for the antiwar movement to merely give lip service to
the struggles of working people for jobs, a living wage, the right to a union,
health insurance, housing, education, pensions etc., and go on as a movement,
separate from the masses. Our challenge from here on is to help facilitate
something that is as necessary as it is natural--the merging of the struggle
against the wars at home with the wars abroad. The struggle against the war
should be inseparable from the struggles against political repression and for
the rights of women, lesbian, gay, bi and trans people, youth and prisoners. We
must find the tactics that bring more workers, both organized and unorganized,
into the center of the struggle against the war, bearing in mind that ordinary
workers may understand more about imperialism than some full-time activists
do.
AN ANTI-IMPERIALIST WORLD VIEW IS CENTRAL TO OUR SURVIVAL AS A
MOVEMENT
There's a false notion in some quarters of the movement that we can only
be effective by diluting our demands, our politics and our analyses (and
tactics) to the lowest, safe common denominator. Just the opposite is true. If
we are not guided by a deeper analysis, our movement will be left confused,
ineffective and irrelevant. The truth is that we are not only fighting one
president--dangerous war criminal that he is--we are also fighting a dangerous
and criminal imperialist system. The magnitude of the world crises of this
system today--and the wars, oppression, misery, destabilization and social
chaos that it is generating with greater destructive intensity each
day--demands that we fight it consciously. We do not have the luxury to pick
and choose which U.S. war to oppose and which ones to ignore. We must be
prepared to fight the global scope of U.S. imperialism's war drive. We must
also fight for an end to the occupations of Palestine, Afghanistan, Haiti and
all U.S. occupations, interventions, plots, colonial machinations, direct or
indirect as well as threats across the globe, whether against the peoples of
the Philippines, Sudan, Cuba, Venezuela or Puerto Rico. Our challenge as an
antiwar movement based in the in U.S. is to be stronger, bolder and more
consistent in our understanding of the issues and in our actions.
THE IMMEDIATE, COMPLETE, & UNCONDITIONAL END TO THE OCCUPATION
OF IRAQ
The war and occupation in Iraq is in a head-spinning freefall, and right now
the generals and politicians are scrabbling in desperation to stem or at least
slow down the meltdown. In the coming weeks, we will hear more plans coming
from politicians, generals, and the White House for major changes to their Iraq
war strategy. None of these face-saving plans will call for what we want--an
immediate, complete and unconditional withdrawal of all occupation troops from
Iraq. This demand has been and will now be all the more central to the
independence, clarity, and strength of the antiwar movement henceforth.
NO U.S./U.N.SANCTIONS & WAR AGAINST NORTH KOREA & IRAN --
DISARMAMENT BEGINS AT HOME
Other crises likely to take on more importance are the U.S. drives for
sanctions and possibly military aggression against North Korea and Iran. Let
the message from the U.S. antiwar movement to the world on this be united, loud
and clear--that the number one nuclear threat to the peoples of Asia, the
Middle East and the world comes from the U.S. Pentagon's war machine and
nuclear arsenal. As long as U.S. rulers are plotting regime change, occupation
or both for any country that dares to object to U.S. domination, those
countries are quite predictably going to try and find the means to defend
themselves. We must oppose sanctions and threats against North Korea and Iran
and demand that nuclear disarmament begins at home.
FREE PALESTINE -- FIGHT ANTI-ISLAMIC RACISM
The response to the call for mass protests throughout the U.S. to protest
the U.S./Israeli war against Lebanon a few months ago came primarily from the
Arab and Muslim communities. While it's a positive step forward when a
targeted community is able to take to the streets and exercise its unity and
power, as the Arab and Muslim communities did last August in solidarity with
Lebanon and Palestine, it was a problem that participation at those
demonstrations from protestors who are not from the targeted communities was
relatively small. An important part of forging an anti-imperialist movement is
fighting against the influence of racism--anti-Arab and anti-South Asian
bigotry, Anti-Islamism and the demonizing of resistance movements within the
antiwar movement. The more that we are a consistently anti-imperialist
movement, the more we will strengthen the foundations of genuine solidarity and
unity in the struggle.
THE MORE WE ARE ANTI-IMPERIALIST MOVEMENT -- THE MORE UNITED WE WILL BE
The more anti-imperialist our movement is, the more connected it will be to
the rest of the world; as well as the growing immigrant communities in the U.S.
of Latin@, African, Asian, and Arab peoples; the more it will be a force for
lasting solidarity; and the stronger, more independent and effective it will
be. How do we forge greater unity? All one need do is observe the social and
racial character of most antiwar activities to realize that limiting the
demands and dumbing down the politics of the movement serves to narrow the base
instead of broadening it. The next five months is a time to transform our
movement and make it what it needs to be in order to push forward and stop the
madness.
FORGE ALLIANCES WITH MOVEMENTS AGAINST THE WAR AT HOME AN
ANTI-RACIST, ANTI-IMPERIALIST MOVEMENT IS A UNITED MOVEMENT
- STOP THE WAR AT HOME AND ABROAD
- END ALL OCCUPATIONS--FROM IRAQ TO PALESTINE TO HAITI
- NO SANCTIONS & WAR AGAINST NORTH KOREA & IRAN
- FULL RIGHTS FOR IMMIGRANTS
- JUSTICE AND RECONSTRUCTION FOR KATRINA AND RITA
SURVIVORS
- MONEY FOR JOBS, A LIVING WAGE, HEALTHCARE, SCHOOLS, PENSIONS--NOT
WAR
How you can help:
Endorse http://www.troopsoutnow.org/mar17endorse.html
Volunteer http://www.troopsoutnow.org/mar17volunteer.html
Donate http://www.troopsoutnow.org/donate.html
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