
|
Volume1- Issue 5-Late Spring
2003
|
Green Dove Zine will be published
monthly (or bi-monthly) on the web and in a print edition
by the Green Dove Network. The Green Dove Network
is dedicated to being a presence for peace, featuring articles,
reviews, poetry, art, current events and resources around
Bloomington and the state of Indiana and the world.We welcome
submissions of articles,
reviews, poetry, art, calendar events, classifieds, and Letters.
If you would like to contact us by means other than the web,
our mailing address is Green Dove Network, P.O. Box 8172,
Bloomington, IN 47407-8172. E-mail
Us
|
|
The
words above are from an open book titled "Peace Words"
located in the Indiana University Fine Arts Library.
|
|
GREEN
DOVE NOTE
FROM THE EDITOR
|
|
DEAR
GREEN DOVE
YOUR LETTERS
|
| *NEW
GREEN
DOVE SHOP |
|
|
|
BOOK OF
THE MONTH
|
|
DEAR READER
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
United
For Peace
|
|
|
Not
in Our Name
NO War Without Limits
NO Detentions & Round-ups
NO Police State Restrictions |
|
http://www.VoteNoWar.org
|
|
War Resisters League
|
|
MOVEON.ORG
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Bloomington
Volunteer Network - call 349-3433 to find out how you
can help
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
"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
|
|
|
|

|
|
|
Current Nuclear News
Click for full articles
|
Click 1
or
2 for info on Nuclear Testing
|
IERE
The IN Environmental Report
|
|
|
|
|
|
NORML
|
|
|
| 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 |
|
|
|
links to
alternative news sources featuring local, national and global
news and Native American publications
|
Alternet
is an independent news
coverage site of world events.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Visit Hart Rock
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|

The Indiana Holistic Health
Network.
|
|
|
|
BloomingtonsurfBest.com
With over 50,000 Access Numbers in more than 10 cities nationwide,
5 FREE e-mails and 20MB of Web space for only $12.50/month,
SurfBest is unbeatable.All 56K modems, Excellent Customer/Technical
Support, Comprehensive FAQ's, 100% automatic start-up software
|
|
|
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
|
|
Experience Clean Air!
Let us show you how to protect your home from pollution, dust,
and allergens. Call to schedule an appointment and to receive
your free gift. Toll Free 1-866-803-9821
|
|
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,
groups, culture, alternative issues, nuclear resources, society
topics and activist resources, information about peace work,
education, essays, news, community food and currency links,
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
valued peace resource.
Deadline for Classified Ads--by the 21st
day of the month. Rate sheet is available.Deadline for Print
Calendar --by the 21th day of each month. Submit to on-line
Calendar for regular posting or ALERT for immediate action.
Please send your donation in the form of a check or money
order to: Green Dove
P.O. Box 8172
Bloomington, IN 47407
Please include your e-mail address and street address. To
receive a receipt, send a self-addressed, stamped envelope
with your donation. Be a friend to Green Dove, send a few
extra dollars to help keep up alive! Send
submissions to submissions@greendove.net
Volunteers -If you want to help Green Dove
- please contact us, we can really use your help!
|
|

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
|
|
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.
|
|
Breathe new life into your
old homeFor information call Rob at 812-331-0886
|
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 |
|
WFHB
91.3 and 98.1 FM
|
|
Boxcar Books and Community
Center, Inc.
|
|
Tea Party - A Journal
of Revolutionary Thought from the Center
for Sustainable Living
|
|
|
|
|
|
WFIU
|
|
The Ryder
- available in town
|
|
|
|
Branches
|
|
The Pinup
|
| THE
FIRE THIS TIME audio projecthttp://www.firethistime.org/The
Fire This Time - Deconstructing the Gulf War - a permanent record
of the fate of Iraq and a guide to the language of mass media
propaganda. |
|
|
| 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. |
|
|
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
|
 |
|
"The choice is not
between violence and nonviolence, but between nonviolence
and nonexistence." Martin Luther
King
|
|
I
loathe America, and what it has done to the
rest of the world
|
|
By
Margaret Drabble
(Filed: 08/05/2003)
|
I
knew that the wave of anti-Americanism that would
swell up after the Iraq war would make me feel ill.
And it has. It has made me much, much more ill than
I had expected.
My
anti-Americanism has become almost uncontrollable.
It has possessed me, like a disease. It rises up in
my throat like acid reflux, that fashionable American
sickness. I now loathe the United States and what
it has done to Iraq and the rest of the helpless world.
I
can hardly bear to see the faces of Bush and Rumsfeld,
or to watch their posturing body language, or to hear
their self-satisfied and incoherent platitudes. The
liberal press here has done its best to make them
appear ridiculous, but these two men are not funny.
I
was tipped into uncontainable rage by a report on
Channel 4 News about "friendly fire", which
included footage of what must have been one of the
most horrific bombardments ever filmed. But what struck
home hardest was the subsequent image, of a row of
American warplanes, with grinning cartoon faces painted
on their noses. Cartoon faces, with big sharp teeth.
It
is grotesque. It is hideous. This great and powerful
nation bombs foreign cities and the people in those
cities from Disneyland cartoon planes out of comic
strips. This is simply not possible. And yet, there
they were.
Others
have written eloquently about the euphemistic and
affectionate names that the Americans give to their
weapons of mass destruction: Big Boy, Little Boy,
Daisy Cutter, and so forth.
We
are accustomed to these sobriquets; to phrases such
as "collateral damage" and "friendly
fire" and "pre-emptive strikes". We
have almost ceased to notice when suicide bombers
are described as "cowards". The abuse of
language is part of warfare. Long ago, Voltaire told
us that we invent words to conceal truths. More recently,
Orwell pointed out to us the dangers of Newspeak.
But
there was something about those playfully grinning
warplane faces that went beyond deception and distortion
into the land of madness. A nation that can allow
those faces to be painted as an image on its national
aeroplanes has regressed into unimaginable irresponsibility.
A nation that can paint those faces on death machines
must be insane.
There,
I have said it. I have tried to control my anti-Americanism,
remembering the many Americans that I know and respect,
but I can't keep it down any longer. I detest Disneyfication,
I detest Coca-Cola, I detest burgers, I detest sentimental
and violent Hollywood movies that tell lies about
history.
I
detest American imperialism, American infantilism,
and American triumphalism about victories it didn't
even win.
On
April 29, 2000, I switched on CNN in my hotel room
and, by chance, saw an item designed to celebrate
the 25th anniversary of the end of the Vietnam war.
The camera showed us a street scene in which a shabby
elderly Vietnamese man was seen speaking English and
bartering in dollars in a city that I took to be Ho
Chi Minh City, still familiarly known in America by
its old French colonial name of Saigon.
"The
language of Shakespeare," the commentator intoned,
"has conquered Vietnam." I did not note
down the dialogue, though I can vouch for that sentence
about the language of Shakespeare. But the word "dollar"
was certainly repeated several times, and the implications
of what the camera showed were clear enough.
The
elderly Vietnamese man was impoverished, and he wanted
hard currency. The Vietnamese had won the war, but
had lost the peace.
Just
leave Shakespeare and Shakespeare's homeland out of
this squalid bit of revisionism, I thought at the
time. Little did I then think that now, three years
on, Shakespeare's country would have been dragged
by our leader into this illegal, unjustifiable, aggressive
war. We are all contaminated by it. Not in my name,
I want to keep repeating, though I don't suppose anybody
will listen.
America
uses the word "democracy" as its battle
cry, and its nervous soldiers gun down Iraqi civilians
when they try to hold street demonstrations to protest
against the invasion of their country. So much for
democracy. (At least the British Army is better trained.)
America
is one of the few countries in the world that executes
minors. Well, it doesn't really execute them - it
just keeps them in jail for years and years until
they are old enough to execute, and then it executes
them. It administers drugs to mentally disturbed prisoners
on Death Row until they are back in their right mind,
and then it executes them, too.
They
call this justice and the rule of law. America is
holding more than 600 people in detention in Guantánamo
Bay, indefinitely, and it may well hold them there
for ever. Guantánamo Bay has become the Bastille
of America. They call this serving the cause of democracy
and freedom.
I
keep writing to Jack Straw about the so-called "illegal
combatants", including minors, who are detained
there without charge or trial or access to lawyers,
and I shall go on writing to him and his successors
until something happens. This one-way correspondence
may last my lifetime. I suppose the minors won't be
minors for long, although the youngest of them is
only 13, so in time I shall have to drop that part
of my objection, but I shall continue to protest.
A
great democratic nation cannot behave in this manner.
But it does. I keep remembering those words from Nineteen
Eighty-Four, on the dynamics of history at the end
of history, when O'Brien tells Winston: "Always
there will be the intoxication of power Always,
at every moment, there will be the thrill of victory,
the sensation of trampling on an enemy who is helpless.
If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot
stamping on a human face - for ever."
We
have seen enough boots in the past few months to last
us a lifetime. Iraqi boots, American boots, British
boots. Enough of boots.
I hate feeling this hatred. I have to keep reminding
myself that if Bush hadn't been (so narrowly) elected,
we wouldn't be here, and none of this would have happened.
There is another America. Long live the other America,
and may this one pass away soon.
http://opinion.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/main.jhtml?xml=/opinion/
2003/05/08/do0801.xml
|
|
| Green Dove is accepting
submissions
of articles, essays, stories poetry, art, cartoons, and photographs.
Green Dove Web Magazine needs your work. |
|
Views expressed in Green
Dove are not necessarily the views of this publications volunteers
or advertisers.
|
|
|