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Volume1- Issue 6- October
2003
ISSN # - 154-889X
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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,
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Bloomington, IN 47407-8172. E-mail
Us
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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,
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
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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
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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
- please contact us, we can really use your help!
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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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Your
Rights: Use 'Em or Lose 'Em
By
Rachel Neumann, AlterNet
May 30, 2003
When
I was growing up, there was a popular bumper sticker,
seen mostly on the back of old VW vans that said:
"What if there was a war and nobody came?"
I am reminded of that bumper sticker now, in light
of this administration's unprecedented attack on civil
liberties. What if our basic rights were taken away
and no one noticed? What if our system of checks and
balances was destroyed and everyone remained convinced
it was happening to someone else?
Under current legislation, if you are "suspected"
of terrorist activity, you can be picked up and held
indefinitely, without charges and without access to
a lawyer. If your loved ones call to find out where
you are or if you are okay, they will be told nothing.
After all, to disclose your whereabouts would infringe
on your right to privacy. Don't bother clutching your
passport to your chest; this law applies to all U.S.
citizens.
And, if currently proposed legislation - PATRIOT Act
II - passes, you may no longer even be a citizen.
Under PATRIOT II, if you attend a legal protest sponsored
by an organization the government has listed as "terrorist,"
you may be deported and your citizenship revoked.
This is true even if you are only suspected of terrorist
activity and nothing has been proven. More specifically,
according to FindLaw's Anita Ramasastry, a U.S. citizen
may be expatriated "if, with the intent to relinquish
his nationality, he becomes a member of, or provides
material support to, a group that the United Stated
has designated as a 'terrorist organization.'"
I wish this were an exaggeration. The attack on civil
liberties hasn't been subtle; rather it has erred
on the side of being so extreme as to seem surreal.
Some of the lowlights include:
· The USA PATRIOT Act creates a new crime of
"domestic terrorism" - defined so broadly
as to include civil disobedience and other nonviolent
forms of resistance. The PATRIOT Act also greatly
reduces free speech and privacy, allowing for Internet
and library surveillance and eliminating the need
for warrants before searching video or music store
records.
· The new Homeland Security Department, whose
massive reorganization of over 22 different federal
agencies includes a beefed-up immigration office,
renamed the Bureau of Border and Transportation Security,
with a focus on catching immigrant violations and
keeping people outside of U.S. borders.
· Total Information Awareness, recently renamed
"Terrorist Information Awareness," which
hopes to predict terrorist actions by analyzing such
transactions as passport applications, visas, work
permits, driver's licenses, car rentals, airline ticket
purchases, arrests or reports of suspicious activities.
TIA would make financial, education, medical and housing
records, as well as biometric identification databases
based on fingerprints, irises, facial shapes and even
how a person walks available to U.S. agents.
Patriot Act II: Enough Already!
If all this weren't enough, currently proposed legislation
would increase the PATRIOT Act's powers. The Center
for Public Integrity (www.publicintegrity.org) lists
the full provisions of the act, which include, beside
the deportation of citizens who are suspected of consorting
with or supporting terrorists:
· Immunity from liability for law enforcement
engaging in spying operations against the American
people;
· Immunity from liability for businesses and
employees that report "suspected terrorists"
to the federal government, no matter how unfounded,
racist, or malicious the tip may be.
Furthermore, PATRIOT II explicitly allows the indefinite
detention of citizens, incommunicado, without charges,
and without releasing their names to their own family
members. And unlike PATRIOT Act 1, which expires in
2004 unless it passes another majority vote, PATRIOT
Act II never expires and removes the expiration date
on PATRIOT I.
The Terrorist Smokescreen
If you're not engaged in any activity that could even
be suspected of terrorism, no need to worry, right?
Wrong. According to a Washington Post report, the
Government Accounting Office has found that the majority
of people prosecuted under new antiterrorism security
measures were being pursued for reasons unrelated
to terrorism, including credit card fraud and drug
violations. "Many of [the] terrorism powers were
actually being asked for as a way of increasing the
government's authority in other areas," Tim Edgar
of the ACLU said in the report.
Canaries in the Coal Mine
Perhaps no one you know personally has been arrested.
Perhaps you've had no problem at airports. One of
the reasons that the response to aggressive Homeland
Security Measures has been muted is that, so far,
the primary targets of "homeland security"
have been immigrants, Arab-Americans and South Asian-Americans.
Tirien Steinbach, a lawyer at East Bay Community Law
Center who works with indigent clients, says she has
seen a noted increase in harassment of her clients
since the passage of the act. "It's not the policies
themselves," she says, "but the climate
of repression that lets law enforcement feel as if
they can get away with anything these days."
She sees her clients, and immigrant groups that have
come under attack, as canaries in the coal mine -
a warning signal that others should heed. "Everyone
thinks it only happens to some other kind of people,"
she says, "and by the time they realize the extent
of the repression, it will be too late."
Mac Scott, of the Coalition for the Human Rights of
Immigrants (CHRI), agrees. "The effects on immigrant
communities has been devastating," he says. "So
many people have had family members deported, detained,
or - at the very least - interrogated." While
it is difficult to get the exact number of immigrants
detained and deported, since the government won't
release these numbers, the ACLU, CHRI and other organizations
put the number as reliably in the thousands. What
can't be measured, however, is the increase in general
harassment that immigrants have experienced and the
heightened level of fear they feel.
New Coalitions and Strange Bedfellows
Because of that increased repression, some members
of immigrant communities have been wary of organizing
for fear of being targeted for harassment. Still,
many have reacted to the attacks by organizing within
their communities and reaching out to new allies.
"We have to work as a coalition," says Tram
Nguyen of Colorlines, a national quarterly focused
on race and public policy. "Communities are under
such attack that they have to speak out. Despite the
intense fear, we have seen Latino, South Asian and
Arab communities sharing resources and supporting
each other." She says these alliances are forged
from the recognition that, under new civil liberties
attacks, we are all at risk.
This recognition has also created an unusual alliance
of libertarians, progressives and conservatives. Magazines
such as The New American and groups including the
American Conservative Union and the Eagle Forum have
come out against the PATRIOT Act, TIA, and the Homeland
Security Department. In part, the criticism from the
right comes from those who remember a time when a
base of conservatism supposedly stood for small government,
less bureaucracy and more individual liberty.
Defending the Bill of Rights
One of the largest indicators of the new alliances
forming in support of civil liberties and the biggest
victory for rights advocates has been the success
of the Bill of Rights Defense Committee (www.BORDC.org)
in encouraging communities to pass resolutions and
ordinances repudiating the PATRIOT Act and reaffirming
the Bill of Rights. Since the passage of the PATRIOT
Act in October of 2001, over 100 cities, towns and
counties, including Baltimore, MD, Castle Valley,
UT, and Detroit, MI - and two states (Alaska and Hawaii)
have passed resolutions directly opposing the legislation
and reaffirming the importance of basic civil liberties.
While these resolutions are non-binding (so far only
one city - Arcata, CA - has passed a binding ordinance),
they do not mince words. Here is the language from
the recently passed Alaska resolution:
It is the policy of the State of Alaska to oppose
any portion of the USA PATRIOT Act that would violate
the rights and liberties guaranteed equally under
the state and federal constitutions...[The State]
implores the United States Congress "to correct
provisions in the USA PATRIOT Act and other measures
that infringe on civil liberties, and opposes any
pending and future federal legislation to the extent
that it infringes on Americans' civil rights and liberties."
Close to 13 million people live in places that have
passed BORD resolutions. One would hope that federal
legislators would recognize the concerns of their
constituents and take a stronger stand in support
of basic rights and liberties. Bill of Rights advocates
see the upcoming fights over PATRIOT Act II and Terrorist
Information Awareness as well as the 2004 Presidential
election as key places to let legislators know that
their stand on civil liberties issues will be carefully
watched.
Still, it is not enough to wait for politicians to
act. We must disabuse ourselves of the notion that
it is only "other people's" liberties that
are at stake. Our own government threatens our collective
liberty far more than do outside sources. The response,
as the Bill of Rights Defense Committees have shown,
is to use our rights or lose them. Our right to think
and speak for ourselves, without fear of spying neighbors,
surveillance cameras or retaliation, is gravely threatened
and only our collective and coordinated resistance
will stop that threat.
Rachel Neumann is Rights & Liberties editor of
AlterNet
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