5 Steps to Help Stop the Killing in Iraq

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When we say no to military intervention in Iraq, it’s good to be able to say yes to some alternative steps.  Our Quaker friends at FCNL (Friends Committee on National Legislation) offer 5 Steps to Help Stop the Killing in Iraq.   FCNL excels at promoting positive action for peace.  Read the full article for explanations of the following steps.

1. Reject more U.S. military intervention, which would increase violence.

2. Publicly support a comprehensive political settlement between the key parties to the conflict, inside and outside of Iraq.

3. Halt unconditional military aid to Iraq.

4. Convene a conference to establish a comprehensive arms embargo to Iraq and Syria.

5. Increase and better allocate humanitarian funds to address humanitarian crisis.

You can express your opinion to President Obama by calling the White House hotline at 202-456-1111 (business hours) or email at www.whitehouse.gov/contact

Click here to find your members of…

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PPJ’s Sandusky County Fair Booth Themes Are Announced

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Our fair booth committee has chosen the following themes for this year’s booth at the Sandusky County Fair, Aug. 19-24.

  • Get Money Out of Politics:  Corporations are not persons and money is not speech.

We will feature materials and petitions from Move to Amend.  Move to Amend is a grassroots movement to reject the U.S. Supreme Court’s Citizens United ruling and other related cases, and move to amend our Constitution to firmly establish that money is not speech, and that human beings, not corporations, are persons entitled to constitutional rights.

  • Raise the Minimum Wage

To work for a living must mean to be paid enough to live, that is, a living wage.  We support raising the minimum wage to achieve a living wage.

  • The Cost of War and Militarism

Every minute, the United States government spends $1.2 million on the military.  What if we redirected that money to the real needs of our communities?  See AFSC’s One Minute for Peace Campaign.

The committee is currently seeking donations and volunteers to make this year’s booth a success.  Do stop by to see us when you visit the fair!

 

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Rally to Close Guantanamo, May 23, Tiffin

Not Another Broken Promise! Not Another Day in Guantanamo! Global Day of Action to Close Guantanamo and End Indefinite Detention

May 23 Gitmo action

May 23, 2014

Local Rally at Courthouse Square, Tiffin, 4:30 – 5:30 pm

On May 23rd of last year, President Obama again promised to close the detention facility at Guantanamo. His pledge came in response to the mass hunger strike by men protesting their indefinite detention and to the renewed, global condemnation of the prison.  One year later, far too little has changed: few detained men have left the prison and hunger strikes and force feeding continues.

Demonstrations will be taking place across the United States and the world to demand that President Obama and the US Congress end indefinite detention and close the prison at Guantanamo.

Please join Tiffin Area Pax Christi and Project Peace  for a spirited demonstration at Courthouse Square, corner of S. Washington and E. Market Sts., Tiffin on Friday, May 23rd at 4:30 pm.

During his May 2013 speech, President Obama asked the American people: “Look at the current situation, where we are force feeding detainees who are being held on a hunger strike . . . Is this who we are?”  Sadly, as we face yet another broken promise, this is who we are — a country that indefinitely detains and brutalizes the men in Guantanamo.

The May 23rd Day of Action is being coordinated by Witness Against Torture in collaboration with Amnesty International, the National Religious Campaign Against Torture, Code Pink, the Center for Constitutional Rights, Veterans for Peace, World Can’t Wait, Blue Lantern, the Torture Abolition and Survivor Support Coalition, CloseGitmo.net, the Council on American-Islamic Relations, and September 11 Families for Peaceful Tomorrows, among others.

For more on the Day of Action, go to: www.witnesstorture.org.

Note: If you are in the Toledo area, join NWOPC for their Guantanamo vigil on Sunday May 25, noon-1:30 pm, corner of Talmadge and Sylvania.

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Welcome back to our Palestine delegation!

Project Peace’s delegation to Palestine returned on Saturday. Read some highlights from their travel blog.

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Shehuda street Hebron

Welcome back to our delegation who returned on Saturday!  Review their travel blog on Tumblr at www.tiffinpalestine.tumblr.com

Here are links to a few highlights:

May 12th Lunch at a Bedouin Camp

May 14th  Life on Chicken Street in Hebron

May 15th post by Lindsay Kagy

May 16th Final post by Sr. Paulette  and fellow delegation members

Each member contributed his/her closing memories in their final post below:

The community and hospitality shared by the shopkeepers as they offered welcome, and an invite to come in for a cup of coffee/tea as they shared the details of their arts and crafts. Of course, “we” then contributed to the economy of the area. Many special memories that will last for a lifetime.
(Phyllis)

Despite the impressions one has of Israel coming from the States, we certainly have come away with a new understanding of the injustices perpetrated upon the Palestinian and…

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Drone Warfare film to be shown at May 20 PPJ meeting

Drone Warfare, a video by the American Friends Service Committee, will be shown on May 20, 7:30 pm, at St. Mark’s Lutheran Church Fellowship Hall, 902 E. State St., Fremont.

The half-hour film will be followed by a roundtable discussion on the moral and legal issues surrounding the use of drones in warfare and extrajudicial assassination.

The event is sponsored by People for Peace and Justice Sandusky County.  It will be preceded by a 6:30 pm potluck and business meeting.  The public is invited.  For more information, call Josie Setzler, 419-332-2318.

 

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Project Peace delegation arrives in Jerusalem

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Jerusalem
The Project Peace delegation led by Sr. Paulette  has arrived in Jerusalem!  Two members, Matt and Mary, are writing a travel blog at www.tiffinpalestine.tumblr.com 

Here is today’s post:

Wednesday, 9 p.m., Jerusalem. After a few hours of not knowing whether our Columbus-Newark flight was going to leave on time, we made it to Newark, boarded, and made it safely to Jerusalem. A couple of photos here indicate we are not in Ohio—tonight we had our first dinner together near the Damascus Gate of falafel, hummus, and desserts.

Wrapping up tonight many in the group noted how different and exotic the surroundings appear—from the call to prayer to absence of dogs. Strangely, we are expecting a very rare thunderstorm-in-May event tonight. Tomorrow, to the Tent of Nations and then on to Bethlehem. After 35 hours of travel, to bed.

Tuesday our group of 6 will be leaving Ohio for Jerusalem, Bethlehem…

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Open our Eyes in Afghanistan –from Kathy Kelly’s newsletter

Kathy Kelly, who was PPJ’s fall speaker, sends out a newsletter periodically from her organization Voices for Creative Nonviolence.  The following excerpt from an article by Hakim (Afghan Peace Volunteers) caught my eye. –Josie

Afghan Peace Volunteers

Open Our Eyes in Afghanistan by Hakim*

Even from kindergarten, my ‘inner’ eye was being blinded to alternative ways of learning other than a test-based approach. Unconsciously, I was motivated to believe, “This is education – reading and writing the English and Chinese alphabet well enough to be some ‘meritocratic’ top student.”

Many decades later, during a three-month peace workshop at Bamiyan University, the student participants identified illiteracy as one of the main reasons for the chronic wars in Afghanistan. My awareness had revolutionized, so I disagreed and offered, “The unlettered Afghan shepherd is usually enraptured by care for his sheep. He does not sit on councils to pen justifications for expending blood and money to wage wars. His illiteracy does not cause wars.”

Asad ( not his real name ) had become a young journalist, certainly literate, and educated, by conventional definitions. At a meeting of the showcase ‘Afghan Youth Parliament of Bamiyan Province’, this Hazara, wearing tinted glasses and a Western success-style coat, had concluded, “The Taliban are mainly Pashtun. If I took power someday, I will eliminate them.”

These days, think tanks, and these not even military think tanks, will praise this ‘realistic’ strategy, perhaps even recruit Asad. Asad’s eyebrows were contorted with prejudice and anger. His breath seemed to be puffs from ‘fighter jets’. The war will rage on in his personal and social life, along with the academic degrees he’ll frame and display is his bright-future office.

If I were an angel, I would have let in as much sunlight into that meeting room as possible, encouraged him to ease his frown, and enrolled him in a visionary kindergarten, where, after 5 minutes of “A,B,C” and” آ, ب , پ” , I would introduce him to a 5 year old Pashtun boy, and suggest, “Go out to the park together for the next 50 minutes. Look and listen attentively without alphabets distracting your minds, so as to understand how many different kinds of insects and birds there are and to appreciate their songs. Study how the snow leopard is endangered even though it won’t make you a high-dollar earning oil-driller, mineral-extracting corporatist, or the first financial derivatives trader in Afghanistan.”

“Remove the adult tinted glasses, and open your eyes.”

Excerpted from a longer article available at http://www.counterpunch.org/2013/12/05/open-our-eyes/

*Hakim, ( Dr Teck Young, Wee ), is a medical doctor from Singapore who has done humanitarian and social enterprise work in Afghanistan for the past 9 years, including being a mentor to the Afghan Peace Volunteers, an inter-ethnic group of young Afghans dedicated to building non-violent alternatives to war. He is the 2012 recipient of the International Pfeffer Peace Prize.

 

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Corporate Profits: Highest Level on Record

PPJ recently receive this “Economic Justice Note” from Edie Rasell, Minister for Economic Justice for the UCC.

Corporate Profits:  Highest Level on Record

Economic Justice Note – April 7, 2014  Corporate profits have hit a new, horrifying milestone. U.S. Department of Commerce data show after-tax corporate profits in 2013 totaled 10% of the entire economy, the highest level since the government began tracking this figure 85 years ago. Of every dollar generated in the economy (and taken home as income), fully $1 in $10 went to after-tax corporate profits. Not even in the late 1920s did after-tax corporate profits devour such a large share of the national economy.

The data also show a horrifying milestone for workers. In 2013 employee compensation (wages, salaries, and the costs of fringe benefits) as a share the economy hit its lowest level in 65 years (since 1948). Of every $10 generated in the economy and taken home as income, just $5.27 went to pay the wages, salaries and fringe benefits of workers.

Read more and see stunning graphs in the New York Times article.

Why are after-tax corporate profits so high and workers’ compensation so low?  Because corporate money and power are re-writing our economic policies and laws.

·         Corporate taxes are very low.  “Corporate lobbyists incessantly claim that our corporate tax rate is too high, and that it’s not ‘competitive’ with the rest of the world … [but] both of these claims are false. … [F]ar too many aren’t paying U.S. taxes at all. Most multinationals are paying lower tax rates here in the United States than they pay on their foreign operations.” See the great work on corporate taxes from Citizens for Tax Justice.

·         The Supreme Court favors corporate interests – not just in campaign finance but in many other ways also. “With decision after decision coming down on the side of big business, the Supreme Court under Chief Justice John Roberts has proven itself to be willing and eager to twist the law to favor powerful corporate interests over everyday  Americans.”  See The Corporate Court  by the Alliance for Justice.

·         Money in politics influences policy and regulatory decisions. The Center for Responsive Politics (OpenSecrets.org) has extensively investigated the impact of money in politics, the revolving door between lobbying and public service, and the influence purchased with campaign dollars.

·         Many state legislators are actively working to support a corporate agenda. The American Legislative Exchange Council brings together state legislators and corporate representatives with money and policy proposals. At ALEC, corporations “have a voice and a vote,” right alongside many of our state legislators. ALEC Exposed names names and alerts the rest of us to what is underway. Also read about the corrosive impact of ALEC’s work, The Legislative Attack on American Wages and Labor Standards, 2011–2012, from the Economic Policy Institute.  These measures, and others, have brought employee compensation down to a record low.

·         Trade agreements provide a huge opportunity for corporate representatives to write and re-write national and international policies. Trade negotiations happen outside the view of the public, the media, and even Congress. But corporate interests are well represented at the table. The Trans-Pacific Partnership is currently being negotiated between the U.S. and 11 other Pacific-Rim nations. Among the 566 official advisors who are participating in the talks, 480 represent corporations or trade associations.   More on the TPP

 

All the organizations referenced above provide extensive educational resources and suggestions for what to do. Priorities for 2014 include:

1.       Raise the minimum wage and support workers in their struggles for unions, higher pay, and better benefits.  More

2.       Oppose the Trans-Pacific Partnership and the “Fast Track” authority that lets this bill go through Congress with scant debate and oversight.   More

3.       Oppose reductions in taxes paid by corporations.  Any reduction in the corporate tax rate must be more than offset by closing loopholes, ending the use of tax havens, and eliminating the deferral of taxation on foreign earnings. Taxes paid by corporations must rise. More

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Getting money out of politics: Move to Amend

PPJ is part of the Move to Amend national movement, working to get money out of politics. This grassroots movement seeks to amend the U.S. Constitution to overturn the Supreme Court’s ruling in Citizens United.  According to Move to Amend:

We, the People of the United States of America, reject the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in Citizens United and other related cases, and move to amend our Constitution to firmly establish that money is not speech, and that human beings, not corporations, are persons entitled to constitutional rights.

In December 2012, PPJ joined with allies to help pass a Fremont City Council resolution endorsing the position that “corporations should not receive the same legal rights as natural persons, that money is not speech, and that independent expenditures [for election campaigns] should be regulated…”

PPJ has collected signatures for the Move to Amend effort at our booths at several area events:  Farmer’s Market, Dignity Day, and Tiffin’s Peace Fair.  They will continue their efforts at their Sandusky County Fair booth, August 19-24.

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PPJ hosted a speaking event at Birchard Public Library with Doug Jambard-Sweet from Toledo Move to Amend.  Out of this event we forged alliances to pass a Fremont City Council resolution in support of overturning Citizens United.

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