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Statement of Conscience appears in NY Times

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The statement of conscience appeared in the new york times today ( s19) along with the L.A Weekly and San Francisco Guardian
Link to what the ad looks like in NY Times and also has appeared in the the L.A Weekly and San Francisco guardian
http://www.nion.us/nion_NYT9-19.pdf


A Statement of Conscience: Not in Our Name
 

The Statement of Conscience shares the politics and vision of the Not In Our Name Project and has been signed by an extraordinary list of public intellectuals and artists including (just to mention a few) Mos Def, John Edgar Wideman, Barbara Kingsolver, Ossie Davis, Noam Chomsky, Eve Ensler, Tony Kushner, Edward Said, Gloria Steinem, Alice Walker and Howard Zinn. New signatories are being added everyday, and there are plans to spread word of this statement throughout the US and the world - to make clear that many of the most beloved and respected artists and intellectuals in this country condemn the policies of this government as not simply mistaken but immoral, illegitimate and illegal -- and they will resist them.

The Statement of Conscience was the subject of an article in The Guardian (U.K.) June 14, 2002, entitled, "U.S. Artists Damn 'war without limit'".


The web site for the Statement of Conscience is http://www.nion.us.

If you would like to sign the Statement, send your name to nionstatement [at] hotmail.com.

If you would like to write to the organizers of the Statement, email nion [at] cloud9.net.




------------------------------------------------------------------------

A Statement of Conscience: Not in Our Name


Let it not be said that people in the United States did nothing when their government declared a war without limit and instituted stark new measures of repression.

The signers of this statement call on the people of the U.S. to resist the policies and overall political direction that have emerged since September 11, 2001, and which pose grave dangers to the people of the world.

We believe that peoples and nations have the right to determine their own destiny, free from military coercion by great powers. We believe that all persons detained or prosecuted by the United States government should have the same rights of due process. We believe that
questioning, criticism, and dissent must be valued and protected. We understand that such rights and values are always contested and must be fought for.

We believe that people of conscience must take responsibility for what their own governments do — we must first of all oppose the injustice that is done in our own name. Thus we call on all Americans to RESIST the war and repression that has been loosed on the world by the Bush administration. It is unjust, immoral, and illegitimate. We choose to make common cause with
the people of the world.

We too watched with shock the horrific events of September 11, 2001. We too mourned the thousands of innocent dead and shook our heads at the terrible scenes of carnage — even as we recalled similar scenes in Baghdad, Panama City, and, a generation ago, Vietnam. We too
joined the anguished questioning of millions of Americans who asked why such a thing could happen.

But the mourning had barely begun, when the highest leaders of the land unleashed a spirit of revenge. They put out a simplistic script of “good vs. evil” that was taken up by a pliant and intimidated media. They told us that asking why these terrible events had happened verged on treason. There was to be no debate. There were by definition no valid political or moral questions. The only possible answer was to be war abroad and repression at home.

In our name, the Bush administration, with near unanimity from Congress, not only attacked Afghanistan but arrogated to itself and its allies the right to rain down military force anywhereand anytime. The brutal repercussions have been felt from the Philippines to Palestine, where Israeli tanks and bulldozers have left a terrible trail of death and destruction. The government now openly prepares to wage all-out war on Iraq — a country which has no connection to the horror of September 11. What kind of world will this become if the U.S. government has a blank check to drop commandos, assassins, and bombs wherever it wants?


In our name, within the U.S., the government has created two classes of people: those to whom the basic rights of the U.S. legal system are at least promised, and those who now seem to have no rights at all. The government rounded up over 1,000 immigrants and detained them in secret and indefinitely. Hundreds have been deported and hundreds of others still languish today in prison. This smacks of the infamous concentration camps for Japanese-Americans in World War 2. For the first time in decades, immigration procedures single out certain nationalities for unequal treatment.

In our name, the government has brought down a pall of repression over society. The President’s spokesperson warns people to “watch what they say.” Dissident artists, intellectuals, and professors find their views distorted, attacked, and suppressed. The so-called USA PATRIOT Act — along with a host of similar measures on the state level — gives police sweeping new powers of search and seizure, supervised if at all by secret proceedings before secret courts.


In our name, the executive has steadily usurped the roles and functions of the other branches of government. Military tribunals with lax rules of evidence and no right to appeal to the regular courts are put in place by executive order. Groups are declared “terrorist” at the stroke of a presidential pen.

We must take the highest officers of the land seriously when they talk of a war that will last a generation and when they speak of a new domestic order. We are confronting a new openly imperial policy towards the world and a domestic policy that manufactures and manipulates fear to curtail rights.

There is a deadly trajectory to the events of the past months that must be seen for what it is and resisted. Too many times in history people have waited until it was too late to resist. President Bush has declared: “you’re either with us or against us.” Here is our answer: We refuse to allow you to speak for all the American people. We will not give up our right to question. We will not hand over our consciences in return for a hollow promise of safety. We say NOT IN OUR NAME. We refuse to be party to these wars and we repudiate any inference that they are being waged in our name or for our welfare. We extend a hand to those around the world suffering from these policies; we will show our solidarity in word and deed.

We who sign this statement call on all Americans to join together to rise to this challenge. We applaud and support the questioning and protest now going on, even as we recognize the need for much, much more to actually stop this juggernaut. We draw inspiration from the Israeli reservists who, at great personal risk, declare “there IS a limit” and refuse to serve in the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza.

We also draw on the many examples of resistance and conscience from the past of the United States: from those who fought slavery with rebellions and the underground railroad, to those who defied the Vietnam war by refusing orders, resisting the draft, and standing in solidarity with resisters.

Let us not allow the watching world today to despair of our silence and our failure to act. Instead, let the world hear our pledge: we will resist the machinery of war and repression and rally others to do everything possible to stop it.


From:

James Abourezk
Michael Albert
Mike Alewitz, LaBOR aRT & MuRAL
Project
Aris Anagnos
Laurie Anderson
Edward Asner, actor
Russell Banks, writer
Rosalyn Baxandall, historian
Medea Benjamin, Global Exchange
Jessica Blank, actor/playwright
William Blum, author
Theresa & Blase Bonpane, Office of the Americas
Fr. Bob Bossie, SCJ
Leslie Cagan
Kisha Imani Cameron, producer
Henry Chalfant, author/filmmaker
Bell Chevigny, writer
Paul Chevigny, professor of law, NYU
Noam Chomsky
Ramsey Clark
David Cole, professor of law,
Georgetown University
Robbie Conal
Stephanie Coontz, historian, Evergreen State College
Kia Corthron, playwright
Kimberly Crenshaw, professor of law,
Columbia and UCLA
Culture Clash
Kevin Danaher, Global Exchange
Barbara Dane
Ossie Davis
Mos Def
Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, professor,
California State University, Hayward
Bill Dyson, state representative, Connecticut
Steve Earle, singer/songwriter
Eve Ensler
Leo Estrada, UCLA professor, Urban Planning
Laura Flanders, radio host and journalist
Elizabeth Frank
Richard Foreman
Terry Gilliam, film director
Charles Glass, journalist
Jeremy Matthew Glick, editor of Another World Is Possible
Danny Glover
Leon Golub, artist
Juan Gómez Quiñones, historian, UCLA
Jessica Hagedorn
Sondra Hale, professor, anthropology
and women's studies, UCLA
Suheir Hammad,
writer Nathalie Handal, poet and playwright
Christine B. Harrington, Director of the
Institute for Law & Society, New York University
David Harvey, distinguished professor
of anthropology, CUNY Graduate Center
Tom Hayden
Edward S. Herman, Wharton School,
University of Pennsylvania
Susannah Heschel, professor,
Dartmouth College
Fred Hirsch, vice president, Plumbers
and Fitters Local 393 bell hooks
Rakaa Iriscience, hip hop artist
Abdeen Jabara, attorney, past
president, American Arab
Anti-Discrimination Committee
Fredric Jameson, chair, literature
program, Duke University
Harold B. Jamison, major (ret.), USAF
Erik Jensen, actor/playwright
Chalmers Johnson, author of
“Blowback”
Casey Kasem
Robin D.G. Kelly
Martin Luther King III, president,
Southern Christian Leadership
Conference
Barbara Kingsolver
Arthur Kinoy, board co-chair, Center for
Constitutional Rights
Sally Kirkland
C. Clark Kissinger, Refuse & Resist!
Yuri Kochiyama, activist
Annisette & Thomas Koppel,
singers/composers
David Korten, author
Barbara Kruger
Tony Kushner
James Lafferty, executive director,
National Lawyers Guild/L.A.
Ray Laforest, Haiti Support Network
Jesse Lemisch, professor of history
emeritus, John Jay College of Justice, CUNY
Rabbi Michael Lerner, editor, TIKKUN magazine
Barbara Lubin, Middle East Childrens
Alliance
Staughton Lynd
Dave Marsh
Anuradha Mittal, co-director, Institute for
Food and Development Policy/Food First
Malaquias Montoya, visual artist
Tom Morello
Robert Nichols, writer
Kate Noonan
Rev. E. Randall Osburn, exec. v.p.,
Southern Christian Leadership Conference
Ozomatli
Grace Paley
Michael Parenti
Jeremy Pikser, screenwriter
Jerry Quickley, poet
Margaret Randall
Michael Ratner, president, Center for
Constitutional Rights
Adrienne Rich
David Riker, filmmaker
Boots Riley, hip hop artist, The Coup
Matthew Rothschild
Edward Said
Susan Sarandon
Saskia Sassen, professor, University of Chicago
Jonathan Schell, author and fellow of the Nation Institute
Carolee Schneeman, artist
Ralph Schoenman & Mya Shone, Council on Human Needs
Mark Selden, historian Alex Shoumatoff
John J. Simon, writer, editor
Michael Steven Smith, National Lawyers
Guild/NY
Norman Solomon, syndicated columnist and author
Scott Spenser
Nancy Spero, artist
Starhawk
Bob Stein, publisher
Gloria Steinem
Oliver Stone
Peter Syben, major, US Army, retired
Marcia Tucker, founding director emerita,
New Museum of Contemporary Art, NY
Gore Vidal
Anton Vodvarka, Lt., FDNY (ret.)
Kurt Vonnegut
Alice Walker
Rebecca Walker
Naomi Wallace, playwright
Immanuel Wallerstein, sociologist, Yale University
Rev. George Webber, president emeritus,
NY Theological Seminary
Leonard Weinglass,
attorney Haskell Wexler
John Edgar Wideman
Saul Williams, spoken word artist
S. Brian Willson , activist/writer
Jeffrey Wright, actor
Howard Zinn, historian

Organizations for identification only
(representative list as of July 17, 2002) For
more complete listing of signers, see:
http://www.zmag.org/znet.htm
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