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PROTEST “BLACK HAWK DOWN” Call a picket line at your local theater today!
Speak out against the pro-war propaganda machine orchestrated by recent agreements made between Hollywood and Bush. NEW YORK CITY Wednesday, January 23 @ 6 pm Union Square Theater AROUND THE COUNTRY Call a picket line at your local theater today!
WHY ARE WE CALLING FOR PROTESTS AND BOYCOTTS AGAINST “BLACK HAWK DOWN”?
This movie is a blatantly racist attempt to create support among the U.S. public for a new war against Somalia. According to the Bush administration, Somalia is at the top of the Pentagon’s list of countries to be the next major target of the so-called “war against terrorism.”
In his review of “Black Hawk Down,” New York Times movie reviewer Elvis Mitchell wrote that the movie “converts the Somalis into a pack of snarling dark-skinned beasts … it reeks of glumly staged racism.”
What actually happened in Somalia in 1992-93? On December 12, 1992, the U.S. sent 28,000 soldiers into Somalia under the cover of the United Nations Operation in Somalia (UNOSOM) in what they said was a “humanitarian mission” to bring food to starving people. The invasion came when a several-year drought that had taken tens of thousands of lives was actually abating. At the time, the evening news showed images of thousands of starving Somalis. What people didn’t see was U.S. troops not delivering food but instead engaged in daily gun battles and bombing raids in heavily populated neighborhoods. In ten months, more than 10,000 Somalis died as the U.S. engaged in aggressive military action against those who resisted.
Resistance among Somali women, men and even children to the foreign troops became widespread. The Somali people have a long and proud history of resistance. They fought for the freedom of their country from Italian, French and British colonialism - and they resisted the U.S. attempts to recolonize their country. In the beginning of the military intervention in 1992, Colin Powell, at the time the chairman of the Pentagon’s Join Chiefs of Staff, called the invasion a “paid political advertisement” for the Pentagon at a time (less than a year after the end of the so-called Cold War) when Congress was under growing pressure to cut the war budget. Powell opposed calls that that money be used instead for jobs, education, health care, housing and other social needs, and instead sought to maintain the $300-billion-plus military budget. In reporting on the U.S./UN Operation in Somalia (UNOSOM), the human rights organization Africa Rights stated that troops “have engaged in abuses of human rights, including killing of civilians, physical abuse, theft … Many UNOSOM soldiers have also displayed unacceptable levels of racism toward Somalis …” These abuses included opening fire with machine guns against unarmed protesters, firing missiles into residential areas and outright murder civilians, including many youth. The report states “UNOSOM has become an army of occupation.”
PRO-WAR PROPAGANDA
Since September 11, Bush administration officials have held meetings with Hollywood representatives regarding the content of the movies and other material they produce. In an October 17, 2001, meeting, Hollywood heads “committed themselves to new initiatives in support of the war on terrorism.”
“Black Hawk Down” is just one of those movies, made hand-in-hand with the Pentagon. Weeks before the release of “Black Hawk Down,” the Motion Picture Association of America held a private screening for senior White House advisers, and allowed them to make changes. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and Oliver North, among others, attended the movie’s Washington DC premiere.
Hollywood spends hundreds of millions of dollars on pro-war, racist films like these - $90 million on “Black Hawk Down” alone while millions of people in New York and around the country are facing layoffs, evictions, cuts in health care, attacks on their pensions and more.
A new war in Somalia“Somalia Possible Target” is now a common sentiment echoed in
newspaper headlines and statements of Bush administration officials. In some ways, a new war against Somalia has already begun. In November, the U.S. government shut down the Somali-owned Al-Barakat money transfer company, which provided the only way for Somalis living out of the country to send back much-needed funds, known as remittances, which are often vital for family members’ survival. Up to eighty percent of Somalis which is hundreds of thousands if not milliosn of people rely on funds sent by relatives livng outside of the country. This exposes the pretext given by the U.S. government for the 1992 intervention said then to be a mission to help starving people because now the U.S. is imposing measures that will cause Somali people to starve because they are unable to afford food.
The U.S. also shut down Somalia Internet Company, denying all Internet access to Somalis, and has severely restricted international telephone lines. This is really the beginning of a strangulation
of the country.
Since the U.S. government cannot implicate Somalia in the events of September 11, they are attempting to justify a new military assault by implying that the Pentagon has unfinished business, that they have a “black eye” and must return with a vengeance. This is the goal of “Black Hawk Down.”
All those who believe in justice for the people of the world must take a stand against U.S. threats against Somalia, Sudan, the Philippines, Iraq, Colombia and everywhere else. We don’t know where the next war will be. The Pentagon has announced that it’s wartime all the time and they will select the targets. But we do know the U.S. public is being prepared to justify another bloody incursion
into Somalia.
Protest and boycott “Black Hawk Down” and organize to build the anti-war movement.
CALL ISSUED BY: New York A.N.S.W.E.R. (Act Now to Stop War & End Racism). For more information, call 212-633-6646, email ANSWER [at] afgj.org or see http://www.InternationalANSWER.org. If you are
organizing in your area, please let us know!
This movie is a blatantly racist attempt to create support among the U.S. public for a new war against Somalia. According to the Bush administration, Somalia is at the top of the Pentagon’s list of countries to be the next major target of the so-called “war against terrorism.”
In his review of “Black Hawk Down,” New York Times movie reviewer Elvis Mitchell wrote that the movie “converts the Somalis into a pack of snarling dark-skinned beasts … it reeks of glumly staged racism.”
What actually happened in Somalia in 1992-93? On December 12, 1992, the U.S. sent 28,000 soldiers into Somalia under the cover of the United Nations Operation in Somalia (UNOSOM) in what they said was a “humanitarian mission” to bring food to starving people. The invasion came when a several-year drought that had taken tens of thousands of lives was actually abating. At the time, the evening news showed images of thousands of starving Somalis. What people didn’t see was U.S. troops not delivering food but instead engaged in daily gun battles and bombing raids in heavily populated neighborhoods. In ten months, more than 10,000 Somalis died as the U.S. engaged in aggressive military action against those who resisted.
Resistance among Somali women, men and even children to the foreign troops became widespread. The Somali people have a long and proud history of resistance. They fought for the freedom of their country from Italian, French and British colonialism - and they resisted the U.S. attempts to recolonize their country. In the beginning of the military intervention in 1992, Colin Powell, at the time the chairman of the Pentagon’s Join Chiefs of Staff, called the invasion a “paid political advertisement” for the Pentagon at a time (less than a year after the end of the so-called Cold War) when Congress was under growing pressure to cut the war budget. Powell opposed calls that that money be used instead for jobs, education, health care, housing and other social needs, and instead sought to maintain the $300-billion-plus military budget. In reporting on the U.S./UN Operation in Somalia (UNOSOM), the human rights organization Africa Rights stated that troops “have engaged in abuses of human rights, including killing of civilians, physical abuse, theft … Many UNOSOM soldiers have also displayed unacceptable levels of racism toward Somalis …” These abuses included opening fire with machine guns against unarmed protesters, firing missiles into residential areas and outright murder civilians, including many youth. The report states “UNOSOM has become an army of occupation.”
PRO-WAR PROPAGANDA
Since September 11, Bush administration officials have held meetings with Hollywood representatives regarding the content of the movies and other material they produce. In an October 17, 2001, meeting, Hollywood heads “committed themselves to new initiatives in support of the war on terrorism.”
“Black Hawk Down” is just one of those movies, made hand-in-hand with the Pentagon. Weeks before the release of “Black Hawk Down,” the Motion Picture Association of America held a private screening for senior White House advisers, and allowed them to make changes. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and Oliver North, among others, attended the movie’s Washington DC premiere.
Hollywood spends hundreds of millions of dollars on pro-war, racist films like these - $90 million on “Black Hawk Down” alone while millions of people in New York and around the country are facing layoffs, evictions, cuts in health care, attacks on their pensions and more.
A new war in Somalia“Somalia Possible Target” is now a common sentiment echoed in
newspaper headlines and statements of Bush administration officials. In some ways, a new war against Somalia has already begun. In November, the U.S. government shut down the Somali-owned Al-Barakat money transfer company, which provided the only way for Somalis living out of the country to send back much-needed funds, known as remittances, which are often vital for family members’ survival. Up to eighty percent of Somalis which is hundreds of thousands if not milliosn of people rely on funds sent by relatives livng outside of the country. This exposes the pretext given by the U.S. government for the 1992 intervention said then to be a mission to help starving people because now the U.S. is imposing measures that will cause Somali people to starve because they are unable to afford food.
The U.S. also shut down Somalia Internet Company, denying all Internet access to Somalis, and has severely restricted international telephone lines. This is really the beginning of a strangulation
of the country.
Since the U.S. government cannot implicate Somalia in the events of September 11, they are attempting to justify a new military assault by implying that the Pentagon has unfinished business, that they have a “black eye” and must return with a vengeance. This is the goal of “Black Hawk Down.”
All those who believe in justice for the people of the world must take a stand against U.S. threats against Somalia, Sudan, the Philippines, Iraq, Colombia and everywhere else. We don’t know where the next war will be. The Pentagon has announced that it’s wartime all the time and they will select the targets. But we do know the U.S. public is being prepared to justify another bloody incursion
into Somalia.
Protest and boycott “Black Hawk Down” and organize to build the anti-war movement.
CALL ISSUED BY: New York A.N.S.W.E.R. (Act Now to Stop War & End Racism). For more information, call 212-633-6646, email ANSWER [at] afgj.org or see http://www.InternationalANSWER.org. If you are
organizing in your area, please let us know!
For more information:
http://InternationalANSWER.org
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Boo-hoo, cry me a fucking river you left-wing reactionaries!
If the a.n.s.w.er. people show up, we'll just make them wear "kick me, i'm a leninist" tee-shirts and watch the militarists kick the crap out of them. Great fun!!!
sort of like spitting with the wind when tens of millions will see this movie and not hear a bleeep of your schoolish protest . . .
My main thought was that a GPS guided bomb could have killed the General Adid, with no US casualties and fewer dead Somalis!
BTW, check out this story regarding the freezing of funds of Al Barakaat, which might cause significant economic problems in Somalia:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-110801dish.story