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Indybay Feature

Ground the Drones Demonstration on Pacific Avenue in Santa Cruz

by Bradley Allen (bradley [at] riseup.net)
On Friday, March 1, from 5-6 p.m., Women In Black of Santa Cruz, along with other peace groups, demonstrated at the corner of Cooper and Pacific in downtown Santa Cruz to call for an end to the U.S. drone program and to tell the government and President of the United States, "Ground the drones! Stop killing children and other innocent people!"
women-in-black-stand-for-peace_3-1-13.jpg

Women in Black of Santa Cruz holds a weekly peace vigil on Fridays from 5-6 p.m. at the same location. The vigils in Santa Cruz are typically silent demonstrations where participants dress in all black while holding a banner and signs calling for peace.

This Friday's demonstration was cosponsored by CodePink Santa Cruz, People United for Peace of SC, Peace and Freedom Party SC, and the Resource Center for Nonviolence.

While participants held over 150 placards, one person chanted to pedestrians on Pacific, "These are the names of some of the kids killed by U.S. drones."

Organizers report that under President Barack Obama's watch, and implemented by the CIA, hundreds of innocent children and other adults have been killed and maimed by the use of drones (robotic planes) in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Yemen, and Somalia.

Sherry Conable of People United for Peace held a large sign stating that in Pakistan, over 600 children have died from U.S. drone attacks. The gruesome statistics stated that over 85 children died from U.S. drones in Yemen, and over 35 children in Somalia.

Women in Black of Santa Cruz invites people to join them during their weekly vigils at Pacific and Cooper.

Women in Black is a world-wide network of women committed to peace with justice and actively opposed to injustice, war, militarism and other forms of violence. As women experiencing these things in different ways in different regions of the world, Women in Black supports each other's movements, with a focus on challenging the militarist policies of our their governments. Women in Black is not an organization, but a means of communicating and a formula for action.



Bradley Stuart Allen is a photographer, Indymedia volunteer and website developer living in Santa Cruz, California.
§Noor Mohammad, 15, killed by U.S. Drone Strike
by Bradley Allen
noor-mohammad_3-1-13.jpg
Do the Drones Hear the Cries of the Children Dying on the Ground?
§Never Give Up On Peace
by Bradley Allen
never-give-up-on-peace_3-1-13.jpg
§Ground the Drones
by Bradley Allen
ground-the-drones_3-1-13.jpg
§U.S. Cancels Regular Drone Attacks on Saturdays
by Bradley Allen
us-cancels-regular-drone-attacks_3-1-13.jpg
The Santa Cruz Comic News
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by those are
forr somee racial types, it's the squad car that is the drone you gotta worry about! the white people can still abstract the threat. but black man is not in abstract when it comes to police! not acriticism, just moree facts than you'll ever need.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ssoOASanKao

Published Feb 2013

Emmy-winning journalist, Shad Olson, explores the controversy over U.S. drone policy, both at home and abroad.

While technological sky supremacy gives America strategic superiority on the battlefield, the prospect of drone proliferation over U.S. cities is causing concern about loss of privacy, an end to Habeas Corpus and judicial due process and the destruction of Constitutional rights.

South Dakota U.S. Senator John Thune and former U.S. Senate candidate, Sam Kephart share their views about the consequences of domestic drone deployment in the fight against terrorism.

Originally aired on KNBN-TV, (NBC) NewsCenter1, Rapid City, South Dakota in February 2013.
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