|   Tuesday, April 12, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, stalemate continues,  corruption continues -- why is the US still in Iraq?, Amnesty International  releases a report that stands as an indictment against the thuggery that passes  for 'democracy' in Iraq, and much, much more.        Yesterday the Defense Department issued the  following, "The Department of Defense announced today the death of a soldier who  was supporting Operation New Dawn. Sgt. Vorasack T. Xaysana, 30, of Westminster,  Colo., died April 10 in Kirkuk, Iraq, of injuries sustained April 9 in a  non-combat related incident. He was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 12th Cavalry  Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, Fort Hood, Texas. For more information, the  media may contact the Fort Hood public affairs at 254-287-9993 or 254-287-0106."  He is the sixth US soldier to die in Iraq this month.
   And for what? What is being accomplished? The Iraqi 'govermnet' remains in  a state of paralysis. 2007 benchmarks were never, ever reached. Yet Robert Burns (AP) observes, "The U.S. wants to  keep perhaps several thousand troops in Iraq, not to engage in combat but to  guard against an unraveling of a still-fragile peace. This was made clear during  Defense Secretary Robert Gates' visit Thursday and Friday in which he talked up  the prospect of an extended U.S. stay."  And should the SOFA not be extended?   Tim Arango (New York Times) notes, "The  State Department has worked up plans to double its size here in preparation for  the scheduled military withdrawal.  It intends to expand from about 8,000  civilians to more than 16,000 many of them private contractors, but Congress has  not yet approved the money to pay for it." Why stay? 
   What justifies prolonging the illegal war?  The wonderful human rights  situation in Iraq?  That little myth is (yet again) blown out of the water.   Today Amnesty International issued the report [PDF format warning] "DAYS OF RAGE: PROTESTS AND REPRESSION IN IRAQ" which opens  with the threat made to activist Fatima Ahmed February 25th to stop her from  participating in that day's actions, "If you don't stop your political  opposition activities we will kidnap you, rape you and videotape the rape." In  February many Iraqi cities continued their 2010 protests. February 25th, the  protests reached Baghdad. Every Friday since, protests have taken place in  Baghdad (and across the country -- and they've been held on days other than  Friday as well). The response from Nouri's government was to attack protesters,  arrest them, assault journalists, impeded access to protest sites and  more.     The report rightly notes that Iraqis were protesting in 2010 and that at  least one person died in a June 19, 2010 protest in Basra "when police fired on  astone-throwing demonstrators."  This led to the resignation of the Minister of  Electricity and, from the Minister of the Interior, "new regulations that make  it extremely difficult to obtain official authorization to hold protest meetings  or demonstrations." Though the report doesn't mention it, the resignation also  came with the promise that the electricity issue would be addressed.  It  wasn't.  (The Minister of Oil was also made the Minister of Electricity -- by  Nouri.  No, the Constitution does not allow Nouri to make such a move  unilaterally.)   The reports note that protests in 2011 built up to February  25th which was dubbed "The Day of Rage."  From the report:     The various forces under the control of the authorities and  political parties, including security guards, armed forces and security forces,  responded from the start with excessive force, killing and injuring protesters,  and with frequent arrests.  The first fatalities were on 16 February in the  eastern city of Kut in Wasit province, and on 17 February in Sulaimaniya in the  Kurdistan region. Activists told Amnesty International that the ferocity of the  crackdown following the "Days of Rage" led to a decline in the number of  protests in subsequent weeks, although protests have continued.   On several occasions, however, protestors have used violence --  mainly by throwing stones at members of the security forces or public buildings,  or on rare occasions by setting fire to public buildings. As a result, members  of the security forces have been injured. On most such occasions, it appears  that demonstrators only resorted to violence after security forces had used  force against them, including sound bombs and live ammunition.  [. . .]  Amnesty International also found disturbing evidence of targeted  attacks on political activists, torture and other ill-treatment of people  arrested in connection with the protests, and attacks or threats against  journalists, media outlets, government critics, academics and  students.  Up to now, the Iraqi authorities in both Baghdad and Kurdistan  region have sought to crack down on peaceful protestors.  This must change. They  should be cracking down on the use of excessive force and torture by their own  largely unaccountable security forces, not on the right of people to peacefully  protest.  The Iraqi authorities should be upholding the rights to freedom of  expression and peacefully assembly, including the right to protest, not trying  to suppress them. It is high time to do so.  The Iraqi authorities have failed to respect their constitutional  and international obligations to uphold the rights to freedom of assembly and  expression.     By refusing to do so the authorities in Iraq violated the Constitution's  Article 38 as well as the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights'  Article 21.  The report notes protesters who were killed such as Mu'ataz Muwafaq  Waissi and Salim Farooq.  It also includes testimony from those who were  tortured like activist Oday Alzaidy who was picked up by the army , transferred  to another vehicle, "beaten and blindfolded," taken to another location where he  was held for five days and tortured:     They came to me every day and they attacked me with beatings and  gave me electric shocks.  They told me to confess that I was sent by the Ba'ath  party [the party led by former President Saddam Hussain, executed in December  2006].  When I denied this, they beat me even harder with batons and they  shocked me with electric prods.      In the Kurdistan Region Government, the report explains "at least six  people have died as a result of excessive force b the security forces during  protests".  As elsewhere in Iraq, KRG protesters have decried government  services, corruption, the vast unemployment the lack of "respect for human  rights and freedoms."  The daily sit-ins in Sulaimaniay are noted (ongoing since  February 17th).  This is where security forces shot Rezhwan Ali in the head and  the 15-year-old died. It's where teenager Surkew Zahid and 28-year-old Sherzad  Taha died forllowing attacks by security forces.It's where Omed Jalal was shot  dead by security forces (Jalal was not a protester, the 25-year-old was merely  walking past the protest). Those are only some of the deaths which have taken  place in the KRG protests.  The capital has been largely free of protests and  that's due to the government's clamp down on protests in Erbil by refusing to  allow them access to the city's square -- even when denying access has meant the  security forces violently responding to protesters.  Torture of protesters has  also taken place in the KRG.  Sharwan Azad Faqi 'Abdallah shares:     At around 2.30pm as I had just finished a phone conversation with a  friend, three men confronted me and asked me to give them the mobile. Other men  arrived within seconds, including from behind, and then I received several  punches on the head and different parts of the body.  I fell to the ground, they  kicked me for several minutes, but I managed to stand up.  They put one handcuff  on my right wrist and attached it to someone else's left wrist.  But I managed  with force to pull my arm away and the handcuff was broken. I ran away towards  the Citadel but within seconds another group of security men in civilian clothes  blocked my way and they started punching me and hitting me. There were now many  security men surrounding me and kicking me. There was blood streaming from my  nose and from left eye. My head was very painful.   They put me in a car . . . One security man told me I was one of  the troublemakers. I was taken to the Asayish Gishti in Erbil. I was first asked  to go to the bathroom to wash my face wash my face which was covered in blood. I  was then interrogated in the evening and the person interrogating me kept asking  about why I was in the park and kept accusing me of being a troublemaker. I was  asked to sign a written testimony. When I said I needed to see what is on the  paper he hit me hard.  Then I signed the paper without reading it.  I stayed  there for two nights sharing a room with around 60 people. Then on the third day  I was taken to a police station where I stayed for one night before I was  released. I was not tortured in the Asayish Prison or in the police  station."      That's but one example in the report.  There are many more in the KRG who  share stories and one of the most disturbing aspects -- something that sets it  apart from the arrests/kidnappings of activists elsewhere in Iraq -- is how and  when the forces appear.  The report doesn't make this point, I am.  Forces in  the KRG show up as people are on the phone or have just finished a call.  It  would appear that beyond the physical abuse and intimidation, they're also  violating privacy and monitoring phone calls.      Of the KRG, the report argues:     It appears clear that the two main political parties in the  Kurdistan region have sought to mobilize their own security agencies and party  militants to undermine and weaken the protest movement and are prepared to use  extreme means, including excessive force, arbitrary arrests, torture and  threats, to achieve their objective.     Throughout Iraq, the press has been under attack. Journalist Hadi al-Mehdi  was eating lunch with collegaues (Hussam Sara'i, Ali Abdul Sada and Ali  al-Mussawi) "when at least 15 soldiers stormed the [Baghdad] restaurant, beat  him and his three friends with rifles and forced them into vehicles.  He said  that they were taken to a detention centre run by the 11th Army Division, later  identified as the former building of the Defence Ministry, and interogated.  He  said he was frequently beaten during the interrogation, twice given electric  shocks to his feet, and threatend with rape."  The report also notes the attacks  on journalistic institutions.  Example:
   Journalists covering the demonstrations have been attacked and  injured by armed forces or security forces.  Several have had their equipment  and footage seized or destroyed and some have been detained.  On 23 February in  the morning, security forces raided the office of the Journalistic Freedoms  Observatory in Baghdad confiscating IT equipment and its archive. The  organization has been campaigning for media freedom in Iraq for several years,  including protesting restrictions on media coverage of recent demonstrations  in Iraq.      When you read about Iraqi forces torturing people, grasp that this comes  back to their trainers.  As World Can't Wait's Debra Sweet observed at the Left Forum last  month, on the "Why We Resist" panel, "The way these occupations are maintained  and justified is by terrorizing people through this torture, abuse.  We know  what happened at Abu Ghraib.  One of the things we're going to talk about later  today in our panel on WikiLeaks is the fact that the US not only knew about but  trained the Iraqi military and police in abusing detainees.  And that is still  going on. So this is one of the effects of the war. So these issues are really  important for the occupation." Torture and abuse continue in Iraq and the  pattern for them includes the training forces received.         The report concludes calling for the following:     * Guarantee and uphold the right to peaceful protest, and protect  protesters from excessive force by police or violence by others.     * Conduct full, thorough and transparent investigations into the  killings and attacks on protesters and the assaults and threats made against  journalists and others, make the results of the investigation public and bring  perpetrators to justice.     * Ensure that security forces and other law enforcement officers  act at all times in full conformity with the UN Code of Conduct for Law  Enforcement Officials and the UN Basic Principles on the Use of Force and  Firearms by Law Enforcement Officials, by giving clear instructions that force  may only beused when strictly necessary and only to the extent required for the  performance of their duty, and that lethal force may only be used when strictly  unavoidable in order to protect their lives or the lives of  others.     * Publicly condemn torture and other ill-treatment, and ensure that  these abusive stop.     * Conduct full, thorough and transparent investigations into all  allegations of torture and other ill-treatment and bring perpetrators to  justice.     * Provide victims of human rights violations with financial  compensation and other forms of reparation that are appropriate and proportional  to the gravity of the violation and the circumstances of the  case.         McEVERS: In his modernist sitting room, Chalabi  receives petitioners like a powerful sheik. He says Iraq should serve as an  example to the region.           Mr. AHMED CHALABI (Iraqi Politician): Iraq has  overthrown one of the most terrible dictatorships and blood-thirsty dictators in  the 20th century. Now, Iraq can claim rightfully that it has a democratic  government and it has elected parliament and free elections, and there is a  dialogue, a political dialogue, going on.      McEVERS: Thing is, it's not quite so simple. In  Iraq, Saddam Hussein led an elite made up mostly of Sunnis. Now that he's gone,  many of those in power are Shiites. Western analysts say rather than just  asserting a new Iraq, Chalabi and others are pushing for a Shiite Iraq to become  a major player in the so-called Shiite Crescent, which is led by Iraq's  neighbor, Iran.  And this, they say, is why Chalabi cares so deeply about  Bahrain. The majority of people there are Shiite, but the ruling family is  Sunni. Chalabi denies he's stoking sectarian flames by extending a Shiite hand  to Bahrain.      Meanwhile the US military improves life for Iraqis how by staying on the  ground in Iraq?  Andrew Hammon, Frederik Richter and Alison Williams  (Reuters) report, "Gulf Arab states have asked the Arab League to  cancela  summit scheduled to be held in Baghdad in May" -- this is a  rescheduling.  It was supposed to have taken place in March.  Al  Mada reports that the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Hoshyar  Zebari, has declared holding the Arab Summitt in Baghdad (May 10th through 11th)  will cost the country $450 million in US dollars. Imagine what $450 million,  allocated to Iraq's infrastructure, could do for the Iraqi people. They put on  the dog for the foreigners and allow most Iraqis to live below poverty and  without potable water or reliable electricity. Inas Tariq (Al Mada)  reports on an Iraqi bride who quickly became an Iraqi widow when her  husband was killed in July 2010, leaving her alone and expecting a child. Tariq  notes the continued increase in the number of women who are now heads of  single-parent households and how rare it is for any of them to receive financial  assistance from the government. The Committee on Labor and Social Affairs states  that a great deal of corruption is taking place in programs that are supposed to  be assisting these women. The Minister of Labor and Social Affairs, Nassar  al-Rubaie, estimates that there are over 750,000 Iraqi widows. Tariq's report is  troubling for a number of reasons but especially bothersome considering the  United Nations silence on the targeting of gay and presumed gay men in Iraq is  that the UN is stated to have predicted a list of 'misfortunes' that will plague  Iraq in coming years and "homosexuality" is on the list -- a list that includes  "mental illness." Is the UN being misunderstood or misquoted by Tariq? Or is  that the attitude of the United Nations? Again, their past silence on the  targeting makes it seem less like Tariq's mistake. Last week, UN  Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon delivered a report on Iraq which was written March  31st. Though rather lengthy and allegedly addressing the many problems facing  Iraq as a civil society, the report never noted the targeting of the LGBT  community. What sort of leadership is Ban Ki-moon providing?     Homophobia?  Sexism?  It's the groovy Moqtada al-Sadr.  Iraq's fattest thug  hides in Iran because he's afraid of his own country and his fellow Iraqis.  But  he's worshipped (wrongly) by a number in the US who see him as the  'resistance.'  There is an Iraqi resistance.  It is not represented by Moqtada  al-Sadr and never has been.  Moqtada's currently threatening to do something  (it's the same tired and empty threat he's always made) that if the US doesn't  leave, he's going to unleash his mob on US troops.  UAE's National Newspaper reports on  Moqtada but, note, they do so with a byline credited to "The National staff."  Tell too much truth about Moqtada and you better go anonymous.  The paper  reports that graffiti is popping up around Baghdad announcing the return of  Moqtada's mob:     On the buildings that line the streets and alleyways of  neighbourhoods in the Shiite strongholds of north-eastern Baghdad, similarly  foreboding messages admonish men against shaving their beards and women against  forsaking the abaya for western clothing. Iraq's security forces quickly  whitewash over the warnings, only for them to reappear elsewhere.  They appear to be a calling card of the Mahdi Army which, at the  height of its influence in Baghdad after the US-led invasion of 2003, prohibited  Iraqis from watching football on television on the ground that sport was against  the teachings of Islam. It also operated death squads and fought US troops and  Sunni militants with equal ferocity.   Again, Moqtada al-Sadr does not represent the Iraqi resistance.  He is  a threat to the Iraqi people, he has always been a threat to the Iraqi  people.     Turning to today's violence, Mohammed Tawfeeq (CNN) reports the Ministry of the Interiror's  Mustafa Saeid was shot dead in Baghdad, a Falluja sticky bombing claimed the  life of 1 police officer and injured two passer-bys, and a second Falluja sticky  bombing claimed the life of 1 police officer.  AFP notes a Baghdad bombing claimed the  lives of 2 police officers, Baghdad grenade attacks claimed 2 lives and left two  more people injured, a Baghdad mortar attack injured three poeple, a Baghdad  home bombing (dynamite) claimed the lives of 2 Iraqi "civilian contractors for  the Iraqi army" -- the two were cousins and three of their family members were  left injured, and gun attacks left four people in Baghdad injured.  Aswat al-Iraq notes 1 corpse was  discovered in Mosul and 1 person was injured "when police opened fire on him  accidently".  Aswat al-Iraq also reports an  Iskandariya bombing claimed the lives of 2 police officers and left two more  injured.     Following the US invasion, the US made these MEK residents of Camp Ashraf  -- Iranian refuees who had been in Iraq for decades -- surrender weapons and  also put them under US protection. They also extracted a 'promise' from Nouri  that he would not move against them. July 28,  2009 the world saw what Nouri's word was actually worth. Since that  Nouri-ordered assault in which at least 11 residents died, he's continued to  bully the residents. Iran's Fars News Agency reported last week  that the Iraqi military denied allegations that it entered the camp and  assaulted residents. Specifically, Camp Ashraf residents state, "The forces of  Iraq's Fifth Division invaded Camp Ashraf with columns of armored vehicles,  occupying areas inside the camp, since midnight on Saturday." Friday saw another attack which the Iraqi  government again denied.  Yesterday AP's Lara Jakes  reported that the Iraqi Parliament voted today to close down the  camp. AP reported that last Friday, at a UN  Security Council meeting, Iraq's Ambassador to the UN, Hamid al-Bayati, declared  that Iraq would "not force" the residents back to Iran "but it will encourage  them to go to a third country."  Alsumaria TV reports today that Ali al-Dbbagh --  aka Nouri's mouth -- has declared, "The council of ministers has committed to  implement an earlier decision about disganding the terrorist group People's  Mujahedeen of Iran, by the end of this year at the latest, and the necessity of  getting it out of Iraq."  Reuters notes that the Ministry of  Defense states it will investigate the allegations of an attack -- but such a  claim/boat might be taken more seriously if the ministry had, for example, a  minister.  But the security ministries aren't important enough for Nouri to get  around to naming them.     The violence hasn't stopped -- in fact, it's been on the rise for some time  now.  Why are US soldiers on the ground in Iraq.  Eight years and counting, what  has been accomplished?  How much more blood and money will go into this  war?         Nothing more vividly demonstrates the dissent within, and the  sectarian nature of, the Iraqi government than the failure of the coalition  partners to agree on the nominees for the three of the most significant cabinet  posts, namely those of defense, interior, and national security.  Almost four  months after this government was voted into office on December 21, 2010, these  three cabinet posts remain vacant because the prime minister and the leaders of  the other blocs -- indeed, even al-Maliki's bloc, the National Alliance, itself  -- could not agree on candidates that would get the parliament's vote of  confidence.  Al-Maliki was reported to have siad that he was prepared to wait a  year until he was ready to submit to parliament names of candidates to his  liking. As a result, al-Maliki has since been the acting minister for all three  ministers.     Today Aswat al-Iraq reports that MP "Safiya  al-Suheil [. . .] wondered on Tuesday about possibility of Iraq's commitment  towards the Security Agreement signed between Baghdad and Washington in 2008, at  a time when Iraq does not have Security Ministers." Pure happenstance, of  course, Aswat al-Iraq also reports Nouri "has  nominated Ibrahim al-Lamy" for Minister of the Interiror.  Nouri's been in no  great hurry to put together a complete Cabinet.  But US troops are on the ground  in Iraq.  Ensuring that Nouri is not tossed aside.  Why?        Visit one of America's best known corporation's online and their website  brags about the work they're doing on recycling, their donation to tsunami  relief and more, they'll need more than detangler spray to escape the latest  image problem. Joshua Gallu and Alex Nussbaum  (Bloomberg News) reported this  weekend, "Johnson & Johnson (JNJ), the  world's second-biggest seller of medical products, will pay $70 million after  admitting that the company bribed doctors in Europe and paid kickbacks in Iraq to win contracts and sell drugs and artificial  joints." Halah Touryalai (Forbes' Working Capital) observed, "In  typical settlement fashion, Johnson & Johnson did not admit or deny  wrongdoing but forked over $70 million between the SEC and the DOJ." From the Securities and Exchange Commission  press release on the charges:
  "The message in this and the SEC's other FCPA cases is  plain -- any competitive advantage gained through corruption is a mirage," said  Robert Khuzami, Director of the SEC's Division of Enforcement. "J&J chose  profit margins over compliance with the law by acquiring a private company for  the purpose of paying bribes, and using sham contracts, off-shore companies, and  slush funds to cover its tracks." Cheryl J. Scarboro, Chief of the SEC Enforcement  Division's Foreign Corrupt Practices Act Unit, added, "Bribes to public doctors  can have a detrimental effect on the public health care systems that potentially  pay more for products procured through greed and corruption." According to the SEC's complaint filed in federal  court in the District of Columbia, public doctors and administrators in Greece,  Poland, and Romania who ordered or prescribed J&J products were rewarded in  a variety of ways, including with cash and inappropriate travel. J&J  subsidiaries, employees and agents used slush funds, sham civil contracts with  doctors, and off-shore companies in the Isle of Man to carry out the  bribery.
 
  Peter Loftus and Jessica Holzer (Dow Jones Newswire) reminded, "The  news is the latest black eye for J&J, which has been grappling with a series  of product recalls because of manufacturing-quality lapses, as well as  government investigations of its U.S. marketing practices. J&J recently  agreed to heightened government oversight of manufacturing in its McNeil  Consumer Healthcare unit, the source of recalls of millions of bottles of  over-the-counter medicines including Tylenol since 2009."
  In other  corruption news, the Justice Dept announced Friday that a one-time  US Baghdad Embassy employee who stole close to $250,000 had received a prison  sentence:
  WASHINGTON -- A  former employee of the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad, Iraq, was sentenced today in  U.S. District Court in Alexandria, Va., to 42 months in prison for stealing  nearly $250,000 intended for the payment of shipping and customs services for  the embassy, announced Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer of the  Criminal Division and U.S. Attorney Neil H. MacBride for the Eastern District of  Virginia. Osama Esam Saleem Ayesh, 36, was also ordered to pay $243,416 in  restitution and a $5,000 fine, as well as to serve three years of supervised  release following his prison term. A federal jury convicted Ayesh on two counts  of theft of public money and one count of engaging in acts affecting a personal  financial interest. Ayesh was arrested at Dulles International Airport on Aug.  16, 2010, and indicted on Oct. 15, 2010, on the charges for which he was  convicted. Ayesh, a resident of Jordan, was hired by the Department of State  as a shipping and customs supervisor at the embassy in Baghdad, who oversaw the  shipments of personal property of embassy officials and personnel in Iraq. His  duties required that he maintain close contact with local Iraqi companies and  vendors with expertise in clearing goods through Iraqi customs. As a State  Department employee, Ayesh was aware that he would be subject to the conflict of  interest laws of the United States that prohibit government employees from using  their position for personal profit. According to court records, Ayesh used  his State Department computer to create a phony e-mail account in the name of a  real Iraqi contractor and used that e-mail account to impersonate the contractor  in communications with embassy procurement officials. He also established a bank  account in Jordan under his wife's name to further his criminal scheme and  falsified wire transfer instructions that directed U.S. government electronic  funds transfers to that account. Court records and evidence at trial showed  that Ayesh was personally involved in establishing and operating blanket  purchase agreements for the provision of customs clearance and delivery services  to the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad. From November 2008 to June 2010, Ayesh submitted  false invoices in the name of an Iraqi contractor -- which Ayesh fabricated on  blank stationery he kept in his embassy apartment -- and caused the U.S.  Department of State to wire $243,416 to his wife's account in Jordan. This  case was prosecuted by David Laufman of the Criminal Division's Fraud Section,  who is on detail to the Department of Justice from the Special Inspector General  for Iraq Reconstruction, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas McQuillan of the  Eastern District of Virginia. The Criminal Division's Office of International  Affairs provided assistance in this matter. The case was investigated by special  agents of the State Department's Office of Inspector General and the FBI's  Washington Field Office.
         Finally, at the Left Forum last month, Debra Sweet, director of World Can't Wait, moderated a panel on "Why We Resist"  with the Center for Constitutional Rights' Pardiss Kebriaei,  Iraq War resister Matthis Chiroux and journalists Eric Stoner of the War  Reisisters League.  This was the World Can't Wait panel and WCW posted the video of it on  Friday.  The plan was to note all three panelists.  I've since looked  at the week's schedule which includes a number of Congressional hearings.   There's a chance we won't get to note all three so I'm jumping to Matthis today  (we noted Pardiss Kebriaei yesterday) to make sure he's included.  Time and  space permitting, we will include Eric Stoner in a snapshot this week.        Matthis Chiroux: [. . .] I can't believe that I went to  Afghanistan, just like you [Eric Stoner] went to Afghanistan, except I went as  an occupier.  Not just as an occupier.  An Army journalist sent to try and help  justify what was going on, to try and suggest to the world that this chicken  s**t that is US imperialism is somehow chicken salad that's capable of filling  the bellies of the people of Afghanistan and Iraq.  That's why I resist. I would  like to think I would resist one way or another but I certainly have taken a  very -- uh -- personal stance against all of this.  If for no other reason than  because I deal with such guilt from the knowledge of what he just described to  all of you -- which makes me want to cry.  As a 27-year-old man -- the knowledge  that I am responsible for that . . . is a huge part of why I resist.  . . . I'm  sorry.  Debra will tell you I don't usually get emotionally effected like this  when I'm speaking on panels but, G** damn, nothing has changed.  It's been six  years and nothing has changed.  The people are still suffering so badly.  And  just because we can't see them doesn't mean that we shouldn't be able to feel  them. You know, we're supposed to be listening to Afghanistan today, just trying  feeling for one second what these people must be going through. What these  children -- and he's right, there are so many children in Afghanistan -- And not  these little devils we see running around the streets of America treating their  parents like they're their slaves.  I'm talking about beautiful children who  would do anything to help feed their families, who will try and sell drugs to  soldiers carrying guns so that they can take home a loaf of bread to their  mother.  The most beautiful eyes you've ever seen.  And the children of  Afghanistan, I can't even describe to you how beautiful these children are even  caked in mud and feces and urine, their eyes shine with such life. And to know  that Americans are there pointing guns at them -- that I was there pointing guns  at these children . . . To me, it is a matter of resist or die. I have felt so  suicidal in my life and I have had to make the decision that either I will fight  for justice or I will die for the crimes that I have committed and probably by  my own hand. And it drives me crazy when I hear Americans complain about not  being able to pay their f**king rents while there are millions and millions and  millions of people we have made homeless in the name of security in this  country.  But we know it's not for security.  We know what it's for. It's for  empire. It's just sick.                |