Thursday, April 17, 2008

Discuss LORD OF WAR VIDEO/War Protesters Use Tax Day To Send Message

The Hiroshima-Nagasaki Commemoration Committee will be hosting its latest FILM & SOCIAL CONSCIOUSNESS VIDEO SERIES. The next film, LORD OF WAR [ U.S. , 2005], will be shown Fri., Apr. 18 at AFSC, 4806 York Road [three blocks north of Cold Spring Lane ]. Doors open at 7 PM, and the video starts at 7:30 PM. A discussion follows. There is no charge, and refreshments will be available. Call 410-366-1637.

Nicholas Cage is Yuri Orlov, an arms broker who supplies weapons to dictators and human rights abusers, and Ethan Hawke is an Interpol agent on his trail. The movie is written and directed by Andrew Niccol and co-stars Jared Leto, Bridget Moynahan and Ian Holm. In real life, there is a Yuri Orlov, who is a human rights activist. The film opens with Orlov [Cage] standing in a sea of spent shell casings. As the credits roll, the film follows the life of a bullet from a munitions factory in Odessa , Ukraine to an African country where it is inserted in an AK-47, which is used to kill a boy. Can an arms dealer ever be forgiven?

War Protesters Use Tax Day To Send Message

by Dawn Gagnon

BANGOR, Maine - Opponents of the Iraq war spent Tuesday, the deadline for filing income tax returns, working to educate Mainers about the costs of war.

More than half of each federal income tax dollar paid by Maine taxpayers now goes toward past and current military expenses, according to Larry Dansinger, coordinator of the Maine War Tax Resistance Resource Center.

The group, camped outside the Bangor U.S. post office, was one of at least two Maine organizations that spent Tax Day handing out fliers they said “show where our tax dollars really go.” The other group, the Maine People’s Alliance, handed out fliers in Portland.

Though Dansinger noted that most Mainers now file their tax returns electronically, he said the resistance planned to hand fliers out to those who still do it the traditional way as a “symbolic” gesture.

“April 15 is a significant day for a lot of people in the U.S. because it’s the day their taxes are due,” Dansinger said.

According to data from the War Resisters League, with headquarters in New York City, 54 percent of the federal budget for the 2009 fiscal year - or $484 billion - goes toward past and current military expenses, including an estimated $200 billion for Iraq and Afghanistan war spending.

Dansinger said “the vast majority of Mainers,” based on informal polling, would rather see their tax dollars being used to support such things as health care, education and other public services.

“It’s Tax Day and we feel that it’s really important for people to realize there are two different value systems out there,” said Ben Chin, federal issues organizer for the Maine People’s Alliance.

“One is a value system of war and the other is investing in Americans - health care, education, social services,” Chin said. “What we’re basically trying to do is educate the public because right now I think we’re running dangerously close to getting used to something that we shouldn’t be getting used to.”

Chin said the MPA also planned to call upon Sens. Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins to “take a leadership role” against the war and bring U.S. troops home.

Also on Tuesday, the war tax center awarded grants funded with federal income tax dollars being withheld by some Mainers who don’t want their taxes used to support a war they neither support nor believe in.

“I will not pay our government to threaten and kill in my name,” Dansinger noted in an announcement leading up to Tuesday’s activities. “That would make me an accomplice to murder.”

On Tuesday, the center presented $500 grants of withheld tax money to individuals and to state, national and international groups the resisters say are working to counteract harm being done by the U.S. presence in Iraq. Several of those grants were given out during a brief gathering at the Peace & Justice Center of Eastern Maine:

  • Simon Beckford, 18, of Clifton, to help cover education costs. Beckford, who is being home-schooled by his parents, Peter and Julie Beckford, has decided not to register with Selective Services, required of males ages 18 to 25, a decision that likely will render him ineligible for financial aid for college and some kinds of jobs.

“I’ve always been interested in the truth behind things and where money goes and why people are in which political positions, and so I’ve been pretty aware of the realities of war and what militaries do to each other and to other countries and the environment,” Beckford said Tuesday.

Though he said he has made no decision about college, he does want to work as a political and grass-roots organizer.

  • Iraq Veterans Against the War. A representative from the group was not available to receive a grant Tuesday so the Rev. Gerald Oleson, vice president of the Bangor chapter of Veterans for Peace, accepted it on the group’s behalf.

According to Oleson, the IVAW was founded by Iraq War veterans in 2004. The group is calling for the immediate withdrawal of all occupying forces in Iraq, reparations for the human and structural damage Iraq has suffered, and full benefits and adequate health care for returning service men and women.

Dansinger said other grants were being given to the Western Mountains Peace Action Group in Franklin County promoting “truth in recruiting” and the Direct Aid Initiative, an international group providing medical care to Iraqi war refugees in Jordan and Syria.

© 2008 The Bangor Daily News

Donations can be sent to the Baltimore Nonviolence Center, 325 E. 25th St., Baltimore, MD 21218. Ph: 410-366-1637; Email: mobuszewski [at] verizon.net
"The master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles. The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their lives." Eugene Victor Debs

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