Friends,
On December 14 Carmen Trotta
and Martha Hennessy reported to prison. You can write to Carmen Trotta
#22561-021, FCI Otisville, Federal Correctional Institution, Satellite Camp, PO
Box 1000, Otisville, NY 10963 and Martha Hennessy #22560-021, FCI Danbury,
Route 37, Danbury, CT 06811. Use your full name in the return address. You can
send letters to them on white paper with blue or black ink but no drawings.
Check the website, kingsbayplowshares7.org,
for more detailed instructions. Kagiso, Max
http://commonwonders.com/defying-the-nuclear-sword/
Defying
the Nuclear Sword
Wednesday, September 4th, 2019
By Robert
C. Koehler
“. . . and
they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning
hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn
war anymore.”
These lost
words — Isaiah 2:4 — are nearly 3,000 years old. Did they ever have
political traction? To believe them today, and act on them, is to wind up
facing 25 years in prison. This is how far we haven’t come over the course of
what is called “civilization.”
Meet
the Kings Bay Plowshares 7:
Liz McAlister, Steve Kelly, Martha Hennessy, Patrick O’Neill, Clare Grady,
Carmen Trotta and Mark Colville. These seven men and women, Catholic peace
activists ranging in age from their mid-50s to late 70s, cut open the future,
you might say, with a pair of bolt cutters a year and a half ago — actually
they cut open a wire fence — and, oh my God, entered the Kings Bay Naval Base,
in St. Mary’s, Ga., without permission.
The Kings
Bay Naval base, Atlantic home port of the country’s Trident nuclear missile-carrying
submarines, is the largest nuclear submarine base in the world.
The seven
committed their act of symbolic disarmament on April 4, 2018, the fiftieth
anniversary of the assassination of Martin Luther King. Here’s what they did,
according to the Plowshares 7 website: “Carrying hammers and baby bottles of
their own blood,” they went to three sites on the base — the administration
building, a monument to the D5 Trident nuclear missile and the nuclear weapons
storage bunkers — cordoned off the bunkers with crime scene tape, poured their
blood on the ground and hung banners, one of which contained an MLK quote: “The
ultimate logic of racism is genocide.” Another banner read: “The ultimate logic
of Trident is omnicide.”
They also
spray-painted some slogans (such as “May love disarm us all”), left behind a
copy of Daniel Ellsberg’s book, The Doomsday Machine: Confessions of a
Nuclear War Planner, and, oh yeah, issued an indictment of the U.S.
military for violating the 1968 U.N. Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, signed
by 190 countries (including the United States).
Article VI of
the treaty reads: “Each of the Parties to the Treaty undertakes to pursue
negotiations in good faith on effective measures relating to cessation of the
nuclear arms race at an early date and to nuclear disarmament, and on a treaty
on general and complete disarmament under strict and effective international
control.”
Then they
waited to be arrested.
The plowshares
movement has been taking actions like this since 1980. The Kings Bay action was
approximately the hundredth.
Three of
the seven have been in prison ever since, and the other four, who were able to
make bail, have had to wear ankle bracelets, limiting and monitoring their
movement. In early August — indeed, between the anniversaries of the nuclear
destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki — the seven testified at a U.S. District
Court hearing in Brunswick, Ga. The charges were not dismissed and their trial
date is set for Oct. 21.
What will
happen, of course, is anyone’s guess. One of the defendants, Martha Hennessy (granddaughter
of Catholic Worker co-founder Dorothy Day), put the question this way: “Will we
be allowed to speak?”
That is to
say, will the judge give the defendants and their legal team a chance to open
the case to the size of humanity’s future — the omnicidal danger represented by
the nuclear weapons in U.S. possession — or will she insist on limiting the
case to the matter of trespassing and damaging (or belittling) government
property?
“We took
these actions to say the violence stops here, the perpetual war stops here — at
Kings Bay, and all the despair it represents,” said defendant Clare Grady.
“We took these actions grounded in faith and the belief that Jesus meant what
He said when He said, ‘Love your enemies,’ and in so doing offers us our only
option for hope.”
In other
words, will this trial truly be equal to the “crime” that it’s about? The crime
is the possibility of nuclear annihilation, the death of hundreds of millions
of people — and the fact that there is no way to hold a nation accountable . .
. at least not this nation . . . for its arrogant possession
and ongoing development of weapons of mass destruction.
Just for a
moment, try to imagine national policy based on “love your enemies.”
The mind
stops, crying out: Are you kidding me? What could possibly seem more absurd?
What could possibly ignite more cynicism? Hitler, Munich, blah blah blah.
National policy, especially for the world’s dominant superpower, is based on
the threat of unrelenting force. O Kings Bay Plowshares 7, what were you
thinking? Globally speaking, nothing but force is possible, or imaginable
without a dismissive snort.
But then a
pause sets in: “and they shall beat their swords into plowshares.”
This
concept, bigger than any specific religion, has failed (so far) to alter
history. Preparing for and waging war has dominated human collective action
throughout recorded history, and for nearly three-quarters of a century now,
the human race (or a fragment of it), has been in possession of weapons of mass
destruction, and some of the guardians continually plan to use them.
Here, for
instance, is a single sentence from the Nuclear Operations Handbook,
which was mistakenly uploaded by the Pentagon last June, then quickly removed
from public access, but not before the Federation of American
Scientists got ahold of it and reposted it: “Nuclear forces
must be prepared to achieve the strategic objectives defined by the President.”
Strategic
objectives? Our current president, the guy with access to the button, recently
suggested nuking hurricanes,
a preposterous idea that would essentially use their winds to spread radiation.
“Usable nukes”
are being developed, and the United States is a country married to endless war,
not to mention gerrymandering, voter suppression and a commitment to making
certain that peace remains politically marginalized and beyond the reach of
public opinion — thus guaranteeing that there is no way to bring political
accountability to our insane nuclear stockpile.
Enter the
Kings Bay Plowshares 7, trespassing in defiance of this crime against the
future. Ordinary citizens have
begun to hold the nation, and its military, accountable.
###
Donations can be sent
to Max Obuszewski, Baltimore Nonviolence Center, 431 Notre Dame Lane, Apt. 206,
Baltimore, MD 21212. Ph: 410-323-1607; Email: mobuszewski2001 [at]
comcast.net. Go to http://baltimorenonviolencecenter.blogspot.com/
"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
No comments:
Post a Comment