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THE CALL TO DRIVE OUT THE BUSH REGIME (folks, CIVIL WAR II has begun)
why the world can't wait dot net ^ | 11-2005 | really nutty dangerous subversives

Posted on 11/02/2005 7:21:07 PM PST by doug from upland

The Call to Drive Out the Bush Regime

 Sign the call now!

Your government, on the basis of outrageous lies, is waging a murderous and utterly illegitimate war in Iraq, with other countries in their sights.

Your government is openly torturing people, and justifying it.

Your government puts people in jail on the merest suspicion, refusing them lawyers, and either holding them indefinitely or deporting them in the dead of night.

Your government is moving each day closer to a theocracy, where a narrow and hateful brand of Christian fundamentalism will rule.

Your government suppresses the science that doesn't fit its religious, political and economic agenda, forcing present and future generations to pay a terrible price.

Your government is moving to deny women here, and all over the world, the right to birth control and abortion.

Your government enforces a culture of greed, bigotry, intolerance and ignorance.

People look at all this and think of Hitler — and they are right to do so. The Bush regime is setting out to radically remake society very quickly, in a fascist way, and for generations to come. We must act now; the future is in the balance.

Read more...
 
Endorsers Include

 

ACT UP, New York City
Imam Talib Abdur-Rashid, mosque of Islamic
Brotherhood; Justice Committee, Majlis Ash-Shura, NY
A.N.S.W.E.R. Coalition, NYC
After Downing Street Coalition
"Alberto Lovera" Bolivarian Circle, New York
Aimee Allison, army conscientious objector (Gulf War
90)/counter-Recruiter
Tom Ammiano, San Francisco Board of Supervisors
Aris Anagnos, Los Angeles
Dahoud Andre, Haitian community activist, Brooklyn, NY
Anti-Flag
Edward Asner
Axis of Justice

Mumia Abu-Jamal
Rosa Ayala, Justice for Janitors*
William Ayers, professor and author
Russell Banks, writer
Rev. Willie Barrow, Women Connecting*
Ed Begley, Jr.
Father Luis Barrios, Iglesia San Romero de Las
Americas, New York
Dave Berenson, Cleveland, OH, U.S. Green Party
Timuel D. Black
Jessica Blank, writer, actor
Blaze Bonpane, author
Bob Bossie, SCJ, 8th Day Center for Justice*
Elombe Brath, Patrice Lumumba Coalition, NYC
Dennis Brutus
Gabriel Byrne
, Actor
Campus Anti-War Network(CAN)
Tim Carpenter
, Director, Progressive Democrats of America
Che Cafe
Chicago ADAPT
Citizens For Legitimate Government
Kate Clinton, humorist
David Cobb, Green Party Presidential Candidate, 2004
Code Pink: Women for Peace
Steve Colman, poet
Comite Exigimos Justicia
Culture Clash
Barry Crimmins, political satirist, contributor Air America radio
Chris Daly, San Francisco Board of Supervisors
DC Anti-War Network
Rev. Greg Dell, Pastor, Broadway United Methodist Church
Democrats.com
Dominican Women's Development Center, New York
Tom Duane, NY State Senator
Michael Eric Dyson, author, "Is Bill Cosby Right?"
Steve Earle, musician
Edwin Ellis, President of Veterans for Peace, LA*
Eve Ensler
Michelle Esrick, actress, poet, filmmaker
Donelle Estey, artist, Artists Against the War
Christian Ettinger, exec. prod. of film "The Weather Underground"
Nina Felshin, curator, writer
Rev. John Fife
Jane Fonda
Michael Franti, musician
Aaron Freeman
Deborah Glick, NY State Assemblywoman
Global Justice and Peace Ministries, Riverside Church,
New York
Sam Greenlee, poet
André Gregory, theater director
Andy Griggs, US Labor Against the War, Exec. Board of United Teachers of LA
Jose Guerrero
Freddy Hahne
, Mindshaft Foundation
Haitian Coalition for Justice
Suheir Hammad, poet
Sam Hamill, Poets Against War
Kathleen Hanna, Le Tigre
Hermanidad Mexicana
Warren M. Hern, MD, MPH, PhD
, Director, Boulder Abortion Clinic
Hip Hop Caucus
Rev. Robert M. Hollum, pastor, Luther Place, Washington, DC
Marie Howe, poet and writer
Islamic Circle of North America (ICNA Relief USA)
Islamic Association of America
Abdeen Jabara, past president, American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee
Ron Jacobs
, writer
Bill T. Jones, dancer
Sarah Jones, poet and actor
Rickie Lee Jones, musician
Casey Kasem
Robin D.G. Kelley, Columbia University
C. Clark Kissinger
Frances Kissling, president, Catholics for Free Choice*
Rev. Earl Kooperkamp, St. Mary's Church*, NYC
Jonathan Kozol
Joyce Kozloff, writer
Ron Kovic, author, Vietnam veteran
Carter Kustera, artist

Martha Lavey, Chicago
Mark Leno, California Assemblyman
Rabbi Michael Lerner, editor of Tikkun magazine
James Levin, co-director of Cleveland Festival of Arts & Technology (Ingenuity)
Simon Levy, director, "What I Heard About Iraq" at Fountain St. Theater
Bruce Lincoln, professor, History of Religions, University of Chicago
Margaret Lindgren, FOR/LA (Fellowship of Reconciliation) Los Angeles, CA
Margarita Lopez, New York City Council Member
Haki R. Madhubuti, chairman, publisher, Third World Press
Gregory Maguire, author, "Wicked"
Make the Road by Walking, Bushwick, Brooklyn, NY
Bill Martin, philosopher
Luis Matos, union organizer, 1199, NY
Ellen McLaughlin, actress and playwright
Camilo Mejia, conscientious objector
Ann Messner, artist
Carly Miller, Clothing of the American Mind
Bill Mitchell, co-founder of Gold Star Families for Peace*
Leon Mobley, musician
Daniel Montoly, poet and writer, worker from the Dominican Republic
Tom Morello, Audioslave
Tracie Morris, poet
Andrew Muñana, Images Salón, East Los Angeles
National Lawyers Guild
Armando Navarro, chair and professor, Ethnic Studies, UC Riverside
Not in Our Name
Mike and Julie Nussbaum
Susan Nussbaum
Efia Nwangaza, director, African American Institute for Policy Studies, Greenville, SC

Outernational


Jose Padilla*, executive director, California Rural Legal Assistance (CRLA)
Grace Paley, writer
Reynaldo Garcia Pantaleon, visual artist, NY
Patrick Henry Democratic Club
Ruth Peña
The Network in Solidarity with the People of the Philippines

Peter Phillips PhD, Project Censored, Sociology Dept Sonoma State University
Jeremy Pikser, screenwriter, Bulworth
Jose Piña, Mestizarte*
Dr. Assad Pino, professor, Kent State University*
Harold Pinter, Nobel Prize winning playwright
Millions More Movement, Pittsburg/Antioch CA organizing committee
Sterling Plumpp
, poet
Kevin Powell, writer
Progressive Democrats of America
Jerry Quickley, poet and playwright
Victor Toro Ramirez, activista en el Sur del Bronx (South Bronx activist), Chilean former political prisoner.
Michael Ratner, Center for Constitutional Rights*
Reach Hip Hop Coalition
Raghava Reddy, stem cell biologist, biomedical scientist, film maker
Boots Riley, The Coup
Rosemary R. Ruether, theologian, professor
Douglas Rushkoff, author
Kalamu ya Salaam, Listen to the People
Dorthy Salem, historian and coordinator, women's studies
JD Sampson, Le Tigre
Sapphire, poet, writer
Rinku Sen, Colorlines*
Rafael Sencion, secretary general, Congreso Nacional Dominicano (Dominican National Congress)*
Richard Serra, artist
Cindy Sheehan
Stanley Sheinbaum, economist, LA
Nancy Spero, artist
Sunsara Taylor, Revolution newspaper
Studs Terkel
Gore Vidal
, writer
Kurt Vonnegut
Alice Walker
Wavy Gravy
Leonard Weinglass
, lawyer
Rev. Dave Weissbard, senior minister, The Unitarian Universalist Church, Rockford, IL
Cornel West, Princeton University
Saul Williams, poet
Standish E. Willis, National Conference of Black Lawyers
Krzysztof Wodiczko, artist
Ann Wright, former US diplomat, resigned in protest of Iraq war
Leland Y. Yee, Speaker pro Tem, California State Assembly
Zephyr, graffiti artist, writer
Robert Zevin, Robert Brooke Zevin Associates, Inc.
David Zirin, author, "What's My Name, Fool? Sports and
Resistance in the United States"
Howard Zinn, historian, "A Peoples' History of the United States"



TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: academia; answer; asnerterkelvidal; barkingmoonbats; civilwar2; codepink; commies; communists; cornel; cw2; cwii; dirtbags; edasner; frymumia; hollywoodleft; icna; idiots; lefties; leftistdeciet; leftistliars; leftistlies; leftists; leftisttreason; loonies; losers; lowlifes; moonbats; morons; nion; nlg; noi; notinourname; oldlefties; ratbastards; redjihad; religiousleft; scumbags; sds; sedition; stuckonstupid; subversives; theusualsuspects; traitors; treason; unholyalliance; usefulidiots; weathermen; west
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To: nicmarlo

Drats, no chance then that she'll pay politically for it.
Pretty much she could say almost anything insane and she'd stay in her officee.


161 posted on 11/02/2005 8:44:30 PM PST by Darksheare (I'm not suspicious & I hope it's nutritious but I think this sandwich is made of mime.)
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To: Darksheare

Not only stay, but encouraged to speak socialist propaganda all the more. : (


162 posted on 11/02/2005 8:46:24 PM PST by nicmarlo
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To: nicmarlo

Yeah, I noticed the differnce.
She is calling for violent overthrow.
And she will stay in office more than liekly.

All Al D'amato said was 'Putz', and they were "Oh, that's HORRIBLE!" and he was out of office..


163 posted on 11/02/2005 8:48:03 PM PST by Darksheare (I'm not suspicious & I hope it's nutritious but I think this sandwich is made of mime.)
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To: nicmarlo
Islamic Circle of North America

Grassroots organization working to educate Muslims and non-Muslims, fight against injustice, and benefit communities.

164 posted on 11/02/2005 8:48:35 PM PST by nicmarlo
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To: doug from upland

My husband called a little while ago, after jumpseating on a flight back to the state where his base is located. He said that right after takeoff, the Captain of the flight turned to the First Officer and said something like..."So...how many more days do you think George Bush will be in office?"

My husband said to me that unfortunately for both pilots, dh had a good amount of coffee which added plenty to the lively discussion. And fyi (surprise), the crew was based out of SFO.


165 posted on 11/02/2005 8:49:28 PM PST by getmeouttaPalmBeachCounty_FL (Undocumented border patrol agent.)
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To: Darksheare

What's in the water down there, darks? It is like it's not part of the United States of America, founded by George Washington and all those other patriots with spines.


166 posted on 11/02/2005 8:49:35 PM PST by nicmarlo
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To: nicmarlo

Mmm... radon bearing granite substrate?


167 posted on 11/02/2005 8:50:39 PM PST by Darksheare (I'm not suspicious & I hope it's nutritious but I think this sandwich is made of mime.)
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To: Darksheare

Could be.....with all the skyscrapers....wonder if it's also due, in part, to lack of sunshine? Oregon's that way to, ya know....lots of rain, little sun...they're really bad over there. : )


168 posted on 11/02/2005 8:53:04 PM PST by nicmarlo
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To: groanup
"They wouldn't be comfortable on an all day Boy Scout hike."

Maybe in the Progressive Boy Scouts, with NAMBLA members as scoutmasters.

169 posted on 11/02/2005 8:53:08 PM PST by TheClintons-STILLAnti-American
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To: nicmarlo

Could be the hamster cage effect too as you mentioned.
Closed in, running in small wheels, hectic and frenzied.


170 posted on 11/02/2005 8:56:52 PM PST by Darksheare (I'm not suspicious & I hope it's nutritious but I think this sandwich is made of mime.)
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To: Darksheare
the hamster cage effect

Wish we could just lock 'em all in!

nite darks. see ya later. sleep well.

171 posted on 11/02/2005 8:58:00 PM PST by nicmarlo
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To: nicmarlo

"Wish we could just lock 'em all in!"

Sopmeone woudl still have to clean it..
*yick*


Have a good evening as well.
See you tomorrow.


172 posted on 11/02/2005 9:00:49 PM PST by Darksheare (I'm not suspicious & I hope it's nutritious but I think this sandwich is made of mime.)
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To: nicmarlo

"Sopmeone woudl "

Wow.. typos got me.
"Someone would"..
*sigh*


173 posted on 11/02/2005 9:01:20 PM PST by Darksheare (I'm not suspicious & I hope it's nutritious but I think this sandwich is made of mime.)
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To: Rokurota

Casey Kasem is about the only name that surprised me.
Add another one to the list of losers.


174 posted on 11/02/2005 9:02:07 PM PST by 4integrity
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To: doug from upland

Do leftists have jobs, or do they just give themselves titles like "humorist, philosopher, actor?"


175 posted on 11/02/2005 9:02:21 PM PST by Casloy
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To: Rome2000
Things will be right in this country the day this pack of socialist crook commie sex pervert baby killing marxist scum wierdos who signed this stupid pack of lies are rounded up and dealt with. If the subhuamn islamonazi enemy abroad is sucessful in launching another attack in the homeland, we will no longer have the luxury of tolerating the enemy within

I agree 100 percent but question the wisdom of waiting for another homeland event before dealing with these traitors.
176 posted on 11/02/2005 9:13:01 PM PST by Wolfhound777 (It's not our job to forgive them. Only God can do that. Our job is to arrange the meeting)
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To: groanup

Only if it was someone that they thought was weaker and then they'd send their bodygaurd and their lawyer.


177 posted on 11/02/2005 9:16:15 PM PST by tiki
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To: doug from upland

Damn I'm out of gun oil.


178 posted on 11/02/2005 9:22:05 PM PST by Logical me (Oh, well!!!)
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To: All

Frequently Asked Questions
F.A.Q. (frequently asked questions)

Note: Please note that new additions have been made within the text - 10/20

> Q: Okay, I've read your call. And I sure don't like Bush. But is it really as bad as you say?

A: No. It's probably worse. There is no doubt that there are crimes being done and plans being hatched that are beyond the ones listed in our call and beyond your imagination. On top of this, way too many people are letting themselves get lulled into a gradual acceptance of the outrages that are going on, and allowing themselves to be blinded to the actual direction of things. So it is as bad as we say — and it's getting worse.

> Q: But it's not fascism yet, is it?

A: No it's not. But what's your point? That we should wait 'til it is, when it'll be much much harder to defeat? And look — if all this is not bad enough for you already, if you can look at Abu Ghraib or the indefinite solitary detention of Jose Padilla solely on Bush's say-so, if you can watch the debate over whether Harriet Miers is "Christian" enough to sit on the Supreme Court, if you can do all that and more without puking and still console yourself that at least it's not fascist — then something's wrong. You know it and we know it.

> Q: I don't like those things either, but it seems as if Bush is actually losing power. First there was Cindy Sheehan and falling public support for the war in Iraq, then all the anger around his handling of Katrina, and now even people in his own party are attacking him about Harriet Miers. Isn't the Bush presidency really on the rocks? Won't it just sink of its own accord?

A: No. While the Bush Regime has suffered some important political setbacks, it is like a wounded animal, most dangerous when cornered. So long as he is president, there are many ways that Bush and his regime can bounce back and re-seize the initiative. For instance, Daniel Ellsberg, the man who exposed the Pentagon Papers in the 70's and who knows quite a bit about the inner workings of the U.S. government, has warned that the Bush administration is counting on another 911 type incident to change public opinion and enable the regime to bring in a draft and a clampdown "that will make the Patriot Act look like the Bill of Rights."

On the other hand, Bush is hurting — and if we don't seize the initiative now, if we don't press our advantage, if we don't all throw in and demand his ouster, if we are stupid and passive enough to allow him to regroup . . . then SHAME ON US.

> Q: But who will replace Bush? Won't it just be worse?

A: To answer the second question first, no, it won't be worse; it will be much, much better, it will be like removing a forty-pound tumor from your gut. We will be a hell of a lot closer to ending this obscene war in Iraq, to ending the American torture camps at Guantanamo, Abu Ghraib, Bagram and who know where else, to stopping religious fanatics from deciding who makes the laws, to the right to abortion not being under imminent threat, etc. How in the world will that be worse?

And, by the way, there won't be a "President Cheney" either — this movement is going to send Bush, Cheney and the rest of those fascists packing, and they can take their whole damn program with them.

What there will be is a people that have driven out a monstrous clique and are newly energized and organized and ready to take society in a much much better direction.

> Q: Yes, but what does come next?

A: Again, the first thing that "comes next" will be an energized people, in their millions, that have lifted their heads and are finally acting for basic social justice. After that, there are people in "World Can't Wait" who are working for everything from impeachment to communist revolution. And isn't debating that out a hell of a lot better than talking about "how much more can we take before we move to Canada?"

> Q: But aren't there communists in World Can't Wait?

A: Yeah, there are. Supporters of the Revolutionary Communist Party helped initiate it. They're in it because they think it's absolutely urgent to get rid of this regime, that it would both lift a huge burden from the world and would also give people a sense of their own potential power, and they think all that would open up avenues to get to the society they want. Same as a whole lot of other people in World Can't Wait — which, by the way, includes Greens, Christians, Republicans, anarchists, Muslims, Jews, feminists, Democrats, pacifists, and people who claim no affiliation — who also think it's urgent to drive out the Bush Regime and who also think it can help lead to bigger changes that they want in society, coming from their own viewpoints.

But to turn the question around, if you refuse to pitch in to November 2, when you know that this is what has to be done, just because there are communists in it, then you need to think about how well that worked back in Nazi Germany (when the many forces opposed to Hitler could not find the ways to unite). And how exactly would you explain your particular brand of "abstinence only" policy to a prisoner at Abu Ghraib or a teenager in Tennessee who desperately needs an abortion or someone whose mother was killed at a checkpoint near Falluja? And then after you think about that, you need to actually start working on November 2. To stand aside at this point is really unconscionable.

> Q:I've heard rumors that there'll be Anarchy in the streets on November 2. What about that?

A: This is definitely a loaded question, and barely deserves an answer. The fact is that November 2 will be a day of mass political action — demonstrations and marches that reflect the gravity of the situation, the determination of the people to stop it, and the hope this action represents. People will politically express their determination to drive out this regime, coming (as the Call states) "to the downtowns and town squares and set out from there, going through the streets and calling on many more to JOIN US." As one can see from reading through the call to drive out the Bush Regime, World Can=t Wait and the events of November 2nd are NOT calling for violence and they are definitely not calling to remove the Bush regime from office by any means other than the truly massive societal rejection it will take to do so. Any attempts to say otherwise are not what November 2nd is about.


We should realize that over the past several years — and as a crucial part of what must be resisted and reversed — the people's right to political expression has been drastically curtailed. In New York, for example — that supposed bastion of liberalism — the police have, in the past few years, attacked demonstrators, penned them in, illegally held hundreds in jail for several nights before they were either acquitted or had their charges dismissed, illegally interrogated and/or otherwise intimidated them, called them "terrorists", and prevented them from gaining legal permits to rally and demonstrate.

To those spreading groundless rumors about November 2: do you realize that you're aiding that very process of criminalizing dissent? Let's be blunt here. Do you agree with the Bush Regime's push to criminalize and suppress protest? And tell us — what is it that you find so objectionable in people rising to resist the whole fascist package of this regime? Do you have some love for the Patriot Act, with its measures of surveillance and spying and break—ins, and with its lumping of protest and terrorism? Do you support the White House commands that people "watch what they say?"

Are you for the purging of radical and even liberal professors who speak out from the campus? And what do you think about the jailing of Jose Padilla for over three years and counting, without any charges whatsoever, on the basis that the president thinks he might be a terrorist? (Bush's words, as we remember, were, "trust me — he's a bad guy.")

Enough, okay? Stop the rumor-mongering and do something to support people who are actually trying to stop this monster.

> Q: But what about the Democrats? Why can't we make them fight harder, and then vote Bush out in 2006? That sounds more realistic.

A: If you're trying to actually stop the Bush program and reverse the direction he's taking society, that's the most unrealistic plan possible. First of all, the Democrats won't win. And second, even if somehow they did win, a) they agree with the Republicans on the war and repression and many other major issues, and b) they won't challenge them on the ones they don't agree on.

And besides — let's stop being like Charlie Brown, eternally hoping that Lucy won't pull the football away as we run up to kick it. Face it: if you asked this question, you've been pouring your hopes, money and energy into the Democrats for years now. And how's that been working for you?

> Q: What if this polarizes people?

A: Good. You need argument and debate in order to change people's minds. You need lines to be drawn sharply for people to get up and act and make change. You need all this to get society to move. Name any progressive change that didn't polarize people. The problem right now is that people are finding too many ways to live in the moral shadows of this regime.

The people in power right now are wreaking terrible suffering on the world and they are attempting to bring down even worse. Anyone who supports them is WRONG, and they need to learn that. The people trying to drive out this regime are doing a great thing, and they are RIGHT, and they need to start acting like it. And the people sitting on the fence are. . . well, they need to get off it. Now. To refuse to take a stand when the fate of the world is at stake is morally bankrupt and unacceptable.

> Q: Maybe you're right. But it seems so hard to take on a whole regime. Wouldn't it be better to take on one thing — like the war, or torture?

A: People should righteously fight against every outrage, and we should all support such resistance. But all these outrages are part of an entire program, an entire direction, that is right now represented by these people in power and unless they are stopped, that program will not be deterred. Again, without taking anything away from those fights, we don't want to fight over deckchairs or even lifeboats on the Titanic, when we need to change the whole direction of the ship.

> Q: But you're talking about hundreds of thousands and eventually millions. Can we really get all those people mobilized? Can we really realize the vision in the Call?

A: There are millions of people who not only voted against Bush, they poured their money and time into working against him. They didn't do that because they loved John Kerry, they didn't do it because there was this or that part of Bush's agenda that they objected to — they did it because they were sickened by the whole direction of this country under Bush. If anything, more people feel that way today than ever. Our Call speaks to these people; our demand is their demand. The more we've gotten this messabe out there — in radio ads, with the Call, and so on — the more that people have responded and stepped forward. And yes we have a lot more to do to reach the goal — a hell of a lot. But if we spread the word fast enough and far enough, if we really organize with all we've got in these next two weeks, if we reach into their hearts, if we work and think and struggle like we never have before. . . then we can do it. The potential exists. It has to be realized.

And it can be. If you help make it happen. November 2 can and must be a real beginning — the day that marks the beginning of the end of the Bush Regime. This CAN be done — if you join in.

> Q: But "regime change" is scary.

A: Not as scary as "regime staying in power."

> Q: I just don't know. There's too much tradition in this country, too many good people, too many safeguards, for fascism to get established. I just think that it can't happen here.

A: I wonder what the good German people in 1932 thought about fascism, and then I look at what it meant to be a good German by 1935. A good German in 1935 kept his mouth shut and didn't dare say a word against the Nazi Regime. They closed their eyes as Jews, Communists, and homosexuals where dragged of to concentration camps. Are we there yet? No, but we're moving in that direction quickly and quietly. What has changed over the past five years that indicates a fascist trajectory?

We have a president that was selected rather than elected.

We are aggressively waging war on a country based on lies.

We are ignoring international laws and torturing people who may be guilty of nothing more than defending themselves.

The president select has given himself the right to detain anyone, on the merest suspicion, with no right to due process.

The president select uses medieval religious fundamentalism to determine policies on birth control, abortion, and basic rights of gays and lesbians.

A mouthpiece of Bush, David Horowitz, has spies in Universities across the country shutting down progressive teaching in the classrooms.

A mouthpiece of Bush, William Bennett, makes racist public statements that "crime would decrease if we aborted all black babies" and Bush only stated that the comment was "inappropriate."
Replacing a day of rescue after Katrina with a day of prayer, as the military hijacked all the rescue buses to "secure the territory."
Replacing AIDS education and condoms with prayer and abstanence only programs which is nothing less than genocide. This is clearly a new direction and it's moving quickly. Hitler's fascism was based on nationalism and "racial purity" Bush's fascism is based on biblical law and obedience. Even Catherine Crier, a former republican Judge in Texas, states in her book exposing the religious elements in government, "Be afraid, be very afraid." Theocrats are infiltrating some of the highest positions in government, generally through appointments made by Bush. Those in positions of power that aren't theocrats are doing nothing to stop this trajectory.



Q: But isn't your organization too negative? Don't we need to be motivating people with a positive vision and isn't saying: no torture, no lies, no theocracy, etc. too negative and won't inspire anyone?



Anyone who isn't inspired by the vision of forcing Bush to step down and take his whole theocratic global empire agenda with him has learned to accept the unconscionable. I mean really, I can just picture these people sitting on the sidelines of the abolitionist movement complaining, "Those people are so negative. All they do is talk about how bad slavery is."

WAKE UP! There is no positive vision that any of us would want to be part of that does not include driving out this criminal regime. There is no sidestepping that. That is not "negative" — it is reality.

>
Certainly while we are driving this regime from power, we need to be talking about what we want to replace this regime with, and we need people with different perspectives involved in this effort. But we're not going to replace this regime with something better until we drive it from power.


* * * * *


from 9/29:

From the organizers: We think it's a great thing that the most common question is not whether we should drive out the Bush regime, but whether it's possible, how we're going to do it, and what will replace it. We appreciate your feedback as we continue this conversation.

Is this possible? How do you drive out a regime? What will November 2nd look like?
If we drive out the Bush regime, what will replace it?
> Is this possible? How do you drive out a regime? What will November 2nd look like?
In recent years, millions have spoken out, protested, refused to comply with outrageous new repressive measures, given money, voted, and more. Still, the Bush juggernaut of war, repression and hurtful fundamentalist morality has rolled ahead. All this has shown two things:

1. There are indeed tens of millions who are deeply disturbed by and opposed to the whole direction that the Bush administration is dragging our world into.

2. The will of the people means nothing to the Bush regime. The people's will must be forged into an organized political resistance which repudiates and reverses the whole direction of society, and forces Bush himself from office.

Of course, everyone wants to know exactly what steps will be taken to create a political situation where these things happen. But setting out to drive out a regime, in particular this regime, in this country has never been done before and it is not possible to say exactly what steps will be required or what its final days will look like.

The future is unwritten. Right now, we need very urgently to start writing a new chapter.

Think about this: When four young people sat in at a lunch counter in the South, they didn't know exactly what forms of struggle the Civil Rights movement would develop or how many and who would join them. When women and doctors developed networks to provide abortions and held speak-outs to make it legal, they didn't know exactly what court ruling or piece of legislation would codify this right.

They did these things because living one more day without resistance was intolerable. And, by doing what was right and not compromising, they set new terms for society, changed what was deemed possible and realistic and were able to galvanize and activate many thousands more in ways that couldn't have been predicted.

Today we are facing an unprecedented situation. The challenge is bigger, the stakes are higher, and the window of opportunity is being hammered shut rapidly. There is a moment to seize right now while public support for Bush is at its lowest and millions are seething with anger and aching with desire to affect things. The world cannot wait. The Bush regime must be driven from power. But, we must leave the comfortable ruts of familiar territory and politics-as-usual if we are to stand a chance.

Think of how many people were inspired by the uncompromising and courageous stand of Cindy Sheehan. We are in a moment when one person stepping boldly forward, pointing out that the emperor not only has no clothes, but is a lying, callous brute, can change the whole national discourse. Imagine what can happen when hundreds of thousands, on one day, refuse to bite their tongues or stay at home.

November 2nd, 2005 will be a launch of a new kind of movement, a society-wide resistance. It holds the potential to break open new space and possibilities for the struggle going forward.

November 2nd, 2005 must be a day when history starts to turn.

November 2nd will be a day when those who hate and fear the future Bush is creating will pour into the streets together, out from beneath the suffocating “mandate” Bush claimed last November 2nd, out of the “acceptable” political framework that forces people to speak in “reasoned” tones about compromise positions, out of the dynamic of fighting Bush's outrages one at a time constantly losing ground to the whole onslaught, out of the logic of waiting…and waiting…and waiting for someone somewhere else to say what must be said and do what must be done, while each day people grow accustomed to unspeakable crimes.

On November 2nd, in society-wide outpourings – in large cities and small towns, emptying high schools and colleges and lining the highways in rural areas, buzzing through the media and provoking frank debates among families, friends and coworkers – we will say: NO MORE! WE REFUSE TO BE RULED IN THIS WAY! BUSH DOES NOT REPRESENT US AND WE WILL DRIVE HIM OUT! THE WORLD CAN'T WAIT!

Everyone will be clear – this outpouring is just the beginning of a new kind of movement which takes the offensive in society and really wages a pitched political battle for the whole direction of the future. The gatherings will bring together the impatience of the youth who walk out of school, with the experience of those from the 60's generation, with the stature and voices of prominent artists and intellectuals, together with the anger and perspective of those who have been hardest hit by the Bush program of repression and heightened poverty and racism. The organizers will direct participants to trade phone numbers and emails with other protesters, to start up discussion groups and book-clubs about fascism and resistance movements, building communities of resistance going forward.

By bringing together hundreds of thousands nationwide in outpourings of many sizes which become the lead story in small towns and large cities on the news that night, this day will give heart and inspiration to millions of others who are looking for a way to stop this direction and will very quickly draw them into an organized resistance. It will put a challenge to many who still support Bush, causing them to question and, for some, begin to break with a program that is not in their interests. It will also give notice to the regime and its die-hard supporters that they will not have a free-hand in reshaping the world, leaving them further exposed in the eyes of millions.

This day alone will not stop the regime, but it will introduce a whole new dynamic and will enable millions to make a big leap towards a movement that can stop it. This day will embolden individuals and groups everywhere to speak up, to defend others who come under attack, to challenge the Bushian mentality and program everywhere it pops up – from the local school boards pushing “intelligent design” and Abstinence Only, to the pulpits promoting hurtful intolerance of gays and non-Christians, to the unjust war and continuing torture, and beyond.

November 2nd is a day for which thousands must immediately throw in all their energies and time, creativity and critical thought, connections, skills and finances to pull off on a scale that accomplishes this important beginning.

From there, further organization and planning will be required, but all of it will be in a new context and with new strength. As organizers of the World Can't Wait – Drive Out the Bush Regime, we pledge to take responsibility for leading and broadening the core of those leading this all the way through. We will hold a national summit to chart our next steps, bringing to bear all the strength and momentum and lessons we have gathered and surge ahead on a higher level which impacts the terrain again nationally and internationally.

Years from now, when children want to know the character of their parents -- as they lived in a country that was normalizing torture, moving to condemn half the population to enforced motherhood or back-alley dangers, attacking science and critical thought, waging wars of preemption based on outrageous lies, snatching people off the street without lawyers or charges, and no major office-holder was making a stink – they will ask, “Were you in the streets that day, on November 2nd, 2005?”




> If we drive out the Bush regime, what will replace it?
Our government's agenda, actions and direction are intolerable. We must act now; the future is in the balance.

What the world needs most at this moment is massive and broad political resistance to the Bush regime. We can and must bring millions of people into motion to stop and reverse the political direction the Bush regime is dragging the country and the world. We must drive the Bush regime from office.

The question of what will replace the Bush regime should be discussed and debated as we join together and work shoulder-to-shoulder toward our common political goal. There are, there will be, and there should be many diverse views on this question among us. Our unity is embodied in the Call and our main slogan, The world can't wait—Drive out the Bush regime!

Answered from another angle by the World Can't Wait Youth & Students:

What is the point of the question? Are you saying that if we don't have a full vision of where society needs to ultimately go that we should not go anywhere? Are you saying that people should not unite broadly on a great need that desperately calls out to be done, by millions of people all around the planet, because people disagree about what to do once that need is met?

Let's take this outlook into other realms. Imagine being in a prison, and knowing that everyone in there, or the vast majority of people, were unwillingly there and wanted to get out. Now imagine you had a plan to break through the walls. You had a vehicle that could bust the wall open and free the prisoners, but you heard that it would take all of the people, or the majority of the inmates, to unite to operate the vehicle in order to bust through the wall, and, in order to do that, people needed to first escape their assigned duties that the guards were telling them they needed to stay within.

If you heard this plan, saw its viability, and saw, while difficult, it was reasonable, and achievable, in fact the only way to actually get out of the prison, would you say, “well, f- this plan, I am not getting down if you don't know what we are going to do once we get past the walls.”

THAT'S CRAZY! When the walls come down, a whole new world of possibility will open up, and we need to have talked about what we should do with the potential that does open up. But as we do so, let's not lose sight of where we are, and where we will be. And let's not lose sight of the fact that a more appropriate analogy may not be a prison, or even a plantation. A more appropriate analogy may be a ghetto, or a concentration camp. The World Can't Wait, Drive Out the Bush Regime.


179 posted on 11/02/2005 9:23:36 PM PST by doug from upland (David Kendall -- protecting the Clintons one lie at a time)
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To: All

Battle over Nov. 2 high school walkouts in LA
Hear from students, a school board member, and WCW organizers standing up for the right of high school students to walk-out and join protests Nov. 2nd without being harrassed or arrested by police, and without punishment from school.

From LA high school students:

RESIST OR DIE!

November 2nd marks Bush’s reelection, but after 2005, it will be remembered as the beginning of the end of the Bush regime. On November 2nd thousands of people will be leaving jobs, leaving schools, and taking to the streets. This is a time to take action. What else needs to happen before we act? Go back to segregation? New Orleans, the war in Iraq, and these Supreme Court nominations are proof enough that this regime must go.

Bush is a threat to society. He is drifting society towards fascist theocracy with its roots in the Bible. Bush is letting people die in Iraq. He’s against abortion. He wants to take women’s rights away. He hasn’t said anything about the minutemen on the border. He’s a threat to our future.

We as high school students not only have the right to join this movement, but responsibility to do so. We are going to have high school walkouts all over the country on November 2nd.

In Los Angeles, principals and administrators are trying to stop us from doing this. At Locke, the principal threatened to expel a student because she was passing out posters telling about the genocidal comments of William Bennett and how this is part of why we have to drive out the Bush regime. At Banning, the principal forced a student to walk around the school and take down all the stickers and posters about November 2nd. Then he cancelled the speakout she was working on, which she had permission to schedule at the school. At Reseda, school police told a student she would get a $700 ticket if she walked out of school on November 2nd. And at Fairfax, some teachers started scheduling tests for November 2nd and telling students their grades would be lowered if they missed the test.

Our answer to all this is: F*ck their threats, we’re changing the world!

The administrators are using the same tactics as the Bush administration: fear. They are trying to scare us so we’ll back off and not walk out or go against Bush. What are these threats compared to what Bush is doing? They are nothing.

On top of this, their own policy says we students have the right to walk out of school and the administrators are not allowed to try to stop us! This was in a memo from the Los Angeles Unified School District that was sent to all the principals on October 26, 2005. That memo should be made public to all students and parents. People should support the high school students and make sure these administrators don’t try to punish any students for walking out on November 2nd.

We owe it to the millions of people that are getting tortured, getting murdered, and suffering around the world to do this. Resist or Die - it has come down to that slogan. If we don’t resist right now we won’t have a chance to again. Right now the future is in everybody’s hands. It is up to us. The question is what kind of world do you want to live in? Will you accept everything this regime stands for? If you don’t, then you must join this movement. Join the school walkouts. Join us on Wilshire Blvd. at 12 noon on November 2nd and in Westwood at the Federal Building at 5pm.

-Sara Escudero from Reseda High School and LJ from Los Angeles High School





Urgent Message to Educators- from Andy Griggs
Steering committee US Labor against the War and
member of UTLA board of directors (Organizations for identification purposes only)

AN URGENT MESSAGE TO LOS ANGELES EDUCATORS AND ALL THOSE CONCERNED WITH SOCIAL JUSTICE ON THE WORLD CANT WAIT CALL TO DRIVE OUT THE BUSH REGIME

I would like to echo the sentiments of the Oakland Educational Association who recently unanimously passed a resolution to support the right of participation in the November 2nd. 2005 day of protest and support the policy of no reprisals against students, teachers, and others in the school community who may take-off work or school to take part in protest activities that day. The author of this resolution Larry Felson, teacher and OEA site rep at Oakland High, Oakland, California wrote:

The continuing slaughter of the Iraqi people! The exposure of Bush and the government surrounding New Orleans and the horrendous treatment of Black people. The vicious attack on poor and immigrant youth and youth of color represented by "No Child Left Behind," as well as the attempt to turn our schools into recruiting centers for their wars of expansion and greed! These are outrageous crimes that must be stopped!
As the WORLD CANT WAIT Call puts it: "The Bush Regime is setting out to remake society very quickly, in a fascist way, and for generations to come. A new movement is now forming to stop this disastrous course by taking action and on November 2nd it begins: a mass political resistance that will not stop until this regime is driven from office."

There have been reports that at Fairfax High and other Los Angeles schools there have been cases of harassment and intimidation of students who are organizing for the Nov. 2 day of protests. I urge LA administrators to allow students the exercise of their rights to express their opinion and to further encourage all young people to question those policies that will affect them so deeply--whether because of cuts to education and other social services that will limit their opportunities--or, the even more obvious threat to them--a life in the military where they can be used to kill others in a war that is based on lies and deception!

I join with Larry Felson and the Oakland Educators Association in calling all educators and others across the country to take up WORLD CANT WAIT/DRIVE OUT THE BUSH REGIME activities on November 2nd and to support a policy of no reprisals against those who choose to participate. NOW IS THE TIME TO ACT!





Statement in Support of High School Students
Participating in Nov. 2 Actions
High school and middle school students throughout the country are organizing to take their part in powerful political actions on Wednesday, Nov. 2 to launch the movement to Drive Out the Bush Regime. In southern California student organizers for Nov. 2 are reporting threats and intimidation by school authorities, including failing grades, tickets for truancy, and suspensions.

On October 26 a memo was sent to every principal from LAUSD directly stating “Do not attempt to prevent students from leaving the campus” on Nov. 2. This policy must be made known to students throughout LAUSD immediately, and violations of this order by school administrators and the police must stop. And more, LAUSD must assure the parents and the public that students will not be punished for taking political action on Nov. 2. At a time when military recruiters roam the high schools of this country pressuring underage students to join a military engaging in wars of aggression and torture, students can not be stopped from taking political action to put an end to this regime and affect the future of this world and their place in it.

We call on LAUSD to immediately publicize their policy concerning the right of students to engage in politically protected activity, and all of the memos that have been issued regarding the Nov. 2 actions should be made public, so that students, parents, and the public at large will know that the rights of the students to take political action are being protected.

October 28, 2005

World Can’t Wait! Drive Out the Bush Regime! - L.A.


180 posted on 11/02/2005 9:26:45 PM PST by doug from upland (David Kendall -- protecting the Clintons one lie at a time)
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