David Swanson's Blog, page 200

November 8, 2011

Charlottesville Event with David Swanson's New Book: "When the World Outlawed War"

WHAT: David Swanson with his new book "When the World Outlawed War"


WHEN: Wednesday, 7 p.m., November 16, 2011


WHERE: Random Row Books
315 West Main Street  
Charlottesville, VA 22902
434-295-2493
http://randomrow.wordpress.com


Flyer: PDF.


 


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Published on November 08, 2011 10:31

November 7, 2011

Fahrenheit 11/11/11

Believe it or not, November 11th was not made a holiday in order to celebrate war, support troops, or cheer the 11th year of occupying Afghanistan.  This day was made a holiday in order to celebrate an armistice that ended what was up until that point, in 1918, one of the worst things our species had thus far done to itself, namely World War I.


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Published on November 07, 2011 23:35

November 3, 2011

Public Pressure Is Slowly Ending Afghanistan War

Feints and baby steps in the direction of eventually ending a massive crime are not enough. Hoping to meet a distant deadline for ending a war that cannot be justified for a single day is not enough. A new misunderstanding should not be piled on top of other fictional accomplishments (the closing of Guantanamo, the complete withdrawal from Iraq, universal health coverage, etc.). But if we don't understand that we are beginning to move things in the right direction many among us will lose heart and others will miscalculate.


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Published on November 03, 2011 04:33

October 31, 2011

New Book: When the World Outlawed War

Publication date: Monday, November 7, 2011


When the World Outlawed War Graphic

This is a masterful account of how people in the United States and around the world worked to abolish war as a legitimate act of state policy and won in 1928, outlawing war with a treaty that is still on the books. Swanson's account of the successful work of those who came before us to insist that war be outlawed points us toward new ways of thinking about both war and political activism.


Buy the paperback at Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Powells, or your local independent bookstore, which can order it through Ingram.  (The list price is $15.)  Or you can get 10 copies for $60, or 50 copies for $200, or more (all with free shipping) here. Donate free books to nonprofit educational groups here.


Buy the iPad/iPhone version at the iBookstore.


Get any of these versions for $2 right here:


Kindle:  Add to Cart 
Epub:  Add to Cart 
PDF:  Add to Cart 
Audio book (mp3), read by the author:  Add to Cart 


"David Swanson is a truth-teller and witness-bearer whose voice and action warrant our attention." — Cornel West.


"David Swanson has written a fascinating account of how peace once became the law of the land, through the Kellogg-Briand Pact.  It is particularly pertinent in the era of the Endless War, by giving encouragement and suggestions of a path forward to those who want to give peace a chance." — Liz Holtzman, former member of the U.S. Congress.


"David Swanson brings his laser focus, brilliant writing, and incredible intelligence to bear in this book, where he makes the case that the Kellogg-Briand Pact was a major step -- as yet unrecognized -- on the path towards eliminating war.  He tells a wonderful story, shines light on the unknown peace activists who refused to be deterred by what was considered possible or reasonable, and makes a compelling analogy with slavery -- like war, a worldwide activity deemed unstoppable -- and like war, an immoral crime that must be ended.  I have been active in the antiwar movement from Vietnam through Iraq.  I have done political work for some of the most antiwar candidates of the modern era -- McGovern, Jackson, Nader, Kucinich.  I have marched and petitioned, organized and strategized, and played a part in peace demonstrations from Las Cruces, New Mexico, to London and New York.  And I am a history buff.  But until I read David Swanson's book, I had never heard this story before -- and certainly never understood why it was important." — Steve Cobble, former political director of the National Rainbow Coalition, advisor to Jackson, Nader, and Kucinich presidential campaigns


"Swanson has done it again. This is a masterful account of how Americans and people around the world worked to abolish war as a legitimate act of state policy and won. Swanson's account of the successful work of those who came before us to insist that war be outlawed compels us today to rethink the cost and morality of cynical or weary inaction in the face of our repeated resort to military threats and warfare to achieve policy goals." — Jeff Clements, Author of Corporations Are Not People.


"David Swanson's fascinating new history of the development of the much neglected campaign in the 1920s to outlaw war has many lessons for anti-war activists today.  An essential read." — Andrew Burgin, Stop the War Coalition.


"David Swanson predicates his belief that nonviolence can change the world on careful research and historical analysis.  This compelling and wonderfully readable narrative examines pacifist developments in the U.S., dating back to the 1920s. Swanson then examines contemporary anti-war efforts. He writes from a particularly advantageous perspective because he is firmly rooted in plans and actions designed to put an end to war. Drawing from historical examples of success and failure, he help readers imagine achieving the U.N.'s eloquent mandate: 'to eliminate the scourge of war.'" — Kathy Kelly, Voices for Creative Nonviolence.


"From Daybreak to War Is A Lie to When the World Outlawed War to a prodigious number of essays (and that's just since the '08 election) David Swanson combines the timeliest scholarship and logical elegance in a call to action: 'to learn how to enjoy working for the moral good for its own sake.'" — John Heuer, Veterans for Peace.


"One of the best ways to radicalize someone's thinking is to force the person to look at a cherished ideal in a fundamentally new way. David Swanson does that with War, an ideal cherished by too many Americans. Can the United States ever be weaned from its love affair with war — Endless War? This book provides the background for dealing with that question." — William Blum, author of Killing Hope, and of Freeing the World to Death.


"How many Americans know that an American peace movement in the 1920s mobilized millions of people, and eventually the U.S. government, to get the world's major powers to formally renounce war? Or that the Kellogg-Briand Pact is still on the books making our current leaders guilty of the same crime that we hung people for at Nuremberg? It's time for a little education! David Swanson has written a wonderfully well-documented history of a time when Americans discovered their own power to organize and impact their government on the most vital issue facing the world, then and now: the abolition of war." — Nicolas Davies, author of  Blood On Our Hands: the American Invasion and Destruction of Iraq.


"Polls show a large majority of U.S. citizens oppose current U.S. wars, but many Americans' reluctance to engage in antiwar activism is in part due to their sense of impotence at having any impact on their own government. This book tells the story of how the highly energized Peace Movement in the 1920s, supported by an overwhelming majority of U.S. citizens from every level of society, was able to push politicians into something quite remarkable — the Kellogg-Briand Pact and the renunciation of war as an instrument of national policy. The 1920s War Outlawry movement was so popular that most politicians could not afford to oppose it. If any one piece of American history can re-energize the American people to again push their politicians, then this book can do it." — Bruce E. Levine, author of Get Up, Stand Up: Uniting Populists, Energizing the Defeated, and Battling the Corporate Elite.


"'Ahhh, peace, that would be so nice,' an Afghan grandmother whispered after recounting how 30 years of war had devastated her family. The world community has failed her miserably, as it has failed so many millions from the Congo to Iraq to Sri Lanka. But David Swanson's book gives us a glimpse of another possible reality, a world that says no to war. By recounting the heroic efforts of a generation in the 1920s that actually did pass a treaty banning war, Swanson invites us to dream, to scheme and most important, to take action." — Medea Benjamin, cofounder of CODEPINK.


"David Swanson is on a mission to end war. In his latest book he brings to life an important story about a time when a national peace movement raged across our nation. The media covered this movement, and members of Congress were active participants. Through this movement a treaty was signed that outlawed war. Sadly today few know about this significant moment in our history, but Swanson's book will help change that." — Bruce K. Gagnon, Coordinator, Global Network Against Weapons & Nuclear Power in Space.


Print ISBN 978-0-9830830-9-2


eBook ISBN 9781456605735


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Published on October 31, 2011 06:45

October 28, 2011

Occupy the Winter of Our Discontent

Can occupations survive a winter of global weirding, escalated police brutality, and the corporate media's venom? Should they?


In some parts of the country there will be no cold weather. In others, police abuses will result in larger occupations, not smaller. And it's certainly possible that for the first time in recent years an independent progressive populist campaign will survive the enmity of the corporate media.


In other cases, the cold, the communications assaults, fatigue, and the difficulties encountered by activist camps that also become homes for the homeless and the mentally ill may begin to erode the usefulness of encampments.


What to do?


Here's one activist's recommendations:


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Published on October 28, 2011 13:39

October 27, 2011

A 51st State for Armed Robotic Drones

Weaponized UAVs (unmanned aerial vehicles), also known as drones, have their own caucus in Congress, and the Pentagon's plan is to give them their own state as well.


Under this plan, 7 million acres (or 11,000 square miles) of land in the southeast corner of Colorado, and 60 million acres of air space (or 94,000 square miles) over Colorado and New Mexico would be given over to special forces testing and training in the use of remote-controlled flying murder machines. The full state of Colorado is itself 104,000 square miles. Rhode Island is 1,000 square miles. Virginia, where I live, is 43,000 square miles.


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Published on October 27, 2011 11:58

October 25, 2011

Audio: Joshua Frank and David Swanson on Activism and Elections

SolarTimes editor Sandy LeonVest hosts the first in a series of "progressive conversations" on strategies for the upcoming 2012 presidential elections. Her guests, David Swanson and Joshua Frank, are two of the country's leading progressive thinkers. While they agree that "politics as usual" needs to be challenged in the interest of maintaining (what remains of) democracy, their ideas as to the most effective strategies for pushing a truly progressive agenda differ. Tonight's show, "Can Progressives Organize a Viable Alternative to President Obama in 2012?" features a first-of-a-kind conversation on progressive electoral strategies for 2012. This conversation involves not whether progressives need to challenge the dominant two-party paradigm, but how to do it in the most effective way.
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Published on October 25, 2011 20:57

Occupy Worldwide

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Published on October 25, 2011 20:52

US Army Assaults Its Biggest Fan

One of the most valuable benefits of putting political action into the form of nonviolent encampments is that we learn each other's stories as we occupy our public parks and squares. Here's a story from the October2011 occupation in Freedom Plaza, Washington, D.C. There are many more, and we'd like to hear yours when you join us.


Aristine Maharry is 29 years old and now lives in Freedom Plaza. She grew up in a very military family, with members of her family having participated in every major U.S. war going back to the war for independence, and with members of every generation having joined the military.


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Published on October 25, 2011 14:10

October 24, 2011

Where Are the Jobs?

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Published on October 24, 2011 20:22