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Promoted to Headline (H3) on 6/19/08:     Permalink
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War Resistance Arrests Rise

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“I am energized by the dedication of so many conscientious activists across the country willing to take the risks of peace and speak truth to power,” says Max Obuszewski of the National Campaign for Nonviolent Resistance.  “We have been unsuccessful so far in stopping this awful war and occupation of Iraq, but it is not for the lack of direct action. We are taking on the greatest empire in world history, but we will continue to act.”

 

“There are large numbers of new people being arrested,” notes Cohen-Joppa, “most typically saying, ‘I have tried everything else from writing to voting, but I have to do more to stop this war.’  The profile of people arrested includes high school teenagers to senior citizens, mostly people under 30 and over 50.”

 

Anti-war arrests are significantly under-reported by mainstream media.  For example, around the fifth anniversary of the invasion of Iraq in March 2008, most news stories wrote that there were 150 to 200 arrests nationwide.  Cohen-Joppa and NUCLEAR RESISTER report there were over double that number, well over 400, many outside the cities where regular media traditionally look.

 

Though arrests typically drop off in election years, as people’s hopes are raised that a new President or Congress will make a difference and stop the war, this year looks like arrests are likely to continue to rise.  In part, that will depend on the attitude of authorities in Denver and Minneapolis, where the political conventions are being held.  In 2004, New York City authorities overreacted so much to protestors at the Republican convention that they arrested historic numbers of protestors – including hundreds who had no intention to risk arrest.   If Senator McCain is elected, anti-war resistance activities are expected to rise much higher.

    

Why do people risk arrest in their resistance to war?  Perhaps Daniel Berrigan, on trial for resistance to the Vietnam War, said it best:

 

“The time is past when good people may be silent

when obedience

can segregate us from public risk

when the poor can die without defense.

How many indeed must die

before our voices are heard

how many must be tortured dislocated

starved maddened?

How long must the world=s resources

be raped in the service of legalized murder?

When at what point will you say no to this war?

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Bill Quigley is a human rights lawyer and law professor at Loyola University New Orleans and Legal Director for the Center for Constitutional Rights.

The views expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of the author
and do not necessarily reflect those of this website or its editors.

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HOW MANY WILL BE ARRESTED FOR BALKING AT OPERATION ATTACK by Wolfie on Friday, Jun 20, 2008 at 12:22:04 PM
No One Arrested in Houston, Crawford or Waco? by Richard Volaar on Friday, Jun 20, 2008 at 2:33:48 PM
CD as the new demonstration by Bill Samuel on Friday, Jun 20, 2008 at 8:10:07 PM