We Work for Peace and Justice
28/03/2003
- Opinión
Building a movement powerful enough to stop the war in Iraq or to
successfully curb a next war in Syria, Iran, or Venezuela,
involves many factors. Among these, and perhaps the most
fundamental, is sufficient numbers.
To successfully challenge those in power, our movement must
constantly grow in numbers as well as consciousness and
commitment. We must reach out to people who are against the war,
but who have not yet acted on their beliefs. We must reach out to
people who are troubled by what they are witnessing, but who have
not yet decided to oppose the war and the policies behind it. We
must reach out as well to those who now support the war, but
without full knowledge of the context, history, and implications.
A key task therefore, in addition to demonstrating, is to talk to
people, to hear their misgivings, their confusions, and their
insights, and to provide an alternative viewpoint able to generate
critical solidarity that can last. We need to address the people
whose addresses we don't have. We need to go door to door in
neighborhoods and dorms, and we need to do it over and over. We
need to talk to coworkers on the job, to people who we encounter
during the day shopping, to our neighbors, and to the person next
to us in class or in church or wherever we may be. We need to
organize.
On a larger scale, our collective efforts can also reach out to
audiences beyond our current membership. Our marches can go
through neighborhoods instead of only downtown. People on the
marches can go and talk with those who will inevitably be drawn to
watch such events. Thousands of groups can go into shopping areas
and set up tables and then talk to those in the area. Talk. Talk.
That is the foundation of building larger demonstrations, deeper
commitment, and raising costs for elites, and thus winning change.
If 100 or 500 or 5,000 or 50,000 people or more are ready and
willing to block streets or obstruct buildings as a means of
pressuring elites in a context where support is growing, that's
wonderful, especially when the targets are part of the war
machine, as in the efforts to block military trains in Europe. But
shouldn't as many people, the next day, or the day before, or
both, be willing to spread out and talk to the population,
facilitating their becoming actively involved as well?
Our demonstrations create a context that facilitates reaching out
to organize the populace, but as important as they are, marches,
rallies, and obstructions won't by themselves do that organizing.
To hear views and to change minds requires that we listen and then
convey evidence, arguments, and also sympathy and respect for
where people are at. It takes talk.
To win against this war, the next war, and the causes of war and
of injustice more broadly, we need to assemble tens of millions of
active, committed movement members. But even if we continually
talk to those who disagree with us, how can we know what we are
accomplishing, and what can be our point of entry?
A possible technique would be for all of us, worldwide, to go to
people with a statement for them to sign -- something that's
timely but that won't grow stale, something that is concrete and
specific, but that is also universal enough for international use
and thorough enough so that to get signatures we will have to
address all the issues that obstruct people becoming actively
involved in a growing movement for peace and justice.
Maybe something like this:
"I stand for peace and justice.
I stand for democracy and autonomy. I don't think the U.S. or any
other country should ignore the popular will and violate and
weaken international law, seeking to bully and bribe votes in the
Security Council.
I stand for internationalism. I oppose any nation spreading an
ever expanding network of military bases around the world and
producing an arsenal unparalleled in the world.
I stand for equity. I don't think the U.S. or any other country
should seek empire. I don't think the U.S. ought to control Middle
Eastern oil on behalf of U.S. corporations and as a wedge to gain
political control over other countries. I stand for freedom. I
oppose brutal regimes in Iraq and elsewhere but I also oppose the
new doctrine of "preventive war," which guarantees permanent and
very dangerous conflict, and is the reason why the U.S. is now
regarded as the major threat to peace in much of the world. I
stand for a democratic foreign policy that supports popular
opposition to imperialism, dictatorship, and political
fundamentalism in all its forms.
I stand for solidarity. I stand for and with all the poor and the
excluded. Despite massive disinformation millions oppose unjust,
illegal, immoral war, and I want to add my voice to theirs. I
stand with moral leaders all over the world, with world labor, and
with the huge majority of the populations of countries throughout
the world.
I stand for diversity. I stand for an end to racism directed
against immigrants and people of color. I stand for an end to
repression at home and abroad.
I stand for peace. I stand against this war and against the
conditions, mentalities, and institutions that breed and nurture
war and injustice.
I stand for sustainability. I stand against the destruction of
forests, soil, water, environmental resources, and biodiversity on
which all life depends.
I stand for justice. I stand against economic, political, and
cultural institutions that promote a rat race mentality, huge
economic and power inequalities, corporate domination even unto
sweatshop and slave labor, racism, and gender and sexual
hierarchies.
I stand for a policy which redirects the money used for war and
military spending to provide healthcare, education, housing, and
jobs.
I stand for a world whose political, economic, and social
institutions foster solidarity, promote equity, maximize
participation, celebrate diversity, and encourage full democracy.
I stand for peace and justice and, more, I pledge to work for
peace and justice."
If a million or more new people in many countries around the world
come to understand and to agree with this statement, it will have
powerful short and long run repercussions, enlarging our movement
and giving it a positive tone, as well. We therefore think this is
an approach worth considering. At any rate, we ought to organize,
organize, organize -- among those not yet organized.
** The sign up page is at: http://www.zmag.org/wspj/index.cfm **
Signed,
Ezequiel Adamovsky, Argentina
Vittorio Agnoletto, Italy
Christophe Aguiton, Italy
Michael Albert, USA
Tim Allen, USA
Tariq Ali. England, England
Bridget Anderson, England
David Bacon, USA
David Barsamian, USA
Phyllis Bennis, USA
Elena Blanco, Venezuela
Nadine Bloch, USA
Peter Bohmer USA
Patrick Bond, South Africa
Jeremy Brecher, USA
Paul Buhle, USA
Nicola Bullard Thailand
Leslie Cagan, USA
Alex Callinicos, England
Daniel Chavez, Netherlands
Noam Chomsky, USA
David Cromwell, England
Will Doherty, USA
Brian Dominick, USA
Barbara Epstein, USA
Laura Flanders USA
Bill Fletcher, USA
Eduardo Galeano, Uruguay
Susan George, France
Andrej Grubacic, Sebia
Marta Harnecker, Chile
Tom Hayden, USA
Doug Henwood, USA
John Hepburn, Australia
Edward Herman, USA
Pervez Hoodbhoy, Pakistan
Sut Jhally, USA
Robert Jensen, USA
Boris Kagarlitsky, Russia
Sonali Kolhatkar, USA
Saul Landau, USA
Joanne Landy, USA
Rahul Mahajan. USA
Dawn Martinez, USA
Elizabeth, Martinez, USA
Rania Masri, USA
George Monbiot, England
Hector Mondragon, Colombia
Suren Moodliar, South Africa
Adele Oliveri, Italy
Pablo Ortellado, Brazil
Cynthia Peters, USA
Justin Podur, Canada
Vijay Prashad, USA
Prabir Purkayastha, India
Milan Rai England
Nikos Raptis, Greece
Michael Ratner, USA
Judy Rebick, Canada
Tanya Reinhart, Israel
Carola Reintjes, Spain
Arundhati Roy, India
Marta Russell, USA
Manuel Rozental, Colombia
Stephen Shalom, USA
Norman Solomon, USA
Lydia Sargent, USA
Roberto Savio, Italy
James Tracy, USA
America Vera-Zavala, Sweden
Peter Waterman, Holland
Robert Weissman, USA
Tom Wetzel, USA
Tim Wise, USA
Howard Zinn, USA
Vittorio Agnoletto, Italy
Christophe Aguiton, Italy
Michael Albert, USA
Tim Allen, USA
Tariq Ali. England, England
Bridget Anderson, England
David Bacon, USA
David Barsamian, USA
Phyllis Bennis, USA
Elena Blanco, Venezuela
Nadine Bloch, USA
Peter Bohmer USA
Patrick Bond, South Africa
Jeremy Brecher, USA
Paul Buhle, USA
Nicola Bullard Thailand
Leslie Cagan, USA
Alex Callinicos, England
Daniel Chavez, Netherlands
Noam Chomsky, USA
David Cromwell, England
Will Doherty, USA
Brian Dominick, USA
Barbara Epstein, USA
Laura Flanders USA
Bill Fletcher, USA
Eduardo Galeano, Uruguay
Susan George, France
Andrej Grubacic, Sebia
Marta Harnecker, Chile
Tom Hayden, USA
Doug Henwood, USA
John Hepburn, Australia
Edward Herman, USA
Pervez Hoodbhoy, Pakistan
Sut Jhally, USA
Robert Jensen, USA
Boris Kagarlitsky, Russia
Sonali Kolhatkar, USA
Saul Landau, USA
Joanne Landy, USA
Rahul Mahajan. USA
Dawn Martinez, USA
Elizabeth, Martinez, USA
Rania Masri, USA
George Monbiot, England
Hector Mondragon, Colombia
Suren Moodliar, South Africa
Adele Oliveri, Italy
Pablo Ortellado, Brazil
Cynthia Peters, USA
Justin Podur, Canada
Vijay Prashad, USA
Prabir Purkayastha, India
Milan Rai England
Nikos Raptis, Greece
Michael Ratner, USA
Judy Rebick, Canada
Tanya Reinhart, Israel
Carola Reintjes, Spain
Arundhati Roy, India
Marta Russell, USA
Manuel Rozental, Colombia
Stephen Shalom, USA
Norman Solomon, USA
Lydia Sargent, USA
Roberto Savio, Italy
James Tracy, USA
America Vera-Zavala, Sweden
Peter Waterman, Holland
Robert Weissman, USA
Tom Wetzel, USA
Tim Wise, USA
Howard Zinn, USA
https://www.alainet.org/en/articulo/107195?language=es
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