| Archive:
American
Cities Say "NO" to War in Iraq
One
Million. And Still They Came
The
Observer, UK
Sunday
February 16, 2003
Reckless
Administration May Reap
Disastrous
Consequences
by
US Senator Robert Byrd
Senate
Floor Speech - Wednesday, February 12, 2003
January
22, 2003:
A
Message From Move-On.Org:
Dear MoveOn member,
Thank you. This week exceeded our wildest dreams. . . .Go
to full text
Move-On
ad in New York Times,
December
11, 2002
Sacred
Day in New York, December 10, 2002
Resolution
Authorizing the President to Use Force,
if
Necessary, to End the Threat to World Peace from
Saddam
Hussein's Weapons of Mass Destruction
Final
statement in the Senate by Tom Daschle
Media
Concentration
edited by Susan
Thompson, Move-On.org
Building
a Citizen Politics
October
26, 2002
by Senator Paul
Wellstone
Remembering Paul
Wellstone, from
In These Times
Listen to National Public Radio:
The
Anti-War Movement on the Diane Rehm Show,
Tuesday,
October 15, 2002
A
Peace Movement Emerges
from The Village Voice
Anti-War
Protest in Chicago
Turning
the Tide
from
Move-On.Org
Iraq
and The Art of Misdirection
October
2, 2202
Domestic issuesare being
obscurred by the constant talk of war. If you beat the war
drum loudly enough, can you drown out discussion of all other domestic
issues? It certainly seems like the Bush administration is trying. The
rush to war is dominating the US agenda, drawing attention away from a
whole host of pressing problems. While Iraq remains the focus of the nightly
news, congressional discussion, and the campaign trail, other issues naturally
fade into the background. And this is the most helpful place for them to
remain if President Bush wants to maintain his approval rating. Whether
or not the Iraq war is a case of "wag the dog," it is certainly diverting
attention from policies that might otherwise be threatening the current
administration's very existence. More.
. .
From MoveOn Bulletin, edited by
Susan Thompson.
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