Ending The War: The Iraq Moratorium

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The third Friday of every month (starting September 21st) people from around the globe will be participating in a series of escalating actions to end the occupation of Iraq. For more information, visit: www.IraqMoratorium.org

PRESS RELEASE: Campus Moratorium 3-12-07

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Students for a Democratic Society (SDS)
New School Chapter
newschoolsds@riseup.net
www.studentsforademocraticsociety.org/newschool

Contact:
Pat Korte…………..860.912.3524.
Annie Matches……..609.610.4866.
Patricia Gonzalez….787.244.2517.

Tuesday, February 27, 2007
For Immediate Release

PRESS RELEASE

STUDENTS FOR A DEMOCRATIC SOCIETY (SDS) HAS ISSUED A CALL FOR THE NEW
SCHOOL UNIVERSITY TO PARTICIPATE IN A CAMPUS MORATORIUM.

New York, NY. The New School chapter of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) has issued a call for students and faculty to leave class and participate in a rally, march and day of direct action on Monday, March 12, 2007. Students will assemble at 11:00 a.m. at the Graduate Faculty building on 65 5th Avenue (between 13th and 14th Streets) in lower Manhattan. The action will be held one week before the fourth
anniversary of the U.S. invasion of Iraq.

“The vast majority of the university community is against the occupation of Iraq. Our goal is to translate this anti-war sentiment into action.” said Joe Plourde, a New School SDS member and freshman at Eugene Lang College. “Though the action is not aimed directly at the university administration, it is directed toward the campus community - it is a call to dig up the radical roots of the New School that the administration has repeatedly attempted to bury. Radical thought and social change will return stronger than ever!”

The action coincides with developments within the campus left around the country, with demonstrations being coordinated by SDS chapters throughout the spring. The majority of actions are scheduled from March 19-20, the fourth anniversary of the bombing of Baghdad.

“Students have historically played a role in raising revolutionary consciousness. Though students alone cannot stop U.S. imperialism, we can spark an explosion that will overflow into other sections of society.” said Pat Korte, another New School SDS organizer. “We have no delusions. Our actions will only be effective in ending the occupation of the Middle East if we are joined by thousands of students and workers
in the months to come.”

SDS is calling on all New School students to join in solidarity with the people of the Middle East in resisting occupation, torture, and genocide. Campus organizers believe that by interrupting the day-to-day routine of New School students, they can turn strong feelings of discontent and frustration into constructive action and education. “More
than 655,000 Iraqi casualties, more than 3,100 American deaths, the legal sanctioning and justification of torture, what’s next?” said Annie Matches, a New School SDS member and a sophmore at Eugene Lang College. “There comes a time when the responsibility for ending these injustices falls into the hands of the people. It is our hope that students can provide a leading example to the anti-war movement by
strengthening a commitment to direct action and popular education.”

SDS is an education and social action organization dedicated to increasing democracy in all phases of our common life. It seeks to promote the active participation of young people in the formation of a movement to build a society free from poverty, ignorance, war, exploitation, racism and sexism.

Campus Moratorium Meeting!

News

On Tuesday, February 6, New School SDS will be holding its general meeting in Rm. 101, 55 W. 13th St. at 6:00 p.m. Our primary focus will be on discussing and making decisions regarding logistics for the “Campus Moratorium To End The War In The Middle East”, as well as voting on a chapter constitution and electing secretaries for 2007. All are welcome and encouraged to attend and participate, but only members in good standing (members who have attended two of the three previous meetings) will be granted voting rights.

SDS Meeting!

News

New School SDS will be holding its general meeting on Tuesday, December 12th in Rm. 101 (Student Activities Space) at 55 13th St. We will be discussing:

1. Teach-In! A success? Criticism and discussion on what we did well, what we didn’t do, what to keep in mind for the future. When will the next Teach-In be held?

2. Reach-Out! The need for communication with the Women of Color Organization, Direct Action Networking Collective, National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, etc.

3. Who Runs The University? Accountability, responsibility, democracy, and the case for student power.

If items need to be added to the agenda, drop us an e-mail: NewSchoolSDS@riseup.net

Shafting The Vets

News

“Shafting The Vets”
by Conn Hallinan

Dover Air Force Base.

“War is hell,” Union General William Tecumseh Sherman famously said 14 years after the end of the bloodiest conflict in US history. “It is only those who have neither fired a shot nor heard the shrieks and groans of the wounded who cry aloud for blood, more vengeance, more desolation.”

Clearly the U.S. Civil War is not on the reading list of psychiatrist Sally Satel, a scholar at the right- wing American Enterprise Institute (AEI). Indeed, Satel sees war less as hell than as a golden opportunity for veteran lay-abouts to milk the government by “overpathologizing the psychic pain of war.”

Satel, whom the AEI trots out anytime the Bush administration needs cover for cutting veteran services and benefits, says the problem for former soldiers is not Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).

“The real trouble for vets,” she writes, is that “once a patient receives a monthly check based on his psychiatric diagnosis, his motivation to hold a job wanes.” Her solution? “Don’t offer disability benefits too quickly.”

The commentary makes an interesting contrast to a powerful piece in the October 2006 issue of the California Nurses Association’s magazine Registered Nurse titled “The Battle at Home” by Caitlin Fischer and Diana Reiss. They found that “in veterans’ hospitals across the country - and in a growing number of ill-prepared, under-funded psych and primary care clinics as well - Registered Nurses … are treating soldiers … and picking up the pieces of a tattered army.”

According to the authors, RNs across the country “have witnessed the guilt, rage, emotional numbness, and tormented flashbacks of GIs just back from Iraq and Afghanistan,” as well as older vets from previous wars, “whose half-century-old trauma have been ‘triggered’ by the images of Iraq.”

How many soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan will eventually fall victim to PTSD is not clear, although a U.S. Defense Department study in 2006 found that one in six returnees suffer from depression or stress disorders, and 35% have sought counseling for emotional difficulties. The Veterans Administration (VA) treated 20,638 Iraq vets for PTSD in just the first quarter of 2006 and is currently processing a backlog of 400,000 cases.

Out of 700,000 soldiers who served in the 1991 Gulf War, 118,000 are suffering from chronic fatigue, headaches, muscle spasms, joint pains, anxiety, memory loss, and balance problems, and 40% receive disability pay. Gulf vets are also twice as likely to develop amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (Lou Gehrig’s Disease) and between two and three times more likely to have children with birth defects.

The Ills of War.

Modern battlefields are toxic nightmares, filled with depleted uranium ammunition, exotic explosives, and deadly cluster bomblets. The soldiers are shot up with experimental vaccines that can have dangerous side effects from additives like squalene. In short, soldiers are not only under fire, they are assaulted by their own weapons systems and medical procedures.

Satel need have no worries about the VA rushing to hand out cash to veteran couch potatoes. According to Fischer and Reiss, “A returning vet must wait an average of 165 days for a VA decision on initial disability benefits. An appeal can take up to three years.”

Reserve and National Guard troops - who make up between 40 and 50% of the frontline troops in Iraq and Afghanistan - have a particular problem, because their military medical insurance benefits only cover conditions diagnosed in the first 100 days. PTSD sometimes takes years, even decades to kick in.

When they do complain, vets can expect that their ailments will be dismissed or their cause stonewalled.

When Gulf War vets complained about the symptoms which have come to be called “Gulf War Syndrome,” the Pentagon told them it was in their heads, in spite of studies by the British Medical Journal and the U.S.

Center for Disease Control that showed the returnees were suffering illnesses at 12 times the rate of non- Gulf vets.

For five years after the Gulf War the Pentagon denied that any troops had been exposed to chemical weapons.

It took pressure from veterans’ organizations and Sen.

Donald Riegle (D-MI) to get the Pentagon to admit finally that as many as 130,000 troops (the vets say the number is higher) were exposed to chemical weapons from the destruction of the Iraqi arms depot at Khamisiyah.

Veteran organizations are currently fighting the Pentagon over its refusal to screen returning soldiers for mild brain injuries. Figures indicate that up to 10% of the troops suffer from concussions during their tours, a figure that rises to 20% for those in the front lines. Research shows that concussions can cause memory loss, headaches, sleep disturbances, and behavior problems. The Pentagon, arguing that the long- term effect of brain injuries needs more research, is unwilling to fund a screening program.

Given the wide use of roadside bombs, “Traumatic brain injury is the signature injury of the war on terrorism,” George Zitnay, co-founder of the Brain Injury Center, toldUSA Today. And according to researchers at Harvard and Colombia, the cost of treating those brain injuries will be $14 billion over the next 20 years.

In Iraq.

Upwards of 20,000 Americans have been wounded in Iraq, some of those so grotesquely that medicine has invented a new term to describe them - polytrauma. An estimated 7,000 vets have severe brain and spinal injuries, and have required amputations. For the blind, brain damaged, and paralyzed, war is indeed hell.

Calculating the cost of war is tricky, but Nobel Prize winning economist Joseph Stiglitz recently calculated that the price tag for the long-term health care for Iraq War vets will exceed $2 trillion.

But the hell we bring home is only a pale reflection of the hell we leave behind.

According to a recent estimate by the British medical journal, The Lancet, upwards of 650,000 Iraqis have been killed since the invasion. Most of the country’s infrastructure - already damaged in the first Gulf War or degraded by a decade of sanctions - has essentially collapsed.

Iraq’s experience is not unique.

The Vietnam War ended more than 30 years ago, but according to the recent book, Vietnam: A Natural History, Laotians, Vietnamese, and Cambodians are still dying from it.

From 1964 to 1973, the United States dropped over 14 million tons of bombs on those three countries, including 90 million cluster munitions on tiny Laos alone. Somewhere between 30 to 40% of those fiendish devices never exploded, and, according to the British Mines Advisory Group, they have killed or maimed 12,000 Laotians since the end of the war. They continue to extract a yearly toll of 100 to 200 people, many of them children.

Traces of the 20 million gallons of Agent White, Agent Blue, and Agent Orange herbicides that the United States sprayed over Vietnam still poison the water, soil, vegetation, animals, and people of Southeast Asia, producing cancer and birth defect rates among the highest in the world.

So war is indeed hell - for those who fight it, those caught in the middle of it, and those who eventually pick up the pieces.

This article was originally published on November 22, 2006 in ZNET .

First Teach-In A Success!

News

The New School chapter of the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) held it first teach-in on Tuesday, December 5th in the Eugene Lang Cafeteria on 11th St. The event, “U.S. Imperialism & Campus Resistance”, was the first in a series of teach-ins to be held at the New School in the months to come. The event opened with a screening of the film “Why We Fight”, followed with discussion on the history of imperialism, the racist and barbaric nature of the imperial project, the Military Industrial Complex (MIC), and the role students have played traditionally in revolutionary movements.