Archive for April, 2011

Adults and Students Disagree on Allocation of Tax Dollars

Saturday, April 16th, 2011

This week when we set up Ms. Gizmo in Brooklyn near Borough Hall we attracted the attention of a new group of voters. Montessori students from all over the country were visiting with their teachers, and several groups stopped to vote in the penny poll and discuss tax dollar allocation. (Click on the photos for larger images.)

The results were slightly different from polls done at other Ms. Gizmo events in this location — with more pennies in the “Military” tube than usual. Boys in the classes were allocating more of their tax money to the military than does our usual crowd of adult passersby.


- Eva-Lee Baird
for the Granny Peace Brigade
Photos: Caroline Chinlund
Chart: Edith Cresmer

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Demonstration for Peace, April 9th

Wednesday, April 13th, 2011

This is the Union Square scene and the people who heard  Vinie Burroughs’ speech. (Click on the photos for larger images.)

Our Philadelphia Granny Peace Brigade friends joined us.  Here they are with Corinne listening to the speakers in Union Square.

Resting away from the high volume of the speakers, I found two of many people who had come from Maine.  They got up at 1:00 AM to get on the bus and travel to NYC.

My companions, shown here with Lillian, were parents of a soldier who tried to get work when he returned from his first tour in Iraq.  He failed to find a job; the army refused to give him the Spanish language training he wanted so that he could be in the Border Patrol, which was the work he wanted to do.  His Mom said he felt he had no choice but to go back for a second, and now a third, tour.  “He has a wife and kids to support, “ she said.

Marching down Broadway was the moment I felt how many we were.  You could see us going on forever, in front and behind.  We were diverse; we were young and old; it felt like we have all the challenges and thrills of Tahrir Square ahead of us if we can stay committed to staying together and making a better nation.

There were more speeches in Foley Square.  The drone in the foreground was the work of a peace activist from Westchester.  Meeting people was energizing.  Cindy Sheehan,  Bill Perkins, religious leaders from the Muslim communities, and many others gave 90 second speeches.  Steve took his turn, urging people to stay aware they are making a difference by being out and being seen.  We were startled to find that there was virtually no news coverage of the demonstration and march.  New York 1 covered a labor rally in Times’ Square which was going on at the same time as the Peace demonstration.  CBS radio on the evening news mentioned that “thousands gathered in lower Manhattan” but there wasn’t one word in the New York Times.  It leaves me thinking we’ve got to be our own messengers.

- Caroline Chinlund
for the Granny Peace Brigade

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Brooklyn Votes Against War Spending

Tuesday, April 12th, 2011

Brooklynites began thinking about taxes when they saw our Penny Poll.  Ms. Gizmo attracted a crowd, including small children, and everyone thought carefully about where they wanted their tax dollars to go.

We provided twenty pennies to each voter and asked them to divide the pennies among eight tubes, representing  categories in the Federal Budget.  “Pretend you’re a Congressman, and these are twenty billion dollars,” we told them.  After they voted, we provided these active citizens with information [on the War Resisters League flyer] about where their taxes are really being spent.  Education is our game and pennies and tubes are our tools.

- Edith Cresmer
for the Granny Peace Brigade
Photos: Eva-Lee Baird

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WE ARE ONE – April 9, 2011

Monday, April 11th, 2011

WE ARE ONE, one with the people of Egypt, Yemen and Palestine.
WE ARE ONE in opposing the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan.
WE ARE ONE  with the 5 million people  of Libya  who, in the first days of the humanitarian military action, were attacked by 161 Tomahawk Cruise missiles. Each cruise missile costing  more than one  million dollars means this military assault on Libya cost US taxpayers a quarter of a billion dollars.   However, compared to the 2 billion a week  we spend in Afghanistan, that seems like chump change.

Let us remind ourselves that the bottom line in our capitalist society, in our imperialist society is money. But not  money as more wages for the laborer but instead greater profits for the employer. Oil is the bottom reason for our militaristic Libyan expedition.
So once again, we find the imperial conqueror lusting after Black gold, OIL. And this same lust for greed and profit kidnapped upwards of 20 millions of my ancestors from Africa. The Transatlantic Slave trade built up the great cities of England: Liverpool, London.  Slave labor, free labor enabled the young United States of America to enthrone  Cotton as King and thus laid the foundation for the giant we were to become.
BLACK GOLD from Africa as free labor and BLACK GOLD today with the control of the vast reserves of oil. The newly created unified military command AFRICOM is leading that latter mission with its  sinister machinations in Libya specifically and Africa generally.

WE ARE ONE WITH workers everywhere…workers with jobs and workers needing jobs.
WE ARE ONE with unions seeking  better conditions for their members, seeking to protect gains won and recover gains lost.
WE ARE ONE with women and men wanting to have work that enables them to support and sustain their families.
WE ARE ONE with all who come to this country as immigrants recalling that when the first immigrants came to thses shores there were indigenous families, people, tribes, nations living here; and they fed the strangers, sheltered and helped them to survive.  The newly arrived accepted the  hospitality then expropriated their lands, drove them away to live on reservations. As the native American elder once said: white man made many promises to Indians, only one promise he kept, he promised to take our lands and he took them.

Brothers and Sisters
We are men, women, Indian, Hispanic, African, Asian, Jew, Christian, Muslim, immigrant WE
WE ARE ONE. Thank you.

- Vinie Burrows
for the Granny Peace Brigade

Photos of demonstration: Edith Cresmer

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We Are One

Tuesday, April 5th, 2011

We answered the call to support Union workers and gathered at Starbucks with the Raging Grannies and others.  Across Broadway a large crowd had gathered, many with red signs — Stand Up for Workers’ Rights.

Corinne got the organizers’ permission to sing – and so we did — Union Maids!  We’re sticking with the Union!!

Afterwards we wandered through the crowd, checking out the signs.  And why, you may wonder are these gentlemen smiling?   See Below!  They’re smiling at our tunics, with the sign — Democracy is Not a Spectator Sport.

Here’s a sample of some interesting signs.

- Edith Cresmer for the Granny Peace Brigade
Photos: Eva-Lee Baird and Edith Cresmer

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