[Fwd: [BRC-NEWS] U.S. Bears Sole Blame for Sept. 11]

Carrol Cox cbcox at ilstu.edu
Wed Oct 31 14:57:42 PST 2001


This argument would probably not serve today to rally opposition to the u.s. aggression against Afghanistan. But as Chuck Grimes's prediction slowly fulfills itself, and if the war continues, this _is_ the position the opposition will be taking in 12 to 18 months. The U.S. is _not_ us. The U.S. is the our enemy. ("Us" and "our" refer to 80% plus of the population in the preceding ssentences, but in the next sentence it is equivalent to progressive residents, then again to u.s. workers as a whole.) _Our_ main task is to recruit more and more of us (the larger us) to this perception.

Carrol

-------- Original Message -------- Subject: [BRC-NEWS] U.S. Bears Sole Blame for Sept. 11 Date: Wed, 31 Oct 2001 05:31:10 -0500 (EST) From: Viviane Lerner <vlerner at interpac.net> Reply-To: pomandam at starbulletin.com To: brc-news at lists.tao.ca

http://starbulletin.com/2001/10/18/news/story3.html

Honolulu Star-Bulletin

October 18, 2001

Haunani-Kay Trask says America should focus on the needs of its own people

U.S. Bears Sole Blame for Sept. 11, Trask Says

By Pat Omandam <pomandam at starbulletin.com>

The United States has only itself to blame for the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, said outspoken Hawaiian studies professor Haunani-Kay Trask.

Moreover, Trask said, the United States should stop using its military might to police the world so it can open up foreign trade markets. It should stay out of the Middle East and elsewhere and instead focus on the needs of its own native and poor people, she said.

"The United States is angry because somebody came back and blew up their World Trade Center," said the University of Hawaii professor and sovereignty activist. "I would be angry, too. But what made them do that? It is the history of terrorism that the United States unleashes against native people all over the world."

Trask's comments, which come at a time of increased patriotism across the country, were given yesterday at a University of Hawaii at Manoa forum sponsored by Professors Opposed to War and the University Peace Initiative, comprised of students, faculty and staff of the UH system.

Organizers say these public forums are meant to educate and stimulate critical thinking on why this war on terrorism is occurring and what it means in the long term for the United States.

Members seek nonviolent, globally responsible and lasting solutions to end violence.

Trask was attending a U.N. conference on world racism in Durban, South Africa, Sept. 11 and said she was shocked and horrified watching the attacks unfold on television.

The first words out of her mouth, she said, were what 1960s activist Malcolm X said when asked about the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on Nov. 22, 1963: "Chickens have come home to roost."

"What it means is that those who have suffered under the imperialism and militarism of the United States have come back to haunt in the 21st century that same government," Trask said. "The Third World has responded to the First World, and it is bitter and it is hateful. It's crazy, that war out there."

Trask said the United States began the 20th century with the 1893 overthrow of the Hawaiian kingdom and, a century later, it begins the next one trying to install a new government in Afghanistan.

She said the United States' foreign policy of supporting state-sponsored terrorism to impose U.S.-friendly governments in countries like Chile, El Salvador, Nicaragua, the Philippines, Guatemala and Vietnam led directly to the Sept. 11 attacks.

"Everywhere, the United States has overthrown leftist government. Everywhere, the United States has overthrown native governments," she said. "Why should we support the United States, whose hands in history are soaked in blood?"

About 100 students gathered on the Manoa Campus Center steps to hear the discussion and to be challenged by Trask and others to get involved.

It remains to be seen whether such anti-war activism will rise to the level of protests found on the Manoa campus during the Vietnam War.

"Most of us swallow very easily what we're fed by our government and by the media," said Susan Hippensteele, a women's studies professor who also spoke at the forum.

Hippensteele said there has never been good public dialogue on why these attacks occurred. But a review of U.S. foreign policy shows why people have resorted to these desperate acts of violence against America.

She said President Bush's war on terrorism is more a war on public opinion to generate irrational fear and panic among American citizens so they do not question the policies of the Bush administration.

Hippensteele and others urged students to seek alternative sources of information on the Internet so they can ask tough questions of elected officials and be the watchdog the American public should be.

"Democracy can not be on cruise control," added Ruth Y. Hsu, an associate English professor and moderator of yesterday's event.

Copyright (c) 2001 Honolulu Star-Bulletin. All Rights Reserved.

[IMPORTANT NOTE: The views and opinions expressed on this list are solely those of the authors and/or publications, and do not necessarily represent or reflect the official political positions of the Black Radical Congress (BRC). Official BRC statements, position papers, press releases, action alerts, and announcements are distributed exclusively via the BRC-PRESS list. As a subscriber to this list, you have been added to the BRC-PRESS list automatically.]

[Articles on BRC-NEWS may be forwarded and posted on other mailing lists, as long as the wording/attribution is not altered in any way. In particular, if there is a reference to a web site where an article was originally located, do *not* remove that.

Unless stated otherwise, do *not* publish or post the entire text of any articles on web sites or in print, without getting *explicit* permission from the article author or copyright holder. Check the fair use provisions of the copyright law in your country for details on what you can and can't do.

As a courtesy, we'd appreciate it if you let folks know how to subscribe to BRC-NEWS, by leaving in the first seven lines of the signature below.]

-------------------------------------------------------------------------- BRC-NEWS: Black Radical Congress - General News Articles/Reports -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Unsubscribe: <mailto:majordomo at tao.ca?body=unsubscribe%20brc-news> -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Subscribe: <mailto:majordomo at tao.ca?body=subscribe%20brc-news> -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Digest: <mailto:majordomo at tao.ca?body=subscribe%20brc-news-digest> -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Help: <mailto:worker-brc-news at lists.tao.ca?subject=brc-news> -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Archive: <http://www.mail-archive.com/brc-news@lists.tao.ca> -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Archive: <http://groups.yahoo.com/messages/brc-news> -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Archive: <http://www.escribe.com/politics/brc-news> -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Post: <mailto:brc-news at lists.tao.ca> -------------------------------------------------------------------------- <www.blackradicalcongress.org> | BRC | <blackradicalcongress at visto.com> --------------------------------------------------------------------------



More information about the lbo-talk mailing list