Saturday, October 27, 2007

Information Clearing House Newsletter
News You Won't Find On CNN
Read this newsletter online http://tinyurl.com/dy6yy
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"Under the influence of politicians, masses of people tend to ascribe the responsibility for wars to those who wield power at any given time. In World War I it was the munitions industrialists; in World War II it was the psychopathic generals who were said to be guilty. This is passing the buck.
The responsibility for wars falls solely upon the shoulders of these same masses of people, for they have all the necessary means to avert war in their own hands. In part by their apathy, in part by their passivity, and in part actively, these same masses of people make possible the catastrophes under which they themselves suffer more than anyone else. To stress this guilt on the part of the masses of people, to hold them solely responsible, means to take them seriously. On the other hand, to commiserate masses of people as victims, means to treat them as small, helpless children. The former is the attitude held by genuine freedom fighters; the latter that attitude held by power-thirsty politicians."
: Wilhelm Reich, The Mass Psychology of Fascism
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"It is part of the general pattern of misguided policy that our country is now geared to an arms economy which was bred in an artificually induced psychosis of war hysteria and nurtured upon an incessant propaganda of fear."
: General Douglas MacArthur, Speech, May 15, 1951
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In Loving Memory of My Father

COLIN McPHIE

September 9, 1923 - October 21, 2007

An ordinary, decent man
who showed extraordinary commitment

to his family, friends and employers.

Spared further suffering, he now rests in peace.


BIRTH & CHILDHOOD

Colin McPhie was born in Surrey Hills, Melbourne,
to parents Norman McPhie and Pearl Barlow, on September 9, 1923.
When Colin was only about 3 years old, his father left the family.
He was raised in Yarram, East Gippsland, in country Victoria.

PHOTOS: Young Colin McPhie, presumably at Yarram.
On the back of the photo on the old tractor, written in my mother's handwriting,
are the words "2 years & 9 months".


When young Colin was only 12, his mother died.
He was then raised in Melbourne, by an auntie and uncle living at 158 Glen Iris Road, Glen Iris.

MARRIAGE TO LOIS

While attending Glen Iris Elementary School No.1148,
Colin met young Norma Lois Haeberle,
of 16 Fuller Avenue, Glen Iris.

Later, on September 21, 1946 at the age of 23,
Colin married Lois, then aged 21,
at St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church in Gardner.

Colin & Lois were always a devoted
and inseparable couple
for almost 60 years,
living true to their solemn vows of love
"until death do us part".

Sadly, Lois passed away on June 5, 2006,
after suffering Alzheimer’s Disease
and other health complications.


FAMILY LIFE

Together, Lois & Colin built their new family home
in what was then the orchards and green rolling hills of Burwood,
at 3 Morell Street, (later the suburb was renamed Glen Iris),
and there they raised their two sons -
Bruce born in 1951, and Russell born in 1955.

We were blessed with parents who loved and
supported us every step of the way through life.
Through all the very good times and the bad,
the ups and downs of life,
Mum and Dad were always there with a helping hand
or a comforting word.

When we were young, our parents were not wealthy,
but they saved wisely and made sacrifices
to give us a good education,
and we enjoyed many family holidays together.
Dad & Mum always supported us in our many hobbies
and interests over the years.

(PHOTO: A happy family holiday together at Mildura.
Dad, Mum, brother Russell, & Bruce.)

(PHOTO: The proud Dad!... I may have earned the Queen's Scout Award,
but Mum & Dad rightly deserved much of the credit.
Photo taken in November, 1968.)

(PHOTO: Mum & Dad with the youngest of their 3 grandchildren, in 1989.)

(PHOTO: Russell, Lois, Colin & Bruce -
a happy family celebrate
Dad's 60th birthday at
3 Morell Street, Burwood, in 1983.)

PHOTO: Mum & Dad attended my 40th birthday party held at Omeo in 1991.
At that time, I was living "in the bush" at Cassilis in far north east Victoria.


WORK

Our Dad had many jobs throughout his life,
and he soon developed a well-deserved reputation
for being a dedicated and conscientious worker.

He worked as a fireman at Camberwell Fire Station.
For most of his working life, he was a skilled lathe operator,
a turner & fitter, at Inglis Smith Ship Chandlers in South Melbourne.

Later still, after his health declined, he moved to easier employment
as a biscuit maker at the former Brockoff’s Biscuit Factory
in Burwood, until his retirement at 65.

PHOTO: Dad & workmates at Brockhoff Biscuit factory.

Wherever he worked or went,
Colin formed many good friendships, and was popular for his
hard work, loyalty and sometimes a wicked sense of humour.

As a testament to his popularity
with both workers and management,

he was always warmly welcomed back to visit
the workplaces,
even after he had stopped working there.

Together, our parents enjoyed many coach tours
around much of Australia, and they visited
Singapore, Fiji and New Zealand.
More than just wonderful holidays together,
these also became opportunities to gather
many close, long-term friends.


SURVIVOR OF ILL-HEALTH

Throughout his life, our Dad experienced and survived
some very serious medical conditions,

and developed a reputation as a tough survivor.

As a young man, he underwent a brain haemorrhage operation at
Prince Henry’s Hospital in
Melbourne, and was one of the lucky ones.
He was welcomed back there by medical staff for many years
as a popular and successful survivor.

In later life, he suffered from a number of strokes,
which left him with some side effects,
but he somehow always bounced back.

A roll-your-own smoker most of his life,
Dad immediately quit the deadly habit after his first stroke.

Dad’s quiet stubbornness and strong will to live,
cheated Death for many years.

After nearly 60 years of devoted marriage to Lois,
Colin had to suffer seeing Lois consumed
by
the dreadful Alzheimer’s Disease.

Finally, her passing in 2006,
although in many ways a blessing,
must also have been a terrible time for Dad.

As was often Dad’s way,
he mostly kept his inner feelings to himself.
Perhaps that was his way of dealing with a situation
so tragic and painful, which he could not change.


NEARING THE END

Dad’s strength noticeably declined during those last years,
and especially after the death of Lois.

He required nursing home care,
and
became steadily older and weaker,
although
his heart remained strong to the very end.

Some days before my next tour was to start, I got a
message from brother Russell to say Dad had got worse,
but the doctor could not say how long he had left.
He improved a bit, but then declined again.

I informed my manager, but decided not to fly home at that stage.
I had seen Dad only a few weeks before, while in Australia on my
annual holiday, and Dad’s condition was still unclear.

Anxiously, I continued the tour, prepared to return
to Melbourne the moment I got the call from my brother,
but chose not to tell the travellers about this.

We got half-way through the tour, when I got the call.

Finally, on Sunday morning, October 21,
after a full and active long life of 84 years,
Colin McPhie passed away.


FUNERAL

On Thursday October 25, 2007 at 1:45 pm, about
35 close family, friends, neighbours and former workmates
gathered at Blair Chapel, Springvale Crematorium,
to say farewell to Dad, who was cremated by request.

We displayed some interesting photos of Dad
taken throughout his life,
including some
when he was only about 2 years old.

Dad's most favourite flower was always the tulip,
so we arranged an impressive display of tulips to send off with him.

On the coffin, there were red roses, and a black sash -
Dad's favourite football team was always Essendon!

During the time of reflection, the music played was
Vera Lynne singing "We'll Meet Again."
At the end of the service, we played the Essendon footie song.
We think Dad would have liked that!


The moving service was well conducted by Mr. Greg Crawford
from Syd Peek & Daughter funeral services,
who had also taken care of Mum's funeral in June 2006.


Colin is survived by his two sons, Bruce & Russell,
and his three grandchildren born to Russell and Janet -
Stuart, Ryan and Ashlea.

Colin McPhie will be remembered and loved by his family,
and all the friends and work colleagues who ever knew him,
for his honesty, dedication and selflessness.

He was a hard-working, and devoted Dad, and a loyal mate to his friends.

He will be sadly missed, but now he can finally rest in peace.


In honour of the memory of my Dad,
Intrepid Indochina, my employers in Viet Nam,
made a donation to Alzheimer's Australia (Victoria).
This was unexpected, and much appreciated.
Anything that helps others facing this terrible disease,
and hopefully brings a cure closer,
is a good thing indeed.


Colin & Lois
enjoyed almost
60 years of happy
married life together,
separated only by
the death of Lois
1 year and 4 months ago.

Now,
they can
rest in peace
together
forever.


(PHOTOS: Mum & Dad
at 3 Morell Street,
celebrating their 50th wedding anniversary,
on September 21, 1996.
Mum passed away just 3 months before reaching
their 60th wedding anniversary.)


Rest in Peace - Colin McPhie


* To read my Tribute to My Mum, go to:

http://lemonjuicebruce.blogspot.com/2006/06/in-loving-memory-of-my-mother.html


Saturday, October 20, 2007

Dear Friends,

AGENT ORANGE Online petition under attack

Some weeks ago, shortly after the petition reached 700,000 (it is now approaching 711,000) signatures, the petition www.petitiononline.com/AOVN/ began to receive a number of comments of an obscene and insulting nature, these, of course had to be deleted, and were. Unfortunately, they have continued and have made the petition look unsightly with “Signature rejected” in place of the name of the person.

These comments are an insult to the very people we are trying to help by seeking justice, namely the tragic victims of Agent Orange. Their actions undermine the petition’s objective.

WHY THIS ATTACK?

The online petition is only one part of an international campaign to gather worldwide support for the victims of Agent Orange. Its success has played an important part in that campaign. Many organisations and individuals have put a link to the petition on their websites. Let me express here our sincere thanks to each and everyone of them for their valuable support.

We are very pleased that Friction.TV has produced an online video on Agent Orange that viewers can hear and see me speak and view the photographs of some of the victims. The video gives the viewers and opportunity to comment on the issue. In just a few months, nearly 8,000 viewers have seen the video and a number have make comments. We are also very pleased that the video now appears on YouTube.

WHO IS BEHIND THE ATTACK?

Allowing for a few sick-minded people, and those who are anti-Vietnamese, it is difficult to know, as those who made the comments did not have the courage to put their name. Readers of this letter may have their views on who and why is responsible.

WHAT NOW?



To continue with the online petition would face the risk of further insulting comments.

It is therefore with great regret that we have decided to stop the gathering of signatures.


We will continue our support to the international campaign for justice and seek other ways for people to express their support for victims of Agent Orange.

Let me end by expressing once again our sincere thanks to the over 700,000 thousand from many lands who have supported the petition. We also wish to thank PetitionOnline for hosting the petition and for their support and advice.

We are proud to have received wide support and messages of goodwill since the petition went online.


Rest assured
THE STRUGGLE FOR JUSTICE FOR THE VICTIMS WILL CONTINUE.

Len Aldis

Secretary

Britain-Vietnam Friendship Society
London. UK
October 2007
One day while I was in a bunker in Vietnam, a sniper round went over my head. The person who fired that weapon was not a terrorist, a rebel, an extremist, or a so-called insurgent. The Vietnamese individual who tried to kill me was a citizen of Vietnam, who did not want me in his country.
This truth escapes millions.


Mike Hastie

U.S. Army Medic
Vietnam 1970-71
December 13, 2004

Friday, September 21, 2007

Bush FREE FALL!
Your chance to have some fun with George W !!!
When he gets stuck, drag him with your mouse for futher decline.
Oh, if it were only so!
Now, this might look like torture to you...
However, if we use the Rumsfeld definition of torture
we can do so with a clear conscience.
Remember, it is only torture if your INTENTION is to cause pain -
if your intention was something else
(like getting information, or having fun) it doesn't count as torture!
Something like that.....anyway have fun!!!!!
Islip and Liberation - another excellent free, daily, email alternative news bulletin from George Anthony.

Having discovered the esoterica of blogging, with a little help from friends, it occurred to yours truly, that a blog was not enough. One needs to take proactive action and give the occasional blog reader the nudge that there is more to life than reading the Guardian and the lesser purveyors of distortion.

So every day, incidentally as happened during the invasion of Iraq, a bulletin is issued after culling useful information from the CeeFax, the Morning Star, the Financial Times, aljazeera news on Sky and website, and the daily emailings to midhurst14@aol.com. On Sunday's the Observer.

The service is free, but yours truly and those at the Arkwright Road office, like to think it might build the circulation of the Liberation journal and the Islip newsletter.

The whole exercise takes about two hours a day, the Islip bulletin concentrated on economic and political news, that Islip readers tastes are well known for. The Liberation bulletin concentrating on international news and human rights events, something it has been famous for, for over fifty years.

Please join up by emailing to liberation@btinternet.com or midhurst14@aol.com for your delectation and information.

George Anthony
Farewell Dave Cline

Extract of email
from David Zeiger,
film maker of
Sir! No Sir!
Wednesday, September 19, 2007

I am very sad to have to report the news that Dave Cline died this past weekend.

There are many wonderful tributes to Dave being written
( http://www.veteransforpeace.org ), and I would like to add some personal reflections on the part of his life with which I was deeply connected - the
GI Movement against the Vietnam War.

I hope you will indulge some nostalgic reminiscing here-there really is a point to it.

Let me say up front that without Dave Cline, Sir! No Sir! would not have been made.

I met Dave in the Spring of 1970, when I joined the staff of the Oleo Strut Coffeehouse outside Ft. Hood in Killeen, Texas. My introduction to him and the GI Movement was riding in a broken down Chevy with Dave driving 120 mph through central Texas and me convinced I would never get out of there alive. I'm not sure anything defines Dave Cline better than that wild ride.

Dave and I were from different worlds. I was a middle class kid who came to my opposition to the war and growing radicalism intellectually. Dave, a working class kid from Buffalo, had joined the army and been wounded three times in Vietnam. It was his last wound, from an NLF soldier at point blank range, that changed everything.

The soldier shattered Dave's knee, and Dave killed him with a bullet in the chest. His first realization was it was "pure luck" that he was alive and the other guy was dead. Then it hit him that there was no real difference between the two of them.

Finally, the epiphany: It was the NLF soldier who was fighting for a just cause, while Dave and his comrades were fighting for a lie. In typical Dave Cline fashion he concluded in 1970, "I had to kill a revolutionary to become a revolutionary."

And revolutionaries we were. . .

In 1971 - with literally thousands of GIs rebelling against the war and joining groups like the Black Panther Party - planning demonstrations by day and hotly debating the writings of Marx, Lenin and Mao by night was a very practical thing to do. And boy could Dave debate. Even in his sleep. It wasn't uncommon for him to jolt up from his bed at 2 am to continue a discussion from earlier that day, only to have no memory of it the next morning (Dave claimed he had even slept through a mortar attack in Vietnam) . . .

Then the war ended, and we all moved into other arenas, believing deeply in the possibility of revolution right here in the United States. For a while we stayed close, but through the years political disagreements developed, and in those heady times that meant a lot. By the end of the 70s and beginning of the 80s we weren't in contact any more. Those were very difficult times. In one of the last conversations I had with Dave back then he told me that every morning he woke up thinking "Oh fuck, another day!"

So when I started to make Sir! No Sir! Dave was the first person I wanted to talk to, but I had no idea what or whom I would find. What I found was the person so many have been writing about these last few days. Wracked by illness, he was extraordinarily energetic and eager to tell his story. The day of our interview, he had just come home from a grueling three-day VFP convention and was worried he wouldn't have much energy. We talked for four hours.

. . . Dave knew the tremendous importance of telling the story of the GI Movement today, in this world and with this war.

Because of him, several people are in the film alongside others they wouldn't have been in the same room with a few years ago. And he carried that spirit into the dozens of screenings and Q&As he participated in these past couple of years. He has played a tremendous role in making Sir! No Sir! the spark for today's GI Movement that it has been. And that's on top of his superhuman energy in building the work of Veterans for Peace.

In these last years of his life, I don't think Dave was saying "Oh fuck, another day!" anymore.

This has been a tough year. Along with Dave, two other veterans of the GI Movement who were integral parts of the film have also died-Oliver Hirsch of the Nine for Peace, and Terry Whitmore, who deserted to Sweden after watching federal troops invade his home town of Memphis as he lay wounded in a hospital bed in Japan. Along with Dave, their lives had deep historic meaning.

For more about Dave, and information on funeral and memorial plans, please go to http://www.veteransforpeace.org

Signed,

David Zeiger

Monday, September 03, 2007

USA equipping a private army in preparation for an invasion of Venezuela

Someone is building and equipping a private Army in South America and we get to pay for it. Congress knows nothing about this. It looks like preparation for an invasion of Venezuela, if we had to take a guess.


http://www.vheadline.com/readnews.asp?id=75673
Pentagon 'Three-Day Blitz' Plan For Iran

By Sarah Baxter

THE Pentagon has drawn up plans for massive airstrikes against 1,200 targets in Iran, designed to annihilate the Iranians' military capability in three days, according to a national security expert.


http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article18290.htm



The War Criminal in the Living Room

By Paul Craig Roberts

The media is silent, Congress is absent, and Americans are distracted as George W. Bush openly prepares aggression against Iran. - US war doctrine has been altered to permit first strike nuclear attack on Iran and other non-nuclear countries.

http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article18287.htm



Hillary Clinton Is Willing to Nuke Iran
1 Minute Video
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article18285.htm



Are We 'Good Germans'?

By Ed Ciaccio

Bush wants our always-accommodating Congress, Democrats and Republicans, to declare a part of Iran's military as "terrorists." This will enable him to attack Iran without Congressional authorization.


http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article18291.htm



U.S. Obsessed With Using Force

By Reason Wafawarova

SINCE the United States assumed global leadership from Britain at the end of the Second World War; when it emerged as the biggest beneficiary of the war, a development that saw it declare the era of "the American century", Washington has been obsessed with using force to thwart small countries.

http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article18284.htm

Sunday, August 26, 2007

Some useful Viet Nam sites worth a look


Cultural Profiles:
http://www.culturalprofiles.net/Viet_Nam/Directories/Vi_ACYAIw-7879_ADs-t_Nam_Cultural_Profile/-1497.html

Vietnam Pictorial:
http://vietnampictorial.vnanet.vn

Excellent maps & location info:
www.vinacarta.com
Citizens Arrest of Australian Attorney-General Philip Ruddock as a War Criminal.

"...as Philip Ruddock was about to address a symposium on Law & Liberty in the War on Terror, an anti-war activist confronted Ruddock with a formal Warrant, charging him with various war crimes.

Peter McGregor, a retired academic from Newcastle, was himself then arrested, & charged with 'unlawful entry on inclosed lands'.

McGregor also had criticized UNSW, the Law Faculty, & all present, for welcoming such a war criminal. "Ruddock's abandoning of Habeas Corpus, as both Minister for Immigration, & Attorney-General should make him a social pariah, & especially with academics & those who believe in the rule of law & human rights. In order for evil to triumph, it is enough for good people to do nothing."

Contact: Peter McGregor


Is the Empire's Economy Starting to Crumble?

The Vietnam war was basically financed by printing more dollars. The inflation that followed in the 1970s was exported around the world. The current war in Iraq is again being financed in a similar fashion. But it would seem that after 4 years of expenditure on the war that is now running at more than $US 12 billion per month that things may be starting to come apart.

Uncle Sam, Your Banker Will See You Now by Paul Craig Roberts
Iran steps up petro-dollar war with U.S. by J. R. Corsi

From:
Irregular Gippsland Peace Newsletter Summary
(No. 38 September 2007)

Price: free /Donation
Copyright: the Author.
Feel free to send / copy / proliferate all or in part
Peter Gardner (ed) c/-PO Swifts Creek Australia 3896
ngarak@bigpond.com to receive full newsletter by email
Tomgram: Juan Cole, The Republic Militant at War, Then and Now
To send this to a friend, or to read more dispatches, go to tomdispatch.com

It was the highest-tech military of its moment and its invasion of the Arab land was overwhelming. Enemy forces were smashed, the oppressive ruling regime overthrown, the enemy capital occupied, and the country declared liberated… then the first acts of insurgency began…

George W. Bush's invasion of Iraq in 2003?
No, Napoleon Bonaparte's invasion of Egypt in June 1798. !!!!!!

There are times when the resonances of history are positively eerie. This happens to be one of them.

We all deserve a history lesson about the Napoleonic beginnings of our present catastrophe. (Too bad you-know-who didn't get one before ordering that March 2003 invasion.)

I got mine from a man whose blog,
Informed Comment, I read every morning without fail and whose flow of commentary on Bush's war in Iraq has been invaluable. I'm talking, of course, about Juan Cole who (evidently in his spare moments) has completed a history of the Napoleonic moment of "spreading democracy" to Arab lands, just published as Napoleon's Egypt: Invading the Middle East.

Some of the parallels are enough to make you jump out of your chair (if not your skin). For instance, Napoleon wrote a letter to one of his generals, well into the occupation, forbidding the beating of insurgents to extract information: "It has been recognized at all times that this manner of interrogating human beings, of putting them under torture, produces nothing good." Okay, at least Napoleon could learn from experience, an ability our President seems to lack, but the issue, put that way, rings a terrible bell 200 years later.

Napoleon's Egyptian moment lasted a mere three years. We are already into our fifth year in devolving Iraq with no obvious end in sight.

Last Sunday, the New York Times
printed a remarkable op-ed by an Army specialist, four sergeants, and two staff sergeants of the 82nd Airborne Division, now on duty in Iraq (one of whom was shot in the head while the piece was being prepared).

In it, they wrote, "Viewed from Iraq at the tail end of a 15-month deployment, the political debate in Washington is indeed surreal… [W]e are skeptical of recent press coverage portraying the conflict as increasingly manageable and feel it has neglected the mounting civil, political and social unrest we see every day."

Of the military mission of which they are a part they wrote: "In the end, we need to recognize that our presence may have released Iraqis from the grip of a tyrant, but that it has also robbed them of their self-respect. They will soon realize that the best way to regain dignity is to call us what we are -- an army of occupation -- and force our withdrawal."

Whether these soldiers know the history of Bonaparte in Egypt or not, they have grasped the essence of what lurks behind the fine liberatory words of the leaders of the republic militant.

Let's hope it's not too late to learn the lesson of Napoleon and slip out of "Egypt," while it's still possible. Though it hardly scatches the surface of his new book, here is a little taste from the Napoleonic lesson plan of Juan Cole.

Tom

Pitching the Imperial Republic
Bonaparte and Bush on Deck
By Juan Cole

Click here to read more of this dispatch.

NEED SOME TRUTH?
CHECK OUT TRAVELING SOLDIER

Telling the truth - about the occupation or the criminals running the government in Washington - is the first reason for Traveling Soldier. But we want to do more than tell the truth; we want to report on the resistance - whether it's in the streets of Baghdad, New York, or inside the armed forces. Our goal is for Traveling Soldier to become the thread that ties working-class people inside the armed services together. We want this newsletter to be a weapon to help you organize resistance within the armed forces. If you like what you've read, we hope that you'll join with us in building a network of active duty organizers.

http://www.traveling-soldier.org/

And join with Iraq War vets in the call to end the occupation and bring our troops home now!
www.ivaw.org/
Another excellent AGENT ORANGE site to check out! :

http://theagentorangeproject.blogspot.com/

Saturday, August 25, 2007

IWT - International World Television
The Real News is an alternative to the corporate mainstream television

Dear Supporters,

We just hit 101,000 views of
The Promise on YouTube!

We want to thank you for helping us reach this milestone by viewing the video, sending it to friends and spreading the word about The Real News vision.

Now help us promote a new video with Eric Margolis.
This video is the first test of a new program called, The Real Story.

Eric Margolis, contributor to The Real News, says television news is misleading people about the responsibility of the U.S. in fueling the Iraq civil war.

Click on the link, rate it and send it to your friends.

Together we are making The Real News a reality.

..........................................................................

Join us at www.therealnews.com as we begin our "Think" programming, presenting a seven-part interview with legendary author Gore Vidal. Hear tales of grotesque adventures, the end of empires, the demise of democracy and much more.

Says Vidal, "I was born 80 years ago in a country called the United States of America and now I live in a Homeland - an expression we haven't heard since Hitler."

After watching the Gore Vidal interview, return to the homepage and click on "Join the Conversation" to talk with us at The Real News Junkies. The Real News Junkies is where The Real News community can discuss political topics of interest with each other, and learn more about our development as a network.

Part 1 of our interview with Gore Vidal is posted today. We look forward to knowing what you think!

Thanks again,
Paul Jay

CEO & Senior Editor IWT/The Real News