The Saffron Revolution

October 1st, 2007

This is all pretty remarkable — last bit is the activist/op I posted prior; pass it around. Numbers apparently count … I don’t think Burma was prepared to have the whole world looking at their dirty underwear. Most bullies prefer to do things in the dark.

Jude

Burma: Thousands dead in massacre of the monks dumped in the jungle
MARCUS OSCARSSON, Daily Mail UK
1st October 2007

Thousands of protesters are dead and the bodies of hundreds of executed monks have been dumped in the jungle, a former intelligence officer for Burma’s ruling junta has revealed.

The most senior official to defect so far, Hla Win, said: “Many more people have been killed in recent days than you’ve heard about. The bodies can be counted in several thousand.”

Mr Win, who spoke out as a Swedish diplomat predicted that the revolt has failed, said he fled when he was ordered to take part in a massacre of holy men. He has now reached the border with Thailand.

Meanwhile, the United Nations special envoy was in Burma’s new capital today seeking meetings with the ruling military junta.

Ibrahim Gambari met detained opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi in Rangoon yesterday. But he has yet to meet the country’s senior generals as he attempts to halt violence against monks and pro-democracy activists.

It is anticipated the meeting will happen tomorrow.

Heavily-armed troops and police flooded the streets of Rangoon during Mr Ibrahim’s visit to prevent new protests.

Mr Gambari met some of the country’s military leaders in Naypyidaw yesterday and has returned there for further talks. But he did not meet senior general Than Shwe or his deputy Maung Aye - and they have issued no comment.

Reports from exiles along the frontier confirmed that hundreds of monks had simply “disappeared” as 20,000 troops swarmed around Rangoon yesterday to prevent further demonstrations by religious groups and civilians.

Word reaching dissidents hiding out on the border suggested that as well as executions, some 2,000 monks are being held in the notorious Insein Prison or in university rooms which have been turned into cells.

There were reports that many were savagely beaten at a sports ground on the outskirts of Rangoon, where they were heard crying for help.

Others who had failed to escape disguised as civilians were locked in their bloodstained temples.

There, troops abandoned religious beliefs, propped their rifles against statues of Buddha and began cooking meals on stoves set up in shrines.

In stark contrast, the streets of Rangoon and Mandalay - centres of the attempted saffron revolution last week - were virtually deserted.

A Swedish diplomat who visited Burma during the protests said last night that in her opinion the revolution has failed.

Liselotte Agerlid, who is now in Thailand, said that the Burmese people now face possibly decades of repression. “The Burma revolt is over,” she added.

“The military regime won and a new generation has been violently repressed and violently denied democracy. The people in the street were young people, monks and civilians who were not participating during the 1988 revolt.

“Now the military has cracked down the revolt, and the result may very well be that the regime will enjoy another 20 years of silence, ruling by fear.”

Mrs Agerlid said Rangoon is heavily guarded by soldiers.

“There are extremely high numbers of soldiers in Rangoon’s streets,” she added. “Anyone can see it is absolutely impossible for any demonstration to gather, or for anyone to do anything.

“People are scared and the general assessment is that the fight is over. We were informed from one of the largest embassies in Burma that 40 monks in the Insein prison were beaten to death today and subsequently burned.”

The diplomat also said that three monasteries were raided yesterday afternoon and are now totally abandoned.

At his border hideout last night, 42-year-old Mr Win said he hopes to cross into Thailand and seek asylum at the Norwegian Embassy.

The 42-year-old chief of military intelligence in Rangoon’s northern region, added: “I decided to desert when I was ordered to raid two monasteries and force several hundred monks onto trucks.

“They were to be killed and their bodies dumped deep inside the jungle. I refused to participate in this.”

With his teenage son, he made his escape from Rangoon, leaving behind his wife and two other sons.

He had no fears for their safety because his brother is a powerful general who, he believes, will defend the family.

Mr Win’s defection will raise a faint hope among tens of thousands of Burmese who have fled to villages along the Thai border.

They will feel others in the army may follow him and turn on their ageing leaders, Senior General Than Shwe and his deputy, Vice Senior General Maung Aye.

Burmese Monks Become Spiritual Warriors
Olivia Ward, Toronto Star/Canada via CommonDreams
Saturday, September 29, 2007

The two-week confrontation between Burma’s monks and military is no ordinary uprising, but a deeper struggle between spiritual and worldly forces in a country torn between the two polar opposites.

“Conditions are now critical for the monks,” says Ashin Asabhacara, head of the Burma-America Buddhist Association based in Maryland. “The military break into the monasteries at night, torture monks and throw them in jail. Their hunger for power is making them do terrible things and it will end very badly for them.”

Unlike earlier protests in Burma in the past two decades, the Buddhist clergy are taking the lead in demanding social justice and a new political order. And as protests continue, with mounting casualties, the monasteries are the focus of brutal attacks from the heavily armed 400,000-strong military.

But the unarmed monks are retaliating with spiritual tactics that are also powerful in a country where most of the population begins the day with prayers and offerings, and the vast majority believes that good deeds are spiritual capital.

For the monks, refusing food and alms from the military is a gesture that goes to the heart of Burmese Buddhism.

It was backed by an “excommunicative boycott” declared by a group of exiled monks, cutting off religious support from the junta and its supporters.

“The monks of Burma are poor, and they are unarmed, but they exert a life-and-death power over the population,” says Guy Horton, a British-based human rights consultant who has spent a decade collecting evidence of the Burmese military’s atrocities.

“This goes much deeper than ideology. The government has tried to buy off the monks by building temples and other things. But by attacking the monks they are putting their afterlives in grave danger,” says Horton, who is calling on Canada to join a campaign to bring the junta leaders to justice.

Monks normally begin the day by begging for food, and people who fill their bowls earn credits for the afterlife, known as karma. When monks reject food by overturning their bowls it puts the would-be donors in danger of a terrifying spiritual future.

“It’s a very high-pressure tactic,” explains Bruce Matthews, a Burma expert and professor emeritus of comparative religion at Acadia University in Nova Scotia. “It denies the military their credits. If they die without enough, their rebirth would be at a lower order of existence.”

The junta’s generals are heavily influenced by Buddhism, says Horton. “They’re terrified of the monkhood. They’re endlessly filming themselves going to the pagodas, and half of Burmese television is about the military bringing gifts there.”

Monks play a role in all major aspects of life, attending marriages and funerals, acting as spiritual counsellors and educating the poor. They run schools, hospitals and orphanages, an alternative welfare system in a desperately poor country with out-of-control inflation.

They also have strength in numbers: about 500,000 people devote their lives to the clergy, but hundreds of thousands of others have spent time in monasteries.

In spite of their unworldly image, Burma’s Buddhist clergy have been in the vanguard of political life for decades, sometimes working in partnership with the rulers.

“When you go back in history to how Burma came together, you see that there was a close alliance between monks and warrior kings,” says Priscilla Clapp, former chief of mission in the U.S. embassy in Burma. “They took care of people, but they made sure they served the king.”

Now, says Clapp, the two generals running the junta see themselves as “modern warrior kings” and have tried - but failed - to resurrect the old partnership. The excesses of the regime, and wretchedness of the Burmese people, have driven the monks to the streets.

“The junta is scared. It’s faced with a saffron revolution,” she says, referring to the golden colour of some Buddhist robes.

Rank and file soldiers, and some commanders, may be listening to their own spiritual doubts as the demonstrations continue. Unconfirmed rumours abound of two infantry divisions refusing orders to shoot the demonstrators, threatening a split in the army.

These paradoxes of power make the outcome of Burma’s democracy marches hard to predict.

Some analysts take the military’s hesitation to order wholesale slaughter of the demonstrators as a sign that the regime is breaking down. Others point out that an institution with an iron grip on government, media and economic life is unlikely to crack over months, let alone days, of protest.

“Burma is the most militarized country in the world,” says David Steinberg, director of Asian Studies at Georgetown University. “All power is centralized and personalized. It’s difficult to see the junta compromising and some kind of civil-military partnership coming about.”

Even under brutal attack, the monks could claim a moral victory, says Matthews. “Whether they will prevail against the military is difficult to see. But they have done something extraordinary. Even if they and the democratic activists fail this time, the handwriting is on the wall for the junta.”

Women Activists in Hiding
Shah Paung, Irrawaddy
September 11, 2007

Among the Burmese pro-democracy activists in hiding are many courageous and committed women who have played leading roles in the recent demonstrations against sharp price increases in fuel, which began on Aug 19.

Authorities have been hunting down at least two dozen activists.

Pictures of leading activists, “wanted persons,” have been distributed to checkpoints in Rangoon and other cities.

The Irrawaddy is honored to profile a number of these exceptional women activists who are on the front lines in the struggle for democracy in Burma .

Nilar Thein: A Mother Longs for Her Baby

Her painful breasts are swollen with mother’s milk.

But the brave mother-in-hiding and her hungry, 4-months-old baby are separated—perhaps for months or longer.

“How can I express my terrible feeling of missing my baby?” Nilar Thein said from her hiding place.

Nilar Thein has the sympathy of her fellow activists and from those who know her and her baby, Nay Kyi Min Yu, who is being cared for by her grandparents.

“When you have the feeling of your breasts engorged with milk it reminds you that your baby is hungry for your milk,” said a close friend of Nilar Thein.

The 35-year-old Nilar Thein, a member of the 88 Generation Students group, led a demonstration against the rise in fuel prices in Rangoon.

Nilar Thein does not stay in one location for long, and she sometimes walks the streets alone. She always worries about where she can find a safe place to sleep. She constantly thinks and dreams of her daughter, now living with her mother-in-law.

Her husband, Kyaw Min Yu, also known as Jimmy, is also a leading member of the 88 Generation Students group. He was arrested and detained by Burmese authorities during the recent demonstrtions. Rumors swirled around his condition on Sunday, when there was speculation that he had died after being tortured by the regime.

Nilar Thein herself has been detained by Burmese authorities two times before. Her first arrest was in 1991, when she was jailed for two months. Her second arrest was in December 6, 1996, during a student demonstration.

During the demonstration she slapped the face of a high ranking police officer who tried to block her way in the march.

Nilar Thein joined the Burma democracy movement as a high school student in 1988 as a member of the All Burma Federation of Student Unions.

She was sentenced to seven years imprisonment under Act of 5 (j), an emergency security act, and another three years imprisonment under Act 332 for slapping a policeman. She was released on July 6, 2005.

She was detained in Insein and Tharrawaddy prisons.

Su Su Nway: ‘We Are Water in Their Hands’

Su Su Nway, a John Humphery Freedom Award winner in 2006, has a serious heart disease. Normally, she receives medical treatment twice a week on Tuesdays and Fridays.

But now, in hiding, she can’t see her doctor. Su Su Nway doesn’t venture out from her hiding place, and she is afraid to have her medical doctor visit her.

Su Su Nway became a NLD youth member in 1990. Many Burmese people know of her fearless fight for the rights of people conscripted into forced labor and for farmers whose land has been confiscated by local authorities.

On August 28, she led a demonstration at Hledan Market in Rangoon’s Kamaryut Township where she was violently dragged away by thugs trying to arrest her. Fortunately, she escaped with the help of a Burmese journalist.

Her fight for democracy doesn’t include hate. From her hiding place, she told The Irrawaddy by telephone:

“We held the demonstrations not only for us but for all people, including those who beat us and tried to arrest us, including the police. Those violating us are also facing difficult daily lives. They have been used by the military regime because their lives are under military rule.”

Su Su Nway was jailed in October 2005 for “threatening and swearing at local authorities” and released in early June 2006, following appeals from the international community and the International Labour Organization.

In May 15, 2007, she was arrested while marching to a pagoda in Insein Township to pray for the release of Aung San Suu Kyi. She was released in June.

In 2000, she launched a successful lawsuit against local officials, including the headman of Htan Manaing village in Rangoon Division, for organizing forced labor.

“Because we are in hiding does not mean that we are in retreat, but we worry that there will be no people to stand up for the people and to speak out if we all go to jail,” said Su Su Nway.

“We know we are water in their [the regime's] hands, and we can not escape for long, but before we get arrested we want to say what we should say during the time we are in hiding.”

Mie Mie: An Activist While Still at School

Mother of two children, Mie Mie was a leader of recent protest demonstrations, along with Nilar Thein and other women activists.

“Though our leaders have been arrested, we will continue with our movement,” she told the Associated Press news agency during the demonstrations of August 23. “We will not fear any arrest or threat.”

Mie Mie was a pro-democracy activist while still a 16-year-old high school student at the time of the nationwide uprising in 1988, belonging to the All Burma Federation of Student Unions and the Democratic Party for a New Society. one year later, she was detained for four months because of her political activity.

During the 1996 student demonstrations, Mie Mie, a university student, was arrested and sentenced to seven years imprisonment. She spent about one year in Rangoon’s notorious Insein prison and was then transferred to Tharawaddy prison in Pegu Division.

Eai Shwe Sin Nyut, who knew Mie Mie from her prison days and who now lives in exile, paid tribute to her fellow activist: “Mie Mie is an honest woman—brave and always standing up for truth. Even in prison, she always resisted the authorities and tried to get medicine for her sick friends.”

Phyu Phyu Thin: Who Cares for Her HIV/AIDS Patients Now?

Phyu Phyu Thin, a member of the opposition National League for Democracy, is well known for her work with HIV/AIDS patients, many of whom are now in jeopardy because she is unable to care for them while in hiding.

One of her patients gave sanctuary to Phyu Phyu Thin during the demonstrations, she disclosed to The Irrawaddy from her hiding place. A monk who is HIV positive helped her evade arrest.

Phyu Phyu Thin was first arrested in 2001 during a visit to Mandalay by opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi. She was detained for four months and four days.

She was arrested for a second time in May this year and was held for 10 days. Eleven of her HIV/AIDS patients demonstrated for her release.

UN envoy meets Myanmar democracy leader
AP
Sun Sep 30

YANGON, Myanmar - A U.N. envoy was unable to meet with Myanmar’s top two junta leaders in his effort to persuade them to ease a violent crackdown on anti-government protesters, but was allowed a highly orchestrated session Sunday with detained opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

The military government, meanwhile, flooded the main city of Yangon with troops, swelling their numbers to about 20,000 by Sunday and ensuring that almost all demonstrators would remain off the streets, a diplomat said.

Scores of people also were arrested overnight, further weakening the flagging uprising against 45 years of military dictatorship. The protests began Aug. 19 when the government sharply raised fuel prices, then mushroomed into the junta’s largest challenge in decades when Myanmar’s revered monks took a leading role.

One protest was reported Sunday in the western state of Rakhine where more than 800 people marched in the town of Taunggok, shouting “Release all political prisoners!” Police, soldiers and junta supporters blocked the road, forcing them to disperse, a local resident said.

Ibrahim Gambari, the U.N.’s special envoy to Myanmar, was sent to the country to try to persuade the notoriously unyielding military junta to halt its crackdown. Soldiers have shot and killed protesters, ransacked Buddhist monasteries, beaten monks and dissidents and arrested an estimated 1,000 people in the last week alone.

But it was not clear what, if anything, Gambari could accomplish. The junta has rebuffed scores of previous U.N. attempts at promoting democracy and Gambari himself spoke in person to Suu Kyi nearly a year ago with nothing to show for it.

Gambari began Sunday by meeting with the acting prime minister, the deputy foreign minister and the ministers of information and culture in Myanmar’s new bunker-like capital of Naypyitaw, 240 miles north of Yangon. The meeting, however, did not include the junta leader, Senior Gen. Than Shwe, or his deputy, Gen. Maung Aye, the two key figures whom Gambari had been pushing to speak with before his arrival.

He was then unexpectedly flown back to the main city of Yangon and whisked to the State Guest House. Suu Kyi was briefly freed from house detention and brought over to speak with him for more than an hour, according to U.N. officials.

Suu Kyi, the 1991 Nobel Peace prize winner who has come to symbolize the struggle for democracy in Myanmar, has spent nearly 12 of the last 18 years under house arrest.

Gambari flew back to remote Naypyitaw late Sunday in hopes of a possible third meeting on Monday, an Asian diplomat said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

U.N. officials would not comment on speculation that he was carrying a letter from Suu Kyi to the junta but issued a statement that Gambari still hoped to speak with the junta’s top leaders before leaving Myanmar.

The junta did not comment on Sunday’s talks.

“I view this is very positive,” said a second Asian diplomat who requested anonymity, citing protocol. “Hopefully, the shuttle diplomacy will bring some positive solutions to the present crisis as to the process of national reconciliation.”

Suu Kyi’s own party was not as optimistic. National League for Democracy secretary U Lwin told Radio Free Asia that he expects little progress from the talks because he sees Gambari as little more than a “facilitator” who can bring messages back and forth but has no authority to reach a lasting agreement.

Many see China, Myanmar’s biggest trading partner, as the most likely outside catalyst. But China, India and Russia, who have been competing for Myanmar’s bountiful oil and gas resources, do not seem prepared to go beyond words in dealing with the junta.

Britain’s ambassador Mark Canning said Gambari should stay in Myanmar “long enough to get under way a genuine process of national reconciliation.”

“He should be given as much time as that takes. That will require access to senior levels of government as well as a range of political actors,” Canning told The Associated Press.

The protests drew international attention after thousands of Buddhist monks joined people in venting anger at decades of brutal military rule. Some 70,000 people took to the streets before the protests were crushed Wednesday and Thursday when government troops opened fire into the crowds and raided monasteries to beat and arrest monks.

The government says 10 people were killed in last week’s violence but independent sources say the number is far higher.

Truckloads of armed soldiers on Sunday patrolled downtown Yangon near recent protest sites and along the city’s major streets. A nearby public market and a Catholic church were also teeming with soldiers.

The atmosphere in the city was intimidating but not always menacing. One witness said soldiers sat inside trucks and on sidewalks chatting, munched snacks or walked around looking bored.

Still, a video shot Sunday by a dissident group, the Democratic Voice of Burma, showed a monk, covered in bruises, floating face down in a Yangon river. It was not clear how long the body had been there.

People suspected of organizing this week’s rallies continue to be arrested, a third Asian diplomat said on condition of anonymity, citing protocol. The diplomat estimated the total number of arrests could be as high as 1,000, including several prominent members of the NLD.

Those joined an estimated 1,100 other political detainees already languishing in Myanmar’s jails.

On Sunday, Pope Benedict XVI joined world leaders in expressing serious concern about the situation in Myanmar. About 1 percent of the country’s 54 million people are Catholics.

“I am following with great trepidation the very serious events,” the pontiff said during an appearance at his summer residence near Rome. “I want to express my spiritual closeness to the dear population in this moment of the very painful trial it is going through.”

The Catholic Church has ordered its clergy not to take part in demonstrations or political activities in Myanmar. Worshippers at Yangon’s Catholic churches Sunday read posted bulletins from its hierarchy stating that priests, brothers and nuns were not to become involved in the demonstrations, but that lay Catholics could act as they saw fit.

From Iraq to Burma
Hypocrisy Rules the West
PAUL CRAIG ROBERTS, Smirking Chimp
October 1, 2007

Shame has vanished from Western “civilization.” Hypocrisy has taken its place.

On September 28, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown could be heard on National Public Radio decrying the use of violence against democratic protesters by the government in Burma. Brown declared the British people’s revulsion over the violence inflicted by the Burmese government on its people. But Brown said nothing about the violence the British government was inflicting on Iraqis and Afghans.

George W. Bush also struck the blameless pose when he declared: “The world is watching the people of Burma take to the streets to demand their freedom, and the American people stand in solidarity with these brave individuals.”

Bush and Brown do not have the same sympathy for the peoples of Iraq and Afghanistan. Neither Bush nor Brown stand in solidarity with those who are demanding their freedom from foreign occupation by American and British troops. Indeed, Bush and Brown, as commanders in chief, are on a killing spree that makes the government in Burma look extremely restrained by comparison.

Why were British soldiers sent to kill Iraqis and Afghans? September 11 had nothing whatsoever to do with the UK. No doubt but that the corrupt Tony Blair was paid off to drag the British people into Bush’s Middle East war for American/Israeli hegemony, but Brown has done nothing to terminate Bush’s use of the British military as mercenaries.

The NPR announcers also supported the Burmese people, but they, too, show little disturbance over Bush’s five-year old wars that we now know were based entirely on lies. Al Qaeda is not the Taliban, and Iraq had no WMD. Neither country was a threat to the US. Now that we know this, why does the media still give Bush and Brown a free pass to use violence against Iraqis and Afghans?

To cut to the chase, what is the difference between Bush and Brown on one hand and the murderous Burmese government on the other? Bush and Brown are actually worse. They pretend to be democrats concerned with what people actually want. The Burmese government doesn’t pretend to be anything but a military dictatorship. Moreover, the Burmese government is clean by comparison as it hasn’t committed acts of naked aggression–war crimes under the Nuremberg standard–by invading other countries and attempting to occupy them.

Despite all the killing Bush has accomplished, he thirsts for yet more blood. Iran is in his and Israel’s sights. All indications are that Bush is going to attack Iran. Propaganda, demonizations, and crass lies are pouring out of the Bush regime and its media and academic propagandists such as Columbia University president Lee Bollinger. Both parties in Congress have lined up behind the coming attack on Iran. The despicable senator Joe Lieberman even snuck language into a bill to give Bush the go ahead.

Who is going to stop Bush from a third war crime? Not his vice president, Not his national security adviser, not his secretary of defense. Not his secretary of state. Not Congress. Not the US military. Not the corporate fat cats. Not the Israel Lobby. Not the bought and paid for “allies.” Not the anti-war movement. Not the American people. Certainly not the media.

Americans are content with whatever crimes their government commits as long as the justification is Americans’ safety.

Americans’ willingness to murder others out of fear for their own safety is a result of September 11. The antiwar movement is impotent, because it has accepted the government’s 9/11 story. To oppose a war when you accept the government’s reason for the war is an indefensible position.

The Bush regime knows that if people will believe its 9/11 story, they will believe anything. Propaganda silences facts, and Americans fall for one set of falsehoods after another.

The alleged 9/11 hijackers all came from countries allied with the US, principally Saudi Arabia, but Americans believe the government’s lies that Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, and Syria are responsible. Americans have been convinced that without “regime change” in these countries, the American superpower will remain helpless in face of stateless Muslims armed with box cutters.

Americans have been brainwashed to believe that Muslims hate us for our “freedom and democracy,” whereas in fact the problem is the US government’s immoral foreign policy and interference in the internal affairs of Muslim countries. Bush’s message to the Middle East is clear: Be a puppet state or be destroyed.

In the meantime, to prevent democracy and civil liberties from getting in the way of making Americans safe, Bush has set aside habeas corpus, due process, right to legal representation, privacy, and the separation of powers mandated by the US Constitution.

Otherwise, Bush says, we will lose the “war on terror.”

Bush says he has made Americans safe by ridding them of these constitutional impediments to their safety. And once American bombs fall on Iran and Syria, those countries will be free and democratic, too, like Iraq and Afghanistan.

In leading Americans to this conclusion, Bush has sunk the United States to a new low in human intelligence and morality.

Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration. He was Associate Editor of the Wall Street Journal editorial page and Contributing Editor of National Review.

from AVAAZ

Burma’s generals have brought their brutal iron hand down on peaceful monks and protesters — but in response, a massive global outcry is gathering pace. The roar of global public opinion is being heard in hundreds of protests outside Chinese and Burmese embassies, people round the world wearing the monks’ color red, and on the internet– where our petition has exploded to over 200,000 signers in just 72 hours.

People power can win this. Burma’s powerful sponsor China can halt the crackdown, if it believes that its international reputation and the 2008 Olympics in Beijing depend on it. To convince the Chinese government and other key countries, Avaaz is launching a major global and Asian ad campaign on Wednesday, including full page ads in the Financial Times and other newspapers, that will deliver our message and the number of signers. We need 1 million voices to be the global roar that will get China’s attention. If every one of us forwards this email to just 20 friends, we’ll reach our target in the next 72 hours.

Please sign the petition at this link - if you haven’t already - and forward this email to everyone you care about:

The pressure is working - already, there are signs of splits in the Burmese Army, as some soldiers refuse to attack their own people. The brutal top General, Than Shwe, has reportedly moved his family out of the country – he must fear his rule may crumble.

The Burmese people are showing incredible courage in the face of horror. We’re broadcasting updates on our effort over the radio into Burma itself – telling the people that growing numbers of us stand with them. Let’s do everything we can to help them – we have hours, not days, to do it. Please sign the petition and forward this email to at least 20 friends right now. Scroll down our petition page for details of times and events to join in the massive wave of demonstrations happening around the world at Burmese and Chinese embassies.

With hope and determination,
Ricken, Paul, Pascal, Graziela, Galit, Ben, Milena and the whole Avaaz Team

“So keep fightin’ for freedom and justice, beloveds, but don’t you forget to have fun doin’ it. Lord, let your laughter ring forth. Be outrageous, ridicule the fraidy-cats, rejoice in all the oddities that freedom can produce. And when you get through kickin’ ass and celebratin’ the sheer joy of a good fight, be sure to tell those who come after how much fun it was.”
~ Molly Ivins, 1944 - 2007

In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.
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Entry Filed under: Political Waves

1 Comment Add your own

  • 1. yee,dr  |  December 20th, 2007 at 3:29 am

    what a wonderful job done!!
    I love it.

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