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Cold War II
Will the U.S. response to Iran's supposed threat heat up Cold War II?
These are exciting days in Washington, as the government directs its energies
to the demanding task of containing Iran in what Washington Post correspondent
Robin Wright, joining others, calls Cold War II.
During Cold War I, the task was to contain two awesome forces. The lesser
and more moderate force was an implacable enemy whose avowed objective
is world domination by whatever means and at whatever cost. Hence if
the United States is to survive, it will have to adopt a repugnant philosophy
and reject acceptable norms of human conduct and the long-standing American
concepts of fair play that had been exhibited with such searing clarity
in the conquest of the national territory, the Philippines, Haiti, and
other beneficiaries of the idealistic new world bent on ending inhumanity,
as the newspaper of record describes our noble mission. The judgments about
the nature of the super-Hitler and the necessary response are those of
General Jimmy Doolittle, in a critical assessment of the CIA commissioned
by President Eisenhower in 1954. They are quite consistent with those of
Truman administration liberals, the wise men who were present at the
creation, notoriously in NSC 68 but in fact quite consistently.
In the face of the Kremlins unbridled aggression in every corner of the
world, it is perhaps understandable that the U.S. resisted in defense of
human values with a savage display of torture, terror, subversion, and
violence while doing everything in its power to alter or abolish any regime
not openly allied with America, as Tim Weiner summarizes the doctrine
of the Eisenhower administration in his recent history of the CIA. And
just as the Truman liberals easily matched their successors in fevered
rhetoric about the implacable enemy and its campaign to rule the world,
so did John F. Kennedy, who bitterly condemned the monolithic and ruthless
conspiracy, and dismissed the proposal of its leader (Khrushchev) for
sharp mutual cuts in offensive weaponry, then reacted to his unilateral
implementation of these proposals with a huge military build-up. The Kennedy
brothers also quickly surpassed Eisenhower in violence and terror, as they
unleashed covert action with an unprecedented intensity (Wiener), doubling
Eisenhowers annual record of major CIA covert operations, with horrendous
consequences worldwide, even a close brush with terminal nuclear war.
But at least it was possible to deal with Russia, unlike the fiercer enemy,
China. The more thoughtful scholars recognized that Russia was poised uneasily
between civilization and barbarism. As Henry Kissinger later explained
in his academic essays, only the West has undergone the Newtonian revolution
and is therefore deeply committed to the notion that the real world is
external to the observer, while the rest still believe that the real
world is almost completely internal to the observer, the basic division
that is the deepest problem of the contemporary international order.
But Russia, unlike third word peasants who think that rain and sun are
inside their heads, was perhaps coming to the realization that the world
is not just a dream, Kissinger felt.
Not so the still more savage and bloodthirsty enemy, China, which for liberal
Democrat intellectuals at various times rampaged as a a Slavic Manchukuo,
a blind puppet of its Kremlin master, or a monster utterly unconstrained
as it pursued its crazed campaign to crush the world in its tentacles,
or whatever else circumstances demanded. The remarkable tale of doctrinal
fanaticism from the 1940s to the 1970s, which makes contemporary rhetoric
seem rather moderate, is reviewed by James Peck in his highly revealing
study of the national security culture, Washingtons China.
In later years, there were attempts to mimic the valiant deeds of the defenders
of virtue from the two villainous global conquerors and their loyal slavesfor
example, when the Gipper strapped on his cowboy boots and declared a National
Emergency because Nicaraguan hordes were only two days from Harlingen Texas,
though, as he courageously informed the press, despite the tremendous odds,
I refuse to give up. I remember a man named Winston Churchill who said,
Never give in. Never, never, never. So we wont. With consequences that
need not be reviewed.
Even with the best of efforts, however, the attempts never were able to
recapture the glorious days of Cold War I. But now, at last, those heights
might be within reach, as another implacable enemy bent on world conquest
has arisen, which we must contain before it destroys us all: Iran.
Perhaps its a lift to the spirits to be able to recover those heady Cold
War days when at least there was a legitimate force to contain, however
dubious the pretexts and disgraceful the means. But it is instructive to
take a closer look at the contours of Cold War II as they are being designed
by the former Kremlinologists now running U.S. foreign policy, such as
Rice and Gates (Wright).
The task of containment is to establish a bulwark against Irans growing
influence in the Middle East, Mark Mazzetti and Helene Cooper explain
in the New York Times (July 31). To contain Irans influence we must surround
Iran with U.S. and NATO ground forces, along with massive naval deployments
in the Persian Gulf and of course incomparable air power and weapons of
mass destruction. And we must provide a huge flow of arms to what Condoleezza
Rice calls the forces of moderation and reform in the region, the brutal
tyrannies of Egypt and Saudi Arabia and, with particular munificence, Israel,
by now virtually an adjunct of the militarized high-tech U.S. economy.
All to contain Irans influence. A daunting challenge indeed.
And daunting it is. In Iraq, Iranian support is welcomed by much of the
majority Shiite population. In an August visit to Teheran, Iraqi Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki met with the supreme leader Ali Khamenei, President
Ahmadinejad, and other senior officials, and thanked Tehran for its positive
and constructive role in improving security in Iraq, eliciting a sharp
reprimand from President Bush, who declares Teheran a regional peril and
asserts the Iraqi leader must understand, to quote the headline of the
Los Angeles Times report on al-Malikis intellectual deficiencies. A few
days before, also greatly to Bushs discomfiture, Afghan President Hamid
Karzai, Washingtons favorite, described Iran as a helper and a solution
in his country. Similar problems abound beyond Irans immediate neighbors.
In Lebanon, according to polls, most Lebanese see Iranian-backed Hezbollah
as a legitimate force defending their country from Israel, Wright reports.
And in Palestine, Iranian-backed Hamas won a free election, eliciting savage
punishment of the Palestinian population by the U.S. and Israel for the
crime of voting the wrong way, another episode in democracy promotion.
But no matter. The aim of U.S. militancy and the arms flow to the moderates
is to counter what everyone in the region believes is a flexing of muscles
by a more aggressive Iran, according to an unnamed senior U.S. government
officialeveryone being the technical term used to refer to Washington
and its more loyal clients. Irans aggression consists in its being welcomed
by many within the region, and allegedly supporting resistance to the U.S.
occupation of neighboring Iraq.
Its likely, though little discussed, that a prime concern about Irans
influence is to the East, where in mid-August, Russia and China today
host Irans President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad at a summit of a Central Asian
security club designed to counter U.S. influence in the region, the business
press reports. The security club is the Shanghai Cooperation Organization
(SCO), which has been slowly taking shape in recent years. Its membership
includes not only the two giants Russia and China, but also the energy-rich
Central Asian states Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, and Tajikistan.
Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan was a guest of honor at the August meeting.
In another unwelcome development for the Americans, Turkmenistans President
Gurbanguly Berdymukhammedov also accepted an invitation to attend the summit,
another step in its improvement of relations with Russia, particularly
in energy, reversing a long-standing policy of isolation from Russia. Russia
in May secured a deal to build a new pipeline to import more gas from Turkmenistan,
bolstering its dominant hold on supplies to Europe and heading off a competing
U.S.-backed plan that would bypass Russian territory.
Along with Iran, there are three other official observer states: India,
Pakistan, and Mongolia. Washingtons request for similar status was denied.
In 2005 the SCO called for a timetable for termination of any U.S. military
presence in Central Asia. The participants at the August meeting flew to
the Urals to attend the first joint Russia-China military exercises on
Russian soil.
Association of Iran with the SCO extends its inroads into the Middle East,
where China has been increasing trade and other relations with the jewel
in the crown, Saudi Arabia. There is an oppressed Shiite population in
Saudi Arabia that is also susceptible to Irans influenceand happens to
sit on most of Saudi oil. About 40 percent of Middle East oil is reported
to be heading East, not West. As the flow Eastward increases, U.S. control
declines over this lever of world domination, a stupendous source of strategic
power, as the State Department described Saudi oil 60 years ago.
In Cold War I, the Kremlin had imposed an iron curtain and built the Berlin
Wall to contain Western influence. In Cold War II, Wright reports, the
former Kremlinologists framing policy are imposing a green curtain to
bar Iranian influence. In short, government-media doctrine is that the
Iranian threat is rather similar to the Western threat that the Kremlin
sought to contain, and the U.S. is eagerly taking on the Kremlins role
in the thrilling new Cold War.
All of this is presented without noticeable concern. Nevertheless, the
recognition that the U.S. government is modeling itself on Stalin and his
successors in the new Cold War must be arousing at least some flickers
of embarrassment. Perhaps that is how we can explain the ferocious Washington
Post editorial announcing that Iran has escalated its aggressiveness to
a Hot War: the Revolutionary Guard, a radical state within Irans Islamic
state, is waging war against the United States and trying to kill as many
American soldiers as possible. The U.S. must therefore fight back, the
editors thunder, finding quite puzzling...the murmurs of disapproval from
European diplomats and others who say they favor using diplomacy and economic
pressure, rather than military action, to rein in Iran, even in the face
of its outright aggression. The evidence that Iran is waging war against
the U.S. is now conclusive. After all, it comes from an Administration
that has never deceived the American people, even improving on the famous
stellar honesty of its predecessors.
Suppose that for once Washingtons charges happen to be true, and Iran
really is providing Shiite militias with roadside bombs that kill U.S.
forces, perhaps even making use of some of the advanced weaponry lavishly
provided to the Revolutionary Guard by Ronald Reagan in order to fund the
illegal war against Nicaragua, under the pretext of arms for hostages (the
number of hostages tripled during these endeavors). If the charges are
true, then Iran could properly be charged with a minuscule fraction of
the iniquity of the Reagan administration, which provided Stinger missiles
and other high-tech military aid to the insurgents seeking to disrupt
Soviet efforts to bring stability and justice to Afghanistan, as they saw
it. Perhaps Iran is even guilty of some of the crimes of the Roosevelt
administration, which assisted terrorist partisans attacking peaceful and
sovereign Vichy France in 1940-41, and had thus declared war on Germany
even before Pearl Harbor.
One can pursue these questions further. The CIA station chief in Pakistan
in 1981, Howard Hart, reports that I was the first chief of station ever
sent abroad with this wonderful order: Go kill Soviet soldiers. Imagine!
I loved it. Of course the mission was not to liberate Afghanistan, Tim
Wiener writes in his history of the CIA, repeating the obvious. But it
was a noble goal, he writes. Killing Russians with no concern for the
fate of Afghans is a noble goal, but support for resistance to a U.S.
invasion and occupation would be a vile act and declaration of war.
Without irony, the Bush administration and the media charge that Iran is
meddling in Iraq, otherwise presumably free from foreign interference.
The evidence is partly technical. Do the serial numbers on the Improvised
Explosive Devices really trace back to Iran? If so, does the leadership
of Iran know about the IEDs, or only the Iranian Revolutionary Guard. Settling
the debate, the White House plans to brand the Revolutionary Guard as a
specially designated global terrorist force, an unprecedented action
against a national military branch, authorizing Washington to undertake
a wide range of punitive actions. Watching in disbelief, much of the world
asks whether the U.S. military, invading and occupying Irans neighbors,
might better merit this chargeor its Israeli client, now about to receive
a huge increase in military aid to commemorate 40 years of harsh occupation
and illegal settlement, and its fifth invasion of Lebanon a year ago.
It is instructive that Washingtons propaganda framework is reflexively
accepted, apparently without notice, in U.S. and other Western commentary
and reporting, apart from the marginal fringe of what is called the loony
left. What is considered criticism is skepticism as to whether all of
Washingtons charges about Iranian aggression in Iraq are true. It might
be an interesting research project to see how closely the propaganda of
Russia, Nazi Germany, and other aggressors and occupiers matched the standards
of todays liberal press and commentators.
The comparisons are of course unfair. Unlike German and Russian occupiers,
American forces are in Iraq by right, on the principle, too obvious even
to enunciate, that the U.S. owns the world. Therefore, as a matter of elementary
logic, the U.S. cannot invade and occupy another country. The U.S. can
only defend and liberate others. No other category exists. Predecessors,
including the most monstrous, have commonly sworn by the same principle,
but again there is an obvious difference: they were wrong and we are right.
QED.
Another comparison comes to mind, which is studiously ignored when we are
sternly admonished of the ominous consequences that might follow withdrawal
of U.S. troops from Iraq. The preferred analogy is Indochina, highlighted
in a shameful speech by the president on August 22. That analogy can perhaps
pass muster among those who have succeeded in effacing from their minds
the record of U.S. actions in Indochina, including the destruction of much
of Vietnam and the murderous bombing of Laos and Cambodia as the U.S. began
its withdrawal from the wreckage of South Vietnam. In Cambodia, the bombing
was in accord with Kissingers genocidal orders: anything that flies on
anything that movesactions that drove an enraged populace into the arms
of an insurgency [the Khmer Rouge] that had enjoyed relatively little support
before the Kissinger- Nixon bombing was inaugurated, as Cambodia specialists
Owen Taylor and Ben Kiernan observe in a highly important study that passed
virtually without notice, in which they reveal that the bombing was five
times the incredible level reported earlier, greater than all allied bombing
in World War II. Completely suppressing all relevant facts, it is then
possible for the president and many commentators to present Khmer Rouge
crimes as a justification for continuing to devastate Iraq.
But although the grotesque Indochina analogy receives much attention, the
obvious analogy is ignored: the Russian withdrawal from Afganistan, which,
as Soviet analysts predicted, led to shocking violence and destruction
as the country was taken over by Reagans favorites, who amused themselves
by such acts as throwing acid in the faces of women in Kabul they regarded
as too liberated, and who then virtually destroyed the city and much else,
creating such havoc and terror that the population actually welcomed the
Taliban. That analogy could indeed be invoked without utter absurdity by
advocates of staying the course, but evidently it is best forgotten.
Under the heading Secretary Rices Mideast mission: contain Iran, the
press reports Rices warning that Iran is the single most important single-country
challenge to...U.S. interests in the Middle East. That is a reasonable
judgment. Given the long-standing principle that Washington must do everything
in its power to alter or abolish any regime not openly allied with America,
Iran does pose a unique challenge, and it is natural that the task of containing
Iranian influence should be a high priority.
As elsewhere, Bush administration rhetoric is relatively mild in this case.
For the Kennedy administration, Latin America was the most dangerous area
in the world when there was a threat that the progressive Cheddi Jagan
might win a free election in British Guiana, overturned by CIA shenanigans
that handed the country over to the thuggish racist Forbes Burnham. A few
years earlier, Iraq was the most dangerous place in the world (CIA director
Allen Dulles) after General Abdel Karim Qassim broke the Anglo-American
condominium over Middle East oil, overthrowing the pro-U.S. monarchy, which
had been heavily infiltrated by the CIA. A primary concern was that Qassim
might join Nasser, then the supreme Middle East devil, in using the incomparable
energy resources of the Middle East for the domestic population. The issue
for Washington was not so much access as control. At the time and for many
years after, Washington was purposely exhausting domestic oil resources
in the interests of national security, meaning security for the profits
of Texas oil men, like the failed entrepreneur who now sits in the Oval
Office. But as high-level planner George Kennan had explained well before,
we cannot relax our guard when there is any interfence with protection
of our resources (which accidentally happen to be somewhere else).
Unquestionably, Irans government merits harsh condemnation, though it
has not engaged in worldwide terror, subversion, and aggression, following
the U.S. modelwhich extends to todays Iran as well, if ABC news is correct
in reporting that the U.S. is supporting Pakistan-based Jundullah, which
is carrying out terrorist acts inside Iran. The sole act of aggression
attributed to Iran is the conquest of two small islands in the Gulfunder
Washingtons close ally the Shah. In addition to internal repressionheightened,
as Iranian dissidents regularly protest, by U.S. militancythe prospect
that Iran might develop nuclear weapons also is deeply troubling. Though
Iran has every right to develop nuclear energy, no oneincluding the majority
of Iranianswants it to have nuclear weapons. That would add to the threat
to survival posed much more seriously by its near neighbors Pakistan, India,
and Israel, all nuclear armed with the blessing of the U.S., which most
of the world regards as the leading threat to world peace, for evident
reasons.
Iran rejects U.S. control of the Middle East, challenging fundamental policy
doctrine, but it hardly poses a military threat. On the contrary, it has
been the victim of outside powers for years: in recent memory, when the
U.S. and Britain overthrew its parliamentary government and installed a
brutal tyrant in 1953, and when the U.S. supported Saddam Husseins murderous
invasion, slaughtering hundreds of thousands of Iranians, many with chemical
weapons, without the international community lifting a fingersomething
that Iranians do not forget as easily as the perpetrators. And then under
severe sanctions as a punishment for disobedience.
Israel regards Iran as a threat. Israel seeks to dominate the region with
no interference, and Iran might be some slight counterbalance, while also
supporting domestic forces that do not bend to Israels will. It may, however,
be useful to bear in mind that Hamas has accepted the international consensus
on a two-state settlement on the international border, and Hezbollah, along
with Iran, has made clear that it would accept any outcome approved by
Palestinians, leaving the U.S. and Israel isolated in their traditional
rejectionism.
But Iran is hardly a military threat to Israel. And whatever threat there
might be could be overcome if the U.S. would accept the view of the great
majority of its own citizens and of Iranians and permit the Middle East
to become a nuclear-weapons free zone, including Iran and Israel, and U.S.
forces deployed there. One may also recall that UN Security Council Resolution
687 of April 3, 1991, to which Washington appeals when convenient, calls
for establishing in the Middle East a zone free from weapons of mass destruction
and all missiles for their delivery.
It is widely recognized that use of military force in Iran would risk blowing
up the entire region, with untold consequences beyond. We know from polls
that in the surrounding countries, where the Iranian government is hardly
popularTurkey, Saudi Arabia, Pakistannevertheless large majorities prefer
even a nuclear-armed Iran to any form of military action against it.
The rhetoric about Iran has escalated to the point where both political
parties and practically the whole U.S. press accept it as legitimate and,
in fact, honorable, that all options are on the table, to quote Hillary
Clinton and everybody else, possibly even nuclear weapons. All options
on the table means that Washington threatens war.
The UN Charter outlaws the threat or use of force. The United States,
which has chosen to become an outlaw state, disregards international laws
and norms. Were allowed to threaten anybody we wantand to attack anyone
we choose.
Washingtons feverish new Cold War containment policy has spread to Europe.
Washington intends to install a missile defense system in the Czech Republic
and Poland, marketed to Europe as a shield against Iranian missiles. Even
if Iran had nuclear weapons and long-range missiles, the chances of its
using them to attack Europe are perhaps on a par with the chances of Europes
being hit by an asteroid, so perhaps Europe would do as well to invest
in an asteroid defense system. Furthermore, if Iran were to indicate the
slightest intention of aiming a missile at Europe or Israel, the country
would be vaporized.
Of course, Russian planners are gravely upset by the shield proposal. We
can imagine how the U.S. would respond if a Russian anti-missile system
were erected in Canada. The Russians have good reason to regard an anti-missile
system as part of a first-strike weapon against them. It is generally understood
that such a system could never block a first strike, but it could conceivably
impede a retaliatory strike. On all sides, missile defense is therefore
understood to be a first-strike weapon, eliminating a deterrent to attack.
A small initial installation in Eastern Europe could easily be a base for
later expansion. More obviously, the only military function of such a system
with regard to Iran, the declared aim, would be to bar an Iranian deterrent
to U.S. or Israel aggression.
Not surprisingly, in reaction to the missile defense plans, Russia has
resorted to its own dangerous gestures, including the recent decision to
renew long-range patrols by nuclear-capable bombers after a 15-year hiatus,
in one recent case near the U.S. military base on Guam. These actions reflect
Russias anger over what it has called American and NATO aggressiveness,
including plans for a missile-defense system in the Czech Republic and
Poland, analysts said (Andrew Kramer, NYT).
The shield ratchets the threat of war a few notches higher, in the Middle
East and elsewhere, with incalculable consequences, and the potential for
a terminal nuclear war. The immediate fear is that by accident or design,
Washingtons war planners or their Israeli surrogate might decide to escalate
their Cold War II into a hot onein this case a real hot war.
Z
Noam Chomsky is a linguist, lecturer, social critic, and author of numerous
articles and books.
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IWW - The North American Work People’s College will take place July 12-16 at Mesaba Co-op Park in northern Minnesota. The event will bring together Wobblies from branches across the continent to learn new skills and build One Big Union.
Contact: http://workpeoplescollege.org/.
PEACESTOCK - On July 13th, the 11th Annual Peacestock: A Gathering for Peace, will take place at Windbeam Farm in Hager City, WI. The event is a mixture of music, speakers and community for peace. Sponsored by Veterans for Peace.
Contact: Bill Habedank, 1913 Grandview Ave., Red Wing, MN 55066; 651-388-7733; billhabedank@yahoo.com; http://www.peacestockvfp.org.
CHILDREN’S DEFENSE - July 15-19, join clergy, seminarians, Christian educators, young adult leaders and other faith-based advocates for children at CDF Haley Farm in Clinton, Tennessee, for five days of spiritual renewal, networking, movement building workshops, and continuing education about the urgent needs of children at the 19th annual Proctor Institute for Child Advocacy Ministry.
Contact: cdfinfo@childrensdefense.org; http://www.childrensdefense.org.
ACTIVIST CAMP - Youth Empowered Action (YEA) Camp will have sessions in July and August in Ben Lomond, CA; Portland, OR; Charlton, MA. YEA Camp is designed for activists 12-17 years old who want to make a difference in the world.
Contact: info@yeacamp.org; http://yeacamp.org/.
LA RAZA - The annual National Council of La Raza (NCLR) Conference is scheduled for July 18-19 in New Orleans, with workshops, presentations and panel discussions.
Contact: NCLR Headquarters Office, Raul Yzaguirre Building, 1126 16th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20036; 202-785-1670; www.nclr.org.
LABOR - The Eastern Conference For Workplace Democracy: Growing Our Cooperatives, Growing Our Communities, will be held at Drexel University in Philadelphia, PA, July 26-28.
Contact: info@east.usworker.coop; http://east.usworker.coop/.
WOMEN/LYNNE STEWART- Radical Women is asking for support letters and cards to be sent to Lynne Stewart. Stewart is a civil rights attorney and political prisoner who is currently in jail. She has breast cancer and authorities have denied her request for transfer from her Texas prison to the New York City hospital where she received medical attention during a prior bout of breast cancer. Send messages and cards to: Lynne Stewart 53504-054, Federal Medical Center Carswell, P.O. Box 27137, Fort Worth, TX 76127.
Contact: 747 Polk Street, San Francisco, CA 94109; 415-864-1278; RadicalWomenUS@gmail.com; http://lynnestewart.org/; http://www.radicalwomen.org/.
HAITI/WOMEN - Haiti’s government is considering a legal reform measure that would prohibit and punish all sexual assault, including marital rape. MADRE and the International Campaign to Stop Rape & Gender Violence in Conflict are launching a petition to raise international support for this push to address violence against women in Haiti.
Contact: 121 West 27th Street, #301, New York, NY 10001; 212-627-0444; madre@madre.org; http://www.madre.org.
SYRIA/MIDDLE EAST - The Middle East Children’s Alliance (MECA) is currently seeking funds to assist more than 200,000 refugees fleeing violence in Syria.
Contact: https://www.mecaforpeace.org.
FOLK FESTIVAL - The Falcon Ridge Folk Festival will be held August 2-4, in the Berkshires, NY.
Contact: http://www.falconridgefolk.com/; falcridge@aol.com.
WAR RESISTERS - The War Resisters League will hold its 90th anniversary conference, Revolutionary Nonviolence: Building Bridges Across Generations and Communities, August 1-4, at Georgetown University. The event will focus on the U.S.’ long history of antimilitarism.
Contact: 339 Lafayette Street, New York, NY 10012; 212-228-0450; wrl@warresisters.org; http://www.warresisters.org.
POPULAR ECONOMICS - The Center for Popular Economics is holding its 2013 Summer Institute August 4-9 at Hampshire College in Amherst, MA. No background in economics is needed for this intensive training. This year’s theme is, The Care Economy: Building a Just Economy with a Heart.
Contact: Center for Popular Economics, PO Box 785 Amherst, MA 01004; 413-545-0743; programs@populareconomics.org; www.populareconomics.org.
VETERANS - Veterans for Peace is holding the 28th annual convention August 6-11 in Madison, WI. This year’s theme is, Power To The Peaceful.
Contact: http://www.vfpnationalconvention.org/.
DEMOCRACY - The Democracy Convention will take place August 7-11 in Madison, WI. The convention brings together nine conferences including topics such as media, education, defense, race, environment and others.
Contact: https://democracyconvention.org/.
MEN - The 38th National Conference on Men & Masculinity: Forging Justice: Creating Safe, Equal and Accountable Communities, presented in partnership with HAVEN, will be held in Detroit, MI, August 8-10.
Contact: ccardinal@haven-oakland.org; http://www.nomas.org/.
OCCUPY - An Occupy National Gathering will be held in Kalamazoo, MI, August 21-25.
Contact: natgat2013@gmail.com; http://occupynationalgathering.net/.
COMMUNITIES - The Communities Conference is a networking and learning opportunity for co-operative or communal lifestyles, with workshops, events and entertainment; scheduled for August 30-September 2 at the Twin Oaks Community in Louisa, Virginia.
Contact: http://www.communitiesconference.org/.
LABOR DAY - The 29th annual Bread and Roses Festival, a celebration of the ethnic diversity and labor history of Lawrence, MA, will be held September 2, in honor of the 1912 Bread and Roses Strike. There will be music, dance, poetry, drama, ethnic food, historical demonstrations, walking & trolley tours.
Contact: PO Box 1137, Lawrence, MA 01842; 978-794-1655; http://www.breadandrosesheritage.org/.
OCCUPY WALL STREET - September 17 is the two-year anniversary of the Occupy Wall Street movement. Events are planned in New York City and worldwide.
Contact: http://occupywallst.org/.
TEACHERS - The 13th Annual Conference, “Teaching for Social Justice: The Politics of Pedagogy,” will be held October 12 in San Francisco, CA. The free event features workshops, resources, and free childcare.
Contact: 415-676-7844; teachers4socialjustice@yahoo.com; http://www.t4sj.org/.
HAITI - International Action, which brings clean water and chlorinators to Haiti, seeks office space capable of housing up to six people and their office equipment.
Contact: Zach Bremer, Zbrehmer@haitiwater.org; 202-488-0735; http://www.haitiwater.org/.
MEDIA - The Union for Democratic Communications and Project Censored are sponsoring a joint conference on media democracy, media activism and social justice to be held November 1-3 at the University of San Francisco. Proposals for presentations, workshops and panels from activists and critical scholars are invited.


