The Peace Center is one of the very few peace and justice organizations from the Vietnam War era that have been able to sustain themselves and continue to thrive and grow. For nearly four decades, the Peace Center has proudly established itself as a force for progressive social change in Western New York and beyond.

Free Speech Censored at Public University

By James Holstun

At UB, I frequently teach the poetry and prose of the great Puritan radical, John Milton, including his Areopagitica, one of the great documents in the history of free speech. Milton is disgusted by petty bureaucrats who think they have the right to screen potential publications, deciding what sentiments may and may not be voiced and printed. Recent events suggest that UB administrators may need a remedial Milton course (I’m available for a modest fee—contact me!). Particularly for the large-scale community-oriented “Distinguished Speakers Series,” they frequently demand that all questions be pre-submitted for screening and censoring.

Where did this odious notion come from? I don’t remember ever hearing of such a thing ten or twenty years ago, but lately, it seems to be everywhere. Perhaps some hack wrote an article for Nervous University Managers Fortnightly, saying, “Now you can give the appearance of actual free speech without any of the risks!!!” The idea might then have spread like kudzu among anxious bureaucrats, like that other misbegotten post 9-11 invention, “the free speech zone,” which herds demonstrators into discreet corrals.

Most recently, for the October 7 UB lecture by former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair, the censorship took the form of “The Blair Student Question Contest”: students presubmitted questions for review, and the lucky winners were invited up on the podium to deliver their approved questions in person. When questioned about the practice, Mr. Dennis R. Black, UB Vice President of Students and emcee for the evening, “said that there was no attempt at censorship and that the questions were merely moderated“—an interesting distinction. Another article summarizes Black’s explanation: “The screening was put in place to prevent repeated questions, condense similar questions and displace irrelevant questions like that of Blair’s age, height, favorite color, and other questions that didn’t pertain to the speech.”

This excuse seems less than persuasive. Anyone who has stood in the cavernous Alumni Arena knows that no one would be likely to stand up in front of five thousand people and ask Tony Blair about his favorite color. And some Distinguished Speakers (such as Michael Moore and Steven Colbert) don’t seem to have any trouble answering direct, uncensored questions. Strangely, those who do tend to be ex-politicians on the make (like Blair, Colin Powell, Karl Rove, and Wesley Clark) who have helped kill thousands of people in the Balkans and West Asia. Do they demand protection from real questions in their appearance contracts? Or do UB organizers obligingly offer the service? We can’t say for sure. But we can say that this sort of censorship stinks like week-old fish, particularly at a public university.

But the best-laid plans of mice, men, and even university administrators often go awry. On October 7th, the Peace, Justice, and Anti-War Coalition of Western New York gathered outside the entrance to Alumni Arena, herded inside a corral made of bike racks—UB’s first “free speech zone,” I think. We mooed, chanted, drummed, and leafleted, trying to draw some attention to Tony Blair’s war crimes. We also protested the censorship of questions and Blair’s staggering speaker’s fee: $150,000, as confirmed by his exclusive agent. Since 2007, when he left office under a cloud named “Iraq,” Tony Blair has become the highest paid public speaker in the world, racking up over $25 million worldwide, not to mention the millions he has “earned” from an Israeli peace prize and from consulting fees and bonuses paid by banks such as J. P. Morgan Chase and Zurich Financial Services. Read more »

October 22, 2009

Kathy Kelly comes to Buffalo

The WNY Peace Center’s Annual Dinner Keynote Speaker shares decades of experience in nonviolent direct action

By Irene Morrison

It’s not easy to summarize Kathy Kelly’s work; she is anything but an armchair activist. As co-founder and coordinator of Voices for Creative Nonviolence (VCNV at vcnv.org), Kelly’s version of activism is one of civil disobedience and direct action against violations of national and international law, and she is one of those rare people willing to go to jail for what she believes in. Unlike so many activists who quickly burn out, Kelly is still going strong after decades of work for peace and justice all over the world.

VCNV came out of Voices in the Wilderness, a campaign to end UN/US sanctions in Iraq. Kelly and other members of Voices were in Baghdad during the 2004 invasion, after refusing to leave and hoping that they could still help prevent the war. For their humanitarian aid work, which violated the sanctions, Kelly and others faced jail time, but eventually were fined—but refused to pay—$20,000. Additionally, Kelly and Voices were in Beirut, Lebanon, during the end of the Israel-Hezbollah war, providing humanitarian assistance and reporting. They have also spent time in Pakistan with Swat Valley refugees and in the Gaza Strip during Israel’s “Operation Cast Lead” assault, bringing back the stories of these people to an American public who would often rather not hear about the consequences of their country’s violent actions.

Kelly first became involved in activism through protesting the reinstatement of draft registration and supporting resistors in 1980, and then through “numerous demonstrations, fasts, delegations, and nonviolent direct actions” directed at ending US intervention in Central America. Then, in August 1988, Kelly participated in “The Missouri Peace Planting,” in which she planted corn on nuclear missile silo sites to draw attention to the use of farm-land for violent, highly destructive purposes.

Kelly was sentenced to one year in prison for her role in the action, of which she served nine months. She also served 3 months for direct actions with the School of the Americas Watch (soaw.org) against the School of the Americas at Fort Benning, GA, a military installation which has trained members of brutal regimes in Latin America in violent suppression tactics, including torture.

When asked about her mission, Kelly explains: “Often, our community agrees that my role should also be that of an itinerant teacher.  If other groups invite me to speak, or to offer a retreat or teach in a classroom, we try to arrange our calendar so that I can travel, ideally by train or bus.  When we plan a nonviolent direct action, one or more of us often commit civil disobedience, and so I have spent considerable time in courts, jails, and prisons.  I’ve also tried to nonviolently resist war by going to war zones and living alongside people who bear the brunt of military attacks.” Read more »

October 22, 2009

Doing Justice in an Economic Tsunami

11/07/2009 9:00 am
11/07/2009 4:00 pm
America/New York
Unitarian Universalist Church Of Amherst, New York 6320 Main Street Williamsville, NY 14221

Sponsored by The St Lawrence District Social Justice Council
November 7, 2009 from 9:00 am to 4 pm

Theme Speaker: Rev. JOHN BUEHRENS
Former President, Unitarian Universalist Association, Parish Minister, First Parish, Needham, MA (UU )

The economic meltdown at the national and world levels has pervaded the religious consciousness. The recession has not only social, political and economic consequences, but also moral and spiritual implications as well. How do we respond as individuals, as a congregation, as a religious movement?

This fourth annual conference of the St. Lawrence District Social Justice Council features John Buehrens, former President of the UUA. John brings not only a national perspective on economic justice, but also the understanding of a parish minister. He has been a prominent figure on the national religious scene for years, has served as special advisor to the Unitarian Universalist Service Committee and is a prolific author. Skinner House Books will soon publish his book, co-authored by Rebecca Parker of Starr King School for the Ministry, Maintaining a House of Hope. Read more »

Reception to benefit the Rosenberg Fund for Children

10/25/2009 4:00 pm
10/25/2009 6:00 pm
America/New York
Co-sponsored by the Interfaith Peace Network and the WNY Peace Center

Reception to benefit the Rosenberg Fund for Children

At the Network of Religious Communities, 1272 Delaware Ave, Buffalo Read more »

The WNY Peace Center 42nd Annual Dinner & Celebration

11/07/2009 6:00 pm
America/New York
Featuring Keynote Kathy Kelly

The WNY Peace Center Presents:

 

Our 42nd Annual Dinner & Celebration

 

Featuring Keynote Speaker Kathy Kelly Read more »

Screening of the movie "Rethink Afghanistan"

10/15/2009 7:00 pm
America/New York
At the Network of Religious Communities, 1272 Delaware Ave

Code Pink Buffalo and the WNY Peace Center are pleased to announce a FREE screening of Rethink Afghanistan, a Brave New Foundation Film about the need to end the war in Afghanistan. Watch experts from the U.S., Afghanistan, and Russia explain the issues surrounding this war, including the fact that there is no military solution to the conflict, and why we need congressional oversight. Read more »

Building Bridges to Communities-- Gallery Opening

10/02/2009 7:00 pm
America/New York
Gallery Opening

By Santiago Masferrer

The Latin American Cultural Association (LACA) is pleased to announce the re-opening of our Community Art Gallery in El Buen Amigo, our fair trade storefront and cultural center in Allentown.

The opening reception will feature a show by the Rich Art Experience, a group of individuals with special needs who create beautiful artwork in a variety of mediums.  The work on display will feature abstracts, landscapes, paint on photography and portraits by five different artists – Nancy Richert, Brian Federick, Ann Milliken, Betsy Roshner and Dan Mika. 

Some members of the Rich Art Experience have been working together for over 10 years, when the program was hosted by Spectrum Human Services in Orchard Park.  Their name is in honor of the art therapist, Molly Rich, who formerly ran that program. When the program was cut upon her retirement, Rich found an ally in her friend Barbara Murak.  Murak now runs the program, which meets weekly at the Impact Gallery in the Tri-Main Center.

“Our focus is on art-making, exhibiting and socialization,” Murak said. “The group members talk openly about the stigma of mental illness and demonstrate non-judgmental acceptance and support of each other.”   Read more »

BOYCOTT TONY BLAIR!

10/07/2009 7:00 pm
America/New York
Peace, Justice, and Antiwar Coalition of WNY

By Jim Holstun

Have we lost our sense of smell?

The UB Distinguished Speakers Series has invited former British Prime Minister Tony Blair to speak on October 7. According to his exclusive booking agency,  he will receive $150,000 plus travel and expenses for four persons. The Peace, Justice, and Antiwar Coalition of Western New York (PJAW) has organized a demo for peace and against Blair and his procurers. Please join us at 7:00 p.m. in the Coventry Loop of Alumni Arena, and bring signs and friends. And please don’t buy tickets to this obscene event. Please don’t even take a comp. ticket.

Why protest Tony Blair? Compared to the shamelessly despicable Karl Rove—a Distinguished Speaker of the 2008-9 season at UB—Blair seems almost innocuous. With his goofy grin and his public parade of his faith (including the Tony Blair Faith Foundation and his Faith and Globalisation Initiative), he can come across as a charmingly eccentric combination of Howdy Doody and an earnest choirboy.

The Blair War Crimes Foundation provides a quick answer when it indicts Blair for “Deceit and conspiracy for war, and providing false news to incite passions for war, causing in the order of one million deaths, 4 million refugees, countless maiming and traumas.” Some more detail:

  • During his years as Prime Minister (1997-2007), Blair helped maintain the murderous sanctions on the people of Iraq (1990-2003). From 1990 to 1999 alone, these killed 500,000 to 800,000 people, mostly infants and children. Like former US Secretary of State (and UB Distinguished Speaker) Madeline Albright, Blair thinks “the price was worth it.”
  • Blair’s government provided the “Dodgy Dossier,” a lying and plagiarized compendium that fueled our flight to war. US Secretary of State Colin Powell—also a war criminal and twice a UB “Distinguished Speaker”—used it in the notorious UN presentation that took our country to war.
  • In 2002, Mr. Blair conspired with former US President George Bush to launch a war of aggression. At the Nuremberg Military Tribunal after World War II, Robert H. Jackson, said “To initiate a war of aggression, therefore, is not only an international crime; it is the supreme international crime differing only from other war crimes in that it contains within itself the accumulated evil of the whole.” In his 2005 acceptance speech for the Nobel Prize for Literature, the late British playwright Harold Pinter called for Blair to be arraigned before the International Court of Justice, adding that “The invasion of Iraq was a bandit act, an act of blatant state terrorism, demonstrating absolute contempt for the concept of international law.”
  • Estimates of Iraqi casualties during Blair and Bush’s War on Iraq vary from 100,000 to over 1,200,000.
  • Blair and Bush’s War has created millions of orphans and almost five million refugees, either internally displaced in Iraq, or living in the festering refugee camps of Syria and Jordan.
  • As of September 20, 2009, Blair and Bush’s War has killed 4,345 American servicemen and women, and wounded 31,102. Many of those dead lie buried in Western New York. Many of those wounded lie in our hospitals and walk or roll down our streets and the sidewalks of our campus.

Nationalize the Banks

By Cliff Cawthon
 
Benjamin Franklin’s famous definition of insanity as “doing something over and over again, and expecting different results” reflects our complacency and failure to substantively act in the wake ‘great credit crash’. In a Saturday, Sept. 12th article in the New York Times titled “A Year Later, Little Change on Wall St.” banks still sell and trade unregulated derivatives, despite their role in last fall’s chaos. ” The contradictory and suicidal nature of our banking establishment have revealed the shallow “state of exception” that we have lost and, it beckons us to remember in order to prevent another collapse.
 

According to Webster’s dictionary , Profit is defined as: 1) A valuable return; or, 2) the excess of returns over an expenditure in a transaction or series of transactions; however, in Das Kapital, Marx’s corresponding definition of profit offers a more salient definition and critical definition of profit as accumulation of surplus-value of capital. As later Marxist theorist Ernest Mandel describes it in his introduction to Marx’s “Capital: volume one”:
 

” Capital is thus, by definition, value looking for accretion, for surplus-value.’ ‘But if capital produces surplus-value, surplus-value also produces additional capital….The basic drive of the capitalist mode of production is the drive to accumulate capital” (pg. 60).
 

Therefore, the accumulation of capital (i.e. profit and expansion) through this byproduct of the market is familiar to capitalism, however, it has manifested itself upon us as built on the backs of a slave society of debt an hazardous trading.
 

In capital, Marx postulates that the only difference between the capitalist mode of production and the older slave societies is the extraction of surplus value. It is all involuntary; in the current market there is no choice, to buy our houses, go to school, and in many cases pay medical bills we have to go to one of the three big banks: JP Morgan Chase, Wells Fargo, and Bank of America. Read more »

September 16, 2009

CROSSROADS SPRINGS YARD SALE!

09/25/2009 9:00 am
09/26/2009 4:00 pm
America/New York
Benefit for Crossroads Springs Care Center/School for orphans of AIDS, Hamisi, Kenya

Friday and Saturday, September 25 and 26.  9AM-4PM

at
Orchard Park Quaker Meeting House
6924 East Quaker Road
Orchard Park, NY 14127


 

Come and bring your friends!

Treasures for sale from many kind donors. 
Donations of your treasures gratefully received
Thursday evening 7:30-8:30 PM, Friday morning7:30-8:30 AM
at the Meeting House

Let's Build It! Classrooms for the children!  Education and Health for their Lifetime!

For more info go to www.crossroadssprings.org