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HOLLYWOOD AND THE CIA — Film historian Ed Rampell details Hollywood’s entangled relationship with the CIA and the Pentagon; HOUSES OF THE DEAD: Nancy Kurshan exposes the cruel human rights offenses taking place inside America’s vast gulag of Control Unit Prisons; BROTHERHOOD OF SUMMER:  David Macaray charts the history of the most powerful union in the US: the Baseball Players Association; TAR SANDS COME TO AMERICA: Steve Horn explains how the Keystone Pipeline debates have diverted  attention from Big Oil’s other plans to transport Alberta’s oil into the US. PLUS: Jeffrey St. Clair on CONSTITUTIONAL ENTROPY; Mike Whitney on HOW THE BANKS TARGETED BLACKS; Chris Floyd on THE RISE OF BRITAIN’S TEA PARTY; Kristin Kolb on THE NEEDLE AND THE DAMAGE DONE; Kim Nicolini on the FILMS OF WILLIAM FRIEDKIN; and Lee Ballinger on POETS VS. THE ONE PERCENT.
Who Will Organize the Organizers?

"Sure, Stick It In"

by ALAN McCONNELL

One tip that Mark Rudd left out of his interesting article on organizing on the weekend CounterPunch site: one has to recognize when the movement is all there, ready to go, and just needs a little impetus.

For the past eleven months, on weekend mornings, I’ve been selling our "NO AFGHAN WAR" buttons at Farmers Markets and elsewhere in the D.C. area. The buttons cost $275 per 1000, I sell them for a dollar. If the market is active, I bring in $35-$45 per hour.  Obviously the profits are considerable.

What do I do with the profits?   I buy elegant yard signs saying: "NO WAR IN AFGHANISTAN" — they cost $364 for 100 — and go around neighborhoods in the D.C. area, knocking on doors of houses with yards and saying: "Look at this gorgeous sign!  It would look great on your lawn, no?  Absolutely free!"   And one out of five owners says, "Sure, stick it in!"     

An account of this, with pictures of buttons and signs, can be found at www.waifllc.org.     

I’m on my third order of 1000 buttons and about ready for my fourth order of signs. This is easy pleasant work, and the signs make a big hit.

Thus far my successes.  My failure is mammoth, and easy to describe: I am, up till recently, the only person doing this work. This is not for lack of trying.  I’ve appealed to ANSWER, to Worldcantwait, to Quakers, to CodePink, to Vets for Peace.  I say to them:  If ten people would do what I do, we’d change the face of the D.C. area.  They reject this, sometimes with a smile (They are doing much more important stuff), often quite rudely.      Just recently a couple of people have signed on.  

We’ll see.

Perhaps Mr Rudd has suggestions about how to organize the organizers? Chomsky recognized a decade ago that in many ways we are way ahead of where we were at the end of WW II, or the beginning of Vietnam, so what is sketched above is simply following his insights.     

ALAN McCONNELL can be reached at:  http://patriot.net/users/alan     

Who Will Organize the Organizers?

"Sure, Stick It In"

by ALAN McDONNELL

One tip that Mark Rudd left out of his interesting article on organizing on the weekend CounterPunch site: one has to recognize when the movement is all there, ready to go, and just needs a little impetus.

For the past eleven months, on weekend mornings, I’ve been selling our "NO AFGHAN WAR" buttons at Farmers Markets and elsewhere in the D.C. area. The buttons cost $275 per 1000, I sell them for a dollar. If the market is active, I bring in $35-$45 per hour.  Obviously the profits are considerable.

What do I do with the profits?   I buy elegant yard signs saying: "NO WAR IN AFGHANISTAN" — they cost $364 for 100 — and go around neighborhoods in the D.C. area, knocking on doors of houses with yards and saying: "Look at this gorgeous sign!  It would look great on your lawn, no?  Absolutely free!"   And one out of five owners says, "Sure, stick it in!"     

An account of this, with pictures of buttons and signs, can be found at www.waifllc.org.     

I’m on my third order of 1000 buttons and about ready for my fourth order of signs. This is easy pleasant work, and the signs make a big hit.

Thus far my successes.  My failure is mammoth, and easy to describe: I am, up till recently, the only person doing this work. This is not for lack of trying.  I’ve appealed to ANSWER, to Worldcantwait, to Quakers, to CodePink, to Vets for Peace.  I say to them:  If ten people would do what I do, we’d change the face of the D.C. area.  They reject this, sometimes with a smile (They are doing much more important stuff), often quite rudely.      Just recently a couple of people have signed on.  

We’ll see.

Perhaps Mr Rudd has suggestions about how to organize the organizers? Chomsky recognized a decade ago that in many ways we are way ahead of where we were at the end of WW II, or the beginning of Vietnam, so what is sketched above is simply following his insights.     

Alan McConnell can be reached at:  http://patriot.net/users/alan