Peace Not Terror
Mary Susannah Robbins (Redaktør) Staughton Lynd (Innledning) Michael Ferber (Innledning) William Sloane Coffin (Innledning) David Cortright (Innledning) Dave Dellinger (Innledning) H. Bruce Franklin (Innledning) Howard Zinn (Innledning) David Potorti (Innledning) Noam Chomsky (Innledning) Charles Sheehan-Miles (Innledning) JoAnn Wypijewski (Innledning) Iraqi Girl (Innledning) Kevin Alexander Gray (Innledning) David Harris (Innledning) Tod Ensign (Innledning) Garret Reppenhagen (Innledning) Michael Uhl (Innledning) Jane Collins (Innledning) Mansour Farhang (Innledning) Jeff Jones (Innledning)
«We veterans know that this war is not being sanitized on the nightly news. It has nothing to do with ther liberation of the people of Iraq; instead it has everything to do with the subjugation and domination of these people in the name of U.S. imperial economic and strategic interests.»
Matthew Howard, USMC, Chair of the Vermont Chaper of Iraq Veterans against the War
Peace Not Terror includes essays by Noam Chomsky, Howard Zinn, Dave Dellinger, Staughton Lynd, William Sloane Coffin, H. Bruce Franklin, David Cortright, David Harris, and others, including veterans of the Gulf War and the Iraq War. Les mer
Detaljer
- Forlag
- Lexington Books
- Innbinding
- Innbundet
- Språk
- Engelsk
- ISBN
- 9780739124963
- Utgivelsesår
- 2008
- Format
- 24 x 16 cm
Om forfatteren
Anmeldelser
«We veterans know that this war is not being sanitized on the nightly news. It has nothing to do with ther liberation of the people of Iraq; instead it has everything to do with the subjugation and domination of these people in the name of U.S. imperial economic and strategic interests.»
Matthew Howard, USMC, Chair of the Vermont Chaper of Iraq Veterans against the War
«This remarkable and indispensable book against U.S. militarism includes essays by Noam Chomsky, Howard Zinn, Staughton Lynd, Dave Dellinger, and many others, including Iraq War veterans. These invaluable members of the peace movement show in their writings—and by their own personal stories—the way out of the cycle of violence that the U.S. military response to the events of 9/11 has created. From William Sloane Coffin's sermon on love delivered the Sunday after 9/11, to Jeff Jones, former Weatherman and now environmental actvist, who writes of the need to eliminate our oil consumption to prevent both global warming and war in the Middle East, these essays form a moving and inspiring guide to peace on this earth.»
Daniel Ellsberg, author of Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers
«In Peace Not Terror, Mary Susannah Robbins performs an important public service. By editing and publishing this collection of essays, Robbins not only brings together the voices of the antiwar movement in one user-friendly volume, but she reminds us of the movement's startling scale and diversity. In this book we hear from scholars and statesmen, victims and veterans. Most of all, we hear from patriots—people who know that preemptive war, the backdoor draft, torture, indefinite detention, and extraordinary rendition are un-American. Every citizen should read this book.»
Michael S. Foley, author of Confronting the War Machine: Draft Resistance during the Vietnam War
«Peace Not Terror captures the voices of today's leading thinkers and activists in the U.S. peace movement. The collection of essays is as varied and powerful as the reasons why it is imperative to do away with our culture of militarism in order to embrace peace. This book will affirm and strengthen the position of the antiwar reader, and will challenge those who still believe in war as a viable means to attain peace. It is a brilliant book, and an absolute must read.»
Camilo Mejía, Iraq War veteran and resister, member of Iraq Veterans Against the War, and the author
«Mary Susannah Robbins's powerful book is the answer to those who ask what happened to the antiwar movement. The voices of that movement, past and present, speak passionately in the pages of Peace Not Terror, moving the reader to pay attention, to act and to speak out. It is essential reading in these dark and dangerous days, for it insists not only on the possibility but the necessity of protest.»
Marilyn J. Young, professor of history at New York University and author ofThe Vietnam Wars, 1945-19