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Re: [haw-info] HAW at end of '08, just before the AHA
glad to send some bucks and hope others can do same. HAW has accomplished mightily on slim means. Happy approaching new year to everybody. We seem to have more political oxygen now. Let's use it. Even among the notable dullards (aka average historians). At 11:58 AM 12/31/2008, Jim O'Brien wrote: >To Historians Against the War members and friends: > >We haven't sent out a fund appeal for quite a while, but the truth >is that our treasury is about bare. Our national conference in >Atlanta last April was a big success in terms of substance and >atmosphere, but not financially. Despite careful spending, most of >our previous surplus is now gone. We'll send out an appeal after a >new Steering Committee is elected in January, but since many people >make their contributions around the holiday time, this is a belated >request for anyone who feels so moved to send something to HAW. The >easiest way is via PayPal, at ><http://www.historiansagainstwar.org/donations.html>http://www.historiansagainstwar.org/donations.html. >Another way is to send a check made out to Historians Against the >War to the treasurer, Van Gosse, 314 West Orange St., Lancaster, PA >17603. Thanks for any help. In the interest of >truth-in-soliciting, donations to HAW are not tax-deductible. > >For those coming to the AHA convention in New York, here is a >reminder of the HAW events scheduled for Saturday, January 3. One >of the events is new: the book signing by Carl Mirra, a HAW >Steering Committee member. > >11:30 - 2:30 Literature table (shared with Radical History Review) >in the area of the New York Hilton reserved for nonprofit groups, >probably near the convention registration area > >1:30 Book signing for Carl Mirra's book Soldiers and Citizens: An >Oral History of Operation Iraqi Freedom from the Battlefield to the >Pentagon, Palgrave Booth #267 in the Book Exhibit Hall. > >2:30 - 4:30 Roundtable: "The Bush-Cheney Years": In the Empire >Ballroom East of the Sheraton New York, 7th Ave. and 53rd >St. Speakers are Alice Kessler-Harris, David Montgomery, Vijay >Prashad, Ellen Schrecker, and Barbara Weinstein. > >4:30 - 5:30 Open meeting and discussion for HAW members and >friends, in the same room as the roundtable: "One Faltering Economy >and Two Wars: What Can Historians Contribute? > >6:00 - 8:00 Reception co-sponsored by the Peace History Society and >HAW, in the Sutton Center, second floor of the Hilton > >All the best for the new year, > >Jim O'Brien >for HAW > >Note: You are receiving this email because you signed a Historians >Against the War statement (see >http://www.historiansagainstwar.org/). If you no longer wish to >receive these occasional messages about HAW's work, send an email to >haw-info-request@stopthewars.org?subject=unsubscribe. >_______________________________________________ >haw-info mailing list >haw-info@stopthewars.org >http://stopthewars.org/mailman/listinfo/haw-info_stopthewars.org Note: You are receiving this email because you signed a Historians Against the War statement (see http://www.historiansagainstwar.org/). If you no longer wish to receive these occasional messages about HAW's work, send an email to haw-info-request@stopthewars.org?subject=unsubscribe. _______________________________________________ haw-info mailing list haw-info@stopthewars.org http://stopthewars.org/mailman/listinfo/haw-info_stopthewars.org
[haw-info] HAW at end of '08, just before the AHA
To Historians Against the War members and friends: We haven't sent out a fund appeal for quite a while, but the truth is that our treasury is about bare. Our national conference in Atlanta last April was a big success in terms of substance and atmosphere, but not financially. Despite careful spending, most of our previous surplus is now gone. We'll send out an appeal after a new Steering Committee is elected in January, but since many people make their contributions around the holiday time, this is a belated request for anyone who feels so moved to send something to HAW. The easiest way is via PayPal, at http://www.historiansagainstwar.org/donations.html. Another way is to send a check made out to Historians Against the War to the treasurer, Van Gosse, 314 West Orange St., Lancaster, PA 17603. Thanks for any help. In the interest of truth-in-soliciting, donations to HAW are not tax-deductible. For those coming to the AHA convention in New York, here is a reminder of the HAW events scheduled for Saturday, January 3. One of the events is new: the book signing by Carl Mirra, a HAW Steering Committee member. 11:30 - 2:30 Literature table (shared with Radical History Review) in the area of the New York Hilton reserved for nonprofit groups, probably near the convention registration area 1:30 Book signing for Carl Mirra's book Soldiers and Citizens: An Oral History of Operation Iraqi Freedom from the Battlefield to the Pentagon, Palgrave Booth #267 in the Book Exhibit Hall. 2:30 - 4:30 Roundtable: "The Bush-Cheney Years": In the Empire Ballroom East of the Sheraton New York, 7th Ave. and 53rd St. Speakers are Alice Kessler-Harris, David Montgomery, Vijay Prashad, Ellen Schrecker, and Barbara Weinstein. 4:30 - 5:30 Open meeting and discussion for HAW members and friends, in the same room as the roundtable: "One Faltering Economy and Two Wars: What Can Historians Contribute?
6:00 - 8:00 Reception co-sponsored by the Peace History Society and HAW, in the Sutton Center, second floor of the Hilton All the best for the new year, Jim O'Brien for HAW
Bovard on the "Craven Response" of American Politicians on Gaza
Over at Antiwar.com, Jim Bovard condemns members of the American political class, including President Elect Obama, for their silence on the Gaza carnage: The craven response by the American political class to the use of American planes and weapons to slaughter civilians is what any reasonable cynic should have expected. Obama is maintaining his silence - perhaps because there is little hay to be made from victims outside of Darfur.
This conflict may be even more ludicrous than the typical Mideast carnage. The New York Times, in a front page story headlined, “Israel Reminds Foe It Has Teeth,” noted, “Israel’s military operation in Gaza aims to expunge the ghost of its flawed 2006 war against Hezbollah in Lebanon and re-establish Israeli deterrence.”Labels: Gaza, Israel, Obama
[haw-info] If you'll be at the AHA convention...
Here are the Historians Against the War activities planned for the AHA convention in New York. All of these activities are for the first full day of the convention, Saturday, January 3. 11:30 - 2:30 Literature table (shared with Radical History Review) in the area of the New York Hilton reserved for nonprofit groups, probably near the convention registration area 2:30 - 4:30 "The Bush-Cheney Years: A Historians Against the War Roundtable": In the Empire Ballroom East of the Sheraton New York, 7th Ave. and 53rd St. Speakers are Alice Kessler-Harris, David Montgomery, Vijay Prashad, Ellen Schrecker, and Barbara Weinstein. 4:30 - 5:30 Meeting for HAW members and friends, in the same room as the roundtable. Open Discussion: One Faltering Economy and Two Wars: What Can Historians Contribute?
6:00 - 8:00 Reception co-sponsored by the Peace History Society and HAW, in the Sutton Center, second floor of the Hilton
Also, here's a reminder: If you're interested in running for the HAW Steering Committee (the election will be conducted by e-mail next month), please send a short statement by to either of the current co-chairs, Jim O'Brien ( jimobrien48@gmail.com) or Marc Becker ( marc@yachana.org), this week if possible. The statement should use the following template: Name: Institution: Position: Historical Specialization: Political Background: Reason for Running:
Eartha Kitt RIP
Eartha Kitt not only had talent (see, for example, her scene-stealing performance in St. Louis Blues) but fearlessly spoke truth to power.
In 1968, while at a public White House lunch, she properly embarassed Lady Bird Johnson by declaring "You send the best of this country off to be shot and maimed....They rebel in the street. They don't want to go to school because they're going to be snatched off from their mothers to be shot in Vietnam." Labels: Vietnam
Israel Attacks, Obama Says "No Comment"
As Israel attacks police stations throughout Gaza with our tax money, the President Elect has become uncharacteristically tongue tied. Labels: Gaza, Israel, Obama
Neocons in Progressive Drag
As Bush heads for a well-deserved retirement, peace progressives need to stop looking backward and start paying more attention to the pro-war plans of Obama and those around him. According to Justin Raimondo, as Obama prepares to assume power, the epicenter of the war party has already shifted leftward from the American Enterprise Institute to the Progressive Policy Institute. Labels: neocons, Obama, progressive policy institute
[haw-info] seeking candidates for the HAW Steering Committee
Dear Members of HAW: Next month we will conduct e-mail voting for members of the HAW Steering Committee. The Steering Committee makes decisions for HAW in between the annual meetings at the AHA. Aside from one face-to-face meeting in the summer, the SC conducts business through e-mail and occasional conference calls. If you would like to run (and we strongly encourage you to consider it) or if you would like to nominate someone, let us know.
If you are nominating yourself, please send a brief description, using the template at the end of this message, by January 2 to either of us (jimobrien48@gmail.com or marc@yachana.org). If you are nominating someone else, send us the name and e-mail address sooner so we can contact them and see if they are willing.
If you have any questions, feel free to write either of us.
Thank you,
Jim O'Brien and Marc Becker current co-chairs of the HAW Steering Committee Name: Institution: Position: Historical Specialization: Political Background: Reason for Running:
Katrina vanden Heuvel of The Nation Interviewed
In a fascinating give-and-take interview, Scott Horton and Katrina vanden Heuvel, editor and publisher for The Nation magazine, exchange ideas about libertarianism and progressivism in the peace movement. According to the description of the show, they also discuss "the incoming Obama Administration, the popular backlash against corporate power, the ethical and practical necessity of ending the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, how an escalation in Afghanistan would ruin the promise of change and hope from the Obama campaign, the impotence of conventional military power against the contemporary threats of asymmetrical warfare and piracy and why NATO should be disbanded and a new cold war with Russia prevented." Listen here . Labels: Iraq, Libertarians, Obama, Progressives
Robert Higgs and the "Ratchet Effect" of National Emergency
One of the most insightful economic historians now writing on the relationship between war and the state is Robert Higgs. In his seminal work, Crisis and Leviathan, Higgs discusses how national emergencies, such as wars and depressions, serve to create a "ratchet effect" which lead to rapid increases in big government. Here are some recent comments by Higgs on this issue: I have emphasized again and again that the legacies of national emergency are not merely fiscal, but also, more critically, institutional and ideological....we can see both the institutional and the ideological legacies embodied in a generation of highly placed, closely connected individuals who exerted tremendous influence over the apparatus and conduct of U.S. foreign and defense policies for decades after World War II and whose influence may be seen in the government’s conduct of foreign and defense affairs even today, though in somewhat muted and altered form.
George S. Schuyler: Conservative Critic of the Japanese Internment
In recent years, it is has become fashionable among some conservatives to defend FDR's internment of the Japanese-Americans. Michelle Malkin and Daniel Pipes spring to mind as examples.
For this reason, it should be mentioned that one of the few consistent voices against this policy was George S. Schuyler, an important figure in the rise of the modern conservative movement. Schuyler later wrote Black and Conservative and contributed to such journals as The Freeman and National Review.
Until his death in 1977, Schuyler never flagged in his oppostion to Japanese internment. While he had not yet made the full transition to conservativism during World War II, he already hated FDR's New Deal and "Globalony" with a passion.
On May 29, 1943, he wrote the following in his column for The Pittsburgh Courier, one of the two leading black newspapers at the time:
"Some colored folks have said we should remain indifferent because the Japanese-Americans have never championed our cause and sought to avoid us at all times. While this is not entirely true, it would make difference if it were true....These Japanese-American citizens are NOT in concentration because of the commission of any crime against the state. The contention that 70,000 citizens among the millions of whites on the Pacific coast constituted a danger is a fantastic falsehood. These people are the most industrious, thrifty, and best behaved citizens in this country. Thousands of them are the offspring of American-born Japanese-Americans. Other thousands are the offspring of mixed Americans, many having blonde hair and blue eyes, and look no more Japanese than I do. They had farms, businesses, and service jobs and professions. They sent their children to school and college and did all possible to measure up to American standards. They were put in concentration camps SOLELY because of "race," and the principle behind their jailing is exactly the same as that behind the jailing, torture and murder of the Jews under Hitler's jurisdiction.
Their fight is our fight....and the sooner we realize it the better." Labels: civil liberties, FDR, Japanese Internment
[haw-info] Corrected announcement for HAW panel at the AHA
Dear Friends: HAW has put together a very exciting and timely roundtable for the upcoming AHA conference in New York City. We hope that you can all come to it. And please invite your friends, the panel is free and open to all. The panel "The Bush Cheney Years: The Damage Done, The Consequences to Come, and How Can we Move Beyond Them" will run from 2:30 to 4:30 in the Empire Ballroom East, on the second floor, at the Sheraton New York at 7th Avenue and 53rd Street, on Saturday, January 3rd. The speakers are: Alice Kessler-Harris, Columbia University; David Montgomery, Yale University; Vijay Prashad, Trinity College; Ellen Schrecker, Yeshiva University; and Barbara Weinstein, New York University. After this panel, please join us for a HAW discussion and meeting. Again, all are welcome. We will discuss the connections between the economic crisis and building the anti-war movement and the challenges both situations pose, as well as plans for the upcoming year. For a poster about the panel, go to http://www.historiansagainstwar.org/aha09/ Please contact Margaret Power (power@iit.edu) or Van Gosse (van.gosse@fandm.edu) if you have any questions. Margaret Power Associate Professor Department of Humanities Illinois Institute of Technology 3301 S. Dearborn Chicago, IL 60616 power@iit.edu 312-567-6921 Note: You are receiving this email because you signed a Historians Against the War statement (see http://www.historiansagainstwar.org/). If you no longer wish to receive these occasional messages about HAW's work, send an email to haw-info-request@stopthewars.org?subject=unsubscribe. _______________________________________________ haw-info mailing list haw-info@stopthewars.org http://stopthewars.org/mailman/listinfo/haw-info_stopthewars.org
[haw-info] Exciting HAW Roundtable at the AHA
Dear Friends: HAW has put together a very exciting and timely roundtable for the upcoming AHA conference. We hope that you can all come to it. And please invite your friends. The panel "The Bush Cheney Years: The Damage Done, The Consequences to Come, and How Can we Move Beyond Them" will run from 2:30 to 4:30 in the Empire Ballroom East, on the second floor. The speakers are: Alice Kessler-Harris, Columbia University; David Montgomery, Yale University; Vijay Prashad, Trinity College; Ellen Schrecker, Yeshiva University; and Barbara Weinstein, New York University. For a poster about the panel, go to http://www.historiansagainstwar.org/aha09/ Please contact Margaret Power (power@iit.edu) or Van Gosse (van.gosse@fandm,edu if you have any questions. See you there! Margaret Power Associate Professor Department of Humanities Illinois Institute of Technology 3301 S. Dearborn Chicago, IL 60616 power@iit.edu 312-567-6921 Note: You are receiving this email because you signed a Historians Against the War statement (see http://www.historiansagainstwar.org/). If you no longer wish to receive these occasional messages about HAW's work, send an email to haw-info-request@stopthewars.org?subject=unsubscribe. _______________________________________________ haw-info mailing list haw-info@stopthewars.org http://stopthewars.org/mailman/listinfo/haw-info_stopthewars.org
A Christian Conservative Against the Vietnam War
Shown below is my article for the History News Network (co-authored by Linda Royster Beito) on Eugene Siler, the only member of the U.S. House to oppose the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution: To the extent a religious right of any kind existed in 1964, Eugene Siler easily qualified as a platinum card member. In his nine years in the U.S. House, he was unrivaled in his zeal to implement “Christianism and Americanism.” Yet forty-two years ago this month, on August 7, 1964, he did something that would be extremely rare for a modern counterpart on the religious right. He dissented from a president’s urgent request to authorize military action in a foreign war. It was Siler who cast the lone vote in the U.S. House against the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution. Because he “paired against” the bill (meaning he was absent during the vote), however, most historical accounts do not mention him.
A self-described “Kentucky hillbilly,” Siler was born in 1900 in Williamsburg, a town nestled in the mountains in the southeastern part of the state. Unlike most Kentuckians, he, like his neighbors, was a rock-ribbed Republican. The people of this impoverished area had backed the Union during the Civil War and had stood by the GOP in good times and bad ever since. Siler served in the Navy in World War I and two decades later as an Army captain during World War II. His experiences with the realities of war left him cold to most proposals to send American troops into harm’s way.
After graduating from Columbia University, Siler returned to Williamsburg to be a small town lawyer. A devout Baptist, he gained local renown as a lay preacher, eventually serving as moderator of the General Association of Baptists in Kentucky. He abstained from alcohol, tobacco, and profanity. As a lawyer, he turned away all clients seeking divorces or who were accused of whiskey-related crimes.
He began service as an elected judge of the Court of Appeals of Kentucky in 1945 and promptly refused his regular monthly allotment of 150 dollars for expenses. Instead, he gave the money to a special fund he set up for scholarships. Not surprisingly, Siler often quoted the scriptures from the bench. He did the same in his speeches as the unsuccessful Republican candidate for governor in 1951 earning him a statewide reputation as a “Bible Crusader.”
Siler consistently stressed social conservatism during his tenure in the U.S. House which began in 1955. He sponsored a bill to ban liquor and beer advertising in all interstate media. He said that permitting these ads was akin to allowing the “harsh hussy” to advertise in “the open door of her place of business for the allurement of our school children.” Of course, he was “100 percent for Bible reading and the Lord’s Prayer in our public schools.”
Like his good friend, and fellow Republican, from Iowa, Rep. H.R. Gross, Siler considered himself to be a fiscal watchdog. He disdained all junkets and railed against government debt and high spending. Siler made exceptions for the homefolks, however, by supporting flood control and other federal measures that aided his district.
As with Gross, Siler was a Robert A. Taft Republican who was averse to entangling alliances and foreign quagmires. A consistent opponent of foreign aid, he was just one of two congressmen to vote against Kennedy’s call up of reserves during the Berlin crisis. He favored Goldwater in 1964, but never shared his hawkish views. The people back home did not seem to mind. Sometimes, the Democrats failed to even put up a candidate.
Siler was an early, and prescient, critic of U.S. involvement in Vietnam. In June 1964, shortly after deciding not to run again, he quipped, half in jest, that he was running for president as an antiwar candidate. He pledged to resign after one day in office, staying just long enough to bring the troops home. He characterized the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, which authorized Johnson to take “all necessary steps” in Vietnam as a “buck-passing” pretext to “seal the lips of Congress against future criticism.”
The worsening situation in Vietnam prompted Siler to come out of retirement in 1968 to run for the U.S. Senate nomination on a platform calling for withdrawal of all U.S. troops by Christmas. Ernest Gruening of Alaska and Wayne Morse of Oregon, the only two U.S. Senators who voted against the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, also went down to defeat that year.
Although Siler lived on until 1987, few remembered his early stand against the Vietnam War. It is doubtful that this particularly bothered him. He knew that his reputation was secure among the plain Baptist Republican mountain folk of southeastern Kentucky who had sent him to Congress for nearly a decade.
Gates: U.S. Troops May Stay "for Decades" in Iraq
The bad news keeps coming from Obama and his hawkish "team of rivals." As I said before, the peace movement needs to raise a ruckus about this now rather than later when it may be too late. Here is what Robert Gates told George Will in a recent interview : "Regarding Iraq, Gates is parsimonious with his confidence, noting that ‘the multisectarian democracy has not sunk very deep roots yet.' He stresses, however, that there is bipartisan congressional support for ‘a long-term residual presence' of perhaps 40,000 U.S. troops in Iraq, and that the president-elect's recent statements have not precluded that. Such a presence "for decades" has, he says, followed major US military operations since 1945, other than in Vietnam. And he says, ‘Look at how long Britain has had troops in Cyprus.'"Labels: Gates, Iraq, Obama
Benjamin Netanyahu Praises Obama
First Max Boot, now this: "President-elect Obama spoke to me about his view that Iran's acquisition of nuclear weapons is unacceptable," Netanyahu told Reuters in a brief. "I say that what counts is the goal and the result that he envisions and the way that he achieves that goal is less important," said Netanyahu, a former prime minister.Labels: Israel, Obama
FDR: Another President Who Lied Us Into War
Long before Bush used deception to get us into the Iraq War, economic historian Robert Higgs describes how FDR did much the same thing in the period before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor:
A short comment is no place to settle the controversies that have raged ever since the attack about what Roosevelt and his chief subordinates knew in advance, but one thing has been known for a long time: however “dastardly” the attack might have been, it was anything but “unprovoked.” Indeed, even admirers and defenders of Roosevelt, such as Robert B. Stinnett and George Victor, have documented provocations aplenty. (See the former’s Day of Deceit: The Truth about FDR and Pearl Harbor and the latter’s The Pearl Harbor Myth: Rethinking the Unthinkable.) On December 8, the same day that Roosevelt asked Congress for a declaration of war against Japan, former president Herbert Hoover wrote a private letter in which he remarked, “You and I know that this continuous putting pins in rattlesnakes finally got this country bitten.”
On the basis of facts accumulated over the past seven decades and available to anyone who cares to examine them, we are justified in saying that Hoover’s characterization of the war’s provocation was entirely accurate - both with regard to the Japanese imperial government as “rattlesnakes” and with regard to the U.S. government’s “putting pins in.” Indeed, we now have a much firmer basis for that characterization than Hoover could have had on December 8, 1941. Countless lies have been told, massive cover-ups have been staged, propaganda has flowed like a river, yet in this one regard, at least, the truth has undeniably been brought out.
Most American historians, of course, no longer bother to deny this truth. They simply take it in stride, presuming that the Japanese attack, by giving Roosevelt the public support he needed to bring the United States into the war against Germany through the “back door,” was a good thing for this country and for the world at large. Indeed, some actually shower the president with approbation for his mendacious maneuvering to wrench the American people away from their unsophisticated devotion to “isolationism.” In no small part, Roosevelt’s unrelenting dishonesty with the American people (Stanford University historian David M. Kennedy tactfully refers to the president’s “frequently cagey misrepresentations”) in 1940 and 1941 - plain enough if one reads nothing more than his pre-Pearl Harbor correspondence with Winston Churchill - is counted among his principal qualifications for “greatness” and for his (to my mind, incomprehensible) status as an American demigod.Labels: FDR, Lies
HAW Member Andrew Bacevich Interviewed
Here is an audio of Scott Horton's interview of Andrew Bacevich, a member of Historians Against the War. Bacevich is professor of international relations at Boston University and author of The Limits of Power: The End of American Exceptionalism. According to the description of the interview, he "discusses the negative net returns of U.S. expansionism from the 1960s onward, the establishment of a permanent national security apparatus that made non-interventionism impossible, the Carter Doctrine’s faulty premises and continued influence in Middle East policies and the current Pentagon reassessment of U.S. military limitations that may inhibit a troop surge in Afghanistan and force a more realistic political solution." Labels: Afghanistan, Bacevich, Carter, History and Policy, Iraq, Surge
Are Antiwar Progressives Giving Obama a Free Pass?
The answer is yes according to today's story in the New York Times: To date, there has been no significant criticism from the antiwar left of the Democratic Party of the prospect that Mr. Obama will keep tens of thousands of troops in Iraq for at least several years to come. Okay, fellow peace activists. What do you have to say? Is the New York Times right? Are antiwar progressives giving Obama a free pass? If so, what does Obama have to say or do before antiwar progressives finally start rousing themselves? In answer to those who say we "should wait" and give Obama "a chance," I'd answer that if we don't raise a ruckus now, we will lose any claim to have a place at the table or influence policy. When are antiwar progressives going to stop worrying so much about a lame-duck president and start trying to influence the future? Labels: Hawks, Obama
Toward a Peaceful World: Historical Approaches to Creating Cultures of Peace
The Peace History Society invites paper proposals for its biannual conference to be held at Winthrop University from October 29-31, 2009. Proposals can include efforts to achieve peace or prevent war, including long-term efforts at sustainable development, diplomatic efforts to avert war or maintain peace, and popular social and cultural movements which seek to end war or reform the international environment to avoid future wars. Papers can deal with either current or historical topics and can include, but are not limited to, religious approaches, people-to-people approaches, gender approaches, government-to government approaches, and those dealing with the challenges that peace advocates face in their efforts to bring about reform and lasting peace. Proposals can be for individual papers as well as complete panels including a commentator. Please send one page abstracts and a brief c.v. to both conference co-chairs, E. Timothy Smith, Ph.D., Professor of History, Department of History and Political Science, Barry University, Miami Shores, FL 33161 (esmith@mail.barry.edu), and Virginia S. Williams, Associate Professor of History, Department of History, 377 Bancroft, Winthrop University, Rock Hill, SC 29733 (williamsv@winthrop.edu), by March 1, 2009.
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