War Without End
A Civilized Country Would Heed the Call for Healing
by Kathy Kelly
Ten years ago today, Iraqis braced themselves for the anticipated “Shock and Awe†attacks that the United States was planning to launch against them. The media buildup for the attack assured Iraqis that barbarous assaults were
looming. I was living in Baghdad at the time, along with other Voices in the Wilderness activists determined to remain in Iraq, come what may. We didn’t want U.S.-led military and economic war to sever bonds that had grown between ourselves and Iraqis who had befriended us over the past seven years. Since 1996, we had traveled to Iraq numerous times, carrying medicines for children and families there, in open violation of the economic sanctions which directly targeted the most vulnerable people in Iraqi society — the poor, the elderly and the children. (more…)
Outside the “radical fringes†of the political spectrum, the silence is almost deafening. This is despite the palpable and (by now) incontrovertible nature of the conjoined crises in our collective midst, as the nexus of economic, ecological, technological, and militaristic challenges before us deepens by the day. Drudgery, droughts, and drones, oh my! Reality possesses a “fantastic†quality that often makes it seem as if we’re moving through a colorized version of an old-school horror flick — a notion reified in the cultural near-obsession with trite invocations of the much-anticipated “zombie apocalypse.â€
I plan to begin the day by refusing to stand idle in the face of the threat that is President Barack Obama’s military. An 


