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An Open L
et
ter to
America
: All Power to the People
By Rev. Lennox Yearwood,
Jr.
President of the Hip Hop Caucus
ccun.org, September 6, 2007
On July 1, 2007 I sought the support of regular Americans after receiving
notification from the U.S. Air Force Reserve that they were threatening to
discharge me on the basis of behavior that, in their words, is “clearly
inconsistent with the interest of national security.” The behavior in
question is my outspoken opposition to the occupation of
Iraq
and the inadequate and inhuman response to the tragedy of Katrina.
As a result of the outpouring of support I received from all over the
United States
and from around the world, the Air Force backed down. Thanks to my
brothers and sisters in the movement, I will end my service with the
honorable discharge that I earned. I am
et
ernally grateful, and evermore committed to taking on the powers that be for
the powers that ought to be.
At first, when I informed the Air Force that I would fight their harassment,
they threatened me with deployment to
Iraq
, or even prison time. Then with the tremendous circulation and
widespread publishing of my first Open L
et
ter, the Air Force realized if they were going to challenge me, they would
have to challenge thousands of Americans from across the nation outside of
Robbins Air Force Base in
Georgia
, on my hearing date.
Even now, after all the pain we have been through as a nation these last
years, the reaction of the Air Force shows that when we are organized in the
face of a government that does not represent us, we the people have the
power.
Mine is the third case in which the military has backed down when the people
have challenged their attempts to silence dissent. When former Sgt.
Adam Kokesh spoke out after risking his life in
Fallujah
,
Iraq
, the U.S. Marines threatened him with a “less than honorable” discharge
but backed down after many came out in support of Adam. When Marine
Sgt. Liam Madden spoke out about this “war of aggression” in which war
crimes were being committed, the Marines threatened him but again backed
down when they saw organized opposition. The military now knows they will
feel the wrath of the people if they threaten v
et
erans who speak out against the occupation of
Iraq
.
The anti-war movement truly supported me in my case against the Air Force,
which as a young African-American minister was so empowering to me
personally that I pledge to increase my opposition to the
U.S.
occupation of
Iraq
. I pledge to continue my work in solidarity with the Iraqi people who
are resisting
U.S.
occupation. I will not l
et
the media spin that portrays all Iraqi resistors as insurgents linked to Al
Qaeda and other terrorists groups, silence my moral support for the good
people in Iraq who are fighting to free their land.
Indeed, I have just r
et
urned from a trip to the
Middle East
where I visited with Iraqi refugees. As a person of color, I have no
issue with my brothers and sisters in
Iraq
. I also have no issue with the
U.S.
troops who serve with honorable intentions and so often join the military
under the poverty draft. My issue is with the Bush Administration and
our co-dependent Congress.
These are the six ways I see to oppose the U.S. occupation of Iraq: 1.
Speaking out and creating an echo chamber of opposition; 2. Participating in
acts of civil disobedience; 3. Joining the economic boycott led by the Iraq
Moratorium beginning September 21st; 4. Casting your vote at the polls; 5.
Giving direct aid to humanitarian programs for Iraqi refugees and internally
displaced; and, 6. Counter-recruiting campaigns.
All these m
et
hods become effective when a critical mass of people is mobilized. The
anti-war movement in the
U.S.
has y
et
to reach that critical mass. The critical mass that is necessary to
have a real anti-war movement can be achieved by mobilizing those who are
most oppressed by the
U.S.
government. We must link the struggles of the oppressed in the
U.S.
and in
Iraq
.
The displaced Katrina survivors and the displaced Iraqis is a good place to
start. But it must go deeper than that. Literally, the money that was
supposed to go to levees in
New Orleans
was diverted to the war in
Afghanistan
. The money that is being spent to kill Brown people in
Baghdad
is being diverted from programs that educate Black people in the
U.S.
For example, for what the State of
North Carolina
has sacrificed in war spending in
Iraq
, they could have provided nearly 600,000 students four-year scholarships at
public universities.
I pray that our movement finds the strength of character to listen to the
very oppressed for whom we claim to speak, and l
et
the voices, ideas and actions of the oppressed drive a movement that can
finally grow to that critical mass.
For Future Generations,
Rev. Lennox Yearwood, Jr.
Rev. Lennox Yearwood, Jr. is the President of the Hip Hop Caucus, www.hiphopcaucus.org.
The Hip Hop Caucus is a national, nonprofit, non-partisan organization meant
to inspire and motivate those of us born after the ‘60s civil rights
movement. Rev. Yearwood is also a member of Iraq V
et
erans Against the War, www.ivaw.org.
Rev. Yearwood serves on the board of Voters For Peace, www.VotersForPeace.US.
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