Dear Mr. President,
I have just recently learned of the event in Bahrain over the past year, namely the attempted revolution by the Bahrain people to gain basic freedoms and a parliament that represents them. The revolution was violently crushed by the ruling family with much aid from Saudi Arabia and the CCASG, all regimes the U.S. considers close allies. In many of your speeches you have stated that the United States supports those seeking freedom, but your actions in regards to Bahrain stand in stark contrast to your words. As a United States Citizen I implore you to at the very least voice a strong support for the people of Bahrain and condemn the actions taken by their government in smothering and covering up their calls for freedom. A message of support from you would call international attention to what has happened in Bahrain and show the people that the U.S. is their ally in freedom. A message from you could legitimize their struggle internationally and help initiate new reform talks so the people who have died fighting for their countries freedom will not have died in vain.
As the many revolutions across the world have recently shown, no regime can withstand it's peoples' call for freedom indefinitely. The American people are aware the Bahrain is a key Arab ally, which is why it vitally important to help them transition into a more democratic nation peacefully and with U.S. support instead of violently and against U.S. opposition. If the latter takes place we will have made enemies of friends, and shown the world that we only support freedom if it is politically convenient for us.
Thank you,
J. Garrett Frierson
http://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/2011/08/201184144547798162.html
Monday, November 21, 2011
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Open Letter to the Occupation
To my brave fellow citizens:
The Occupation does not need Demands.
The strength of this movement is it's passion. It appeals to the deep seeded feeling that somewhere on our collective journey humanity took a wrong turn, and now is the time to correct our mistake. No one knows exactly which way to go, but we all agree it has to be different than the way we're heading. To find a future that benefits all of us we must talk, debate, and reason with one another. Our knowledge, like our power, is much greater collectively than individually. Our future needs a forum, a hearth for citizens to gather around and share ideas. Occupy Wall St is that forum.
What cannot happen is a goal or date that, once met, will dissolve the movement. Even if we achieve everything we could hope for, OWS should remain as a reminder and warning of what can happen when we let politicians, lobbyists, and TV personalities do the talking for us. Creating a list of demands will be the beginning of the end. Demands can be marginalized, appeased, and brushed aside. Demands can be twisted and used to demonize and divide us. What can't be marginalized or misconstrued is a citizenry in the streets demanding our government act in our best interest and that when it does not we will hold those in power accountable instead of looking the other way for the sake of convenience or lack of a viable alternative.
Occupy Wall Street needs to become a place of great discussion and learning, a think tank of the people, by the people, and for the people. From this can grow limitless ideas and movements to tackle the many individual problems facing our country and our world, movements that can set specific goals and demands then disband when they are achieved. In this way we can achieve tangible results without forfeiting our reasons to assemble. Occupy Wall St can be a driving force for an American re-catalyzation, a paradigm shift in our world view.
This movement is not about taxes, healthcare, inequality, the economy, education, corporate power or the police state, though these are all part of it. This movement is about we the people and the society we choose to create. Too long have we passively accepted what has been given to us as the cultural 'norm'. We know that the 'norm' is a distortion, a world where our financial and environmental misconduct have no consequences, production and product are unrelated, and politics is a spectator sport. In silence we've allowed these injustices to fester and grow into the great societal sins of our age, believing the propaganda that we are too small and too weak to change the system. This, as the worldwide Occupation has shown, is false. There are billions of people ready to fight for change if we raise our voice above the din.
The Occupation does not need Demands.
The strength of this movement is it's passion. It appeals to the deep seeded feeling that somewhere on our collective journey humanity took a wrong turn, and now is the time to correct our mistake. No one knows exactly which way to go, but we all agree it has to be different than the way we're heading. To find a future that benefits all of us we must talk, debate, and reason with one another. Our knowledge, like our power, is much greater collectively than individually. Our future needs a forum, a hearth for citizens to gather around and share ideas. Occupy Wall St is that forum.
What cannot happen is a goal or date that, once met, will dissolve the movement. Even if we achieve everything we could hope for, OWS should remain as a reminder and warning of what can happen when we let politicians, lobbyists, and TV personalities do the talking for us. Creating a list of demands will be the beginning of the end. Demands can be marginalized, appeased, and brushed aside. Demands can be twisted and used to demonize and divide us. What can't be marginalized or misconstrued is a citizenry in the streets demanding our government act in our best interest and that when it does not we will hold those in power accountable instead of looking the other way for the sake of convenience or lack of a viable alternative.
Occupy Wall Street needs to become a place of great discussion and learning, a think tank of the people, by the people, and for the people. From this can grow limitless ideas and movements to tackle the many individual problems facing our country and our world, movements that can set specific goals and demands then disband when they are achieved. In this way we can achieve tangible results without forfeiting our reasons to assemble. Occupy Wall St can be a driving force for an American re-catalyzation, a paradigm shift in our world view.
This movement is not about taxes, healthcare, inequality, the economy, education, corporate power or the police state, though these are all part of it. This movement is about we the people and the society we choose to create. Too long have we passively accepted what has been given to us as the cultural 'norm'. We know that the 'norm' is a distortion, a world where our financial and environmental misconduct have no consequences, production and product are unrelated, and politics is a spectator sport. In silence we've allowed these injustices to fester and grow into the great societal sins of our age, believing the propaganda that we are too small and too weak to change the system. This, as the worldwide Occupation has shown, is false. There are billions of people ready to fight for change if we raise our voice above the din.
With Love and Solidarity,
Garrett
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