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« July 2007 | Main | September 2007 »

August 30, 2007

Adams-Jeffco Greens September Meeting

Adams-Jefferson Greens will hold their monthly meeting on Thursday, September 6, at the Arvada Library in Olde Town Arvada.

Gogreen

The meeting will begin at 6:30 P.M.

On the agenda ...

Update on upcoming metro Green Party events.

Formation of a metro area campaign committee for the 2008 elections.

Bob Kinsey, potential Green candidate for the U.S. Senate is planning to attend.

Voter registration training.

Adams-Jeffco Greens
Thursday, September 6, 2007
6:30 - 8:30 P.M.

Arvada Library
7525 W. 57th Avenue
Arvada, CO 80002

MAP



Here's a report and photograph from the August 15, Denver-Arapahoe Greens meeting:
The meeting was opened with a review of recent Green actions and community involvement. Topics ranged from CCJP workshops to Earth Works expos. Emerging concerns about upcoming Green initiatives entail having a table at the Monolith musicfest at Red Rocks on Sept. 14th and 15. Brandon Mapes will facilitate working the table and Claire Ryder will help coordinate with Brandon about rotating shifts for the two days. Three folks volunteered to research the prospects for having Green chapters on the campuses of Auraria and University of Denver. Reports on any progress for Monolith and campus chapters will be provided at next month's meeting.

Rom Philpott provided an overview of issues stirring at the national party convention, which gave rise to discussions about Colorado's place on the national scene in lieu of the 2008 Democratic Convention. Plans for vetting candidates like Bob Kinsey for other national, state, and local elections remain a chief concern. Formation of campaign committees may be our next best effort. Green Party visibilty during the DNC is a top concern.

Dave Chandler brought to our attention the September 6, Adams/Jeffco Greens meeting at the Arvada Public Library (Old Towne) where opportunities for Voter Registration training will be presented. Please refer to Dave's electronic postings on "Denver Announce Greens" for other important Adams/Jeffco Greens (and MetroDenverGreens) events and activities.
A reminder ... the next Denver-Arapahoe Greens meeting will be held on September 19, starting at 6:30 P.M. at the Ross-University Hills Public Library.


Denara81507

August 16, 2007

Memorial for Bruce McNaughton

Bruce McNaughton served as Colorado Green Party secretary for four years, from 2001 until 2005.



The Wake and Memorial Celebration
of Bruce McNaughton

Att45133
Date | 17 August 2007

Time | 1:30-5:30

Service | 2:00-3:00

Food and Volleyball | 3:00-5:30

Place | O'Fallon Park, 7.5 miles west of Morrison on CO Highway 74, just east of Kittredge

Children are invited and welcome.

If you would like to participate in the service with a reading, song, or other sharing, please contact Jann at jbmcn@indra.com to be included in the program (this would be separate from sharing memories or speaking during the service, which will be available to all on a spontaneous basis).

Please dress in colorful, comfortable clothing and be prepared for an afternoon rain shower.

Please bring: A food dish that you particularly enjoy

A folding or lawn chair for each person in your group

Your own alcoholic beverage (we will have punch and sodas)

Optional items, please bring if you would like:

One flower that caught your eye. We are going to spread flower petals with a few of Bruce's ashes.

We would be grateful for photos or written memories of Bruce for the memorial book. The book will be circulated among the family members that cannot come to the memorial, and will later be kept by Bruce’s wife and children.

Directions: From the light at the intersection of 285 and CO 74 on the west side of Morrison, go 7.5 miles west of Morrison on Colorado Highway 74, through Idledale almost to Kittredge, take a left into O'Fallon Park (Corwina Park is the wrong one, and if you get into Kittredge you've gone too far). Stay on the dirt road to the left as it winds around next to the stream. Parking on the dirt road is OK, we have a permit for the entire park.

Information/Questions | Jann's Telephone: 303-333-1540 Email: jbmcn@indra.com

August 10, 2007

Upcoming August Green Events

You are invited to attend!

Denver-Arapahoe-Metro Green Meeting

Just a reminder that our monthly meeting is Wednesday, August 15, at 6:30 P.M., in the large upper conference room of the Ross-University Hills Public Library, 4310 E. Amherst Avenue, Denver.

Please feel free to bring any friends or family that you would like to invite.

Tentative Agenda:

Vote_green_2

* Update on recent Green actions/events (Carolyn Bnisnski/CCJP/etc.)
* Soundings on efforts to expand base of youth involvement
* Future Green activities (Monolith/Re-create '68/CRES/etc.)
* Review of national party initiatives/issues
* State and national candidate vetting
* New business
* Next meeting and agenda

Ross-University Hills Public Library
4310 E. Amherst Ave.
At S. Birch St.
Denver, CO 80222

MAP



Van Bibber Park Clean-Up

Sponsored by Adams-Jefferson County Green Party

Van Bibber Park
5575 Ward Road
West side of Ward Road, just south of 58th Avenue
Arvada

MAP

Saturday, August 18, 2007

11:00 A.M. to 1:00 P.M.

Getting There
A large parking lot is located just south of 58th Avenue on the west side of Ward Road. Left-hand turns from northbound Ward Road are prohibited. Another small parking lot is located on the west side of the park at Indiana and 56th Avenue.
Woodsy_just_for_kids
Once again, please remember to bring water, sunscreen, and a hat. You may also want to bring gardening gloves to pick up garbage.

For more information call Tony D'Lallo at 303-428-6677 or email: antoniodlallo@comcast.net



A Reminder About Adams-Jefferson Greens

Adams-Jefferson Greens will hold their next meeting on September 6, 2007, at the Arvada Library from 6:30 to 8:30 P.M.

August 07, 2007

Colorado Greens for Peace

Ron Forthofer was the Green Party candidate for governor of Colorado in 2002; he won four percent of the vote in Colorado's 2nd Congressional District in 2000.

War is Collective Insanity
Ron Forthofer

War_is_not_healthy

August 6th is a date that reminds us of a horrible chapter in human history. On this day 62 years ago, the U.S. launched atomic warfare when we dropped an atom bomb on Hiroshima, Japan almost immediately killing an estimated 80,000 civilians and tens of thousands more who died horrible deaths within a few years due to the radiation poisoning they experienced. On August 9, 1945 we dropped a second nuclear bomb on Nagasaki killing tens of thousands more.

Reflecting on the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, I wonder, have we learned the right lessons? We learned that nuclear weapons kill large numbers of innocent civilians, but so do so-called conventional weapons. Perhaps what we should have learned is that war is not the answer and that the world needs alternatives for solving crises.

Unfortunately, the lesson the U.S. and a few other countries took away from Hiroshima and Nagasaki was that more nuclear weapons were needed. Once the atomic genie was unleashed, nuclear proliferation became the name of the game. Talk about your overkill - the U.S. eventually manufactured and deployed more than 70,000 nuclear weapons! Might, not diplomacy, was 'in'.

By the early 1960s, five nations had nuclear weapons, with the Soviet Union and the U.S. armed to the teeth and following the policy of mutual assured destruction (MAD). The leaders of these countries were indeed mad! Commenting on this situation, Army General Omar Bradley, the first chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said: "Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants. We know more about war than we know about peace, more about killing than we know about living."

Stephen Schwartz of The Brookings Institute reported the U.S. spent over $5.5 trillion (in 1996 dollars) on nuclear weapons, a large portion of the $18.7 trillion spent on the military between 1940 and 1996. And add in a few trillion dollars more since then. Contrast these amounts with the paltry sums for preventing violence and supporting agencies working on international cooperation. Moreover, in 1953 President Eisenhower reminded us of the other cost of these huge weapons expenditures when he said: "Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed."

Has all this money spent on nuclear weapons and the military brought us peace and security? Or has it simply improved the killing capability of our military and enriched the merchants of death, the Congressional-military-industrial complex, at the expense of our people and worldwide peace and security? A look at the past 62 years shows that our huge and bloated nuclear-armed military has brought neither security here at home nor peace throughout the world. In fact, it appears that the U.S., by having such a powerful military, tends to turn to it first instead of trying to solve problems diplomatically.

Our illegal attack on Iraq is a horrible example of our reliance on military might instead of diplomacy. The evidence is now overwhelming that the Bush administration was intent on removing Saddam Hussein and would not countenance any diplomatic resolution. Besides the huge number of Iraqi casualties and over 3600 U.S. military deaths, the image of the U.S. has further been damaged by this wanton and illegal violence. Incredibly we are now seeing a repeat of the propaganda campaign used against Iraq, this time with Iran as the target. The Bush administration is again trying to frighten us, raising the specter of an Iranian nuclear weapon. In an attempt to build more support for an attack on Iran, the Bush administration has added the unsupported claim that Iran is behind many of the attacks on U.S. forces in Iraq. Once again Bush wants to use the military instead of diplomacy. In 2003 Iran reached out to the U.S. for negotiations on all issues, but the Bush administration would not even consider this offer. Unfortunately Congress is ready and willing to support an attack on Iran. Therefore it is up to the American public to stop another war crime. If we fail to stop the attack, the consequences are likely to be disastrous for the world and for the U.S.

A quote from Seneca the Younger from almost 2000 years ago still seems to apply: "We are mad not only individually but nationally. We check manslaughter and isolated murders, but what of war and the much vaunted crime of slaughtering whole peoples?"

August 01, 2007

Letter: An "Inconvenient" Protest

Denver Green Party chair, Claire Ryder, has a succinct, powerful letter-to-the-editor in today's Denver Post.

An "inconvenient" protest
Re: "Iraq war foe gets jail for Udall office sit-in," July 29 news story.

Carolyn Bninski faces a month in jail for trespassing in Congressman Mark Udall's office. She "trespassed" for 10 whole minutes, reading names of Iraqi dead. During the trial, Carter Ellison of Udall's staff referred to the protestors as being "inconvenient." Makes me wonder what Udall and his staff think about the "inconveniences" the Iraqi people face daily: no clean water, no power, lack of food, lack of health care, and constant fear of death.

It isn't inconvenient for Udall to continue to fund the Iraq war. I will find it "inconvenient" to vote for Udall for Senate.

Claire Ryder, Denver