They Kill Kids.
Well, that certainly got my attention. Go on.
Dear friends,
Final negotiations are underway right now in Dublin, Ireland on a treaty to ban cluster bombs. Arms manufacturers are pushing governments to riddle the treaty with loopholes and delays -- and the final text will be decided in the next 72 hours.
Cluster munitions don't just kill during war. They scatter small, shiny, unexploded "bomblets" on the ground that hold their deadly charge for years. When children pick them up, they are often maimed or killed. Most governments agree that these weapons should be outlawed, but back-room pressure is rising to undercut a strong ban.
If enough of us act before the treaty is signed on Friday, we can drown out the weapons merchants and convince our governments to ban cluster bombs once and for all. Click below to send a message, and then forward this email to friends and family:
http://www.avaaz.org/en/ban_cluster_munitions/13.php?cl=92415442
Canadian Cynic has a great post up this. Don't know about you, but I think we need to do a little something to let our governments know that maimed and murdered children are not an acceptable by-product of war.
Next message:
If Bush says it's legal...
Oshit. No good can come of this. What's the stupid fucker done now?
Dear ACLU Supporter,Oh, for fuck's sake, yet more FISA fuckery? It's starting to look less like legislation and more like a zombie every day: it keeps coming back from the dead. How many more mutations are the Republicons and the fucktard Democrats who enjoy licking Republion balls going to force on this bill?
It’s okay to break the law if the President tells you it’s okay.
That’s the outrageous proposition at the heart of a new FISA “compromise” that Republican Senator Kit Bond is pushing on
Capitol Hill.
His goal: to let off the hook telecommunications companies that willfully cooperated with illegal spying.
Senator Bond wants to bury lawsuits filed against telecom companies in a secret court. And, when they get there, he wants cases dismissed if the companies can show that the President gave them a note saying his request for customer information was legal.
Tell your representative: Just because the president says it's legal doesn't make it so!
Over and over, you and the ACLU have drawn a clear bottom line for Congress. We’re demanding:So far, we’ve persuaded Democratic leaders in the House to hold the line.Real accountability for telecommunications companies that broke the law.
No government spying on Americans without an individual warrant.
But now, some Democrats who want to look tough on national security are getting nervous, and they’re being tempted to support this flawed “compromise” spying bill.
Senator Bond’s proposal wouldn’t actually look at whether
telecom companies broke the law; it would just look at what the Bush administration told telecom companies was the law. Legitimate cases against telecom companies could be dismissed by a secret court, simply because the Bush
administration issued a sham certification.
Don’t let it happen. Your representative needs to hear
from you now before Congress comes back to work next week.
Tell your representative you demand accountability.
Thanks for all you do in defense of freedom.
Let's get something clear: in a democracy, breaking the law isn't legal just because the President said so. That's how dictatorships work. Are we dictatorship or democracy? Why the fuck do I have to ask this question in my own damned country?
Muster up your outrage and do some signing for me, would you, darlings? Thankee kindly.
I sent a message in the hopes my voice will be heard and the cluster bombs will be banned.
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