January 14 DAWN Email
HONK FOR PEACE SUNDAY
Members of the DuPage Peace
Through Justice Coalition (DPTJC) and others
will hold a "honk for peace" rally from 2:00-3:30 p.m. on Sunday,
January 15, in
front of Trader Joe's (
Please join us with signs and banners calling on motorists to "honk for
peace" in support of ending the
--Kevin
-----
Media and the Public Interest:
Debating the Responsibility of the Press in a Democratic Society
Thursday, January
19, 2006. The Oriental Institute (58th and
University) at 6:30PM. Chicago Society will host five distinguished
guests in a public debate on the role of the media in democratic societies.
The participants will touch upon media-related issues such
as fair coverage, obligations to inform the public, tensions between national
security and free access to information, and more. Student questions and a
reception will follow. This event is free and open to the public. Seating is
limited, so please arrive early.
Our special guests for the panel are:
·
Katrina vanden Heuvel,
Editor in Chief of The Nation
·
David D. Hiller, Publisher and CEO of The
·
John Nichols,
·
James Warren, Deputy Managing Editor and Former
·
Danielle Allen, Dean of the Division of the Humanities at
the
·
·
BISHOPS URGE
In a
statement sent to Bush and Congress, Catholic prelates avoid the word
"withdrawal," but say American troops should leave "sooner than
later."
By
Larry B. Stammer, Times Staff Writer
Friday,
January 13, 2006
Declaring
that the United States was at a crossroads in Iraq, the nation's Roman Catholic
bishops said Thursday the time had come to withdraw U.S. troops as fast as
responsibly possible and to hand control of the country to Iraqis.
"Our
nation's military forces should remain in Iraq only as long as it takes for a
responsible transition, leaving sooner than later," said Bishop Thomas G. Wenski of Orlando, Fla., speaking for the U.S. Conference
of Catholic Bishops.
Wenski, chairman of the bishops Committee on International Policy,
said recent statements by the Bush administration that troop levels would be
reduced were not enough. He said the
The
eight-page statement, in the works for months and delivered to the White House
and members of Congress on Thursday, was candid in its assessment of the war,
which U.S. bishops and the late pope, John Paul II, had opposed from the start.
It
underscored failures but also highlighted successes in the nearly three years
since the U.S.-led invasion. Weapons of mass destruction were not found; more
than 2,200 American troops and tens of thousands of Iraqis have been killed;
U.S.-held prisoners were tortured and mistreated; and violence was continuing
in the streets.
The
bishops said they remained "highly skeptical" of Bush's doctrine of
"preventive war." But they also saw signs of hope, including the
Iraqi elections.
"Our
nation cannot afford a shrill and shallow debate that distorts reality and
reduces the options to 'cut and run' versus 'stay the course,' " Wenski wrote, speaking for the bishops
conference.
In an
interview Thursday, Wenski said the bishops purposely
decided to avoid the word "withdrawal" in favor of
"transition" to avoid the impression that bishops were advocating
that the
"No
matter what the debate might have been about going into Iraq, now that we are
there, our presence gives us a whole set of new moral obligations that we have
to try to fulfill in a responsible way," Wenski
said.
"Our
nation is at a crossroads in
"We
must [also] reject an optimism that fails to acknowledge clearly past mistakes,
failed intelligence, and inadequate planning related to
John
Carr, a senior staffer on the Catholic bishops committee, said the statement
was intended to set the stage for what bishops hoped would be a vigorous but
civil discussion on what the U.S. must do next.
"Candidly,
there seems to be more talk on Sunday morning TV talk shows than there is in
the Congress or within the Bush administration, at least in the public
sense," Carr said. "The great temptation is to try to justify past
policies instead of acknowledging where we are and what we need to do."
On
Thursday, Catholic bishops forcefully restated their abhorrence to torture and
said the
Bishops
were careful not to criticize
Bishops also called for religious freedoms in Iraq,
including tolerance for non-Muslims, and the protection of Iraqi refugees and
asylum seekers.
They
said that as the