Sunday, November 28, 2021

MILITARISM/MILITARY INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX/WARMAKING AND WARMAKERS/AGENTS OF US WAR OF TERROR IN ARKANSAS

 

OMNI

MILITARISM/MILITARY INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX/WARMAKING AND WARMAKERS/AGENTS OF US WAR OF TERROR IN ARKANSAS

Newsletter #3

NOVEMBER 28, 2021

COMPILED BY DICK BENNETT FOR A CULTURE OF PEACE, JUSTICE, AND ECOLOGY

.  (#1, Feb. 19, 2012; #2 October 10, 2012)

Omnicenter.org/donate/

 If a way to the Better there be, it exacts a full look at the Worst.” ― Thomas Hardy.

This newsletter reports only a part of the militarism embraced by the state of Arkansas.  For the present this is all the time I have to devote to the subject.  I hope someone will carry it forward.  –Dick

CONTENTS

Dick’s Introducton: Hitler’s Replacement of Weimar Republic by Nazi Totalitarianism

EDUCATION IN ARKANSAS
ROTC
  
College
   High School Junior ROTC

  

TIES BETWEEN CONGRESSIONAL REPRESENTATIVES AND MILITARY
On this level the US is already deeply immersed in militarism.  Most of our federal representatives are members of the War Party, celebrate US imperial foreign policy, and eagerly fund it.

 LITTLE ROCK, STATE CAPITOL
GOVERNOR ANNOUNCES COMMITTEE TO ENHANCE ARKANSAS’ MILITARY INSTALLATIONS 
“Arkansas’ Arms Sales Jump Nearly 500% in 2018” especially to Saudi Arabia and Lockheed

ARKANSAS CITIES
LOCATION:Military-Government-Corporate-Education Complex (MIC)
List of Cities, Military Contractors, Contracts, and $Dollars
Logo Map of Military Weapons Contractors in AR

CAMDEN, Center of MIC in Arkansas
Highland Industrial Park
Camden’s War Economy
SW Arkansas Tech University (Camden Workforce Training)
Lockheed Martin
   “$560 Million Pentagon Production Contract for Camden”
   “Camden Site to Build Part of Saudi System.”
Raytheon
   $1 billion Deal with Aerojet Rocketdyne
   Patriot Missile Contract
Spectra Technologies
American Rheinmetall Munition, Inc.

Other cities

BENTONVILLE
   Military Contractors
   Navy Junior ROTC

FAYETTEVILLE
 University of Arkansas UAF
     Pentagon Funds Infrared Night Vision Research
     Pentagon Funds $1.25 Million for Computer Speed
     Pentagon Awards Fellowship
     Navy Awards Grant
     Industrial Engineering Faculty Member Named Editor-in-Chief of Military Operations
         Research Journal

 

UAF Nuclear Weapons Program
   
Tomlinson on Schools of Mass Destruction and UAF
 UAF ROTC

FORT SMITH
Ebbing AFB, 188th Wing
     Drones
     F-16 Falcon and F-35 Fighter Jets
 Nuclear Weapons Transport Training

HOT SPRINGS
Radius Aerospace Produces Titanium for Lockheed F-35

HUNTSVILLE-BERRYVILLE
Ducommun and Raytheon: Naval Strike Missile Fuel Control Systems

JACKSONVILLE
 
Little Rock AFB: C130s, essential “boxcar” transport plane for US empire (latest version C130-J).

PINE BLUFF/Whitehall Weapons Manufacture
Old Army facility opened new plant to make biological and chemical protective suits for the military.

SPRINGDALE
Military Contracts
Marine Corps Junior ROTC

 

The military-business-government-MEDIA COMPLEX.  The close alliance of Pentagon, business, finance, and political parties would not be so unified and influential without the aid of media.   For of course, the statewide newspaper—the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette-- is a supporter of the MIC   The Arkansas MIC should receive ever-watchful, critical reporting, but AR media are boosters of neoliberal profit, growth, development, and inequality.  Similarly, all the newspapers and magazines in the state defend the system in which the combat fighter wing at Ebbing is named for the Go-Razorback!football team.  The Media Complex needs a thorough examination ongoing by dissertations, theses, columns, lte, if we are to keep our democracy.


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TEXTS

     Abel sent me this from Cindy Sheehan 11-24-21: “In response to my Facebook post about war contracts in Arkansas, Cindy Sheehan wrote:  When I was researching a book many years ago, I found out that if you live in the US, you don't live more than 50 miles from a war profiteer, war installation, or recruiting office. That's why the war machine is entrenched in this society.’” 

      Here’s an abstract way of conceptualizing the domination she describes: the USA is composed of multitudes of militarized crevices (cracks, splits, fissures, clefts, chinks, niches).  Any force that occupies and controls the most significant interstices controls the government or nation and the populace.  

     We see this played out by Adolph Hitler in Benjamin Hett’s The Death of Democracy: Hitler’s Rise to Power and the Downfall of the Weimar Republic (2018) during the years 1928 to 1934 (plus some earlier contexts).   Hitler gradually gained control of the institutions of Weimar both large and small until at last he took the Chancellorship and Presidency and above all the army.  One by one, he replaced the established interstices of power—Germany’s conservative political elites, the business leaders, the military commanders-- with members of the Nazi Party.

 

      But almost to the very last Hitler’s ascension to the highest power in Germany was not a foregone conclusion.  Although “after 1929, there was no viable antidemocratic coalition that did not include Hitler and the Nazis,” who “proved to be the most skillful politicians at capturing the resentments” of the electorate, and “one after another the conservatives found themselves outmaneuvered and sidelined” (234), still Hitler had to murder one of his “few friends,” Ernst Rohm, and destroy Rohm’s Storm Troopers, the SA—on the Night of the Long Knives--to ensure the country was his.  Leading up to that moment, Hitler faced opposition from major parties and leaders, which he had to defeat and replace with his Party followers, the Nazis.  And high level Weimar military insurgents were still resisting Hitler during WWII in their attempted assassination of Hitler in Operation Valkyrie of 1944.

      Hett addresses his final remarks to his audience of 2018.    Thinking of the end of the Weimar democracy “as the result of a large protest movement colliding with complex patterns of elite self-interest, in a culture increasingly prone to aggressive mythmaking and irrationality—strips way the exotic and foreign look of swastika banners and goose-stepping Stormtroopers.  Suddenly the whole thing looks close and familiar. . . .few people could imagine the worst possibilities.  A civilized nation could not possibly vote for Hitler. . . .”   But “it is hard to blame them for not foreseeing the unthinkable.”

        Fortunately for us, “We who come later have one advantage over them: we have their example before us” (235). 

Militarization of Education in Arkansas
(I hope some doctoral student will write her dissertation on this subject..  Did US public school education encourage militarism, or curb it?)

ROTC

Colleges
AFAS
Winter 2021 | Armed Forces Alumni Society Quarterly

Armed Forces Alumni Society afas@arkansasalumni.org via uark.edu 

6:01 AM (8 hours ago)

https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/images/cleardot.gif

https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/images/cleardot.gif

to me

https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/images/cleardot.gif

 

 

 

 

ICYMI: The AFAS held a tailgating event last month to engage with its members before the football game versus the Missouri Tigers. WPS!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Have you heard? AFAS is offering a scholarship beginning fall 2022!

What is it? The University of Arkansas Armed Forces Alumni Society Award is a one-year nonrenewable, academic scholarship.

How can I contribute to the scholarship?
Donate online at: onlinegiving.uark.edu

OR

Make check payable to: U of A Foundation


Mail to:

Arkansas Alumni Association

PO Box 1981,

Dept. 2759

Fayetteville, AR 72702
 

Who is eligible?
•  Recipients must be full-time students in good standing
•  Recipients must have a 3.0 minimum cumulative GPA
•  Recipients must be current or former members, or dependents of a current or former member, of the Armed Forces of the United States and have verifying documentation on file with the VRIC OR
•  Recipients must be current members, or dependents of a current member, of the Armed Forces Alumni Society.

Students may reapply each year.

Additional Notes:
•    Reserve Officer Training Corps cadets are only eligible if they are prior military service members with a verifiable DD214 Member 4.
•    Military service members with a dishonorable discharge or their family member(s) are not eligible.

When are applications due? The application opens on Jan. 1, 2022 and closes on Feb. 15, 2022. The Armed Forces Alumni Society will make selections the spring 2022 for award in the fall 2022 semester.

How do I apply? Complete the online application at: arkansasalumni.org/scholarships.

Email alumnisp@uark.edu for information.

 

 

REMEMBERING AN ALUMNI VETERAN

 

 

 

Floyd E. Sagely

 

B.S.B.A | 1955

 

 

 

 

 

 

MARCH 26, 1932 – SEPTEMBER 22, 2021

 

 

 

READ FLOYD'S OBITUARY

 

 

 

UPCOMING EVENTS

 

Feb

 

10

If This Walk Could Talk Documentary Premiere

 

Join us in person or virtually for the premiere of If This Walk Could Talk! It tells the story of the U of A, from personal reflections through time, by those whose names are etched in stone. The film is directed by Larry Foley, journalism professor and chair of the School of Journalism and Strategic Media. The event will be held in the Faulkner Performing Arts Center.

Schedule (subject to change)
6 p.m. Reception
7 p.m. Viewing
Q & A and Dessert to Follow

 

Junior ROTC
This Navy program was started after a 2019 student interest survey and a local naval advocate led the district to recommend it.  “ROTC is a program offered at hundreds of colleges and universities nationwide, which prepares young adults for a career as an officer in the military.  The Army, Air Force, Navy, Marine Corps, Space Force, and Coast Guard all offer high school programs.  There are 46 high school Junior ROTC programs in Arkansas.  Bentonville’s is the sixth Navy Junior ROTC program in Arkansas.”  Mary Jordan.  “Junior ROTC Program First in NW Region: Bentonville District Started It This Year with 126 Cadets.”  NWA Democrat-Gazette (Nov. 21, 2021).   

This “first” draws attention both to the state’s expanding militarization of educational institutions and to the possibility of opposition—the insurgency-- to further ROTC programs and, more difficult, to the reversal of Bentonville’s first.  Now NWA opponents of militarism should build a coalition against the crevices being occupied by the ROTC, or if they do not, and the military training expands further, they have only themselves to blame.  As a starter, they should ask: who stands to gain financially, institutionally, and personally by the new, anti-democratic ROTC unit, and what alternatives might opponents offer in Bentonville and other cities.

 

CONGRESSIONAL REPRESENTATIVES AND MILITARY

TIES BETWEEN CONGRESSIONAL REPRESENTATIVES AND MILITARY
This subject is huge, another dissertation needed.  Every Congress member should receive an exhaustive analysis, if we are ever have the transparency essential to changing the militaristic values of our Congress.  Its bipartisanship is obvious to us all, and celebrated by many that in foreign policy we have only One Party: the War Party.  That’s what Hitler aimed at and achieved; that’s what the Republicans and most of the Democrats have achieved in their endless wars from 1941 to the present.

“WOMACK Chairs Military Meeting.”  NADG (11-24-19).  “The West Point board of visitors, chaired by Arkansas’ 34d District U.S. Rep. Steve Womack, met in Washington earlier this month.”  https://www.pressreader.com/usa/arkansas-democrat-gazette/20191124/281827170612367

LITTLE ROCK, STATE CAPITOL
GOVERNOR ANNOUNCES COMMITTEE TO SUPPORT, ENHANCE ARKANSAS MILITARY INSTALLATIONS, Sept. 21, 2015.

https://armoneyandpolitics.com/governor-announces-committee-to-support-enhance-arkansas-military-installations/

Gov. Asa Hutchinson announced today, Sept. 21, the creation of a new statewide initiative aimed at supporting and promoting Arkansas’ military installations. The Governor’s Military Affairs Committee will be a public-private initiative to support and advocate for the state’s military institutions and installations, both at the national and state level to accomplish short- and long-term economic objectives.

At a press conference, held at the Arkansas Military Aviation Support Facility at Camp Robinson in North Little Rock, Hutchinson said altogether, the state’s military installations contribute $1 billion to the state’s economy each year….Continued:  https://armoneyandpolitics.com/governor-announces-committee-to-support-enhance-arkansas-military-installations/

 “Arkansas arms sales jump nearly 500% in 2018, Saudi Arabia near the top of state export marketplace” by Wesley Brown (wesbrocomm@gmail.com), https://talkbusiness.net/2019/05/arkansas-arms-sales-jump-nearly-500-in-2018-saudi-arabia-near-the-top-of-state-export-marketplace/

Civilian aircraft parts, ammunitions and rice were the top Arkansas exports purchased by U.S. trade partners in 2018, representing more than 25% of the $6.5 billion in homemade goods shipped from the Natural State to other countries, according to new data compiled by the U.S. Census Bureau on foreign trade.

At the same time, oil- and cash-rich Saudi Arabia leapfrogged reliable U.S. trading partners in Europe and Asia such as France, China, Japan, Germany and the United Kingdom to land among the top three purchasers of Arkansas-made goods. In 2018, the Middle Eastern country bought $397 million of Arkansas commodities, which represents 6.1% of the state’s global export market.

The stark increase in exports to Saudi Arabia is directly attributed to the Middle Eastern nation’s long-term relationship with U.S. defense giant Lockheed Martin. In 2017, Saudi Arabia expressed its intent to procure more than $28 billion in integrated air and missile defense, combat ships, tactical aircraft and rotary wing technologies and programs with the Bethesda, Md.-based defense contractor.

Part of that deal includes the U.S. Army’s $1.1 billion foreign military sales contract to deliver Patriot, or PAC-3 missiles, interceptors, launcher modification kits, associated equipment and spares to the Kingdom, South Korea and Qatar. Not only is Lockheed’s sprawling industrial site in south Arkansas responsible for final assembly of the high-velocity interceptors, but fellow Camden-based defense contractor Aerojet Rocketdyne also manufactures the rocket propulsion systems that allow the PAC-3 to shoot down enemy missiles….Continued: https://talkbusiness.net/2019/05/arkansas-arms-sales-jump-nearly-500-in-2018-saudi-arabia-near-the-top-of-state-export-marketplace/

ALL AR CITIES

Arkansas War Contractor Lists by City United States Government Contracts

296 Cities out of 605 received defense contracts!!!

The largest recipient is Camden:

Camden, AR

27

397

$367,960,495

But other even towns and hamlets are receiving large amounts; for example:

Alexander, AR

15

2,720

$147,705,941

 

I have barely scratched the surface of this gargantuan money saturation of Arkansas by the military.  Please someone make a study of this data.

https://www.governmentcontractswon.com/department/defense/arkansas_cities.asp

State

Arkansas (AR)

Dollar Amount of Defense Contracts Awarded to Contractors in this State from 2000 to 2020

$7,585,647,368

Number of Defense Contracts Awarded to Contractors in this State from 2000 to 2020

57,594

Number of Defense Contractors in this State

3,303

Number of Cities in this State

605

 

Defense Contract Totals for Contractors in this State
Contract Count/Contract Dollar Amount

 

2020

11,003/
$260,566,083

 

2019

9,600/
$176,114,954

 

2018

9,481/
$242,216,688

 

2017

2,390/
$130,194,321

 

2016

2,061/
$158,159,744

 

2015

1,715/
$185,296,693

 

2014

1,249/
$229,773,465

 

2013

1,156/
$237,101,905

 

2012

1,364/
$446,138,846

 

2011

1,546/
$632,056,398

 

2010

1,866/
$606,602,021

 

2009

1,958/
$497,758,238

 

2008

2,139/
$332,378,258

 

2007

1,993/
$310,413,759

 

2006

1,831/
$570,244,686

 

2005

1,881/
$511,225,445

 

2004

1,342/
$378,392,405

 

2003

1,256/
$443,082,569

 

2002

990/
$686,300,944

 

2001

401/
$342,988,757

 

2000

372/
$208,641,189

Map of Aerospace/Military Weapons Contractors in Arkansas

Arkansas Aerospace Manufacturing Companies Map | AEDC

 

Camden, Arkansas

Camden, Arkansas Military Weapons Manufacturing

https://www.teamcamden.com/industry/

 

https://www.teamcamden.com/industry/

OUR TARGET INDUSTRIES

We’re big on a strong national defense because it’s in our blood. The defense industry is the life line of our economy. For us, it is jobs and pride and an awareness that what our defense workers do to deliver the very best in workmanship makes the difference between life and death.

Most of our defense contractors are located in the Highland Industrial Park – a privately-owned 17,000-acre industrial park located close to Camden in Calhoun County. Among the products produced at the Highland Industrial Park are the PAC-3, THADD, HIMARS, MLRS and Guided MLRS, Standard Missile-3, Evolved Sea-Sparrow Missile (ESSM), Hydra-70 rockets, Modular Artillery Charges (MACs), pressed warheads, infra-red flares and other countermeasures, practice round munitions, including “green” training grenades, Hellfire/Javelin Tactical Missiles, and tactical rocket motors and warheads for use in Javelin, PAC-3, Tomahawk, Standard Missile, Army TACMS, and GMLRS…Continued:

https://www.teamcamden.com/industry/

 

HIGHLAND INDUSTRIAL PARK

Another article on Highland Industrial Park in Camden, warmaking details:

https://www.globalsecurity.org/military/facility/highland.htm

 

Highland Park, Camden and Arms Trade:

https://talkbusiness.net/2020/08/contract-changes-provide-more-work-to-lockheed-operations-in-camden/

 

Camden’s War Economy

March/April 2015 Issue

https://armoneyandpolitics.com/feature-camdens-war-economy/

Photos courtesy of Spectra Technologies and Highland Industrial Park


Top photo: A large sign at the entrance to the park’s more than 15,000 acres displays the names of the organizations with a presence there — Fortune 500 companies like General Dynamics, Lockheed Martin, and Raytheon, among many others.


Camden, Ark., is an old, historic city. The Ouachita River lies still as a serpent where it curves against the bluff upon which the town is built. The streets and buildings of downtown seem to exist under a spell from the past. Life feels slow and easy.

But in 2001, when International Paper’s Camden mill closed, there was a danger that slow and easy might become — as it has for some towns in south Arkansas — death and decay. Camden, however, had a secret weapon. As ground wars heated up in Afghanistan and Iraq, nearby Highland Industrial Park (HIP), home to numerous defense contractors making munitions, heated up with money and jobs. Now, with large-scale fighting by U.S. forces winding down and defense budget cuts kicking in, can the park continue to fuel the local economy?....Continued: https://armoneyandpolitics.com/feature-camdens-war-economy/

History of Southwestern Arkansas Tech University (Camden workforce training institution)
http://www.sautech.edu/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/History-of-SAU-Tech.pdf

 

Lockheed Martin

MFC Camden

Lockheed Martin Announces New $560 Million Pentagon Production Contract For Camden

 June 26, 2019

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2019-06-26/lockheed-martin-announces-new-560-million-pentagon-production-contract-for-camden

Lockheed Martin Camden patriot missile

Only days after Gov. Asa Hutchinson returned from a European trade mission where Lockheed Martin announced a multimillion-dollar deal to expand its operations in Camden, the Pentagon awarded the defense giant another blockbuster contract to manufacture warheads at its South Arkansas military industrial complex.

On Tuesday, Lockheed Martin announced it received a $561.8 million production contract for the U.S. Army’s MGM-14O Tactical Missile System (ATacMS) missiles for the so-called Foreign Military Sales (FMS) customers. The two-year contract calls for new production of the Army’s tactical guided missile systems, as well as upgrading older ATacMS variants as part of the Pentagon’s so-called Service Life Extension Program….

In the bid award specifications released by the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) on Monday, the hybrid contract notes that the Army’s long-range missile system will be sold under the Pentagon’s foreign military sales program to allies in Bahrain, Poland and Romania. The newest version of the surface-to-surface missile system has a range of over 150 miles and can be fired from multiple rocket launchers….Continued: https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/local-regional-news/2019-06-26/lockheed-martin-announces-new-560-million-pentagon-production-contract-for-camden

“Camden Site to Build Part of Saudi System.”  ADG (3-7-19).
LM’s branch will participate in the $945.9 million contract to build a Terminal High Altitude Area Defense system to defend against short-and medium-range ballistic missiles.

 

RAYTHEON
“Camden plant to get Raytheon parts work”  NADG (3-27-20). 
Arms-maker Raytheon Co. has reached a $1 billion, five-year strategic deal with a key supplier that operates a rocket motor production plant Arkansas.

Raytheon's deal with Aerojet Rocketdyne -- which has a rocket motor production operation in Camden -- is for the production of propulsion and control systems over a five-year period for several of Raytheon's key missiles, according to a news release.

"Aerojet Rocketdyne has supported one or more variants of the Standard Missile program for more than three decades; we are proud of our contributions to these vital defense products," said Eileen Drake, Aerojet Rocketdyne chief executive and president. "This significant agreement on multiyear contracts strengthens our current relationship and positions Aerojet Rocketdyne favorably for future business opportunities and continued growth."

Aerojet Rocketdyne is a subsidiary of publicly traded Aerojet Rocketdyne Holdings.

Several Aerojet Rocketdyne sites will do the work for the project, including the Solid Rocket Motor Center of Excellence in Camden.

-- John Magsam

Camden plant to get Raytheon parts work - PressReader

www.pressreader.com › usa › arkansas-democrat-gazette
8 hours ago - Arms-maker Raytheon Co. has reached a $1 billion, five-year strategic deal with a key supplier that operates a rocket motor production plant ...

Camden plant key facility in Raytheon's $2.4 billion Patriot ...

www.magnoliareporter.com › news_and_business › local_business

Dec 20, 2014 - Camden plant key facility in Raytheon's $2.4 billion Patriot missile contract with Qatar ... to build 10 Patriot fire units and spare parts for the State of Qatar. ... Work for the $2,397,211,870 fixed-price-incentive, foreign military ...

Sep 30, 2018 - Two years ago, Lockheed Martin's Camden manufacturing plant was the ... to produce and deliver Standard Missile-6 all-up round missiles and spare parts. ... 31% of the contract work would be done at Raytheon's East Camden factory. ... Smaller industrial and defense suppliers and manufacturing have ...

 

Spectra Technologies (Warhead/Explosives Manufacturer)

BOOMING BUSINESS: ARKANSAS’ DEFENSE COMPANIES, A GROWING ECONOMIC SEGMENT by Dwain Hebda March 25, 2019 

https://armoneyandpolitics.com/booming-business-arkansas-defense/pectra Technologies kes warheads from the Calhoun …Spectra Technologies is one of the more modestly-sized firms – just 200 employees – that’s part of a 10,000-job, $1.8 billion industry in The Natural State, according to the Arkansas Aerospace and Defense Alliance. Spectra makes warheads, the explosive payloads that range from a few milligrams to 500 kilos, as well as hand-thrown grenades, 40mm grenades and assorted demolition products….Continued:

https://armoneyandpolitics.com/booming-business-arkansas-defense/

American Rheinmetall Munition Inc.,  (German Subsidiary)
Multi-million dollar Pentagon awards boost Arkansas’ defense sectorMANUFACTURING

by Wesley Brown (wesbrocomm@gmail.com)  858 views 

https://talkbusiness.net/2018/09/multi-million-dollar-pentagon-awards-boosts-arkansas-defense-sector/

Arkansas’ fast-growing defense sector got another big boost this week after two global defense contractors with state ties won contract awards or extensions on work that will be completed at East Camden’s sprawling industrial munitions complex.

On Thursday, American Rheinmetall Munition Inc., based in Stafford, Va., was awarded a firm-fixed price contract worth $59.7 million firm to supply the U.S. Marine Corps with 2,135,026 high-velocity practice grenade holders, known as MK281 MOD 3 cartridges. According to contract specifications published each week by the U.S. Department of Defense, work will be performed in American Rheinmetall’s munitions factory in East Camden, Ark. with delivery expected to be complete by Sept. 25, 2022.

American Rheinmetall Munitions, Inc. (ARM) is the U.S. operating subsidiary of European defense giant Rheinmetall Waffe Munition GmbH, a publicly traded company in Düsseldorf, Germany that has nearly 24,000 employees across the globe and annual sales of more than $6.8 billion. Talk Business & Politics reached out to ARM officials in Camden, Virginia and at their global headquarters in Germany, but did not get a response…
https://talkbusiness.net/2018/09/multi-million-dollar-pentagon-awards-boosts-arkansas-defense-sector
[
Of course these are not all of the war profiteers in Camden.]

 

OTHER ARKANSAS CITIES

BENTONVILLE
[See the War Contractors List by Cities above]:  Military Contractors: 28; Contracts: 3,849; Total Payments: $24,026,014.

Navy Junior ROTC (see note above on Junior ROTC in Arkansas)
Mary Jordan.  “Junior ROTC Program First in NW Region: Bentonville District Started It This Year with 126 Cadets.”  NWA Democrat-Gazette (Nov. 21, 2021).  This Navy program was started after a 2019 student interest survey and a local naval advocate led the district to recommend it.  “Bentonville’s is the sixth Navy Junior ROTC program in Arkansas” and will be led by Cmdr. Mike Davis, retired Navy surface warfare officer.  This “first” draws attention to both the state’s expanding militarization of educational institutions and to the possibility of opposition to further ROTC programs.

 

FAYETTEVILLE
Military Contractors: 68; Contracts: 836; Payment:  $95,114,742

“Designer of Circuits Lands $1m in Grants.  ADG (July 19, 2017).  For developing control systems in jets detectors and high temperature electronics.  The money builds on previous work.

          University of Arkansas UAF

“Research Funded by DoD to Improve Infrared Detectors Used for Night Vision.”  Shui-Qing Fisher Yu and  Gregory Salamo.   UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSS NEWSWIRE.   Thursday, August 29, 2019.   FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – Military aircraft, missile tracking systems and ground troops who rely on night-vision systems could benefit from a new generation of infrared imaging devices made with a powerful semiconducting material developed by University of Arkansas researchers and their colleagues at several institutions.
Shui-Qing “Fisher” Yu, associate professor of electrical engineering, and Gregory Salamo, Distinguished Professor of physics, have received a $7.5 million award from the U.S. Department of Defense, as part of its Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative, or MURI. Yu, as principal investigator, and Salamo, as co-principal investigator, will lead a multi-disciplinary and multi-institutional team of researchers who will design, fabricate and test infrared detectors made with silicon germanium tin.
“This is a significant award – the first MURI with the University of Arkansas as the lead institution,” said Dan Sui, vice chancellor for research and innovation. “Fisher has dedicated most of his career to an investigation of this powerful material and its potential as a promising new semiconductor. So, I’m happy for him, but I’m also extremely excited that this work is happening here, on our campus. It is yet another demonstration of this university’s contribution to improving systems that make our world better.. . . “
In 2018, Yu was awarded three Air Force grants totaling $1.5 million to develop optically pumped germanium tin lasers and to study how to use germanium tin as a platform for optical signal processing.
Yu and Salamo said the impact of this research extends beyond military applications and could improve imaging systems used in health care, meteorology and climatology, surveillance and autonomous systems such as self-driving vehicles.
[The expanded UAF military-university complex]  In addition to Yu and Salamo, researchers on this project include Yong-Hang Zhang, professor of electrical engineering at Arizona State University; Andrew Chizmeshya, associate professor of molecular sciences at Arizona State University; Jifeng Liu, associate professor of engineering at Dartmouth College; Greg Sun, professor of engineering at University of Massachusetts – Boston; and Tianshu Li, associate professor at George Washington University.
The Defense Department’s MURI program started in 1985 and is jointly sponsored by the Army Research Office, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research and the Office of Naval Research. It is an annual competition designed to address the Defense Department’s complex challenges that do not lie within a single discipline. MURI awards are highly competitive and prestigious. This is the first time the University of Arkansas is the leading institution on a MURI award.
[The University of Arkansas is a significant part of Arkansas’ military-industrial complex centered in Camden, AR.  –Dick]

 

 

Data Science Professor Receives $1.25 Million from Department of Defense.   UAF NEWS (10-8-20).

Justin Zhan develops algorithms to enhance computational speed and efficiency of applications requiring massive amounts of streaming data.

Read more »

University of Arkansas

Physicist Awarded Vannevar Bush Fellowship by Department of Defense.  UAF NEWS 5-29-20.

The award, the department's most prestigious given to a single researcher's group, supports fundamental research with the potential to advance national security.   Read more »

Researcher Receives Navy Grant to Study Creative Decision Making.  Fulbright Review (April 2021).
How cool! Psychology researcher Darya Zabelina received a $750,000 grant from the Office of Naval Research to study creative decision making under time constraints. Her work on creative cognition and imagination could ultimately guide how military personnel are trained to make quick and effective battlefield decisions.

 

 

University of Arkansas Nuclear Weapons Program

NUCLEAR WEAPONS RESEARCH AT University of Arkansas, Fayetteville

[Honeywell/UAF]

From Abel 12-18-19

Dear friends,

Last month, the Nobel Prize winning International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) published a detailed report called, Schools of Mass Destruction: American Universities in the U.S. Nuclear Weapons Complex.  This report shows the University of Arkansas made a deal with the devil by signing a collaboration agreement with the war profiteering corporation Honeywell to help build nuclear weapons.   This is part of Obama-Trump's illegal nuclear arsenal "modernization", which is costing over $1 trillion and terroristically threatening every human. I am sending this to ask you all for ideas of what might be done to confront the University and see if we can pressure them into canceling this agreement? What form of protest would be most effective? What are other ways pressure can be placed on the UA Administration? Please forward this message to anyone else that would be interested in this.

Below are 3 sources, a news story from Common Dreams, ICAN's report, and a primary source on UA-Honeywell collaboration.

1. 'Schools of Mass Destruction': Report Details 49 US Universities Abetting Nuclear Weapons Complex

https://www.commondreams.org/news/2019/11/13/schools-mass-destruction-report-details-49-us-universities-abetting-nuclear-weapons 

2. Schools of Mass Destruction: American Universities in the U.S. Nuclear Weapons Complex. 

https://d3n8a8pro7vhmx.cloudfront.net/ican/pages/430/attachments/original/1574113227/ICAN-Schools-of-mass-Destruction_nov2019.pdf  

3. U of A, Honeywell to Collaborate on National Security Technology

https://news.uark.edu/articles/38766/u-of-a-honeywell-to-collaborate-on-national-security-technology?fbclid=IwAR13Vpj_NzBg1DOhaY-vfWkyoi3qFaqjnD74X5XseTcme1qNm2YMqtZZd8k  

 

Thank you,
Abel Tomlinson

OMNI Peace Action Committee, Chair

Arkansas Nonviolence Alliance, Founder

AbelTomlinson.com

Facebook Twitter

(479)283-5762

                     
FORT SMITH 
 [C-130s at Little Rock, Drones and F-16 and F-35 in Ft. Smith:  Arkansas at the front and a mainstay of US aggression around the world, as a look at the histories of these planes reveals.]   
“Drones, Cops, and the Unaccountable Machinery of Death.”  https://www.thenation.com › Article
Apr 29, 2015 — From signature strikes in Pakistan to police violence in Baltimore.]]

[I am copying the following news report because it reveals so smoothly well the machinations and language of imperial expansion that a dozen graduate-level papers or MA theses could be written to expose them.  As far as I know such analysis is seldom being performed in our English (or the National Council of Teachers of English) and Political Science departments in the colleges of Arkansas, which are of course part of the complex, but contain insurgents.–D]   

GOV. HUTCHINSON’S Building on Guard Site Starts”

Project to house 3 wing missions” By Dave Hughes.  Posted: February 14, 2018 at 1:01 a.m.

http://www.nwaonline.com/news/2018/feb/14/building-on-guard-site-starts-20180214/?news-arkansas-nwa

  •  

FORT SMITH -- The Arkansas Air National Guard broke ground Tuesday on construction of a 40,000-square-foot building that will put all three of the 188th Wing's major missions under one roof.

In a ceremony at Ebbing Air National Guard Base, the 188th's commander, Col. Robert Kinney, said the $14.2 million building that will house the wing's remotely piloted aircraft, distributed ground station and intelligence surveillance reconnaissance missions in one structure is expected to be completed in 2020.

"Upon completion, this Razorback Operation Center, as this facility will be known, will be the only facility in the world which will house all three mission sets," Kinney told the crowd of about 100 military officials, congressional representatives, community leaders and airmen.

Among those present Tuesday were Arkansas Adjutant General Maj. Gen. Mark Berry, Arkansas Air Guard Chief of Staff Brig. Gen. Joe Wilson, Col. [Ret.] Steve Eggensperger representing Gov. Asa Hutchinson, and Fort Smith Mayor Sandy Sanders.

Berry said he believed the 188th's missions were important in maintaining the nation's national security, an asset that will employ many airmen and guarantee the long-term survival of the Arkansas National Guard.

Combining the three missions under one roof, Kinney said, will lead to innovations, efficiencies and synergies that will help operators and analysts collaborate to solve problems in carrying out their missions around the world.

"This just didn't happen," Sanders said. "It took a lot of support from the governor's office, the congressional delegation, and it demonstrates the confidence in the leadership of the 188th."

The 188th's missions are more important today given the complicated world for the military to navigate. Kinney said the newly released National Defense Strategy, among other things, refocuses attention on strategic competitors Russia, China, North Korea, Iran and transnational groups such as ISIS and al-Qaida.

They will challenge the United States, short of armed conflict, he said, and blur the lines between civil and military force.

"We here at the 188th are primarily focused day to day on the counter-insurgency fight," he said. "In parallel, we will continue to prepare for the strategic fight as the National Defense Strategy provides."

The 188th took on the new missions after losing its long-held flying mission in 2014 when the wing's A-10 Thunderbolt IIs, nicknamed the Warthogs, were reassigned.

Kinney said the wing was put on a tight schedule to transition to the new missions, completing six years of hiring in six months and training more than 500 personnel in two years.

The remotely piloted aircraft mission moved into a 5,000-square-foot classified facility where combat missions took place around the clock. The distributed ground station targeting mission is in a 3,500-square-foot classified space. A renovated 20,000-square-foot operations space houses the intelligence surveillance reconnaissance group headquarters.

Putting those missions into action was accomplished in three years, Kinney said.

"We do support combat and command requirements 24/7/365 around the world," Kinney said. "I can't talk about where those are, but we certainly have that capability."

NW News on 02/14/2018

 

 

Nick Mottern, KNOW DRONES (an online magazine started by Mottern and sponsored by Veterans for Peace)

2-17-18

10:27 AM (10 minutes ago)

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Hi Dick:

 

Thank you for writing.  What you describe as the mood in Arkansas is prevalent across the country as far as I can tell.  That is certainly true in metropolitan NYC.  I will consider coming to visit Fort Smith.  However, it is a major time, money and energy commitment, and I think it is very likely that I would not be able to do this until the fall.

I really appreciate your sending me the article about the Fort Smith drone base.  This is an indicator, to be added to others, that the U.S. is dramatically expanding its killer drone capability and operations.  VERY, VERY, in my view, disastrous for humankind.

Here is an extremely important quote from Albert Speer, mastermind of Hitler's industrial war machine, from his book Inside the Third Reich:

            "The catastrophe of this war," I wrote in my cell in 1947, "has proved the sensitivity of the system of modern civilization evolved in the course of centuries.  Now we know that we do not live in an earth-quake-proof structure.  The build-up of negative impulses, each reinforcing the other, can inexorably shake to pieces the complicated apparatus of the modern world.  There is no halting this process by will alone.  The danger is that the automation of progress will depersonalize man further and withdraw more and more his self-responsibility."

We are seeing what drone assassination is doing in Yemen and Afghanistan, among other places, in destroying the fundamental ability of societies and cultures to be peaceful and self-sustaining.  We are seeing an advance in killer drone technology that is spreading this plague, a plague that will clearly engulf our supposedly safe world and bring it into the violent chaos that we have so carelessly visited on others.

We will be running more cable TV ads in Fort Smith within the next few months.  I will send  preliminary versions to get your comments before we run the final ads.

Thank you Dick for your inspiring persistence,

Nick 

 

 Ebbing AFB:  new fighter planes [Ebbing had the deadly A-10 “Warthog,” replaced them by the drones, and now is adding fighter jets F-16 and F-35)   

Fort Smith's Ebbing Air National Guard Base chosen as the site for multi-
national fighter jets by
John Lovett,, Fort Smith Times Record

After a year-long competition with several other cities, Ebbing Air National Guard Base in Fort Smith was chosen as the location to host a multi-national training site for F-16 Falcon and F-35 fighter jets.
The new mission would come with an estimated $800 million – $1 billion economic impact, according to the Fort Smith Regional Chamber of Commerce.
The Air Force Secretary announced Thursday that Ebbing Air National Guard Base was chosen to host the training site. 

Ebbing exceeded the minimum bidding requirement for military airspace. The base had also previously housed F-16s from 1988-2005 under the 188th Fighter Wing.

F-16 Falcon fighter jets could once again be based at Fort Smith's Ebbing Air National Guard Base as part of a multi-national contingent training site. This F-16, seen in February, is part of the Air Force Test Center's 96th Test Wing at Eglin Air Force Base in Florida.

Singapore's F-16s would be housed for a security initiative in Pacific Indochina. About two dozen F-35s would be for a multi-national contingent for the air forces of Finland, Poland, Switzerland, and Singapore. 

A “rising threat” from China was cited in August by a spokesperson for U.S. Sen. Tom Cotton as one factor in creating the allied training base. Staff members for Cotton and U.S. Rep. Steve Womack said the delegation had petitioned the Federal Aviation Administration to increase military airspace over the River Valley. Col. Jeremiah Gentry, vice commander of the 188th Wing at Ebbing, noted in August the military airspace around the Fort Smith airport exceeded the minimum required for the training site bidding process.

Singaporean delegates visited Fort Smith in March as part of the competition that was announced in July 2020 and was narrowed down from five to three airbases late last year. The four other sites in the competition included Buckley Air Force Base in the Aurora, Colorado area; the Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland; Hulman Air Field just west of Indianapolis; and Selfridge Air National Guard Base in the Detroit area.

An August 2020 Times Record Facebook poll showed 93% of readers were in favor of having Fort Smith serve as the fighter jet training site. There were 288 votes.

The entrance to the Arkansas Air National Guard Base, as seen, Wednesday, March 10, in Fort Smith. The base was recently chosen as the preferred site to host a multi-national training site for F-16 and F-35 fighter jets.

Fort Smith has a long history with fighter jets. According to the 188th Wing, in the early 1950s the T-6D “Texan” trainers were flown out of Fort Smith, followed by the TB-26B “Invader.” Also in the 1950s, the Fort Smith base was home to RF-80 and RF-84F fighters. The RF-101, F-100 and F-4Cs fighters were flown out of Fort Smith in the 1970s. F-16 Falcons were flown by the 188th Fighter Wing from 1988 through the 2000s. The 188th then flew the A-10 “Warthog" before changing over to an unmanned flight mission with remotely piloted aircraft. The last A-10 flew out of Ebbing Air National Guard Base in June 2014.

Gov. Asa Hutchinson, U.S. Sens. John Boozman and Cotton, and Womack applauded the U.S. Air Force announcement that Ebbing Air National Guard Base in Fort Smith was selected.

“The selection committee recognized that Arkansas is one of the most military-friendly states in the nation," Hutchinson said in a news release. "Our tax exemption for military retirement income and our licensing reciprocity initiatives are valuable tools for recruiting qualified employees and their families to Fort Smith."

The governor noted the progress toward building expansive fifth-generation airspace over Ebbing and an aerial range 4 miles from the base. In his meeting with the Singaporean delegation and the U.S. Department of Defense, Hutchinson said it was clear they understood "the River Valley would wholeheartedly welcome the fighter-jet training."

F-35 Lighting fighter jets could fly over Fort Smith as part of a multi-national training site, the Air Force announced June 2, 2021.

Hutchinson also credited members of the military affairs committee for the Arkansas Economic Development Commission in winning the new mission for Ebbing.

"We already are prepared to provide a first-rate quality of life for the families who will move here," the governor noted. "Congratulations to Major General Kendall Penn, Colonel Leon Dodroe, 188th commander, other USAF leaders, the Air Force and the community leaders whose thoughtful efforts and hard work to sell Fort Smith landed a project that will pay dividends for years."

 

Nuclear Weapons Transport Training in Fort Smith,
       Arkansas

Nuclear Weapons Transport Training in Fort Smith, Arkansas

Local News Report: Fort Chaffee A Training Ground For Nuclear Transport

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SHtgDCodWgQ

Office of Secure Transportation

National Nuclear Security Administration

https://www.energy.gov/nnsa/office-secure-transportation

This troubled, covert agency is responsible for trucking nuclear bombs across America each day

https://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-nuclear-couriers-20170310-story.html

RALPH VARTABEDIANW.J. HENNIGAN

MARCH 10, 2017 3 AM PT

The unmarked 18-wheelers ply the nation’s interstates and two-lane highways, logging 3 million miles a year hauling the most lethal cargo there is: nuclear bombs. The covert fleet, which shuttles warheads from missile silos, bomber bases and submarine docks to nuclear weapons labs across the country, is operated by the Office of Secure Transportation, a troubled agency within the U.S. Department of Energy so cloaked in secrecy that few people outside the government know it exists.

The $237-million-a-year agency operates a fleet of 42 tractor-trailers, staffed by highly armed couriers, many of them veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, responsible for making sure nuclear weapons and components pass through foggy mountain passes and urban traffic jams without incident.

The transportation office is about to become more crucial than ever as the U.S. embarks on a $1-trillion upgrade of the nuclear arsenal that will require thousands of additional warhead shipments over the next 15 years….Continued:  https://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-nuclear-couriers-20170310-story.html

National Nuclear Security Administration.  August 19, 2021.

 

Despite pandemic, Arkansas personnel of NNSA’s Office of Secure Transportation (OST) remain focused on training its future federal agents.

https://www.energy.gov/nnsa/articles/despite-pandemic-arkansas-personnel-nnsas-office-secure-transportation-remain-focused

 OST graduates

The most recent Nuclear Material Courier Basic Academy graduating class at Fort Chaffee, Arkansas.

Last month, a new class of federal agents graduated from NNSA’s Nuclear Material Courier Basic Academy, another example of how the agency’s Office of Secure Transportation (OST) has kept up its critical mission to securely transport government-owned special nuclear materials in the contiguous United States throughout the COVID-19 pandemic….Continued:

https://www.energy.gov/nnsa/articles/despite-pandemic-arkansas-personnel-nnsas-office-secure-transportation-remain-focused

HOT SPRINGS

Noel Oman.  “Hot Springs’ Radius to Break ground on Titanium Plant.”  NADG (11-22-19).  “Radius Aerospace, a 53-year old aerospace fabricator and supplier [headquarters in] Hot Springs, is almost as stealthy as the Lockheed F-35 Lightning II, the U.S. Air force’s new multirole fighter jet, for which the company supplies complex titanium parts.”  (“The company may operate with a low profile in Arkansas, but it is well-known in the aerospace industry.”)  At present “Radius operates in 359,000 square feet of space in the city,” and it is breaking ground “on its new titanium Operations facility, an investment worth $24.5 million.”  Radius also supplies parts for the F-15 Eagle, a U.S. Air Force all-weather tactical fighter, and the F/A-18 Hornet, a U.S. Navy multirole combat jet.”  “The company is growing, having recently acquired two British facilities now known as Radius Europe.”

Huntsville/Berryville

“Raytheon partners with Ducommun to build Naval Strike Missile fire control systems.  Contract to add new manufacturing business in Arkansas.”

https://raytheon.mediaroom.com/2017-09-11-Raytheon-partners-with-Ducommun-to-build-Naval-Strike-Missile-fire-control-systems
TUCSON, Ariz.Sept. 11, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- “Raytheon Company (NYSE: RTN) has selected Ducommun (NYSE: DCO) to build fire control systems for the Naval Strike Missile, or NSM, an advanced weapon that Raytheon is offering for the U.S. Navy's over-the-horizon requirement for its littoral combat ships and future frigates.  The partnership will support manufacturing jobs at Ducommun's Berryville and Huntsville, Arkansas, operations…” continued: https://raytheon.mediaroom.com/2017-09-11-Raytheon-partners-with-Ducommun-to-build-Naval-Strike-Missile-fire-control-systems  (Note on “littoral” ships: “Littoral” means seashore or region along the shore.  These “littoral combat ships and future frigates” are designed for attack, for aggressive war, and are already deployed in the South China Sea.)

JACKSONVILLE: C-130J
Arkansas Military-Corporate-Government-Media Complex Seizes the Profitable Cold War Opportunity
Rex Nelson.  “The Next Big Thing.”  NADG (June 9, 2018, Column).   
Gives a thumbnail history of the creation of the Little Rock AFB near Jacksonville through the joint efforts of the USAF and SAC, money raised to purchase the land by Pulaski County Chamber of Commerce, County Judge Archibald Campbell, Pulaski County businessmen (Raymond Rebsamen, Everett Tucker, Harry Pfeifer, Ike Teague) , and the Army Corps of Engineers that constructed the base.  The base was activated Oct. 9, 1955.  “Approximately 85,000 people attended.”   Now the base is the home of the C-130J, mighty flying boxcars of Empire.  And Mr. Nelson is oblivious to the MCGM, which keeps the Complex flying.  -- Dick

 

PINE BLUFF/Whitehall Arsenal Weapons Manufacture

PINE BLUFF:ARSENAL IN WHITE HALL
(needed here is a history of this old Army facility)
Stephen Steed.  “Arsenal on Track to Be Site of Plant.”  NADG (9-19-19).   An El Paso, Texas company is opening a new plant at the Pine Bluff Arsenal in White Hall to make “biological and chemical protective suits for the military.”   “The Economic Development Corp. of Jefferson County voted…to provide $490,260 in incentive funds to ReadyOne industries.”  The Pine Bluff Arsenal, “an Army facility…opened in 1941 and eventually housed a large portion of the nation’s chemical and biological warfare stocks.”  The article emphasizes economic development, more of the overwhelming evidence of the unity of US capitalism and the MIC and its growing presence in Arkansas as the Pentagon’s budget increases.  –D

SPRINGDALE
69       500     $1,136,836,589
ROTC
“Springdale High School launched a Marine Corps Junior ROTC program in 2006.”  (Jordan 11-21-21, 1B).

Conclusion

Electoral Action

In the 11-29/12-6, 2021 no. of The Nation, “The Mess We’re In,” John Nichols writes: “2022 matters”: The Democrats’ “blunt focus must be on the reality that if they lose next year. The future of American democracy will be suddenly and severely imperiled” (4).  To win he urges Dems to nominate “dynamic progressives” and to “break the filibuster and enact the For the People Act and the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act.”

 

 

 

CORRESPONDENCE WITH NEW PAX CHRISTI IN LR

I wrote her 11-22-2021

Cheryl Simon <sherrysimon54@me.com>

4:01 PM (17 minutes ago)

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https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/images/cleardot.gif

to me   11-17-19

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Hi Mr. Bennett,
This is Dr. Sherry Simon. I was excited to see that you seem to be keeping track of and publishing information about different peace groups. I am the current president of Pax Christi Little Rock. Would love to talk with you at some point about your involvement in the peace movement. You know Jean, so I don’t doubt that you are an activist with a heart! Please feel free to contact me either at this email address or you can text or call at 501-268-8653.
Blessings of Peace,
Sherry

Sent from my iPhone

Dick Bennett

4:18 PM (0 minutes ago)

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to Cheryl

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My Peace Movement Directory was published in 2000, and  then in 2001 I started the OMNI Center for Peace Justice and Ecology, and since then like Jean I have worked for those values ever since.   We have a coalition of peace and justice organizations, mainly in LR (APCJ, WAND, and now PAX Christi) and Fayetteville (and we also have a growing military-industrial complex mainly in Camden especially, Jacksonville, Fort Smith (drone squadron), Whitehall/PB, and Fayetteville (UAF research, ROTC).   We have much at least to expose in Arkansas.   Maybe some day we can resume our annual meeting of Arkansas/regional peace groups.

Thanks for writing, Dick Bennett, Prof. Emer. UAF

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

 

Bottom of Form

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

LETTER TO Gl, K, Taylor (intern), Kim Rues, et al.

Dick Bennett <j.dick.bennett@gmail.com>

11:27 AM (4 hours ago)

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to Gladys, Still, Taylor, kimberly, bcc: Karen, bcc: Gerald, bcc: Sonny

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UAF has the ROTC, this weekend, military financed research, and more.

The peace movement has occasional marginal events.  

What to do? 

Perhaps the first thing to do is to make this war making complicity known to the faculty, staff, and students.

 

I copied the following 2 Contents into Culture of War newsl doc  3-1-2020

US Military-Industrial  (Corporate-Wall Street--White House- Congressional) Complex (Dems and Repubs One War Party)

 

TEXTS FOR ARKANSAS MIC

PENTAGON: MILITARY FORCES

The key method to militarize a representative democracy is to proceed gradually and thus invisibly to the unenquiring, undiscerning majority, by inserting it throughout each state, not only in every interstice possible, but in every thing and life.  Some are large and significant, but it’s the thousands of little things that make, eventually, the military perception of reality seem natural and normal. Consequently, this newsletter and all of my newsletters on the subject offer only an introduction to the gargantuan reality.

 US MILITARISM   

                                    OMNI US MILITARISM, EMPIRE NEWSLETTER # 16, May 17, 2015.   

                                    http://jamesrichardbennett.blogspot.com/2015/05/us-imperialism-and-                                                               militarism.html              US Military Budget

ARKANSAS MILITARISM

Consider Arkansas:  The Attorney General’s special protection of military service employees.  The cash-cow military-industrial town of Camden, AR, supplies steel rain to the men, women, and children of the Middle East.  The state’s main newspaper’s reality-softening vocabulary—our troops not killed but only fallen.

                       

U.S. Companies Censor Anti-War Billboards.  By David Swanson, World Beyond War.   Companies in Syracuse, NY, and Fort Smith, AR, are refusing to rent billboards for messages opposing drone wars.  These are the billboard images they are censoring:
 No company has questioned the facts of the messages or even raised that topic in any manner. It is hardly disputable that drones make orphans, or that they kill innocent children. That drone wars make us less safe ought to be obvious after what the "successful" drone war has done to Yemen, following the April 23, 2013, testimony of Farea al-Muslimi before the U.S. Congress that drone strikes were building support for terrorists. But don't take it from him or me, when a leaked CIA document admits that the drone program is "counterproductive," and numerous recently retired top U.S. officials agree.

Censorhip in Syracuse
I signed a contract with Lamar Advertising, working with one of their people in Virginia, where they had previously accepted one of our billboards. We have a signed agreement to put up seven billboards for two months each in Syracuse, for a cost of $10,325. But they sent me this email:
"The Syracuse office did not approve the copy that you sent over, however they are much more comfortable with the design that you used with us previously. Would you like to use the design from Charlottesville (attached) or do you have any other copy that you would like to run by us. I have attached our copy acceptance policy as well."
This was the design that Lamar had permitted us to use in Charlottesville, and Clear Channel had permitted us to use in Baltimore as well:

See explanation of the 3% calculation here. Neither company ever asked for any explanation or expressed any concerns. Here is what Lamar's "acceptance policy" says:   "Lamar reserves the right to reject advertising copy for any reason, but rejects copy for the following specific reasons:
• The copy is factually inaccurate, misleading, fraudulent or deceptive.
• The copy is obscene, offensive or otherwise inconsistent with local community standards.
• The copy promotes an illegal activity.
• Advertisers who have a pattern of using provocative and critical copy to create negative impressions of other entities may be barred from posting copy. . . .
"Lamar will not accept or reject copy based upon agreement or disagreement with the views presented.
"When a website address is contained in advertising copy, the content of the website will be considered in Lamar’s process of deciding whether copy is acceptable."     The line claiming that the company will not reject content because it disagrees with it seems to be false, given that it is rejecting content but willing to accept other content it is "much more comfortable" with, and given that it has not attempted to allege that any reason other than its discomfort applies. I asked for further explanation and got none.

Censorship in Fort Smith

Meanwhile in Fort Smith, Arkansas, a company called Billboard Source agreed (though we hadn't yet signed a contract) to put our images on two digital billboards for 11 weeks for $10,000. That was right up until they saw the images. Then they said:

"This is what I was told by my management after reviewing the artwork. Management collectively discussed this campaign and it is not something our inventory can support at this time.  I apologize for the inconvenience."

I asked for a better explanation and received none.

Also in Fort Smith, I contacted RAM Outdoor Advertising, and they were helpful until they saw the images, and then said:

"Thanks for sharing your potential creative. I’ve shared it with the owners and they have decided that your creative will violate our lease agreements. We will have to decline your ads. Ashby Street Outdoor has the most boards in town. You might give them a shot at earning your business."

I requested to see the "lease agreements" and received no reply. I also contacted Ashby Street Outdoor, but saved time by sending them the images right away. I received no reply.

Freedom of Speech

World Beyond War billboards are funded entirely by contributions made by supporters of ending war who want to help put up more billboards. We will continue to solicit such contributions and to work to overcome censorship.

One of the more common, if ludicrous, defenses of war making is that it somehow defends one's rights. Yet, freedom of speech and of press is routinely restricted in the name of protecting the war making.

Following the recent school shooting in Florida, we pointed out that the shooter had been trained by the U.S. military in a JROTC program funded by the NRA, and that this information was publicly available and not disputed. Major media outlets chose to avoid that story in order to focus, instead, on the undocumented (and, as it happens, false) claim that the shooter had worked with right-wing groups.

Google, Facebook, and other big forces on the internet are working hard to steer ever more traffic toward big corporate outlets and away from voices of dissent.

Whistleblowers are now up against the risk of prison time.

Protesters at inauguration parades face felony charges.

In my town in Virginia, Charlottesville, we are still forbidden to take down any war monuments, and still have no peace monuments.

In some airports, this story will be blocked on the grounds that it constitutes "advocacy."

Is this the "freedom" for which all the wars endanger and impoverish and indebt us?

Add your voice

We're starting a petition that we will deliver to the following companies, which you might also want to phone. Please remember that it is most effective to be polite. SIGN THE PETITION HERE [Link Coming].

Lamar Syracuse office: 315-422-5174
Billboard Source: 940-383-3500
RAMOutdoor: 479-806-7735
Ashby Street Outdoor: 479-221-9827

Support this project here.

Don’t let our antiwar message opposing drones be silenced by systemic acceptance of war as inevitable!

We must amplify our antiwar voices! Please help WBW spread the news by contributing to our billboard fund today! No amount is too small or too large to share the news that there is an alternative to wars and drones. And since we are all impacted by senseless wars and we all share this same beautiful planet, no matter where you call home, please contribute to our billboard fund now!

David Swanson is an author, activist, journalist, and radio host. He is director of WorldBeyondWar.org and campaign coordinator for RootsAction.org. Swanson's books include War Is A Lie. He blogs at DavidSwanson.org and WarIsACrime.org. He hosts Talk Nation Radio. He is a 2015, 2016, 2017 Nobel Peace Prize Nominee. Longer bio and photos and videos here. Follow him on Twitter: @davidcnswansonand FaceBook, and sign up for:
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ARKANSAS NATIONAL GUARD

Hunter Field.  “80 State Guardsmen Bound for Kuwait.”  NADG (Feb. 6, 2017). 

     These “aviation support personnel” of the 77th Combat Aviation Brigade” augment “about 300 helicopter maintenance and operations” Guardsmen “already on the ground.”  “The deployment is part of the United States’ longstanding cooperation with Kuwait to promote “’security, stability, and our mutual interests in the region.’”  What are those “mutual interests”?  Besides ensuring a steady flow of oil from Kuwait and other regional oil countries (not mentioned), they will “support combat missions targeting the Islamic State group” and, quoting Governor Hutchinson, prevent “terror attacks” on the US (“’because our military men and women are forward deployed’”).  Our Governor’’s brain has been captured by fossil fuel capitalist imperialism.

     We also learn that “about 700 soldiers in the Arkansas Guard’s 39th Infantry Brigade” are preparing to deploy to “the Horn of Africa”; that is, to Somalia, across from Yemen, where the US supports Sunni Saudi Arabia bombings against the Shi’a Houthi insurgency.   Well, that’s the story from the Arkansas Guard and Governor.  If you wish to see through that Pentagon/White House/Congress official rationale that sustains public fear and the military industrial complex, read Andrew Bacevich’s America’s War for the Greater Middle East.  And if you want the NADG to stop reporting Pentagon propaganda about the Middle East, tell them what Bacevich reveals.  This applies equally to the new assassination/collateral damage drone base at Fort Smith (the 188th Air National Guard), and the C-130 base at Jacksonville (without those flying boxcars the empire would soon implode).

     But that’s not all!  The reporter is bursting with pride also over the Guard’s “additional deployments planned in the spring and summer to Central America and Kosovo”!   In conclusion he describes one of the deploying soldiers who wanders alone following the ceremony.  And he quotes Maj. Gen. Mark Berry, adjutant general of the ANG, who “assured the soldiers their families would be looked after.  ‘We won’t forget about them while you’re gone,’ he told the 80 volunteer soldiers standing in formation.’”

 

So why can’t our state fund our colleges or our medical system adequately?  Even the NADG recently rebuked the Republican legislature for its inconsistency regarding public needs and tax cuts.  (Check out the military conversion movement: Economic Conversion | Public Sphere Project; Sawmill River Productions - Economic Conversion Now - Military ...; Economic conversion - Wikipedia;  [PDF]Economic Conversation: Conversion & the Labor Movement). 

 

MAIN ARKANSAS MILITARY BASES

 

MEDIA PART OF THE MIC

Arkansas’ Leading Newspaper

ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE

EUPHEMISMS:  “FALLEN,” NOW SLEEPING

We are so saturated in the softening of the brutality and horror of war we hardly notice.  Our state newspaper, the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, especially likes “fallen.”  Today May 31, 2016, on page one, after three days of celebrating Memorial Day (support the troops no matter what they do), we are regaled with a color photo of a dad and his two young daughters visiting the grave of a relative at Fayetteville National Cemetery:  “Remembering the Fallen.”  So girls it’s really not so bad.  Of course, how the relative died is not reported, and we can assume the dad employed the national cover-up word for leg or arm or head blown off, 50-caliber machine gun bullet exploding the stomach, drowned with full pack—“fallen.”   So girls, don’t worry about the next war, your uncle, brother, cousin just fell down and is now peacefully sleeping.

Dick 5-31-16

 

AETN > Engage > Blog > “Arkansans Ask: Veterans History Project”

“Arkansans Ask: Veterans History Project”

https://www.aetn.org/engage/blog/arkansans_ask_veterans_history_project

The Library of Congress houses the Veterans History Project, which “collects, preserves, and makes accessible the personal accounts of American war veterans.”  Learn how Arkansans can take action to preserve the histories of Arkansas veterans in a special episode of “Arkansans Ask” Thursday, Sept. 14, at 7 p.m.

In addition to offering information about the Veterans History Project effort in the state and providing guidance for Arkansans to participate in the project, the episode will also discuss the various aspects of the “AETN Salutes Arkansas Vietnam Veterans” initiative.

Panelists include: retired Col. Anita Deason, military and veterans affairs liaison for U.S. Senator John Boozman; Olivia Olson, Library of Congress Veterans History Project volunteer; Dillon Vick, Library of Congress Veterans History Project volunteer; and Julie Thomas, AETN marketing and outreach director. Veteran journalist Steve Barnes will serve as host.

Col. Anita Deason served 33 years in the Army National Guard before retiring in 2013. She became involved with the Library of Congress Veterans History Project in July 2015 after being informed that Sen. Boozman wanted more Arkansans to be made aware of the project and involved in preserving our veterans' experiences.

When Boozman introduced Col. Deason to the Veterans History Project, he shared the story of how his own father served as a waist gunner in the U.S. Army Air Corps during World War II and later retired from the U.S. Air Force as a master sergeant. However, after his father died, Boozman wished he had asked his father more about his military service experiences.

The senator's comments basically gut-kicked me. My father died shortly after my 19th birthday; he served in the U.S. Navy during World War II in the Philippines. I regret I never really talked to him much about his time in the military. And I failed to even thank him for his service. - Retired Col. Anita Deason

Olivia Olson is a retired teacher and author of two children’s books, “Eva’s Gift” and “Window of Time.” She is also a long-time member of the Daughters of the American Revolution. Olson was previously involved with the Veterans History Project and became reengaged after attending a workshop conducted by Sen. Boozman's office. To date, Olson has submitted 55 interviews: 39 that are featured on the Veterans History Project website and 16 that are still being processed.

Dillon Vick is a graduate of North Little Rock High School. He served in the U.S. Navy for 5 1/2 years as a hospital corpsman third class. Vick is now a junior at the University of Central Arkansas. He became involved with the Veterans History Project while interning for Sen. Boozman’s office during the summer of 2017.

Viewers may submit questions and comments at 800-662-2386, paffairs@aetn.org or on Twitter with #ARAsk.

What can we do about this militarizing of our educational tv?  Protest to Boozman and his staff.  They won’t change, but they must not be allowed to think his constituency agrees with military values.  Study your children’s social sciences textbooks, and let the Principal know what you think.  Check your college’s curriculum to see if it offers a course on US militarism and imperialism.  --D

 

 

 

 

 

Arkansas Attorney General

 

August 12, 2015

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 

CONTACT:

Judd Deere, (501) 317-9880

Judd.Deere@arkansasag.gov

 

Consumer Alert: Protecting Those Who Serve 

LITTLE ROCK – Federal laws protect our active-duty servicemen and women and their families from mortgage foreclosures and exorbitant interest rates. 

Arkansas Attorney General Leslie Rutledge issued today’s consumer alert to educate Arkansas’s active-duty servicemen and women and families about safeguards that are in place if they plan to buy or currently own a home.  

“Our military men and women put their lives on the line to protect us, and they have unique needs because of their service,” said Attorney General Rutledge. “Laws are in place to protect their homes while they are deployed, and they need to know about these programs.” 

The Servicemembers Civil Relief Act of 2003 (SCRA) protects active-duty service members from potentially harmful civil legal matters. These protections cover insurance, mortgage payments, interest rates, leases, contractual arrangements and civil judicial proceedings.  .  . 

In April, Rutledge launched the first-ever Military and Veterans Initiative at the Attorney General’s Office. This initiative seeks to assist active-duty military service members, reservists, veterans and their families with consumer related issues, Veterans Treatment Courts, the Hiring Heroes Program and many other collaborative efforts. 

Arkansas military service members, veterans and families should file consumer complaints with the Attorney General’s Office on ArkansasAG.gov or by calling (800) 482-8982.  

For more information and tips to avoid scams and other consumer related issues, call the Arkansas Attorney General’s Office at (800) 482-8982 or visit ArkansasAG.gov or facebook.com/AGLeslieRutledge

 

Rutledge employs one of the many linguistic triumphs that promote militarism: service, servicemen, servicewomen.   I can think of a hundred kinds of deserving citizens who perform dedicated service to our nation, from firemen to fishermen and women, but when anyone, asks “What service were you in?” you know it refers to the military.  

 

 

 

 

MILITARY INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX IN ARKANSAS

CAMDEN

CAMDEN, ARKANSAS

 

Stephen Steed.   “Camden Plant to Get Navy-missile Work.”  NADG (9-27-19). 
Raytheon Missile Systems, based in Tucson, Ariz., has been awarded a $22,121,560 modification to a previously awarded contract to produce missiles for the U.S. Navy.

The U.S. Department of Defense, in an announcement of contract awards Thursday, said 68% of the work will be done at Raytheon's plant in Camden. Smaller portions of the work will be at Raytheon facilities in Arizona and California, with contract expected to be finished by November 2021.

The missile work specifically is for the Navy's Standard Missile-2 and Standard Missile-6 program.

On its website, Raytheon called the Missile-2 system "the world's premier fleet-area air defense weapon, providing superior anti-air warfare and limited anti-surface warfare capability against today's advanced anti-ship missiles and aircraft out to 90 nautical miles." The Missile-6 program, the company said, is "the only missile that supports anti-air warfare, anti-surface warfare and sea-based terminal ballistic missile defense in one solution."

A Google Search for the preceding item also turned up the following.

Camden plant gets 11 percent of $304 million missile ...

www.magnoliareporter.com › news_and_business › local_business

Dec 30, 2016

Camden, AR | Lockheed Martin

https://www.lockheedmartin.com › business-areas › missiles-and-fire-control

Why Raytheon dumped a decades-old way to make missiles ...

https://www.cnet.com › news › why-raytheon-dumped-a-decades-old-way-...

Jun 16, 2014 - 

Arkansas: Missile Plant to Launch Expansion | Site Selection ...

https://siteselection.com › issues › jul › arkansas-missle-plant-to-launch-ex...

Jul 15, 2019 - 

Lockheed Martin announces $142M investment, 326 new jobs ...

https://www.arkansasedc.com › newsroom › detail › 2019/06/17 › lockhee...

Jun 17, 2019 -    

Raytheon's New Plant Set To Produce First SM-3 Block 2A ...

https://spacenews.com › 41670missile-defense-raytheons-new-plant-set-to-...

World War II Ordnance Plants - Encyclopedia of Arkansas

https://encyclopediaofarkansas.net › entries › world-war-ii-ordnance-plants...

Jul 4, 2017 - 

Raytheon: Customer Success Is Our Mission

https://www.raytheon.com

 

“Lockheed Starts on Expansion of Plant.”  NADG (9-11-19).   Company officials and Governor Asa Hutchinson announced Lockheed Martin’s $142 million expansion in Camden, AR, the center of Arkansas’ military-industrial complex.  Named the “Long Range Fires Production Facility,” the plant was established in 1978 to produce L-M’s multiple launch rocket system.    

US Army Awards $1.13 Billion Contract to Lockheed Martin for ...

https://news.lockheedmartin.com › 2019-03-28-U-S-Army-Awards-1-13-B...

Mar 28, 2019 - U.S. Army Awards $1.13 Billion Contract to Lockheed Martin for Guided Multiple Launch Rocket System Production, Support Equipment.    

Multiple Launch Rocket System (MLRS M270A1) | Lockheed ...

https://www.lockheedmartin.com › en-us › products › multiple-launch-roc...

Lockheed Martin is under contract to incorporate two new upgrades to the current MLRS system. The new M270A1 launcher appears identical to existing M270s ...

 

 

Rocket Motor Plant Expansion, Google Search 4-27-19

Camden rocket motor plant expansion - Fox16



https://www.fox16.com/news/state-news/camden-rocket-motor-plant.../1953191885

 

1.      

2 days ago - Aerojet Rocketdyne breaks ground on large solid rocket motor development facility.

Aerojet Rocketdyne breaks ground on large solid rocket motor ...



https://www.myarklamiss.com/...rocketdyne...ground...rocket-motor...facility/195462...

 

1.      

2 days ago - ... leaders broke ground on a large solid rocket motor development facility. ... "We're very excited for Camden and really all of South Arkansas.

Aerojet Rocketdyne Breaks Ground on New Expansion in Camden



https://amppob.com/aerojet-rocketdyne-breaks-ground/

 

1.      

3 days ago - Aerojet Rocketdyne Breaks Ground on New Expansion in Camden. ... On Thursday April 25, Aerojet Rocketdyne's leadership team and state and local officials broke ground on the new facility in Camden, which is to be used for the development of large solid rocket motors within the Ground Based Strategic Deterrent program.

Ground broken on rocket-motor plant - PressReader



https://www.pressreader.com/usa/arkansas-democrat-gazette/.../282333976319161

 

2 days ago - Ground broken on rocket-motor plant. Construction has begun on a $50 million rocket motor engineering, manufacturing and development plant scheduled to open next spring at the Highland Industrial Park in East Camden. ... Its 800 employees produce solid rocket motors for missiles and other applications.

News in brief - The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette



https://www.arkansasonline.com/news/2019/apr/26/news-in-brief-20190426/

 

1.      

2 days ago - Ground broken on rocket-motor plant. ... and development plant scheduled to open next spring at the Highland Industrial Park in East Camden.

Aerojet Rocketdyne's New Camden Facility Looks to Future Contracts ...



https://www.arkansasbusiness.com/.../aerojet-rocketdynes-new-camden-facility-looks-t...

 

1.      

2 days ago - Aerojet Rocketdyne's New Camden Facility Looks to Future Contracts ... East Camden plant Thursday as the company broke ground on a new facility ... presence since 1979 and now makes 75,000 solid rocket motors a year.

Solid rocket motors | | magnoliareporter.com



www.magnoliareporter.com/image_8bdd4950-68d1-11e9-8795-fb9e56ec297b.html

 

1.      

15 hours ago - ... Manufacturing and Development (EMD) facility for solid rocket motor design at Aerojet Rocketdyne in Camden. ... Aerojet Rocketdyne starts construction on solid rocket motordevelopment site in CamdenCAMDEN -- Aerojet Rocketdyne officials joined state and local leaders to break ground Friday…

Aerojet Rocketdyne expanding Arkansas facility; adds 140 jobs



https://www.arklatexhomepage.com/news/local...rocketdyne...facility.../1373299771

 

1.      

Aug 15, 2018 - Aerojet Rocketdyne recently relocated its Solid Rocket Motor Center of ... to Camden, resulting in growth for the Arkansas plant in Camden, ...

 

It’s not only what is there but what is not seen there.  In “Camden on the Ouachita” (NADG, 9-9-17) regular columnist Rex Nelson’s survey of the city’s main features doesn’t mention its war profiteers.  

 

NTS Buys 650 Acres in Camden to Expand Testing
By Amy Riggin -
 7/9/2008 10:59:01 AM

 

California-based National Technical Systems Inc. has purchased about 650 acres adjacent to land the company leases in Camden

Details of the transaction were not disclosed.

Raffy Lorentzian, senior VP and CFO, said NTS leases about 260 acres in Camden, bringing the total available space to roughly 900 acres. He said the company has been in business there for more than 15 years.

"The additional land gives us two distinct advantages," Jack Lin, chairman of NTS said in a news release. "First, combined with our present property at Camden, we will have ample space to perform testing previously not allowed due to space limitations. Secondly, we will enhance our capability to meet anticipated future demand for munitions and ordnance testing."

The company's backlog at Camden has risen to a record high of more than $10 million. NTS has recently obtained several U.S. Army contracts, including contracts from the Army's Armaments, Research, Development and Engineering Center at Picatinny Arsenal and Naval Surface Warfare's Center in Fallbrook, Calif., and Indian Head, Md.

"We will be adding two additional large test ranges immediately to further enable the Camden facility to service all of our clients' needs quickly and efficiently," said William McGinnis, CEO of NTS. "We believe Camden's expanded capacity and increased efficiency will result in increased revenues and improved margins."

 

 



 

 

     

 

The military-industrial town of Camden, AR.

Brian Fanney, “Camden Area, Making Arms Go Way Back.”  ADG (June 2, 2015). 

     “Over the years, workers from this city have made some of the most potent weapons in the world.

     In World War II, they supplied the workforce for the world’s largest rocket assembly unit.

     During the Cold War, they manufactured a rocket system that could take on Soviet Union forces.

     After Iraq’s 1990 invasion of Kuwait, south Arkansas-made munitions pummeled Baghdad .  Iraqis referred to them as ‘steel rain.”

     It is such a patriot money-cow for Arkansas, that Gov. Asa Hutchinson tossed in $87.1 million bond issue for Lockheed Martin to bolster its bid for a U.S. Department of War contract.   

       It’s a long article.  The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette and, at least they think, all Arkies are very proud of Camden.  Oh, what a lovely war….and profit!

 

Stephen Steed.   “2 E. Camden Plants Given Defense Work.”  NADG (10-2-18).

    Brief report (6”, 4 paragraphs) on 2 contracts: to American Rheinmetall Munition Inc. $59.7 million for practice grenades for Marines, and to Raytheon Missile systems $395 million to increase a previous contract for US Navy missiles on cruisers and destroyers.

 

 

Find my analysis of Steed’s report in NADG—anything about AR in it?

So nothing has changed (policy wise) since the Titan-2 Missile madness?

From: Dick Bennett <j.dick.bennett@gmail.com>

Sent: Monday, September 10, 2018 5:11:16 PM

To: Sr. Rosalie Ruesewald; Sandra Lee-Shirley; Jean Gordon; Bob Estes; Gladys tiffany; Still on the Hill; Steve Holst; Kuzmarov, Jeremy; Carl Barnwell; Sue Skidmore; Gerald H. Sloan

The answer is: nothing has changed.  This is the subject of Ellsberg's new book, The Doomsday Machine:

"...my basic theme, otherwise hard to absorb: that the same type of heedless, shortsighted, and reckless decision-making and lying about it has characterized our government's nuclear planning, threats, and preparations, throughout the nuclear era, risking a catastrophe incomparably greater than all these others together" (349).    Turning Trump into the monstrous monster of all monsters is forgetting all the other US presidents.   The US has Titan III and a trillion dollars appropriated to develop and perfect all our nuclear warheads and delivery systems.   Dick

 

 

 

NW ARKANSAS MIC EXPANDING

365 More Cheerleaders for US Militarism

“Berryville, Huntsville Plants Adding Jobs,” NADG (9-12-17).

“Ducommun Inc., based in Santa Ana, Calif., will add 190 employees at its plant in Berryville and 175 jobs at Huntsville to handle a contract for Raytheon Co. . . . .to build the Naval Strike Missile[‘s] fire control systems.”  “[The contract] will provide long-term continuing support of jobs,” said Raytheon.  [Raytheon, in the past protested by anti-war groups at its Waltham, Mass., headquarters, knows how to prevent protest, though that’s not much of a danger in pro-war jobs Arkansas.  –Dick]

 

“Berryville, Huntsville Plants Adding Jobs.”  NADG (Sept. 12, 2017). 

HIGHER EDUCATION: ROTC

ROTC ARKANSAS, Google Search, May 12, 2016

UAF, UAFS, ASU, ATECH, UCA

1.    ROTC Programs - todaysmilitary.com‎

Adwww.todaysmilitary.com/‎

Top of Form

Bottom of Form

Home | Army ROTC | University of Arkansas

armyrotc.uark.edu/

University of Arkansas

Let the experienced team of officers and non-commissioned officers of the University ofArkansas ROTC program lead you on that road to success. If you have ...

Faculty - ‎Alumni - ‎About - ‎Programs

University of Arkansas Air Force ROTC Detachment 030

afrotc.uark.edu/

University of Arkansas

Cadet information, training schedule, staff directory, and recruiting details.

Faculty | Army ROTC | University of Arkansas

armyrotc.uark.edu › Army ROTC

University of Arkansas

Dustin Humphrey, SFC. Senior Military Instructor MSI Instructor Greg Thigpen, 7MSG gthigpen@uark.edu. Lorne Kelley, MAJ. Assistant Professor of Military ...


470 Campus Dr · (479) 575-4251 

ROTC Home | campuslife.uafs.edu

campuslife.uafs.edu/rotc/rotc-home

Welcome to the University of Arkansas Fort Smith Army ROTC Department. The ArmyROTC program at UAFS is both challenging and rewarding. There's no ...


Military Science - Arkansas State Universitywww.astate.edu/a/military-science/    Arkansas State UniversityASTATE Red Wolf Battalion. The Arkansas State University ROTC Program is dedicated to developing quality leaders for America's Army. ... Next year celebrates US Army Cadet Command's 100th Anniversary, as well as our Indian Battalion / Red Wolf Battalion's 80th Anniversary.

Army ROTC | Arkansas Tech University

https://www.atu.edu/rotc/

Arkansas Tech University

Army ROTC. The Arkansas Tech University Army ROTC provides students with tools to become a leader inside and outside of the military. We assist you in ...

UCA ROTC — UCA Army ROTC - University of Central Arkansas

uca.edu/rotc/

University of Central Arkansas

Welcome. The mission of Army ROTC is to commission the future officer leadership of the U.S. Army and to motivate young people to be better citizens.

Faculty & Staff (Cadre) — UCA ROTC - University of Central Arkansas

uca.edu/rotc/cadre-staff/

University of Central Arkansas

Edit Quick Links. Reserve Officers Training Corps (ROTC) ... University of CentralArkansas · 201 Donaghey Ave., Conway, AR 72035 · (501) 450-5000.

Debra Hale Shelton.  “State Funds Short.  UCA Making Cuts.  Maintenance, Capital Projects Pared.”  NADG (Feb. 6, 2017).  

Another in the increasing number of reports of austerity because not enough money.   Why is that?  What are these universities not talking about?

 

 

UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS, FAYETTEVILLE

Tracie Dungan.  “UA Plans Special Honors for Graduating Veterans.”  ADG (May 9, 2013).   A pre-commencement breakfast is planned where the vets will receive the “Chancellor’s Challenge Coin,” both sides of which are shown in a photo.  On one side the coin “features the UA logo stamped in gold along with the words in all caps: ‘HONOR COURAGE SUCCESS.’”     We also hear from the director of the UA’s Veterans Resource and Information Center.   Comment:  Our public universities are part of the preparation to invade and occupy foreign countries.  The Pentagon and VA and other direct government support are not enough to ensure constant reinforcement of military motivation and martial spirit; our educational system must also participate by providing a special staff for the vets.   We might have thought the UA’s proper duty to the students in a democratic society is to inculcate, not the military values as stated on the coin, but the highest value of its motto: Veritate Duce Progredi (Latin), To Advance with Truth as our Leader.  Dick

UAF NEWSWIRE, MAY 9, 2018

U of A Professor Takes Whirlwind Tour to Learn About Military

Paul Calleja recently visited the U.S. Navy aircraft carrier John C. Stennis 100 miles off the coast of San Diego to learn about military experience and the opportunities it affords to young people.

I sent the following comment on the above to these people: Gerald Sloan <gsloan@uark.edu>, Kelly Mulhollan <still@stillonthehill.com>, Sandra Lee-Shirley <sandyleeshirley@gmail.com>, Carl Barnwell <cbarnw@centurytel.net>, Ruth Francis <rfranciscats@gmail.com>, Ted Swedenburg <tsweden@uark.edu>, John Duval <jduval@uark.edu>, Jeremy Kuzmarov <jeremy-kuzmarov@utulsa.edu>, Michael Lieber <mikelieber1@yahoo.com>, Karen Lentz Madison <kmadison@uark.edu>, Karen Thom <karen@troutmusic.com>, Art Hobson <ahobson@uark.edu>, Aubrey Shepherd <aubreyshepherd@hotmail.com>

Militarism is so pervasive, I suspect it never occurred to the Prof. that recruiting for the military might not be one of his duties, or that his purpose to the contrary was Veritate Duce Progredi, UAF's motto.  Dick.  

TED’S REPLY

 

Ted R. Swedenburg  5-9-18

11:03 AM (1 hour ago)

https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/images/cleardot.gif

https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/images/cleardot.gif

https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/images/cleardot.gif

to me, Gerald, Kelly, Sandra, Carl, Ruth, John, Jeremy, Michael, Karen, Karen, Art, Aubrey

https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/images/cleardot.gif

I had the same reaction, Dick.

Here's his profile. I don't know him, he's in another college. 

https://hhpr.uark.edu/faculty-staff/uid/pcallej/name/Paul-Calleja/

Paul Calleja | Faculty and Staff | University of Arkansas

hhpr.uark.edu

Directory of personnel for the Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation

 

 

 

 

MILITARIZING THE ALUMNAE

NEWSWIRE 
Friday, November 09, 2018

 

100th Anniversary of World War I Armistice: When the U of A Answered the Call

Students, faculty, staff and alumni answered the call to service during World War I. They served on both the war front and home front. Here's their story.

In Memory of Those Who Fell

Thirty-one people associated with the university died during World War I.

Events During Veterans Week

 

 

YOU DON’T PROMOTE ARMISTICE AND PEACE BY CELEBRATING TROOPS, particularly when they are warring and occupying worldwide.  UAF, whose motto affirms the search for truth, and whose College of Arts and Sciences is named after former Senator J. W. Fulbright, shouldn’t have a Veterans Resource and Information Center that functions actively to promote war and warriors.

Veterans Week Events Coincide with 100th Anniversary of the End of WW I

Nov. 05, 2018

     

 

Photo Submitted

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – A week of events are scheduled on and around Nov. 11 at the University of Arkansas and in the Northwest Arkansas community, to honor U.S. veterans of military service. This year Veterans Day also marks the 100th anniversary of the end of fighting in World War I.

Beginning in 1919, Nov. 11 was celebrated as “Armistice Day” in the U.S. and many other countries, to mark the day an armistice agreement was signed, ending fighting in World War I. The holiday was changed to “Veterans Day” in the U.S. a few years after the end of World War II – and broadened into a day to honor all military veterans. [From celebrating peace and the end of war(s) to celebrating the troops and endless wars. –D]

This year the U of A Veterans Resource and Information Center is coordinating several events during a campus-wide Veterans Week. Community events are also included.

  • Tuesday, Nov. 6: At noon Marine Corps veterans, and third year law students, Kevin Flores and Ty Bordenkircher will host a cake-cutting ceremony at noon in the E.J. Ball Courtroom as an early celebration of the 243rd birthday of the U.S. Marine Corps – which actually falls on Nov. 10. Marines across campus are invited to attend, along with other veterans and the rest of the campus community.
  • Thursday, Nov. 8: The Veterans Resource and Information Center will host it’s annual Veterans Day Breakfast Celebration, from 8:30 to 10:30 a.m. at the center, in the Garland Center. All U of A students, staff, and faculty who are military veterans are invited.
  • Friday, Nov. 9: The Associated Student Government presents a Veterans Day Commemoration from 2-3 p.m. in the Reynolds Center Auditorium, with a guest speaker from Veterans Affairs. 
  • Saturday, Nov. 10: The the Armed Forces Alumni Society and the Master of Science in Operations Management Alumni Society are hosting a catered meal for veterans during the Hog Wild Tailgate at the Arkansas Alumni House, about two and a half hours before the Razorbacks take on LSU. Veterans can register here by Nov. 7 to attend.
  • Sunday, Nov 11: A ceremony marking the 100th anniversary of the Armistice will be held at 6 a.m. at the National Cemetary in Fayetteville.
  • Sunday, Nov. 11: A screening of the classic silent film Wings will be held at 2 p.m. in the Jim and Joyce Faulkner Performing Arts Center, hosted by the Department of Communication’s Film Appreciation Society and its partners. The film portrays men who flew during the “Great War”, and is being shown to commemorate the 100th anniversary of that war’s end. Wings, was the first film to win an Oscar as Best Picture – and the only silent film to win it. This screening will feature live music by the Mont Alto Motion Picture Orchestra, a group of classically trained musicians from Boulder, Colorado.
  • Tuesday, Nov. 13: The Armed Forces Alumni Society will honor veterans at a reception from 6 to 7:30 p.m. at the Arkansas Alumni House. The group will be collecting food items for the Veterans Resource and Information Center Food Pantry and suggests contributions such as single serve mac and cheese cups, cookies, snack packs, meal kits and water or other drinks.  

TOPICS

CONTACTS

Erika Gamboa, director 
Veterans Resource and Information Center 
479-575-8742, egamboa@uark.edu

 


I sent the following invitation and my note to THE FOLLOWING GRADS OR PROFS. AT UA

Anne Wright, Gerald Sloan, Ted Swedenburg, Karen Madison, Sam Totten

Inaugural Reception: RSVP by March 2

Armed Forces Alumni Society  societies@arkansasalumni.org via imodules.com 

11:30 AM 2-23-18 (22 hours ago)

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https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/images/cleardot.gif

https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/images/cleardot.gif

YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND THE 

Armed Forces Alumni Society Inaugural Reception

Thursday, March 15, 2018

Janelle Y. Hembree Alumni House

491 N. Razorback Road, Fayetteville, AR 72701

 

FEATURED SPEAKER

Chancellor Joseph E. Steinmetz


Please RSVP by Friday, March 2, 2018

 

 

Arkansas Alumni Association - P.O. Box 1070, Fayetteville, AR 72702 - 1-888-275-2586
If you wish to be removed from this group's mailing list, click here

David Swanson, World Beyond War

The University of Arkansas is taking another step backward in Arkansas’ militarization (Ebbing ANG AFB done base at Ft. Smith, C-130s at Jacksonville (LRAFB), military industry at Camden, several JR and college ROTC units).   Have you worked on this?

Thanks, Dick Bennett

 

AnnGeraldTedKarenSamuel

https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/images/cleardot.gif

You are connected with UAF past or present in some way, and I believe you would want to resist this augmented militarization of our university if you have the time at present.   I have just now received this notice, so I have no suggestions yet about how we might oppose this one more intensification of US militarism, but I know I must not keep silent, and perhaps you share my feelings.   What might we do?  Let's pick one action at least, and do it.

Please forward to someone you know related to UAF who might want to resist these misguided alums.  As you see, I cannot at this moment recall many alums I know who might join us.  

Dick

Gerald Sloan <gsloan@uark.edu>,
Ted Swedenburg <tsweden@uark.edu>,
Carl Barnwell <cbarnw@centurytel.net>,
"Sr. Rosalie Ruesewald" <rosruese@hotmail.com>,
Karen Lentz Madison <kmadison@uark.edu>,
Art Hobson <ahobson@uark.edu>,
Merlee Harrison <merlee.harrison@gmail.com>

 

Join the Armed Forces Alumni Society in celebrating Veterans Week

Danielle Wood-Williams and Erika Gamboa   10-26-18  afas@arkansasalumni.org via imodules.com 

4:06 PM (1 hour ago)

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https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/images/cleardot.gif

to me

https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/images/cleardot.gif

View this email in a web page

 

Dick,

We are pleased to invite you to two very special Armed Forces Alumni Society events to celebrate Veterans Week.

For the first event we are joining with the Master of Science in Operations Management Alumni Society to gather at the Hog Wild Tailgate on November 10. We have come together to pay for your catered meal ticket. Help us Call those Hogs before the Razorbacks take on LSU for the Battle for the Golden Boot.

On November 13, we will gather at the Janelle Y. Hembree Alumni House for a Veterans Week Reception.

Your Connection Starts Here, 

 

Danielle Wood-Williams BA'98, BS'01, MEd'02, EdD'09

Life Member
President - Armed Forces Alumni Society

 

Erika Gamboa MEd'06, MS'14

Annual Member

Vice President - Armed Forces Alumni Society

 

 

 

 

November 10
Hog Wild Tailgate

You are invited to a special alumni societies tailgate during the Hog Wild Tailgate for the LSU game. The Armed Forces Alumni Society and the Master of Science in Operations Management Alumni Society are coming together for this event.

2.5 Hours before Game Start

Janelle Y. Hembree House
491 N. Razorback Road
Fayetteville, AR 72701

The two societies are joining together to cover the cost of your catered meal ticket. Register by November 7 to make sure we have your space reserved.

REGISTER

 

 

November 13
Veterans Week Reception

The Armed Forces Alumni Society will honor veterans at a reception on November 13.

Janelle Y. Hembree Alumni House
6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. 


We are collecting food items for the Veterans Resource and Information Center Food Pantry which provides support to our nutrition initiative.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

EXAMPLES OF MILITARY RESEARCH UAF

 

University of Arkansas

NEWS

Tuesday, April 16, 2019

Research

“Research Funded by DoD to Improve Infrared Detectors Used for Night Vision.”  Shui-Qing Fisher Yu and  Gregory Salamo.   UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSS NEWSWIRE.   Thursday, August 29, 2019.   FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – Military aircraft, missile tracking systems and ground troops who rely on night-vision systems could benefit from a new generation of infrared imaging devices made with a powerful semiconducting material developed by University of Arkansas researchers and their colleagues at several institutions.

 

 

[The University of Arkansas is part of Arkansas’ military-industrial complex centered in Camden, AR.  –Dick]

 

U.S. Army Funds Research on Nanoporous Materials for Water Purification

April 03, 2019       This image illustrates how Hassan Beyzavi proposes to use nanopourous structures to remove contaminants from drinking water.

Hassan Beyzavi

This image illustrates how Hassan Beyzavi proposes to use nanopourous structures to remove contaminants from drinking water.

 

Contaminants from munitions can make their way into our water supply through runoff, and they are surprisingly common pollutants. Hassan Beyzavi, an assistant professor in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, is investigating the use of nanoporous structures to detect and remove these contaminants in water. His research is supported with an award from the U.S. Army Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program.

 

Beyzavi explained that these types of pollutants can cause serious problems for humans, plants and animals.

 

"These chemicals are significant groundwater and industrial wastewater contaminants in both the United States and European Union." Beyzavi said. "The success of this research project will significantly aid in the advancement of removal technology for toxic compounds in drinking water and soil."

 

The Beyzavi Laboratory is working with a local startup company, CatalyzeH2O, LLC. CatalyzeH2O was founded by Shelby Foster, a graduate student in chemical engineering, and Lauren Greenlee, an assistant professor in the Ralph E. Martin Department of Chemical Engineering.

 

Beyzavi and CatalyzeH2O are investigating the design, synthesis, and application of covalent organic frameworks, which are a type of nanoporous material. Nanoporous materials have attracted wide attention owing to their ability to interact with atoms, ions, and molecules. Because of their molecular structure, covalent organic frameworks can serve as building blocks for making predesigned, robust materials in an unprecedented way. They can be used for various applications, including ion exchange, catalysis, sensor applications, biological molecular isolation and purification, gas storage and separation.

 

Tiny Antennas Show Promise in Defense Sector

Aug. 24, 2018.    https://news.uark.edu/articles/42541/tiny-antennas-show-promise-in-defense-sector?utm_source=Newswire&utm_medium=email2018-08-24&utm_campaign=tiny-antennas-show-promise-in-defense-sector

 

 

MILITARIZING POLICE

AZIZA MUSA.  “ÁCLU REQUESTS DATA ON SWAT.”  ADG (March 14, 2013), 1B, 3B.   “The Arkansas chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union joined about two dozen other chapters Tuesday in a nationwide investigation to measure the scope of the so-called militarization of local police.”

“’Equipping state and local law enforcement with military weapons and vehicles, military tactical training and actual military assistance to conduce traditional law enforcement erodes civil liberties and encourages increasingly aggressive policing, particularly in poor neighborhoods and communities of color,’ the Center for Justice. . . .” 

 

MORE CATEGORIES OF MYRIAD PUBLIC SUPPORT, powerful, essential reinforcement of US militarism.

(ADG: Arkansas Democrat-Gazette)

FUNERALS

“Hundreds of people lined a mile-long stretch of U.S. 64 Saturday waving flags and holding signs of support for the family of Sgt. Jason Michael Swindle, who died in Afghanistan last week.”  The newspaper gave it two pages, plus a photo of his casket carried from the military transport at Dover AFB.   Traffic tied up the highway.  The church was packed.  His Baptist minister father led the service, his mother at front with the Sgt.’s wife and their baby son.  Two of his brothers wrote a song for him: “Soldier-boy, wandering far from home, living out the life of your dreams….”  Rev. Swindle said he “imagined his son in heaven, cradled in God’s right arm.”   Amy Schlesing.  “Cabot Soldier Killed in Afghan War Laid to Rest.”  ADG (Sept. 30, 2012).

FREE ‘HONOR” FLIGHTS TO WASHINGTON

“…More than 70 World War II veterans from Northwest Arkansas toured the World War II Memorial and recalled memories of their time of service to the nation.”  “Thousands of WWII veterans have visited the memorial since the first Honor Flight took place in May 2005.  This was the sixth Honor Flight from Northwest Arkansas and was made possible through donations from Tyson Foods and the Walmart Foundation.”  One vet said “’they have treated us like we are up on a pedestal.”  (“Honor Flight Network is a nonprofit organization created solely to honor America’s veterans for all their sacrifices.”  Peter Urban.  “Veterans Visit Memorial: Honor Flight Lands in D.C.”  ADG (May 19, 2013).  Comment: Since none of the some fifty foreign interventions and invasions following WWII were legal or necessary, the WWII “Great War” vets are given this special attention, and the war is used to distract the populace from the strictly political, imperial purpose of all the others.  

 

 

Alex Golden.  “Lowell Plans Park, Trail Additions.”  NADG (11-22-18).  Kathleen Johnson Memorial Park to include a veterans memorial.  (how many vet memorials in Springdale?  In all the towns?  All have at least one?)

Include BV’s

 

Special Tax Favors for Military Personnel (see separate newsletters on grassroots militarism in Arkansas: http://jamesrichardbennett.blogspot.com/2016/12/grassroots-militarism-newsletter-2.html)

Brian Fanney and Michael Wickline.  “Bill Seeks Exemption for Military Retirees.”  NADG (Nov. 16, 2016).   Legislation to exempt retired armed forces from the income-tax, to add to the $6,000 income-tax exemption they already enjoy.

 

MEDIA FOR WAR

SHORTEN OR OMIT FOLLOWING: NOT ABOUT AR

PRESIDENTS, MEDIA, AND WAR

Here’s my latest radio editorial for KPSQ, Fayetteville’s local station.

Dick’s EDITORIAL #17 (Sat. Feb. 17 get year broadcast date) (War #9)    Presidential/Media Complex for War.  Norman Solomon, War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death (2005).  

Title:  Challenging US Pro-War Myths

      The US is a nation of war.  It began by war; it conquered continental USA--some 500 Indian nations--by war; it grabbed a third of Mexico by war; it subdued the Philippines by war; in WWI it joined one side in a colonial war of massive slaughter; since WWII its wars—some 40 interventions and invasions-- have been virtually ceaseless.  As one historian wrote, the US has killed thousands of “enemy” soldiers and millions of civilians by war.

      How was that possible?    When a warrior hawk president and his advisors, whether liberal or conservative, want war, the president begins by besieging the public.  From the outset, warrior presidents, all of whom represent themselves as the Commander in Chief, seek the impression of consensus behind The President.

     His main weapon is media spin.  A media campaign for hearts and minds at home, means going all out to persuade us that the next war is as good as a war can be—necessary, justified, righteous, and worth any number killed.

     US leaders follow 2 steps to war: The first is this battle over public opinion, and support  for  war  is  the  first  victory.  Conquest is the second—since WWII, to name a few of the invaded countries:  Haiti, Guatemala, Dominican Republic, Chile, Grenada, Nicaragua, Panama, Afghanistan, Iraq, War on Terror!  The people of the US have been sold a succession of wars, in their names and with their tax dollars, time after time. 

    Among all the methods of propaganda, one of the most obvious is fear-mongering.  The president’s interventionists,  his congressional supporters,  and mainstream media enablers   insist that military action is necessary to prevent a whirlwind of calamities.

     Less obvious is the deployment of unexamined myths repeated so often for so many years, for so many generations,  most citizens take them for granted.  The march to war has been a 24-7 advertising campaign inseparable from the constant US self-aggrandizement and cultural reinforcement for war.  Here are a dozen of the many MYTHS that keep us ready for war:

 

The US is a Fair and Noble Superpower

Our Leaders Will Do Everything they Can to Avoid War

Our Leaders Would Never Lie to Us

The Enemy Is a Modern-Day Hitler

The US Stands for Human Rights

The War Is Not about Oil or Corporate Profits

We Had to Invade to Protect US Citizens

The Enemy Is the Aggressor, Not Us

Opposing the War Means Siding with the Enemy

Even if the War is Wrong We Must Support Our Troops

The Pentagon Fights Its Wars as Humanely as Possible

Our Soldiers Are Heroes, Theirs Are Inhuman

Withdrawal Would Cripple US Credibility

     These have been features of US self-branding as a good nation and people, and therefore as good war-makers.  But they have not always been successful, especially if the war is lengthy.  The US was defeated in Vietnam after over fifty thousand US troops and some 3 million Vietnamese were killed.   The US invasion of Cuba was stopped at its shores, which intensified the US economic invasion. 

     Hermann Goering offers a partial explanation of public war acquiescence:   “…of course, the people don’t want war. . . .But it is a simple matter to drag the people along. . . .the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders [for war].  That is easy.  All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked, and denounce [opponents] for lack of patriotism.”

     But Goering was generalizing from a nation lacking robust democratic institutions.  The US has had those institutions, and Goering unintentionally suggested how we might strengthen them to prevent or stop wars, at least to make it less easy for our leaders to be sheepherders. 

     Challenging fear-mongering wherever and whenever by vigorous application of knowledge through the First Amendment can be a safeguard against falsehoods and manipulations by war demagogues.   Sturdy critical thinking in the public schools, questioning all the leaders and myths that grease the wheels of war, can be another bulwark against the Democratic/Republican War Party.  674  the editorial we recorded today is 7 minutes 14 seconds long.

References:

Norman Solomon, War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death (2005).  

Film based on the book  directed by Loretta Alper and Jeremy Earp.

War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death. Written and directed by Loretta Alper and Jeremy Earp. Produced by Loretta Alper. Based on the book by Norman Solomon. Narrated by Sean Penn. 

The Military-Industrial-Media Complex | FAIR

https://fair.org/extra/the-military-industrial-media-complex/

But on the large TV networks, such voices were so dominant that they amounted to a virtual monopoly in the “marketplace of ideas.” This article is excerpted from Norman Solomon's book, War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death (John Wiley & Sons, 2005). The first chapter of the book can ...

Norman Solomon: War Made Easy - YouTube

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZNyBEw93NrA

Nov 3, 2008 - Uploaded by University of California Television (UCTV)

William Blum.  Killing Hope and Rogue State.  Gives a chronology of US interventions and invasions.  Source of my statement regarding millions killed by US aggressions.

 

ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE

     On September 10, 2013, the ADG editorialized for empathy—for the people of rural Guatemala who lack electricity.  The editorial focused mainly on the laudable Arkansas electric linemen who are dedicating their time to help the people of Huehuetenango, Guatemala.  “Heroes are always welcome in the news.”   But needs of the villagers are made clear.  The heroes here are not the US troops around the world applying the armed force of the superpower, but generous citizens helping the needy around the world.  And the editorialist hopes to support them in their noble and lonely tasks by quoting Jimmy Webb’s song “Wichita Lineman” made famous by Arkansan Glen Campbell.

     Let us praise the newspaper for this rare glimpse of international compassion.  In contrast, it has supported invasion and intervention after invasion and intervention—over forty since the end of WWII, and none of them constitutional, just, or necessary (in Latin America alone: Guatemala, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Chile, and more; see William Blum’s books: Killing Hope, Rogue State, America’s Deadliest Export: Democracy.)    --Dick

 

 

STEPHENS PAPERS SERIES OF COMBAT HEROES     FIND

 

 

Misc. Patriotism, Supporting the Troops, Athletics and Military, the Flag

 

Special Tax Favors for Military Personnel (see separate newsletters on grassroots militarism in Arkansas: http://jamesrichardbennett.blogspot.com/2016/12/grassroots-militarism-newsletter-2.html)

Brian Fanney and Michael Wickline.  “Bill Seeks Exemption for Military Retirees.”  NADG (Nov. 16, 2016).   Legislation to exempt retired armed forces from the income-tax, to add to the $6,000 income-tax exemption they already enjoy.

 

 

Bentonville Students Produce Video to Honor U of A Student Who Served Country

Sep. 26, 2017

     

Photo Submitted

James LaRocco shares some of the mementoes from his military service.

University of Arkansas student James LaRocco was inspired by the 9/11 terrorist attacks to enlist in the Army, and he spent nine years on active duty that included two deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan. This month, for the 16th anniversary of 9/11, students at Bentonville High School produced a video featuring LaRocco as a tribute to him and others who answered the call to service.

LaRocco began volunteering with the coaching staff of the Bentonville football team in July 2016 and this fall is continuing as an intern with the team. He expects to graduate in December with his bachelor's degree in kinesiology and hopes to continue to coach in Northwest Arkansas.

In the video, students and coaches talked about LaRocco's impact on the team. LaRocco talked about similarities between a military unit and an athletic team.

"In our summer workouts and our offseason program, we sweat and bleed together and that's what really builds their bond," he said later. "It's the same way with us in the military. We train and train and train and build our bond. We do it for a purpose; they do it for a purpose, although a different purpose."

For him, working with the team also eased his transition from military to civilian life.

"The video was a chance for me to speak for others," LaRocco said. "I was in almost nine years. Not only we, but our families, sacrificed a lot. We come home, and adjustment to civilian life is rough. For me, finding football and this kind of environment was great. I don't think I could have found a better place."

Last year, he brought the U.S. flag that flew over his base in Iraq for a student to run onto the field at the start of a game near Veterans Day. He plans to do that again.

"The flag was given to me by my brigade commander and that was the first time it was out of the case since I brought it home," LaRocco said. "It's something special for the kids to do."

TOPICS

·       Points of Pride

·       College of Education and Health Professions

·       Kinesiology

CONTACTS

Heidi S. Wells, director of communications 
College of Education and Health Professions 
479-575-3138, heidisw@uark.edu

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

RESISTANCE

COUNTER-RECRUITING, WAR RESISTERS LEAGUE

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Know Before You Go, 'Cause There's No Reset Button
A collaboration with the Ya-Ya Network (Youth Activists-Youth Allies), this leaflet breaks down the myths of enlistment, life and injustices in the military, and stop-loss. Created by youth, it is accessible to everyone!
Know Before You Go, 'Cause There's No Reset Button is just $0.15 each, plus shipping!


Counter-Recruiting

What Every Girl Should Know About the US Military | War ...

https://www.warresisters.org › store › what-every-girl-should-know-about-...

Written for girls, queer and trans youth, youth of color and poor youth, this newly redesigned full-color "What Every Girl Should Know About the U.S. Military" ...

 

CONVERSION MOVEMENT

“Thursday Thumbs.”  NADG (Feb.9, 2017).  “The state has devoted $8.5 million in annual tobacco settlement proceeds to provide services to 500 to 900 people on the list [of 3,000 persons waiting for in-home services for the developmentally disabled], but state officials say meeting the needs of the entire list would cost about $43 million a year. . . .but when tax-cutting Republicans suggest the state has plenty of money and can afford a tax cut, remember this list of people with developmental disabilities….”  Where has our state’s money gone when there are so many urgent needs here?  See all of the above.  Speak up for converting imperial money to human, species (extinctions!), planetary needs.

 

PUT FOLLOWING AT END OF NEWSLETTER #3

 

 CONTACT INFORMATION FOR ARKANSAS FEDERAL DELEGATION  1-23-17

 

U. S. Senator John Boozman  (Republican)

  Washington, D.C.

    141 Hart Senate Office Building

    Washington, D.C.   20510

    (202)224-4843

 

   Little Rock

     1401 W. Capitol Avenue, Suite 155

     Little Rock, AR  72201

    (501)372-7153

 

U.S. Senator Tom Cotton (Republican)

    Washington, D.C.

      124 Russell Senate Office 

      Washington, D.C.  20510

      (202)224-2353

 

    Little Rock

      1401 West Capitol Avenue, Suite 235

      Little Rock, AR  72201

 

U.S. Representative Rick Crawford (Republican-1st District)

    Washington, D.C.

       2422 Rayburn House Office Building

       Washington, D.C.   20515

       (202)225-4076

 

     Jonesboro

        2400 Highland Avenue, Suite 300

        Jonesboro, AR   72401

        (870)203-0540

 

U. S. Representative French Hill (Republican-2nd District)

       Washington, D.C.

         1229 Longworth House Office Building

         Washington, D.C.   20515

         (202)225-2506

 

        Little Rock

          1501 N. University, Suite 150

          Little Rock, AR  72207

          (501)324-5941

 

 U.S. Representative Steve Womack (Republican-3rd District)

          Washington, D.C.

             2412 Rayburn House Office Building

             Washington, D.C.  20515

             (202) 225-4301

 

           Rogers

             3333 Pinnacle Hills, Suite 120

             Rogers, AR 

             (479)464-0446

           

   U.S. Representative Bruce Westerman (Republican-4th District)

           Washington, D.C.

              130 Cannon House Office Building

              Washington, D.C.  20515

              (202)225-3772

 

            El Dorado

              101 N. Washington St., Suite 406

              El Dorado, AR  71730

              (870)864-8946

 

 

 

END MILITARISM IN ARKANSAS NEWSLETTER #3

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