Gość: AGR
IP: 64.66.217.*
27.10.02, 18:22
Busha matematyka: (wiekszosc jest za wojna) :):):)
Trzeba bylo to widziec ... w Washington i San Francisco, szkoda ze go tam
nie bylo z liczydlem, na wlasne oczy by widzial jak go "popieraja"
Protesters March Against War in Iraq
Sat Oct 26, 7:18 PM ET
By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON, Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Tens of thousands of anti-war protesters circled the White
House on Saturday after Jesse Jackson and other speakers denounced the Bush
administration's Iraq policies and demanded a revolt at the ballot box to
promote peace.
The protest coincided with anti-war demonstrations from Augusta, Maine, to
San Francisco and abroad from Rome and Berlin to Tokyo to San Juan, Puerto
Rico, and Mexico City. In Washington and many of the other demonstrations,
protesters added complaints about U.S. policy toward the Palestinians.
"We must not be diverted. In two years we've lost 2 million jobs,
unemployment is up, stock market down, poverty up," Jackson told a spirited
crowd in Washington. "It's time for a change. It's time to vote on Nov. 5
for hope. We need a regime change in this country."
Congress has authorized the use of military force to achieve the
administration policy of "regime change" in Iraq.
"If we launch a pre-emptive strike on Iraq we lose all moral authority,"
Jackson told the chanting, cheering throng spread out on green lawns near
the Vietnam Veterans Memorial.
A sign showed Bush's face at the end of two bright red bombs with the
caption: "Drop Bush, not bombs."
The protest brought out the elderly, young parents with babies in strollers,
even a man dressed as Uncle Sam wearing dreadlocks and another Uncle Sam, on
stilts, with an elongated Pinocchio nose.
Protest organizers claimed up to 200,000 people had answered the call to
challenge President Bush (news - web sites)'s determination to force out
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein (news - web sites). Because the U.S. Park
Police no longer issues crowd estimates, the size of the crowd could not be
verified. As the march began, participants stretched for at least five city
blocks.
On a nearby street corner, a handful of Iraqi-Americans staged a
counterdemonstration. Aziz al-Taee, spokesman for the Iraqi-American
Council, said, "I think America is doing just fine. ... We think every day
Saddam stays in power, he kills more Iraqis."
New Englanders ventured out in snow, sleet and rain to join demonstrations
in Maine and Vermont. Across the nation a couple thousand showed up at the
Colorado capitol in downtown Denver, and demonstrators marched at San
Francisco.
The thousands who gathered in cities across Europe, Asia and beyond also
displayed vocal opposition to the U.S. policy toward Iraq and demanded
reversal of Bush's Iraq policies.
In San Francisco, demonstrators stretched about a mile as they marched from
the financial district to City Hall, carrying placards that read, "Money for
jobs, not for war" and "No blood for oil."
Young punk rockers with mohawks, aging hippies and middle-aged couples with
children all took part, chanting, "One, two, three, four, we don't want your
racist war."
More than 2,000 chanting, drum-beating protesters marched on a home owned by
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld near Taos, N.M., waving placards that
read, "Rumsfeld is a War Criminal" and "Teachers Against War." A few
protesters held photographs of Iraqi children.
A Secret Service agent said Rumsfeld was not at home.
In Berlin, an estimated 8,000 people, brandishing placards that
declared "War on the imperialist war," converged on the downtown
Alexanderplatz and marched past the German Foreign Ministry. Another 1,500
showed up in Frankfurt, 500 in Hamburg.
Another 1,500 rain-soaked demonstrators gathered under umbrellas outside the
U.S. Embassy in Copenhagen, Denmark. More than 1,000 marched in Stockholm,
Sweden.
In Washington, civil rights activist Al Sharpton addressed Bush, even though
the president was at an economic summit in Mexico.
"It would have been good for you to be here, George, so you could see what
America really looks like," Sharpton said. "We are the real America.
"We are the patriots that believe that America should heal the world and not
bring the world to nuclear war over the interests of those business tycoons
who put you in the White House."
___
Associated Press writers Elizabeth Wolfe in Washington and Angela
Watercutter in San Francisco contributed to this report