Korean Atomic Bomb Victims Seek Justice
Korean Atomic Bomb Victims Seek Justice by Brad Wolf 855 words On June 8th, 2024, in Hiroshima, Japan, The International People’s...
Korean Atomic Bomb Victims Seek Justice by Brad Wolf 855 words On June 8th, 2024, in Hiroshima, Japan, The International People’s...
Tax Day and War Resistance, Philip Berrigan Style by Brad Wolf 811 words Each year Americans forfeit a sizable slice...
Photo by Barbara Zandoval on Unsplash
Seeing Our Way to Peace by Brad Wolf 997 words In 1918 the painter John Singer Sargent was commissioned by...
War for Profit: A Short(ish) History by Brad Wolf 1156 words The senseless slaughter of World War I began with...
Staying Alive in a Country of Death by Brad Wolf 911 words “I’m mad as hell and I’m not going...
Our Freedoms Shrink as Our Military Expands by Brad Wolf 938 words The Merchants of Death even own our sidewalks. That’s...
War is a language of lies. Cold and callous, it emanates from dull, technocratic minds, draining life of color.
Justice, it seems, is hard to find. Thousands of grassroots organizations across the country seek justice for their concerns. In the US, some 13,785 nonprofits work for civil rights and social justice. Organizations focused on international justice such as peace, refugees, and international aid number 23,532. There are 27,402 environmental groups.
What is it like to be so ashamed of the company for which you work that you cannot bring yourself to admit you work there?
Anyone can see it coming, right there on mainstream news. Writers don’t need to warn of the worst because the worst is already unfolding in front of us all.
In the White Mountains of New Hampshire, I recently joined a gathering of people highly concerned with a range of threats, from war to climate catastrophe and more.