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- <text id=91TT0055>
- <title>
- Jan. 14, 1991: Rising -- But Still Muted -- Dissent
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Jan. 14, 1991 Breast Cancer
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 14
- Rising--but Still Muted--Dissent
- </hdr><body>
- <p> Congress was just beginning to debate the Administration's
- gulf policy last week, but thousands of Americans have been
- voicing their antiwar views for months at marches, teach-ins
- and vigils around the country. With Jan. 15 approaching,
- protest organizers are hoping to ignite a bonfire of dissent
- against any U.S. military action. Said Dennis Murphy, an
- antiwar demonstrator in Charlotte, N.C.: "These politicians are
- the people who gave us Vietnam, Watergate, the deficit, the
- savings and loan crisis, and `Read my lips.' Are we supposed to
- stand back and say, `Oh, go ahead and do what you want to'? Not
- this time."
- </p>
- <p> But the protest movement so far lacks any firm central
- direction. Some activists are having trouble linking up across
- the country--or even across town. Still, the antiwar cause
- has become strong enough to rally thousands of people coast to
- coast. They represent an unusual and surprisingly broad cross
- section of Americans that includes student activists, relatives
- of soldiers, Vietnam veterans, middle-class professionals and
- organizers of the inner-city poor. Their general message: Let
- economic sanctions fight Saddam Hussein for now; the nation has
- too many pressing problems at home to wage a military battle
- overseas.
- </p>
- <p> The antiwar movement appears to be growing steadily. Last
- fall the Military Families Support Network was born after
- University of Wisconsin professor Alex Molnar--the father of
- a Marine in Saudi Arabia--wrote an open antiwar letter to
- President Bush in the New York Times. The Network began a
- storefront operation in a Milwaukee suburb with one phone.
- Today the office has five phones, three computers, a fax
- machine, two full-time staffers--and 4,000 member families.
- </p>
- <p> Last month in Chicago a march by 65 labor, peace,
- environmental, religious and political groups drew more than
- 4,000 people, the largest protest of its kind in the city since
- the Vietnam War. At Boston's busy Downtown Crossing area, a
- 12-ft. by 4-ft. antiwar banner attracted so many signatures
- that four more strips of cloth had to be added. On college
- campuses around the country, teach-ins and demonstrations were
- interrupted only by the holiday break.
- </p>
- <p> Some peace groups are beginning to battle local radio and
- TV stations that refuse to sell air time for antiwar spots. In
- San Francisco a computer networking system is trying to link
- up protesters around the country. In Atlanta civil rights
- groups are working hard to transform Jan. 15--Martin Luther
- King's birthday--into a Peace with Justice day.
- </p>
- <p> The date heralds what the antiwar groups hope will be the
- start of an intensive peace campaign. The Military Families
- Support Network will begin a vigil the day before in front of
- the White House, and the Women's Peace Group will start a fast.
- On Jan. 19 and 26, rallies and marches are planned for the
- streets of the capital. Says Massachusetts activist Tekla
- Lewin: "George Bush and his advisers are doing everything they
- can to plug their ears. This will be a way to get heard." The
- sound is still far from deafening--but it does keep growing
- louder.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-