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Posts Tagged ‘Allison Center for Peace’

Pleased to report the Fort Bragg City Council Ceasefire Resolution PASSED BY UNANIMOUS VOTE!

WATCH Grassroots Democracy in action in this video of the February 26, 2024 Fort Bragg City Council where the Ceasefire Resolution passed! https://bit.ly/3IcLFvE Public comments begin at 40; Fort Bragg City Council vote at 1:28 with City Councilman Lindy Peters.

LISTEN to this KZYX radio news segment on the Passing of this Ceasefire Resolution https://bit.ly/3UXsDAV

My Feb 26th public comment:

To the Fort Bragg City Council with regard to Supporting the Ceasefire Resolution

Over the last two weeks, in the midst of two major weather events, I canvased the town of Fort Bragg for signatures related to the Fort Bragg City Council adopting the Ceasefire Resolution.

So many of my neighbors who signed this Ceasefire Resolution have felt powerless against the horror of what is still unfolding a world away. With more than 30,000 already dead from the bombings since October 7th, and so many of those slaughtered women and children, it is hard for any of us to accept this inhumanity and DO NOTHING!

I want to share how I am voicing my dissent in calling for a CEASEFIRE. Even though each Friday at noon I join others protesting for a Ceasefire and Peace in the center of town, I also signed my name to this Ceasefire Resolution and gathered signatures from my neighbors. I have found these activities to be peace-affirming experiences. Being able to express my dissent against what’s going on in Gaza has given me PEACE.

Of the people I approached to sign this Ceasefire Resolution, a solid 65% ASKED TO SIGN and jumped at the chance to DO SOMETHING. Many residents of the Mendocino coast stand in solidarity against this genocide and want their concerns for peace represented by the Fort Bragg City Council.

I implore the Fort Bragg City Council to hear citizens of our community who wish to send a message to end the bombing and genocide by adopting this Ceasefire Resolution. Stand in solidarity! A Ceasefire shall benefit ALL CIVILIANS impacted by this confrontation.

DEMANDING PERMANENT CEASEFIRE!

Please ADOPT this important Ceasefire Resolution now!

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On Monday, February 12, 2024 local Mendocino coast citizens offered a Ceasefire Proclamation before the Fort Bragg City Council, attempting to have our Ceasefire Proclamation added to calendar for consideration and adoption. Here is what I shared:

Good evening dear neighbors. My name is Laurel Krause. For 20 years I’ve made my home on Pudding Creek Road at the Allison Center for Peace. This evening I am here to encourage the Fort Bragg City Council to consider and support the Sustained Ceasefire proclamation we have put before you.

Our proclamation is made in response to Israel’s unrelenting bombing, killing of women and children in Gaza, and their inhumane genocide of the people of Palestine. Since October 20, 2023, on every Friday in town center at noon, I join a group of local citizens to protest for peace and ceasefire, sponsored by the Allison Center for Peace. As a Jew, I support this proclamation and demand a sustained, permanent CEASEFIRE NOW!

The Allison Center for Peace was established in memory of my sister Allison Krause, who was one of four antiwar student protesters killed by U.S. military gunfire at Kent State on May 4, 1970. The Allison Center is creating a Kent State and Jackson State massacre memorial, where we honor those who stood against war and for peace in May 1970. Populated with sustainable art, the memorial is a developing project to enhance peace and healing via peace gardens and a power art farm. A place for us to get on with our PEACE!

Our proclamation calls for the protection of all peoples’ human rights, free of terror and bombing, with access to food, water, shelter and medical aid. We call for PEACE in Gaza.

URGING the Fort Bragg City Council to ADOPT the ceasefire proclamation we have put before you.

JOIN the 47 cities (now 70 cities!) recently passing symbolic resolutions, calling for a halt to Israel’s Gaza bombardment. STAND with other U.S. cities like Richmond, San Francisco, Oakland, Detroit, Michigan, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Chicago, Illinois, Atlanta, Georgia, Akron, Ohio, St. Louis, Missouri, Albany, New York, Wilmington, Delaware, Bridgeport, Connecticut and Madison, Wisconsin to name a few.

Those Quiet During Genocide Are Accomplices!

Let the voice of peace be heard!

Thank you
XXX

Before the close of the meeting, City Council members approved hearing our Ceasefire Proclamation on Monday, February 26th.

To WATCH the full Monday, February 12, 2024 Fort Bragg City Council meeting, go to https://bit.ly/3HYN9cR. Commenters begin at 1:08; Approval of the hearing for our Ceasefire Proclamation at 1:55.

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August 22, 2022 from the Allison Center for Peace

Watching the recently-discovered Death of a Decade, The Kent State Story, Side 4 described as “…the most comprehensive historical account (with authentic audio) of the events that led up to and included the May 4, 1970 shooting deaths of four student protestors at Kent State University. Side 4”

Viewing for the first time blew my mind more than 50 years later. I’d never heard many of these original Kent State recordings including official responses from Ohio National Guard General Canterberry, Kent State University President White and the extended recording of Arthur Krause, my father’s comment about Allison’s killing presented before the world press as I watched in our backyard on Tuesday, May 5, 1970:

From Arthur S. Krause, father of Allison, speaking for Allison immediately after the May 4, 1970 Kent State massacre from the Death of a Decade/KentState/Side 4, hear it at 16:30-18:20:

“She was deeply interested in helping people. She truly cared about people and life. On Saturday evening she called home to tell me there was some trouble in the business section of Kent. She said there was some property damage and she was against that. She was not involved in that but she felt they had to demonstrate; she felt they had to do this because there was no other way to express themselves.

She resented be called a bum because she disagreed with someone else’s opinion. She felt the war in Cambodia was wrong. Is this dissent a crime? Is this a reason for killing her? Have we come to such a state in this country that a young girl has to be shot because she disagrees deeply with the actions of her government?

I want something to be done. What I would like to see happen is that my daughter’s death and those of the other three children as well as the wounded not be in vain. I would like to see Congress investigate the situation and determine who authorized live ammunition to be brought against children by tired and frightened national guard. Also, who approved such an action?

Can Congress find out why our children can’t express themselves?”

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April 23, 2021

Dear Allison,

Even though you’re not with us, I am writing to wish you a happy 70th birthday. This is my bittersweet wish from your little sister who still looks up to you. Five decades later, I still want to tag along with you and follow your lead. It has been my honor to grow up with you, and to know and love you every day dear Allison.

I want you to know my greatest surprise has been that ever since forming the Kent State Truth Tribunal and the Allison Center for Peace, I’ve healed a little each day. Who knew that searching for truth and accountability related to your killing at Kent State would help me feel better and find peace in my life? Kent State peace is a double blessing you ignited. ;-)

Allison, even after all these years, you continue to drive me with your peaceful, kind, astute and loving spirit. I especially enjoy the pranks I see with your name written all over them. Please keep ‘em coming.

On the first Earth Day, April 22, 1970, the day before your 19th birthday, you celebrated your commitments to peace, against war, to a planet in harmony and your love for all beings in a Buckminster Fuller-inspired geodesic dome set up on the Kent State University commons. A moment that embodied peace in its sacred geometry, its energies and its presence.

Bucky’s geodesic dome was erected just days before President Nixon destabilized the United States with his Cambodian invasion and then called you a “bum” for reacting to an escalating war in Vietnam. In response, on May 3, 1970 you said, “What’s the matter with peace? Flowers are better than bullets.” 

Thank you for continuing to guide us. For whispering encouragement into the ears of peaceful young persons even today, and for driving peace worldwide in thousands of other ways. I am so thankful to have you in my life and have so much gratitude for the strength you give me to fight for truth and accountability at Kent State as I stand with you!

Wanted you to know in the coming days we are returning to the United Nations for the U.S. 5th periodic review. We’ll join other human rights organizations to demand accountability for excessive and deadly force used by law enforcement, and the military against citizens and protesters. We’re also working to make sure the U.S. government never kills another protester again.

Happy 70th Allison!

Love, peace and healing to the folks, family and Manny,

Laurel xo

Allison artwork by Prapat Campbell

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________________________________________________________________________

 

         United States’ Compliance with the

International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights

Kent State Truth Tribunal

Response to Follow-Up Report

4th Periodic Report of the United States

from the

110th Session of the Human Rights Committee, Geneva

March 2014

________________________________________________________________________

Read this report at the UN webpage http://bit.ly/1cxCnbY

1 May 2015

I.    Investigate & Examine the Kent State Audio Evidence

Seeking a credible, independent and impartial investigation into the Kent State audio recorded on May 4, 1970 during the Kent State Massacre (Article 2 (Right to remedy); Article 6 (Right to life); Article 19 (Right to freedom of expression); Article 21 (Right to peaceful assembly))

II.   Reporting Organization

The Kent State Truth Tribunal (KSTT) was founded in 2010 upon the emergence of new forensic evidence regarding the May 4, 1970 Kent State Massacre. KSTT is an NGO focused on revealing truth and bringing justice to Kent State Massacre victims and survivors.

Less than a day before her unlawful killing at Kent State University, Allison Krause said, “What’s the matter with peace? Flowers are better than bullets”. On May 4, 1970 Allison Krause was shot dead by U.S. military personnel as she peacefully protested the American Vietnam War and stood for PEACE.

Representing Allison Beth Krause, 19-year-old Kent State University student protestor slain on May 4, 1970: Doris L. Krause, mother & Laurel Krause, sister.

III.  Related Concluding Recommendation of the Committee & the US Delegation’s Response:

At the US 4th Periodic Review on March 13, 2014, two UN Human Rights Committee members addressed the submitted issues of the Kent State Truth Tribunal. Messrs. Walter Kaelin and Yuval Shany flagged the United States regarding the killing at Kent State in several expressed reasons including lack of accountability, concerns related to command responsibility, the use of excessive and deadly force by the military and law enforcement, and US investigatory practices when credible, forensic evidence emerges 40 years later.

The next day the US delegation offered:

We were asked about Kent State: In 1970 four students were killed, were murdered. Nine were wounded. In 1974 the US Department of Justice prosecuted eight of the officers involved in that. The Judge threw out that prosecution. There is nothing we can do now. Between double jeopardy and the statute of limitations, there is nothing we can do. We are aware that there are some who say there’s new evidence. We have looked at that new evidence and that new evidence does not make an unprosecutable case prosecutable.”

Even though the United States claimed Kent State was “murder and killing”, their recent April 1, 2015 response does not include any action taken with regard to the Kent State “unlawful killings”, as outlined in the March 2014 UNHRC concluding recommendations:

The party should ensure that all cases of unlawful killing, torture or other ill-treatment, unlawful detention or enforced disappearance are effectively, independently and impartially investigated, that perpetrators, including, in particular, persons in positions of command, are prosecuted and sanctioned, and that victims are provided with effective remedies. The responsibility of those who provided legal pretexts for manifestly illegal behaviour should also be established.”

The Kent State Truth Tribunal United Nations Reports:

February 2013 Kent State Truth Tribunal UN Submission ~ http://bit.ly/1f2X25i

October 2013 KSTT Shadow Report ~ http://bit.ly/1kBSjfa

February 2014 KSTT Final Update ~ http://bit.ly/1ezn0cG

March 2014 KSTT Addresses the UN Human Rights Committee ~ http://bit.ly/1dgliTW

After the US 4th Periodic Human Rights Review at the United Nations, this tshirt design was created by artist Josh Starcher for the Kent State Truth Tribunal:

KSTT_Reunion13

RECOMMENDATION: The United States must examine forensic evidence of expert Stuart Allen’s digital analysis of the Kent State tape and acknowledge his findings.

IV.  US Unlawful Killings Require Acknowledgement, Credible Investigation & Accountability

When the United States Delegation said, “In 1970, four students were killed, was murdered”, the long held US position that the killings at Kent State were simply a ‘civil rights’ matter was extinguished forever.

Now that the deaths at Kent State have been acknowledged by the State as murder, US authorities are required to treat the Kent State recording as evidence from a cold case homicide, and the tape must be credibly, impartially and independently investigated as noted in the United Nations Human Rights Council from the 26th session on the “Promotion and protection of all human rights, civil, political, social and cultural rights’ mandate of the Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary and arbitrary executions:

the obligation of all States to conduct exhaustive and impartial investigations into all suspected cases of extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions, to identify and to bring to justice those responsible, while ensuring the right of every person to a fair and public hearing by a competent, independent and impartial tribunal established by law, to grant adequate compensation within a reasonable time to the victims or their families and to adopt all necessary measures, including legal and judicial measures, in order to bring an end to impunity and to prevent the recurrence of such executions, as stated in the Principles on the Effective Prevention and Investigation of Extra-legal, Arbitrary and Summary Executions.”

The requirement for effective investigation includes acknowledgement of new evidence in accordance with international norms such as the United Nations Manual on the Effective Prevention and Investigations of Extra-legal, Arbitrary and Summary Executions, U.N. Doc. E/ST/CSDHA/.12(1991). http://www1.umn.edu/humanrts/instree/executioninvestigation-91.html#11

V.   The Current Instituted History of the Kent State Massacre Confuses, Censors and Obfuscates the May 4, 1970 Unlawful Killings

Instead of examining the Kent State tape that emerged in 2010, the US Justice Department has refuted the provenance of the tape, ignored the new evidence, confused what was discovered, discredited the forensic expert and censored the 2010 forensic findings in the Kent State tape. This behavior echoes the tremendous effort on the part of the US government, Kent State University and US Justice Department to hamper and derail efforts for restorative justice to be achieved and Kent State truth to be known by the public since May 4, 1970.

Back in 1979, after nine years of civil litigation, where Kent State plaintiffs sued for wrongful death (the only legal option in the American judicial system), an out-of-court civil settlement was reached, including $15,000 paid by the State for the death of Allison Krause and a statement of regret signed by the Kent State shooters.

Rediscovered on September 2014, was the Kent State Civil Settlement Statement of 1979, authored and signed by the plaintiffs, which shared the sentiments of all harmed in the May 4th Kent State Massacre. The Settlement Statement includes hard-fought-for recommendations to the US government that were patently ignored, never implemented and could have protected the lives of countless Americans.

Following the emergence of the new Kent State evidence, in 2012 Kent State University constructed a $1.1 million visitor center near the killing site. The visitor center exhibits are not factually accurate and whitewash US government complicity; the new Kent State tape evidence is buried, and when mentioned, criticized.

In 2011, forensic expert Stuart Allen was interviewed by CNN on his findings in the Kent State tape and until recently the interview was available to be viewed at CNN.com. This year Stuart Allen’s CNN Kent State interview was removed from the CNN website; watch the CNN scrubbed Stuart Allen interview on youtube.

Will we ever learn the truth of what happened at Kent State?

To date there have been no credible investigations into what occurred at Kent State. This is a terrible precedent. Americans still do not have access to true knowledge through credible investigation of what occurs when US law enforcement and the military kill civilians. The same, flawed US grand jury system only exonerates and protects the police and those in authority. There is no facility for redress in America. Instead victims and surviving families are encouraged to “move on” yet many survivors suffer from harassment by the FBI for many years to come.

RECOMMENDATION: In the coming days, the Kent State Truth Tribunal will be making application to the Special Rapporteur on Extrajudicial, Arbitrary and Summary Execution, Mr. Christof Heyns. Mr. Heyns was recommended by Ms. Maria Clara Martin, Chief Americas Sections at the UN in March 2014.

VI.  Truth Tribunals: A New Standard for Citizen-Organized Accountability in America

When the courts fail to bring justice to the injured and when governments prefer to neglect their role in such tragedies, families sometimes turn to alternative means of gathering the truth. After years of exhausting efforts to find out what happened on the day of Allison’s death, and failure to receive any meaningful recognition for the injury suffered by our family, we established the Kent State Truth Tribunal on the 40th anniversary of the killings. We felt the imperative to do this for our family and to come together with others to create an accurate historical account of what occurred at Kent State, also honoring and preserving the first person narratives of original witnesses and participants.

When young Michael Brown was shot to death by US law enforcement in Ferguson, Missouri on August 9, 2014, Allison’s family watched the efforts of the United States to investigation Michael Brown’s unlawful killing, especially noting the parallels between Michael’s killing and Allison’s.

First a State grand jury was instituted and at the conclusion, those in authority failed to bring criminal charges for killing and exonerated US law enforcement. We recognized the similarities in the government’s handling of the killings at Kent State. The results were almost identical with the State grand jury not capable of indicting the police officer that shot Michael dead. Those in authority in Ferguson and at the US Justice Department viewed the killing of Michael Brown through a ‘civil rights’ lens, outrageously ignoring the much more critical crime involved in Michael’s killing by US law enforcement.

Ever since August 2014, deaths of people of color, particularly young people, at the hands of US law enforcement, have been dealt with as civil rights issues, neglecting to hold anyone accountable for the State killing civilians. In America there is no recourse, nor any other judicial avenue, no possibility for redress for acts of State-sponsored murder.

It has become clear that accountability is impossible in the current American judicial system. Because of the flawed system and since the witnesses and participants of civilian death by US law enforcement at Ferguson (Cleveland, Baltimore and more) will not have their truth recorded, known or honored, we wish to offer the use of the Truth Tribunal methodology to enable a citizen-organized campaign for accountability in these situations.

RECOMMENDATION: The Kent State Truth Tribunal seeks direction and support from the United Nations in offering the facility of citizen-organized Truth Tribunals to those harmed by State-sponsored, unlawful killings in America. Our goal is for the KSTT and the United Nations to work together to bring restorative justice and accountability to the United States. How may we get started?

VII.  The Allison Center for Peace

Later in 2015 we will be inaugurating the Allison Center for Peace, a peace destination in America, creating an environment for the discussion and development of peaceful solutions, and focused on fostering peace in America.

As we form our center for peace in America, we invite the United Nations to become involved as a founding partner.

RECOMMENDATION: The Kent State Truth Tribunal wishes to explore an on-going relationship with the United Nations in the development of the Allison Center for Peace on the Mendocino coast of Northern California.

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