| Friday, March 11, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, protests take place  across Iraq, Nouri wasn't able to nominate people for his empty Cabinet posts  again, serving on the Integrity Commission means getting beat up by Nouri's  thugs, a US House Subcommittee explored the VA's inability to enact the law  Congress passed, and more.   "Mr. [Ranking Member Mike] Michaud has a distinguished history of support  for our veterans and I look forward to working closely with him to ensure that  those who have honorably served our nation receive the highest quality care that  they so, so deserve," Chair Ann Marie Buerkle as she brought the US House  Veterans Affairs Subcommittee on Health hearing to a start this morning, setting  a strong bi-partisan tone.  She also recognized Sarah Wade and Patty Horan who  are full time caregivers for their husbands who were wounded while serving in  Iraq.  Chair Buerkle asked the two women to stand and then led a round of  applause for them. But she and Michaud had serious concerns that echo  those raised in the March 2nd Senate Veterans Affairs Committee hearing.      Chair Patty Murray: Mr. Secretary, I have a great deal of respect  for the work that you've done on homeless and women's issues and I know you're  working diligently in a number of ways. But I wanted to bring up an issue that  I'm very concerned about.  I've already discussed the caregiver issue with you,  I've talked about it with Jack Woo, I've talked with senior staff at the White  House and I have spoken directly with the president of the United States. VA's  plan on the caregivers issue was overdue and once submitted it hardly resembled  the bill that unanimously cleared this Congress. Three weeks ago, my Committee  staff requested information on how that plan was developed and to date no  information has been provided. Rather than following the law, the administration  set forth some overly stringent rules bureaucratic hurdles that would  essentially deny help to caregivers.  Sarah and Ted Wade who were staunch  advocates and worked hard with us to get this passed were invited by the  president to attend the bill signing at the White House, they won't be eligible  for the program under the plan that the department submitted. We're also hearing  a lot from veterans and caregivers from across the country who fall outside of  this new line in the sand the VA has drawn, who have been left in limbo and now  don't know if this benefit that they advocated and worked so hard for will  support them.  Mr. Secretary, it appears your that department is not complying  with the law as we have  written. Can you please tell this Committee  why?   And he couldn't.  As Kat reported , Ranking Member Richard Burr  informed Shinseki that either the law was implemented as written or Shinseki  better be prepared for "one hell of a fight." As they should.  DAV notes , "The veteran population aged 65 and older is  expected to increase from 37.4 percent to 44.8 percent by the year 2020. VA is  also treating a new era of younger, severely injured servicemembers. Many  veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan will need lifetime care."      Chair Ann Marie Buerkle: This question is for each of the members  on this panel, based on your expertise and all of the investigation and work  you've put into this law and looking at its implementation, could each one of  you identify for me what it is that you see as the single most serious deficit  in the implementation of this law and what your solution would be for that  deficit?  And if you could just limit your remarks so that everyone could have a  chance to respond, I would really appreciate it.  We'll start with Mr. [Atizado]  --   Adrian Atizado:  Chairman Buerkle, I appreciate that question but,  again, I have to caution the Committee that eligibility is only one of a number  of gateway provisions in this law.  Certainly if a service member and their  caregiver -- veteran and their caregiver are deemed eligible and meet other  gateway provisions that don't allow them the appropriate services then being  eligible becomes a moot point in the end.  As the other panelists have  mentioned, it appears that VA's eligibility criteria does raise the bar that a  caregiver and veteran must meet to be entitled or at least considered eligible  and my testimony has a specific example of that.  But I think in all -- In all  fairness, I believe, VA has -- VA clinicians know what they need to do.  And I  think we know what -- we know what we want them to do.  And I think there's --  There may have been a little bit of a misinterpretation on both sides.  My point  is -- is that we all have to step back a little bit from this very emotionally  charged situation, reassess ourselves and come together on equal grounds because  I fear that no matter what we say today, if we continue down this path, we will  not come to a very amicable solution.    Chair Ann Marie Buerkle: Thank you.  Mr. Ibson?   Ralph Ibson: I share -- I share my colleagues -- thank you [to Tom  Tarantino, who helped him with his microphone] -- I share my colleagues view  that it's difficult to isolate a single factor because there really are a great  many flaws but -- but honoring your question, I do think that the imposition of  very, very restrictive eligibility criteria that are inconsistent with the law  and have the effect of disqualifying three of every four caregivers who probably  should be covered under this law  is the most profound of the many problems we  have discussed this morning.    Chair Ann Marie Buerkle: Thank you.  Mr. Tarantion.   Tom Tarantino:  I associate myself with the comments of Adrian and  Ralph. I think they're absolutely correct. There are multiple issues with the  regulation of this law but if we needed to start somewhere, we have to start at  eligibility because that's the first gateway.  Uhm, and-and if you want to look  at how to do it, I would suggest that they read the law because it's very  explicit.  It is in fact probably the most explicit piece of legislation that  I've read since I started working in this field three years ago.  But I-I  actually do and I share Adrian's concern: We need to caution ourselves that we  don't just stop there, that we have to actually look at how this program -- how  this program is implemented holisticly and that once, if the elegibility  criteria is fixed, that we don't just stop and say "Great!" put a win on the  board and then move on.  This is a very complicated program and we have to keep  looking at it until it is -- We get it right.     Chair Ann Marie Buerkle: Thank you.    Barbara Cohoon:  Our association would feel that it has to do with  when you're actually going to be starting the benefits.  It's not until there's  all these other requirements that are met.  And so therefore it pushes  elegibility to all these benefits until further down the road and while it may  be several months or years into veterans status.  And we would like to see that  start earlier because our caregivers need these benefits much earlier in the  process than when they'll possibly be getting them. The VA's also rolling out  all the benefits at the same time. So we feel that they should be able to start  some of the benefits earlier in the process interjecting them at the time when  the caregiver actually needs them so that they have the resources that they  need, have the right skills to provide the care that they need and therefore the  veteran gets the care -- or the service member's getting the care -- that they  need. So our concern is the fact that they're waiting until all the wickets are  met before they start any of the benefits and one of the major wickets has to be  that the veteran has to be receiving care 100% in home and many of our service  members are still going through the recovery phases where they might be having  wound revisions or maybe they're having burns taken care of.  So waiting until  it's 100% in home as far as care, that could also delay either them leaving the  military or starting this particular benefit.  So that would be our concern.   Elegibility also, but that's the biggest for us.     Elsewhere during the first panel, Tom Tarantino brought up what is  considered "the signature wound" of the Iraq and Afghanistan Wars: Traumatic  Brain Injury (TBI).  If you're new to the topic of TBI, Barbara Mannino (Fox Business News) has a report on  the topic, just published today .  While the first panel was forthcoming, the  second panel was a sad joke.  It was the same performance from last week for  Robert Petzel who still can't convincingly mouth words allegedly of  regret.  Due to a vote about to take place, time was limited on the second panel and  the Chair turned the questions over to US House Rep Phil Roe who is also Dr. Roe  (medical doctor).  We'll note a bit of the exchange.   US House Rep Phil Roe: Quickly, I've watched this now for the third  year. It seems like all the programs we see are slow and glacial to get going.   And I know it's a very complicated program but as you clearly pointed out, it's  not nearly as complicated as having no arms or legs and getting around in your  home or with a Traumatic Brain Injury where you can't balance the check book and  someone has to be there to help you do that. That's a lot harder, as you just  pointed out. I could not agree more. So why is it taking so long?  And this  program doesn't seem as complicated to me as many of the programs that the VA  has.   Robert Petzel: Thank you, Congressman Roe.  I will turn to Debbie  Amdur to elaborate on this but I think the biggest aspect of this is that it is  a completely new concept for us. We have never been in the business of providing  a stipend to somebody who is providing caregiving services. And developing the  regulations for this, getting all of the correct input before the regulations  are actually in place, takes a long time. I-I-I think -- I apologize as I have  before for the fact that we are so late in doing this but I think the fact that  this was new and it required relatively complex regulations is part, at least of  the explanation.   US House Rep Phil Roe:  This reason?  I mean we have regulations  now for home health care people that go in.  It looks to me like it would have  been fairly simple to look at those and say "There's some criteria there."   We've been pretty easy. I think we micro-manage this down to "what if? what if?  what if? what if?" until it got to be almost -- and also the intent of Congress  was to provide this to as many families.  And I think right now, just like in  the HUD-VASH voucher program we found out we've got 11,000 vouchers out there  with no veterans, homeless veterans. So I think what you're going to find out  with this is there's going to be a lot more need than we thought but we don't  even know what that is now because it's so hard for people to get in and, as Mr.  Tarantino pointed out, the gateway as eligibility, but that's just the first  step. So we really don't know right now how many people -- And do you know how  many people have applied or how many have  to date?   Robert Petzel:  Well, of course, there hasn't been application  period yet, Congressman, But have an estimate of somewhere between 750 and a  thousand people would probably be applying or would be eligible under the way  the criteria are presently deliannated.    US House Rep Phil Roe:  Well I guess that seems like an awfully  small number to me in a country with millions of veterans. It seems to me like  I'll be it will be ten or twenty or thirty times that many.       On TBI, Deborah Amdur declared, "And [I] was very concerned to hear the  interpretation that we would not be covering veterans with Traumatic Brain  Injury. When we put together the eligiblity crtieria we brought forward subject  matter experts from across VA including leadership of our Federal Recovery  Coordination  from our programs our poly trauma programs, Traumatic Brain injury  programs and so forth. And there was significant recognition of the challenges  that are faced by family members caring for individuals with Traumatic Brain  Injury."  Dr. Roe wanted Adur to promise that by July, caregivers will be  receiving money.  And she did.  She tried to go with "It is our intention" but  she ended up promising.  But that doesn't mean the VA will keep the promise,  they never do.  But we'll go ahead and note that the promise was made and we'll  note it if it's kept or if it's broken.       Protests took place across Iraq today.   AFP estimates  that 500 Iraqis  gathered in Baghdad's Liberation Square (Tahrir Square before the protests began  last month) and they speak to Layla Saleh Yaseen who explains why she is  protesting, "I demand the rights of Iraqis -- more rations and an improvement in  services like electricity. I have four children and have to care for a disabled  brother by selling simple goods in the streets." And that's the type of person  the Iraqi military was advancing on, that's the type of person that scares Nouri  so that he orders military helicopters to patrol the air space above Liberation  Square.  Jonathan Blakley (NPR's The Two-Way  blog) reports , "Security forces lined the streets of central Baghdad with  riot gear.  Authorities didn't bother issuing a curfew or banning traffic in the  normally congested city, but entrances into Baghdad province were blocked to  motor vehicles.  At times, traffic passed through Baghdad's Tahrir Square as the  protesters, numbering between 500 and 1,000 shouted into megaphones and waved  anti-government banners."  Dar Addustour notes  that the  protesters are calling on Nouri al-Maliki to listen to them. Aswat al-Iraq quotes  activist Emad  Karim stating, "Dozens of citizens went to streets on Friday billed as 'Friday  of Truth', calling for better services and fighting corruption." Yahya Barzanji, Bushra Juhi and Lara Jakes  (AP) report  protesters decried the way they had been treated by  Iraqi forces in previous protests.  Sami Majid pointed to the February 25th and  explained, "They beat and kicked me, then forced me to sign a commitment that I  would not participate in demonstrations or raise riots."  Khalid Walid (Iraqhurr.org) reports  that riot police  descended on the protesters late in the afternoon, using batons to intimidate  and disperse them and that Ali Kamal declared that Nouri al-Maliki has stated  reforms will come in 100 days and that they will continue demonstrating and that  they have little to no confidence in the government.  Dar Addustour  reports that protesters in Najaf carried flowers as they called for an  end to corruption, improved basic services and ration card items. Aswat al-Iraq notes  protesters in  Nassiriya are criticizing the way security forces have treated protesters. In  Falluja, Dar Addustour reports , protesters  called for an end to random arrests. Aswat al-Iraq notes  that Falluja  saw a crackdown ahead of the protest with "a vehicle and bike ban around the  protest region."  Yahya Barzanji, Bushra Juhi and Lara Jakes  (AP) report  approximately 4,000 people turned out to protest in  Sulaimaniyah.  Saman Mahmoud Mawloud (Reuters) reports   one Sulaimaniyah protester attempted to burn himself but was stopped by other  activists, notes the protesters chanted for KRG President Massoud Barzani to  step down and quotes Nasik Qadir stating, "There has been no response from the  government. We are here to change the despotic system, end the corruption in  Kurdistan. People feel the corruption and want jobs, justice and services."     Al Mada reports that Hilla saw two  protests and the demands included that the govenor of Babel Province (Babylon  Province is another term used for it and the term Al Mada uses) be elected  directly and not via quotas. They also called for an end to unemployment, all  ration card items being available and reductions in the costs of water and  electricity.  Those were some of the demands of the first group.  The second  group had overlapping demands and some of their own demands as well.  They agree  that a new governor is needed and they want qualifications for the office --  including that he or she must hold a bachelor's degree.   In an opinion piece, Al Mada argues  that the protests taking place in  Baghdad's Tahrir Square have dug a grave for and buried sectarian politics and  forced sectarian politics to fall away by pulling sectarian politicians and  their constituents apart, and that the biggest victors are young Iraqis who,  among other things, trained themselves in something that was not possible in  Iraq's previous five decades, protesting the rulers.  This training creates a  bond between today's Iraqi youths and those of the 1940s and 1950s who also  engaged in cross-sectarian demonstrations.  Al Mada sees the protests as  strengthening the notion of "Iraqi" and of "citizen."  Yesterday, Nouri al-Maliki spoke to Parliament . . . and again heaped scorn  on the protesters.  Why, oh, why, hasn't anyone apologized for the Iraqi  security forces and police who were hurt in protests?  When young boys are  killed in protests by security forces, that asshole has a lot of nerve trying to  grand stand.  Nouri's little forces have behaved like the thug they work for.   That's reality.  Dar Addustour reports  one of Nouri's  'finest,' the man in charge of the Rapid Response Brigade got caught by the  Integrity Commission in the process of accepting a $50,000 bribe.  And?  He  ordered the forces to attack the Integrity Commission, he ordered the forces to  attack them and beat them -- beat nine of them, leaving them all wounded and  three of the nine requiring hospitalization.  That's Nouri al-Maliki's  thugs..        A group of anti-government protesters missing since they were  arrested this week in Baghdad are feared to be at risk of torture, after other  recently released protestors told Amnesty International they were tortured in  detention.
 At least 10 people were detained on Monday while returning  home from a Baghdad protest against unemployment, government corruption and poor  social services.
 
 The arrests came as other protesters who were  detained last month told Amnesty International that they were tortured in  detention.
 
 "We fear there is a real risk of torture for those arrested  on Monday, especially as their whereabouts in detention is yet to be disclosed.  This seems to be following a pattern of protesters being detained and tortured  as the Iraqi government tries to crackdown on demonstrations," said Malcolm  Smart, Amnesty International's director for the Middle East and North Africa.
 
 "The authorities must immediately reveal where these latest detainees  are held and release them if they have been detained solely for exercising their  legitimate right to protest."
 
 Those detained on Monday include Ala'  Sayhoud, Ma'an Thamer, 'Ali Abdel Zahra' and Muhammad Kadhim Finjan. They were  arrested by Iraqi security forces in Baghdad's  al-Batawin area after they  participated in a demonstration in the city's Tahrir Square on Monday.
 
 Two recently released activists have told Amnesty International that they  were tortured or otherwise ill-treated in detention after they were arrested in  connection with recent protests.
 
 Abdel-Jabbar Shaloub Hammadi, who was  detained without charge for 12 days following his arrest on 24 February, the day  before a planned 'Day of Rage' protest in Baghdad, was beaten and tortured  throughout his first five days in detention.
 
 "They beat me a lot and  kept me suspended every day for nearly 15 hours. In one method they tied my  hands and legs together behind by back and left me hanging by a rope; in the  other they suspended me from the wrists and left me standing on the tips of my  toes on a chair - both were very painful," Hammadi told Amnesty International.
 
 Journalist Hadi al-Mehdi, who was arrested on 25 February, told  Amnesty International he received electric shocks to his feet and was threatened  with rape during his interrogation by police.
 
 "The Iraqi authorities  claim that they are stamping out torture but as these testimonies show it  continues to be used against detainees and the perpetrators appear to believe  they can act with impunity," said Malcolm Smart.
 
 "The authorities must  order an immediate independent investigation into all allegations of torture and  those responsible for torture must be exposed and brought to justice."
 
 As calls for reform persist in the country, Amnesty International has also  called on the Iraqi authorities respect the right of assembly and freedom of  expression.
       Amnesty International has welcomed yesterday's release of four  anti-government protesters reported missing since their arrest in Baghdad on  Monday and called on the authorities to free others still in  detention.
 The four were among at least 10 people detained while  returning home from a protest against unemployment, government corruption and  poor social services.
 
 "While the release of these four detainees is a  welcome step, the authorities must reveal where the remaining detainees are held  and release them if they have been detained solely for exercising their  legitimate right to protest," said Malcolm Smart, Amnesty International's  director for the Middle East and North Africa.
 
 "The Iraqi authorities  must also ensure that those still in detention are not tortured or ill-treated  and order an immediate independent investigation into all previous allegations  of torture, bringing those responsible to justice."
 
 Those detained on  Monday include Ala' Sayhoud, Ma'an Thamer, 'Ali Abdel Zahra' and Muhammad Kadhim  Finjan.
 
 They were arrested by Iraqi security forces in Baghdad's  al-Batawin area after they participated in a demonstration in the city's Tahrir  Square.
 
 As calls for reform persist in the country, Amnesty International  has also called on the Iraqi authorities to respect the right of assembly and  freedom of expression.
   Nouri has disappeared protesters and he had the never to stand up in front  of the Parliament yesterday and trash the protesters.  Dar Addustour reports  that the  al-Sadr bloc heard the speech (the same one Shuster's praising) and have demand  that Nouri apologize to Iraqis. They were offended by his labeling groups  supporters of Saddam or Ba'athists. They note he had little to offer other than  demonization. Other Arabic articles note the snide tone of the speech and  generally emphasize Nouri's insistence that the government in Iraq will not be  changed except by elections. It was a thuggish speech by a pompous ass who  history needs to take down. Al Mada notes that MP Sabah  al-Saadi was not impressed by Nouri's song and dance yesterday and asserts that  the measures Nouri has proposed do not get to the root of the problems, that  instead of offering "frank talk," Nouri's plan proposes cover ups of the  corruption. Do we remember the other reason why Nouri was meeting  with Parliament? Right that Cabinet he's never been able to fill. DPA reports , "Top appointments at  Iraqi's key defence, interior and national security ministries have been pushed  back a week due to disagreements among the country's political blocs, an Iraqi  lawmaker said Friday."   Moving over to some of the violence reported in today's news cycle, Al Rafidayn reports  late yesterday there  was an attempt to rob a Baghdad jewelry store and 6 people ended up being killed  -- four police officers and two bystanders.  Aswat al-Iraq reports  a man killed his  father today in Mosul .Also,  Aswat al-Iraq reports  a Kirkuk car  bombing left eleven people injured.  Turning to the US . . .    Get on your pony and ride Get on your pony and ride No one to catch up to you If you try No one to catch up to you If you try 'Cause I tried 'Cause when the mind that once was open shuts And you knock on the door, nobody answers anymore When the love and trust has turned to dust  When the mind that once was open shuts When you knock on the door, nobody answers anymore When the love and trust has turned to dust - "Too Late," written by John Phillips, first appears on The Mamas and the  Papas' The Papas & The Mamas.   A few got on their pony's this week.  Shocked! Simply shocked! By the lack  of coverage of the wars.  In one case, they were noting service members -- for  the hour! -- and expressed their shock and outrage that the people don't follow  the wars.  The people don't or the talk shows hosts don't?  Ava  and I waited all week to see what would happen  for one woman when Friday rolled around.  Having hopped on her pony earlier in  the week, would she suddenly remember Iraq today?  Uh, no.  And we'll  be assisting two who rode their high horses early in the week off of them --  with a hard push -- at Third  on Sunday.  Yesterday's snapshot  covered the Senate Armed  Services Committee hearing (on threats to the US) and Ava covered the hearing at  Trina's site last night in "Senate Armed Services  Committee ."  The hearing also tossed out a brief nod to WikiLeaks.   March 29th, Frontline  (PBS) airs a report on Bradley Manning . Last night,The NewsHour (PBS) offered  excerpts  focusing on Brian Manning, Bradley's father. Who is Bradley?Monday April  5th , WikiLeaks released US  military video  of a July 12, 2007 assault in Iraq. 12 people were  killed in the assault including two Reuters  journalists Namie Noor-Eldeen and  Saeed Chmagh. Monday June  7th , the US military announced that they had arrested Bradley Manning  and he stood accused of being the leaker of the video. Leila Fadel  (Washington Post) reported  in August that Manning had been  charged -- "two charges under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. The first  encompasses four counts of violating Army regulations by transferring classified  information to his personal computer between November and May and adding  unauthorized software to a classified computer system. The second comprises  eight counts of violating federal laws governing the handling of classified  information." Manning has been convicted in the public square despite the fact  that he's been convicted in no state and has made no public statements --  despite any claims otherwise, he has made no public statements. Manning has been  at Quantico in Virginia, under military lock and key, for months. Earlier this  month, David S. Cloud (Los Angeles Times) reported  that  the military has added 22 additional counts to the charges including one that  could be seen as "aiding the enemy" which could result in the death penalty if  convicted. David E. Coombs is Bradley's  attorney and he provided a walk through on Article 104 . Like many, Sophie Elmhirst (New Statesman) emphasized  the  possibility of the death penalty.  Brian Manning believes his son is innocent.  Bradley may well be.  The only  'evidence' offered to the public thus far comes from a convicted felon (whose  record actually goes back to pre-18 y.o. though the press hasn't been interested  in that) who became a government snitch to protect his own ass.  That's a  reliable witness?   Bradley may be innocent.  In the US, you are innocent unless you are proven  guilty.  Those writing pieces on Bradley to help him?  Kevin Zeese, you and your  friends need to stop convicting Bradley in your badly written columns.  You're  doing the government's job for them and you're showing no respect for Bradley or  for the presumption of innocence.  Bradley is not a political football.  He is a  very, very young man facing very serious charges.  He should not be treated like  Laura Dern's character in Citizen Ruth.  There's far too much at  stake for Bradley.  Whereas, we've seen this movie before.  We saw a number of  the same participants pretend to care about Ehren Watada but write pieces that  helped no one but their own pet causes. We saw a 'reporter' whine about herself  and how Ehren -- who was actually facing charges -- wasn't clearing her name.      If you're supporting Bradley, you need to support him.  That means he's  innocent unless he says otherwise or is convicted.  That means you stop doing  the government's work for it by writing these ridiculous pieces where you  explain -- YOU EXPLAIN -- why he did it.  YOu don't know that he did a thing.   Stop writing those bad, bad pieces.  And stop linking to Julian Assange because  that's what the US government is trying to do.  You're not helping Bradley and  you're not helping Assange.     BBC News' Philippa Thomas (currently on sabbatical)  reports at her website that yesterday at MIT, US State Dept spokesperson  Philip J. Crowley was asked and commented that the actions the Defense Dept has  taken against Bradley are "ridiculous and counterproductive and stupid."  Yet he  wasn't calling for Bradley to be released because he quickly added,  "Nonetheless, Bradley Manning is in the right place."  And that sort of thinking  goes along way towards explaining how the US government can continue supporting  a despot like Nouri al-Maliki -- rationalize that away, rationalize the  brutality aimed at Bradley who has not been convicted of a damn thing.  But he's  where he belongs, according to Crowley.     Are US troops where they belong too?  Because seems like this never ending  illegal war was supposed to have ended sometime ago.  Adrian Hairapetian (Clark Chronicle)  observes , "The  war in Iraq. Merriam-Webster defines war as a 'struggle or competition between  opposing forces or for a particular end.' This impels me to ask: what end? It's  been almost seven years, and we still haven't seen this end. " The ongoing  Iraq War has an anniversary coming up and there will be protests in the US. A.N.S.W.E.R . and  March Forward!  and others will be  taking part in this action: 
     March 19 is the 8th anniversary of  the invasion and occupation of Iraq. Iraq today remains occupied by 50,000 U.S.  soldiers and tens of thousands of foreign mercenaries.   The war in Afghanistan is raging.  The U.S. is invading and bombing Pakistan. The U.S. is financing endless  atrocities against the people of Palestine, relentlessly threatening Iran and  bringing Korea to the brink of a new war.   While the United States will spend  $1 trillion for war, occupation and weapons in 2011, 30 million people in the  United States remain unemployed or severely underemployed, and cuts in  education, housing and healthcare are imposing a huge toll on the people.   Actions of civil resistance are  spreading.   On Dec. 16, 2010, a veterans-led  civil resistance at the White House played an important role in bringing the  anti-war movement from protest to resistance. Enduring hours of heavy snow, 131  veterans and other anti-war activists lined the White House fence and were  arrested. Some of those arrested will be going to trial, which will be scheduled  soon in Washington, D.C.   Saturday, March 19, 2011, the  anniversary of the invasion of Iraq, will be an international day of action  against the war machine.   Protest and resistance actions  will take place in cities and towns across the United States. Scores of  organizations are coming together. Demonstrations are scheduled for San  Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington, D.C., and more.         |