| Friday, September 9, 2011. Chaos and violence continue, protest erupt in  Iraq, an assassin or assassins killed yesterday but Hadi al-Medhi is not  forgotten, Iraqis and human rights and journalism organizations call for his  killer(s) to be brought to justice, the Sadr bloc wants to oust the Speaker of  Parliament, Nouri wants to hush up the judge heading the corruption  investigations, and more.   "They promised to serve the people while all they did  is loot! " was one of the cries in Baghdad's Tahrir Square this morning. Alsumaria TV observes ,  "Massive demonstrations  took place in Iraq provinces on Friday."  Dar Addustour notes  that protests took  place in several cities as protesters demanded basic services, jobs and reforms  with some activists calling for early elections as well.  The paper explains  that there were attempts to halt the protest in Baghdad by tightening security  and blocking off roads; however, citizens turned out in the "thousands"  We'll come back to Baghdad but demonstrations took place across Iraq on  what is called the Dawn of The Liberators.  The Great Iraqi Revolution posts video of the protest  in Ramadi  where the chants included "We're coming to Baghdad, we're  all soldiers to liberate Baghdad! "  Aswat al-Iraq reports  protests took  place in Hilla as well with citizens demands ("handed to the Provincial  Council") including "dissolving the council, relieving Babil governor from his  post, putting to account all corrupted governmental officials, activation of  industrial, trade, service, agricultural and sodial services, protection of  civil freedoms and adopting talented people for building the new society."  A  council member responded that the governor is "on probation" and that the other  issues are issues that the central government out of Baghdad (Nouri) has to  address.  The Great Iraqi Revolution reports  that in Wasit  Province's Kut, "the government refused to grant the activists the permit  required.  Anti riot forces armed with guns, armors and armored vehicles,  ambudlances and police cars are spread in and around the city specifically Amel  Square in Kut; and invidiual searches are carried out as well."  And they report  that "security forces in Wasit  province arrested a large number of the demonstrations organizers and the number  of detainees exceeded 50 people, among them the activists Sayed Jaber and Sajad  Salem were arrested in the city of Kut."  Aswat al-Iraq reports  on the protest in  Falluja where "hundreds of unemployed youths, intellectuals and triable sheiks  demonstrated" and organizer Kahmess Jadan al-Lihaibi explains the demands (end  to corruption, employment, basic services and a functioning judicial system)  included "stopping the work in Kuwaiti Morbarak terminal and calling the UN to  intervene to terminate Iranian and Turkish atrocities against Iraqi borders."   The outlet reports  on the protest in Diwaniya as  well noting that the "hundreds" of participants included members of the  Socialist Movment, NGOs, Democratic and Communist parties "and some well-known  personalities" and they quote the Communist Party's Jabbar al-Shaibani stating  that "the demonstration marched with 500 citizens, including women and children,  who raised placards denoucning the government and demanding the central and  local governments the implementation of basic services, otherwise these  demonstrations shall be repeated in stronger manner."  Al Jazeera notes  protests also took place in  Basra and Najaf.  Back to Baghdad, Alsumaria TV notes , " In Baghdad, an Iraqi army  force using batons dispersed a demonstration organized by Abu Ghraib residents,  western Baghdad, in protest against administrative corruption. Demonstrators  staged three rallies in Al Tahrir Square, central Baghdad. The first demanded  the elimination of corruption, the second called for the establishment of FAO  port and the abolition of borders' demarcation with kuwait while the third  objected the visit of Iraqi speaker Ousama Al Nujayfi, and Iraqi Vice President  Tarek Al Hashimi to Saudi Arabia. Security Forces closed all entrances to the  Green Zone and tightened security measures in anticipation to any security  implications."  Something's left out of that, did you catch it?  Let's move over  to Aswat al-Iraq which states  that the  demonstration in downtown Baghdad (Tahrir Square) lasted over three hours and  called for "better services, early elections and termination of corruption" and  that they "shouted against Mubarak terminal and the Turkish and Iranian  atrocities in the north" (Turkey and Iran's armies are shelling and bombing  northern Iraq).  Hmm.  They miss it too.  "The martyr was one of the activists in the movement against corruption and  the curbing of rights and freedoms, through Facebook and through demonstrations  in Tahrir Square.  He was always stressing the need to reject any violation of  the constitution and the law."  That's WG Dunlop (AFP) quoting activist  Zahir al-Jamaa .  Speaking of?  Journalist and activist Hadi al-Mehdi who was  not at the protest today because he was assassinated yesterday .  His face was seen at today's demonstrations across Iraq as, in Baghdad and  throughout, protesters carried photos of Hadi.  The Great Iraqi Revolution  notes , "Our correspondent in Baghdad:: The government forces refused  to release the body of the assassinated journalist Hady Mahdy for the public  funeral arranged by protestors. The did not allow a symbolic funeral to take  place either.// Hady Mahdy , what greatness! They fear you dead or  alive."Dar Addustour calls the assassination of  Hadi "a deep wound in the conscience of Iraq" and Hadi "a shining star in the  honored sky illuminating the path in the stuggle against tyranny."  In Baghdad  today, at the Tahrir protest, activist Hattem Hashem told AFP , "The voice of  Hadi will not be silenced, despite his assassination with a silenced weapon."   Al Jazeera quotes  Hadi once telling the network,  "When we speak up and raise our voices they kill us and tell lies about us."   They describe his weekly radio program:     Music and humour punctuated his pointed attacks on everyone he  thought was ruining Iraq. Taxi drivers were riveted by the show and callers phoned in to  complain about everything - from paying bribes to get running water to  politicians who, once elected, moved to the Green Zone, the heavily guarded  area where many of Baghdad's government institutions are housed. Although his favourite targets were corrupt politicians and the  Iraqi parliament, he also lashed out at armed groups considered  untouchable.   Anne Gowen (Washington Post) reports on  the protest in Baghdad and notes Hadi al-Mahdi, "On his radio program, 'To  Whoever Listens,' Mahdi loudly criticized Iraqi politicians of every stripe,  including Maliki. He had a background in theater, and it showed in his delivery.  He often used humor in his attacks. Maliki's officials often had complained  about Mahdi's views to the radio station that aired the thrice-weekly talk show,  supporters said."   Dina al-Shibeeb (Al Arabiya) reports :      Iraqis reacted to the news of Mahdi's  death with condemnation and criticized a government they see as increasingly  dictatorial and basically unchanged from the rule of its brutal predecessor,  Saddam Hussein.In response to Mahdi's killing, a Facebook group, "We Are  All Hadi al-Mahdi," was created, and has attracted 1,700 members.
 "In a  cowardice operation a criminal hand killed the activist and the organizer of  tomorrow's protest ... " one member wrote, while another commentator said "the  path of freedom has become the path of martyrdom … the revolution has  begun."
 One female reader wrote "write all that comes from your souls and  hearts, we are all corpses that will be buried one day," and another group  member said, "death to Maliki and long live Hadi al-Mahdi."
     Al Mada quotes Hanna Edwar stating,  "Hadi al-Mahdi was a strong voice calling out attacks on freedom and demanding  reforms in the system."  Ali Hussein (Al Mada) cals out the assassination and  "the silencing of voices of truth and justice" seeing similarities between the  current Iraq and Iraq under Saddam Hussein's rule, how "many things have not  changed."  The assassination of Hadi is a cae where "a citizen loses his life  with the utmost simplicity due ot the absence of law and the lack of knowledge  and responsibility on the part of those who are supposed to implement the law."   The assassin accomplished very little because Hadi al-Mahdi remains in the  hearts of Iraqis with the same brilliant smile and childlike features.  Ali  Hussien writes of knowing Hadi and of Hadi's belief in the future of Iraq, of  seeing him last in a Baghdad cafe one evening with friends, full of life and  talking about his future and the future of Iraq and he saw Iraq as an adventure  and living in Baghdad as an adventure.  Ali Hussein ends the column wondering,  "Who killed Hadi al-Mahdi?  I think all of Iraq should be seeking that  answer."     The Committee to Protect Journalists denounced  the assassination and CPJ Deputy Director Robert Mahoney declared, "Iraq remains  one of the most dangerous places for journalists to work, and the Iraqi  authorities' record of impunity for journalist murders is dismal.  Wih this  murder, a strong independent voice in Iraq has been silenced.  Those who carried  out this killing cannot go unpunished."  Human Rights Watch issued the  following : (Beirut) -- Iraqi authorities should conduct an  immediate, full, and transparent investigation into the September 8, 2011  killing of Hadi al-Mahdi, a popular radio journalist often critical of the  government, at his home in Baghdad, and prosecute those responsible, Human  Rights Watch said today."The killing of Hadi al-Mahdi sadly highlights that  journalism in Iraq remains a deadly profession," said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights  Watch. "After more than six years of democratic rule, Iraqis who publicly  express their views still do so at great peril."
 Witnesses at the crime scene  told Human Rights Watch that they saw no evidence of a struggle or theft,  suggesting that the killing was deliberate. Al-Mahdi's cell phone, laptop, and  other valuables were left in the house untouched.
 Al-Mahdi, a freelance  journalist and theater director, had been openly critical of government  corruption and social inequality in Iraq. His popular talk radio  program, "To Whoever Listens," ran three times a week in Baghdad before he left  the show two months ago. The program's appeal was al-Mahdi's fearless and  scathing voice, laced with a sense of humor, Human Rights Watch said. Leading up  to the country's "Day of Anger" mass pro-democracy and anti-corruption  demonstrations on February 25, he became increasingly involved as a vocal  organizer of Iraq's new protest movement in Baghdad.
 Human Rights Watch spoke  with al-Mahdi during the demonstration on February 25, and he stressed the  importance of peaceful protest. As riot police began acting aggressively and  groups of protesters started to throw hundreds of rocks, Human Rights Watch saw  al-Mahdi take a leadership role with those who locked arms and made a human  chain between angry crowds and riot police in an attempt to keep the peace. Many  who did so were injured by rocks or by the riot police's use of force.
 After  the protests, security forces arrested him and three other journalists at a  Baghdad restaurant. They beat and blindfolded them, and  threatened them with torture during their subsequent interrogation.  Al-Mahdi told Human Rights Watch after they were released the next day that  interrogators had forced him, while blindfolded, to sign what he was told was a  criminal confession and also a pledge to refrain from participating in future  demonstrations. He showed Human Rights Watch bruises and red marks on his face,  neck, and shoulders, as well as on his legs and abdomen.
 Al-Mahdi continued  to attend and organize many of the weekly Friday demonstrations that followed in  Baghdad's Tahrir Square. He told Human Rights Watch that on March 4, an unknown  man in the crowd approached him in an intimidating fashion and said that  security forces were watching him, and then listed all of the people al-Mahdi  had called on his phone that day. Al-Mahdi said on March 11 that in the previous  week he had been threatened several times by phone or text message not to return  to Tahrir Square.
 Al-Mahdi was also one of the prominent organizers of a big  demonstration planned for the first Friday after the end of the month-long  Muslim holiday of Ramadan, on September 9. His Facebook profile picture was an  announcement for the demonstration, and he posted the following message  describing threats against him in the hours before his death:
  Enough ... I have lived the last three days in a state of terror. There are  some who call me and warn me of raids and arrests of protesters. There is  someone saying that the government will do this and that. There is someone with  a fake name coming on to Facebook to threaten me. I will take part in the  demonstrations, for I am one of its supporters. I firmly believe that the  political process embodies a national, economic, and political failure. It  deserves to change, and we deserve a better government. In short, I do not  represent any political party or any other side, but rather the miserable  reality in which we live. ... I am sick of seeing our mothers beg in the streets  and I am sick of news of politicians' gluttony and of their looting of Iraq's  riches. The killing of al-Mahdi follows years of  targeted violence against journalists in Iraq. Most recently, on August 29, an  assailant beat a prominent  journalist, Asos Hardi , in  Sulaimaniya with a pistol, requiring Hardi's hospitalization and 32  stitches. Since the start of protests  in Iraq in February over widespread corruption and lack of services, journalists  have faced escalating attacks and  threats , including from members of  the government's security forces. "In  Iraq, we're used to journalists being attacked, but this one was close to the  bone," Ammaral-Shahbander, head of the  Institute for War and Peace Reporting in  Iraq and a friend of al-Mahdi's, told Human Rights Watch after seeing al-Mahdi's  body lying in the kitchen at his home. "This attack was different because  usually journalists here have been killed in the line of duty, and you expect  fatalities in war zones. But sitting in your own home and getting shot like this  is too much to bear." Emad al-Ebadi,  another friend of al-Mahdi's, told Human Rights Watch that al-Mahdi confided  that he was receiving daily death threats via social media and cell phones with  blocked numbers: "He would come to me very upset and angry and shows me the  incoming calls to support his allegations. I used to try always to calm him down  and tell him to not care that much about these phone calls and advise him to be  careful at the same time and stay alert." Al-Ebadi, a television journalist who has frequently  criticized parliamentary and government figures, survived an attempt on his life  on November 23, 2009, when unknown assailants shot him in the neck and  head. Al-Shahbander expressed hope  that al-Mahdi's killing would not deter Iraq's journalists from reporting on  events in the country. "So many  journalists have been kidnapped and killed in Iraq but it doesn't matter how  many are tortured, intimidated, or killed -- journalists will continue doing  their jobs," he said. "This attack just shows how desperate the enemies of  democracy have become."Amnesty International notes :     The killing of a prominent radio journalist in Baghdad highlights  how Iraqi authorities are failing to protect media workers from continued  threats and violence, Amnesty International said today.Hadi al-Mahdi, 44,  was shot twice in the head in his flat in the Karrada district of  Baghdad  yesterday, ahead of a planned protest he was due to attend in the city's Tahrir  Square today.
 Friends have said he had feared for his life after receiving a  string of threats in recent weeks.
 "Journalists continue to pay a high price  amid the ongoing violence in Iraq, and politically motivated attacks like this  must no longer be tolerated," said Philip Luther, Deputy Middle East and North  Africa Director at Amnesty International.
 "Iraqi authorities must roundly  condemn Hadi al-Mahdi's killing, carry out a full investigation to identify and  bring his killers to justice, and ensure other journalists who face threats are  given adequate protection if they request it."
 Al-Mahdi was an outspoken  political critic, and his popular Radio Demozy show "To Whoever Listens" took on  a wide range of issues. No-one across the political spectrum was spared his  scrutiny, and his analysis was described as irreverent and witty, drawing on his  theatrical background.
 Officials in President Nuri al-Maliki's government  had reportedly complained to Radio Demozy about the show.
 Al-Mahdi stopped  broadcasting the show about two months ago, reportedly out of fear for his  safety.
 Earlier this week, al-Mahdi had been using social media sites to  publicize a protest planned for 9 September in Baghdad's Tahrir Square, where he  had been attending weekly protests in recent months.
 Several hours before he  was killed on the eve of the protest, al-Mahdi posted a note on Facebook saying  he felt he was in danger:
 "I have lived the last three days in a state of  terror. There are some who call me and warn of raids and arrests of protesters.  There is someone saying that the government will do this and that. There is  someone with a fake name coming on to Facebook to threaten me."
 Earlier this  year, al-Mahdi had told Amnesty International about how a group of at least 15  soldiers detained him and three other journalists on 25 February, after they had  attended a pro-reform demonstration in Tahrir Square.
 The four journalists  were detained overnight for interrogation at the headquarters of the army's 11th  division, where al-Mahdi was beaten, given electric shocks and threatened with  rape, before being released without charge.
 In August, Iraq's Parliament  passed a new law on legal protections for journalists, who face ongoing  politically motivated threats and attacks. However, the law does not provide for  their physical protection.
 "Al-Mahdi's murder just a month after this new law  was passed merely highlights this major loophole in the measure," said Philip  Luther.
 "Iraqi authorities must redouble their efforts to ensure journalists  can carry out their work in safety."
 
   Hadi al-Mahdi, a theater director and radio anchor who has been  calling for reform, said he was blindfolded and beaten repeatedly with sticks,  boots and fists. One soldier put a stick into Hadi's handcuffed hands and  threatened to rape him with it, he said.  The soldiers accused him of being a tool of outsiders wishing to  topple Maliki's government; they demanded that he confess to being a member of  Saddam Hussein's Baath Party. Hadi told them that he blamed Baathists for  killing two of his brothers and that until recently he had been a member of  Maliki's Dawa Party.  Hadi said he was then taken to a detention cell, his blindfold off,  where he said there were at least 300 people with black hoods over their heads,  many groaning in bloody shirts. Several told him they had been detained during  or after the protests.  Hadi, who comes from a prominent Iraqi family, and his colleagues  were released after their friends managed to make some well-placed phone calls.    "This government is sending a message to us, to everybody," he said  Saturday, his forehead bruised, his left leg swollen.    And many believe the assassination Thursday of Hadi was another message  from the government of Nouri al-Maliki.  NPR's Kelly McEvers Tweeted  yesterday:       Meanwhile there's a battle going on between Nouri and members of  Parliament.  Dar Addustour reports  Nouri is  attempting to force out Judge Rahim Ugaili as the chair of the Integrity  Commission.  At Nouri's request and under intense pressure, Judge Ugaili  tendered his resignation and Parliament is saying not so fast.  Ugaili ticked  off Nouri as a result of his investigation of alleged corruption among  government officials and Nouri wants Ugaili out so that he (Nouri) can go public  with files on his political opponents while ensuring that members of his own  Cabinet -- who do have files as well -- will not be revealed publicly. In other  news of Parliament, the Sadr bloc is attempting to oust Osama al-Nujaifi as  Speaker of Parliament.  Dar Addustour cites  the bloc's Jawad  Hasnawi as stating that and tomorrow Parliament meets to review several  proposals.          In the last two years?  No, the violence didn't vanish after 2007 despite  the way some outlets attempt to spin it.       Timothy McDonald: Baha Mousa was working at a hotel which British  soldiers raided in search of weapons in 2003. He was detained with nine others  and within forty-eight hours, he was dead. An autoposy showed that he suffered  93 injuries including fractured ribs and a broken nose.  His mother wants the  men responsible to be prosecuted.   Baha Mousa's mother: Of course he died as a young man. He was  deprived of his youth and his children.  His sons are deprived by the British  soldiers. They killed him so how could the court release them? We call upon the  British government to reconsider the report.     Laurence Lee: Baha Mousa died at the hands of British soldiers who  were supposed to be making Iraq a better place.  Instead this innocent  26-year-old was subjected to abuse described by this inquiry as "vile and  cowardly," "a grave and shameful episode for Britian. ... Here's the crux of it:  The soldier being filmed [in the video] called a violent bully was the only one  to be jailed even though many more are implicated. The techniques as they're  called, like hooding, are illegal under the Geneva Convention.  Yet Baha Mousa  and nine others were subjected to two days of this. The military unit was  operating in a building without doors in the open.  Soldiers boasted about what  they were doing. It was described as "a free for all."  Even before Baha Mousa  died, the detainees were described as looking like they were in a car crash.   The soldiers were using the so-called five techniques: hooding, sleep  deprivation, use of noise, wall standing and food deprivation. All had been  banned by the British government in 1972. Yet somehow the soldiers knew all  about them.    Somehow they knew these techniques.  In 2003, techniques that had been  banned 31 years before, before any directly involved had even been born, the  soldiers knew these techniques.  Was it past-life recall?  More likely they knew  what to do because they were told what to do.  They were trained to do what they  did.  And the inquiry refused to go there.  At the same time, the inquiry  refused to blame those higher up the chain of command.  If the soldiers weren't  doing what they were instructed to do, then the command should have known about  it.  Their refusal to monitor those serving under them is dereliction of duty.   The report refused to indict the chain of command in any way or form.     Laurence Lee: The report calls for better training and says  soldiers may not have been clear what was allowed.  Lawyers for the Iraq  detainees say that's absurd.    Phil Shiner: We've seen the training materials.  They've managed to  lose the training materials from before the war but we've managed to see the  training materials from 2005 and 2008. And they're riddled -- those materials --  they're riddled with techniques which were clearly unlawful -- harshing, get  them naked and keep them naked if they won't cooperate.   Laurence Lee: This was the biggest inquiry into professional  standards in the British army since the Bloody Sunday investigation into the  killings of unarmed Catholics in Northern Ireland forty years ago.  It tries  simultaneously to say that mistreatment of Iraqis wasn't a one-off but that  there was no general culture of abuse. Based on the evidence, some are likely to  read it as the continuation of a historical pattern.     The final key failure was not holding those in positions of  authority accountable. It is perhaps not surprising that a corporal was the only  person punished. The laws of war, which the British government promotes  elsewhere in the world, states that those in a position of authority who knew or  should have known about a serious offence and failed to prevent it, or to hand  the matter over for prosecution, are themselves guilty of crimes. Senior officers should have been aware of the abuse Mousa was  enduring. The inquiry heard that Mousa and his fellow detainees endured repeated  beatings and hooding. Hooding is one of the "five  techniques" that the British government said 40  years ago it would never use again and is prohibited by the Geneva conventions.  Such acts are not just a few soldiers out of control, but require training and  orders. In fact, given the knowledge of abuse in Iraq in 2003, the most senior  officers and the politicians ultimately in charge should have been aware of the  extent of the abuse that was taking place. There is precious little evidence of  any steps being taken to stop it.    The editorial board of the Arab Times observes , "Predictably, the British Army  response has been that this was an isolated incident. It was not as isolated as  they would believe. It was not the only British military crime in Iraq. There  was Ahmed Kareem, forcibly drowned in May 2003, allegedly by four British  soldiers. Many will say that it was just the most recent in a long line of  British military atrocities, stretching from its colonial period in India, South  Africa, Kenya and elsewhere to, more recently, the troubles in Northern  Ireland."  In addition, Nina Lakhani (Independent of London)  reports , "The Ministry of Defence is facing legal action by the families of  32 dead Iraqi civilians, who they say were killed unlawfully by British troops,  unless it agrees to hold an independent inquiry into the deaths so that lessons  can be learnt. Among the dead are Hanaan Salih Matrood, an eight-year-old girl,  who died after being shot by a British patrol in August 2003. The MoD denies the  deaths were unlawful."   As we wind down, in the US an important tenth anniversary is approaching at  the end of the month:      Haymarket Books 10th Anniversary CelebrationFriday, September  30, 2011
 Galapagos Art  Space
 Brooklyn,  NY
 
 Haymarket Books is ushering in its tenth year of independent  publishing with an evening of drinks, music, and politics at Galapagos Art Space  in Brooklyn on  Friday, September 30.
 
 We hope you will join us as we celebrate our first  decade and lay the foundation for our next decade.
 
 We will be joined by  authors Dave Zirin, Chris Lehmann, Frances Fox Piven, Brian Jones, Moustafa  Bayoumi,  Michael Schwartz, Jose Vazquez, Jeremy Scahill, and Amy Goodman. We  will also have special greetings from Arundhati Roy, Omar Barghouti, John  Carlos, China Mieville,  Mike Davis, Ilan Pappé, Aviva Chomsky, David Barsamian, Wallace Shawn, and other  Haymarket writers.
 
 Doors will open at 7 pm and the event will begin at 8  pm.
 
 Tickets are available now
 
 Info:
 
 Buy tickets
 
 Congratulations to Haymarket on ten years, a populace that reads is not  only educated, it's (more importantly) informed.  Senator Patty Murray is the  Chair of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee.  We'll close with this from her  office on another 10th anniversary, the 9-11 annivesary this Sunday:   FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                     CONTACT:  Murray Press Office  Friday, September 09, 2011                                         (202) 224-2834 Senator Murray's Statement on 10th Anniversary of 9/11  Attacks (Washington, D.C.) -- Today, U.S. Senator Patty Murray released  the following statement as the United States prepares to commemorate the 10th  Anniversary of the September 11th attacks this Sunday.
 "Ten years ago  terrorists attacked our country, our financial center, our military  headquarters, and our sense of security. The shocking pictures from that day are  still fixed in our minds. Our collective history was changed and none of us will  ever be the same. On that day, no matter our differences, where we came from in  life, the region of the country, our race, religion, or political party - we  were all one thing: Americans.
 "This somber anniversary should serve as a  reminder to everyone that there truly is more that binds us than divides us. It  is our freedom: to live, to prosper, to govern ourselves, and yes – even to  disagree. This makes us all Americans.
 "Our great nation has withstood many  challenges. We have learned and grown together as a result of the attacks of  September 11th, and we will never forget that terrible day ten years ago. Our  hearts will forever go out to the victims, their friends and family, the  volunteers and workers, and the police and firefighters and other first  responders who answered the call.
 "Our nation must also pay tribute to the  men and women in uniform who have answered the call to serve after that fateful  day ten years ago. Since the attacks, brave American service members have  stepped forward to serve our nation. Many of these service members have done  more than one tour of duty abroad – sometimes serving, three, four or even more  tours.
 "Many who have served have come from the ranks of our National Guard  and Reserves and have turned a part time commitment into a full time job  protecting our nation. These men and women, who chose to join our all volunteer  force, come from all walks of life and from every corner of our nation. They  serve as a constant reminder of what our nation can accomplish when differences  are put aside in order to move our country forward, and it is our solemn duty to  care for them when they return home.
 "So as we commemorate this unspeakable  tragedy, as we remember the thousands lost, and as we recount the stories of the  heroism and compassion, I urge all Americans to remain vigilant, to remember and  to revisit the common good that still exists between us all."
 ### Meghan Roh   Deputy Press Secretary   Office of U.S. Senator Patty  Murray   @SenMurrayPress   202-224-2834   Get Updates from Senator  Murray       |