It is better to "talk, talk. talk, talk, talk" for 10,000 years, than to waste even one drop of blood for an unjust and unnecessary war.
Peace Vigils

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Peace on Good Friday
 - Please join us -
- Silent Peace Vigils on Friday Afternoons 5-5:30
- Rain or Shine, let your silence be heard! 
- Pro-peace or Anti-war messages only, please.
- No personal nor political bashing.
- Join those who share your concerns and take a stand for your convictions. 
- Signs are provided.
-
Meet across the street from the Post Office on College Street in Macon, Georgia. 




  http://www.answercoalition.org





 




   30 Minutes of Silence Can Say a Lot!
Meet across the street from the Post Office on College Street in Macon, Georgia.

  Friday Afternoons 5-5:30 



Military members join the movement ---
 Appeal For Redress .org
and
Vote Vets.org



  Christian vigils:
 
www.christianpeacewitness.org  
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  Posted on Thu, Mar. 29, 2007
http://www.macon.com/mld/macon/news/editorial/letters/16988987.htm

We have been grossly ignorant of history

As evidence of further hypocrisy and incompetence mounts for the Bush administration, it is important to grasp the significance of a very sensible move by the president: Sending the secretary of state to the conference on the future of Iraq.

Why should this shift by the president be considered worthwhile? To answer requires a review of the war in Iraq. Before the war I wrote to you and the president imploring that we heed the advice of inspectors who had found no WMDs. The potency of nerve gas stores had dissipated at least a dozen years earlier. Saddam Hussein had no involvement in 9/11, and there are many despots worse than he.

Our dependency on foreign oil has kept us silent regarding the fact that the 9/11 terrorists came from Saudi Arabia. Iraqis did care enough about democracy to vote, but their primary allegiance is to faith and tribe. In spite of our efforts, electric power remains below prewar levels. Estimates have placed the percentage of international terrorists at less than 10 percent of combatants in Iraq.

The vast majority of insurgents are from two groups: (1) Iraqis who do not want us there, not unlike the way good ol' boys in Georgia would drive out any occupying army, and (2) Sunnis and Shiites embroiled in an age-old civil war. An unprecedented number of generals have spoken against the war, and recently a military poll revealed that a majority of our troops no longer believe in the mission. Last, if Gen. Petraeus is the very best at this type of war, why have we not heard of him before now?

In this context the merit of our seeking a heretofore maligned diplomatic solution becomes clear. I celebrate the president's decision to take part in the Iraq conference. There is no doubt that our valiant troops can reduce violence in areas of Iraq temporarily. But when we leave an area, the roaches scurry back. This analogy holds for our entire involvement in Iraq. We have been grossly ignorant of history to believe we could implant our ways in Iraq and leave.

Likewise, it has been naive to believe we could control the influence on Iraq from its neighbors by threatening them. We will not be there forever, but a glance at a map reveals that Iran, Syria, Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Egypt will be. Our only chance to have a lasting impact on Iraq will be through efforts to create a long-term plan for the region. We must recognize that those nations - like it or not - will shape the future in the Middle East for good or ill. If we can assist them in negotiating an agreement (perhaps partitioning Iraq and its oil revenues as the Kurds are already doing), that is likely to be the best we can hope for.

Eradicating al-Qaida continues to be the real goal for all of us. Great Britain and Pakistan demonstrated the best approach toward al-Qaida a few months ago when they shared intelligence from careful police work. Suspected terrorists were arrested without violence and without an army. My belief that this is the best approach is based on our experience with terrorists which indicates that they tend to band together in small cells of 20 or fewer members throughout the world.

Roby M. Kerr is a resident of Macon.


Old Testament links US All


Moses brought new laws and new regulations for his people. Moses (peace be upon him) not only gave the Ten Commandments to the Israelites, but a very comprehensive ceremonial law for the guidance of his people.

As regards to Jesus (peace be upon him) he took a strong stand to assure the Jews that he had not come with a new religion or new regulations different from what Moses brought to the world. Jesus was quoted in the gospel of Matthew 5:17-18 saying "Think not that I am come to destroy the Law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to fulfill for verily I say unto you, till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one title shall in no way pass from the law, till all be fulfilled."

Mohammad (peace be upon him) took the pains to assure what Jesus had assured before him to the world. Mohammad also came to fulfill not to deny or destroy what Moses had established and what Jesus confirmed.

You can read in the Holy Quran chapter 2 verse 62 "Those who believe in the Quran, and those who follow the Jewish scriptures and the Christians and the Sabians, and any who believe in God and the last day, and work righteousness, shall have their reward with their Lord; On them shall be no fear, nor shall they grieve."

Muslims have been warned many times in the Quran not to discriminate against any previous laws or scriptures that were revealed upon Abraham, Moses and Jesus and all must be believed in and must be admitted throughout Muslim behavior. The Quran stated in chapter 2, verse 136 "Say you: We believe in God, and the revelation given to us, and to Abraham, Ishmail, Isaac, Jacob, and the tribes, and that given to Moses and Jesus, and that given to all prophets from their Lord: We make no difference between one and another of them, and we bow to God in peace."

That is why there has never been quoted any statement by a Muslim against the person of Abraham, Moses or Jesus. It always has and always will be, one law and one message from the Lord of Universe to the mankind.

Ahmed Yousef is a resident of Macon.
http://www.macon.com/mld/macon/news/editorial/letters/17002920.htm
Posted on Mon, Apr. 02, 2007

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