Archive for the 'Uncategorized' Category

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Medea Benjamin: Stop the next war now!

We are pleased and excited to present this podcast of the Peace and Justice Center of Eastern Maine annual General Assembly program featuring an inspiring talk by world-recognized peace activist MEDEA BENJAMIN. Medea spoke at Wellman Commons on the old campus of the Bangor Theological Seminary, Bangor, Maine on Thursday May 11, 2006.

Medea visited us on her way to a Mother’s Day weekend vigil at the White House for a Mother’s nationwide call for peace in Iraq and Iran including Susan Sarandon, Cindy Sheehan, Randi Rhodes, Dolores Huerta, and Patch Adams.

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73 min; 17 MB; 32 kbps mp3; download link here ->

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Geshe Lobzang Tsetan on inner peace

Khen Rinpoche Geshe Lobzang TsetanOn Tuesday April 18, 2006, Tibetan Buddhist monk Khen Rinpoche Geshe Lobzang Tsetan spoke in Bangor, Maine on “Finding Inner Peace in a Time of Conflict.”

This program was sponsored by the Peace & Justice Center of Eastern Maine. Professor Doug Allen of the Peace Center and the University of Maine Department of Philosophy assists in the presentation and Sonja Peronsky introduces the speaker.

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85 min; 38 MB; 64 kbps mp3; download link here ->

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Doug Allen on war and peace

This excellent podcast is a reflective and philosophical look at major ideas and forces shaping war and peace over the last six decades. It opens up a chance to discuss and evaluate the peace movements in which most of the audience members have been active. We do too little of the kind of reflection and rarely discuss the philosophical insights that Doug offers in this valuable program.

The program is part of the University of Maine Spring 2006 Socialist and Marxist Studies Spring Lecture Series and is entitled THE U.S. SIXTY YEARS AFTER WORLD WAR II: WAR MAKING AND PEACE BUILDING, SOME HISTORICAL AND PHILOSOPHICAL REFLECTIONS, with Professor Doug Allen, philosophy.

DOUG ALLEN: In my view, there is tremendous potential for peace making. It seems to me that the dominant, disastrous US policies in Iraq have shown ever more clearly, the clear contradictions in US policies, and the limits of war making and empire building–even for the world’s only superpower. I have no doubt that US power has peaked. And in the coming decades we shall observe the decline in US power relative to the rest of the world. Pre-emptive war and overt overwhelming military force and domination–instead of mutuality, peace building, and reconcilliation–are short-sighted attempts at maintaining an expanding US empire.

I feel that US peace makers are gaining much greater voices, and that in the coming decades, there will be more and more opportunities for urgently-needed peace building; local, national, and global consciousness of life-affirming and life-sustaining interrelatedness, and successful struggles for reconcilliation grounded in peace with justice.

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69 min; 16 MB; 32 kbps mp3; download link here ->