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View Full Version : Surveying the Web: Mobilizing Online Against War



thedrifter
03-11-03, 11:45 AM
By Cynthia L. Webb
washingtonpost.com Staff Writer
Tuesday, March 11, 2003; 8:12 AM


The Pentagon is proudly displaying its technological superiority as it ramps up for a possible war with Iraq, but antiwar groups too are engaged in a high-tech mobilization to protest a U.S. military intervention.

Hundreds of Web sites -- many cross-linked to sympathetic groups in a grassroots effort to drum up support -- are urging Americans and people worldwide to take action. Site visitors are urged to download antiwar posters, sign online petitions and send chain e-mail letters to friends and lawmakers. The Internet is allowing antiwar groups to communicate nationwide and across the globe in ways hardly possible during any other conflict in American history.

Last month, Moveon.org (www.moveon.org) and the Win Without War coalition (www.winwithoutwarus.org) organized a "Virtual March" on Washington, asking Americans to call their members of Congress and inundate Capitol Hill with e-mail and faxes. The groups claimed more than 85,000 people participated in the online protest.

On March 15, groups opposed to a war with Iraq are planning protests in several U.S. cities, including Washington, San Francisco and Los Angeles. Over the next several days, washingtonpost.com will survey the antiwar movement's use of the Internet to spread its message, looking at how national, religious, student and other groups are conducting their organizing campaigns. On Friday this feature will look at online campaigns employed by groups supporting President Bush's policy on Iraq.

Yesterday, Moveon.org and other antiwar organizations were posting a letter on their Web sites for readers to sign and submit online to protest President Bush's push for a second U.N. Security Council resolution to authorize force against Iraq. Moveon.org said it planned to submit the letters to members of the security council.

While e-mail has been used to flood lawmaker's inboxes, online faxes have become another powerful tool of the antiwar movement. Washington-based True Majority -- an education and advocacy nonprofit group -- offers a link on its home page (www.truemajority.org) that users can click "to send free faxes to Congress and the president telling them we can win without war and they should let the inspections work."

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A9405-2003Mar11.html


Sempers,

Roger

wrbones
03-11-03, 03:39 PM
I sent the reporter an email suggesting that she might take a look at the other side of the issue as well.

eddief
03-11-03, 06:05 PM
Ar least 70% of America is for the war. The peace protestors can't stop anything. The war is inevitable barring a Hussein exile miracle.