WiLL/WAND Torchbearer Award
Delivered at the Sewall-Belmont House in Washington, DC
Saturday, September 13, 2003
Good evening. I am profoundly honored to receive the Torchbearer award from great women leaders who are not ready to consign the twenty-first century to war without end. It is up to us to see that peace is given a chance. When the cold war ended after fifty years with both superpowers aiming--but not triggering--weapons of mass destruction at each other, we thought we were going to live happily ever after. The twentieth century was personified by war, death and destruction: two world wars, Korea, Vietnam, the Gulf War. Of course, there were great breakthroughs--we landed on the moon, we reached out, we led the world in high tech, we promoted civil rights, women's rights and human rights. We thought we had learned our lesson.
The Women Legislators Lobby (WiLL) is a professional organization of state legislators formed in 1990 as a program of WAND (Women's Action for New Directions). WAND's mission is to empower women to act politically to reduce militarism and violence, and to redirect excessive military spending toward unmet human and environmental needs. WAND/WiLL honors Helen Thomas with the 2003 BellSouth Torchbearer Award for her lifelong willingness to ask the "tough" questions and her recent commentary speaking truth to power.
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Letters
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Lap Dogs of the Press
Helen Thomas: During the run-up to the Iraq War, the nation's leading print and broadcast media could have saved lives if they questioned the Administration's pronouncements. Instead, they were an echo chamber for the White House.
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Truth, Fear and War
Helen Thomas: It is up to us to see that peace is given a chance.
As we see our constitutional rights being chipped away by the current administration in the name of patriotism, it's time to call a halt. There is so much at stake not just in terms of human liberty but to try to recapture the way we were--role models for the rest of the world, venerated because we were willing to share our ideals and our wealth with the disadvantaged. We cared.
We have lost our halo, because we represented the...best hopes and ideals of mankind and we have disappointed the world. To be a military superpower does not arrogate to us the right to invade countries, defy laws and dictate to other people. That is not us. It never was. We have no choice--it is imperative for us to take back the dawn.
If we care about the children, the grandchildren, the future generations, we need to make sure that they do not become the cannon fodder of the future. Otherwise history will never forgive us for sitting back and letting the neoconservative hawks prevail. Terrorism per se must be challenged and defeated--but that all-inclusive epithet "terrorism" surely does not fit all sizes and all those who strive for change. Only the bereft would think so. There are better ways we can transform this virulent hatred--by living our ideals, the Peace Corps, exchange students, teachers, exporting our music, poetry, blue jeans. The Pope and other religious leaders, voices of reason and hope, and by keeping our treaties and by understanding that we have nothing to fear but fear itself. Ask not for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for all of us.
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