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Join a Day of Action to Support Diplomacy With Iran

Today people across the country will gather outside congressional offices in support of diplomacy over war.

NationAction

August 25, 2015

To express support for the nuclear accord with Iran, a member of Code Pink interrupts Republican Presidential candidate and Senator Ted Cruz during a demonstration by the Concerned Women for America Legislative Action Committee (CWALAC), an organization opposed to the deal. (AP Photo/Luis M. Alvarez)

What’s going on?

We have only a few weeks to convince members of Congress to support the historic deal to limit Iran’s nuclear program. If hawks get their way and are able to sabotage the deal, it would put us back on the path to confrontation with Iran and greatly increase the possibility of war.

What can I do?

Our friends at MoveOn, WinWithoutWar, Democracy for America, Credo, and numerous other organizations have organized a Day of Action for today, August 26. To ensure that members of Congress hear from their constituents before they return from summer recess, people across the country will gather outside congressional offices in support of diplomacy over war. Click here to find an event near you.

If you can’t make it to a protest, you can still be a part of this historic day of action. MoveOn will be hosting a thunderclap on Facebook, Twitter, and Tumblr. And if you haven’t done so already, be sure to join the nearly half a million Americans who have signed our petition to members of Congress demanding they choose diplomacy over war.

Learn More

The Nation has consistently called attention to the dangers we face if we reject diplomacy with Iran. Shortly after the deal was announced, the magazine called the accord a “victory for all who favor patient, sometimes frustrating diplomacy over those who favor confrontation, even war,” and lauded its potential to transform US-Iran relations. More recently, David Bromwich pointed out that the same people rejecting the deal with Iran also supported the disastrous invasion of Iraq; James Carden asked why The New York Times would publish an article on the deal filled with neoconservative talking points, and Noam Chomsky asserted that, contrary to the proclamations made by many politicians, Iran is not the “greatest threat to world peace.”

NationActionThe Nation’s Take Action program directs readers to meaningful actions on a range of critical issues.


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