It was still raining when the assistant chief of Brunswick Police begged us not to block the road during our air show protest yesterday. I kind of regretted that we weren't planning to do that and I felt even more FOMO after a huge tanker trunk entered the main gate of Brunswick Landing and my husband called out, "Jet fuel!" A former pilot, he is aware as many of us are that jet fuel is among the worst petroleum products in terms of greenhouse gas emissions.
Forty people gathered to object to the promotion of the U.S. Air Force Thunderbirds and their role in the Gaza genocide on opening day of the Great State of Maine Air Show.
While the band took a break we heard from speakers including Trish, a U.S. Army veteran wearing fatigues painted with the words "I can't comply with genocide, can U?" A fitting message to mark the 300th day of Israel's assault on Gaza at an event registered with ShutitDown4Palestine.org.
Faisal Khan spoke about the devastation in Gaza and the need for us to stay focused on supporting Palestinians, while Barbara West reported back on her recent trip to DC to protest war criminal Israeli PM Netanyahu speaking to Congress.
Beckham shared some of the many grim statistics on death and destruction by Israel, and Tim Paradis spoke of the ongoing organizing of the Maine Coalition for Palestine and encouraged people to get in touch with that growing organization.
Lou Kimball reminded us of Aaron Bushnell's sacrifice and pointed out that, since February when U.S. Airman Bushnell self-immolated over his complicity in genocide, the assaults on Gaza have gotten much, much worse. And Bruce Gagnon, an Air Force vet from the Vietnam war era, reminded us that U.S. warplanes support imperialist aggression in West Asia, East Asia, Africa, and Europe. Connect these dots and we are well on the way to WWIII.
Screen capture from reporter Pearl Small's interview of RosemaryWe also heard from Rosemary on recruiters in the Washington County high school she attended. Later she gave this powerful interview to News Center Maine on the recruiting purposes of air shows like the Thunderbirds. She was also among those handing out flyers linking the air show to recruiting, and sharing some dark facts about Thunderbirds sponsor Pratt & Whitney's complicity in genocide.
The local Times Record also gave our protest some coverage in a long article mostly glamorizing the Thunderbirds pilots. None of the corporate press noted that local residents were angered by the incredible noise levels as the warplanes practiced in the days leading up to the show. Maybe that would account for the dramatically lower number of cars passing through the main gate yesterday? (All of us who've protested past air shows at that venue noticed this.) That tickets were $68 a pop may have also been a factor -- my husband reported a lot of grumbling about this on social media.
The most interesting conversation I had yesterday was with a woman from Connecticut whose family had gone into the air show while she boycotted it. She reported that her 14 year old son is fascinated by planes and other military hardware, and that she walks a fine line between living her own values while also supporting her kid's autonomy and developing ability to make his own judgements. We agreed as moms that raising kids in this toxic militarized culture is difficult. But we won't stop speaking our truths even when they're drowned out by the obscene roar of bombers over the settler colony called New England.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Because of a deluge of spam, I have had to switch to moderated comments. Sorry for the inconvenience.