Fort Manning: A 3 day occupation of the Los Angeles court house

Free Bradley Manning So Cal presents: “Fort Manning: A Three Day Occupation of the Federal Court House in LA!”. With musical performances, marches, vigils, assemblies and more! July 13-16th, 2012. We encourage everyone to attend!

 

 

6 thoughts on “Fort Manning: A 3 day occupation of the Los Angeles court house

  1. Free Bradley and put in prison all his enemies… ! to punish someone for your own evil crimes is a damned to hell one… ! the USA government will pay dearly for their crimes. damn them

  2. I look at Bradley Manning and see my son. Starting out in life thinking he should do the right thing. Only to be crushed by power that cares not for the murders, torture, the imprisonment, and the massive misery inflicted on innocents. I hope he knows that there are mothers who worry for him. I hope he knows there are mothers who are proud of him. I hope he knows we love him just because he is Bradley Manning.

  3. Jail the war criminals, thugs, brutes, murderers, child-molesters and psychopaths- NOT THE WHISTLEBLOWERS and TRUTHTELLERS!@%^7

    • No thugs and brutes…I have a couple cousins who fit that description. But, yes, please imprison all bankers, insurance types, politicians, cops, etc.
      Iceland did it. Why can’t we?……

  4. Bradley has friends in the highest places… let all his enemies be burned and damned to damned hell… no exceptions,no excuses. Hugh

    Mary Tucker-Pettersen… lovely and true.

    n.b. the United States of America is a disgrace.

  5. What he did (or is accused of doing) evokes such a complicated feeling in me that I hesitate to even try. But let’s just say I waited for so long for someone to do this. To actually ….disobey the secrecy orders that are causing *so *much *death *and *destruction. And he actually went through channels, which people forget. He tried to go through the “chain of command” and they told him to stuff it. So what’s the moral obligation? Turn a blind eye to murder?

    He faced his own ruin because he is part of something larger—part of something that reaches and includes all of us.

    I think the best way to honor what Bradley did (?)is to each of us, in our own lives, tell what we know about what goes wrong even if it gets us in trouble. We all have to become whistle-blowers and face the music. This is the only way we’re going to save ourselves.
    It’s not as easy as it sounds. What happens to whistle-blowers? They get shunned. They lose their jobs. Their action benefits people they’ve never met, and severely cripples their own lives and livelihoods. How do you know what to do? What to tell and when? But if he can sit in that jail for these hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of days now, then we can do our part. Whatever that is and however it works out in our own lives.

    I have my Bradley postcards located throughout the house, on the fridge, tucked into a bathroom cabinet, where I can get a glimpse of his face at random times during the day. It always makes me feel better.

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