Over 100 activists were present in Philadelphia the weekend of
June 25-27 to officially christen the new National Network Opposing
the Militarization of Youth (NNOMY). Born from a proposal made
at the "Stopping War Where It Begins" counter-recruitment
conference held a year earlier in Philadelphia, NNOMY is an effort
to bring together the growing number of organizations and activists
who are working against the militarization of young people in
communities across the country. Participating in this first NNOMY
conference were people from California, Colorado, Connecticut,
District of Columbia, Hawai'i, Illinois, Kansas, Maryland, Massachusetts,
Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania,
Vermont, Washington and Wisconsin.
Most of the conference participants represented organizations
that have officially become network members or are considering
doing so. Approximately 30 local, regional and national groups
have joined so far, some of which are: Veterans for Peace, Fellowship
of Reconciliation, Youth Activists/Youth Allies (NY City), Central
Committee for Conscientious Objectors, Pax Christi USA, CHOICES
(D.C.), Project on Youth and Non-Military Opportunities (San Diego),
American Friends Service Committee, Madison Area Peace Coalition,
Teen Peace in Port Townsend (WA), Los Angeles Coalition Opposed
to Militarism in Our Schools, Not in Our Name, Resource Center
for Non-violence in Santa Cruz (CA), and Committee Opposed to
Militarism and the Draft. Additional memberships are pending from
various other organizations.
To promote more effective networking and organizing, caucuses
were formed at the conference around issue and identity themes,
such as women in the military, Latinos, draft-related issues,
rural organizing, people of color, youth of color and LGBTQ (Lesbian,
Gay, Bi-sexual, Transgender, Questioning). To broaden representation
in decision-making, caucuses were invited to apply for membership
status that is equal to regular organizations, and some were included
in a NNOMY steering committee. Ten organizations and six caucuses
were unanimously approved for the steering committee, which will
make between-meeting decisions that are subject to review by the
larger body of voting network members. Also adopted was a proposal
from the youth caucus to have at least two steering committee
members younger than 25, and to pursue the goal of majority representation
by both youth and people of color.
NNOMY will continue to grow and develop plans, but an immediate
course was set at the conference to pursue two goals: facilitating
further development of organizing and educational resources, and
promoting regional training of counter-recruitment organizers.
For the near future, conference participants volunteered to collaborate
on some specific resource development projects, and regional caucuses
met to discuss what they could do to carry out networking and
training in their geographical areas. Progress in these and other
areas will depend on additional post-conference communication,
so the contact information for participants will be incorporated
into the Stopping War email list that was established after the
national conference held in 2003. Caucuses will have their own
communications networks and will, hopefully, continue to work
on the special issues that brought them together.
One important facet of NNOMY is its commitment to including and
supporting the various communities that are especially affected
by military recruiting and the violence of militarism, including
people who are victims of the military's homophobia. And since
the conference dates overlapped with gay pride celebrations nationally,
special materials were given to conference attendees on issues
relating to militarism and sexual identity. An exciting music/spoken
word event was also organized and hosted by the Attic Youth Center
in Philadelphia, one of the few Queer youth centers in the country.
The NNOMY conference itself was co-hosted in Philadelphia by
the American Friends Service Committee and Central Committee for
Conscientious Objectors. Conference planning and other tasks were
shared by a number of groups that had served as an ad hoc steering
committee, but the AFSC Youth and Militarism Program office provided
the bulk of the on-site resources and logistical support, including
the Friends Center where the conference was held.
It was especially appropriate that the founding meeting of this
network occurred in a city where some of the most important revolutionary
events occurred in U.S. history and within days of the anniversary
of the Declaration of Independence. While some of the decisions
that went into the formation of the U.S. government over 200 years
ago were tragically inconsistent with the ideals of liberty and
justice for all, one thing that many of the country's founders
got right was their perception that the growth and influence of
a large military establishment would undermine civil society and
progress toward democracy. Over the last 60 years, this lesson
has been largely forgotten, and the traditional controls over
the military that were once seen as necessary and even taken for
granted have greatly eroded. In addition to the considerable influence
that the Pentagon has over government decisions (including economic
ones), our most important institutions of socialization, the public
schools, are being overrun by people in uniform teaching military
values, and popular culture is being saturated with messages that
popularize soldiering and war. We are rapidly approaching a point
where the long-term effects of militarization will be extremely
difficult to reverse. A massive effort is needed to turn the trend
around, and NNOMY is a crucial step in that direction.
The conference in Philadelphia was a time of sharing, discussing,
strategizing and planning that left us at the end with an important
opening to build a movement that speaks to the needs of constituencies
that have traditionally not been reached very well by the U.S.
peace movement. And because it focuses on interrupting the flow
of human resources and challenging the mechanisms of propaganda
that are needed to wage war, it is an effort that also offers
people an effective way to move from war protest to war resistance,
while at the same time working for long-term social transformation.
For more information, contact NNOMY c/o AFSC Youth and Militarism
Program, 1501 Cherry St., Philadelphia, PA 19102; 215-241-7176;
http://www.youthandthemilitary.org.
This article is from Draft NOtices, the newsletter
of the Committee Opposed to Militarism and the Draft (www.comdsd.org)
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