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Anti-War Protesters Drive Industry-Army Conference from UCSB, Santa Barbara
***For continued breaking information, visit http://www.sbindymedia.org and http://www.sbantiwar.org.***
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: February 13, 2008
(Santa Barbara, CA) -- Anti-war protesters celebrated today after having forced the US Army's Institute for Collaborative Biotechnologies (ICB) to cancel the second day of its annual conference at UC Santa Barbara.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: February 13, 2008
(Santa Barbara, CA) -- Anti-war protesters celebrated today after having forced the US Army's Institute for Collaborative Biotechnologies (ICB) to cancel the second day of its annual conference at UC Santa Barbara.
Upon arriving at UCSB's Corwin Pavilion this morning to engage in a second day of direct action against the conference, protesters found that the building was empty and that facility staff had posted a pair of signs reading, "The ICB Conference Has Been Canceled." Staff at the Hotel MarMonte, where the conference attendees were staying, confirmed that the conference did not occur on the second day.
The day prior, over 500 UCSB students and Santa Barbara community members disrupted the conference to demand an end to UC complicity in illegal weapons research designed to kill Iraqis in an illegal war. The protesters completely disrupted the conference multiple times, including for more than an hour following the lunch period. The day culminated when around 100 chanting protesters entered Corwin Pavilion whereupon roughly 50 lingering conference attendees quickly departed.
The ICB is a $50 million Army-funded research institute hosted by UCSB, with sub-contracts at MIT and the California Institute of Technology. According to the Army's 2006 Budget Justification to Congress, the "ICB is focused on advancing the survivability of both the soldier and weapons systems through fundamental breakthroughs in the area of biotechnology," including sensors, electronics, and photonics for these military applications. The annual conferences feature military-sponsored biotechnology researchers from all over the country.
"The ICB's research directly contributes to the war in Iraq as well as to the US military's long-term project of, to paraphrase the Army, war that will not end in our lifetime. Therefore, it was the most salient target possible for an anti-war protest at UCSB," protest organizer Larri Craig said. "Our victory in this action represents a major triumph of people power over the United States' bloated war machine."
The anti-war direct action movement has been building steadily at UC Santa Barbara during the past year, starting when roughly 1,500 protesters shut down Highway 217 last February 15 to protest the war in Iraq. In other recent actions, students have driven CIA recruiters from campus, conducted a nine-day hunger strike against the University of California's development of nuclear weapons, and conducted a large "critical mass" bike ride from Isla Vista to downtown Santa Barbara.
Epitomizing the militarism that the protesters sought to address, three of them were violently arrested by police, including one UCSB student, and one student was tazered (video footage of all of these incidents is available upon request). At the time of the final arrest, the student in question was standing holding one of the ICB's posters while inside of Corwin Pavilion, when a conference attendee lunged at her and attempted to wrest the poster from her.
Two police officers subsequently rushed the student, wrenched her arms behind her back and threw her to the ground, before forcefully pushing her face-first against glass double doors. Once outside, they threw her face-down on the concrete before roughly dragging her to the police car as she wailed in pain.
***For continued breaking information, visit http://www.sbindymedia.org and http://www.sbantiwar.org.***
The day prior, over 500 UCSB students and Santa Barbara community members disrupted the conference to demand an end to UC complicity in illegal weapons research designed to kill Iraqis in an illegal war. The protesters completely disrupted the conference multiple times, including for more than an hour following the lunch period. The day culminated when around 100 chanting protesters entered Corwin Pavilion whereupon roughly 50 lingering conference attendees quickly departed.
The ICB is a $50 million Army-funded research institute hosted by UCSB, with sub-contracts at MIT and the California Institute of Technology. According to the Army's 2006 Budget Justification to Congress, the "ICB is focused on advancing the survivability of both the soldier and weapons systems through fundamental breakthroughs in the area of biotechnology," including sensors, electronics, and photonics for these military applications. The annual conferences feature military-sponsored biotechnology researchers from all over the country.
"The ICB's research directly contributes to the war in Iraq as well as to the US military's long-term project of, to paraphrase the Army, war that will not end in our lifetime. Therefore, it was the most salient target possible for an anti-war protest at UCSB," protest organizer Larri Craig said. "Our victory in this action represents a major triumph of people power over the United States' bloated war machine."
The anti-war direct action movement has been building steadily at UC Santa Barbara during the past year, starting when roughly 1,500 protesters shut down Highway 217 last February 15 to protest the war in Iraq. In other recent actions, students have driven CIA recruiters from campus, conducted a nine-day hunger strike against the University of California's development of nuclear weapons, and conducted a large "critical mass" bike ride from Isla Vista to downtown Santa Barbara.
Epitomizing the militarism that the protesters sought to address, three of them were violently arrested by police, including one UCSB student, and one student was tazered (video footage of all of these incidents is available upon request). At the time of the final arrest, the student in question was standing holding one of the ICB's posters while inside of Corwin Pavilion, when a conference attendee lunged at her and attempted to wrest the poster from her.
Two police officers subsequently rushed the student, wrenched her arms behind her back and threw her to the ground, before forcefully pushing her face-first against glass double doors. Once outside, they threw her face-down on the concrete before roughly dragging her to the police car as she wailed in pain.
***For continued breaking information, visit http://www.sbindymedia.org and http://www.sbantiwar.org.***
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Congratulations to these brave students and patriotic community members who chose to put human dignity and respect for life above the cruel, morally degenerate research whose sole aim is to develop weapons of mass destruction and terror to be used in a despicable plan for permanent war against those countries like Iran whose leaders seek to chart an independent course for their nation.
It is time for a new foreign policy and a rethinking of the old worn-out cold war strategies that primed the pump of useless military spending and destructive results.
The truth must be faced: It is the United States military that is responsible for the economic depression we are entering today. In the name of protecting national security the various branches of the armed forces and the so-called intelligence establishment has bilked the public with pork-laden billions of totally wasted dollars, largely unaccounted for, and spent without proper oversight or civilian control.
Using the threat of hostile enemy attacks as an excuse to expand American military bases around the globe, and then positioning nuclear weapons on those sites, Bush's policies have produced a hostile and defensive reaction by those nations whose people feel threatened by this unilateral aggressiveness.
Military research on university campuses compromises the purpose of educational enlightenment and converts the academic environment into a spawning ground for biotechnological weapons whose only purpose is to wage war against innocent civilian populations.
It is time for a new foreign policy and a rethinking of the old worn-out cold war strategies that primed the pump of useless military spending and destructive results.
The truth must be faced: It is the United States military that is responsible for the economic depression we are entering today. In the name of protecting national security the various branches of the armed forces and the so-called intelligence establishment has bilked the public with pork-laden billions of totally wasted dollars, largely unaccounted for, and spent without proper oversight or civilian control.
Using the threat of hostile enemy attacks as an excuse to expand American military bases around the globe, and then positioning nuclear weapons on those sites, Bush's policies have produced a hostile and defensive reaction by those nations whose people feel threatened by this unilateral aggressiveness.
Military research on university campuses compromises the purpose of educational enlightenment and converts the academic environment into a spawning ground for biotechnological weapons whose only purpose is to wage war against innocent civilian populations.
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