This coming MONDAY, May 7th is the  
 Sundance Channel's televised Premiere of  
 Sir! No Sir! and The Ground Truth
Don't miss this opportunity to see these two excellent films.
Make a night of resistance out of it! 
************************************************************************
***********
Sir! No Sir!
Monday,  May 7
Sundance Channel
9:00 pm Eastern and Pacific 
 
Sir! No Sir!
A MUST SEE documentary of the 1960’s anti-war movement WITHIN the
military! 
Few today know of these history-changing events. Sir! No Sir! will
change all that.
HYPERLINK "http://www.sirnosir.com"; \nwww.sirnosir.com 

 
************************************************************************
**** 

The Ground Truth 
Monday, May 7
The Sundance Channel
10:30 pm Eastern and Pacific 
 
THE GROUND TRUTH 
The terrible conflict in Iraq, depicted with ferocious honesty in this
film, is a prelude for the even more challenging battles fought by the
soldiers returning home – with personal demons, an uncomprehending
public, and an indifferent government. As these battles take shape, each
soldier becomes a new kind of hero, bearing witness and giving support
to other veterans, and learning to fearlessly wield the most powerful
weapon of all - the truth. HYPERLINK
"http://groundtruthstore.seenon.com/?pa=atw"; \nwww.thegroundtruth.net  
 

Check Listings for Central and Mountain 
***********************************************
 
 
A Letter From David Zeiger 
Director of  Sir! No Sir!

It's a unique experience to feel that you are part of making history. 


So says Dr. Howard Levy who, as an army doctor in 1966, spent 3 years in
federal prison for refusing to train Green Beret troops heading to
Vietnam. His comments come at the end of my film about the GI Movement
against the Vietnam War, Sir! No Sir! 

In a sadly ironic twist, 40 years later Dr. Levy and the thousands of
active duty soldiers who openly organized against the Vietnam War while
in the military are once again part of making history-because their
story is sparking a new and significant movement in the military today.

Sir! No Sir! tells a story that has literally been erased from history.
Hundreds of films, both fiction and non-fiction, have been made about
Vietnam. But this story-the rebellion of thousands of American
soldiers-has never been told in film. This is certainly not for lack of
evidence. By the Pentagon's own figures, 503,926 "incidents of
desertion" occurred between 1966 and 1971; officers were being
"fragged"(killed with fragmentation grenades by their own troops) at an
alarming rate; and by 1971 entire units were refusing to go into battle
in unprecedented numbers. In the course of a few short years, over 200
antiwar underground newspapers were published by soldiers around the
world; local and national antiwar GI organizations were joined by
thousands; thousands more demonstrated against the war at every major
base in the world in 1970 and 1971, including in Vietnam itself; and
stockades and federal prisons were filling up with soldiers jailed for
their opposition to the war and the military. Colonel Robert Heinl, the
Marine Corp's official historian, wrote strikingly in 1971 that
rebellion in the ranks had "permeated every branch of the service." His
article in the Armed Forces Journal was titled "The Collapse of the
Armed Forces."

Sir! No Sir! opened in theaters last Spring and got a good deal of
attention. L.A. Times critic Kenneth Turan called it "A powerful
documentary that uncovers half-forgotten history, history that is still
relevant but not in ways you might be expecting," and another critic
only half-jokingly called it "A film that threatens the war movement
with every showing, the Bush administration should outlaw it from all
theatres within fifty miles of an armed forces recruiting station."

It turns out he had a point. Since its release last spring, my little
film about events that happened 40 years ago has had quite an impact
inside the military. Kind of like giving a motorboat to prisoners
abandoned on a remote Island. The organization Iraq Veterans Against the
War has distributed hundreds of DVDs soldiers for free, and the film has
been cited by several who have publicly refused deployment to Iraq on
the grounds that the war is immoral and a clear violation of
international law.

Navy Seaman Jonathon Hutto and Marine Sergeant Liam Madden met at a
screening in Norfolk last fall and, inspired by the film and David
Cortright's seminal book on the GI Movement, Soldiers in Revolt, decided
to start the Appeal for Redress. Cleverly using the military's own
whistleblower protection policy, the Appeal is a petition to congress
calling for an immediate end to the war. Almost instantly they had 1,600
signatures (it has since risen to over 2,000). If the number seems
small, consider this: There are currently about 140,00 troops in Iraq.
In November 1969, with over 3.5 million GIs in Vietnam, 1,366 signed a
New York Times ad calling for an end to the war-and the effect was
electrifying. Numbers only take on their true meaning when understood in
context.

True, Iraq is not Vietnam, and 2007 is not 1969. But something very
profound is happening here. The world is full of moments when history
intertwines with the present in dynamic and unexpected ways. The civil
rights movement of the 1960s was fueled by the hundred-year-old stories
of Harriet Tubman, John Brown, and the slave rebellions we never learned
about in school. This is another one of those moments.

My film doesn't tell anyone what to do. But it does tell an incendiary
story of thousands of soldiers who helped end a war 40 years ago. As the
Bush administration plans only escalation of this horrendous war, the
200-pound gorilla blocking his way may well be the troops themselves.

David Zeiger: HYPERLINK
"mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]"[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

 HYPERLINK
"http://i132.photobucket.com/albums/q40/jadefox_bucket/displacedlogo.jpg
"Displaced Films
 HYPERLINK
"http://www.democracyinaction.com/dia/TrackImage?key=107903553";


 




 





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