http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/12/18

Published on Sunday, December 18, 2011 by MichaelMoore.com

A Man in Tunisia, a Movement on Wall Street, and the Soldier Who 
Ignited the Fuse

by Michael Moore

It's Saturday night and I didn't want the day to end before I sent 
out this note to you.

One year ago today (December 17th), Mohamed Bouazizi, a man who had a 
simple produce stand in Tunisia, set himself on fire to protest his 
government's repression. His singular sacrifice ignited a revolution 
that toppled Tunisia's dictator and launched revolts in regimes 
across the Middle East.

Three months ago today, Occupy Wall Street began with a takeover of 
New York's Zuccotti Park. This movement against the greed of 
corporate America and its banks -- and the money that now controls 
most of our democratic institutions -- has quickly spread to hundreds 
of towns and cities across America. The majority of Americans now 
agree that a nation where 400 billionaires have more wealth than 160 
million Americans combined is not the country they want America to 
be. The 99% are rising up against the 1% -- and now there is no 
turning back.

Twenty-four years ago today, U.S. Army Spc. Bradley Manning was born. 
He has now spent 570 days in a military prison without a trial -- 
simply because he allegedly blew the whistle on the illegal and 
immoral war in Iraq. He exposed what the Pentagon and the Bush 
administration did in creating this evil and he did so by allegedly 
leaking documents and footage to Wikileaks. Many of these documents 
dealt not only with Iraq but with how we prop up dictators around the 
world and how our corporations exploit the poor on this planet. 
(There were even cables with crazy stuff on them, like one detailing 
Bush's State Department trying to stop a government minister in 
another country from holding a screening of 'Fahrenheit 9/11.')

The Wikileaks trove was a fascinating look into how the United States 
conducts its business -- and clearly those who don't want the world 
to know how we do things in places like, say, Tunisia, were not happy 
with Bradley Manning.

Mohamed Bouazizi was being treated poorly by government officials 
because all he wanted to do was set up a cart and sell fruit and 
vegetables on the street. But local police kept harassing him and 
trying to stop him. He, like most Tunisians, knew how corrupt their 
government was. But when Wikileaks published cables from the U.S. 
ambassador in Tunis confirming the corruption -- cables that were 
published just a week or so before Mohamed set himself on fire -- 
well, that was it for the Tunisian people, and all hell broke loose.

People across the world devoured the information Bradley Manning 
revealed, and it was used by movements in Egypt, Spain, and 
eventually Occupy Wall Street to bolster what we already thought was 
true. Except here were the goods -- the evidence that was needed to 
prove it all true. And then a democracy movement spread around the 
globe so fast and so deep -- and in just a year's time! When anyone 
asks me, "Who started Occupy Wall Street?" sometimes I say "Goldman 
Sachs" or "Chase" but mostly I just say, "Bradley Manning." It was 
his courageous action that was the tipping point -- and it was not 
surprising when the dictator of Tunisia censored all news of the 
Wikileaks documents Manning had allegedly supplied. But the internet 
took Manning's gift and spread it throughout Tunisia, a young man set 
himself on fire and the Arab Spring that led eventually to Zuccotti 
Park has a young, gay soldier in the United States Army to thank.

And that is why I want to honor Bradley Manning on this, his 24th 
birthday, and ask the millions of you reading this to join with me in 
demanding his immediate release. He does not deserve the un-American 
treatment, including cruel solitary confinement, he's received in 
over eighteen months of imprisonment. If anything, this young man 
deserves a friggin' medal. He did what great Americans have always 
done -- he took a bold stand against injustice and he did it without 
stopping for a minute to consider the consequences for himself.

The Pentagon and the national security apparatus are hell-bent on 
setting an example with Bradley Manning. But we as Americans have a 
right to know what is being done in our name and with our tax 
dollars. If the government tries to cover up its malfeasance, then it 
is the duty of each and every one of us, should the situation arise, 
to drag the truth, kicking and screaming if necessary, into the light 
of day.

The American flag was lowered in Iraq this past Thursday as our war 
on them officially came to an end. If anyone should be on trial or in 
the brig right now, it should be those men who lied to the nation in 
order to start this war -- and in doing so sent nearly 4,500 
Americans and hundreds of thousands of Iraqis to their deaths.

But it is not Bush or Rumsfeld or Cheney or Wolfowitz who sit in 
prison tonight. It is the hero who exposed them. It is Bradley 
Manning who has lost his freedom and that, in turn, becomes just one 
more crime being committed in our name.

I know, I know, c'mon Mike -- it's the holiday season, there's 
presents to buy and parties to go to! And yes, this really is one of 
my favorite weeks of the year. But in the spirit of the man whose 
birth will be celebrated next Sunday, please do something, anything, 
to help this young man who spends his birthday tonight behind bars. I 
say, enough. Let him go home and spend Christmas with his family. 
We've done enough violence to the world this decade while claiming to 
be a country that admires the Prince of Peace. The war is over. And a 
whole new movement has a lot to thank Bradley Manning for.

© 2011 Michael Moore


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