Fuck Yeah Radical Literature!
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Book: The New Yorkers’ Guide to Military Recruitment in the 5 Boroughs

Note: Digital Read. Also, this is a book of small size, so you will have to zoom in.

URL: http://www.mediafire.com/?9s538sloilogvl8

Introduction:

New York is, for countless millions, a beacon. As much it has a history as a destination point and a place to make a better life, it also has a history of protest, at different times and for different reasons, when needed. 

During the Civil War, Abraham Lincoln issued the Enrollment Act of Conscription, or military draft. Lincoln’s call for 300,000 young men to fight a seemingly endless war frightened even those who supported the Union cause. Not everyone was nervous, however- one of the exemptions to the Act was a “commutation fee.” For $300, an outrageous sum in 1863, the wealthier citizens of New York could buy their way out. 

On July 12th, 1863, the names of the first draftees were published in city newspapers. Within hours, throngs of outraged New Yorkers had formed a roving mob, destroying homes of the rich, looting stores, and sadly, fighting amongst themselves. For three days 50,000 people terrorized New York, sick of the war, enraged at being forced to fight because they couldn’t afford not to.

Few New Yorkers would welcome a three-day riot, even if the draft were reinstated for the war in Iraq. But the parallels are there from 1863-the fat that then, as now, money is a key factor in enlistment, and many who join do so for economic reasons, even when those benefits are not guaranteed.

On May 2, 2003, aboard a nuclear-powered aircraft called the USS Abraham Lincoln, George W. Bush proclaimed “Mission Accomplished.” He wore a flight suit, despite the fact that he had used his wealth and position in society to advance to the top of the list for the Texas Air National Guard, a position that shielded him form combat in Vietnam.

ALmost three years later, we know the war isn’t over. We know the same economic advantages are being used to free certain people from the specter of enlistment, and we know who profits from this war and who loses. What else do you know, and what are we going to do with that knowledge?

What you hold in your hands is as much a love letter as a warning, filled with equal parts hope and outrage, a product of wishful thinking, grim acknowledgment and thoughts of the past as well as the future. 

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Book: Why Do People Hate America?

by Ziauddin Sardar and Merryl Wyn Davies

note: 1) Digital Read 2) This is one of my personal books, out of my own habit, it tend to highlight, underline, bracket, ect.. things that stick out to me. 3) This is a good book for anyone who wants to know why people actually DO hate america other than the propagandized excuses of “our freedom, democracy, and wealth”. 

Pt 1: http://www.mediafire.com/?jztmkr5zank

Pt 2: http://www.mediafire.com/?wmmztznemmd

Description:

American corporations and popular culture affect the lives and infect the indigenous cultures of millions around the world. The foreign policy of the US government, backed by its military strength, has unprecedented global influence now that the USA is the worlds only superpower - its first ‘hyperpower’.

America also exports its value systems, defining what it means to be civilized, rational, developed and democratic - indeed, what it is to be human. Meanwhile, the US itself is impervious to outside influence, and if most Americans think of the rest of the world at all, it is in terms of deeply ingrained cultural stereotypes. 

Many people do hate America, in the Middle East and the developing countries as well as Europe. Ziauddin Sardar and Merryl Wyn Davies consider this hatred in the context of America’s own perception of itself, and provide and important contribution to a debate which needs to be addressed by people of all nations, cultures, religions and political persuasions. 

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Zine: Confronting Militarism and Military Recruitment In Our Schools

By: DC SDS

note: this was scanned in to be printable. feel free to print as many copies as you want.

URL: http://viewer.zoho.com/docs/cQbA5

Opening: Thinking about joining the military? Are you willing to leave your family for extended periods of time? Are you ready to kill or die for a cause you don’t believe in? Are you prepared to give up the rights you enjoys as a civilian? Are you willing to fight someone else’s war? If you answered “No” to any of these questions, then the military may not be for you.