MySpace
myspace music

Back to www.peacedrum.org

Welcome to Dream Kitchen's Peace Blog where music meets action. We look forward to your comments and to your active participation as well. You can also join our new open discussions at the forums at www.peacedrum.org


Dream Kitchen



Last Updated: 5/20/2009

Send Message
Instant Message
Email to a Friend
Subscribe

City: Bethesda
State: Maryland
Country: US
Signup Date: 8/6/2005

Blog Archive
[Older      Newer]
 /  / 
Wednesday, October 22, 2008 

What a blast when ol' friends get together.  Buddy and drummer for 10 years with Young Caucasians wanted to play some more as did guitar player from the Very Nice Plants, Mr Bobby Birdsong.  So if the Dream Kitchen Page seems a little dormant, it might be because this crew is playing as FolkaDelic.  So make my folk the P-Folk.  see www.myspace.com/folkadelics

Friday, August 15, 2008 
Is the Iraq conflict a war about oil? Any reasonable person can effectively argue for or against the topic. Without knowing which side is ultimately right, one progressive tactic can be done.  Take oil out of the equation as much as possible.  Use less, need less.  Do what each can to make oil less valuable.

Peacedrum has adopted the use of commuter scooters more.  They are not the answers for everything, but they can cut down the need to drive conventional vehicles by at least 40-60% of someone's personal driving needs.  They are cheap.  They get anywhere from 60-80 mpg. They often come from mom and pop shops and small business people.  

I purchased one to test it.  So far so good.  Here is an example of what we are talking about.   Sample Scooters
Want less.  Do more

Saturday, July 21, 2007 

Category: Music

The night we played Polly's was a sun cloaked day interrupted by a pummeling evening storm. Cars pulled over from driving for lack of visibility.  Unloading gear, we would get wet in two directions as the rain dumped down and as it bounced up from the pavement.

Some came to see Dream Kitchen acoustic.  Other just came in off the streets.  The windows semi protected from awnings let the attracting sound of song compete with the storms mono pitched rant. 


What made me say, "watch someone is going to show up with a harmonica" I'll never know.  But no sooner was that uttered, than some guy with more shopping bags then a game show contestant, came is and dumped an array of mouth harps on the table in front of us.  No matter what song we played, he joined it like a heckler with a bellows.

Normally playing a half step out of key is a great way to frustrate and end the piping chromatic songs crows.  But this one would stop at nothing.  Until we simply said, thank you and goodnight.  It was 20 minutes into our first set.  Thank you and good night.  Well sort of.  Without us strumming, the minstrel bored and departed, probably looking for some godforsaken "blues jam".

This gave us time to refill several rounds of drinks during which time we were able to fill the bartenders in on our plan.  That seemed to bring a round on the house.  Knowing the Polly's crowd as we do, we went on again after the forced intermission and started calling out songs we but somewhat knew from the 60's and seventies.  Live Karaoke as it were.  We played for 75 minutes straight just calling out songs, often skipping bridges and verses because no one new all the words.

 

Call it some inner latent retribution.  Call it giving in to the Hotel band we never want to be.  What ever you call it, it was drunk and rowdy and somewhat a riot.

From this time forward, I have a clue how sets at Polly's will go.

Wednesday, July 18, 2007 

I have an old time friend in band called LumpDog.  They have been asking me to play with them lately as they lost their guitar player. In June they had a show at the Alexandria Waterfront Festival opening for some majors.  The headliner was Bowling For Soup. Good bunch of guys.  The gig was near the airport. So the Bowling guys  had nothng better to do than to hang out and drink for about 7 hours straight backstage, and who can blame them. 


I think I will have to get Chris some video editing software if we can ever get back in contact.  He is a real sweet guy, but he spends way too much time watching DVDs.  I can't help but think he could make his own wild videos with footage from all the crazy places they go.

Jaret and I talked about families as we both have kids. He is on the road so much but has a house in a great texas neighborhood where a lot of Dallas Cowboys live.  He plans tours so he can always fly home in the week... when he can.  I see my kids everyday and I get to open up for him.  Best of both worlds

They played well after emptying all the coolers.  That is worth a vote.

 

Tuesday, June 19, 2007 



Below is a template that asks that no more money go to privateer armies such as Blackwater.   As always, use this letter to state you agree but always add your own words to let your elected offical know this is not one fax machine sending in letters.
__________________________________________________________________

To:
From:
Subject: Continued War Funding,
End the funding of BlackWater with taxpayer money

As a voter, I am extremely disappointed in the lack of backbone Congress showed in not standing up to the Bush Veto about War Supplemental.  We all know the percentage of funds that actually go to fund the troops from a supplemental is quite low and that there are always ways to fund the well being of troops.  

Furthermore, I absolutely disapprove that any funds are made available to private security contracts like BlackWater or any other such companies.  Our Executive branch should not have a private militia at the expense of taxpayers; whose numbers are not part of the troop surge reports.  Nor are such independent contractors subject to the same Military laws that our enlisted men and woman have to adhere to.  I ask that the use of such militias can only be allowed by consent of Congress and subject to Congressional oversight.  

The last election proved that the Country does not support this war.  There is no reason to vote any longer for an elected official who does not strongly follow the will of the people.   To support this war in any way or to vote in the future on issues that passively continue this war will absolutely cost you my vote. You need to ask yourself, how do you expect to end a war by funding a war?

Sincerely,

Constituent of:
Phone Number:

 

Thursday, May 31, 2007 
PeaceDrum Vol1, a music compilation which features works by 13 PeaceDrum affiliated bands, enjoyed increased distribution and downloads lately.  The distribution of the compilation this time period provided the following actions:
 
-outreach programs to meet with students at Maryland High Schools
-donations to a mother of current enlisted men currently serving in Iraq in her effort to meet directly with members of Congress.
- Make donations to Rebuilding Together Montgomery County earmarked to purchase door operators for the home of a 22 year old Army Specialists who was severely injured by IED attack in Ramadi.
- maintain the website and increase the size of the download section of the peacedrum site to make room for new artists submissions.
 
A little music can go along way.
 
all the best
Jerry h
 
Thursday, March 15, 2007 

Category: News and Politics
..> ..>
Letter to Congress about War Supplemental

(Here is a copy of the letter peacedrum.org and our music members, freinds and fans are sending out to Congress.  Please use it as a template and replace the text in itlaics with your own information)

To: Rep or Senator
From:  yourname

Please oppose the War Supplemental.

Last week, several peace activists were arrested for occupying Sen. Mikulski's office.  Others were called idiots by Mr. Obey.  To Mr. Obey and others like him, I would like to ask, what is crazier, squatting in opposition of this war, or funding this war.

 

Please oppose the War Supplemental.  These are the reasons why:

 

·        We need more oversight

·        There are plenty of ways to fund troops

·        No money should go to the likes of KBR , who handled Walter Reed, or Haliburton, Bechtel.

·        We should work more with Iraqi Companies and help their employment so they can stand on their own two feet instead of funding No-Bid Contracts

 ·        You can not end a war by funding the war

·        Those who fund the war own the war

·      Wars end at the negotiating table.  Force the table.

 

Sincerely,

(Your Name)

Constituent in (your town)

Tuesday, October 10, 2006 

I wish our President would take a lesson from the Amish.  In fact, the Community of Nickel Mines should be nominated for a Noble Peace Prize for their exhibition of True Love, True Faith, True Compassion.

Instead of blaming, lashing out, living in fear, or threatening, they turned inside themselves and reached out to show compassion to the family of their attacker.

They attended the funeral of their attacker to support the family of their assailant.  They insist that the family of their attacker be recipients as well of the donations coming into them from the outside non Amish Communities.  They hold no malice to the family of the person who did them harm.  They have gone out of their way to recognize the grief and misery that befell that family as equal to their own. 

What greater honor to know such people are still in our midst, as we speak of wanting peace from our comfort zone and $3 lattes.  The community of Nickel Mines practices true peace and true resolve that most of us can not really imagine.  Their actions point to a deeper more lasting solution to attacks than the path our leaders take us.

The proceeds of Dream Kitchens next shows will also go to that fund, not so much to honor their pain, but to honor their inner strength and to honor them as teachers to us all.  There is no death.  Only life. And the small unassuming community of Nickel Mines just reminded us.

Thursday, August 03, 2006 

Category: News and Politics

Last week, Dream Kitchen, along with peacedrum and the peacedrum affiliates and thousands of other Pro Peace advocates wrote in to our elected officials about the cessation of Violence in Middle East.  We stated the issue was not the right to defend oneself.  The issue is that such defense as currently practiced is not getting anyone anywhere and is making things worse with more innocent victims than anything else.

I received this letter from Rep Van Hollen.  I appreciate his letter, but I question it.  If he feels so strongly about ending violence enough to write to the Secretary Rice,  than why will he not co-sponsor proposed legislation that calls for a cease fire.  He needs to make more of a difference in legislative matters simply because he is a legislature.   Without his vote and his voice in Congress making a stance, his letter to the Cabinet is but window dressing during an election year.   As much as I appreciate his letter, if he is not willing to put his clout behind it, than I am inclined to vote out any sitting status quo official for weak engaging in weak government.  Give me 100 rookie Wellstone's over any status quo person any day.

all the best,
jerry h
Dream Kitchen

Letter from Rep Van Hollen in it's entirety:

Please find below my signature a letter I wrote to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on July 30, 2006, regarding the tragic situation in Lebanon. I urged Secretary Rice to call for an immediate cease-fire to be followed by the rapid deployment of an international force in southern Lebanon.

Again, thank you for taking the time to contact me. Please don't hesitate to let me know whenever I may be of service.

Sincerely,
Chris Van Hollen
Member of Congress
-------------------------------
July 30, 2006

The Honorable Condoleezza Rice
Secretary of State
United States Department of State
2201 C Street NW
Washington, D.C. 20520

Dear Secretary Rice:

I write regarding the tragic situation in Lebanon. I urge you to call for an immediate cease-fire to be followed by the rapid deployment of an international force in southern Lebanon. I began this letter Friday evening, but todays bombings in Qana have made the matter even more urgent. A forty-eight hour time-out in the bombing campaign is not sufficient. Your lack of effective action to date has turned an opportunity to isolate Hezbollah into a political victory for Hezbollah.

The killing and kidnapping of Israeli soldiers by Hezbollah precipitated the current crisis in the region. Those actions were followed by Hezbollah rocket attacks that have fallen indiscriminately in Haifa and other Israeli population centers. Like any sovereign country, Israel has the right and responsibility to defend itself. The people of Lebanon understand that Israel did not initiate these hostilities. By all reports, the majority in Lebanon strongly resent Hezbollah for dragging Lebanon into this conflict and recognizes that Israel has a right to target the military apparatus employed by Hezbollah to launch its attacks on Israel.

The Israeli response, however, has now gone beyond the destruction of Hezbollahs military assets. It has caused huge damage to Lebanons civilian infrastructure, resulted in the large loss of civilian life, and produced over 750,000 refugees. Hezbollah is undeniably the culprit, but it is the Lebanese people -- not Hezbollah -- who are increasingly the victims of the violence. As a result, the Israeli bombing campaign, supported by the United States, has transformed Lebanese anger at Hezbollah into growing hostility toward Israel and the United States. The result has been a surge in the political strength and popularity of Hezbollah and its leader, Hasan Nasrallah, and the weakening of the already fragile Lebanese government of Prime Minister Fouad Siniora. Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Egypt and the Arab League have gone from condemning Hezbollah to denouncing Israel for its actions and the United States for its inaction. Even Prime Minister Siniora has now publicly praised Hezbollah for defending the country. We have squandered an opportunity to isolate Hezbollah and strengthen our credibility and negotiating leverage in the region. As a result of our ineffectiveness, Hezbollah has won a political victory not only in Lebanon, but throughout the Arab world, the Muslim world, and much of the international community. We may have won some battles, but we are losing the war.

You have failed the obligation of a good friend to give sound counsel and advice. I understand the impulses that are driving Israels actions, but I strongly believe that a continuation of the bombing campaign as it is being carried out is against the interests of the Israel and the United States. When someone is in the heat of battle, it can sometimes be difficult to see the full picture. It is the responsibility of the United States, as a close friend and ally, to intervene more effectively in this crisis. In my view, Israel is entirely justified in using the maximum force necessary to hit Hezbollah military targets. The issue, however, is not the amount of force used, but where and how it is applied. Had you done your job and successfully urged Israel to limit its attacks to clear, identifiable Hezbollah military assets, I would support a continuation of the campaign. But you failed to do that. Your lack of effective leadership has harmed the interests of both Israel and the United States.

The lack of American leadership in the current crisis exists in the larger context of our failed policies in the Middle East and Southwest Asia. The policy of promoting democracy in the Middle East is the right one, but you and the Bush Administration have missed the critical point from the start. Do you believe that free and fair elections today in Saudi Arabia, Egypt and elsewhere in the Arab world would bring to power governments that are more willing to live in peace with Israel and are more interested in building stability and peace in the region than those that exist today? I dont think so. Not if you pay attention to public opinion there. It is clear that the result of such democratic elections would likely be governments that are much more anti-Israel and anti-American than those today. Witness the election of Hamas. The point, however, is not to stop promoting democracy, but to recognize that the public perception of our policies in the Arab and Muslim world will have a direct bearing on the nature of any democratically elected governments. Consequently, if we are going to keep promoting democracy in the Middle East, we had better start caring about the public perceptions of our policies in the region. Otherwise, you are simply promoting a process that will produce governments that hate both Israel and the United States.

That brings me back to Lebanon. As you have said, the starting point should be the implementation of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1559, which calls for the dismantling of all independent militias in Lebanon. It is obvious that, in the short term, the Lebanese army is not strong enough to defeat the Hezbollah forces militarily. Even the Israeli military campaign, while degrading Hezbollahs military capabilities, cannot deliver a knock-out punch. Consequently, international forces with a strong mandate will have to be deployed to southern Lebanon. However, that will not resolve the underlying political issues. The Lebanese government of Prime Minister Fouad Siniora is already fragile. Now it has been further weakened. As you know, Hezbollah has significant representation in the Lebanese parliament. Had the current crisis been handled differently, their influence could have been diminished. Now, however, their political stock has risen. As a result, it will be extremely difficult for the Lebanese government, assuming it survives the crisis, to strengthen the Lebanese military with the purpose of disarming Hezbollah. Once again, while we have rightly promoted democracy in Lebanon, our policies have mostly strengthened the political standing of those most adverse to our interests.

Any comprehensive and long lasting resolution of the current crisis must also address the role of Syria and Iran in arming Hezbollah. The United States must do more to rally international efforts to pressure Iran and Syria to end their support for Hezbollah and Hamas. Unfortunately, the war in Iraq has had the unintentional but very foreseeable consequence of inflaming anti-Western sentiment and strengthening the hand of the most radical Islamic forces. Among the biggest beneficiaries has been Iran with its many ties to the majority Shia population in Iraq. Iran has successfully exploited the chaos and instability in neighboring Iraq to advance its own radical agenda and expand its influence in the region. We must develop a better strategy for addressing this trend, but the fact that we are bogged down in Iraq has complicated this effort.

Finally, no lasting solution to the turmoil in the Middle East will be achieved without resolving the Israeli-Palestinian problem. In a speech delivered at the American Enterprise Institute in February 2003, a few weeks before invading Iraq, President Bush declared that going to war would help promote democracy and stability in the Middle East, reduce the influence of the hardliners and help resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. He claimed that it would "begin a new stage for Middle Eastern peace and set in motion progress toward a truly democratic Palestinian state." Unfortunately, but predictably, we have seen the opposite result in the aftermath of the invasion of Iraq. The region has been more radicalized and Hamas prevailed in the Palestinian elections. While we engaged militarily in Iraq, this Administration has disengaged from any serious effort at re-establishing an Israeli-Palestinian peace process. It is essential that the United States renew its efforts to resolve this festering issue. There can be little doubt that the lack of progress on that front continues to breed hatred and hostility that is effectively exploited by Hezbollah, Iran, Syria and others. Until that conflict is resolved, it will remain a key component of anti-American sentiment throughout the Middle East and complicate our efforts at democracy promotion in the region.

The overall foreign policy of this Administration has significantly diminished Americas credibility and moral standing around the world. That, in turn, has severely undermined our effectiveness. I sincerely hope that the current turmoil in the Middle East will result in a fresh American initiative to seek a comprehensive solution to the many conflicts brewing in the region. It will be a true test of leadership. I hope you will engage the Congress in such an effort.

Sincerely,
Chris Van Hollen
Member of Congress

 

Tuesday, June 27, 2006 

It seems a little odd that a Nation that holds all other countries to International Treaties is always on the cusp of breaking such treaties whenever it seems suitable.  It makes International Law or any law seem rather meaningless.  Peace Action reports that the Bush Administration is continuing to make their argument for India to have Nukes when India has not signed the Non Proliferation Treaty.  Such an action is directly against US policy as agreed to by the treaty.

The following is  extracted  from the Peace Action Letter:
'Today, June 27, the House International Relations Committee (HIRC) will mark-up H.R. 4974 and on Wednesday, June 28, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee (SFRC) will mark up S. 2429 -- these are the Administration's bills for the unsafe U.S./India Nuclear Deal.

At these committee meetings, Members of Congress will have opportunities to make this deal less dangerous. Members of these committees need to get phone calls from constituents today to influence the legislation before it's too late. Click here to see if your Rep. is on the HIRC, and click here to see if your Senator is on the SFRC.

Call Committe Members to say the following:
"I want Rep./Sen. _______________ to oppose the U.S./India Nuclear Deal and to support amendments that address nonproliferation problems with the deal."

Call the Capitol Switchboard now at 202-224-3121