Thursday, May 31, 2007

TRUTH BE TOLD TOUR begins,…

 

BENDERMAN
TRUTH BE TOLD

TOUR

 

AMERICA‘S NEW GENERATION OF LEADERSHIP

Sgt. Kevin Benderman is coming to a city near you!!!

Sgt. Kevin Benderman has begun his TRUTH BE TOLD TOUR  speaking to Americans nationwide.  Benderman is joined by his wife, Monica Benderman, a renowned writer who has been published worldwide.  If your organization would like to host the Bendermans in your city, please act immediately as dates are filling up quickly.   For in-depth information on Sgt. Kevin Benderman and his wife Monica, you can visit the following 3 web sites:

Benderman Timeline

The chronology of events leading to the court-martial of Sgt. Kevin Benderman, a ten year Army veteran who filed for Conscientious Objector status having served one tour of duty in Iraq .  This site provides a full array of resources for anyone with questions regarding the military judicial system.

Benderman Defense

The chronicle of a personal journey to Conscientious Objection as experienced by Sgt. Kevin and Monica Benderman. This site provides personal insight into how a soldier’s personal experiences can lead him or her to change his beliefs about war

Benderman’s Bridge

  • Developing projects designed to restore peace at home by reaching out to connect small towns and communities of America with the veterans who fought to defend them. 
  • Remembering the values our veterans believed in when they volunteered their service.
  • Living by the principles we sent them to fight to defend. Honoring their sacrifice by working toward positive social change within our communities.  

The TRUTH BE TOLD TOUR  features Kevin’s past experience with the U.S. Army as a conscience objector to the War On Iraq, and the Bendermans’ unique approach to attaining peace. Highlights of the speaking engagement are the Bendermans’ frank discussion of Kevin’s in-depth beliefs regarding ending war, the relationship between civilians and the military, and their presentation for a solid direction on helping America ’s Veterans via their new organization Benderman’s Bridge, a part of the Benderman Defense Trust. Kevin Benderman also addresses his position regarding America’s current foreign and domestic policies, removing the fear and restoring America, and the future of the America ’s Veterans.

More than just a speaking event, every engagement becomes an interactive event as audiences are invited to become involved in discussions. No current speaking event has the impact of the Bendermans’ TRUTH BE TOLD TOUR.  Audiences have left feeling rejuvenated by the wealth of knowledge shared, the inspiration they are given to become involved, and the simplicity of the positive direction provided for America .  Kevin Benderman has been billed as part of America ’s New Generation of Leadership and rightfully so.

Kevin and Monica recently attended the premiere of  SOLDIERS OF CONSCIENCE in Atlanta.  SOLDIERS OF CONSCIENCE is a documentary of Conscientious Objection and a discussion of soldiers faced with questions of morality as they actively served in the Iraq war. Benderman’s case served as the inspiration for the project. 

Kevin and Monica Benderman’s book Letters from a Ft. Lewis Brig is due out later this year. The book is being published by Lyon ’s Press, a division of Globe Pequot Press.  

The first phase of the Bendermans’ TRUTH BE TOLD TOUR will be covering the west coast in June, the Midwest in July and the East Coast in August.  If you would like to host the Tour in your city contact Benderman Defense Trust at 912-369-4585 or EvansMediaUSA, 865-637-5742.

 

CHOICE AMERICA NETWORK

 



Posted by BDT in 10:47:22 | Permalink | Comments (2)

Monday, April 30, 2007

It’s time to build a bridge. Who will help?

 

Selling Out – or Building a Bridge

By Monica Benderman

He walked up to us after a speaking event.  There had been several questions about GI Resistance and how to encourage more soldiers to resist.  He came apologetically.  He said it was his tax dollars that were funding the war.  We agreed.  He said he was not ready to face the consequences of refusing to pay his taxes.  We said no one was telling him to, he would have to make that decision when he was ready – if it was a decision he chose to make.  In the meantime, he was not really in a position to tell soldiers to make choices they were not ready to make, facing potential consequences they might not want to face.  We wondered if he understood.

Selling Out.  

She came to me after a speaking event.  There had been a discussion of the consequences soldiers faced by speaking out against the war.  She came determined to strengthen the position of one soldier speaking out.  She said she knew the war to be illegal and therefore the soldier was right to speak as he had been doing, it was his choice.  We agreed.  She realized that the war had not yet been proven illegal in a court of law, even though we all concurred it had certainly shown itself to be in many of the actions taken by our administration and even some military personnel.  We said it is not the responsibility of the soldiers to prosecute manipulated and deceptive policy.  It is the responsibility of the soldiers to defend sound policy implemented by the Congress which represents the people whose policy the soldiers are meant to defend.  The people should not have allowed the soldiers to be in a position to face the consequences so many now face.  Rather than merely “supporting” the dissenting soldiers, isn’t it time for the people to stand up and demand that Congress change the policy?  We wonder if she understood.

Selling Out.  

We drove through a small town on our way to a speaking event.  For every restaurant open there were two now closed.  Small town America is losing ground.  The owner of the restaurant we ate in was also the cook.  Her spirits were high and the history of her little café was recorded in photographs and newspaper clippings hanging in gilded frames on the walls.  She smiled a thank you as we left, doing her best to hold on a little longer in a community where many had closed up shop and given in to the corporate franchises whose financial backing comes from somewhere overseas.

Corporate “America” calls with the skewed voice of the illusion of success shouting temptations over the quiet sound of truth.  Every day one more American gives in to the beckoning sound of money, of “getting ahead,” of security with retirement benefits all neatly spelled out in the work of creative public relations firms producing bright-colored websites, as those believing their words leave the security of tangible work for the empty promises showing little of the truth.  They read graphics detailing pay scales, perfect work weeks and benefits designed to make life easy.  The grass is always greener, and the hope of no more struggle leads many to a greater struggle when the truth does hit them as they clock out after three hours of overtime for the tenth day in a row, seeing home only in the darkness of a late night arrival that never had mention on the front page advertisement of the corporate giant that called their name and the money in the bank at the end of the week is nowhere near the payscale displayed in rainbow hues on the home page of a parent corporation that doesn’t even know the worker’s name.  

Selling Out.  

People talk of saving America.  People talk of small town communities and honoring the sacrifice of those who refuse to give in to the mega-giant conglomerates with ownership in a foreign country that doesn’t care what happens on Main Street in the heart of the USA.  It’s talk, all talk and when the chips are down and the going gets tough the talk becomes more talk and it’s always someone else’s job to take up the slack while we save ourselves.  We turn to the very corporations we claim to disdain and become one of them just to make a bigger buck, while the door closes a little tighter on those who still keep fighting, wondering how we could have left them standing after the talk we made which led them to believe they were not going to be left there standing alone.  

Selling Out.  

Who will stand and not sell out?  Who will live their talk?  Who will face the struggle with more than just words, hanging in when it gets tougher; not quitting simply to save themselves?  

Who will face tomorrow knowing how much better it would have been if someone had faced it before?  Who will look at the future knowing they didn’t back down simply because it seemed that no one else wanted to care?  

Who will take a stand and mean it?  Who will keep their word?  

He came to us after a speaking event, telling us we must get our story into the schools.  He came with a pleading voice, desperate to find a way to keep our young people from making a decision that could eventually send them to war.  He said they need to hear what you have to say.  We said words are not the answer if there is no program for change in the works to back them up.  We can’t tell our youth not to join the military if we are not willing to raise the funds, create the programs and present the alternative in something other than idle talk. 

As we sellout to the highest bidder in the race to get rich, leaving small communities in the dust, forsaking the values that have helped them survive through depressions, oil busts and droughts, we leave little behind for our youth to turn to except the very corporate entities we claim to disdain.  

He came to us through an email, having heard our name from someone who attended a speaking event.  He was getting ready to leave for Iraq and his second return for an indefinite deployment was tearing his marriage apart.  He was anxious for support, and his wife was threatening to leave.  They had married young, had their first child soon after and the military gave them the benefits and security they could not find anywhere else.  They wanted a better life, to fulfill the dream others lived while he stood on the frontlines keeping them safe, but he saw nowhere to turn except to return to war.

It’s time to build a bridge.  Who will help?  

It’s time to stop the talk, to stop the futile attempts to justify our complacency by claiming it is someone else’s turn to pick up the torch and carry it further.  

For social change to happen, we must implement social change.  It takes real money and commitment to do this, it cannot simply be a vision.

Some of us have risked it all to open the door for people to understand what is needed and to light the path for moving in the direction of establishing real solutions but we can not do it alone.  It will take the work of all of us together giving the talents we have to build the bridge we all must walk across if we are to arrive at someplace a little closer to peace than where we now have settled.

Please help us make a difference.  Please don’t sellout.  We’ve heard the promises and we’ve walked a long way believing in the promises.  Please come through and help us do what we know must be done – creating a connection between communities of people who want to survive as people, not as pawns in a corporate game of greed where the winner has the brightest web design.  

Please help us build a bridge.

Monica is the wife of Sgt. Kevin Benderman, a ten-year Army veteran who served a combat tour in Iraq and a year in prison for his public protest of war and the destruction it causes to civilians and to American military personnel. Please visit their website, www.BendermanDefense.org to learn more. Monica and Kevin may be reached at mdawnb@coastalnow.net

 

CHOICE AMERICA NETWORK


Posted by BDT in 20:58:04 | Permalink | Comments (3)

Wednesday, April 4, 2007

Benderman’s Bridge - America’s Veterans Project

 BENDERMAN’S BRIDGE    

Bridging the Future of America’s Communities with the Spirit of the Past

 

I hereby challenge the presidential aspirants in the story below to donate to the veterans and service member project that my wife Monica and I have established - Benderman’s Bridge.

It seems to me that if these people can raise millions to have television and radio ads that may help them get elected to the presidential office then they should not have any problem whatsoever in donating to an organization that will help the very people who enabled them to be there in the first place.

These politicans and their political machines that are able to raise millions to put their face and political message out there should be able to spare $100,000 apiece to this project that will help America’s veterans and service members get back to a normal life after serving multiple combat tours and who are not getting much help from either their branch of service,  the V.A., or Walter Reed Medical Center in dealing with the combat stress and the physical devastation they have received as a result of going to war for this nation.

This is a grassroots project.  We have been contacted by veterans and service members across this nation who have over-whelmingly told us that this project is desperately needed and I am honored that they have looked to me for such leadership.

Benderman’s Bridge is service members helping service members,  backed by professional counselors and others who have many years of experience with this type of organization.

I look forward to hearing from and meeting each and every one of you in the very near future.

Respectfully,

Kevin Benderman 

JOIN US TODAY! - FOR MORE INFO VISIT: www.Bendermansbridge.org


Romney tops GOP in race for funds

Mitt Romney yesterday reported raising nearly $21 million in the first quarter of 2007 for the Republican presidential primary, a formidable sum that makes him the top GOP fund-raiser so far and rivals the amount that Senator Hillary Clinton has netted this year for her Democratic primary battle.

Romney, who has built a broad network of supporters, friends, and former business contacts, had been expected to put up a strong first-quarter showing, but his dominance over fellow Republicans — and the possibility that he could match or even beat Clinton in fund-raising for the primaries — immediately branded him a rising force in the 2008 presidential race. “I think it is remarkable,” said Stuart Rothenberg, who publishes the nonpartisan Rothenberg Political Report. “It’s surely getting everyone’s attention.”

In unveiling his figures yesterday, Romney overshadowed similar announcements from his top rivals for the Republican nomination. Former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani reported raising nearly $14 million in primary funds, while Arizona Senator John McCain, who had warned he would miss first-quarter expectations, reported raising $12.5 million, nearly all of it for the primary.

Candidates have until April 15 to report first-quarter financing details to the Federal Election Commission, but most candidates released unofficial revenue figures Sunday and yesterday.

Some candidates, like Clinton , released totals that lumped together funds raised for the primary along with money they raised for the general election to follow. Others, including Romney, have only raised money for the primary. Donors are allowed to give up to $2,300 to candidates for the primary and another $2,300 for the general election.

Many GOP officials and political analysts expected Romney to out-pace McCain and Giuliani, but some say the bigger accomplishment is coming within striking distance of Clinton, a longtime national figure and prodigious fund-raiser. In disclosing Sunday that she had raised $26 million in the first quarter, Clinton ’s campaign did not reveal what proportion was raised specifically for the primary and how much was for the general election. But if the general election donations totaled more than $5.5 million, that would mean she raised less than Romney’s $20.6 million for the primary — and that would make Romney the top primary fund-raiser from any party so far.

“Governor Romney is winning over voters and supporters because he is the candidate with the best ideas and the most detailed vision for leading the country into the future,” Romney campaign spokesman Kevin Madden said in a statement.

Romney’s campaign yesterday also reported that he had loaned his campaign about $2.4 million in the early days of his presidential campaign. Romney, according to Madden, had loaned himself the money before telling reporters at a $6.5 million daylong fund-raising blitz Jan. 8 that it would be “akin to a nightmare” if he were forced to give his own money to his White House bid.

One senior Romney campaign aide emphasized yesterday that the $2.4 million was a loan, not a gift. “A loan’s a loan,” the aide said. “That was just to start up.”

One significant unknown about Romney’s finances at this point is his so-called burn rate, or the pace at which he is spending what he has raised. Because Romney has built large organizations and already aired radio and TV ads in at least three early primary states, experts anticipate that his full first-quarter campaign finance report — which is due at the Federal Election Commission by April 15 — will show that he is running an expensive campaign.

Jon Fleischman, a vice chairman of the California Republican Party, said Romney has proven definitively that he’s a top-tier fund-raiser. Now, Fleischman said, he needs to show that he knows how to spend it in order to catch up to Giuliani and McCain in the polls. Romney trails far behind both rivals in many opinion polls.

“Romney has shown that he knows how to raise the money,” said Fleischman, who publishes FlashReport.org, a website devoted to California politics. “The question is, does he know how to spend the money effectively? And that is going to be the story of the next few months.”

“Mitt Romney is still relatively obscure,” Fleischman added. “He’s got a big challenge ahead of him.”

Romney’s strong first-quarter financial showing is sure to help by fueling a wave of positive mentions in the media, from commentators, and among bloggers about his viability as a candidate.

Leading candidates of both parties are raising millions more for this presidential campaign than candidates have raised in the past, in part because an accelerated 2008 primary calendar — in which states such as California and Florida have moved up their votes to early in the year — is forcing them to spend money across the country sooner than ever.

In the first quarter of 2003, all candidates together raised nearly $31 million. For the entire 2004 election campaign, the candidates raised more than $600 million from individual contributors.

In past races, McCain’s first-quarter tally of $12.5 million would have been deemed impressive. Instead, his campaign manager, Terry Nelson, was forced to acknowledge yesterday that the campaign didn’t meet expectations. “Although we are pleased with the organization we’ve built and polls show us strongly positioned in key primary states, we had hoped to do better in first-quarter fund-raising,” Nelson said in a statement. “We are already in the process of taking the necessary steps to ensure fund-raising success moving forward.”

Giuliani’s campaign, meanwhile, sought to cast its figures as evidence of momentum. The campaign said Giuliani had raised $10 million in March and has more than $11 million cash on hand, the vast majority for the primary.

“We are thrilled by the response to Mayor Giuliani’s optimistic vision, experienced leadership, and proven record of results,” campaign manager Mike DuHaime said in a statement. “Considering our late start, we are very pleased by the pace raised in March and see it as a positive indication of what’s to come.”

Another Republican candidate, Kansas Senator Sam Brownback, expects to have raised about $1.3 million last quarter, campaign manager Rob Wasinger said yesterday. “The Republican activists who actually get out and do the hard work of winning elections are responding very favorably to Senator Brownback’s candidacy, and we are looking forward to running a strong issue-based, positive campaign and continuing to activate the grass roots,” he said.

Among Democrats, all eyes now are on Illinois Senator Barack Obama, who is expected to show a strong first quarter, in part because of a growing base of Internet supporters. As of yesterday, Obama’s campaign wasn’t prepared to release its figures. The New York Times today reported that aides to Obama said he had raised more than $20 million so far in 2007. Former North Carolina senator John Edwards reported Sunday raising $14 million so far this year.

Scott Helman can be reached at shelman@globe.com.

© Copyright 2007 Globe Newspaper Company.


 
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