MASS OCTOBER 26TH DEMONSTRATIONS INAUGURATE GRASSROOTS 
PEOPLE'S ANTI-WAR REFERENDUM AS PEOPLE VOTE NO TO WAR!

http://www.VoteNoWar.org

In the biggest anti-war demonstrations since the Vietnam 
War, hundreds of thousands of people on October 26th took 
to the streets across the country announcing with a 
massive visible and vocal presence the creation of a new 
anti-war movement to stop George W. Bush's plans to wage 
war against Iraq. The demonstrators included a vast number 
of people compelled to action because they were frustrated 
and angered when the Congress failed to listen to the 
people's opposition to a war on Iraq.

More than 200,000 people marched in the streets of 
Washington, D.C. and over 100,000 in San Francisco in 
addition to tens of thousands in other cities around the 
country. In Washington, D.C., the march was so vast that 
as the front of the march completed encircling the White 
House it met the last quarter of the march that had not 
even begun moving up towards the White House, and was 
forced to stop for a half an hour to allow the last 
portion of the march to proceed before the front could 
continue along the route back towards the rally site. 
People filled Washington's wide boulevards and sidewalks 
shoulder to shoulder for 25 city blocks, over two miles.

The October 26 demonstrations launched another major step 
in mass action against the war -- the grassroots People's 
Anti-War Referendum and a mass national 2-day mobilization 
on the weekend of January 18-19 in Washington, DC, timed 
to coincide with the birthday of Dr. Martin Luther King 
Jr. and the 12th anniversary of the start of the 1991 Gulf 
War.

To VOTE NO TO WAR, go to:
http://www.votenowar.org/referendum.html

For an easy-to-download PDF version of the two-sided FLYER 
ANNOUNCING THE PEOPLE'S ANTI-WAR REFERENDUM AND THE 
JANUARY 18-19 WASHINGTON DC MOBILIZATION, go to:
http://www.votenowar.org/flyer.pdf

To GATHER VOTES AGAINST THE WAR, download the flyer at 
http://www.votenowar.org/referendum.pdf, make copies, and 
mail the votes in to the address listed on the bottom of 
the flyer.

At the demonstration in Washington, people were chanting 
"Congress Votes for War -- We Vote No War!" as thousands 
began signing the People's Anti-War Referendum. People 
could be seen filling out referendums at the tables and on 
each other's backs, and taking stacks of referendums with 
them back to their communities. Thousands more visited the 
electronic voting booth and voted against war at 
http://www.VoteNoWar.org while they watched the rally on 
television at home.

The VoteNoWar People's Anti-War Referendum is a unique 
effort to expose the lie that the people of the United 
States support George W. Bush's planned war in Iraq and 
reveals the mass anti-war opinion that exists as a 
majority sentiment. Bush has carried out a sustained 
campaign to build the myth of consensus around the 
so-called war on terrorism. This has been successful in 
cowing Congress to rubber-stamp Bush's demand to be able 
to declare war at his discretion against Iraq. The myth of 
consensus has also saturated the mass media. The enormous 
outpouring of opposition sentiment this weekend is 
puncturing this myth.

By organizing public opinion we can build a potent 
political mass movement that can be decisive in the next 
few months. Congress did not end the war in Vietnam but 
the people's movement did and once again it is up to the 
people to stop this war.

The signatures pouring in on this anti-war referendum are 
a tangible manifestation of the breath of the opposition 
to the war against Iraq.

The VoteNoWar.org Anti-War Referendum is an extremely 
effective organizing tool so that we can bring the message 
of the anti-war movement into our workplace, schools, 
communities or places of worship. Millions and millions of 
people who have never been to a demonstration oppose this 
war and we need to reach them so that their opinions can 
be registered and reflected in the political process and 
so that more and more people become engaged in real 
grassroots democracy.

Congratulations go to the thousands of A.N.S.W.E.R. 
volunteers and those from other organizations who 
committed their time, their energy and their resources to 
make the October 26 demonstrations a huge success. So many 
people helped out passing out leaflets, putting up 
posters, acting as bus captains and bus greeters, staffing 
phones, making thousands of phone calls, organizing their 
communities, campuses, high schools, and workplaces, and 
volunteering with all the other tasks involved in bringing 
people to the demonstration and making sure that it was 
well organized. The demonstration could not have been so 
large without the work of the leadership provided by 
hundreds of grassroots organizers in cities and towns 
around the country who brought busses, vans, and car 
caravans to Washington DC and San Francisco. A special 
debt of gratitude goes to those who participated in set-up 
and take-down of stage and sound equipment and who 
remained to secure the area overnight in a pouring rain 
the night before the demonstration.

Make a donation to support the anti-war movement at 
http://www.internationalanswer.org/donate.html

FOR MORE INFORMATION:
http://www.VoteNoWar.org
http://www.InternationalANSWER.org
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
New York 212-633-6646
Washington 202-332-5757
Chicago 773-878-0166
Los Angeles 213-487-2368
San Francisco 415-821-6545

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