By Linda Rigas
On Saturday May 16, the Fire John Yoo protest at the UC Berkeley Law School Commencement furthered a visible resistance in the Bay Area against torture. With super pickets (large backpack-like signs) displaying the messages "Silence + Torture equals Complicity," "Fire and Dis-Bar John Yoo," and "John Yoo is A War Criminal," Bay Area members of World Can’t Wait along with community members, lawyers, activists, and students engaged the Berkeley Law Class of 2009 graduates and their family and friends to wear an orange ribbon and resist the continuance of torture in our names. World Can’t Wait also originated the following string of messages and placed them strategically, emphasizing a torture apparatus and the presence in the Bay Area of five war criminals and what actions they took to make torture state policy.
As graduates and their guests proceeded to the entrance of the graduation ceremony, they passed World Can’t Wait activists dressed in orange jumpsuits, silently posed, representing those who have been tortured around the world by the U.S. government. Between one-third to one-half of the graduates, faculty, and their guests took ribbons, and perhaps 20% wore them and supported the World Can’t Wait call for the release of the torture photos and the prosecution of the war criminals. A few graduates ran back to ask for a handful more to give to others.
In a clear ploy to prevent the graduation processional from encountering the protest at the main entrance – where the processional traditionally enters the Greek Theater – without public announcement, law school officials routed them in the back way instead. Alerted, the large group of protesters, jumpsuit groups and all, sprinted to the other entrance and re-set up, just in time to still greet the hundreds of graduates as they arrived.
I myself am a law student, and while we were going up and down the line of graduates waiting to be led into the Greek Theater for the ceremony, I sought to further draw out students’ thinking. Some students said they completely supported and agreed with World Can’t Wait’s advocacy against torture — yet they did not want to wear an orange ribbon. I asked them: What would it take for you to wear an orange ribbon opposing torture right here, right now? How many more people have to be tortured for you to find taking this action as necessary? How many more crimes have to be committed by the legal profession for which you will soon be a part? At that point, more of the graduates did take the orange ribbon to visibly stand against torture.
The well-known image of an Abu Ghraib detainee robed in black was evoked as a professor from another California university dressed in a black shroud with the bright yellow "Cal" logo clearly visible across his chest, and stood by the sign guiding people into the reception. As the law school’s Dean Christopher Edley walked out of the stadium, he passed a waterboarding reinactment – with the activist playing the torturer pouring the water wearing a John Yoo mask. As Dean Edley passed, the "victim" lying on the waterboard called out to him: "Dean Edley! Dean Edley! Make them stop!" [NOTE: Edley has very publicly defended and protected "Torture Professor" Yoo’s presence on the law school faculty as a matter of "academic freedom."]
During the graduation ceremony, 60 people called together by World Can’t Wait gathered in front of the Greek Theatre, where people talked about why they were there. We discussed the latest revelations emphasizing the widespread use of torture under the Bush Regime continuing under the Obama Administration, and the need for our presence on the streets showing visible resistance.
The torture protesters then moved a mile away for the graduates’ reception, where they asked the graduates and their guests whether torture will be accepted by the people in the U.S. How will the graduates oppose torture in a legal profession that authorized it? More ribbons and flyers were accepted, and here more conversations were possible. The police attempted to bar the World Can’t Wait protesters from the reception grounds, but when people demanded to stand on our rights to public speech in a public space, the police retreated and the protest unfolded all over the entry pathways and parking lot.
Overall the protest emphasized the growing need to oppose tolerating and protecting torture, and why people must be out on the streets raising the demand that they will not be complicit with this crime.
President Obama obviously does not comprehend how, because he now refuses to release the 2000 torture photos and because he refuses to prsecute those like John Yoo, and many others in either the Bush or Obama administrations who are also guilty of torture, that he himself has now become complicity in tghese crimes against humanity.
If the U.C. Regents also refuse to take action against Yoo, they, too, will also be complicit in the same crimes. By squelching anything to do with bringing truth to justice concerning the reprehensible issue of torture, the U.C. Regents, the Obama administration and every U.S. citizen who supports this suppression of truth have now become willing instruments of this policy.
Pathetically, now that Pfresident Obama now has based his refusal to release the 2000 torture photos on the premise that \”they will pose a danger to the safety of U.S. troops\”, he is using the very same bizarre logic and argument that Bush used to also squelch the truth.
Given so many recent positions taken by President Obama ( his active political, economic and military support of the racist, apartheid state of Isreal; the continuation of a fradulent pilfering of the U.S. Treasury and taxpayers monies by Wall Street banksters; continuuing escalation of the illegal war and occupation against the peoples of Iraq, Afghanistan and now Pakistan; continuation of the Military Tribunals at the Gitmo concentration camp; continuation of the illegal wiretapping of the American citizenry)is the Obama administration one that could be referred to as \”Bush-Lite\” or simply another full-strength Bush administration but wiht a kinder, gentler face?