The current Daniel Ellsberg Week celebrates the achievements and inspirational spirit of the most significant whistleblower of the 20th century. Daniel Ellsbergās recent announcement of a terminal diagnosis broke my heart, but his remarkableĀ responseĀ gave me great hope.Ā To quote Ellsberg: āAs I just told my son Robert: he’s long known (as my editor) that I work better under a deadline. It turns out that IĀ liveĀ better under a deadline!ā
Daniel Ellsberg has done just that; an avalanche of interviews and webinars have followed his announcement. And now the RootsAction Education Fund has teamed up with the Ellsberg Initiative for Peace and Democracy to co-sponsorĀ Daniel Ellsberg Week, April 24-30, to celebrate his lifeās work and āto honor peacemaking and whistleblowing.ā
Known as the insider who blew the whistle on U.S. government lying about the Vietnam War, Ellsbergās high level military planning experience began earlier.Ā Ellsberg was a nuclear war planner during the 1950s and ā60s. For decades he has put himself on the line to oppose those evil plans; writing, speaking, standing up and sitting-in against the threat of nuclear annihilation. Ellsberg has been hauled off to jail for civil disobedience against war over 80 times. Here he offers chilling clarity about āthe nuclear war planners, of which I was one, who have written plans to kill billionsĀ of people,ā calling it āa conspiracy to commit omnicide, near omnicide, the death ofĀ everyone.ā He asks us, āCan humanity survive the nuclear era? WeĀ don’t know. I choose to act as if we have a chance.ā
This quote is from one of several eye-opening podcasts being released this week (which I directed in partnership with the RootsAction Education Fund), enabling people to hear Ellsberg directly. In these half dozen two-to-three-minute animated musings, Daniel Ellsberg offers up a succinct analysis of the calamity posed by nuclear weapons and a possible way to reduce their risk.Ā You can watch and listen here.
When Daniel Ellsberg leaked the Pentagon Papers in 1971, Henry Kissinger (then President Nixonās national security advisor) called him āthe most dangerous man in America.ā But those closely held secrets of the war in Vietnam were less explosive than the nuclear secrets that Ellsberg held in his safe. Then a top strategist for the Defense Department, he had been party to plans for a nuclear holocaust. After being buried for safekeeping, those documents disappeared in a hurricane that literally blew away his secrets, but that didnāt dampen Ellsbergās desire to share what he knew.
At 92, with mind sharp as ever, Ellsberg remains an undisputed expert on ānational security.ā In this unusualĀ illustrated podcast, he shares his unvarnished thoughts about the threat of nuclear annihilation and how it might be defused.Ā
Can we simply ignore the reality of the worldās largest nuclear arsenals on hair-trigger alert — amid escalation of a new cold war with heightened nuclear dangers? Indeed, the U.S. just enacted its biggest military budget in history, with unprecedented investment in weapons of mass destruction and their deployment.
We ignore this impending disaster and its impassioned opponent, Daniel Ellsberg, at our own peril.
Hereās a chance toĀ honor him byĀ listeningĀ and heeding his words.
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Judith EhrlichĀ co-directed and produced āThe Most Dangerous Man in America,Ā Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers,āĀ which was nominated for an Oscar and Emmy and won the Peabody Award.Ā Her recent film,Ā āThe Boys Who Said NO!āĀ features Daniel Ellsberg, Joan Baez and a cast of war resisters who chose prison over killing in the Vietnam War. Ehrlich is currently in production onĀ āThe Mouse that Roared,ā a film onĀ the evolution of the Internet poetically explored throughĀ Icelandic MP/āpoetician,ā single mother, defender of whistleblowers andĀ Internet pioneer,Ā Birgitta Jónsdóttir.Ā To watch the Oscar-nominated film on Daniel Ellsberg, please go to:Ā www.mostdangerousman.org.Ā To host a screening of āThe Boys Who Said NO!ā seeĀ here, andĀ to read Ellsberg’s 2017 gripping expose āThe Doomsday Machine: Confessions of a Nuclear War Plannerā see:Ā https://www.ellsberg.net.
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