Showing posts with label New Jersey Peace Action. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Jersey Peace Action. Show all posts

Friday, December 5, 2025

Radical Jeff

Radical Jeff

 

Radio is playing some long-forgotten song

John Fogarty splaining how the world went wrong

Radical Jeff is driving he’s humming along

When your heart is true you are strong

 

Radical Jeff well he’s a radical

Full of hope a little cynical

We’re all hoping on a miracle

Radical Jeff well he’s a radical

 

Well there are too many things we could protest

If you believe in love you just want the best

No more endless war and that means genocide

Sorry Uncle Sam we don’t like pilgrim pride

 

Radical Jeff well he’s a radical

Full of hope a little cynical

We’re all hoping on a miracle

Radical Jeff well he’s a radical

 

By God’s grace go punch a Nazi in the face

Let’s fix Earth before we ruin outer space

Peace love and understanding for the human race

And radical Jeff is setting things in their place

 

Radical Jeff well he’s a radical

Full of hope a little cynical

We’re all hoping on a miracle

Radical Jeff well he’s a radical

 

Radical Jeff is throwing the dice he’s playing the game

Radical Jeff I wish he had a better rhyming name

Call him an old hippie call him whatever you will

Jesus said a lot more than Thou Shall Not Kill

 

On the corner tonight the weather was bitter cold

All of the time day by day we’re growing old

We have but one wish in this wicked world of sin

To leave better than we got to our children

 

Radical Jeff well he’s a radical

Full of hope a little cynical

We’re all hoping on a miracle

Radical Jeff well he’s a radical


 GREAT BOOK OF SONG LYRICS



The Big Book Of Song Lyrics, Check It Out!!

Saturday, May 29, 2021

Love Is The Key By John Kaniecki

Love Is The Key  Copyright 2019 John Kaniecki All Rights Reserved!💀💝

 

They bind the mind with their evil lie

Serve your country in war kill and die

They train your brain until you’re insane

All the money of the world is vain

 

Love is the key to release

As ye seek so shall it be found

Come and join me heaven bound

I will live a life of peace

Love is the key to release

Go to college and get a degree

Major in the art of agony

Work behind a desk as a slave

Be a faithful follower to the grave

 

Love is the key to release

As ye seek so shall it be found

Come and join me heaven bound

I will live a life of peace

Love is the key to release

 

We only come down this way one time

If you don’t live right it’s a wicked crime

Smell the flowers and resist the higher powers

Understand you’re in command of all your hours

Take sweet time to walk off of the path

Let your words rhyme and ignore the wrath

Let there be a merry song in your heart

And never let righteousness depart

 

Love is the key to release

As ye seek so shall it be found

Come and join me heaven bound

I will live a life of peace

Love is the key to release

Click Here


Click Here


Click Here
Click Here
Click Here
Click Here
Click Here
Click Here



Saturday, May 12, 2018

Editorial by Madelyn Hoffman

U.S. needs to embrace a ban on nuclear weapons
Madelyn Hoffman
Special to North Jersey Record USA TODAY NETWORK - NEW JERSEY
Nuclear ban or nuclear war? It’s an easy choice for most, but perhaps not for the U.S. government.
On April 29, New Jersey Peace Action celebrated its 61st anniversary with a program featuring two dynamic women answering this question. They were Ray Acheson, from Reaching Critical Will and the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, and Alice Slater, from the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation and a veteran of the fight for nuclear abolition. Both had traveled to Oslo, Norway, in September 2017 to accept the Nobel Peace Prize on behalf of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons.
Peace and nuclear disarmament groups cheered at the announcement of ICAN’s award. They were pleased to see a grass-roots organization honored and excited to see nuclear abolition efforts finally acknowledged as a vital part of the work for peace and a necessary step toward the survival of the planet.
Nuclear disarmament has never been more important than it is today. It hangs as a backdrop behind all work to prevent wars and the yelling between the U.S. and North Korea. The escalating rhetoric between Kim Jong-un and President Trump is intensified because one wrong move could lead to the potentially catastrophic use of nuclear weapons. The proximity of Russian and U.S. troops in Syria becomes more dangerous because if either Russia or the U.S. provokes the other, that conflict, too, could result in the use of nuclear weapons.
Don’t let anyone fool you. No one will win a nuclear war. Remember the last time (and hopefully the only time in the history of the world) that atom bombs were used? “Fat Man” and “Little Boy” were dropped by the U.S. military on Nagasaki on Aug. 9 and Hiroshima on Aug. 6, 1945. Some 210,000 people were killed or vaporized instantaneously – with millions dying from radiation poisoning over time. Some of the effects from exposure to radiation continue to affect the children and grandchildren of the survivors. Today’s nuclear weapons are more powerful, so would have more devastating effects.
The consequences of radiation poisoning are still making themselves felt today. Fed up with what seems to be a reluctance to once and for all rid the world of nuclear weapons, led by ICAN in July 2017, members of 122 of the 192 member countries in the United Nations agreed to create a world that completely bans these terrible weapons.
In addition to opposing nuclear weapons out of concern for the humanitarian consequences of their use, the U.S. government has pledged to spend $1 trillion over the next 30 years to “modernize and rebuild” the entire U.S. nuclear arsenal, making it bigger and more powerful than it was at the height of the Cold War. At the same time, the U.S. warns countries like Iran and North Korea that they cannot have any nuclear weapons. All this when U.S. infrastructure is crumbling or when money is needed for education, health care, veterans’ benefits, public transportation and more. Think of how much money is needed for these purposes and then think about spending $1 trillion on our nuclear weapons arsenal. The words fall flat on their faces.
Ray Acheson wrote in her April 27 article “A New Generation Against the Bomb,” published in The Nation, “Since its founding in Melbourne, Australia, in 2007, ICAN has encouraged and accepted contributions from every person of every age … ICAN is not a youth organization … We’re an intergenerational campaign. Indeed, that’s one of our greatest strengths. We have octogenarians working alongside school students. No one is too young or too old to contribute to a world free of nuclear weapons.'
Nuclear countries like the U.S. must realize that instead of protecting the world and bringing about peace, many U.S. actions accomplish the opposite. Instead of tearing up international diplomatic agreements like the Iran Nuclear Deal, the U.S. should do everything it can to protect such agreements.
On May 12, we’ll learn whether the Trump administration will protect the Iran Deal. It shouldn’t be so difficult to support efforts by young and old alike to lower the escalating levels of violence in our society, including violence from mass shootings and U.S.-initiated violence in the form of drones, nuclear weapons or illegal and undeclared wars of aggression around the globe.
We can support local efforts to highlight the dangers of war on the first Saturday of every month from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the MLK statue, 450 MLK Boulevard, Newark. Let’s also support the nuclear abolition efforts of NJPA’s honorees – including the Essex County Branch of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom celebrating its 103rd anniversary this year.
We all have a stake in peace.
Bloomfield resident Madelyn Hoffman is executive director of NJ Peace Action.

Support New Jersey Peace Action Purchase Peace Poems.