Kids get Addicted to War
San Francisco's high school students to study a different kind of  
schoolbook
BY AMANDA WITHERELL amanda[[at]]sfbg.com
It's a lucid time line of 230 years of American wars and conflicts. It's a  
well-researched text, footnoted from sources as varied as international  
newspapers, Department of Defense documents, and transcripts of speeches  
 from scores of world leaders. It's been endorsed by such antiwar stalwarts  
as Susan Sarandon, Noam Chomsky, Helen Caldicott, Cindy Sheehan, and  
Howard Zinn, who called it "a witty and devastating portrait of US  
military history.
And it's a comic book that's going to be available for  
10th-through-12th-grade students in San Francisco's public schools. Four  
thousand copies of Addicted to War: Why the U.S. Can't Kick Militarism, by  
Joel Andreas, have been purchased and donated to the San Francisco Unified  
School District using contributions gathered by local peace activist Pat  
Gerber.
Gerber came across the book at a rally about a year and a half ago and,  
inspired by the compelling display of such heavy content, presented it to  
the Board of Education's Curriculum and Program Committee, where its use  
as a supplemental text was unanimously approved last fall. The book will  
be distributed to all high school social studies teachers for review, and  
those who opt in will be given copies to use as supplemental texts to  
their already approved curriculum.
Many peaceniks may be familiar with the 77-page comic book that was  
originally conceived in 1991 to highlight the real story behind the Gulf  
War. With spare wit and imagery, Andreas plainly outlines how combat is  
the very expensive fuel that feeds the economic and political fire of the  
United States.
In outlining this history, Andreas doesn't gloss over the lesser-known and  
oft misunderstood conflicts in Haiti, the Philippines, Lebanon, and  
Grenada. He draws on multiple sources to portray America's purported need  
to overthrow foreign governments and establish convenient dictators,  
including Saddam Hussein, in order to fill the pockets of the most  
powerful people and corporations in American history. Andreas also  
includes the blinded eyes of the mainstream media, whose spin and  
shortcomings keep this business rolling.
The current publisher, Frank Dorrel, came across the book in 1999. "This  
is the best thing I've ever read," the Air Force veteran told the  
Guardian. "I've got a whole library of US foreign policy, but this puts it  
all together in such an easy format. Howard Zinn, Noam Chomsky, Michael  
Parenti — they're all [authors of] great books, but they aren't easy  
reads." When Dorrel first discovered the book, he contacted the original  
publisher to order 100 copies to give to all his friends.
"They didn't even have 10," he said. "It was out of print."
Dorrel was disappointed with the news and thought an updated text was  
overdue. With the use of a private investigator,
he tracked down Andreas, who happened to live in the Los Angeles area just  
a few miles from Dorrel.
Andreas agreed it was time for a new edition. Addicted to War now includes  
Kosovo, Sept. 11, Afghanistan, and the current quagmire in Iraq. Over the  
years, 300,000 copies have been distributed in English, Spanish, and  
Japanese. Many of those copies have been distributed to teachers and  
students through the Books for Schools program, but San Francisco Unified  
is the first entire district to approve use of the book. Dorrel encourages  
others to follow suit by deeply discounting the $10 price for school  
districts to as little as $2.50 a book plus shipping. He seems unconcerned  
with making a profit and said, "It's all done to get out the information."
For San Francisco, he discounted the price even further, and the costs  
were met by donations from local peace activists. No taxpayer or school  
district funds were involved in the purchase, and Gerber and Dorrel are  
still accepting donations to defray some costs. (Contributions may be sent  
to Frank Dorrel, PO Box 3261, Culver City, CA 90231-3261.)
The district teachers' union, United Educators of San Francisco, expressed  
unanimous approval of the book, and it sailed through the board's  
bureaucracy. But it is not without its critics.
Sean Hannity of Fox News slammed the book for, among other things,  
illustrations of President George W. Bush wearing a gas mask and a baby  
holding a machine gun. Hannity invited Sup. Gerardo Sandoval to his Jan.  
12 show, introducing him as "the man who doesn't think we need a military"  
in a distorted reference to something Sandoval said in a previous  
appearance.
This time Hannity asked Sandoval, "Do you support this as propaganda in  
our schools?"
To which Sandoval responded, "It's not propaganda. But I do support having  
alternative viewpoints, especially for young people about to become of  
military age.... I think it provides a balanced approach to history. Some  
of the actions that the US has taken abroad in our 200-year history have  
been less than honorable."
To which an aghast Hannity countered, "It encourages high schoolers to  
kick the war habit. It is so unbalanced and one-sided.... You're entitled  
to your left-wing 'we don't need a military' views ... but leave our  
children in school alone."
Strangely, images of the book shown during the Fox segment bear little  
resemblance to those in the actual text. The news channel flashed to a  
picture of a thick, hardbound book with a dust jacket of the cover  
illustration, though as far as Dorrel and Gerber know, it has never been  
published in hardcover and never with a dust jacket. Gerber thinks the  
cover image and some internal cartoons were printed from the Web site  
www.addictedtowar.com and faked into a book that the news channel didn't  
have a copy of and had not actually read.
The SFUSD was invited by Fox News to speak on behalf of the book but  
declined. "We decided we didn't want to debate in that forum," district  
spokesperson Gentle Blythe told the Guardian.
Blythe said the district has been contacted mostly by people in support of  
the work and the only criticism has come from its coverage in the  
conservative media. She stressed that the use of the book is optional, at  
the discretion of each teacher, and the Office of Teaching and Learning is  
researching other texts that offer another perspective but has not settled  
on anything yet.
"If a teacher agrees with the content, they love the book," Dorrel said.  
"This is really the history. We've been going around in the name of  
liberty, and it's not that. It's a business. It's really bad when war is  
your business."
Dorrel said that since he's been distributing the book, which has all his  
contact information on the first page, he's only received a couple of  
nasty phone calls. "The phone rings every day. Every day there are  
e-mails, and mostly I just get praise because they've never seen anything  
like this. *
Posted: 2007-02-07 01:01:39
http://www.sfbg.com/entry.php?entry_id=2785&catid=&volume_id=254&issue_id=280&volume_num=41&issue_num=19
http://www.sfbg.com/printable_entry.php?entry_id=2785
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