Lecturers challenge public to combat injustice

WINSTED — The first two of three Rose Nader Circle lectures at Northwestern Connecticut Community College took place this month, first with veteran talk-show host Phil Donahue’s “Media Taboos and Free Speech� and this week with history professor Christopher Pyle’s “Getting Away with Torture: Restoring the Rule of Law.� Both talks focused heavily on politics and U.S. foreign policy.

Donahue challenged his audience to speak out against injustice, particularly, he said, when the mainstream media is not doing its job. An outspoken critic of the United States’ military involvement in Iraq, he challenged listeners to embrace their First Amendment rights.

Pyle gave an overview of United States-sponsored torture programs and warned that people need to rally against abuses of international law.

“We are in the third term of the Bush administration,� Pyle said. “The Obama administration is not the same in every way, but there are many similarities when it comes to foreign policy.�

Pyle indicted members of the Bush administration all the way up to Vice President Dick Cheney in his analysis of United States-sponsored torture in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantanamo Bay. He also suggested that prisoners at Guantanamo may end up being sent to prisons in Afghanistan, where their captors will remain outside the scope of American law.

Pyle’s view of U.S. foreign policy, outlined in his latest book, “Getting Away with Torture: Secret Government, War Crimes and the Rule of Law,� was admittedly bleak at some points. “If we just maintain the status quo that will be an accomplishment,� he said. “Things can get much, much worse.�

Pyle told his audience members to embrace their Constitutional rights and to write to legislators when they see injustices like those he has chronicled in his book. Citizens were also encouraged to write letters to the editor and speak out against systematic torture.

The third and final talk in this year’s Rose Nader Circle series will include decidedly lighter fare as lecturer Patricia Klindienston will present “The Earth Knows My Name: Food, Cultural Heritage and Our Gardens� on Wednesday, Nov. 4, at 7 p.m.

Lectures take place at Northwestern Connecticut Community College’s Founders Hall Auditorium at the corner of Route 44 and Route 8 North. For more information about the lecture series, call 860-738-3138.

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