Events
Peace & Justice Expo
Saturday, April 26
Primary Election
May 13
Email Chuck Hagel Nebraska Peace Stratcom
News and important info on the threat to the world from Omaha.
Whiteclay
Updates on Nebraska's tiny reservation border town.
Dick Cheney
Impeachment is on the table.
Speaking Our Peace Forty & Counting
By Paul Olson, NFP President
Global Warming Global Warming Is Alive and Well
By Professor Bruce E. Johansen
Peace Matters
Omaha NFP Newsletter
StratCom Conference Space Conference
Alexandra Svoboda
An Injury to One is an Injury to All…
Event World Peace forum
Peace Propaganda Peace Propaganda

Initiative Petition to ‘Use Public Power’

Paul Schumacher
www.usepublicpower.com

Open Up the Information Super Highway for Nebraskans. Under Nebraska’s current telecommunication’s policy, Nebraskans pay the highest taxes on their phone bills of any state.


It’s the War, Stupid

Paul Olson, NFP President

We can choose to have schools, universities, roads, healthcare, thriving family farms and productive households, public transportation and green energy. Or we can choose to cry ‘Terror’ endlessly...

Ten Organizations from Five States
Address Proposed Uranium Mining

Shannon Anderson
Powder River Basin Resource Council

We call on the public and all elected officials to do everything possible to protect the water, land, and local economies from proposed uranium activities.

Event
  • History
  • Priorities
  • Board of Directors
  • Videos
  • Gallery
  • Links
  • Blog
Peacemaking Action Alerts Section Division Action Image 02 Cat Lovers Against The Bomb
The Year of Vigilance
2008 Calendar
Action Image 01 2007 Peacemakers
John Krejci
Nebraska Coalition for Peace
NFP ON FLICKR
Priorities

2008 NFP State Board Issue Priorities


There’s no end to peacemaking. No matter how much a Peace & Justice organization like ours might already have on its plate, or how overcommitted we may already be, there’s always one more issue deserving of our attention.

But when you’ve only got a budget of $150,000 a year and the equivalent of three full-time staff, you have to make some choices. So each year, the State Board of Nebraskans for Peace has the unenviable task of setting the organization’s priorities for the coming year.

From our inception at the height of the Vietnam War, NFP has always been a multi-issue organization — focused on both peace and justice issues. That same mindset and outlook informs our agenda-setting efforts today. With the United States embroiled in yet another conflict in the developing world, anti-war organizing is of course a foundational part of our activities. As a Nebraska-based group, however, we continually strive to give our anti-war work a Nebraska flavor — particularly since our state has two senators, in Chuck Hagel and Ben Nelson, who have been openly critical of the White House’s policy initiatives in the Islamic world.

We try to balance this national and international emphasis though by also choosing some issues that have a uniquely Nebraska bent (such as our long-term involvement with Whiteclay alcohol sales, for instance). Not only does this local focus highlight our Nebraska identity, we’re well aware that if NFP doesn’t pick up on these state-specific Peace & Justice issues, it’s unlikely anyone else in the country is going to.

Finally, you may notice that this year’s list of priorities looks suspiciously like last year’s list of priorities — and not all that different from the priorities of the year before. While the work of peacemaking and justice-working is indeed endless, many of the issues are persistent and enduring. Sadly, our government tends to force its will onto the rest of the world as much today as it did 40 years ago. Exploitation and oppression are as prevalent now as they were four decades ago. And injustice continues to be pretty standard wherever you look.

It’s our responsibility, as the oldest statewide Peace & Justice organization in the country, to continue to confront these unacceptable conditions — with whatever resources we have at our disposal. And, as always, how effective we are in confronting them depends to a large part on the support we can muster from our members.

For 2008, the NFP State Board has identified the following five program priorities:

Program I: Turn Off the Violence. As has been the case previously, we will continue our anti-bullying work in the schools. We hope to take a leading part in the passage of LB 205, the anti-bullying bill that got out of committee last session. This year we also mean to expand the focus of this program to address domestic abuse and adult violence.

Program II: Anti-War & International Law. This long-standing priority will center not only on Iraq, Iran and the White House’s “War on Terror,” but on the essential role of the United Nations and the primacy of international law.

Program III: StratCom & Anti-Nuclear Organizing. With StratCom in our backyard, those of us in NFP have a special responsibility to alert the rest of the world about the even greater menace this command center has to world peace in the wake of 9/11.

Program IV: Civil Rights. In addition to our continuing focus on Whiteclay, we will also be treating such diverse topics as immigration, globalization and economic development in North Omaha.

Program V: Environment. The ongoing degradation of the environment is fast becoming the premier peace issue of our time. In addition to urgently needing to develop our state’s renewable wind energy resources, Nebraska faces a long overlooked, but growing danger from the military and nuclear pollution of our soil and water.

Just as these five programs are not ranked in order of importance, this list is not immutable or exhaustive. For example, with this being our best opportunity in years to abolish capital punishment in the state, NFP will naturally be aiding Nebraskans Against the Death Penalty in their abolition efforts. Our 2008 Priority Plan is really nothing more than a blueprint for action — and we know, depending on the circumstances, plans can and should be changed. But if we’re to be as effective as we can be with the limited resources we have available, it’s important that we have a plan