|  US 
              artists damn 'war without limit'
 Duncan Campbell in Los AngelesFriday June 14, 2002
 The Guardian
 
    A group of leading American writers, actors and academics have 
              signed a statement strongly criticising their government's policies 
              since September 11. It is an indication of a growing feeling that 
              the administration is promoting its own agenda on the back of the 
              attacks. In a statement called Not In Our Name, the signatories say the government 
              has "declared a war without limit and instituted stark new 
              measures of repression". They also criticise the media for 
              failing to challenge the direction the government has taken.
 They include the musicians Laurie Anderson and Mos Def, the actors 
              Ossie Davis and Ed Asner, the writers Alice Walker, Russell Banks, 
              Barbara Kingsolver and Grace Paley, and the playwrights Eve Ensler 
              and Tony Kushner.  Martin Luther King III, Gloria Steinem, Noam Chomsky, Edward Said 
              and Rabbi Michael Lerner have added their names, making this the 
              widest ranging group of opponents of government policy since September 
              11.  Jeremy Pikser, one of the organisers of the statement, said yesterday 
              that he had been concerned that the rest of the world was under 
              the impression that there was no dissent in the US to the bombing 
              of Afghanistan and the plans for a war against Iraq.  Pikser, a screenwriter who wrote Bulworth, a satire on American 
              politics in which Warren Beatty played a politician who finally 
              decided to speak his mind, said some people had been reluctant to 
              add their names. "A lot of people haven't signed it, although 
              they agree with it, because they think it might jeopardise other 
              things they're involved in."  Clark Kissinger, another of the organisers, said they had been 
              heartened by the number of people wanting to sign.  Mr Kissinger, one of the organisers of the first anti-Vietnam war 
              marches on Washington in 1965, said he was receiving about 60 emails 
              a day from people who wanted to add their name to the list.  "It's a shame that there's not a voice of opposition coming 
              out of the United States."  The statement, which the signatories hope will be published by 
              the American media, ssays: "We must take the highest officers 
              of the land seriously when they talk of a war that will last a generation 
              and when they speak of a new domestic order.  "We are confronting a new openly imperial policy towards the 
              world and a domestic policy that manufactures and manipulates fear 
              to curtail rights."  Support for the president's policies remains high, however, and 
              those who appear critical of them have been accused of lacking patriotism. 
             It was announced last week that Bill Maher, host of the television 
              show Politically Incorrect, has not had his contract renewed by 
              ABC.  Maher was criticised for an exchange six days after September 11 
              in which he and a guest agreed that whatever else the hijackers 
              were, they were not "cowardly."
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