Scott Horton Show - Just the Interviews - 11/19/21 Russell Wray on the Antiwar Movement, Protesting and the Military’s Impact on the Environment
Episode Date: November 22, 2021Scott interviews activist Russel Wray from Ellsworth Maine. Wray has been protesting the wars every Sunday since 2002. He discusses his journey to the antiwar movement and how it’s changed since he ...began his weekly protests. Wray is also a member of a group that’s trying to fight back against the Navy’s sonar practices, which he says are unnecessarily dangerous to marine life. Discussed on the show: Earth’s Greatest Enemy Documentary Russel Wray is an anti-war activist from Ellsworth Maine and a member of Citizens Opposing Active Sonar Threats, an advocacy group working to bring attention to the U.S. Navy’s unnecessary killing of marine life. This episode of the Scott Horton Show is sponsored by: The War State and Why The Vietnam War?, by Mike Swanson; Tom Woods’ Liberty Classroom; ExpandDesigns.com/Scott; EasyShip; Dröm; Free Range Feeder; Thc Hemp Spot; Green Mill Supercritical; Bug-A-Salt; Lorenzotti Coffee and Listen and Think Audio. Shop Libertarian Institute merch or donate to the show through Patreon, PayPal or Bitcoin: 1DZBZNJrxUhQhEzgDh7k8JXHXRjYu5tZiG. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, y'all, welcome to the Scott Horton Show.
I'm the director of the Libertarian Institute, editorial director of antivore.com, author of the book, Pools Aaron,
time to end the war in Afghanistan, and the brand new, enough already, time to end the war on terrorism.
And I've recorded more than 5,500 interviews since 2000.
almost all on foreign policy and all available for you at scothorton dot for you can sign up the podcast feed there and the full interview archive is also available at youtube.com slash scott horton show all right you guys introducing russell ray and he's from elworth main and i got a friend of mine sent me a picture uh i guess he was there visiting and he's from elworth maine and i got a friend of mine sent me a picture uh i guess he was there visiting and he
met Russell with his sign where he's been standing every Sunday since 2002 in the run-up to
Iraq War II. This time his sign says defund the Pentagon. And my friend was telling me he had a
really good conversation and recommended an interview. So I decided to go for it. So welcome to
show. Russell, how are you doing, sir? Thank you very much, Scott. I'm doing fine. Thanks.
Happy to have here. So you've been
standing out there protesting ever since 2002.
Were you always an anti-war activist before that?
Well, I have been, yeah.
I mean, going back to my time in high school
when I became aware of what war was about somewhat,
and I had a, this was back during the conscription lottery
and the Vietnam War was still going on.
And I had a very low number.
And I had applied for conscientious objector status and was rejected.
And a few months after I was rejected, the conscription lottery ended.
But I never intended ongoing.
So I'm not sure exactly where that came from.
I think it had a lot to do with just the feelings, the mood at the time.
people, you know, were really, the anti-war movement was alive and well at that time.
And I had no intention of going.
And so that would have been, what, in the early 70s?
I was in 73, yeah.
And then luckily that war finally ended a couple years later or a year or so later there.
And then, so in 2002, I imagine you weren't.
standing alone out there you must have had some friends and i know all across this country and
including in austin where i'm from there are people of all kinds of political descriptions were
coming together to try to oppose that war that's right yeah um in ellsworth we actually which is not a
big town we we had some really good uh turnouts for some of our our vigils and protests um and
those were more on um particularly like national protesting
days but otherwise we had our ongoing weekly vigil and um at that time yeah i i wasn't alone
there was there was other people there with me yeah in uh i mean i i went to the big ones myself
otherwise i haven't always been very big on the street protesting stuff but there were i don't
know when this stopped but there were in austin the women in black would stand out there
they were essentially like code pink type ladies and that lasted at least through the bush years i
don't know if they kept it up into obama or not yeah well unfortunately i think uh the obama years
really um things uh he was he was perfect for the powers that be in in terms of um kind of making
people feel like things were going to be okay and and they weren't so i kept my
protest going through the Obama years.
Yeah, well, that's very good to hear.
He certainly kept the wars going through his years.
He really did.
Yeah, and it's just on every facet of American life now,
everything is so politicized and then on top of that, you know,
ultra-partisan, where if conservatives start to get good on war,
liberals start wondering whether maybe they should get worse on it,
rather than agree with people that they hate on anything,
even if it's people that they hate actually getting good on something after too long, you know?
Right, right.
It is strange times.
Yeah, it sure is.
All right, so now defund the Pentagon.
I see in the picture here that my friend took,
that's a pretty new-looking sign.
Do you change the slogan on the sign very often?
Um, that's, I mean, I, the sign I had before that, uh, just said, bring all the troops home now or something like that. Um, that was, um, after the during and during the height of the Black Lives Matter movement, when that whole defund the police, um, you know, was big and people understood the meaning of it, or at least some people, many people understood what that was getting at. I thought,
Well, why not defund the Pentagon?
And it seemed like the time was right and, you know, people might understand the connection there.
So that's when I made the sign.
Yeah.
You know, so you got a few years on me, but I was born right after the Vietnam War.
And I was raised in the shadow of it.
And there certainly was the residual culture on the left of, you know, fear of and distaste.
for the CIA and the military and military-associated industries and that kind of thing.
That was, you know, the Vietnam syndrome, as the critics called it, you know, really had made an
impression on them and lasted for a very long time.
But I think maybe people just, you know, it was in the movies too, right?
Hamburger Hill and Platoon and Jacob's Ladder and there are quite a few more, right?
Like all the Vietnam War movies, and even like the Stephen King movies, Firestarter, was about this secret evil government agency that experimented on this little girl and gave her these powers.
You know what I mean?
It was all kind of felt that way.
But I think maybe a lot of that culture is missing.
You know, it kind of wore off.
Even after Iraq should have invigorated it more, but kind of didn't.
It did invigorate it more.
And, yeah, I agree.
It should have, it's really interesting how, how, I think, well, I personally think Obama had a lot to do of really fracturing the peace movement and the anti-war movement, you know, really kind of put it to sleep to a large extent.
And it's not just Obama, of course.
The U.S. military got smart and ended the draft.
And, you know, now it's, of course, some say it's a, there's now an economic draft.
And there's a lot to be said for that, you know.
But that helped a lot to put people back to sleep.
I see when I'm standing out there on the bridge, I see all kinds of young people go by with no reaction.
It's like it doesn't it doesn't affect them these wars or at least they I mean it does affect it affects everybody.
It affects all of life on these on this planet, but it doesn't they don't feel like it affects them personally, I guess.
Yeah.
You know, one time in L.A. I was sitting in my truck and I had an anti-war.com sticker on the back window.
And a guy walked by and I just heard him scoff to himself.
I don't think he was necessarily trying to be overheard.
by me you know he was just kind of saying to himself anti-war like he just couldn't even get his
head around the idea at all that why would anybody begin to bother about something like that
i mean who cares at all you know it just seems so alien to him anti-war what a that's like
pro quilting on a bumper sticker some just seemed like a completely ridiculous thing to have on a
bumper sticker. Maybe more ridiculous than pro-quilting. I don't know. There's nothing wrong with
quilting. Yeah. You know what I mean, though? It just, it seemed completely bananas to him.
Like, what are you even talking about? Yeah. Well, it's, I'll tell you, we've heard a lot of,
a lot of very strange comments coming from people driving by us on the bridge. And, you know,
some people just, I mean, we've been called communists and go back home and everything.
it's they don't people don't i don't think they get it and i'm not sure why well certainly the
people driving by don't but do you have any good stories of meeting people and talking to them and
changing some minds um you know it's it's interesting i had a young guy approach me on the bridge
um this was a number of years back and he asked me what i was doing he was a little bit uh you know
he was slightly, what's the word, he was, he was, clearly he was angry and a little bit ruffled,
but I talked to him for a while, and he ended up coming back a few weeks later,
and I was a little bit shocked when he told me that he had enlisted.
So he was going off to the wars, and, or I don't know if he was going off,
off to the wars, but he had enlisted in the military and he may have gone off to the wars.
So that was a little surprising to me because I was trying to, you know, when I was talking to him,
I was trying to get him to understand that are, that U.S. wars have not, they're not, they really have
almost nothing to do with defending Americans anymore. And how much damage they do to people
and the environment and it just it didn't he wouldn't accept it I guess so that was that was a little
surprising to me that he ended up doing that yeah that's disappointing yeah I'd like I'd love to
know where he is now and what you know how he's doing and what he what he thought what he ended up
thinking of his time in the military yeah well I hope it didn't go too bad for him but I know that
in my experience, it seems like, you know, the idea of joining the military and being in the
army and all that, it almost has nothing whatsoever to do with what is America's foreign policy
right now? Who is the president right now? Or is he and are his men making good decisions right now
or not? But it's more about like, well, my uncle was in the military. And so, you know what I mean? Or just
I need a job or it's the college.
I know a lot of, I've heard a lot of Army guys just say, hey, it's just a job.
Like people say, oh, thank you for your service.
It's just a job.
Uh-huh.
Yeah.
So it doesn't matter which country we're invading.
You know what I mean?
It doesn't matter.
That's just, it's a whole separate issue.
And I think a lot of them just kind of, I mean, certainly, certainly the many of the people, I think,
who enlisted after 9-11 did you know they just think it's the patriotic thing to do and i think a
lot of them actually honestly believe that they're they're doing the right thing and they're
defending the country but i think there's they're very badly misinformed yeah all right now
ed told me that you brought up uh and i saw actually that you have this group the citizens
opposing active sonar threats.
And this is something I heard about the first time a long time ago
and I very rarely hear about it.
But I guess the first time I heard about it
it was probably 20, 25 years ago in the 90s
about new, more powerful sonar on submarines
creating major problems for sea life
and causing whales and dolphins to be be beached
and all this kind of thing.
So I just wonder if you could tell us about your group
and any progress you made there.
Well, I actually didn't know anything about it until 2000, the year 2000.
And I had, I'm an artist and that's what I do when I'm not doing my activism.
And at the time I was running a gallery, I had a woman stop in.
And a lot of my artwork involved, you know, I've done a lot of work that is about whales
and dolphins because I just grew up loving them.
And I was lucky because this woman happened to be somebody by the name of Marsha Green
who runs the Ocean Mammal Institute.
And she has filed a number of lawsuits against the Navy for their sonar use.
And she told me about it.
And at the time, she was organizing a conference on the sonar right in college of the
Atlantic, which is very close to where I live, and she invited me to go. So I went to the college,
I went to the conference, learned a lot. And shortly right afterwards, I said, I got to do
something about this. And I started Citizens Opposing Act with Sonar threats. And, you know,
being a, being an artist, I'm not a sign, I'm not from a scientific background or anything.
And sonar is very technologically oriented.
I'm not.
But basically, as I've said in some of my comments on Navy sonar projects,
you don't have to be a rocket scientist to understand
when you're blasting this extremely loud noise into the oceans,
it's going to impact the creatures that live there.
And it's having, you know, it's really having a serious.
impact. Unfortunately, because these animals are at sea and many of the Navy exercises are far from
our shores, we don't see the impacts very often. Sometimes we do see them, but most of the impacts
we never see and we really don't know. But I believe there's a lot of dead animals on the
bottom of the ocean that people never know about, never seen. And I think it's having very
serious. And this is not just affecting whales and dolphins. It affects fish and some
types of fish and other sea life. You know, you're blasting this extremely loud sound energy
through the water. And water is a great conductor of that noise.
especially the low-frequency sonar, which can travel for very great distances,
literally for thousands of miles.
And it's affecting a lot of creatures in the oceans.
One of the reasons that I decided to focus in on that particular issue of Navy sonar
was because it's so beautifully combined my love of whales and dolphins in the oceans,
and nature
with my strong feelings
against war making.
Yeah.
Hold on just one second.
Be right back.
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well and i would just like to point out you know for their audience sake too that
conservation is not just a partisan issue and not all environmental concerns are global warming
laws and taxes being inflicted or whatever and uh we may need submarines if we need a standing
army at all maybe we need a couple of good submarines as ron paul said but there's got to be a way
to do it where we're not waging war against the basic ecosystems of the planet that we all are
going to need to survive for the long term.
Absolutely.
You know, one of the things that various organizations that have been working on this issue
have been trying to get the U.S. Navy to do, and some other foreign navies are actually
much more reasonable than the U.S. Navy when it comes to attempting to protect marine life.
But the U.S. Navy, like, they insist they have to train, even if it's just for practice or training, they have to do it.
They have to have the sonar at full blast, and they don't want to ramp up the sonar.
In other words, started it at a low level and slowly raise the level to give marine mammals and other life that's nearer time to, you know, try to move away from the sound.
they just refuse most reasonable mitigation measures that could really lessen the impacts on ocean life.
So I think the U.S. Navy is incredibly arrogant in its approach to using this sonar,
which they know is harmful, and they just won't take reasonable measures.
And now is there anybody in Congress who cares about this makes much of a big deal about it or any kind of real movement to stop them?
You know, there have been Congress people in the past who've expressed concern, certainly.
But not, there hasn't been any real reigning in.
I mean, the raining in of the Navy, whatever little has occurred, has been through court action.
action. It's not through legislative action. And usually, in many cases, the Navy just, you know,
appeals, they'll, they'll, if they lose the case, they'll appeal. And they'll say, hey, we need this for
national security, and that's it. I mean, one case when, during the Bush years, went up to the
Supreme Court. And that was about sonar, sonar training, often.
off of California and it went up to the Supreme Court and they ruled in favor of the Navy
because the Navy screamed, hey, we need it for national security. Now is it. Yeah, the courts
will always defer to the executive branch on stuff like that, unfortunately. Yeah, so,
So really it is ongoing.
I think we don't really know the full extent of the harm that's been done by it,
but I believe it's large.
I mean, we do know that there's been numerous whale strandings following Navy sonar exercises,
where injuries are consistent.
with acoustic impacts and, you know, there's no doubt that it is causing problems.
One of the problems is that, you know, other countries don't necessarily have protocols in place
to find all the whales. I mean, there are remote stretches of beach where whales can wash up
where they won't be found until it's too late.
They're just, you know, they're rotting on the beach.
And at that point, you can't really do a necropsy that's going to be successfully able to find out what may have caused the death.
So anyways, it's, I think it's a big problem.
Right now, you know, what I've been working on mostly, aside from my anti-war work, is I live in Maine.
and as you mentioned, and there's, we have a whale here that migrates up and down the east coast.
It's called the North Atlantic right whale, and it's one of the most critically endangered of all the whale species.
There's only 336 estimated to be still alive, and these are incredible creatures.
They're, you know, they get up to like over 50 feet long.
They're massive.
They're just amazing.
and they keep getting entangled in fishing gear and struck by ships.
And the reason I brought this up was because there is a Navy sonar base, sonar range.
It's a range that is called the Undersea Warfare Training Range.
And it's about 50 miles off the shore between Florida and Georgia.
and this even though the Navy was very much aware of the fact that this is the area where the right whales go to have their calving ground it's their calving grounds they're only known calving grounds and they were told that they know they were very much aware of it but they insisted it's got to be there and we took him to court on it I was part of a lawsuit on that and we lost the lawsuit we appealed and we lost the appeal
even though the law was clearly on our side, I mean, for a number of reasons.
But again, you're fighting the Navy, and it was, you know, the courts just,
they just wouldn't have it. So they, so we lost that case. But why I brought this up is because
here's this sonar range right next to the calving grounds of this critically endangered whale.
and this whale one of the big problems is they're they're because of all the stress they're under
they're having they're calving less frequently than they used to like females used to in their
in their years of their reproductive years they would sometimes give birth like every three
years but now it's now it's much slower than that it's like more like once every eight or nine or
10 years. And they're very stressed out from various things, one of which is entanglements.
But I'm wondering, and I'm sure I'm not alone in this, how much that sonar range, which
this range is, they're engaging in these sonar exercises. What was the figure? I'm really bad at
remembering figures, but it was like, you know, more than every, more than once a day.
you're blasting this sonar and it's like 50 miles or it's i mean the the whales don't have uh you know
they don't say this inside this circle is our cabin grounds they'll give birth in and around that area
and some and they have photographed a whale giving birth i think it was just outside of that area of
the uh the defined location of this particular range sonar range so how much is that
is that sonar noise impacting these critically endangered whales's ability to give birth and to raise
and to bring up their young, you know, because they, after they give birth, they stay down there
for a while to nurture the newborn calves.
Yeah.
So what's all the sonar noise doing to them?
Right.
Well, and the thing is, too, like, let's say that your take on it is overblown.
the reality is there's no accountability
and the Navy can just do whatever they want
and so it's clear that regardless of how bad
this is for the whales they're going to do whatever they want
and as you say what can you do sue them
the courts won't intervene and so
it's going to take you know some kind of popular pressure
that makes it you know an important issue
for politicians to get on board with and that kind of thing
and speaking of which I wonder if
You're familiar with the journalist Dar Jamal?
Yes, I know.
I don't know him, but yes, I know of him, yes.
So my understanding is that he's a old friend of mine from the Iraq War Two Days,
where he did great reporting there.
And I know that this is his beat, is, you know, militarism and environmentalism,
where they intersect there.
And I'm under the impression I think I'm right that he's making a documentary now with Abby Martin about this.
And I wonder if you're in contact with them or if your group is in contact
with them. No, I haven't been. And I don't think I knew that. Are you saying he's making a film about
Sonar in particular? No, about militarism and environmentalism. So I'm sure this will be part of it.
I know that Dar has written about this in the past. Yeah, I'm aware. But they're, you know,
this is going to tackle all different kinds of pollution and all their fossil fuel use and all the
rest of that i'm sure right but just yeah i was thinking you know you should make sure that your group
is in contact with them and you put your best scientist forward or whatever to to be interviewed and
that kind of thing if you can well like i said i'm you know we don't my group is a very small
group and actually recently in all honesty it's it's been me alone but um and i'm not a scientist
But there are other groups that are working on this
that have really very knowledgeable people
who understand the sonar technically, et cetera.
Yeah.
Well, you need to get your recruitment up.
I'm going to talk, though.
But yeah, I'll tell you,
I mean, you did mention, though,
earlier about the expert opinion of some specialist lady, didn't you?
uh marcia green are you talking about yeah i think so woman who told me about uh the sonar yeah yeah
yeah i will i will let her know yeah okay cool just want to make sure that they got all the best
people to uh to represent the case there when they when they put their thing out i know they're doing
some fundraising for it and that kind of thing and you know environmentalism in general and all its
little parts have all been very much politicized, too, between left and right. But, you know,
conservation is the old term for environmentalism. And it was the kind of word that conservatives could
agree with. Yeah, conservation. That's the kind of thing that hunters are into, you know?
That's environmentalism for Marlboro men. It's okay to be against environmental devastation
doesn't make you a commie or a hippie to be worried about the Navy killing whales unnecessarily
or any of these things so um you know despite all the hype about global warming one way or the
other uh there are a lot of issues here that people of all persuasions ought to be able to agree on
you know i agree yeah absolutely all right well listen i really appreciate you coming on the show
it's been very interesting and i wish you the best of luck up
there getting people's head straight well thank you scott i appreciate it and i really appreciate you
inviting me on yeah all right we'll have a great day okay you too thanks all right you guys that is
russell ray in elsworth maine and uh you'll find him out there protesting every sunday against
the war and uh he is the director of citizens opposing active sonar threats as well
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