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outh
is the first victim of war; the first fruit of peace. It takes
20 years or more of peace to make a man; it takes only 20
seconds of war to destroy him.”
~
King Baudouin I of Belgium
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I
am
a manipulated stooge who sold his
soul to exploit the ignorant with the proud lies our own leaders."
~
"heretic"
www.militaryproject.org
&
www.ftssoldier.blogspot.com |
Editorial
One Mother in Crawford
Published:
August 9, 2005
Summertime
often produces unexpected media figures, and this is Cindy
Sheehan's season. Ms. Sheehan, the mother of a soldier killed
in Iraq last year, is camping out near President Bush's
ranch in Crawford, Tex., and says she won't leave until
Mr. Bush agrees to meet with her to discuss the war. There
are many reasons for the flood of media attention she is
attracting: she has a poignant personal story and she is
articulate - and, let's face it, August is a slow news month.
But most of all, she is tapping into a growing popular feeling
that the Bush administration is out of touch with the realities,
and the costs, of the Iraq war.
Ms. Sheehan's 24-year-old son, Casey, was killed in Baghdad.
She says she and her family met privately with Mr. Bush
two months later, and she is sharply critical of how the
president acted. He did not know her son's name, she says,
acted as if the meeting was a party and called her "Mom"
throughout, which she considered disrespectful.
Ms. Sheehan has traveled from her California home to Crawford,
where Mr. Bush will be spending much of the month, in the
hope of having a more substantive discussion. On Saturday,
Mr. Bush's national security adviser and the White House
deputy chief of staff met with her beside a road a few miles
from the ranch, but she is still insisting on a meeting
with the president.
Even many Americans who do not share her views about the
president - she arrived in a bus bearing the slogan "Impeachment
Tour" - share her concerns about his war leadership.
President Bush has refused to ask the nation to sacrifice
in any way, so the sacrifice gap has never been greater.
A few families, like Ms. Sheehan's, have paid the ultimate
price. Many more, including National Guard families, are
bearing enormous burdens, struggling to get by while a parent,
a child or a spouse serves in Iraq. But the rest of the
nation is spending its tax cuts and guzzling gas as if there
were no war.
Mr. Bush obviously failed to comfort Ms. Sheehan when he
met with her and her family. More important, he has not
helped the nation give fallen soldiers like Casey Sheehan
the honor they deserve. The administration seems reluctant
to have the president take part in events that would direct
widespread attention to soldiers' funerals or to the thousands
who have returned with serious injuries.
Perhaps most troubling, Mr. Bush is not leveling about where
things stand with the war. He continues to stay on message,
as he did with the platitude he offered last week: "We
will stay the course; we will complete the job in Iraq."
The public knows that things in Iraq are not going well
on any number of levels, and deserves a fuller, more honest
discussion led by the commander in chief.
Just 38 percent of the respondents in a recent Associated
Press-Ipsos poll, a new low, approved of Mr. Bush's handling
of Iraq. That does not mean the remaining 62 percent agree
with Ms. Sheehan that the troops should come home immediately.
But it does mean that many Americans are with her, at least
figuratively, at that dusty roadside in Crawford, expecting
better answers.
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"I
hate it when they say, 'He gave his life for his country.'
Nobody gives their life for anything. We steal the lives of
these kids. We take it away from them. Theydon't die for the
honor and glory of their country. We kill them." -
~
Admiral
Gene
LaRocque
|
A
LETTER TO TIME MAGAZINE
FROM CINDY SHEEHAN
Dear
Time Editors:
My son, Spc. Casey Sheehan was killed in Iraq on
04/04/04. This has been an extraordinary couple of weeks of
"slaps in the faces" to us families of fallen heroes.
First, the Secretary of Defense—Donald
Rumsfeld—admits to the world something that we as military
families already know: The United States was not prepared
for nor had any plan for the assault on Iraq. Our children
were sent to fight an ill-conceived and badly prosecuted war.
Our troops were sent with the wrong type of training, bad
equipment, inferior protection and thin supply lines. Our
children have been killed and we have made the ultimate sacrifice
for this fiasco of a war, then we find out this week that
Rumsfeld doesn't even have the courtesy or compassion to sign
the "death letters"—as they are so callously
called. Besides the upcoming holidays and the fact we miss
our children desperately, what else can go wrong this holiday
season?
Well let's see. Oh yes. George W. Bush awards the Presidential
Medal of Freedom to three more architects of the quagmire
that is Iraq. Thousands of people are dead and Bremer, Tenet
and Franks are given our country's highest civilian award.
What's next?
To top everything off—after it has been proven that
Iraq had no weapons of mass destruction, there were no ties
between Saddam and 9/11 and over 1,300 brave young people
in this country are dead and Iraq lies in ruins— what
does Time Magazine do? Names George W. Bush as its "Man
of the Year." The person who betrayed this country into
a needless war and whom I hold ultimately responsible for
my son's death and who was questionably elected, again, to
a second term, is honored this way by your magazine.
I hope we finally find peace in our world and that our troops
who remain in Iraq are brought home speedily—after all,
there was no reason for our troops to be there in the first
place. No reason for my son and over 1,300 others to have
been taken from their families. No reason for the infrastructure
of Iraq to be demolished and thousands of Iraqis being killed.
No reason for the notion of a "happy" holiday to
be robbed from my family forever. I hope that our "leaders"
don't invade any other countries which pose no serious threat
to the United States. I hope there is no draft. I hope that
the five people mentioned here (and many others) will finally
be held responsible for the horrible mistake they got our
country into. I hope that competence is finally rewarded and
incompetence is appropriately punished. These are my wishes
for 2005.
This isn't the first time your magazine has selected a questionable
man for this honor—but it's the first time it affected
my family so personally and so sorrowfully.
Cindy
Sheehan
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CONTACT
CINDY SHEEHAN
SCINDY121 aol.com |
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s democracy is perfected,
the office of President represents, more
and more closely, the inner soul of the people.
On
some great and glorious day
the plain folks of the land will reach their heart's desire
at last and the White House will be adorned
by
a downright
moron.
~
H. L.
Mencken
(1880 - 1956)
|
I
REFUSE TO BE LIED TO - I REFUSE TO BE DECEIVED!
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