Author: mopress

  • Bar Ditch Dispatches: Kim McIntosh

    Austin activist Kim McIntosh was at Camp Casey Saturday and Monday. She talked about it a little today via phone. Monday morning was very peaceful, “nothing much happened.” The camp population averaged 10-20 at a time as people rotated between camp and the Crawford Peace House. “There were reporters there the whole time,” says McIntosh. “When I left there were three reporters standing there.”

    “It’s mostly veterans and CodePink,” says McIntosh, who is CodePink herself. The two women from L.A. (see story below) who arrived Sunday night are part of a CodePink delegation that will be rotating people into Camp Casey for the foreseeable future. Fort Worth also had a CodePink rep.

    On Monday Kim joined four other Austin CodePinkers on the car trip to Crawford, taking supplies, banners, some water, and, of course, pink umbrellas with peace signs on them to shade the camp from sun and war. “We also made a big pink sheet with a peace sign on it that we could spread on the ground so it could be seen from overhead.”

    She has read and viewed some media accounts of Saturday’s protest, and they seem pretty accurate, except she thinks they don’t quite convey the perception of the campers that the Secret Service was intimidating. Although she wasn’t there, she heard that their tires squealed to a stop and they got out of the car saying: “You’re not going to treat the Iraq vets the way you treated the VietNam vets are you?” But, as McIntosh says, the VietNam vets were standing with Sheehan.

    Two things McIntosh says about television reports. They sometimes fail to mention that Sheehan’s request to see the President is motivated by recent pronouncements that the war is a ‘noble cause’–“that’s what spurred her,” says McIntosh. And they sometimes exploit Sheehan’s more emotional moments. “Sure, she cries now and then,” says McIntosh. “But they make her look vulnerable when she’s really not at all.”

    This morning McIntosh heard a quote from Sheehan on Air America Radio that she really liked. This is what she heard: “I have more courage in my little finger than George Bush has in his whole body, and my son Casey had more courage in his whole body than the entire administration. If he thinks he’s going to intimidate me he’s wrong.”–gm

  • Sheehan Draws Tears of Support

    By Greg Moses

    IndyMedia Austin / Peace Journalism / Bella Ciao / ZNet / CommonDreams / UrukNet / InformationClearingHouse / OpEdNews / AlbionMonitor / PoliticalSwitchboard

    When Robert DeLozier saw the story of Cindy Sheehan on television Sunday, he told his spouse right away: “I’m going up there. We have to drop everything and go.” At the Sam’s Club of all places, says Robert, he nearly broke down crying while he was shopping Monday morning thinking about what Sheehan was doing in memory of her son Casey, who was killed in Iraq last April.

    “She’s a strong woman,” says Robert via cell phone as he drives back home Monday night. “She feels she has been wronged. She feels her son has been wronged. And she feels like this whole occupation of Iraq is wrong. She is strong and powerful enough to take a stand. When I see it, it just strikes a chord. She’s speaking truth to power. That’s it. David and Goliath.”

    Robert hands the phone to spouse Abbe Waldman DeLozier as their car glides up and down the gentle hills of Central Texas. It is just past dark Monday night, but Abbe is lit up with fresh memories of an evening with Sheehan and the brave band of pilgrims who have come from unexpected places. “Hawaii,” says Robert from his seat as Abbe holds the phone.

    “Yes, Hawaii, that was one of the places,” says Abbe. “And California. Two young ladies from L.A., another from Pennsylvania.” In all there were about 15 people who gathered at dusk to pow wow some strategy. “They say there are more people in the morning,” says Abbe. This afternoon, an anonymous donor ordered up two or three party trays of sandwiches from the Subway Sandwich Shop in McGregor and had them sent out to feed Sheehan’s camp. Folks are sending flowers and money, too.

    Since Abbe has experience with media, she volunteered to help Sheehan sort out her media calls. There were 85 messages on Sheehan’s cell phone. Abbe, with the two young ladies from California who had never done any media work before, copied down the messages, put them on a list, and began returning the calls.

    “The two young ladies were very professional,” said Abbe. “They had never done this before, but they were very good.” By the end of the evening, Abbe had made a master schedule for Sheehan so that she could begin to manage the line of media waiting from all over the world.

    Returning a call to a radio station in Oregon, Abbe suddenly found herself on the air live during a show in progress with Mike Hoffman, co-founder of Iraq Vets Against the War (IVAW). She said “Hi Mike” but didn’t have much time to chat with a war resister who she had once helped with media relations back in the bad old days when the work was very difficult indeed, not like this where you end up accidentally live on the air, both of you in Oregon!

    Abbe doesn’t know much more about the pow wow. An NPR reporter was on hand and the group asked for fifteen minutes of privacy to talk about some serious issues like what they were going to do if the cops showed up and started arresting people. The NPR reporter was gracious enough to give the tribe some space, and Abbe was hospitable enough to walk around with the reporter while the group worked things out. Then the NPR reporter took about 90 minutes of tape from Sheehan and Company which has to be cut down to perfect size by deadline.

    Abbe thinks the media are responding to Sheehan because of her strong stand. “I’m not leaving until Bush just simply comes out and talks to me,” says Abbe in a respectful impersonation of Sheehan’s message. “She will not leave until they put her in jail, until she sees the President, or until he leaves Crawford for the summer,” says Abbe. “And she is very intelligent.”

    When Robert and Abbe arrived at the camp about 4:00 this afternoon, folks had just moved off a “triangle” of grass at the request of police and were camped down in a “ditch area” with cows and field for as far as the eye could see. Press reports put the group five miles from the President’s ranch, but Jim Harrington of the Texas Civil Rights Project says that if the media get to stand within a half mile of the ranch, so should the protesters. Legal help is another thing people are giving.

    Later in the evening black suburbans started whizzing past. A stream of maybe 25, coming down the road, one after the other, about a minute apart, with government tags. Soon after that overhead came the presidential helicopter with a three helicopter escort, buzzing past the camp and over to the Western White House. But the impressive action was down in the ditch among the small band of resolute activists who have flung themselves together for this circle of courage and tears.

    “It’s very moving being out there,” says Abbe. “I’m so glad I went.” She’s going to clear her schedule and go back soon. “I’m very emotional, very glad. If I could communicate to you what it’s like to be there. If people could see it and experience it, well then number one…” But Abbe can’t finish the sentence. “I can’t finish the sentence, because I’m crying.”

    “Let me just say,” says Abbe Waldman DeLozier through her tears, “that there would be millions out there. Millions.”

    —–

    To comment on this story please visit the comment blog.

  • Media Line Up for Sheehan

    “She has media lined up calling her all the time,” said our source in the field shortly before his cell phone went dead at 9 p.m. Central. There are reporters from England, Italy, and France. They just spent an hour and a half with NPR.

  • Premier Peace Think Tank Goes Begging

    Received via email:

    In the decades since World War II, the United States has amassed the
    most sophisticated and expensive military in human history and
    employed its military, intelligence, diplomatic, and economic power to
    wage a costly arms race with the former Soviet Union, dominate the
    global arms trade, impose devastating sanctions and embargoes
    against regimes it despises, overthrow democratically-elected
    governments, and make unholy alliances with corrupt and
    repressive rulers who serve US national interests. Meanwhile, during
    those same years, an individual armed only with an inquiring mind, a
    great intellect, dogged determination, a small staff, a prolific pen,
    and a laughably minuscule budget has provided millions of ordinary yet
    extraordinary people around the world with the ability to achieve
    freedom and democracy through nonviolent action.

    Gene Sharp, a major theorist and strategist of nonviolence since
    Gandhi, is the scholar whose name is synonymous with “the
    politics of nonviolent action.” His monographs, booklets, books and
    those of his colleagues at the Albert Einstein Institution have been
    translated into 30 languages. His writings, consultations, trainings,
    and underground workshops have contributed enormously to
    nonviolence movements and nonviolent revolutions around the world –
    – in The Philippines, Burma, Palestine, Serbia, Georgia, the
    Ukraine, Kyrgyzstan. From the 3-volume tome The Politics of
    Nonviolent Action to the 88-page booklet “From Dictatorship to
    Democracy” that explains how nonviolent resistance can be used to
    undermine repressive regimes, Gene and the Albert Einstein Institution
    have had a profound impact on the pedagogy of nonviolence as well
    as on events in the world’s public squares.

    Our lives have been touched, enriched and shaped by Gene Sharp
    and the work of the Albert Einstein Institution as they have guided,
    informed and gathered us in the growing nonviolent movements found
    on every continent. But we have just learned that the Institution
    faces an unsustainable financial shortfall and its board, in September, must seriously consider whether to close its doors. The staff has been cut back to two, including Gene. If the Institution is to continue, it
    needs a minimum of $250,000 for the coming year. Most of us had assumed that such influential work was well endowed and funded. We were wrong.

    Absent government support or sufficient foundation grants, we must
    turn to that uniquely fitting and appropriate force that epitomizes
    nonviolence — people power. As surely as we believe in the power of
    nonviolence, we believe also that a simple, straight-forward appeal to
    you, to your networks and your institutions can generate the funds to
    sustain the work of Gene Sharp and the Albert Einstein Institution.
    Please send in a check today. And circulate this appeal to others by
    e-mail or the postal service. With September soon upon us, the
    timeliness of this appeal cannot be stressed too strongly. As we have
    learned in our study and practice of nonviolence, we must be prepared
    and ready for that special moment in history. That moment is today.

    In gratitude to Gene and the Albert Einstein Institution,

    Elise Boulding
    Carol Bragg
    Dorothy F. Cotton
    Richard Deats
    Marjorie Swann Edwin
    David Hartsough
    Bernard LaFayette, Jr.
    George Lakey
    Mary Lord
    Jim Lawson
    Michael True

    To: The Albert Einstein Institution
    427 Newbury Street
    Boston, MA 02115

    Enclosed is:
    __ $25 ___ #50 ___ $100 ___$500 ___ $1000 Other:___________

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    For online credit card donations, go to www.aeinstein.org
    Your gift is tax deductible.