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Making a House Call on Congress

By Rose Aguilar, AlterNet. Posted July 28, 2006.


Military families are determined to bring their troops back home -- even if they have to talk to every politician in Washington.

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When Congress voted to "stay the course" in Iraq on June 15, many military families were furious.

"I watched the entire mock debate on C-Span for 13 hours," says Stacy Bannerman, a member of Military Families Speak Out (MFSO). "That day, I decided that if they wanted to 'stay the course,' they would have to explain their rationale to my face."

A week later, Bannerman left Seattle for Washington, D.C., where she launched Operation House Call, an MFSO campaign to highlight the ongoing human toll in Iraq. Since June 22, Bannerman, whose husband served in Balat, Iraq, from March 2004 to March 2005, has been joined by over 50 families of U.S. troops who are serving, have served, or were killed in Iraq.

So far, the families have met with several politicians, including Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., and Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Mass. They're hoping to meet with Sen. Hillary Clinton in the coming days, but say they have yet to hear back from Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Sen. John Warner, R-Va., chair of the Armed Services Committee.

"When a handful of members of Congress have loved ones in the military, they have no idea what staying the course looks like," says Bannerman, who has written a book about her experiences, titled "When the War Came Home." "This war is being waged on .4 percent of the American population. The rest of the people in this country -- 99.6 percent -- have no connection to the war. They are not being asked to sacrifice or allowed to see the human cause of this war."

For many of the families, Operation House Call is their first foray into political activism. "I never even voted until 2004," says 44-year-old Georgia Stillwell. "I never registered. I never cared. I was as apathetic as they come. And then it got personal."

Stillwell's 22-year-old son spent his 19th and 20th birthdays in Iraq, and is now dealing with a severe case of post-traumatic stress disorder. In January, he drove his car over an embankment in excess of 120 mph. Miraculously, he survived the crash. "I know I should be grateful he's not dead, but he's dead inside," says Stillwell.

On July 12, Stillwell shared her son's story during an emotional 30-minute meeting with House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill. "The congressman compared Iraq to a football game about changing strategies," she says. "I touched his arm and said, 'Congressman, children don't die in football games.' He said nothing. I also showed him a picture of a friend's son who was killed in Iraq. He was unblinking and unfeeling."

After the meeting, Hastert's press secretary said the speaker thought Stillwell was a "very patriotic woman who was proud of her son's service in Iraq."


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Rose Aguilar is a San Francisco-based journalist who is writing a book about her road trip through the "red states."

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View:
America:Freedom to Fascism
Posted by: Allan Stevo on Jul 28, 2006 1:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This week, I saw the movie Freedom to Fascism, and it is powerful. The thing is pertinent to just about everything I read on Alternet, especially those regarding unchecked government growth. It's a documentary dealing with the Constitution, taxes, and the federal reserve bank, among other things. The director's quote of "Stop being a good Democrat. Stop being a good Republican. Start being a good American." is especially poignant to me. This weekend it opens in Chicago, Kansas City, New York, Tampa, and Austin. If enough folks see this, it's going to start a debate that, I'm convinced, will bring change from all corners of society.
Allan Stevo

You can find more info at: www.freedomtofascism.com

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» Behold A Pale Horse Posted by: makeadifference
change
Posted by: rsaxto on Jul 28, 2006 4:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
These ladies are trying to change our society from one where greed is the primary cause of war to a society where peace is the primary cause of justice so that our children won't have to kill or be killed/injured for greed.

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These people are sniveling liberal whiners
Posted by: rightbetweentheeyes on Jul 28, 2006 7:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Every generation has them. And I'm being nice. I could accuse them of the kind of slithering traitorous behavior exhibited by Cindy Sheahan and her ilk to gain a little notoriety and money from the carcass of her dead hero son. Instead I'll just say that the boys they produced and are now fighting are greater than the sums of their parts. Let them seethe and whine while better men and women protect their worthless asses.

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» nothingbetweentheears Posted by: taxidave
» RE: Why are you so angry? Posted by: marklar
» Response from a combat vets mom Posted by: Iraq combat vet's mom
» Why are they angry, you ask? Posted by: BackintheRed
Kudos
Posted by: pcushniesr on Jul 28, 2006 7:35 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Kudos to all the Gold Star mothers who confront the criminals and madmen who have stolen control of the country (I refuse to use the word H---land because it is so fascistic-sounding and a product of the Bush criminal culture). The fact that such a small percentage of Americans are personally involved in the middle-east insanity by having children in the military is because there is still no draft. But how long can that last in this Orwellian situation where the war is not meant to end? I don't know if conscription is inevitable or not (though it's hard to believe we can "stay the course" indefinitely without it). If it does come to be, THEN you will see an anti-war movement to rival anything that took place during Vietnam.

A quick note to our conservative friends across the aisle: Don't look for another terrorist attack in this country unless it is one contrived by the Bushites themselves prior to November. After all, the real terrorists are in the White House already.

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Related to this article, see the movie, THE WAR TAPES.
Posted by: marklar on Jul 28, 2006 9:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No matter what you belive, you will go away challenged by this movie. Seriously, it will change the way you think. It's not pro-war, pro-soldier. In fact, far from it but it's not anti-either. It's one of those rare documentaries that strikes a centered balance, subtley, it makes a case for the story and it will no doubt freak you out and make you laugh and make you cry - I don;t care how stubborn you are.

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More than Suggested
Posted by: NoPCZone on Jul 28, 2006 9:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Wars (yes, there are 2 of them) will affect everyone, just in a very different way. This cabal of NeoCons has brought us the first $1,000,000,000,000 + war. By the time the bills are all paid the total will be well over that number.

While Haliburton and others are getting paid on time for their overpriced no-bid contracts, the Army IMA (Installation Management Agency) is so starved for cash that they cannot pay their utility bills. Why is this? Part of the war has been financed by robbing other budget items throughout the Defense Department. Otherwise, it's costing a whole lot more than the 'official' price tag of specific appropriations.

A whole generation of expensive equipment is getting worn out years to decades earlier than projected and the spare parts supply levels have been heavily drawn down. Guess who is going to get tagged for the multiple hundreds of billions it's going to cost to repair, replace and re-stockpile all of that?

Oh, by the way, did anybody tell you that this war is being fought with borrowed money? All of that expense has interest that gets to be paid out for the years it will take to repay. Here's the kicker- the paper is mostly held by foreign banks and governments. As it is repaid, our government will be exporting that money directly out of the US economy.

In summary: 'W' and his handlers/financiers/cronies are getting rich off of overpriced no-bid contracts, our kids are getting wounded/maimed/killed, Iraq is getting destroyed, SW Asia is getting more unstable, our nation is getting poorer, foreign banks and governments are getting richer and the American people are getting the bill. What a deal from someone you didn't even elect.

We could not afford Universal Healthcare because it would cost too much, but Bush & the NeoCons have DOUBLED our debt in 6 years with nothing but 2 wars and a police state at home to show for it.

Welcome to Bushworld/Cheneyworld.

If you don't throw the members of Congress that enabled this bunch out to do this you don't have the right to complain about anything.

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» RE: More than Suggested Posted by: Lincoln fan
Dying for Haliburton
Posted by: sofla100 on Jul 29, 2006 8:06 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When Paul Bremer took over as the civilian administrator in Iraq, the first thing he did was maximize privatization. American firms, Haliburton, GE, Conoco, they were all set up and given billions to "rebuild Iraq." Fast forward about 2 years, hardly anything is rebuilt and the place is a raging civil war bloodbath. Nonetheless, Bremer talked recently about how proud he was to bring about Iraq's transition to a "market economy." He had nothing to say, of course, about the sectarian violence, the continuing slaughter the USA has done nothing to stop. What does this mean, it means soldiers, sailors, marines, all of them, they are the pawns in a war designed and propagated to promote US corporate interests. First GW said it was WMD's, next getting bad old Sadaam, next "liberating" the Iraqi people, and now lately even GW can't come up with a reason for it. Despite all this, isn't it amazing how the soldier "pawns" have been brainwashed into believing the war is for democracy or freedom? How many will have to come home in boxes, or come home ruined and disillusioned and with lifelong mental problems? As for those who have died, you died for the "market economy," you died for Haliburton, GE and Conoco.

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An effective solution: twist arms
Posted by: Lincoln fan on Jul 30, 2006 7:43 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The war in in Iraq and the threat of another in Iran are not the only issues that don't reflect the will of the people. There are many issues from universal health care to adequate public education that are ignored by the leadership of both parties.

The reaon that these issues are ignored is that neither party is a party of the people. Individual congresspersons are not the people to petition they follow the party line. The people to attack are the parties' leaders. And not politely with a request but with a demand that your issue be on their platforms or you will cast a write-in protest vote for "Honest Abe".

We have less than 100 days to keep the election from being between the Republican Right and the Reoublican Lite.

Bob Reichenbach
lincoln0212@msn.com

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