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Cindy Sheehan's Farewell

By John Nichols, The Nation. Posted June 2, 2007.


The antiwar movement took Cindy Sheehan for granted. It was only when she resigned from a role that she never sought that anyone bothered to think of what an essential player she had become.

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Cindy Sheehan never set out to be the face of the antiwar movement. She was a mom thrust by an ugly circumstance and a lovely faith to the forefront of a movement that was struggling to find its voice. She gave it that voice as an honest player who spoke her mind -- sometimes intemperately, often imperfectly, always sincerely -- and backed up her words with actions. Her unscripted activism allowed her to succeed where others had failed in touching hearts and calling the disengaged, the disenchanted and the downright angry to believe once more in the prospect that citizens can make real the promise of the American experiment.

So it was that when Sheehan announced that she was "resigning" from a role she never sought, the loss was palpable. Yes, the antiwar movement took her for granted. She was expected to show up, draw a crowd, willingly accept the outrageous attacks of critics, risk arrest -- and get up the next morning and do it again. It was only when she explained in a poignant letter that she would no longer be the Sisyphus of a troubled movement that anyone bothered to think of what an essential player she had become.

"Nobody has given more to the peace movement in recent years -- emotionally, physically, spiritually," explained Tim Carpenter, national director of Progressive Democrats of America. With Code Pink and her own Gold Star Families for Peace, PDA was the group with which Sheehan most closely aligned herself during a period of nonstop antiwar activism that began after the death of her son, Army Spc. Casey Sheehan, in a Baghdad ambush. She became a national phenomenon when, in August 2005, she set up camp outside George W. Bush's ranchette in Crawford, Texas, and demanded to talk with the President about her loss and about his responsibility to end the war before any more mothers suffered her fate.

On a Memorial Day weekend that fell just hours after Congress met Bush's demand for more war funding, Sheehan reached what she described as "heartbreaking" conclusions. "The first conclusion is that I was the darling of the so-called left as long as I limited my protests to George Bush and the Republican Party. Of course, I was slandered and libeled by the right as a 'tool' of the Democratic Party. This label was to marginalize me and my message. How could a woman have an original thought, or be working outside of our 'two-party' system?" she wrote. "However, when I started to hold the Democratic Party to the same standards that I held the Republican Party, support for my cause started to erode and the 'left' started labeling me with the same slurs that the right used. I guess no one paid attention to me when I said that the issue of peace and people dying for no reason is not a matter of 'right or left,' but 'right and wrong.'"

Sheehan was not whining in her resignation letter. She was despairing for a Republic to which she had shown a patriot's allegiance. She and I had over the past several years appeared frequently onstage together, and we talked a lot about politics. But it was only over time that I came to understand Sheehan as a Jeffersonian Democrat in the best sense of that term. She believed, as the third President did, that people should not fear their government; government should fear the people. Now, she has come to question whether the will of the citizenry will prevail.

It is reasonable to argue with Sheehan about her read of politics and assessment of politicians. She's the first to admit she's no expert on campaign strategy or legislative tactics. But we should recognize the troubling turn politics have taken when one of democracy's true believers ends her intense activism by saying, "I am deemed a radical because I believe that partisan politics should be left to the wayside when hundreds of thousands of people are dying for a war based on lies that is supported by Democrats and Republicans alike. It amazes me that people who are sharp on the issues and can zero in like a laser beam on lies, misrepresentations, and political expediency when it comes to one party refuse to recognize it in their own party. Blind party loyalty is dangerous whatever side it occurs on ... If we don't find alternatives to this corrupt 'two' party system our Representative Republic will die and be replaced with what we are rapidly descending into with nary a check or balance: a fascist corporate wasteland."

We have not seen the last of Cindy Sheehan. But this may be the last we see of her as that Jeffersonian Democrat who believed so deeply and so unapologetically in America's promise. To my mind, this is the truest measure of the darkness in which we now find ourselves.

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See more stories tagged with: anti-war, war in iraq, anti-war movement, cindy sheehan, resignation

John Nichols is The Nation's Washington correspondent.

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col. jackleg
Posted by: Col. Jackleg on Jun 2, 2007 2:17 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Cindy Sheehan is a true patriot and will be missed. I hope that she has not suffered permanent injury from those that lack the courage and integrity to stand for something that redeems mankind rather than abase it. Unfortunately, America is a corporate-driven dungheap with three components that drive its motivation and economy: (1) military industrial complex; (2) street crime; (3) white collar crime. No sweet lady and no combination of working class family types can overcome the trifecta........until, perhaps one day, we hold our hands together and rise as one and demand that government of, by and for the people is actually more than bullshit. Until that happens, and it won't, this place is toast. One brave lady gave it her best shot and she deserves our respect and gratitude. Here's to you Cindy, you have honored us with your presence!

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» RE: col. jackleg Posted by: Jonnikhan
CINDY SHEEHAN THIS COMBAT VETERAN SALUTES YOU!
Posted by: kc10ken on Jun 2, 2007 4:22 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Mrs. Sheehan.....

If by chance you read this I would like to extend my heartfelt gratitude to you dear Mother. As a grieving Gold Star Mom with true grit you captured the hearts and minds of the nation in it's fight to expose the truth behind the QUAGMIRE we call Iraq.

As a combat Veteran who did 3 tours in the Middle East and as a parent I commend you and throw a salute to you for your herculean efforts and all you have done for the cause.

YOU are responsible for saving lives and shortening this blight on humanity's record. Don't EVER let anyone tell you otherwise. It was your passionate pleas and speaking from the heart as a Gold Star Mom and a damn fine American that convinced this old combat Vet to GET INVOLVED to end the war.

THANKYOU MRS. SHEEHAN.

GOD BLESS YOU!
YOU WILL BE MISSED!

Peace,

Kc10KEN
SSGT USAF Retired

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» RE: SHEEHAN WAS DUPED Posted by: kbest
» RE: SHEEHAN WAS DUPED Posted by: Tacticsb
My hero.
Posted by: HughScott on Jun 2, 2007 4:39 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In May 2005, Cindy set up her “peace camp” outside President Bush’s Crawford, Texas, ranch and immediately became a target of derision by Republicans and other unthinking citizens.

Now, two years later, except for rightwing GOP zealots, few people ridicule her mission of bringing an end to George W’s unjustified war of choice.

Moreover, as the Iraq occupation grinds into its fifth year, killing and wounding more GIs, many people, I suspect, wished they had supported her gutsy antiwar campaign instead of ignoring it.

Speaking as a Vietnam veteran who resigned his Regular Air Force commission in 1966 and became a war protestor -- thanks for your patriotism, Cindy. You are my hero.

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Cindy Sheehan
Posted by: Dianka on Jun 2, 2007 4:53 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"The antiwar movement took Cindy Sheehan for granted. It was only when she resigned from a role that she never sought that anyone bothered to think of what an essential player she had become."

You're wrong on that one. I'm sure Cindy Sheehan herself grossly under-estimated the value of what she has accomplished. She's one of us, that huge mass of ordinary people. This one ordinary mom stood up to the entire US government and said, "Enough!" We looked at her with surprise, and then a few million of us also stood up to do what our own representatives in government (for the most part) lacked the courage to do. We, too, said, "Enough". Our children stood up, and our parents as well, and we ALL started moving forward together, to tell the Bush administration, "Enough!" THAT'S the antiwar movement.

This didn't begin when Cindy Sheehan stepped back, but when she first stepped forward. And we, the people who are rarely heard, never took her for granted.

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» RE: Cindy Sheehan Posted by: LMNOP
» rose-colored glasses Posted by: Iconoclast421
» RE: rose-colored glasses Posted by: Tacticsb
» a benchmark Posted by: Iconoclast421
» RE: rose-colored glasses Posted by: LMNOP
I'm sure she's not giving up
Posted by: tlees2 on Jun 2, 2007 6:00 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Having met Cindy Sheehan, I am sure she is not giving up, she wants to change roles a bit. I know she's coming to the Philadelphia area in July. Cindy is right about holding all politicians' feet to the fire over Bush's war in Iraq - not just Republicans.

Tom

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CINDY SHEEHAN COMES OUT FOR 9/11 TRUTH - WHERE'S THE ALT MEDIA?
Posted by: BillDouglas on Jun 2, 2007 6:16 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Twin towers looked like a controlled demolition," Sheehan says.

Sheehan expressed her support for the Jersey Girl's petition, which calls for a new independent investigation of the terrorist attacks, slamming the 9/11 Commission Report as a "total travesty and a smokescreen."

"George Bush and Dick Cheney held hands and testified behind closed doors, not under oath," said Sheehan, adding, "There are many things that just don't add up on that day."

Sheehan questioned why U.S. air defenses were distracted by drills and exercises scheduled for the morning of 9/11 and why standard operating procedure for intercepting errant aircraft was not followed for the first and only time in history.

"When you lose control of an airplane, you intercept it with a military jet and that should only take seconds - from what I understand it's not even an order to do that it's mandatory," said Sheehan.

prisonplanet.com/articles/may2007/310507cindysheehan.htm

Sheehan knows we've been lied to about 9/11, and that 9/11 is the crux of the war on civil liberties at home, and the wars for oil abroad. WHEN WILL ALT MEDIA FOLLOW CINDY TOWARD THE TRUTH OF 9/11?

If you haven't seen the 5 minute video on youtube "$20 Bucks 9/11" watch it. It'll be the most eye opening 5 minutes you've ever spent.

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Lady with guts
Posted by: Democritus on Jun 2, 2007 6:23 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Cindy Sheehan had more courage in her little finger than was in the bodies of all those war-mongering, draft-dodging cowards who engineered the illegal invasion of Iraq. She fought them to a standstill. It's up to the rest of us to take them down.

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Cindy
Posted by: Roverton on Jun 2, 2007 7:06 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Cindy Sheehan was supposed to inspire us to take her place. We have failed Cindy. The Democrats have failed us all.

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This is an American failure
Posted by: LMNOP on Jun 2, 2007 7:29 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Cindy Sheehan’s capitulation is a nice illustration of just how weak the American people are as a political force.

For whatever reason – apathy, media (slandering of Sheehan, failure to cover protestation), ignorance – the American people could not rise up and rally around her in numbers sufficient to help her sustain her or her effort.

This is true despite the fact that she was the poster child for the cause that supposedly had America’s bipartisan attention: Iraq. Americans voting Democrat or Republican expressed dissatisfaction with Bush and the war, and the midterm elections were interpreted as a unanimous call to begin withdrawal. Immediately thereafter, Bush, in defiant disregard of any opinion not his own, escalated the war and promised not to withdraw from Iraq in his term, and vetoed a spending bill with a timeline. Normally, that would provoke an extreme response from the public.

Here is the one issue – Iraq - that both red state and blue state citizens agree on, which affects so many people and their families so much, about which almost everyone is aware and has an opinion, inflamed by a government’s flagrant disregard of their will to begin withdrawing in the form of an escalation. Add to that mix a sympathetic, nationally recognized icon – Cindy Sheehan -to serve as a potential nucleus around which an angry and concerned electorate could crystallize and grow into concerted political force demanding its government’s ear.

That’s a dream scenario for some kind of democracy-in-action, grass roots, groundswell, populist reaction to crystallize and swell into a democratic movement at the national level. Really, a dream scenario for a counter-movement to form and shake Washington until it took heed.

But somehow, nothing. This woman of great courage and sacrifice, after years of waiting, gave up. Did she give up on peace or her son Casey? No, she gave up on America. And if she didn’t accomplish much, why do I think my efforts would? Nobody’s home in America. Shut of the lights and close the door on your way out. This goose is cooked. Reagan was close. It’s mourning time in America. There’s really not much left here to fight for if virtually the entire ruling class is sociopathic and the hoi polloi is demented and paralyzed. You can fight, but what makes us think that the American people will ever develop a spine or a nervous system?

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» Hugh Posted by: apophenia_monkey
» RE: This is an American failure Posted by: alternetrose
» RE: This is an American failure Posted by: alternetrose
Resignations
Posted by: oregoncharles on Jun 2, 2007 9:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Nichols has written a beautiful tribute to our most courageous peace campaigner, and he quotes her at some length, but he left out the very point that got her in trouble with the "Left":

She was also, explicitly, resigning from the Democratic Party, and presumably from Progressive Democrats, as well. She was doing that because the Democratic Party supports the war, as they have done all along. She is hardly the only one; besides droves of anonymous commenters, our own local Cindy said the same thing.

The Democratic Party's real agenda has finally become perfectly clear: they support the war, they support "free trade/corporate globalization", and they are determined to cuddle up just as close to W as they can get.

I'll leave you to speculate about their motives, but the consequence is quite clear:

The Party has put its progressive supporters in an untenable position. That's a painful dilemma for many. "Progressive Democrat" is becoming a contradiction in terms. And the much-talked-about grassroots campaign to "take back" the Party has led only to the leadership's recent passage of the funding supplemental - complete with trickery so they don't have to own up to it - and deal with the Bushies on "free trade".

What are you going to do about it?

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» RE: esignations Posted by: owleyes
» RE: esignations Posted by: alternetrose
Corporate media spin on this story is revealing
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Jun 2, 2007 11:41 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
According to the corporate media, the anti-war movement didn't begin until 2005 when Cindy Sheehan camped out in Crawford Texas - it was indeed a well-designed move that forced the media to focus on the anti-war movement.

However, let's not forget the millions who mobilized to prevent the war before it ever started, and the fact that those protests were almost entirely ignored by the corporate media, who deliberately packaged the Bush lies for public consumption, and who ignored the many voices and piles of evidence that showed that the stories about Saddam's nuclear and biological weapons and ties to Al Queda and 911 were lies.

It's understandable that Ms. Sheehan feels her reserves are exhausted, and she deserves commendation for her efforts, cheers all around, and now let's continue.

Take the story, Iraq war vets could face disciplinary action over protests

Adam Kokesh, who served in Fallujah, is one of them. A member of Iraq Veterans Against the War, Kokesh wore his camouflage uniform, with all insignia removed, on March 19 during a mock "combat patrol" past the White House. Soon after his picture was in The Washington Post, Marine Maj. John Whyte e-mailed him that he may have violated regulations that forbid wearing all or part of a uniform "while engaged in political demonstrations or activities."

If you want to support an anti-war group that will really make a difference, support the Iraq Veterans Against the War - they've been there, they've seen the Vietnam-style insanity, and they are by far the most credible anti-war voices that exist. Give them your money and provide them with speaking venues - that's the anti-war strategy that works, and that's why these brave veterans are the target of the Pentagon and the corporate establishment.

However, remember also that even if the Iraq occupation is ended, the main thrust of the military-industrial complex remains unaltered. Protests won't change that - deeper structural changes are needed, such as banning generals from entering the private sector after retirement.

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it just goes to show!
Posted by: greggwyck on Jun 2, 2007 1:55 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
it is a shame that our country men and women cant gat along. even coming to a compramise or being able to have a discussion that is not damaging to a woman that gave her child to this countries politics. denied the ablity to speek her oun mind. in the land of the free, all should be punished. all have had oppertunity to change america but you all stand idally by and let the corruption of our system chip away at our rights. because the actions of the few we have so many laws and restrictions that dont allow us to live in peace. all are guilty and all are punished! now this woman returns home with her face dripping in tears. anyone who rejoices in her suffering are the miss guided and will have their oun judgement. well if their smart enough to think about what they have done. but its like they say ignorance is bliss, till the law catches up with you. i will miss our conversations cindy and i am sorry for your loss. peace:)

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You are my hero...
Posted by: mistery509 on Jun 2, 2007 11:14 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Cindy you have been my hero ever since you stood up to cowardly Bush. He hid in his gopher hole and would not come out to talk to you.

The media would not help you. You were not interviewed by any networks but you carried on and finally woke up the people. We owe you so much Cindy.

Your son would be so proud of you. Nothing hurts more than losing a child. It hurts even more when a child dies for a lie created by a corrupt group of greedy cowards.

You will be missed.

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Nichols is right, that Sheehan (and Bacevich) indict 2-party imperial war
Posted by: amacd on Jun 3, 2007 8:57 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Nichols’ column in “The Nation” is indeed a refreshing and insightful change from the corporate media’s spin and dissembling about the meaning of Cindy Sheehan’s place in the anti-war movement.

I just watched the always forgettable and vacuous Howard Kurtz, with four other talking head pundits, on “Reliable (sic) Sources”, tear apart Cindy Sheehan with the argument that she did not understand that she was only a convenient anti-war image, and that when she started to speak more broadly and radically against our whole political environment, it exposed her lack of pragmatic understanding.

The counter-truth to this typical corporate media hatchet-job on an emotional and unsophisticated leader of anti-war sanity as being too emotional and not sufficiently informed by geopolitical reality is, of course, the absolute reality that as consummate a geopolitical strategic expert as Andrew Bacevich came to the exact same conclusion as Cindy at exactly the same time.

[The only humor in this irony might be that Kurtz, Crowley, and the rest of the talking-head pundits bemoaning Cindy’s lack of gravitas on the anti-war issue either don’t know or don’t care to share with their audience that Bacevich is the very image of anti-war intellectual rigor far beyond their own petty knowledge or grasp].

If Sheehan is the emotion and passion of the anti-war movement, then Andrew Bacevich is surely the intellect and reason.

It is ironic that both lost their sons to this imperial oil-war, and it is more than ironic that both reached the same ultimate conclusion, albeit from the differing paths of the heart and the mind ----- that this war is an imperial war; launched and continued by an unaccountable ruling-elite Empire of money and power, which only poses as a democracy under the facade of its two-party "Vichy American" lie.

Sheehan's heart and Bacevich's mind reached the same correct conclusion that hopefully will not be lost on the feeling and thinking American population at large ---- that this war is the unavoidable consequence of a government that has metastasized from democracy to Empire because of our inattention.

Hopefully, the American people will rise up against this murdering global corporate Empire that has stolen our government, stolen the lives of our children, and stolen the light of democracy from our country.

If all honest, average, working class Americans reach the same ineluctable conclusion as Sheehan and Bacevich, and rise up against this guileful two-party lie of Empire, then perhaps the otherwise senseless deaths of our children will not have been entirely in vain.

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Sticks and Stones
Posted by: Sum Won on Jun 3, 2007 10:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Rhuppke at the tribune.com suggests Cindy Sheehan's departure represents an anti-war movement without guts. Liberals who cut and run. Bored, distracted and impotent, just a lot of hot air.

Does one respond to them or focus the effort on educating more of the electorate to the spin, doublespeak and meaningless of this rhetoric that emanates as opinion. Will our composure in the face of such ridicule expose it for the propaganda that it is?

A moment of silence to reflect on Cindy’s efforts and to Thank her for putting herself out there. Even in withdrawal they can’t resist tossing their slings and arrows. The silent majority watches and listens. Their disgust grows larger but they recognize that feeding a bully only makes him stronger. Bullying is about power. Those high on it can’t be reasoned with. They only want reasons to be able to claim that you started it, finished it, or acted in anything other than an exemplary fashion. A polite but firm “stop” or "no" will fall on deaf ears.

According to www.theconnection.org/shows/2004/05/20040519_b_main.asp (they work with schools) "Bullying is a cultural phenomenon. Bullies are typically *not* the outcasts looking for attention, they're typically the social leaders using bullying of an out-group member to establish their dominance over the in-group."

Don’t respond to their taunts. Focus your efforts on engaging the silent majority in civil discourse about the situation. When the time comes, they will remember all the Cindy’s and will provide the needed authority to remove the incorrigible from positions of power. They’ll want a new culture where bullies are no longer tolerated.

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I hope she gets the help she needs to deal with the death
Posted by: albrechtkrausse on Jun 3, 2007 3:38 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
of her son and her mental problems. Being in the public view for so long has made it difficult for her to address her problems and, hopefully, now that she is 'retired' from public view she can get the mental health treatment she needs.

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Are Americans Really Against The War
Posted by: braxxian on Jun 3, 2007 3:54 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Given the the luke warm actions by the anti war people over the last few years its hard to really know if the American people are against this war or not. Apart from individual efforts like Mrs Sheean Americans seem to be taking this war sitting down. Where are the massive and ongoing protests, where is the threat to shut down the country?, where are the marches?- nowhere to be seen. Just doing the occasional march isnt good enough people, the pressure needs to be continuious.

It appears as though most of America is more concerned about garbage reality tv than the war that is being fought in their name. For those who are trying to do something look back to your parents days in the 60's, now they knew how to protest against a war. I'm affraid that only a military draft will wake the slumbering US people from their disinterest. Most simply don't give a damm, unless they have to do the fighting of course.

Wake up USA

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Cindy Sheehan is regrouping
Posted by: bobiam on Jun 3, 2007 7:45 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and taking a much deserved break. She forced the Democrats to expose their true self as being in the same coroprate camp as the Republicans. A lot of us knew this but her exposure will reach many others if she can get a little coverage from the press.

The path I hope she follows in the future is one that can educate the masses that are eligble to vote but are either not registered or if so they do not vote. We can rest assured that most of these would not vote Republican and at this point it is doubtful if they would vote for the Democrats.

There is an estimated 100 million citizens in this country that are eligible to vote but are not registered. Cindy Sheehan can lead the movement to get these people to the polls in future elections. She can work with NGOs that have hundreds of thousands of members that could take a break from a lot of iffy demostrations and get people registered. United for Peace and Justice have 1,300 plus organizations under their umbrella and they could be mobilized to get people registered.

Karl Rove and company fear the voters and that is why they have pushed this idea of "voter fraud" for years. They do not want people to go to the polls because they know they will not vote for them. It is time for an Independent third party and I'm not talking about the Greens. We need something new in this country that the masses can relate to. A party with the name "Independent."

So Cindy, where ever you are, take a long break and when you come back, work on getting new leaders in Congress and the White House that will follow your ideas of peace in this world.

I think millions will follow your lead in a campaign to take back our country from the fascist.

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Cindy Sheehan i love you
Posted by: behrouzabadi on Jun 3, 2007 8:45 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Dear Cindy Sheehan,

I heard the news that you resigned as ‘face’ of antiwar movement it is really sad in a democratic country in which most of the people who have lost their sons, daughters, husbands and wives in this war not to join and support you wholeheartedly. It seems as if they really love George Bush’s adventurism more than peace and freedom for all. Remember that the war started with a phony excuse and as time goes by the excuse and reason for the war changes accordingly. After all they may believe in an intelligent evolution of reasons as suites them.

Behrouz Abadi

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Burnout is Common in Social Justice Movement
Posted by: DataDoc on Jun 3, 2007 10:54 PM   
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Many of us who protested the war face burnout. Many activists face similar issues: We don't get paid to advocate for social justice, and their are so many issues that need work. I'm glad Cindy participated, and I have a feeling she'll be back. It's sad that protest has been so sidelined and managed by the government that it seems to have lost its value. However, every protest costs thousands in security money, and does eventually impact policy. Setting up non-governmental social justice institutions can be even more effective.

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Time to unwind and relax
Posted by: Holly Sue on Jun 5, 2007 5:53 PM   
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I figure that Cindy Sheehan was at the forefront of the anti-war movement as long as she needed to be there. I don't interpret her retirement from that tough position to be a retirement to her being against the war and opposed to the way our federal government and our country have changed for the worst, and confrontive at those who are so incredibly dishonest.

Cindy somehow managed to do her grieving simultaneously with becoming a full-time activist. Either of these positions is exhausting. Doing both at once is both exhilarating, and sets up a crash-and-burn. She is apparently wise enough to know when it is time to rest for a while.

Holly

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