By Sheila Samples
08/23/05 "ICH" -- -- Folks
who watch the fair-and-balanced coverage of Fox News or perhaps
CNN, the most "trusted name in news," might think Camp
Casey is a neat new name for the Gaza Strip in Palestine or even
a teenage hideout in Aruba. They would probably be surprised to
learn the camp is at President George Bush's ranch in Crawford,
Texas, and is named after 24-year-old Army Specialist Casey
Sheehan, who was killed in Iraq on April 4, 2004.
Casey's mother, Cindy Sheehan, has been living
in a tent on George Bush's doorstep since Aug. 6 -- three days
after Bush assured a group of Texas lawmakers in Grapevine that
the slaughter of 20 Ohio Marines from one battalion in a single
week would not shake his will, because, by God, "we are at
war." Bush crowed, "Our men and women who've lost
their lives in Iraq and Afghanistan and in this war on terror
have died in a noble cause and a selfless cause."
That did it. Cindy Sheehan says she decided at
that moment to go to the Crawford ranch and ask Bush one
question -- just one. "What was the noble cause that my son
died for?"
Now, it would not be unreasonable for the
president of the United States to come out and answer one
question from a grief-stricken mother whose child was sacrificed
in what Bush so giddily proclaims a "noble" cause. But
that's not how this president does things. No one calls the
shots for Bush; he does not make mistakes, and he says the great
thing about being president is that he doesn't owe anybody an
explanation. About anything. Especially about his war, a noble
cause which has settled gloriously around his shoulders like a
Cicerian ruff.
Bush steadfastly refuses to hear the voice of
"the people" or to even acknowledge they have a voice
at all. The only call Bush hears comes directly from God -- not
from the street rabble
comprising the cannon fodder required for his legacy, nor from
their keening mothers who are beginning to buzz around his head
like pesky mosquitoes at a Texas all day singing and dinner on
the grounds.
Parents shouldn't have to bury their children.
Ever. It disrupts the "natural order" of things.
Unfortunately, most of the world is in agreement that nobody is
better at disrupting order than George W. Bush. Thanks to his
callousness and cruelty, the "one-question" meeting
with Sheehan that Bush could have resolved in less than an hour
while racking up some badly needed positive PR evolved instead
into a movement that is gaining both attention and velocity. It
is assuming a life of its own, and is sweeping non-stop across
the nation. Cindy Sheehan is emboldening Americans awakening to
a nightmare of murder, genocide, torture, abuse, assassination,
rendition -- lies piled upon grisly lies -- to break through the
yellow ribbons encircling the patriotic detention camp their
nation has become.
Suddenly, this summer. Free at last.
Although Sheehan was called to her stricken
mother's bedside last week and remains in California, the number
of sojourners to Camp Casey continues to grow. These concerned
citizens believe their president should -- as Fox News' Sean
Hannity demanded in 1999 when troops were preparing to go into
Kosovo -- "Explain to the mothers and fathers of
American servicemen that may come home in body bags why their
son or daughter have to give up their life..."
The people are awake. Like Sheehan, they want
answers. Yet, at Camp Casey...
I saw NO religious leaders striding bravely
through the shimmering Texas heat in an effort to stem the flow
of innocent blood. Where are the peace-loving Christians who
should be speaking out on behalf of Jesus Christ -- who minced
no words when it came to peace and love and mercy? Why do these
Good Samaritans cross to the other side of the street and
skitter by fearfully, lest anything even remotely resembling
compassion should be expected of them?
I saw NO members of Congess from either side
of the aisle with the courage to throw a supportive arm around
Sheehan's shoulders and demand that Bush answer her single
question. How can they? Like dogs in heat, some are in pursuit
of their corporate donors who are marching triumphantly into
Baghdad. Others, mostly Democrats, are calculating the political
risk of showing their faces in public lest they be asked to take
a stand on anything, especially a hideous war for which
ultimately they must be held accountable. The silence
surrounding the 78 elected women in Congress is as thick as an
Iraqi sandstorm.
I saw NO objective mainstream media (MSM)
coverage of Sheehan's vigil. Those forced to acknowledge that
something of historical magnitude was gathering steam were very
careful to "balance" a 10-second Sheehan sound byte
with interminable interviews with those who condemned Sheehan
for not supporting the troops in a time of war. It's easy for
those who get their news from US state-controlled corporate
media to get the impression that Sheehan is an "activist
mom," that she is little more than an "anti-war
advocate" who is being used by left-wing political groups
for their ideological advantage. [1][2]
Actually, the electronic MSM left the building
years ago and are little more than holographic images on our TV
screens. Their goal, especially CNN and Fox, is to do whatever
it takes to keep the people from challenging or embarrassing, as
they like to say, "this president." The gist of their
coverage is that the Sheehan "ditch witch" needs to
just shut up and accept Bush's grand vision. Sheehan should
leave, for her presence there forces God-fearing,
family-values-oriented Americans to watch sausage being made in
Iraq and Afghanistan. However, in spite of all they can do,
Bush's noble cause is rapidly becoming the people versus the
sausage-making machine. The MSM are indignant that Sheehan is
forcing them to bother their beautiful minds with such a messy
process. Sheehan needs to show more compassion when George Bush
whines that he needs to "get on with his life." After
all, her son's life is over -- why does she have to try
to ruin his?
The print MSM, although not as racuous, has
uniformly enabled Bush to act upon his spate of fantastical
delusions, whether about weapons of mass destruction, regime
change, distributing freedom to every individual of oil-rich
countries as a gift from God, liberating the denizens of entire
villages by blowing them off the face of the earth, or spreading
democracy like a virus throughout an entire region. Rather than
address the critical questions that Sheehan and others ask --
have every right to ask -- about why their sons and daughters
are dying, most reporters turn the issue into a political
pissing contest.
"Certainly Sheehan has caught a wave, and
the ranch stakeout was very clever," Washington Post's
Dana Milbank remarked on Aug 18 in an online
discussion. "But she has been seeking publicity for
more than a year ... and for the most part, the media ignored
her." Milbank admitted it is "possible" for
Sheehan to have ignited a movement that will continue, but added
he believed "Sheehan's story will fade after the Roberts
hearings start." Milbank also quipped that the only citizen
who has a right to take a grievance to the president is -- Laura
Bush.
In his own online chat the day before,
Milbank's cohort at the Post, Jim VandeHei, yawned,
"The White House thinks this whole story is a silly
obsession of bored reporters with nothing better to do during
the slow August."
The blase' attitude of Milbank and Vandehei is
shared by the majority of their peers, with the exception of far
too few editorial writers such as the Atlanta Journal-Consititution's
Jay Bookman and the New York Times' Paul Krugman and, of
course, Frank Rich -- who has no peer. While waiting for August
to end, Milbank and Vandehei could perhaps amuse themselves and
their readers with a rollicking account of the travails endured
by a pack of their fellow reporters and photographers who
accompanied Bush on a 17-mile bike ride on Saturday, Aug. 13.
Or not. I mean, after spending hours cycling
through the Texas Johnson grass and loco weed with the leader of
the free world, a "bonding" adventure if ever there
was one, what's there to talk about -- the 1,868 butchered US
citizens in Iraq, one of whom was Casey Sheehan, whose mother is
camped out at the front gate?
No? Well maybe the bikers thought to ask Bush
why he stubbornly continues to remain in a bloody IraqNam
quagmire that continues to suck our sons and daughters under at
more than three a day, continues to add more wounded and maimed
Americans to the already 45,000 whose lives are shattered
forever, continues a murderous rampage against innocent
civilians in two countries whose existance on this planet is so
trivial their deaths are not worthy of counting.
Too much hard work? Well, I'm sure those
stalwart journalist cyclists were just bubbling with questions
about the "nobility" of a cause wherein a president is
willing to sacrifice his nation's citizens, its money, its very
existance on an illegal, immoral, grandoise crusade to spread
freedom and democracy -- only to back
off at the last minute and support the creation of an Islamist
state. Surely they are curious about such shuddering
hypocrisy. For Bush to change horses in the middle of the
Democracy stream is the most deadly flip-flop of all time.
Bush's cowardly retreat screams an answer to Sheehan's question
and to questions of all mothers who are waking up and realizing
that their children have died -- will continue to die -- in
vain.
Milbank flippantly opines that when this
August non-story is over, Cindy Sheehan will be viewed as either
"Rosa Parks or Lyndon Larouche." I have news for
Milbank and his fellow MSM holograms -- this is not last August
nor the August before and, as Yogi Berra once earnestly opined
-- "it ain't over till it's over.
The people have Karl Rove in hiding; they have
smoked Bush out and have him on the run. Bush is so rattled that
he shouts "9-11!" to any question posed to him,
calls out "9-11!" to questions not posed to
him, and holds up a sign heralding "9-11!" to
passers-by on the street.
The search for answers began with a single
woman stumbling along through a tangle of weeds in a ditch
beside a dusty Texas back road, with a single question to ask
the president of the United States. She was ignored by the
president, yet her presence ignited a movement that roared
across the country at an astonishing rate, almost instantly
becoming larger than one dead soldier and his heartbroken
mother.
And it is not over.
The people are coming, and George Bush knows
it. They want answers. They want the truth and they will not
stop until they get it from Bush and his neoconservative
handlers, from the heartless and destructive religious right,
the corporate military-industrial jackals, Congressonal whores
and cowards, from the hollow virtual media complex. And from the
murderous Donald H. Rumsfeld.
When that happens, this nation will experience
its own terrible and awesome "Suddenly, This Summer"
moment.
Then, and only then, will it be over.
________________
[1] Local media across the nation did
an admirable job of covering candlelight vigils that lit up the
entire US landscape last week. Great photos and coverage here
-- where attendees are encouraged to post photos from vigils in
their area -- and here.
[2] The Internet is literally pulsating
with minute-by-minute reports from reporters at the scene --
reports that cannot be spun, watered down or scrubbed by the
administration or the MSM. There are far too many to mention
here, but check out Democratic
Underground, TruthOut,
Huffington Post, The
Iconoclast, Bush's hometown paper, and Air
America Radio.
Sheila Samples is an Oklahoma writer and a
former civilian US Army Public Information Officer. She is a
regular contributor for a variety of Internet sites. Contact her
at: rsamples@sirinet.net. © 2005 Sheila Samples