Monday, August 08, 2005

Fw: Talking to cops in Crawford, Taxes


----- Original Message -----
From: "Tom Cahill" <tcahill@mcn.org>
To: <cacker@mcn.org>; <ams@mcn.org>; <denmailat@hotmail.com>;
<babs@mcn.org>; <reikigal@msn.com>; <deutsch@mcn.org>; <cwolman@mcn.org>;
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<john@cypresshouse.com>; <aha@mcn.org>; <indigoa@mcn.org>;
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<ananda@mcn.org>; <moonmaid@mcn.org>; <korrinne@mcn.org>
Sent: Monday, August 08, 2005 8:37 PM
Subject: More from Crawford, Taxes

>
> >
> >A Day in the Bar Ditch of Democracy USA
> > By Greg Moses
> > Peacefile
> > "I'm back here where I met you, in the tent!" says 53-year-old
> > Vietnam Veteran Michael Young, speaking by cell phone Saturday evening,
> > with lots of commotion in the background to back him up. Yes, he went to
> > Crawford like he said, and here's what he reports:
> >
> > "Well, I got up around 7:30. Was already running a little late,
> > because I didn't get home until midnight. I put on a pot of coffee and
> > then got in such a hurry that I forgot it. Didn't take any of it with
me.
> > And I got here (at the tent) just as people were organizing to go to
Crawford."
> >
> > There was a little preliminary controversy before the caravan left,
> > says Young, as Veterans for Peace negotiated some turf issues with Cindy
> > Sheehan, the mother of Iraq war casualty Casey Sheehan and moral leader
> > of the trip to confront the President. In the end, it was decided that
> > the Crawford trip would be a mutual action, since VFP had already
planned
> > a trip to the Western White House as part of its annual convention being
> > held under and near the big tent.
> >
> > With preliminary issues settled, 70 people hit the southbound
highway
> > out of Dallas, some riding in the Veterans for Peace Impeachment Bus,
the
> > rest in about 15 cars following behind. Young caught a ride in a Prius
> > driven by Vietnam Veteran Ken Ashe of North Carolina.
> >
> > "No, we hadn't met before the trip, this was the first time, but
> > we're brothers now," Young assures me. Ashe made two tours to the
Vietnam
> > war as a medic. "He's got my information, I've got his information, and
> > we plan on meeting up again."
> >
> > When they finally pulled off the highway into Crawford, the caravan
> > stopped at the Crawford Peace House to freshen up with water and
> > watermelon. They did a little protesting near the street there.
> >
> > "One old hillbilly with two goats in the back of his truck told us
to
> > go home," says Young with a chuckle, "but that was the only negative
> > thing." So the posse remounted and took off on the five-to-six-mile
> > journey to Crawford Ranch, where the President of the USA - in an eerie
> > replay of 2001 - is on extended summer vacation.
> >
> > "The cops made us stop the vehicles about a half mile or quarter
mile
> > from the gate. It was about 100 degrees out there. But they made us walk
> > the rest of the way. And they wouldn't let us walk on the road."
> >
> > "You have to see that road," says Young. "There is no traffic on
that
> > road at all, yet they made us walk in the bar ditch beside the road,
> > which was full of weeds. Real hard ground." After a while the cops
> > stopped them. "They were looking for an excuse to stop us," says Young.
> > "They said we were walking in the road against orders."
> >
> > "We protested loud and proud," recalls Young. "And we meant
> > everything we said. That went on for about 30-45 minutes. We even told
> > the police to get out their history books and read about Hitler so they
> > could understand their role in history, standing here protecting a war
> > criminal. We were being brutally honest from our point of view. And
there
> > was lots of press there at the time."
> >
> > "Cindy got right in their face, too," says Young. "She said look,
> > this is a public roadway. How can you prevent me from walking on a
public
> > roadway?"
> >
> > "At that point I got right behind her," says Young. "If she was
going
> > to jail, I was going to jail. If they wanted confrontation, I was going
> > to back her up. I had made my mind up about that." But there was no
> > confrontation, no arrest.
> >
> > "Far as you could see there were armed Secret Service, armed
> > Sheriff's deputies, armed cops up and down the road eyeing us," says
> > Young. "We didn't carry any backpacks or anything so they could see we
> > were unarmed. They made us stand there, off the pavement in that heat.
> > All the time we were there, I think I saw one car pass." Then the press
> > left the scene.
> >
> > "Once the press left, there was not much point standing there," says
> > Young, so the protesters peeled away. I tell Young about internet
> > information that Sheehan plans to return until she sees the President,
> > and caravans are reported to be coming from San Diego and Louisiana. "A
> > lot of people just showed up out of nowhere," says Young. "I yelled 'til
> > I was hoarse."
> >
> > "I gave Cindy a big hug and told her I loved her. Even if Cindy had
> > found the President, she wouldn't have found what she wants," says
Young.
> > "Cindy wants her son back. That's just the plain truth. I feel for her.
> > And I was there to back her up."
> >
> > "Here we were on this little road that nobody was using but we
> > couldn't walk on it," says Young. It's like you can hear him shaking his
> > head. Send a man off to war to defend his country's freedoms, and 35
> > years later this is what he sees.
> >
> > "But I'll tell you we did ourselves proud out there. We didn't take
> > no guff and we talked to the cops. They said they were just acting
> > professionally, just doing their job. And we told them that's what
> > Hitler's people said."
> >
> > "Once you've been to war and you're a vet," says Young, "and if
> > you're sworn to uphold the Constitution and protect it from enemies BOTH
> > foreign and domestic - that never leaves. I fought in an illegal war.
> > These young guys in Iraq are fighting in an illegal war. If I can save
> > one life I'll do whatever it takes." In the bar ditch outside the
> > President's Crawford Ranch, Young is fighting a better war than he
fought
> > in Vietnam.
> >
> > "This is a war for our country," says Young. "They are taking our
> > country away from us and turning it into a fascist state. What has Bush
> > done for the people? Everything he's done has been for the
corporations."
> > He talks about news reports of record earnings at Halliburton and jobs
> > going overseas.
> >
> > "Here's what they need," says Young. "They need a state of constant
> > war. They need an ignorant population to fight it. They need people to
> > provide the services and materials for war. And they need an ignorant
> > population to do that work. But it will definitely be a country of rich
> > and poor if this is not stopped."
> >
> > "I don't know if I can stop it," says Young. "But I'll be doing it
> > until the day I die. And the Vietnam vets? I'll tell you for sure, we're
> > not going to back down. They can't do any more to us."
> >
> > ---------
> >
> > Greg Moses is editor of PeaceFile and author of Revolution of
> > Conscience: Martin Luther King Jr. and the Philosophy of Nonviolence. He
> > can be reached at gmosesx@prodigy.net.
>
>

Fw: Help stop the daily tsunami of 30,000 children deaths

"See that you do not despise one of these little ones,
for I say to you that their angels in heaven
always look upon the face of my heavenly Father."
Matthew 18: 10
----- Original Message -----
From: Sojourners
Sent: Monday, August 08, 2005 9:47 AM
Subject: Help stop the daily tsunami of 30,000 children deaths

Dear carol,

the 30,000 CAMPAIGNEvery day 30,000 children die a preventable death due to extreme poverty.[1] Yet we have the power to prevent this silent tsunami. What is missing is the moral and political will to do so.

From September 14-16, world leaders will gather during the opening of the United Nations General Assembly to review commitments made by 140 nations in 2000 to build a safer, healthier, and more just world by cutting global poverty in half by 2015 through the "Millennium Development Goals" (MDG's).[2] During the upcoming World Summit we can shine a spotlight on the scandal of 30,000 child deaths by using our voices to ensure that the Summit yields real progress around time-bound and measurable commitments on education, health, gender equity, and sustainable development.

We ask that you join the "30,000 Campaign" by lending your voice, your prayers, and your sacrifice in order to bring greater attention to the World Summit. Sojourners has been working closely with a range of religious organizations, including Episcopalians for Global Reconciliation, World Vision, Micah Challenge, and Bread for the World, to plan a three-day vigil during the Summit. You can join the campaign by:

1) Writing, Praying, and Fasting! We are calling on more than 30,000 people to declare to President Bush their intention to fast and pray for bold U.S. leadership. A fast can be as simple as sacrificing one meal during the course of the Summit, which can serve as a spiritual and personal act of solidarity with the billions of people across the world who go without food and basic necessities every day (click here to learn more about ways you can fast).

»Click here to let President Bush know you will be fasting and praying for bold U.S. leadership.

2) Traveling to New York City for the World Summit. During the three-day Summit, we are co-organizing three days of fasting, praying, and political witness in the Dag Hammarskjold Plaza near the United Nations. We are looking for volunteers who can join us in providing three days of political witness in the space. Please contact organize@sojo.net if you are interested.

3) Highlighting the crisis of global poverty in worship services across the country leading up to the World Summit. In order to raise awareness and engagement around the Millennium Development Goals, we are asking that churches include prayer and liturgy in services around the crisis of global poverty. Sojourners will be providing a worship resource kit with sample prayers, liturgy, and other materials. We will be sending a sample worship kit.

Stay tuned for more information as we continue to build a movement to end extreme poverty.

Peace,
Adam, Matt, and Christa


[1] According to the United Nations, 30,000 children die every day of preventable illness and malnutrition. This staggering statistic often can be overwhelming; however, the world possesses the knowledge, resources, and proven programs to stop these senseless deaths.

[2] Five years ago at the Millennium Summit, more than 140 nations pledged to cut in half the number of people living in extreme poverty by the year 2015. These, along with other benchmarks called the "Millennium Development Goals" (MDGs), focus on a wide array of sustainable anti-poverty strategies, such as women's empowerment, access to clean drinking water, access to basic education and health care, sustainable economic development, and more.


To unsubscribe from all Sojourners mailings, reply to this email with "REMOVE" as the subject, or click here to unsubscribe or to choose which types of messages you prefer to receive. 

Fw: George: TALK TO CINDY!


----- Original Message -----
From: "wbfree" <wbfree@bendcable.com>
To: "Catherine Sky" <Cskyhere@yahoo.com>
Cc: "Tim Breeden" <Tbreeden@coinet.com>; "Ray Duray" <Rduray@Bendcable.com>;
"P" <penelopejonah@hotmail.com>; "NoneRadio (Rich Pike)"
<rpike@noneradio.com>; "Marin" <marinm13@hotmail.com>; "John Mahoney"
<jmahoney@bendnet.com>; "Jane stillwater" <jpstillwater@yahoo.com>; "carol
wolman" <cwolman@mcn.org>
Sent: Monday, August 08, 2005 1:14 PM
Subject: Fw: TALK TO CINDY!

>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Mike Ferner" <mike.ferner@sbcglobal.net>
> To: "Inquiring Minds" <mike.ferner@sbcglobal.net>
> Sent: Monday, August 08, 2005 12:34 PM
> Subject: TALK TO CINDY!
>
>
> >
> > ----- Original Message -----
> > From: "Stan Goff"
> > To: <bthn@lists.riseup.net>
> > Sent: Monday, August 08, 2005 3:20 PM
> > Subject: ACTION ALERT - DISTRIBUTE WIDELY
> >
> >
> > SPREAD THE WORD!
> > GEORGE BUSH, TALK TO CINDY!
> >
> > George Bush is on vacation.
> >
> > Cindy Sheehan is on his case.
> >
> > Cindy is the mother of Army Specialist Casey Sheehan, KIA at Sadr City
> > on April 4, 2004, and a co-founder of Gold Star Families for Peace.
> > Cindy is at the gates of Bush's ranch in Crawford Texas to demand that
> > he explain to her –face to face– why Casey had to die. Bush is refusing
> > to come out. Cindy says she's staying until Bush talks to her or leaves
> > Texas (see Chicago Tribune, Washington Post, UK Guardian and The Lone
> > Star Iconoclast, Bush's "home-town paper").
> >
> > We can help Cindy Sheehan turn the heat up on Bush.
> >
> > 1-Email the White House. Send a simple three-word message, "Talk to
> > Cindy!"
> >
> > 2-Call the White House comment line (202) 456-1111, and/or send a
> > postcard to George Bush, The White House, 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW,
> > Washington, DC 20500 with the same three words.
> >
> > 3-Spread the word! Send this appeal to your friends, to email lists, to
> > blogs. Post it on websites. Let's swamp the White House with our simple
> > three word demand: TALK TO CINDY!
> >
> > http://www.bringthemhomenow.org/
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > --
> > Internal Virus Database is out-of-date.
> > Checked by AVG Anti-Virus.
> > Version: 7.0.338 / Virus Database: 267.9.7/60 - Release Date: 7/28/2005
> >
> >
>
>