You are hereCindy Sheehan

Cindy Sheehan


Cindy's Stand in Crawford

For Peace Mother, life as normal ended with soldier son's death

San Luis Obispo Tribune
by MARTHA MENDOZA, Associated Press

VACAVILLE, Calif. - Before her son was killed in Iraq, before she began a peace vigil outside President Bush's Texas ranch, before she became an icon of the anti-war movement and the face of grieving mothers, there was a time when Cindy Sheehan's life was, by all appearances, incredibly normal.

She grew up in a suburb of Los Angeles, the daughter of a housewife and an electrician. She married her high school sweetheart, Patrick Sheehan. They had four babies, one almost every other year. They drove their growing clan in a huge, yellow station wagon with a goofy nickname: "The BananaMobile." She volunteered at church, and later, as the children grew, she worked there.

9/11 Family Member: Crawford As a Turning Point

Daily Kos
by Andrew for Oklahoma (Brother of 9/11 Victim David Rice & 2006 Candidate for State Senate in Oklahoma)

In Oct. 2004 I flew to San Francisco to do a speaking event with Lila Lipscomb (of FARENHEIT 9/11 and a fellow member of GSFP with Cindy). Cindy came to the event that night to meet us. If I recall correctly, Cindy had just begun getting more and more active in opposing the war that had killed her son Casey. Lila, of course, was and still is very active as well.

After the event I was talking with some friends and fellow members of Sept. 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows (http://www.peacefultomorrows.org) and it was apparent to us, in watching Cindy and Lila speak to the press and people who attended the event, that they and other military families who had paid the worst price from an unnecessary war would be the catalysts who would bring an end to the occupation of Iraq. They would be able to ultimately succeed where us 9/11 families who were against the war had not been able to succeed.

"Anne Wright And The Man In The Truck"

[This is a very moving and poignant true glimpse into the lives of people visiting and staying at Camp Casey. It is the first in an ongoing series from the Upbeat Defiance site.]

Posted by Sapphire on 2005/8/13 11:27:17

Annie Spell called in this morning to share some brief glimpses into the lives and personalities of the people who have joined them at Camp Casey. I've debated what order to share these stories in, wanting to ensure that each and every story was read, because they are all so powerful, so moving. How was I to choose?

LONE STAR ICONOCLAST UPDATES ON CINDY SHEEHAN VISIT TO CRAWFORD - Saturday, Aug. 13, 2005

Lone Star Iconoclast
W. Leon Smith, publisher

Check The Lone Star Iconoclast site for their continual updates throughout the day.

Here's their report from 11:05 a.m. today:

Coordinator Ann Wright said, “There are about 50 Republicans here walking the mile and a half up the road from the Broken Spoke Ranch to Camp Casey. They get to walk on the road. They put us in the ditch, but those who support Bush get the road. I don’t understand that. It is so hot and these people are planning to walk all the way. We’re here a

Photos of SF Rally Last Night

Submitted by Jeff Paterson on Sat, 2005-08-13 12:22.

Hi Cindy,

On less than two days notice, over 200 folks rallied last night in San Francisco to support the stand you have taken in Texas. The rally included a Gold Star Families for Peace member who’s brother was killed serving in Iraq and a member of Iraq Veterans Against the War. Following the rally, we marched up to the busy Union Square shopping district to make some noise. See you again in Crawford next week!

Here are the photos:
http://www.indybay.org/news/2005/08/1759454.php

President Bush, Shameful. . .

The Washington Note
By Steve Clemons

It's hard to know, but I think that Harry Truman would have met Cindy Sheehan. I think that Dwight Eisenhower would have. He knew about military sacrifice -- the horror and complexity of it.

The micro life of a soldier -- or an Iraqi victim -- is lost sometimes against the macro drama, no matter what side of the war people might be on.

I think that Carter would be out there with her. I'm really not sure about Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon -- though a hunch tells me that Johnson would have been out there before Nixon and Kennedy.

Ronald Reagan would have stopped his car, if for no other reason that to hold Cindy Sheehan for a few moments, to express the regrets of a nation that her son was lost, and to thank her -- even though he might not have made her and many of us believers in this war.

Battle lines are drawn in Texas

San Diego Union Tribune
By Alex Roth

CRAWFORD, Texas – A few miles down the road from President Bush's vacation ranch, a small patch of countryside has come to symbolize the fault line that has emerged in this country over the wisdom of the war in Iraq.

Along a dusty road yesterday morning, under the shade of several large oak trees, dozens of posters declared "Wage Peace" and asked "Who Would Jesus Bomb?" A man with dyed-orange hair strummed an acoustic guitar from atop a 1983 Volvo station wagon, and an anti-war group handed out pink umbrellas decorated with peace signs so protesters could shield themselves from the blistering Texas sun.

The Grief of Cindy Sheehan

The Nation
by Bruce Shapiro

Pitching her tent on the Texas roadside, Gold Star Mother Cindy Sheehan has given a face, a voice and a story to the widespread but amorphous disillusionment with George Bush's Iraq occupation. Truck drivers divert from the interstate to blare their horns in support. Dozens of veterans and dead soldiers' families brave the summer heat to join her. Network news programs lead their morning broadcasts with the story of her protest.

The President, unwilling to accede to Sheehan's demand for a meeting and aware of the explosive potential of the war-bereaved, utters a generic statement and leapfrogs by helicopter over the possibility of direct confrontation.

Cindy Sheehan TV ad airs in Crawford, TX

Working for Change
Posted by Andrew Boyd

A TV ad of Cindy Sheehan addressing President Bush will air on Crawford, TX cable channels near Bush's ranch. The total ad buy is currently $15,000, paid for by Gold Star Families for Peace. The group plans to air the ad throughout August and wherever Bush visits during his vacation. Watch the ad now .

Sheehan's son, Casey, was an Army mechanic who was killed just five days after arriving in Iraq.

THE IN-LAWS: A Cindy Sheehan cartoon

From Daily Kos
by Tony Seybert
Sat Aug 13th, 2005 at 07:59:02 PDT

LINK TO CARTOON

* Tony Seybert's diary :: ::

I posted this at My Left Wing yesterday. My Left Wing now has three semi-regular cartoon features, and it is a blast to log on and see cartoons on the front page. mental debris contributes "The Fuss Bunnies," dhonig does "The Jew Boy Speaks," and I have a cartoon called Duckerford B. Hayes, that started out as a vicious attack on the cosmic lamenosity of Mallard Fillmore, but soon took on a like of its own. ("The In-Laws" is part of the Duckerford B. Hayes series.)

Cindy Sheehan support - Your local events

Daily Kos
by raincat100
Sat Aug 13th, 2005 at 08:05:39 PDT

Yesterday, mem from somerville posted a diary here about local events in support of Cindy Sheehan and Camp Casey - my diary from yesterday was a follow-up.

As mem said, we can't all be in Crawford, but many of us want to show our support.

Please post any such events in your area here (and provide a link or contact information if you have it.) And, please recommend so this diary doesn't fall off the page in a few minutes. (Thanks for the recommendations last night!)

Tiananmen Ranch

by James Moore
The Huffington Post

A close friend of mine went cycling with President Bush on Crawford Ranch last year and described a focused, relentlessly aggressive man on a mountain bike. Bush hammered out a hilly 18 mile course and left behind the guests and secret service agents trying to keep pace with his frenetic pedaling. There was nothing but him and the bike and the road and the pound of his heart. Good athletes are like this. Decent presidents are not.

Most endurance athletes discover that their minds, stimulated by endorphins released through exercise, tend to wander across a landscape of subjects. And when you find one that is engaging or significant, solutions and sensitivities unknown are suddenly discovered. That's why I wonder how the president can hit the trails of Prairie Chapel or even linger over his morning coffee and not be fixed on the unrelenting grief and resolve of Cindy Sheehan. She is becoming the symbol of our American Tiananmen.

The President Owes Ms. Sheehan More than Platitudes

by Rep. Bernie Sanders
The Huffington Post

Cindy Sheehan and the other families of soldiers who lost their lives in Iraq deserve answers from President Bush about his plans to bring our troops home. That is why I, along with dozens of other members of Congress, have urged the President to sit down with Ms. Sheehan.

One of the greatest concerns I have about the Bush Administration is their unwillingness to discuss issues with people whose positions are different than theirs. The President should hear firsthand from a woman whose views reflect those of tens of millions of Americans who believe that we have got to begin bringing our troops home as soon as possible.

It Takes a Village to Smear Cindy Sheehan

by Arianna Huffington
The Huffington Post

The right wing attacks on Cindy Sheehan -- desperate, pathetic, and grasping at straws -- expose much less about their target than about the attackers.

I mean, trying to slime a grieving Gold Star mom because she is inconveniently questioning the reasons her son was sent off to die in Iraq? Why that would be like trashing a much-decorated war hero or outing an undercover CIA agent…

Oh, right…

How much longer can the Bushies get away with mauling the very values they profess to stand for before their supporters start getting wise to the fact that the only value they really value is power?

We Have the Power

by Cindy Sheehan
The Huffington Post
Posted at 12:52 AM

My day started way too early today. After 3 hours of sleep, I was being shaken awake by someone at 6:30 a.m. telling me that the Today show wanted me to be on. I had come into town to sleep in a trailer because my tent had been infested with fire ants.

We had a very interesting day. We had Bush drive by really, really fast twice. I caught a glimpse of Laura. I was hoping after she saw me that she would come down to Camp Casey with some brownies and lemonade. I waited for her, but she never came.

The Bushes were going to a barbeque/fundraiser down the road from us. I was very surprised that they let us stay so close to Bush. The families of the fallen loved ones held their son's crosses from Arlington West while Bush drove by. I bet it didn't even give him indigestion to see so many people protesting his murderous policies.

Bush Avoids Sheehan Like He Owes Her Child Support

President can run, but he cannot hide
OfficialWire
by Michael Ascot

CRAWFORD, TX -- (OfficialWire) -- 08/13/05 -- It's shameful really. This president is a coward. He likes to talk the big talk, like "Bring 'em on...", "We'll hunt 'em down..." and the like, but actually, George W. Bush is a coward with nothing much to say.

Evidence of the expanding yellow streak down the backside of America's Commander-in-Chief is his continued refusal to meet with Cindy Sheehan, whose son Casey was killed in Sadr City, Iraq, on April 4, 2004. Sheehan and her supporters are maintaining a roadside encampment—Camp Casey—close to the president's Prairie Chapel Ranch in Crawford.

They Just Don't Get It - Pro-war FReepers to rally in Crawford

OfficialWire
by Jennifer Monroe

CRAWFORD, TX -- (OfficialWire) -- 08/13/05 -- The 'Heart of Texas' chapter of Free Republic, a conservative forum, is planning a demonstration Saturday aimed at countering the peace vigil organized by Cindy Sheehan, whose son Casey was killed in Sadr City, Iraq, on April 4, 2004. Sheehan and her supporters are maintaining a roadside encampment—Camp Casey—close to the president's Prairie Chapel Ranch in Crawford.

Sheehan, 48 (shown here), traveled to the 'Western White House' one week ago after George W. Bush said that fallen U.S. troops had died for a 'noble cause' and that the mission must be completed.

From the Archives: The New Face of Protest?

The Nation
Originally posted March 9, 2005 (March 28, 2005 issue)
by Karen Houppert

On a Sunday afternoon in February a young man made a plea to a room full of 400 antiwar activists who had gathered in St. Louis for three days of strategizing on how to end the war in Iraq. "I'm probably the most experienced activist in my organization and I've been an activist for one year," 25-year-old Michael Hoffman said, "so we need your help with logistics." In return, he promised that his group would serve as a shield. "When there are massive protests, we will be out front. We will say that you are doing everything you can to support the troops by demanding that this war is ended, and ended now, so that the troops are brought home and cared for when they return."

Fallen soldier's mother digs in

In her camp outside the President's ranch, Cindy Sheehan talks and waits.
By Denise Gamino
AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF

CRAWFORD — Even the florists are making house calls to Cindy Sheehan's foxhole.

Her small, silver tent is pitched in a rain-soaked ditch 1 1/2 miles from orange barricades that prohibit entrance to a road leading to President Bush's 1,600-acre rolling prairie ranch. She's not leaving, so the world comes to her: national television news teams, cell phone calls from members of Congress and steady deliveries of fresh cut flowers.

And every bouquet, it seems, sparkles with blooms of a distinctive "Tie a Yellow Ribbon" shade of lemon.

Cindy Sheehan's Pitched Battle

In a Tent Near Bush's Ranch, Antiwar Mother of Dead Soldier Gains Visibility
By Michael A. Fletcher
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, August 13, 2005; Page A01

CRAWFORD, Tex., Aug. 12 -- Cindy Sheehan vaulted into national consciousness this month on the power of her story as the grieving mother of a fallen soldier.

But what began as a solitary campaign to force a meeting with President Bush by setting up camp along the road to his ranch has quickly taken on the full trappings of a political campaign. Sheehan is working with a political consultant and a team of public relations professionals, and now she is featured in a television ad.

The Situation Room on CNN Covers Cindy's Protest

CNN THE SITUATION ROOM 3:00 PM EST
Friday, August 12, 2005

CINDY SHEEHAN, SON DIED IN IRAQ: I want to ask the president, why did he kill my son? What did my son die for?

BLITZER: War mothers on both sides of the issue speaking out.

And a CNN exclusive. We'll go live inside North Korea where our Mike Chinoy is the only western correspondent in a tightly closed country. Stay with us.

BLITZER: Welcome back. We've been hearing a lot about Cindy Sheehan, she's protesting the president and his war policy. She lost a son in Iraq. We're going to be speaking with her shortly. But first, let's go to Chicago. Georgette Frank is joining us live. Georgette Frank lost a son in Iraq, as well. Georgette, thanks very much for joining us. Tell us a little bit about your son, Phil, first of all.

Anderson Cooper Covers Casey Sheehan and Cindy's Protest

ANDERSON COOPER 360 DEGREES
Thursday, August 11, 2005

BUSH: Listen, I sympathize with Mrs. Sheehan. She feels strongly about her position. And I -- she has every right in the world to say what she believes. This is America. She has a right to her position. And I've thought long and hard about her position. I've heard her position from others, which is, get out of Iraq now. And it would be a -- it would be a mistake for the security of this country.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

COOPER: Well, that was President Bush earlier today talking about Cindy Sheehan, the mother of a soldier killed in Iraq. Now, she's been camped for days near the president's ranch in Crawford, Texas, demanding to ask him in person why her son died. It's a personal story that's become very political as well.

MSNBC's Countdown with Keith Olbermann Covers Cindy's Protest

COUNTDOWN on MSNBC 8:00 PM EST
August 11, 2005 Thursday

OLBERMANN: At about the same time the president spoke to the media today, the mother of Army Specialist Casey Sheehan, who died at Sadr City, Iraq, in April 2004, held a news conference of her own, joined by other families. Cindy Sheehan pledged to stay camped outside that ranch for the duration of the president`s August vacation, adding that if he does not talk with her there, she may to go Washington in September.

And while the president did not talk with her directly today, he did finally address her presence and her purpose.

Hardball on MSNBC Covers Cindy's Protest

HARDBALL 7:00 PM EST
Thursday, August 11, 2005

GREGORY: On the same day President Bush met with his foreign policy team at his ranch in Crawford, Texas, he said he had sympathy for a woman whose son was killed serving in Iraq. That woman, Cindy Sheehan, has been waiting outside the president`s ranch, demanding to meet with him.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

BUSH: And I sympathize with Mrs. Sheehan. She feels strongly about her position. And I -- she has every right in the world to say what she believes.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

GREGORY: Melanie Morgan, a conservative radio talk show host, has been in e-mail correspondence with the Sheehan family on the father`s side and was sent the following statement just this morning: "The Sheehan family lost our beloved Casey in the Iraq War and we have been silently, respectfully grieving. We do not agree with the political motivations and publicity tactics of Cindy Sheehan. She now appears to be promoting her own personal agenda and notoriety, at the expense of her son`s good name and reputation. The rest of the Sheehan family supports the troops and our country and our president, silently, with prayer and respect."

NBC Nightly News and NPR's All Things Considered Cover Cindy's Protest

NBC Nightly News 6:30 AM EST NBC
Thursday, August 11, 2005

BRIAN WILLIAMS, anchor:

Now to that woman outside the president's ranch in Texas. Cindy Sheehan lost a son in Iraq. She has met with the president before but wants so badly to meet him and talk to him again. She's vowed to live outdoors, outside his Texas ranch, until she gets to see the president. Her story tonight from NBC's Kelly O'Donnell.

KELLY O'DONNELL reporting:

Day six at this improvised campsite, about a five-mile drive from the president's ranch in Crawford, Texas. One mother's vigil...

Ms. CINDY SHEEHAN: Why did George Bush kill my son?

Cindy Sheehan: The Human Face of A Nation at War

This isn’t about politics, it’s about grief. It’s about a growing group of ordinary citizens trying to teach this callous cowboy how to care,even as he bikes away his worries while the families of the 46 soldiers killed in the month of August alone attend funerals.

By Lilian Friedberg
http://www.opednews.com

One sorely neglected aspect of the Cindy Sheehan story concerns public expression of mourning. Ronald Reagan’s death called for an entire week of public mourning, and myriad other instances of public mourning in response to the death of a single individual mark the landscape of recent US-history: the death of John Lennon in 1980, of John Kennedy Jr. in 1999, of Christopher Reeve in 2004, Pope John Paul II earlier this year, and most recently, of ABC news anchor Peter Jennings. Public mourning in the aftermath of the Oklahoma City bombings, the Challenger and Columbia disasters and the 9/11 attacks was widespread, fuelled in large part by a veritable carpet-bombing of memorials delivered to our living rooms by the corporate media. All of us took time out of our busy schedules to mark the tragedies in public displays of despair, and the effect was cathartic, a necessary step in the process of “moving on

Current Editorials: Republicans Engaged in Heavy-Artillery Shill Spam Campaign

Web.Morons.Org
Posted by spatula on Aug. 12, 2005

I don't know who is organizing it, but I can see its effects: the Republicans have launched an all-out war on the mother of a young man who died in Iraq...

Every day I get a report in my email that shows me how many hits and visitors the site got, a projection of traffic for the month, number of requests per second, and, most importantly, the URLs of the referring sites. This way I can tell where the traffic is coming from. Often this leads me to other amusing sites where our articles or the site are discussed-- sometimes in a flattering way, and sometimes not.

Oklahomans Join Peace Vigil outside Bush's TX Ranch

KTEN Channel 10

CRAWFORD, Texas (AP) - At least five Oklahomans have joined a growing peace vigil outside President Bush's ranch in Crawford, Texas.

What started Saturday as a California woman's solo demonstration has swelled to encampment of at least 50 supporters.

Serena Blaiz of Oklahoma City says the crowd might number 100, but that it's hard to tell the peace activists from the media.

Melissa Rabe of Blanchard says she came to support Cindy Sheehan, the California mother whose son was killed in Iraq last year.

The Peace House of Oklahoma City says other Oklahomans at the vi

Scottsdale mothers join anti-war vigil in Texas

Anti-war protest near Bush ranch
Carol Sowers
The Arizona Republic
Aug. 12, 2005 12:00 AM

SCOTTSDALE - Two Scottsdale mothers have joined a highly publicized vigil near President Bush's remote ranch in Crawford, Texas, to demand that he withdraw troops from Iraq.

"This is a real pivotal moment in the anti-war movement," said Sherry Bohlen, whose son is in Iraq. "We want to raise public awareness."

Under mounting pressure, Bush repeatedly has said it is too early to pull out of the war, but he sympathizes with parents of soldiers.

Bohlen and Rebecca Bahr, also of Scottsdale, arrived in Crawford on Wednesday afternoon, where about 200 protesters have gathered since Saturday.

More Right Wing Attacks

Read 'em and sympathize. It has to hurt to have no other argument for your war than the ability to call opponents of it "extremists."

Speaking Events

2017

 

August 2-6: Peace and Democracy Conference at Democracy Convention in Minneapolis, Minn.

 

September 22-24: No War 2017 at American University in Washington, D.C.

 

October 28: Peace and Justice Studies Association Conference



Find more events here.

CHOOSE LANGUAGE

Support This Site

Donate.

Get free books and gear when you become a supporter.

 

Sponsors:

Speaking Truth to Empire

***

Families United

***

Ray McGovern

***

Julie Varughese

***

Financial supporters of this site can choose to be listed here.

 

Ads:

Ca-Dress Long Prom Dresses Canada
Ca Dress Long Prom Dresses on Ca-Dress.com

Buy Books

Get Gear

The log-in box below is only for bloggers. Nobody else will be able to log in because we have not figured out how to stop voluminous spam ruining the site. If you would like us to have the resources to figure that out please donate. If you would like to receive occasional emails please sign up. If you would like to be a blogger here please send your resume.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.