Camp Casey III – Other Memories: The Photos Speak for Themselves


Dee, Cindy, Tom


Dee, Barabara Cummings, Tom

Tom and Barabara Cummings


Barabara Cummings


Memorial “pink” garden. The flowers are all pink shades. The shoes symbolize the lost lives of children in war.


Reverend Diane and Barabara Cummings. Barbara’s son makes the Impeach Bush and Cheney t-shirts.


Tom, Bill Holloway, and Rena at the Green Party Table


The Crawford Police are really great and very supportive of Camp Casey. This was the day that a disgruntled local, who also lost his son in Iraq, showed up unannounced on the Camp Casey property along with a tv van for a press conference he had called. He had a history of causing a disturbance in the past on the property. He was asked to leave, which he did.


Dee, Arjuno, and Tom. Arjuno was the sound guy.


Dee, The Rev, Tom


Dee, Zachary, Tom


Dee, Cloy, Tom


The day’s schedule was always posted at the security tent.


Signs in front of a participant’s campsite

An invention by “Dale”
of recycled materials that when in operaton the bottles spin around – “The USA Spinning Out of Control”! (this is a .mov clip).


Crawford has kept erected and maintained the “Crawford City Jail”, an old archaic structure.


Memorial Plaque on Crawford in front of the Crawford Peace House.


This is a motel in South Austin along a strip of very progressive businesses.


These people were doing counter-protest against Cindy.


Some property owners around the Camp Casey property aren’t happy with Cindy being their neighbor.

4 responses to “Camp Casey III – Other Memories: The Photos Speak for Themselves

  1. i so wish I could be out there this time around…..

  2. We decided to just do it. We rarely use our credit card (keeping it on hand for emergencies), but we decided that we would finance some activism projects this summer with it, otherwise we wouldn’t have been able to go.
    I would encourage anyone who can possible free up time and resources to go. Camp Casey is nearly over for the time being, getting ready to move to DC for September. If you really want to go, see if you can solicit your friends and others for donations – especially if they support your activism and your cause. You’d be surprised at what you can get by just asking!

  3. i should have done that on my podcast.
    oh well….next time!

  4. When I was a single mom and really poor, I was fortunate to have a friend who donated his frequent flier miles to get me a ticket to D.C. so that I could go to the CODE PINK events back in March of 2003. I was also lucky to have 3 other women to share a hotel room with so the trip was pretty inexpensive. It kind of just shows that sometimes a way comes if you can just stay open to it.

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