Camp Casey III – Education

Tom and I participated in some workshops that were offered while we were at Camp Casey. We couldn’t attend all of them, but here are some that we did:

Counter-Recruitment

We were interested in this because we are engaged in counter-recruitment here in Utah and want our campaign to become more active with the Desert Greens Green Party of Utah which has a section on its website with its position on military recruitment in schools, along with opt-out forms for parents to request exemption from the military recruitment clause in the No Child Left Behind Act.
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CCIII – protesting Karl Rove

Almost the entire camp drove the two hour drive to Austin on Saturday afernoon, August 19, to attempt to do a Citizen’s arrest of Karl Rove  in Austin, TX, where he was speaking to the Texas Republican Party.  Tom and I volunteered to stay behind at camp, along with several others, to help with security and other items needing attention at camp while the rest of the camp went to the protest.

The Austin “Pink Police” showed up wtih folks from Camp Casey at the hotel where the event was being held.  Several women booked rooms in the hotel.  Cindy Sheehan read the list of charges against Rove and demanded that the police do a “citizen’s arrest” of him.  A “stand-off” was engaged and when the protesting group finally decided to leave, Cindy Sheehan’s spokeswoman asked of the Austin Police:  “So why won’t you go in and do a citizen’s arrest?”  The police decided they had had enough of this, threw her to the ground, handcuffed her, and hauled her off to jail.  She was ultimately charged with criminal trespass (even though she had booked a room and had a key) and “participating in a riot”.  RIOT???

Sheehan, supporters protest at Rove event

By Angela K. Brown
Associated Press

      AUSTIN — Chanting “Try Rove for treason,” Cindy Sheehan and more than 50 other war protesters ambushed a reception before President Bush’s top adviser Karl Rove spoke at a fund-raiser Saturday.

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Rodolfo Gonzalez, Associated Press
Protester Cindy Sheehan, center, is caught in the middle as police arrest Tiffany Burns on Saturday in Austin, Texas.

      One woman was arrested during a scuffle with police after Sheehan and the anti-war demonstrators rushed toward the closed doors and kept chanting loudly after the guests went into the dinner.
      Rove was speaking to the Associated Republicans of Texas, and ticket prices started at $200. He was not in the Renaissance Hotel lobby during the reception.
      “I want him arrested. He planned the war that killed my son,” Sheehan told officers guarding the door. Sheehan’s oldest son Casey was killed in Iraq in 2004.
      Police then ordered the group to leave, but some protesters had paid for rooms for the night. Those protesters went upstairs, including Sheehan.
      Earlier, wearing shorts and T-shirts while guests of the lobby reception walked past in sequined dresses and expensive suits, anti-war demonstrators carried American flags and signs, including one that read “Check your conscience.” A few protesters unfurled a large banner from a sixth-floor hotel balcony that read “Rove v. Truth: No Contest. Pink slip Rove.”
      Those at the reception sipped their drinks and largely ignored the protesters before they started chanting. One man looked at the group and said, “Go Bush!”
      Earlier Saturday, the group of more than 70 gathered at the hotel entrance, carrying a large banner that read, “Rove: Guilty of crimes against humanity.” Former U.S. Diplomat Ann Wright, who resigned in 2003 in protest over the war, yelled through a bullhorn, “Karl Rove, you are a criminal!”
      After about 30 minutes, Austin police made them move onto grass at the edge of the property about a block away. Dozens remained later Saturday, holding signs as cars drove by, honking their horns.
      Sheehan and the group left their campsite in Crawford near Bush’s ranch, where they have held vigil the past two weeks, and drove about 100 miles south to Austin.
      The war protest will continue until early September, although Bush’s 10-day ranch vacation ended last weekend. Sheehan’s 26-day protest last August drew more than 10,000 people to her campsite in ditches off the rural road leading to the ranch, but she recently bought land near downtown for the group to camp on.

Volunteering at Camp Casey

Tom and I volunteered for most of our time at Camp Casey. Tom helped a little with the garden that Midge is maintaining. Tom also did quite a bit of electrical work to help in the development of infrastructure at the camp and helped with lighting ventilation around the stage area. We both continually picked up trash from around the camp. We both also did security gate detail every day and on Sunday morning we helped erect crosses in the Memorial Garden. the crosses represent the soldiers killed in the Iraq War.

Below are photos of volunteer work in action. More photos of the gardens will be posted later.


Tom King of Utah, helps put electricity in at the camp.

“Midge” helps keep the pink garden alive.
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Camp Casey III – Messages Around the Camp – The Photos Speak for Themselves


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Camp Casey – Ft. Hood Action

Friday August 18 was an afternoon when many people from camp traveled to Killene, about an hour’s drive southwest of Crawford, where the Ft. Hood Military Base is.  This was the base where Casey Sheehan was stationed.
This is also the base where Suzanne Swift
the Army Specialist was stationed, who refused to return to Iraq because of the extreme duress she suffered in the form of sexual harassment at the hands of three of her commanding officers.  She continues to be harassed and “punished” (by not receiving treatment for PTSD and being assigned to active duty despite her health problems).  The action was in part to stand in solidarity with  Suzanne and in part also to educate GI’s on their rights.

Above right:  One of our participants became ill from heat exhaustion and as he began to feel better, he slipped and fell on some water, cracking his head open as it hit a pole and injuring his hip on a pipe protruding from the ground.  Tom and I went to the emergency room to wait for him as he was treated. Our camp Medic, Carl, stayed with him in treatment.

 

The People at Camp Casey

We all know that it’s the people. And if it weren’t, things wouldn’t happen like Camp Casey. Here are some photos of some of the wonderful folks behind the operation of Camp Casey. We made connections and bonds that will last.

(Note: This is not inclusive of everyone we met and who volunteer. This includes the photos we were able to get.)


Above: Cindy Sheehan, founder of Camp Casey, speaks to us after the Karl Rove Action on Saturday, August 19th.
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The Crawford Peace House

The Crawford Peace House The Crawford Peace House was founded in 2003, as the war was getting started. It has been the host, sponsor or coordinator of many events and actions prior to when Cindy Sheehan came to town. It was co-founded by Johnny Wolf and Hadi Jawad.

The Peace House is a place where folks can gather and organize. There is also a labyrinth and meditative back yard with garden space. Folks at the Peace House provide meals for Camp Casey. The Crawford Peace House is a wonderful place – please visit it when you are in Crawford.




Above is Michael, a supporter and volunteer at the Crawford Peace House.
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Camp Casey III

My experience at Camp Casey last weekend is hard to put into words. I will be posting photos later today and an account of my experiences there. Tom and I have decided to go to Camp Democracy for a few days next month in DC (which Camp Casey transforms into for September).

One thing that Cindy Sheehan said to us all while we were there is that while it is great and wonderful to be at Camp Casey, we need to take Camp Casey with us to our homes. She encouraged us to “take some of Camp Casey home” with us – dirt, rocks, etc. – and spread it all over the world.

We have done just that. We brought home with us a rock as a concrete reminder of our experiences there so that we will spread the energy, knowledge, and wealth of exepereince within our community here in Utah.

Here are the welcome signs in Crawford:


Bush’s visit – thoughts

I have been encouraging everyone I know to attend next week’s rally to protest the Bush administration. I now understand that there will be several rallies going on, which is great. The more the merrier.

I was part of the original group that began planning for this event. I and many others dropped out of the planning because the planning process became manipulated, stacked, and painful. Decisions that were made at previous meetings were re-made again and again. Last year it took FIVE DAYS to pull together an amazing rally for Bush’s visit on August 22, 2005. This year the planning process began at the beginning of July and there has been nothing advertised on websites(that I’ve seen)- only newspaper articles. Fliers have not yet come out (well, they have just yesterday but they have typos in them). Many folks wanted a new and different kind of rally, but it sounds like it will be the same type of rally that has always been planned with multiple speakers, something that I and many others want to get away from doing.

So I decided that I did not need to be part of this (the organizing). As Emma Goldman stated, “If I can’t dance I don’t want to be part of your revolution.” Well, I’m still going to attend and protest, but I’ll be doing my own thing there, along with some others. The fun of organizing went out the window for me when folks showed up with all their friends and family to stack votes, when people called each other names, when the decision-making process was manipulated to meet a few peoples’ agendas. So be it.

In our conversations with Cindy Sheehan last weekend, we found that she is excited to come to SLC (although we are worried since she had a hysterectomy just yesterday and hope that if she is not well enough, she will cancel this gig). We learned from her and others that you CAN make a statement by being bold and standing up to get hour voice heard. Many folks that we talked to started their activism off by just doing things themselves (more on this in a later post). Organizing doesn’t have to be elaborate, drawn out, or “painful”. When it gets to be that way, it’s too big and not as effective.

So my message here, in a round about way, is to show up with your signs on whatever issue is bugging you regarding the current U.S. administration. Talk to people. Network. Discover how you can keep being involved instead of just waiting for the next rally.
It is likely that this rally well go very smoothly – and I sincerely hope it does. The media has been paying attention to this rally because of the public figures that will be involved. Most folks won’t know what went on behind the scenes, which is a good thing. I am sure that part of the reason why many folks don’t participate in activism here in Utah is because of all the turmoil that occurs within the activist community, exascurbated by a small handful of individuals who insist on controlling the organizing scene.

MOst of all, don’t wait for others to organize – do it yourself. I’ll be posting ways here on my blog on how you can get your voice heard without all the ups and downs of organizing in a big group, which, especially here in Salt Lake, seems to be more and more cumbersome and…..just not fun in many cases.

Demand accountability from George Bush: Bring our Troops Home NOW~~ALIVE. Take care of our troops when they get home. REBUILD AMERICA: Spend our money on relief for disaster victims, healthcare and infrastructure.

Divine Strake – in Indiana?

It looks like the Divine Strake test is being diverted to Indiana:

Louisville Courier Journal
Quarry mentioned as blast test site
Environmentalists fear effects of 700-ton bomb
http://www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060817/NEWS02/608170468

Indianapolis Star:
Military tested explosives at Ind quarry
http://www.indystar.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060816/LOCAL/60816030

Ft. Wayne News Sentinel:
Company: Military tested explosives at southern Indiana quarry
http://www.fortwayne.com/mld/newssentinel/news/local/15288924.htm

Counterpunch
Divine Strake in the Bible Belt
http://www.counterpunch.org/blair08182006.html

CANCEL THE DIVINE STRAKE! STOP WEAPONS TESTING ON ANY LAND! END NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION!