IN GAELIC, "SHEEHAN" MEANS "PEACE MAKER"
http://www.lewrockwell.com/shaffer/shaffer116.html
EXCERPT:
As this psychopathic administration now scans its world atlas for new targets
upon which to direct its forces of "shock and awe," it is time for all of us
to understand that there is nothing "noble" in the systematic slaughter of
people. There is no "honor" in bringing grief and suffering to others; and no
transcendent "purpose" in being part of a collective of fungible human beings
to be exploited for whatever ends suit those with ambitions over the lives of
others.
The War Against Cindy
by Butler Shaffer
Truth is the most valuable thing we have. Let us economize it.
~ Mark Twain
I got both into and out of active politics while in my late twenties, shortly
after my graduation from law school. I was impressed with Barry Goldwater;
became executive secretary of my state�s Republican party organization; and
got elected as part of our state�s delegation to the 1964 Republican national
convention. My initial enthusiasm for political action quickly dissolved in
the realism that politics was nothing more than a vicious racket; that trying
to reform the process was as pointless as trying to clean up the Mafia. 1964
was the last year in which I devoted any of my energies to such purposes,
including voting.
During my short stay in the political circus, I noticed attributes of both
"liberals" and "conservatives" that carry over in the present. In terms of how
they communicated with the general public, liberals were brighter and more
clever than conservatives. Like snake-oil peddlers or good magicians, liberals
could put on a show to bamboozle people to embrace their programs. In
contrast, conservative policies were presented with the level of excitement
one would get from reading the annual report of a corporation.
With the failure of its economic and social interventionist policies becoming
more evident in recent decades, liberalism has had a difficult time
rationalizing its existence, and has become as useless to its constituencies
as legs on a snake. Modern conservatism, on the other hand, has become
anchored in maintaining the status quo, a purpose often tied to police,
military force, and other instruments of institutionalized order. With
liberalism in a thoroughly lobotomized state, conservatives find themselves in
an open field with which to pursue their preferences for expanded coercive
policies.
There is, however, a cost to politics that none of the participating parties
can afford to confront: the diminution of respect for the worthiness of the
individual. Politics both degrades and destroys life, nowhere in a more
depraved manner than in the institution of war. For centuries, young men and
women � and their families � have been told fantastic lies to get them to
throw themselves on a grenade in furtherance of some allegedly "noble
purpose." The current war in Iraq is but the latest chapter in this swinish
endeavor, with administration liars and their media megaphones constantly
changing the rationale for the resulting death and destruction.
One woman has chosen to call all of this into question. Cindy Sheehan � whose
son, Casey, was killed in Iraq last year � has been waiting outside George
Bush�s Crawford, Texas, ranch for him to come out and explain to her "what was
the noble cause Casey died for"? She openly confronts the Bush
administration�s claim that ending the war now would "dishonor" those who have
died. She responds that "by sending honorable people to die, they so dishonor
themselves. They say we must complete our mission . . . but why would I want
one more mother to go through what I have, just because my son is dead?" She
wants to tell Mr. Bush "don�t you dare spill any more blood in Casey�s name."
This is powerful language, not just because it comes from a mother whose son
was killed as a result of an act of unprovoked aggression by the United States
against Iraq; but because her words are a clear challenge to the collective
mindset upon which every mob depends for its power.

Cindy Sheehan's protest is heroic
Arizona Republic, AZ - Aug 14, 2005
When a lone Chinese protester faced down a tank in Tiananmen Square, the world
applauded him as a hero. He stood up to an evil government ...
http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/opinions/articles/0815monlets153.html
Cindy�s stance is reminiscent of that of Wang Wei-lin, the young man who
confronted the row of Chinese tanks in
Tiananmen Square in 1989. When the human spirit stands up to the cold,
faceless, dehumanizing, destructive machinery of the state, there is a release
of emotional energy whose force transcends material calculation.
Cindy�s efforts have met with the unsophisticated response one has come to
expect from modern conservative voices. The reptilian "see-act" reactions of
such people as Bill O�Reilly, Rush Limbaugh, Ann Coulter, and John Gibson,
only scratch the surface of the thoughtless rage with which conservatives
confront a world beyond their ken. So, how did the Bush-leaguers propose to
deal with Cindy�s actions? By threatening to have her arrested�, in the name
of what has become the default explanation for state excesses: "national
security"! As Mr. Bush gushes about Americans fighting for "freedom," his
administration threatens Cindy with arrest for exercising hers!
The liberal establishment � the left wing of the state�s bird of prey � would
have been just as indifferent to Cindy�s plea as are the conservatives.
Liberals would not, however, have been so unbelievably stupid as to attack a
lone, grieving mother, and threaten her with arrest. A liberal president would
have met with this woman to "feel her pain" � with full media coverage, of
course � before proceeding with the conduct of his bloody warfare.
Because the state depends, for its existence, upon the enforcement of
collectivized thinking, Cindy Sheehan � along with her message � must be
marginalized. Lies must be metabolized by the body politic; the immune system
must remain on the alert for viruses of truth and understanding that might
infect individual minds and enervate the collective organism. Such responses
remind me of the apocryphal description of lobsters in a pot of water who,
upon seeing a fellow crustacean trying to escape, pull him back with the
others.
In an effort to render Cindy�s thoughts inconsequential, the established order
has paraded onto television families whose sons died in Iraq. One spoke of the
"very noble cause" for which his brother had died, and praised America for the
willingness to "sacrifice our people." When asked about Cindy�s actions �
which it was the network�s purpose to have this man criticize � he responded
that we should "praise the sacrifice," and the fact that the soldiers had
"died for a cause greater than themselves." The mother of another dead soldier
� when asked to contrast her position with Cindy�s � stated "we support our
president," adding that she believed her son had died for a noble cause.
Other relatives of Casey Sheehan issued a statement � at whose behest it was
not made known � disagreeing with Cindy�s "political motivations" and
"publicity tactics." Of course, their public statement was free of "political
motivations" and lacking in "publicity tactics," as they concluded that the
rest of the family "supports the troops, our country, and our President."
I have no quarrel with the families of dead soldiers wanting to believe that
their children died for some important purpose. Even Cindy Sheehan�s question
to George Bush asks for an explanation of the cause for which her son died. It
is a part of human nature to want our lives to have some transcendent purpose,
and when young people die before they have had an opportunity to define and
act upon such a meaning for their lives, it is truly sad. To believe that
there was something "noble" in the death of a young man or woman becomes a way
of surmounting the feeling that their lives were meaningless. Such emotions
are often found following the murders of small children, with parents engaging
in efforts to draft a piece of legislation or create a foundation, either of
which might bear the name of a fallen child.
In Gaelic, the name "Sheehan" means "peace maker." It is precisely the desire
of Cindy and millions of others to foster peace and prevent additional deaths
� whether of Americans or Iraqis � that underlies the campaign President Bush
and other statists strive to marginalize. This war has been nothing but one
string of ever-changing lies from the beginning. The spinmeisters continue to
exploit the suffering that their lies, forgeries, and deceptions have created
for untold thousands of people. The twisted-ribbon bumper-stickers that read
"support the troops" have a hidden message that often comes through in the
course of further discussion: "support the war and support President Bush;
sacrifice the troops."
As this psychopathic administration now scans its world atlas for new targets
upon which to direct its forces of "shock and awe," it is time for all of us
to understand that there is nothing "noble" in the systematic slaughter of
people. There is no "honor" in bringing grief and suffering to others; and no
transcendent "purpose" in being part of a collective of fungible human beings
to be exploited for whatever ends suit those with ambitions over the lives of
others. "Life" belongs to living individuals, not to the state, a message each
of us must impart to our children and grandchildren as they learn to resist
the seductions of those who would destroy them. It is also time for Americans
to take a stand with Cindy Sheehan and help this country rediscover its soul,
and return to the sense of decency from which it has so aimlessly strayed.
We might begin our transformation with the lesson offered by a friend of Kurt
Vonnegut as the two returned from Europe following their World War II
soldiering. Vonnegut asked this man what he had learned from his wartime
experiences, to which his friend replied: "not to believe my government."
August 15, 2005
Butler Shaffer [send him e-mail] teaches at the Southwestern University School
of Law.
Copyright � 2005 LewRockwell.com
Bedlam at Bush�s Ranch
Alex Jones Goes to Crawford
Infowars.com | August 15, 2005
by Alex Jones
I�d been to Crawford on the eve of the Iraq war and on its first anniversary,
so I thought I knew what to expect when I traveled there yesterday. Upon my
arrival Sunday morning, I found myself beset on all sides by the massive media
circus surrounding Cindy Sheehan, the mother of Casey Sheehan, a soldier who
tragically died in Iraq while attempting to give medical aid to his wounded
buddies
http://www.infowars.com/articles/iraq/alex_crawford.htm
Iraqi War - George W. Bush's Accountability ("What noble cause??...Cindy)
http://www.apfn.org/apfn/sheehan.htm

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