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Saturday, April 29, 2006:
Marching for Peace & Justice
An estimated 300,000 thousand anti-war protesters
marched Saturday, April 29, 2006 through Manhattan
to demand an immediate withdrawal of U.S. troops
from Iraq. Cindy Sheehan, joined in the march
along with Susan Sarandon and the Rev. Jesse Jackson.
CODEPINK was a strong presence in this massive
mobilization, saying YES to peace, justice, democracy,
environmental, civil and human rights. We have
had enough of the occupation of Iraq, the threat
of military strikes against Iran, and the diversion
of our resources away from the needs of people
in this country into never-ending wars. Scroll
below to see more photos!
Quote
from Daily
Kos
"The New York Code
Pink delegation was amazingly
cool and had some great chants like "Condi
Condi Condi Rice, Your Policy Sucks But Your Shoes
Are Nice" and "We're
Women, We're Marching, We're Not Out Shopping."
They were really energized and fun and pretty
much energized our whole section of the rally."
Quote
from Truth
Out
"My
Nephew Died for This?"
Like so many people on this brilliant
day, she's wearing sunglasses. She stands behind
the IVAW contingent, part of the startlingly large
group of military families against the war that
are leading off this demonstration. She's Missy
Comley Beattie - she spells it out carefully for
me - a member of Gold Star Families for Peace.
"My nephew was killed on August 6, 2005 in
al-Amariyah. He was a Marine."
She comes from red-state Kentucky,
but now lives in New York. She's wearing a tiny
gold peace sign around her neck and a Code
Pink T-shirt. "I write like
three articles a day. It's an obsession. I was
told recently that I'm an embarrassment to my
[Kentucky] community for my stance on the war.
I won't tell you who said that. But I have my
brother's support. It was his son who died. My
mother's a former chair of the local Republican
Party. Now, she's a screaming progressive. Actually,
my mother tells me that things are beginning to
change in Kentucky. She sees a lot more anti-Bush
letters-to-the-editor in the papers than she used
to.
"I think that people in
the red states are increasingly opposed to Bush.
But to be honest, I suspect it's the rising costs
at the pump, not the human costs that are doing
it. It's also that so many people just don't pay
attention and the death rates are always submerged
beneath the Ken- and Barbie-like TV anchors as
they talk about the crime of the week. And keep
in mind that Bush doesn't allow people to see
the bodies come home.
"When my nephew was little
we were close, but now I live here. I talked to
him before he joined the Marines and urged him
not to do so. Then I urged him to join something
like the Coast Guard, but he was attracted to
the bravado of the Marine Corps. He'd say to my
father, 'Why settle for second best when you can
be best?' I even tried to convince him to go AWOL.
"Cindy [Sheehan] and I were
arrested on March 6, seven months to the day after
my nephew died, and the reason I sat down with
the others was this: My nephew actually went to
Iraq because he thought he was fighting for our
freedom. I never believed that, but I sat down
because the police wouldn't even let us walk on
the sidewalk to give our petition to the U.S.
Mission to the UN. I thought: My nephew died for
this? So I sat down, spent twenty-two hours in
jail, and now here I am."
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