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Casualties of war: Camp Casey and New Orleans
by Starhawk
September 9, 2005
When Katrina hit, I was at Camp Casey in Crawford, Texas, where I had
gone to support Cindy Sheehan, the Gold Star mother who encamped outside
of Bush's ranch to demand a meeting so she could ask him one simple question,
"What noble cause did my son die for?" Cindy is a formidable
woman, a fearless woman because she has already lost what she most loved.
Loss and grief are powerful forces. Camp Casey was full of those who
had suffered the real losses of the Bush administrations' war on Iraq,
the families of soldiers, returning veterans, Gold Star Mothers who had
lost a child in Iraq. Along the roadside stood a vast field of crosses
to represent the dead. Across the road, a small encampment of pro-war
counter-demonstrators would gather each day. They didn't stay overnight.
On our side, we camped in a ditch, in the hundred and five degree heat,
itching from sweat and chigger bites. The counter-protestors shouted slogans
and drove up and down the road in cars decorated with signs proclaiming
their love for Bush, honking. David, my partner, a veteran of the civil
rights movement and a draft resistor in Vietnam, thought they needed some
lessons in taunting. He's been taunted by better in his time - the outfront
racists, the fanatic anti-communists. The worst our counter demonstrators
mustered was a sign saying, "The Sixties are over - why don't you
go home!" Someone on our side countered with a sign reading, "The
Fifties are over - why don't YOU go home?"
Bush and his allies are experts at manufacturing emotion, whipping up
fear, exploiting the dead. But here the air was permeated by real and
personal loss. "You have to understand," the woman said to me.
"My mother does not go out. She doesn't leave the house." Her
mother, standing next to her, nodded in agreement. We were outside the
big tent where the rally was being held, at Camp Casey Two, up the road
from our campsite. "But I told her, you have to come. You have to
see this."
The woman was blond, late thirties, conservatively dressed, in a big sunhat.
She spoke with a Texas accent, and she and her mother looked like archetypal
Republicans. "Nothing looks prettier than a young man in a uniform,"
she said, smiling sadly "but when you look at what's underneath,
it's not so pretty." Her brother had come back from the first Gulf
War, mentally and emotionally shattered, and had never recovered. And
that's what drew her mother out, to gather with others who had also lost
real children, real lives.
I told her about Billy, the son of my best friend from junior high school.
Mary and I played with paper dolls and screamed for the Beatles and went
wild together in the Sixties. She was the first of my friends to get pregnant,
when we were nineteen, and I helped her through the stress of telling
her ultraconservative family, her hasty marriage and messy divorce. Then
we lost touch for many years. I remember Billy as a sweet two-year-old
with angelic curls. He grew up to be the second soldier across the line
in the first Gulf War. I reconnected with Mary shortly after he took a
gun to the beach and shot himself, one of the thousands of uncounted casualties,
suicides, chronically ill, leftovers from that adventure.
The homeless shelters and the cold streets are still filled with men of
my own generation, the living ghosts of Vietnam. Meanwhile veterans' services
are being cut back, hospitals closed. My aunt and uncle from the communist
side of the family worked all their lives for the VA, proudly, because
as my aunt said it was the closest thing to socialism in this country.
They enjoyed providing free treatment for people. Perhaps that is why
the same warmongers, so eager to create new casualties, refuse to adequately
fund their ongoing care.
The people at Camp Casey talked about "being on someone else's mission,"
about "chains of command" and "getting orders from above",
which they agreeably followed. "This place is run like the military,"
one of my friends remarked. "We are the military," was the answer.
They were indeed the military, the people in this country most directly
affected by the reality of war, Gold Star Mothers who had lost a child
in Iraq, returning veterans, Veterans for Peace, military families. They
wore cowboy hats and spoke in real Texas accents: Bush's natural base,
in rebellion not at the concept of authority but at his misuse and abuse
of the authority entrusted to him.
Most people there were from Texas, many of them surprised and delighted
to meet other Texans who opposed the war. A whole contingent was from
Louisiana, and New Orleans.
And so on Sunday night when the news reports were tracking Katrina's progress
and predicting the disaster of New Orleans, the mood at the camp was grim.
I was over at Camp Casey Two, where a big tent was set up for
meetings and rallies. I was trying to be helpful by making a list of all
the stuff needed for the caravans which would be setting out when the
camp closed on a speaking tour, mobilizing people for the September 24
march on
Washington. On the screen a video was playing detailing the effects of
depleted uranium, showing pictures of the deformed babies born in Iraq,
cyclops babies with only one eye in the center of the forhead, babies
with
heads like tumors, babies that are nothing but undifferentiated lumps
of flesh. And at my feet, a man from New Orleans was crying and raging.
The bridges were closed, and no one could get out any longer. The news
was predicting that thousands might die.
The petrochemical industry and the developers have long ruled in the Gulf,
with free reign to destroy the wetlands that are nature's buffer against
storms. A huge proportion of the Louisiana National Guard, which is supposed
to take charge during natural disasters, was in Iraq. The rest were apparently
in Florida, moving military equipment out of the path of the storm. The
funds for flood control and reinforcing the levees had been systematically
cut by the Bush administration in order to fund our attacks on Baghdad
and Fallujah. Hurricanes are fueled by the warmth of the ocean, and the
Gulf is abnormally hot due to global warming, which Bush and his allies
will not admit is happening. Global warming may not have caused Hurrican
Katrina, but it undoubtedly amplified it's power and fury.
New Orleans, like Casey Sheehan, is a casualty of war. And I imagine Cindy
joined in her vigil by a mother from New Orleans, perhaps one whose baby
died in her arms of dehydration at the Superdome, to ask, "Why did
my child die?"
And Bush, if he were honest would have to say to her, "Your child
died of incompetence and callousness justified by a set of false assumptions:
That the current economy and technology, fueled by cheap oil and gas,
can and should continue in its current form.
That the profits of those who benefit from the current system are of paramount
importance, and should be protected at all costs.
- That war is good for business.
- That environmental impacts don¹t need to be counted as part
of the cost of doing business and so don't count.
- That technology has transcended nature.
- That global warming has no real consequences.
- That government owes nothing in the way of care and support to its
citizens.
- That the lives of the poor aren¹t worth much, anyway, especially
if they happen to be black.
- That the way to respond to uncomfortable questions is to sneer at
and smear the questioner.
- That a good media spin can redefine and outweigh reality."
But reality has a way of being, well, real, and catching up with you.
Real loss, real grief are the real results of the Bush administration's
policies. His neocon friends maintain their power by manufacturing fear,
exploiting
the dead. But now the real dead are coming back to haunt them.
And so I imagine Cindy and the mother from New Orleans joined by a legion
of mothers from Iraq. I envision the roads of Crawford lined with the
corpses of Baghdad and Fallujah, with the one-eyed monstrous stillbirths,
the
children blown to pieces, caked with flesh, soaked with blood. I hear
a chorus of voices asking, "Why? What noble cause? What great gift
are you bringing us? What is this democracy that abandons the poor to
drown?"
I see them laying the bodies at the gates of power. I see us joining
them, to turn the to a wind of justice, a wind of change. Hurricane season
has just begun.
Starhawk is an activist, organizer, and author of The Earth Path, Webs
of Power: Notes from the Global Uprising, The Fifth Sacred Thing and other
books on feminism, politics and earth-based spirituality. She teaches
Earth Activist Trainings that combine permaculture design and activist
skills, www.earthactivisttraining.org
, and works with the RANT trainer's
collective, www.rantcollective.net
, that offers training and support for mobilizations
around global justice and peace issues.
Donations to help support Starhawk's trainings and work can be sent to:
ACT
1405 Hillmount Street
Austin, Texas 78704
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