Aug. 18, 2005
Cindy, the Peace Train,
and the Little Ditch that Could
By Greg Moses
http://peacefile.org/wordpress/?p=232
Two months ago while exhausted from a Summer Soulstice
peace festival, and while looking with dismay into a
long hot summer of war, Louisiana attorney Buddy
Spell, his spouse Annie, and their guest of honor
Cindy Sheehan decided they needed to do something, but
not something too high energy. So they browsed
through the train schedule and designated an Amtrak
Crescent as their Peace
href="http://www.newdemocracyrising.com/">Train.
Come September they'd board the train in New Orleans
and put out word to folks along the way to hop on for
a ride to the big peace march in Washington D.C. That
would be enough to keep their peace hopes on track.
Of course, that was then.
"We had about 60 people signed up before Cindy went to
Crawford," says Buddy, "but that has tripled." With a
pre-boarding rally in Covington, Louisiana the night
before Cindy and friends depart, the little town of
Covington may soon be feeling like next month's
Crawford. And when the train hits Union Station,
Buddy says 'old fart' activists will be greeted by the
Campus Action Network, and wherever they go for the
weekend, they will be marching 500 strong. And that's
how you go in just a couple of months from a little
ol’ z-net
href="http://zmagsite.zmag.org/images/zaps0505.html">zap
to a global headliner by way of the little ditch that
could.
Of course internet aficionados of the Crawford Peace
House will know Buddy best as the daddy of Smudge
kitty, who got semi-famous when somebody wrote about
the little critter pouncing among the Rosemary
branches last week. But Buddy's not bitter about that
at all. "No, I've just been practicing law for the
past 20 years, working my ass off. And Smudge kitty,
all she does is show up! Now somebody wants to sell
pictures of her on EBay to raise money for Gold Star
Families. And a New York publishing attorney is
working on a children's book." As you can tell, when
it comes to Smudge, Buddy is proud as he can be.
As organizers of the Louisiana Action Network, Buddy
and Annie have been acting as their own lawyers and
law enforcement liaisons for years. They are driving
back to Crawford Wednesday night because the McClennan
County Sheriff's Department wants them there. There
is a big move coming up, and believe it or not, the
movement did not peak out last weekend as expected, so
the complexities of keeping all things smoothly
flowing are growing by the hour. Buddy and Annie made
a good deal of headway with the local cops last week,
so they need to get back to work.
As Buddy talks about organizing peacekeepers for last
week's events, I tell him that no peacekeepers were
apparent to me when I was there. "When this is all
over with," he assures me. "I'll tell you how that
works. And I won't mind giving up all my secrets when
this is over, because this ain't never going to happen
again. It's a perfect storm." In language and tone,
Buddy is slipping into his courthouse drawl, the kind
of talking that gets things done among jurors and
judges across the South.
Buddy started out his law practice in 1989,
representing clients like Halliburton, Brown and Root.
In 1993 he switched to criminal law and finds that he
likes his new clients better. For one thing, they are
human clients, not corporate. For another thing, he
gets to represent some innocent clients these days,
whereas with corporate clients, "that was never a
possibility!" 1996 he became law partners with his
spouse Annie, otherwise known as mommy to Smudge. And
they have been keeping the faith in the peace movement
with no idea that the dog days this year would prove
to be so cool.
"In two days Cindy did through pure moxie what a lot
of us in the peace movement haven't been able to do in
two years," says Buddy. "It's going to galvanize the
movement. Lots of old problems have been forgotten."
There is no more talk, for example, that the ANSWER
coalition and United for Peace and Justice will hold
separate rallies and then stage feeder marches.
Thanks to Cindy's action in Crawford, the seemingly
impossible knots within the movement have disappeared,
"and everyone is focusing on the central issue: the
dead and those who might die."
No one as active as Buddy and Annie has much time to
take in the news coverage, but Buddy did catch the
Hardball interview, and he thinks Cindy held up well.
"She did an excellent job," he says. "And so did her
sister."
Something about the land and weather at Camp Casey
strips away all your poses. What's left is something
like raw core. After two weeks of heat and activity,
Cindy's image is not only suitless, it's anti-suit.
We can look at Cindy the way we look at ourselves in
the mirror before and after the styles have been
applied. No way for the networks to outdo that. To
watch a television reporter carrying the obligatory
blazer in that heat is to watch a metaphor for all the
silly posing that the deadly messages of war have
wrapped themselves in for the past few years.
"We show up to Crawford exhausted to begin with
(because of the travel) and then the weather really
does wear you down. Yet Cindy holds up well. I'm 48
years old, too, and the days I spent at Camp Casey
beat the hell out of me. I was glad to go home and
get some bed rest." Yet he's rushing back into action
with high energy this week, because the pilgrims just
keep coming.
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Note: Peace Train info at www.newdemocracyrising.com
-----
Greg Mosese is editor of Peacefile and author of
Revolution of Conscience: Martin Luther King, Jr. and
the Philosophy of Nonviolence.
-----
gmosesx@prodigy.net
http://peacefile.org/phpnuke/
"Further: the consequences of War, when impartially examined, will be
found big, not only with outward and temporal distress, but with an evil
that extends where in the darkness and tumult of human passions it is
neither expected nor conceived to reach"--Anthony Benezet
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