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Requested Article

2444 08/21/2005
The LIstening Tent and the Raw Talk Revival at Camp Casey Two
Greg Moses
Aug. 21, 2005

If by socialism you mean the kind of world that
officer's kids enjoy, then I'm pretty much for it.
It's the kind of world I grew up in. Free health
care, pretty good job security, cheap movies (that I
could afford to attend every night in a row), swimming
pools, bowling alleys, shooting ranges, craft shops,
safe streets, and no private property to speak of.
The toughest day on base was the day you "cleared
quarters", when a soldier with clipboard would come to
your house and tell you whether you had to spend
another day scrubbing the most out-of-way corners of
your home so that it could be turned over to the next
family. Of course, if you passed that dreaded
inspection, you were off to see the world, living
somewhere far away in quarters recently cleared.

So I have spent the better part of a day trying to
figure out what is making me feel so anxious
throughout my body as I think about the day the
socialists got kicked out of Camp Casey Two, arrested
actually for the crime of not having better relations
with the camp's organizers. Like me, some of these
camp organizers have learned their socialism in
ordinary places and have fully enjoyed the writings of
great socialist thinkers such as Karl Marx.

In fact, the first place I found "the best of Karl
Marx" was on my grandfather's very short bookshelf, in
his study at the back of that beloved home in Highland
Park, Texas. His name was Russell Moses and I was
named after him, although from an early age everybody
decided it would be better if people used my middle
name so as not to confuse me with him. But like I
say, the bookshelf was very short, and right beside
the Reader's Digest anthologies, grandpa kept an
anthology of Marx.

I don't know how America got to be so juvenile since
then, but there was a time when a Southern boy with
one glass eye could go to West Point, get a good job
in the Army, retire as a Colonel, dedicate his
retirement to teaching, vote as a Lincoln Republican,
and die in East Texas with a mind open enough to see
that Marx is simply one of the best reads going. I
mean, even if your only interest is quality writing,
why would you not have some affection for good ol'
Karl right next to (because it's never in) the best of
Reader's Digest. Too bad grandpa died before I
finally re-read Marx more thoroughly. We might have
had a quite wonderful chat about that. In terms of
pure writing, I'd have asked grandpa if he'd ever read
Adorno.

From the very beginning of the post 9/11 debacle,
socialists have been quite reliable opponents of the
Bush juggernaut. They predicted more or less where
this was all heading, and they hit the streets early
hollering about it. Some of my best sources of news
these past years have come from lists organized by
socialists. Moms of dead or endangered soldiers might
find out they have more in common with socialists than
they would otherwise think. So I hope the parties
work something out. In terms of world history,
America is sadly missing out on the great secret that
socialism is a mainstream movement, adopted by base
commanders everywhere as the best way for officer's
kids to be raised. Not to mention land grant
universities such as my alma mater, Texas A&M.

Meanwhile, when Cindy Sheehan attempted to re-center
herself at ground zero of a peace tornado that blew up
overnight over the Texas prairie, she pointed our
browsers to lewrockwell.com, which is not socialist
but libertarian. In Texas, if a libertarian stands a
far better chance than does a socialist of coming out
and not getting beat up, it has nothing to do with
anyone's considered opinion of the issues. It's just
the way our contradictions work down here. But
libertarians also have been pretty reliable opponents
of the so-called war on terror and right up until
Saturday, even in Texas, the libertarians and
socialists have stood in solidarity against the
extremist initiatives of the Bush administration. Now
is not the time for either side to provoke a sectarian
sideshow.

If the ISO would consider it, a simple compromise may
be possible. Do your tabling on the county road at
Camp Casey One. It is public property. You have as
much right as anyone else to be there. Even
libertarians must agree with that. Plus, you've
worked as hard against the war as anyone and for just
as long if not longer. Showcase your own veterans.
If PETA could work something out in the middle of all
these meat farms; then it can be done. And if you need
a volunteer next weekend, give me a call and a ride
from Austin. I'm not (nor have I ever been) a member
of the ISO, but I've always enjoyed your book tables.

Now if you'll just bear with me for another 860 words,
I'd like to tell you about Saturday night under the
big tent. The libertarians were there of course, and
the Democrats, the carnivores and the vegans, I can't
imagine that some Republicans didn't sneak their way
in to find out how to keep their kids and partners
from being killed. And if we must know, the radicals
were there too, even long after the arrests, even if
they were not pushing those sectarian newspapers that
you see at nearly every public rally these days, yes
Virginia, even in Texas.

Our homespun sage Steve Earle said at the end of the
evening (and this much has been previously reported)
that we have to do two things: proceed with respect
for others, that's number one. And second, we have to
respect our own views of things by refusing to
self-censor. In this age of emerging transparency,
nobody hides for very long anyway. Why get caught
trying?

And I think this need for raw honesty was the artistic
motivation for why James McMurtry played his Oklahoma
tom-tom song (the same one covered so well, so well on
Ray Wylie Hubbard's new CD). This just ain't the time
to sing like we're living in Disneyland. Just as
slick talk and censorship got us into this godawful
butchery, raw talk is going to cut the path that gets
us out. Under the listening tent, we have to put it
just the way we feel.

On stage Saturday night under the listening tent,
although I can't find news of it anywhere, not even in
the so-called alternative press, there was a long line
of emissaries from military families, including Iraq
veterans themselves, all of them bringing open
messages from within the ranks of the military. Fight
like hell to end this war! That's what they want us
to do for them. That's what we have to do anyway. So
there are a lot of people, them and us included, who
we cannot afford to let down.

My personal favorite was Eddie Boyd who on Friday flew
all the way down from Baltimore and who Sunday would
be flying all the way back in order to try and keep
his job. When they asked if anybody wanted to speak
from stage he said hell yes I do, and he said it
plain. He said:

"I was one of those guys who fell for the con. I was
one of those guys who believed we were out to defend
democracy and bring freedom to Iraq. Besides in the
neighborhood where I come from, there were not too
many options. Eight out of ten of my best friends
back home died from a life of crime." (Back in his
neighborhood, kids weren't treated like officer's
kids.) Eddie was at Camp Casey to support Sister
Sheehan and he wanted us to know that there are lots
of honest, hard working people who feel this war is
insane.

"And do you want to know what terrorism is?" asked
Eddie. "Terrorism is being the richest nation on
earth and letting 43 million people go without health
care. Terrorism is giving money to large corporations
for contracts in Iraq while refusing to put money into
schools and hospitals. In Baltimore cameras are
watching you 24 hours a day, and they say they are
protecting our rights. They say they're fighting for
your right to speak. But ever since this war started
I got less and less rights. I'm pissed off at this
administration."

"Right over there," says Eddie pointing next door.
"Is a president on Va-Ca-Tion! We've got wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan, not to mention the Philippines and
other places. And this man," says Eddie pointing,
"decides to go on vacation! Today the line must be
drawn."

"When I came back from Iraq my mom could not
understand where I was. Yes, physically I was all
right. But mentally and spiritually I was dead. If
we love our kids so much why don't we keep them from
putting on uniforms?"

"And what about the female soldiers who get into the
military and face sexual harassment and assault.
Don't they too deserve every right to live in peace?
If you want to find a terrorist, look at 1600
Pennsylvania Avenue, that's where the terrorist lives!
And we need to do something about it!" As I scribble
to keep up best I can, I think, Eddie Boyd has earned
the right to say these things, and he has already paid
too high a price. Will he be able to keep his job
after all in the land of the free?

I take notes on sheets of paper folded into eight
squares, which is sixteen squares of notes per sheet,
if you count both sides. What I have just reported
from Eddie Boyd is three and a half squares of notes
from a 24-square evening of speeches. And I'm not
finding any of this stuff online. Socialists looking
for something to do? Why not come here and listen?
With all due respect for those who bring literature,
there is a crying need in the world today to get the
words spoken from this tent out. What do you think
Marx would be doing out here? Reading or writing?

----

Greg Moses 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