Cindy Sheehan: This is George Bush's
Accountability Moment
Huffington Post/Yahoo News
Cindy Sheehan Thu Aug 11, 4:56 PM ET
This is George Bush's accountability moment. That's why
I'm here. The mainstream media aren't holding him accountable.
Neither is Congress. So I'm not leaving Crawford until he's held
accountable. It's ironic, given the attacks leveled at me recently, how
some in the media are so quick to scrutinize -- and distort -- the words and
actions of a grieving mother but not the words and actions of the president of
the United States.
But now it's time for him to level with me and with the American
people. I think that's why there's been such an outpouring of
support. This is giving the 61 percent of Americans who feel that the war is
wrong something to do -- something that allows their voices to be heard.
It's a way for them to stand up and show that they DO want our troops
home, and that they know this war IS a mistake… a mistake they want to
see corrected. It's too late to bring back the people who are already
dead, but there are tens of thousands of people still in harm's way.
There is too much at stake to worry about our own egos. When my son was
killed, I had to face the fact that I was somehow also responsible for what
happened. Every American that allows this to continue has, to some extent,
blood on their hands. Some of us have a little bit, and some of us are soaked
in it.
People have asked what it is I want to say to President Bush. Well, my
message is a simple one. He's said that my son -- and the other children
we've lost -- died for a noble cause. I want to find out what that noble
cause is. And I want to ask him: "If it's such a noble cause, have
you asked your daughters to enlist? Have you encouraged them to go take the
place of soldiers who are on their third tour of duty?' I also want him
to stop using my son's name to justify the war. The idea that we have to
"complete the mission' in Iraq to honor Casey's sacrifice is,
to me, a sacrilege to my son's name. Besides, does the president any
longer even know what "the mission' really is over there?
Casey knew that the war was wrong from the beginning. But he felt it was his
duty to go, that his buddies were going, and that he had no choice. The people
who send our young, honorable, brave soldiers to die in this war, have no skin
in the game. They don't have any loved ones in harm's way. As for
people like O'Reilly and Hannity and Michelle Malkin and Rush Limbaugh
and all the others who are attacking me and parroting the administration line
that we must complete the mission there -- they don't have one thing at
stake. They don't suffer through sleepless nights worrying about their
loved ones
Before this all started, I used to think that one person couldn't make
a difference... but now I see that one person who has the backing and support
of millions of people can make a huge difference.
That's why I'm going to be out here until one of three things
happens: It's August 31st and the president's vacation ends and he
leaves Crawford. They take me away in a squad car. Or he finally agrees to
speak with me.
If he does, he'd better be prepared for me to hold his feet to the
fire. If he starts talking about freedom and democracy -- or about how the war
in Iraq is protecting America -- I'm not going to let him get away with
it.
Like I said, this is George Bush's accountability moment.
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