
The photos are courtesy of Marcia Mueller. Click on them to enlarge.


The event lasted a little less than an hour. The circle of participants gradually split, an inner and outer circle moving by in opposite directions, shaking hands, making introductions. Very nice. A warm moment at a cold time.
But back to the question: What does make Cindy run?
Democracy Arsenal offers a take on why Cindy Sheehan is so hard for Bush to ignore and so difficult for the right wing slime machine to derail:
Conservatives such as Michelle Malkin and Bill O'Reilly have blasted the liberal media for lavishing attention on an unworthy protest, but that hardly takes away from what Sheehan has accomplished. After all, there are countless efforts made by anti-war protesters which don't result in this kind of coverage. But Sheehan did a perfect job of framing herself as a lonely voice in the wilderness of Crawford, attempting to soften the heart of an American pharoah hiding behind the darkened windows of his limousine. And as the NYT points out, Sheehan had the good luck (or perhaps the good sense) to stage her protest in the "slow news month" of August, when journalists are almost desperate for news.This is on the right track, but it's still not quite there.


I know I risk losing my Card Carrying Cynic's credentials by saying this, but I think DA has underestimated the extent to which Sheehan is the real deal, who means what she says - no less, certainly, but no more either.
Here's the most recent reason to think so:
She's asked that all her supporters across the nation and around the world start to dial it back a little, please.
"I appreciate all their help, but their help is going to have to diminish and go to the sidelines, so it's going to have to get back to a mom sitting in a chair waiting for George Bush," she said in an interview Tuesday. Of those who suggest that her personal tragedy has become a political rallying point, she says, "I kind of see their point that this was a grass-roots thing that grew into a monster...."(Courtesy of Americablog.)
"The media focused more on me and not the message," she says. "I'm not the only one that wants answers."
Comments are welcome--please share stories about the vigil you attended, or links to media coverage tomorrow.
1 comment:
KATU Channel 2 links to its coverage on its web site:
http://www.katu.com/stories/79124.html
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