Peace Mother Sheehan's New Neighbours Hate Her

Back on July 29th, I blogged about Cindy Sheehan buying land in Crawford Texas and moving in. Today Steve Janke points out that on her blog Peace Mother Sheehan (PMS) has quite a few comments from local neighbours and there is not a single supportive comment. Every one of them is negative, and one even seemed to imply that she got a bunch of dead fish guts (or something like that) delivered to her new place.

While reading the comments, there was a poem written by a Marine which I have reproduced below. I read it through and it really is quite touching. It really explains why we are taking it to the terrorists overseas.

Monsters and the Weak

The sun beat like a hammer, not a cloud was in the sky.
The mid-day air ran thick with dust, my throat was parched and dry.
With microphone clutched tight in hand and cameraman in tow,
I ducked beneath a fallen roof, surprised to hear “stay low.”

My eyes blinked several times before in shadow I could see,
the figure stretched across the rubble, steps away from me.
He wore a cloak of burlap strips, all shades of grey and brown,
that hung in tatters till he seemed to melt into the ground.

He never turned his head or took his eye from off the scope
but pointed through the broken wall and down the rocky slope.
“About eight hundred yards,” he said, his whispered words concise,
“beneath the baggy jacket he is wearing a device.”

A chill ran up my spine despite the swelter of the heat,
“You think he’s gonna set it off along the crowded street?”
The sniper gave a weary sigh and said “I wouldn’t doubt it,”
“unless there’s something this old gun and I can do about it.”

A thunderclap, a tongue of flame, the still abruptly shattered;
while citizens that walked the street were just as quickly scattered.
Till only one remained, a body crumpled on the ground,
The threat to oh so many ended by a single round.

And yet the sniper had no cheer, no hint of any gloat,
instead he pulled a logbook out and quietly he wrote.
“Hey, I could put you on TV, that shot was quite a story!”
But he surprised me once again — “I got no wish for glory.”

“Are you for real?” I asked in awe, “You don’t want fame or credit?”
He looked at me with saddened eyes and said “you just don’t get it.”
”You see that shot-up length of wall, the one without a door?
Before a mortar hit, it used to be a grocery store.”

“But don’t go thinking that to bomb a store is all that cruel,
the rubble just across the street — it used to be a school.
The little kids played soccer in the field out by the road,”
His head hung low, “They never thought a car would just explode.”

“As bad as all this is though, it could be a whole lot worse,”
He swallowed hard, the words came from his mouth just like a curse.
“Today the fight’s on foreign land, on streets that aren’t my own,
I’m here today ’cause if I fail, the next fight’s back at home.”

“And I won’t let my Safeway burn, my neighbors dead inside,
don’t wanna get a call from school that says my daughter died;
I pray that not a one of them will know the things I see,
nor have the work of terrorists etched in their memory.”

“So you can keep your trophies and your fleeting bit of fame,
I don’t care if I make the news, or if they speak my name.”
He glanced toward the camera and his brow began to knot,
“If you’re looking for a story, why not give this one a shot.”

“Just tell the truth of what you see, without the slant or spin;
that most of us are OK and we’re coming home again.
And why not tell our folks back home about the good we’ve done,
how when they see Americans, the kids come at a run.”

You tell ‘em what it means to folks here just to speak their mind,
without the fear that tyranny is just a step behind;
Describe the desert miles they walk in their first chance to vote,
or ask a soldier if he’s proud, I’m sure you’ll get a quote.”

He turned and slid the rifle in a drag bag thickly padded,
then looked again with eyes of steel as quietly he added;
“And maybe just remind the few, if ill of us they speak,
that we are all that stands between the monsters and the weak.”

Talk about touching.

ADDENDUM:  The term “Peace Mother Sheehan” was pilfered from one of my favourite blogs Peace Moonbeam Chronicles.  BTW, Peace Moonbeam is back!!!

6 thoughts on “Peace Mother Sheehan's New Neighbours Hate Her


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    August 13, 2006 at 12:16 am
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    Wow. That’s one eloquent marine.

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    Uncommon Truths


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    August 13, 2006 at 11:17 am
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    A most powerful poem and thank you for the kind words!


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    August 13, 2006 at 2:56 pm
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    An old buddy of mine, a retired Marine (not ex-marine), showed me this poem a few weeks back. I wept a bit and then passed it on. Thank God somebody finally stuffed it under her nose. I doubt she’ll “get it” though, given that this poem and everything her son did with his adult life runs counter to all of Cindy’s core beliefs.


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    August 13, 2006 at 4:51 pm
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    God bless Cindy Sheehan who had to sacrifice her child, her son, so others can sit back in peace and dis her. That was how Mother’s Day started in England. Mothers were fed up with what war did to their sons and protested. Of course all those who benefited from the deaths of other people’s children assumed it to be their right to dismiss the mother’s sorrow as “unpatriotic”.


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    August 14, 2006 at 11:30 am
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    Penelope, your thinking is as fuzzy as the tail on a bunny. Sheehan did not sacrifice her son. He sacrificed his life to make the world a better place. She gets paid for her speaking appearances ($2,500.00 each), received hundreds of thousands of dollars in life insurance and death benefits and instead of buying her son a headstone…bought herself a new car! She turned her son’s death into a lucrative career. She posed for Vanity Fair magazine while lying atop Casey’s grave. She is as unpatriotic and it is possible to be.

    You can read all the facts at http://www.cindysheehanwatch.com.

    As Crazy Cindy herself said “It’s almost like I’m a brand name.”

    Don’t try to paint her as a martyr.

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