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23:12 21.10.2018(updated 23:27
21.10.2018)Get short URL
Reintroducing the language of peace
into America’s increasingly polarizing cultural conversation.
Seeking no less than a complete
end to all US military actions abroad and the closure of all foreign
military bases, the 2018 Women's March on the Pentagon is a bipartisan
call to profoundly shrink the Pentagon budget and use the cash
to fund healthy and much-needed social programs in America.
Commemorating, in part, the 51st
anniversary of the landmark 1967 Washington DC anti-war march, the Sunday,
October 21, 2018, Women's March on the Pentagon (WMOP), coincided
with sister events in cities across the United States.
WMOP is, according to their
website, responding to the consistently growing number of actions
worldwide by the military forces of the United States over the
past several decades. The group looks to place the political and
cultural focus of the country on peace, instead of legacy
conflicts in the Middle East, northern Africa and many other locations
across the globe, according to Heavy.com.
From the WMOP website:
"Our demands are
simple: The complete end
to the wars abroad; closure of foreign bases; dramatically slash
the Pentagon budget to fund healthy social programs here
at home."
WMOP's event director, Cindy Sheehan,
became a powerful activist for peace following the 2004 death
of her son, Casey Sheehan, in Iraq.
Famously referred to by Hip Hop
Caucus CEO Reverend Lennox Yearwood as "the Rosa Parks of the antiwar
movement," Sheehan is also routinely labeled the ‘Peace Mom,' from a
2006 autobiography describing her transition from housewife and mother
to one of the most prominent peace activists on the US stage.
The United States' contribution
to global violence cannot be overstated, according to WMOP and
like-minded peace organizations in the US.
With a bloated military budget
equaling that of the next seven countries — China, Russia, Saudi
Arabia, India, France, the UK and Japan — combined, the Pentagon,
through support of both GOP and Democratic lawmakers, is diverting
enormous amounts of cash and resources away from desperately-needed
programs in the US, including healthcare, education and housing, cited
by Commondreams.org.
WMOP details that, beyond simply
diverting resources, ongoing US military actions abroad are now seen
as acting to decimate entire countries and cultures — peoples
that have not directly attacked the US.
The focus of the march,
according to the organization's' website, is to bring to center
stage a cultural understanding in the country that no woman is free while
the US spends trillions of dollars bombing
millions of people while
simultaneously occupying territories — whether invited or not —
in over 150 countries.
In pointing out that the
movement is not a "Get Out the Vote Rally for the Democrat half
of the War Party," WMOP seeks to draw together all antiwar
sentiment in the US under what the group describes as a
"principled call to action against the entire rotten
Empire."
Sputnik reporter Alex Rubinstein was
on the ground for the 2018 Women's March on the Pentagon and was
able to speak to organizer Cindy Sheehan and director Bonnie
Caracciolo.
Sputnik: Is the march primarily
addressing US wars overseas as a women's issue?
Sheehan: "Women around the
world are being occupied by US imperialist forces or countries that the US
are supporting, [like] Israel and its genocide against Palestinians,
in Gaza, particularly."
"We know that the United States
is supporting Saudi Arabia and its absolutely horrible, incomprehensible,
destruction of Yemen, where tens of thousands of people are
dying and millions are starving at this moment."
On gender diversity in the US
military:
Sheehan: "We can't
celebrate gay or trans people being allowed to join the military. It's not
that I think they should be prevented. I don't think that anybody should join the military."
On Trump:
Sheehan: "We don't
like Trump, but we don't like Trump for the same reason
that we didn't like Obama and Bush. They are representative of the
most evil, violent, racist and sexist [people] in [the US] empire, if not in history."
"When Trump was first elected,
my first thought was, ‘well, maybe the movement will be revitalized,' even
though I feel that the movement was very hypocritical because they were
against the war in Iraq and Afghanistan while Bush was president,
but not against those wars when Obama was president, or his
destruction of Libya, or further incursions into Africa, Syria,
Somalia and not ending the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan."
On Washington DC and the political
will for peace:
Sheehan: "The Democrats are just
as bad as the Republicans."
"We have
to take these forces who have separated from the Democrat and
Republican parties and funnel that
energy more
positively."
Sputnik: How does the peace movement
coincide with your experience as an American with a family?
Bonnie Caracciolo: "I don't want
my kids to go to the military. We need to keep our kids
out of there. We all need to take a big hard look at where our
money is going."
"The suicide rate
among returning veterans is absolutely
over the cliff. Also, if you look at these refugee streams,
they are women and children that are suffering from every angle. So, [war]
is a women's issue."
"It always absolutely has been a
women's issue. We want our sons and other brothers and our husbands and our
uncles to be with us on this, because it is everybody's issue,
ultimately."
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