100000+ Protest Bush In Dc

Thousands protest Iraq war, globalization <!-- END HEADLINE -->

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More than 100,000 protesters flooded Washington on Saturday to stage dual demonstrations against the U.S.-led war in Iraq and economic globalization, before coming together to demand that President George W. Bush bring troops home.

Thousands marched in London as well, and protests were planned in San Francisco and Los Angeles that called for an end to military action in Iraq nearly 30 months after an invasion ousted Saddam Hussein.

"We need a people's movement to end this war," said Cindy Sheehan, an anti-war protester whose son was killed in fighting in Iraq. Camping out in Crawford, Texas, during much of August while Bush was vacationing there, Sheehan's rallies drew crowds that sometimes numbered in the hundreds as she demanded a meeting with Bush.

Bush, who met with Sheehan in 2004 after her son was killed, refused to meet with her again.

"We'll be the checks and balances on this out-of-control criminal government," Sheehan, who has become the anti-war movement's best-known face, told the group gathered at the Ellipse, a park behind the White House.

The crowds swelled throughout the day, and by late afternoon organizers of the anti-war demonstration said 300,000 people had assembled -- exceeding an anticipated 100,000. Washington police declined to comment on the size of the rally.

Meanwhile, 1,000 to 3,000 people, as estimated by demonstration organizers, gathered a few blocks away to protest the autumn meetings of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank, saying policies that promote globalization and reduce trade barriers hurt the world's poor.

CIRCLING THE WHITE HOUSE

Many of them joined the anti-war march that circled a wide swath of downtown Washington, including the White House. They walked slowly, and often silently, and carried a blocks-long string of pictures of the 1,900 U.S. soldiers who have died in Iraq.

"We're here to bring a dose of reality to the American public," said Chad Hetman, a member of an anti-war veterans' group. "This war was based on lies."

The protesters were graying baby boomers who had railed against the Vietnam War, parents pushing strollers with toddlers, college students and a few adults in wheelchairs.

On Washington's National Mall, they set up a faux military cemetery of hundreds of small, white crosses in neat lines. In Los Angeles, 60 mock coffins draped in American flags were laid out in rows on a downtown street.

"This is what we are losing every day," said Vickie Castro, of Riverside, Calif., standing in front of the coffins with a picture of her son, Cpl. Jonathan Castro, who was killed in action in Mosul, Iraq, in 2004.

Demonstrations in Washington and London took aim at the Bush administration, calling its policies and actions "criminal."

Some protesters carried signs calling Bush and Cheney "Liars." One sign said, "Bush is a Cat 5 Disaster," in a reference to the recent hurricanes that have hammered the U.S. Gulf Coast.

Another said, "Make Levees, Not Humvees" -- referencing the New Orleans levees that Katrina breached and recalling the "Make Love, Not War" chant of 1960s Vietnam war protesters.

VARIED CAUSES



In addition to anti-war and anti-globalization groups, the demonstrations drew anarchists, communists and environmentalists. Others called for an end to the U.S. economic embargo on Cuba and expressed solidarity with leftist Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and the Palestinians.

Protesters tried to link their separate causes under the umbrella of a fight against global poverty.

Some at the IMF/World Bank protest said they were fighting for the rights of the poor in Louisiana displaced by Hurricane Katrina, the poor in Iraq who are being hurt by war and those that protesters say are forced into poverty by IMF policies.

A U.S. veterans' group criticized the protesters.

"The political protesters of the '60s didn't end their war and neither will this new generation," Jim Mueller, head of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, said in a statement. "They will, however, achieve the same result -- they will devastate troop morale."

But a veteran of the Iraq war at the Washington march disagreed.

"People join the military to defend their country, not lies," said Adam Reuter, a 22-year-old Georgia resident who was given a medical discharge from the Army four months ago.

Washington police said they made two arrests by Saturday afternoon.




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dirty

EOG Master
Cindy Sheehan, Anarchists, Communists and Environmentalists make My point for me



Nothing else needs to be said
 

ZZ CREAM

EOG Master
That is what I would call a 'statement'! It does not matter though- Bush is a lame duck now and does not care about deaths or casualties. Karl Rove will have spun this by tomorrow into a bunch of crackpot psychos that hate 'America' and are traitors and terrorists. Can you say '1984'?
 
X

xpanda

Guest
dirty said:
Cindy Sheehan, Anarchists, Communists and Environmentalists make My point for me

It is too bad that the movement is led by such questionable people since there's a great deal of merit behind its position. Can you imagine a world in which everyone was pro-war?
 

dirty

EOG Master
xpanda said:
It is too bad that the movement is led by such questionable people since there's a great deal of merit behind its position. Can you imagine a world in which everyone was pro-war?



Yes I can......It would Be more peacefull


In Kennesaw, GA There is a law that states you have to have a gun in your House.....

Guess which City in the Nation has the lowest Crime rate!!!!


dAMN RIGHT......Kennesaw, GA



The reason is the Deadbeat thugs will not go anywhere they might get shot.
 

dirty

EOG Master
xpanda said:
It is too bad that the movement is led by such questionable people since there's a great deal of merit behind its position. Can you imagine a world in which everyone was pro-war?

and to answer your question



yes.... it is better for the world if everyone had the same thing...Noone would wan't to start anything.....


IE.....The Cold War.......


Tell me another time in this world that was peaceful??? other than the Cold War
 

ZZ CREAM

EOG Master
dirty said:
and to answer your question



yes.... it is better for the world if everyone had the same thing...Noone would wan't to start anything.....


IE.....The Cold War.......


Tell me another time in this world that was peaceful??? other than the Cold War
So when was this utopia period in the world when there was no war? Not in my lifetime and I doubt you are older than I, even if you were older than Methusaluh you would not find a year with no war! Take it down the road Karl!
 
X

xpanda

Guest
dirty said:
Tell me another time in this world that was peaceful??? other than the Cold War

You are kidding, right?

The Cold War might not have ended with the two big players blowing each other up, but not only did we come really close (see the Cuban Crisis and the 60-seconds-away-from-annihilation history surrounding it) and the ongoing fights in each of the players' extended territories.

Korea, Vietnam, Iran, Afghanistan, Panama, Cambodia et al.

Ask these folks how peaceful things were for them during the Cold War.
 

Nimue77

EOG Senior Member
80% of the country could be saying one thing and all you would do is marginalize them. Grow a brain.


dirty said:
Cindy Sheehan, Anarchists, Communists and Environmentalists make My point for me



Nothing else needs to be said
 

Nimue77

EOG Senior Member
I don't know where to start with that question. What makes you say the period known as the cold war was peaceful for the world?

BTW, I do agree that - for instance, it's better if iran gets nukes because then the usa wont attack iran (thats a good thing). It's called mutually assured destruction and thats clearly what you were refering to with the cold war. Of course, it would be better if nobody had them.

dirty said:
and to answer your question



yes.... it is better for the world if everyone had the same thing...Noone would wan't to start anything.....


IE.....The Cold War.......


Tell me another time in this world that was peaceful??? other than the Cold War
 

dirty

EOG Master
What I was Referring to was the Time periods when we had No world Wars....yes There are always going to be wars......That is a given Fact...


And Realistically Noone can ever think that nations will not have nuclear weapons...the goal is to keep Rogue Terroristic Nations from having them and selling them to These Religous Zealots of the Peaceful Religion of Islam...so they can Detonate them on Innocent women, Children and Men in this Country and Abroad...
 

Nimue77

EOG Senior Member
I'd prefer to keep nukes out of george bush's hands too. Seriously though, how can the usa mantain its stance on nuclear weapons when the usa continues to build more and create new ones.
 

ZZ CREAM

EOG Master
Nimue77 said:
I'd prefer to keep nukes out of george bush's hands too. Seriously though, how can the usa mantain its stance on nuclear weapons when the usa continues to build more and create new ones.
I know for a fact that that if the world were polled, the US would definitely be the country most feared. And I think that is downright sad!
 
X

xpanda

Guest
It's true. While there might be more nutbar dictators and such out there who would love to detonate this side of the world, they don't (and won't) have the capacity to do so. Not only does the US have the firepower to take on and beat virtually every nation on the planet, but it's been using this firepower for the better part of 60 years.

Nonstop.

If having nuclear weapons promotes peace, then why does the nation with the most nuclear weapons also have the highest number of wars under its belt during the past century? Coincidence? Or does maybe one have to do with the other?
 
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