Thursday, August 25. 2005
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From CNS News:
The Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C., the current home of hundreds of wounded veterans from the war in Iraq, has been the target of weekly anti-war demonstrations since March. The protesters hold signs that read ?Maimed for Lies? and ?Enlist here and die for Halliburton.?
The anti-war demonstrators, who obtain their protest permits from the Washington, D.C., police department, position themselves directly in front of the main entrance to the Army Medical Center, which is located in northwest D.C., about five miles from the White House. Among the props used by the protesters are mock caskets, lined up on the sidewalk to represent the death toll in Iraq.
Code Pink Women for Peace, one of the groups backing anti-war activist Cindy Sheehan?s vigil outside President Bush?s ranch in Crawford Texas, organizes the protests at Walter Reed as well . . . .
According to the Walter Reed Army Medical Center, nearly 4,000 individuals involved in the Iraq war were treated at the facility as of March of this year, 1,050 of whom were wounded in battle.
One anti-war protester, who would only identify himself as ?Luke,? told Cybercast News Service that ?the price of George Bush?s foreign policy can be seen right here at Walter Reed ? young men who returned from Iraq with their bodies shattered after George Bush sent them to war for a lie.?
Luke accused President Bush of ?exploiting American soldiers? while ?oppressing the other nations of earth.? The president ?has killed far too many people,? he added.
On Aug. 19, as the anti-war protesters chanted slogans such as ?George Bush kills American soldiers,? Cybercast News Service observed several wounded war veterans entering and departing the gates of Walter Reed, some with prosthetic limbs. Most of the demonstrations have been held on Friday evenings, a popular time for the family members of wounded soldiers to visit the hospital.
But the anti-war activists were unapologetic when asked whether they considered such signs as ?Maimed for Lies? offensive to wounded war veterans and their families.
?I am more offended by the fact that many were maimed for life. I am more offended by the fact that they (wounded veterans) have been kept out of the news,? said Kevin McCarron, a member of the anti-war group Veterans for Peace.
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