CodePink Faces Tough Odds For Public's Attention
WASHINGTON - Kelly Jacobs will be wearing dresses made from a "peace flag" every day at the Democratic National Convention. As a delegate and a CodePink activist, she'll don bright pink earrings, shoes and backpacks - and hundreds of peace and pink-colored buttons.
"There's no getting away from the peace message. It's on my neck down to my waist," said Jacobs, 49.
The Mississippi activist, who is a delegate for Hillary Rodham Clinton, is one of about 20 CodePink women attending the Democratic convention. They probably won't be disruptive inside. But CodePink members outside the Denver convention are planning to stage parades, protests, concerts and other theatrics - anything to keep the anti-war message alive.
These are hard times for peace activists. Despite CodePink's flashy costumes and willingness to disrupt campaign events and congressional hearings - sometimes facing arrest for it - the women are finding it more difficult to maintain public attention on the Iraq war.
Americans are now focused more on the gasoline prices they're paying, declining values of their homes and other economic issues. The ups and downs in a highly contested presidential election also have edged Iraq off the front page and evening newscasts most days.
"We do feel to some extent that these elections have sabotaged our peace actions and messaging because ... the media is completely focused on the two candidates," said CodePink activist Liz Hourican, who moved here from Arizona a year and a half ago to devote her time to ending the war. "It's a lot more challenging."
And while Iraqi and American officials are discussing a pullout of U.S. combat troops from major Iraqi cities by next June and a broader withdrawal by 2011, CodePink members say they won't be satisfied until all U.S. forces are back from Iraq. "We'd like a timeline that is shorter," said co-founder Medea Benjamin.
Congress' decision this summer to fund U.S. operations in Iraq and Afghanistan into next year with $162 billion was a setback, but CodePink already was on the campaign trail, "bird-dogging" presidential candidates and unfurling anti-war banners at their events.
Republican John McCain is a favorite target. "Just about every place McCain goes, we have somebody confronting him," Benjamin said. "We want the undecided voters ... to see we associate McCain with more war and with the failed Bush policy, and, of course, we want the media to cover it."
The activists' campaign on Capitol Hill didn't stop. Before Congress left for recess, the women in their pink outfits scoured the halls almost daily. They seated themselves behind witnesses at hearings unrelated to the war, flashing pink anti-war posters at TV cameras recording, for example, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke talking about the collapse of investment bank Bear Stearns.
"There's a lot of very creative people in the group," Hourican said. "They make so many different crafty, visually brilliant things, and they love using their talents to push this along and see their costume on the news."
Obama's people haven't exactly welcomed them. A group of women went to his Washington office last month seeking to meet with a foreign policy aide but only got a promise in the hallway they would be contacted and given more information on the Democratic candidate's policies. His office never called back.
When Congress returns in September, so will the women in their pink garb. Without a war funding bill to protest, they'll lobby against going to war in Iran and protest alleged abuses by military contractors. "As long as Congress is sitting and not doing the people's bidding, then we're going to be here," said Gael Murphy, another CodePink co-founder.
CodePink - a mocking reference to the government's color-coded terror alert system - started as a vigil in front of the White House in November 2002 to protest a war with Iraq. The vigil culminated in a women's peace march to the Capitol four months later when the war began.
Soon afterward, other chapters "spontaneously started all over the country," Murphy said. The group now has 250 chapters and 200,000 people on its mailing list.
At any given time, at least six CodePink members live in a three-story group house near Capitol Hill that is decorated with pink curtains and "peace" banners. Times and locations of major congressional hearings and demonstrations for the day are written on a self-erase board. Just as prominent is the phone number for U.S. Capitol Police, a source for learning which activists have been arrested, the charges against them and the bail needed.
In Denver this week and at the Republican nominating convention next week in St. Paul, Minn., CodePink has orchestrated an array of anti-war protests. "Pink Police" riding in-line skates who will hold signs reading "stop war, yield for peace" and bicycle brigades will rally against what the activists call America's addiction to oil and war.
"You can't be green and be pro-war," said co-founder Benjamin. "In general, both parties have kept us down this militaristic path and neglected our basic needs."
On the Net:- CodePink: http://www.codepink4peace.org/
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21 Comments so far
Show AllDo they let men in Code Pink? I'd like to join--I love 'em. Get it on, Ladies!!! All recruiters out of our schools!
'Merikan Politics are an evil circus, designed to distract us from reality.
Btelfare
Thank you, Ms. Jacobs and the other activists reminding everyone about the war in Iraq. The war can get on the back burner while someone's gas for their hummer takes centerstage.
yes poet, the picture does speak volumes. Try a maxi-pad or a sanitary napkin - ya know the type my mom used as a teen in the early '50s.
Actually, paleomarc (are you comarc metamorphized?) I was less impressed with the bloody hands than I was the exprtession on both women's faces--that is the communication which impressed me.
Poet
I just love that picture! The image says so much without uttering a word
Poet
Aloha Fossil Fooled--
You asked who could afford to attend; not me. However, I am the founder of the Maui chapter of CODEPINK and so dissatisfied with the state of our country that I couldn't not go. So, I literally took up a collection amongst all my friends and acquaintances world-wide. Fourteen of them responded and here I am in Denver, ticket paid and staying at a friend's.
Even though being here is not easy, I wouldn't trade the opportunity to make a difference for anything, not to mention the solidarity among like-minded women.
CodePink activists are actually highly respected on the hill.
Oakknot
I don't really agree that Matti is not a swiftboater...for one thing, if the individual is disagreeing with what Code Pink does, then why is there no alternative idea being posited by Matti? Code Pink is the epitome of the non-violent peace movement, and while they haven't "single-handedly" stopped the war, what else is there but to start the Revolution? I wholeheartedly agree with Code Pink. Go Pink Go!
Matti's questions are rhetorical red herrings intended to deflect attention from the elites' burning fires of classist aggression. Asking the wrong questions is a powerful strategy used by elites in their manipulation and exploitation of people. A better question: Is it "Mission Accomplished" for Code Pink and time for progressives to "move on" to the message of reordering the government to serve the people?
heavy menstral flow? Gross. Some things should remain private even between two women. My 2 cents.
Gee, I thought Code Pink was doing a great job of getting public attantion. I agree with them myself, but don't get the coverage they do.
Sure is nice to have CD back after last week. I really wonder at the true source of their 'technical difficulties'. It seemed like when it was putting on a new system would be an XLNT opportunity for a Watergate break-in, if only because it would be so hard to prove.
I hope CD gives some report based on their investigation as soon as resources permit.
Hooray for Our Side!
Since it seems that hyperlinks are now permitted in the comments (he said cautiously), I recommend this article:
http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2008/07/17/code_pink/index.html
(Disclaimer: I'm not sure if non-subscribers can access this.)
BTW, "matti" is not a new swiftboater.
I support Code Pink, tactics and all. I don't dispute that in the Amerikan anti-cultural milieu, where imagination is an aberration rather than a virtue, that the vast majority of well-adjusted technobarbaric dullards will be inclined to dismiss such tactics as "stupid".
"Americans are now focused more on..."
According to who? The CORPORATE MEDIA who FOCUSED their attention on whatever is the trivia of the day.
Thank you AP for pointing out the subtle manipulation of our attention on to topics that concern, in this case, the 'unbiased' reporter, Christine Simmons. Here we find an obscure article on Code Pink, not in action, but as artifact, too dangerous to be reprinted anywhere but Common Dreams. Rather sad.
Code Pink's only problem is that they have not gotten much coverage and ought to be ten times the size... People have less time to protest, less money... Who can afford to go to Denver? At some point, maybe we see the unrest we have all been waiting for, the sort that doesn't fit in a 'protest cage'?
Since the change in format, more swiftboaters seem to have joined CD.
i.e. Matti espousing positions belittling active non-violent dissent.
Active dissent is the only voice that eventually will get things changed.
If active dissent is not a threat to our fascist state, you would not see such repressive measures used by the oppressive heel of the capitalistico-fascist leadership. They are afraid the rest will join in and overthrow them.
You could, of course, try voting. However, Nader is going to get 3% of the vote for a reason; 97% of Americans would prefer not to try his solutions.
Now one can either whine about how unfair this situation is, or work to convince those 97% to change their minds. Throwing blood on C. Rice is not going to convince anyone of anything beyond that the blood throwers are stupid.
If you want to see "repression", by the way, you should really go and talk to the (surviving) brave protestors in Zimbabwe. Or try to find that guy who stood in front of a tank in Tianamen square. Or try to organize an anti-government protest in Pyongyang, Minsk, Moscow, Tehran, Cairo, Khartoum, or dare I say it, Habana. The worst repression most protesters face in the US is that they are ignored.
Questions:
Is what CodePink does really so good and useful?
What are the results of all this protest?
Has this done anything to actually halt the violence?
Has this done anything to actually change the People's attitude toward war?
I know some might be tempted to look at the "poll numbers" on the Iraq Occupation and answer yes to the last question, but what do these numbers really tell us?
Have the "American" People turned against violent solutions to conflict?
Have they even truly turned against War to solve today's particular conflicts?
Or are they just sore at the government for making the military hang around in Iraq with too many dead and wounded "Americans" and too little to show for it when they could be fighting on the "right battlefield" of the "War on Terror"?
The Democratic Candidate (presumptive) for President certainly seems to think this is where the People are at (mentally), are we really sure he is wrong?
Even if he is, the question remains WHY are the People against the war?
Is it really CodePink's kind of protest actions?
Or is it the economy? or the price of gas? or Katrina? or the wounded? or something else? or some combination of these?
A final question then remains: If these kinds of actions cannot be demonstrated to have a positive effect on the causes of Peace and Justice and Fairness, can they be demonstrated to have a NEGATIVE effect?
I think the answer is --Maybe so-- and this is why I question the utility of CodePink's current tactics and perhaps even their overall strategy.
Note that I do not criticize the people in CodePink or their goals just -to repeat- their tactics and strategy.
So no angry at me OK?
Have Fun,
-matti.
great, one of the few groups actually doing anything, and people start shooting at them.
Code Pink is great. Stumbled onto their camp in Denver last night and had a great time talking with them!
Notice how Condie is looking down in this photo...
She has continually compromised her humanity to play a role in the divisiveness of the Bush administration -
and thus loses ethical integrity by this alignment.
Bravo to the bravery and integrity of the women of code-pink!
That lady should have wiped her hands on Condi's face.
The above photo is a great candidate for a time capsule. A picture is worth a thousand words.
God, I love the code pink ladies!