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August 8, 2005Does suffering make us exploitable?UPDATE: I’ve written more on this troubling story here. Drudge has a story up that I find terribly distressing. I’m a little slow to come to the story. Apparently this woman, Cindy Sheehan, who quite tragically lost a son in Iraq, has been garnering some media attention (and I am certain it has been positive media attention) for keeping vigil in Crawford, Texas while President Bush vacations there. Her stated purpose is to make President Bush come out and talk to her - apparently before cameras and a jeering crowd - about her son’s death. A vacationing president being called-out by a grieving mother, while operatives from Code Pink and other leftist organizations surround her with signs detailing their agendas. It is a Bush-Haters wet dream. The Fourth Estate’s, too. It’s all been kind of innocent and wide-eyed, this look at suffering - even when it has been focused on the searing pain that comes with one dying so young. So often our thoughts about suffering find meaning in St. Paul’s words, “when I am weak, then I am strong.” We have not talked about how suffering can be transformative in the negative, even though there is ample evidence around us that this is so. We have seen it in families where the father has been replaced by the social worker, and we have seen it in countless stories of men or women, jilted in love and unable to accept it, destroying the object of their desire. It seems, sadly, that if this Drudge story is accurate we may be seeing that same negative transformation here, as well Or, perhaps a woman who has lost her beloved son and who is vulnerable in grief (as are we all) is simply being exploited by others who had an agenda and a script - but who needed the credibility of a grieving mother to give them voice and movement and “poignancy.” Anger is one of the “steps” one lands on when one is trying to work one’s way through grief. If one is having a rough time working through it, fighting the grief, fighting the pain, refusing - so to speak - to live through it, one becomes enormously vulnerable and will latch on to any feeling that will seem to make the pain go away, or, perhaps to make the pain feel “unwasted.” It would seem that Mrs. Sheehan - whom I can’t gainsay, because I cannot begin to imagine her pain - may perhaps have been plucked, in her vulnerabilty, as a ripe apple for the left’s endless banquet of hate. If Drudge story is correct we may be witnessing the terrible exploitation of a mother’s grief, a grief which is sacred, for a bit of political theatre in a slow news month. I hope President Bush does not cave in to the pressure the press and the left will apply, to make him “come out” and be ambushed in public. More importantly, I hope the press can find some shred of decency within itself and stop being party to the naked manipulation and exploitation of a mother in deep sorrow. I hope. I pray that the press can find it in themselves to take this evidence that this woman is simply parroting a script and refuse to aid in her exploitation. But I am not going to hold my breath. On the other hand, if the Drudge report is right, someone on the left did not do their homework, did not “vet” this woman properly - missed a bit of discrediting evidence. In which case, they’ll just go shamelessly scrounge up another aching soul who does not know where to put her pain, and begin to parade her around. What a terrible shame. It is also, in a way, insideous, because the folks behind this theatre have triangulated the president: If he does not meet her, “he is a creep.” If he meets her privately, he is a “coward” and this woman, Mrs. Sheehan can come out and say anything she likes about their meeting with no one able to prove her wrong. If the president meets her outside, amid a crowd of people who literally hate him, he is a schmuck who can be manipulated and who is then at the mercy of cameras and editors. This is not how you treat the American President, no matter who he is. And yes, I’d say the exact same thing if Bush had a D after his name. Some things you simply do not do. UPDATE: Hmmm…I’m afraid that after seeing this picture and reading Mrs. Sheehan’s remarks via Air America, I am somewhat flabbergasted. Some are suggesting she has displaced rage. Perhaps. This seems like it goes beyond mere venom, though. And…sadly…it does seem the press has chosen her for its “It” girl. UPDATE: Michelle Malkin has more thoughts, as does KMG, a marine with a son currently stationed in Iraq. And while we’re talking Marines, Roger L. Simon shares a picture of Marine Second Lt Gabriel Ledeen son of Michael Ledeen, who is headed Eastward. Godspeed to them all, I say. UPDATE: I’ve written more on this troubling story, here. WELCOME Michelle Malkin readers! While you’re here, please nose around. In the last 24 hours, we’ve been talking about Military Morale, Comics and Condoms in Canada, and we’ve been wondering why it’s “so wrong” to ask voters to provide proof of ID. http://theanchoressonline.com/2005/08/08/does-suffering-make-us-exploitable/trackback/ 8 Responses to “Does suffering make us exploitable?” |
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August 8th, 2005 at 3:23 pm
THE FRIENDS OF CINDY SHEEHAN
The Bush-bashing mother of a soldier who died in Iraq last year has garnered quite a bit of buzz from the MSM for her anti-war vigil outside of Crawford, Texas. Drudge highlights her rather drastic change of heart: CINDY 2004…
August 8th, 2005 at 4:30 pm
This has nothing to do with Sheehan, per se. It is about an agenda.
If the MSM truly cared about the Sheehan and other tortured souls, they would behave very differently.
Roe, of Roe v Wade, changed her mind about abortion, insisting that she had made a mistake and regretted being ‘Roe.’
To the best of my recollection, the MSM could not be bothered by Roe’s change of heart- and ensuing pain.
The MSM are pimping Ms Sheehan because she fits an agenda- their own. When she can’t deliver the goods, Ms Sheehan will be left at that Waco roadside, like yesterdays trash- which to the MSM, is exactly what she is, a commodity to be used, exploited and then tossed.
August 8th, 2005 at 6:09 pm
My son told me how he felt about the war, and about his Commander In Chief, before he was commissioned.
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He also gave me instructions on what I was to say and do if he was captured or killed.
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That is a h*ll of a thing for a 20-year-old to have to sit down with his Dad and talk about.
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Rest assured, if something happens to him I will carry out his wishes faithfully.
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What I say will be very, very different than what Ms. Sheehan has to say.
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My son is a proud and patriotic American who is grateful and humble to be able to serve the cause of freedom, his country, and G-d. He is the best of us, doing the best of things Americans do: engaging in that perfectly American ambition to liberate the oppressed.
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The MSM gloating over Ms. Sheehan would not like what I would say. Not a bit.
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August 8th, 2005 at 10:13 pm
RJGatorEsq: I am grateful to your son for his service and will pray that he stays safe.
The MSM gloating over Ms. Sheehan would not like what I would say.
No they wouldn’t, and I doubt that they would even report it.
August 8th, 2005 at 11:43 pm
[...] The Anchoress brings an interesting examination on exploitation with, Does suffering make us exploitable? [...]
August 9th, 2005 at 12:50 pm
Cindy Sheehan, Mother of Casey Sheehan, Soldier KIA
Yesterday I saw t;his report on the Drudge Report. I have been reading about Mrs. Sheehan in the past few days and about her camping out at Crawford, TX, in an attempt to get a meeting with President Bush to ask him “why he killed her son.”
When…
August 11th, 2005 at 12:21 am
[...] WELCOME: Thomas Lifson, American Thinker readers! I’m honored! While you’re here, please look around. In the last few days we’ve been discussing Irony at the New York Times, whether suffering is playing a role in the strange utterings of Mrs. Sheehan, and just how doable our endeavor in Iraq really is. And why it is so important. [...]
August 11th, 2005 at 3:02 pm
[...] Previous posts on Mrs. Sheehan: here and here. [...]