United for Peace & Justice Anti War March

United for Peace & Justice Anti-War March
September 24, 2005
Washington, D.C.


Randy Bastian, 20, from Freeport, Illinois, marches with Veterans Against the Iraq War. Himself not a veteran, he marched with his sister’s boyfriend, a U.S. Marine Corps vet who served from 1985-1991.


Tiffany Burns, from Los Angeles, leads the “Code Pink” contingent in a chant saying, “This is what Democracy looks like.”


Ryan Moore, 20, from Des Plains, IL, protests with permanent marker.


Iraq Veterans Against the War


Gold Star Families for Peace


Streetside debate that goes nowhere: Approximately 200 counter-protesters lined one block of Pennsylvania Avenue, separated from the march by metal barriers and a line of police standing with about a five-foot gap between each of them. Here, a war protestor, right, argues briefly with a counter-protester.


Poet Rick Burnley

I’’m a patriot, as you can see,
Got the ‘‘Merican flag on my SUV,
And everything I need to know,
I get from the Limbaugh and O’’Reilly show.

I don’’t waste time readin’’ the papers,
That’’s what liberals do.
I get my news predigested,
I don’’t even have to chew…


Cindy Sheehan, mother of humvee mechanic Army Specialist Casey Sheehan who was killed in Iraq, arrives at Camp Casey for a reunion.


Sheehan, who camped for a month outside President Bush’s Crawford residence to demand answers about the war, greets supporters at “Camp Casey DC.” Supporters of the original camp packed the camp and traveled the country to spread their message, winding up their bus trips in DC, where the camp was recreated.


On her birthday this year, June 10, Sheehan received this tattoo to commemorate her late son.


On his birthday last year, Carlos Arredondo was waiting with his phone in his yard for a celebratory phone call from his son, Alex, who was serving in Iraq. Instead of a phone call, Carlos watched a government van with three marines pull up to his house. Distraught with the news that Alex was killed in Iraq earlier that day, Carlos set fire to the government van, attempting to kill himself. Carlos said about his son, “He was my American Dream.”


Camp Casey DC at dusk

If you liked these pictures, please point your friends to joetresh.com. You can use the e-mail link below to send a link to a friend.


8 Comments

nice pictures. best i’ve seen so far.

wish i’d been there. good work.

Posted by charley on 25 September 2005 @ 3pm

Bravo — excellent photos!
.

Posted by Jeffraham Prestonian on 25 September 2005 @ 4pm

nice work…really nice…ambience quite palpable…
you should try to make a living with this stuff
;)

Posted by konopelli/WGG on 25 September 2005 @ 4pm

Great photography. Glad you put them up. Made me feel good looking through them.

Posted by mer on 25 September 2005 @ 4pm

Excellent work. I’m glad there are people who are starting to wise up about the Bush lies. This Iraq war was illegal and it was based on lies.

http://www.moveon.org

Posted by Anonymous on 25 September 2005 @ 6pm

Excellent work

Posted by KOB on 25 September 2005 @ 9pm

Nice shots.

Posted by Lonnie Bruner on 29 September 2005 @ 3pm

Excellent photos and commentary. You really should look into what it would take to do this for a living. You’re a natural. I bet,

Your Mom is very proud of you!

Posted by Anonymous on 2 October 2005 @ 3am

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Camp Casey DC Rally to Honor Military Families

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