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Speak of the Dead: The Cindy Sheehan story...[good article]
Weekly Standard ^ | August 29, 2005 issue | Noemie Emery

Posted on 08/20/2005 5:26:35 PM PDT by Roscoe Karns

Speak of the Dead: The Cindy Sheehan story is only the latest instance of the left's grief-based politics.

IN THE FOUR YEARS OR so since September 11, liberals have found a new weapon of preference, and that weapon is martyrdom. They have discovered grief as a tactical weapon. They tend to like grief they can use. They use it to arouse guilt and sympathy to cover a highly partisan message, in the hope that while the message may be controversial, the messenger will be sacrosanct and above reproach. Since 9/11, they have embraced this tactic repeatedly, and each time with a common objective: to cripple the war, to denounce the country, to swing an election, but mainly to embarrass and undermine the president.

The first time was in May 2002, when Democrats accused Republicans of insulting the dead of September 11 by selling a photo of George W. Bush on Air Force One on that day. The second was in October 2002, when Democrats tried to capitalize politically on the shock and sorrow from the deaths of Paul Wellstone, his wife, and his daughter. The third go was with the "Jersey Girls," four young widows whose husbands died in the Towers, whom Gail Sheehy formed into a Bush-bashing regiment, and who ended up campaigning for John Kerry and cutting commercials for him. And the fourth, of course, is poor Cindy Sheehan, the bereaved mother of Army Specialist Casey Sheehan, who was killed in action in Baghdad in April 2004. Sheehan is now surrounded by the usual clique of far-out cause-mongers, who orchestrate her every move for maximum drama. All of these episodes involve attempts to attack without fear of reprisal, by exploiting the sympathy people feel for those who have suffered as well as the natural reluctance to hurt those in pain.

Let us meander down memory lane, way back to May 2002, when the Republican National Committee offered for sale to some of its donors a set of three pictures from the first year of the Bush presidency, including one from September 11 that showed him talking on the phone from Air Force One as he looked out the plane's window. Immediately, a cry went up from prominent Democrats that he had insulted the dead. "Disgraceful," said Al Gore. "Incredibly disrespectful to the families of the thousands of Americans who lost their lives just hours before this photo was taken," said Terry McAuliffe, then chairman of the Democratic National Committee, without telling us why.

This was the start of an ongoing campaign on the part of the Democrats to rule the attacks and Bush's response to them out of bounds, down to attacking as crude and exploitative his decision to hold his 2004 convention in New York. This was a predictable partisan ploy, but by March 2004, the party had found some new allies. When the Bush campaign unveiled its campaign ads, including some shots of the smoldering wreck at Ground Zero, with rescue workers bearing a flag-covered stretcher, the attack was already prepared. The newspaper headlines said everything: "Sept. 11 Victims' Kin Urge Bush to Pull Ads," read one Boston Globe story. "Bush Ads Using 9/11 Images Stir Anger," ran one in the Washington Post. "It upsets me tremendously that . . . my son could be used as a political pawn," said one victim's father. "To say that we're outraged is the truth, but it's more than outrage," said a woman whose brother had died in the North Tower. "It's a deep hurt and sorrow that any politician . . . would seek to gain advantage by using that site." "Our message to all politicians is, 'Keep your hands off Ground Zero,'" the brother of another victim said

Into the breach charged a vast herd of Democrats, all lashing Bush for his lack of fine feelings: "Speaking to a crowd of 2,000 at a campaign rally in New Orleans," the Boston Globe reported, "Senator John F. Kerry whipped the audience into a frenzy of booing as the presumptive Democratic nominee denounced Bush for using images of the September 11 attacks." It was not until weeks later that it was fully revealed that all of those quoted were not a cross-section of victims' relatives repelled by the president's crassness, but members of a minuscule subset who belonged to a pacifist group called September 11 Families for Peaceful Tomorrows, whose press conference was orchestrated by MoveOn.org. In the end, it turned out that they not only did not represent all or most of the families, they didn't even represent their own families, as some of their parents and siblings were opposed to their acts. Indeed, their impact was neutralized, as they succeeded in rousing a counterreaction among survivors who were hoping to stay out of politics, but were galvanized by them to stand up for the president. By enlisting the dead, they gave Bush's campaign a very rough send-off, which of course had always been the idea.

AN EVEN LESS GOOD IDEA was that embraced by some Democrats in Minnesota when Paul Wellstone was killed in a plane crash at the very end of a close 2002 Senate race against Republican Norm Coleman. Wellstone had died with his wife, his daughter, and five

others, and the shock of the loss stunned the state and the nation. Two years before, when Missouri governor Mel Carnahan had similarly been killed in a plane crash in the closing days of his Senate race, party leaders had drafted his widow and successfully framed the race as a memorial to the dead man. Wellstone left no natural successor, but there was a proxy of sorts in former vice president Walter F. Mondale, who had been around so long he seemed he could be Wellstone's father, and who agreed to run in his stead.

The race, Mondale's drafters hoped, could be run as a memorial to Wellstone, in an aura of reverence. Harry Reid and other Senate factotums warned Coleman's campaign that it would be improper to criticize Mondale, or to campaign at all until after Wellstone's memorial service, which would be several days later (and a week before the election). Meanwhile, Democrats felt free to frame Senate races all over the country as tributes to Wellstone, that they wanted to win in his memory. Caught in this box, Coleman slipped to eight points behind Mondale, and was thought to be finished by the day planned for Wellstone's public memorial. Then everything changed.

"Most of the event feels like a rally," thought Slate's Will Saletan as he entered the University of Minnesota arena. "The touching recollections are followed by sharply political speeches urging Wellstone's supporters to channel their grief into electoral victory. The crowd repeatedly stands, stomps, and whoops." Republican senators were booed, while Democrats were cheered, none more so than Mondale. "As the evening's speakers proceed," reported Saletan, "it becomes clear that to them, honoring Wellstone's legacy is all about winning the election. Repeating the words of Wellstone's son, the assembly shouts, 'We will win! We will win!'" Then Wellstone's friend and campaign treasurer took the stage to address by name Wellstone's Republican friends in the House and the Senate and beg them to "honor" the fallen man by helping Mondale win the race: "We can redeem the sacrifice of his life, if you help us win this election," he said.

In translation, this is the unspoken theme of grief-centered politics: We are suffering, so you owe it to us to give us what we ask for. This is the claim of Cindy Sheehan and the Jersey Girls, and it carries with it an implied accusation: If you don't do what we ask you, you don't care that our loved one is dead. But no one had ever heard it stated so baldly or bluntly as at the Wellstone service, and the bluntness repelled. "The late senator was treated as little more than one broken egg in a great get-out-the-vote omelet," wrote Christopher Caldwell in these pages. "The pilots and aides who died with him were barely treated at all." People stalked out. People complained. Floods of cash poured into Norm Coleman's campaign, which found itself suddenly energized. The scandal had not only dissipated the aura of reverence, it gave Coleman permission to run hard against Mondale. He did. Not only did he win, but the riptide seemed to extend to neighboring states, helping pull in Jim Talent, who edged past Jean Carnahan, who had been comparing the Wellstone disaster to her own husband's death. Lesson to liberals: Grief-centered politics has to be subtle. It's a lesson they haven't quite learned.

IT WAS NOT LEARNED by the Jersey Girls, the four widows from the Middletown area, who, like Cindy Sheehan, had lost kin in the war, but in lower Manhattan, not Iraq, and husbands, not sons. They were discovered by Gail Sheehy, a writer and liberal Democrat, who had come to their town to write about healing, and stayed to dabble in activist politics, forming the Moms into a corps of crusaders, bent on finding the flaws in the system, and then on blaming them all upon Bush. The Moms seemed at first to have been apolitical (two of them claimed to have voted Republican), but they soon began sounding exactly like Sheehy, who became their coach, their den mother, sponsor, and publicist, detailing their struggles in the New York Observer under a series of headlines such as "Four 9/11 Moms Battle Bush," "Vigilant Widows Wait for Condi With Suspicion," and "Moms Battle Bush." Wrote Sheehy: "So afraid is the Bush administration of what could be revealed by inquiries into its failures . . . it is unabashedly using Kremlin tactics to muzzle members of Congress . . . but there is at least one force that the administration cannot scare off or shut up."

Trading on the reluctance of people and of politicians to seem to be rude to pretty young widows, she used their status as the bereaved to push the government into staging an investigation of the events leading up to 9/11. Sheehy tossed off stories of the four in their kitchens, coloring Easter eggs and planning their Passover seders, as they discussed their ambitions to nail Condi Rice. "It's The Mmes. Smith go to Washington," she trilled happily. "Instead of Jimmy Stewart shouting himself hoarse in the well of the Senate, these young suburban widows have banded together to coax and cajole, outwit and outlast their national leaders until officials face up to their mistakes." For "face up to mistakes" read "embarrass the president," a goal they did not try to hide.

Sheehy, the Moms, and their legions of fans saw them as heartbroken souls facing a sinister government, but to a growing number of people they came to appear as both sad and obsessive, demanding in retrospect a form of clairvoyance from government, and over their heads in discussing such matters as counterintelligence. "In the public pronouncements of the Jersey Girls we find . . . hardly a jot of accusatory rage at the perpetrators of the 9/11 attacks," the Wall Street Journal's Dorothy Rabinowitz noted. "Who . . . would not be struck by the fact that all their fury and accusation is aimed not at the killers . . . but at the American president, his administration, and an ever wider assortment of targets, including the Air Force, the Port Authority, the City of New York?" (One who was struck was Debra Burlingame, sister of a pilot who died at the Pentagon, who emerged as the head of a backlash against them. By the time Condi Rice did testify, the family members had split into two different factions: the Moms, who staged a conspicuous walkout, and the Burlingame forces, who applauded her lustily.) In the end, the Moms and the commission went out with a whimper, the Moms enraged when it failed to damn Bush. By now, they were linked to the website of Peaceful Tomorrows, but it no longer mattered, nor did their endorsement of Kerry, who lost. This was the end of their spell in the limelight. When they failed to deliver what Sheehy expected--the ouster of Bush, or at least his embarrassment--she quickly lost interest, and the four moms are now back in New Jersey, bereft not only of their husbands, but also of the publicity, adulation, and public attention on which they seemed to have come to depend.

AFTER THE JERSEY GIRLS, there was nowhere to go but to "Mother Sheehan,"* who, like the Wellstone Memorial, may be about to implode. In her case, her cover as Everymom is more easily broken, as her connection to the Loony Left is far more explicit, and her tongue is a lot less controlled. You might not know it from her televised interviews (where she seems well coached by the expensive media mavens retained by MoveOn.org), but the Internet is alive with her unscripted sayings, and they make quite a collection. To anyone's knowledge, none of the Jersey Girls or members of Peaceful Tomorrows has appeared on a program with Lynne Stewart, the convicted lawyer and friend to Islamic terrorists, and proclaimed her a personal heroine. None has ever said anything like this to a public gathering: "We have no constitution. We're the only country with no checks and balances. We want our country back if we have to impeach George Bush down to the person who picks up the dog s--in Washington. Let George Bush send his two little party animals to die in Iraq."

Few Everymoms have ever told newsmen: "America has been killing people on this continent since it was started. This country is not worth dying for." Few Everymoms have been endorsed and commended by David Duke, the Hitler admirer, because he agrees with their statements that their sons were killed to help the Jews. The Crawford Peace House--the Crawford, Texas, group that sustained her protests against the vacationing president through the first half of August--is dedicated less to opposition to the war in Iraq than to the belief that Israel is the source of all evil, so she has now added that to her list.

It took a few weeks for Peaceful Tomorrows to reveal itself as a partisan outfit, and months for the same thing to occur with the Jersey Girls, but with the Sheehan phenomenon, it has only been a matter of days. And the reaction has set in already: Other family members, also bereaved, have denounced her performance, and other military families have come forward to declare she does not speak for them. Among them has been Linda Ryan, whose son, Marine Corporal Marc T. Ryan, was killed in Iraq in November. "George Bush didn't kill [Cindy Sheehan's] son," she told her local New Jersey newspaper, the Gloucester County Times. "George Bush was my son's commander in chief. My son, Marc, totally believed in what he was doing." "She's going about this not realizing how many people she's hurting. When she refers to anyone killed in Iraq, she's referring to my son. She doesn't have anything to say about what happened to my son."

SINCE THE FLORIDA RECOUNT, the left has been driven mad by their loathing for George W. Bush, which subsequent elections in 2002 and 2004 only intensified. And since 9/11, they have also been turned into grief-seeking missiles, and slipped into a confusion and squalor that boggle the mind.

"The moral authority of parents who bury children killed in Iraq is absolute," declares the New York Times's Maureen Dowd. What she means is the moral authority of those she finds useful. Does she accept the moral authority of Linda Ryan, who finds Sheehan disgraceful? Does she bow to the moral authority of the thousands of parents of the dead and the wounded who support the war and the president, and find her snideness disgusting? Can she begin to guess at what the phrase even means?

There are so many people who have buried children, and so many more who have had children wounded, and so many more who have children in danger, that their political views cannot be uniform. What happens when the opinions behind which they put all of their moral authority collide? When parents and other family members of the dead and wounded disagree about politics, who gets custody of the moral authority? Is the moral authority of Cindy Sheehan compromised by the dissent of her husband, who is also a parent in agony?

It is impossible to avoid the conclusion that for Dowd and her ilk, moral authority stems less from service or suffering than from the potential to cause serious trouble for Bush. Thus combat service gave great moral authority to John Kerry, running against Bush for president, but did nothing at all for the 100-plus Swift Boat Veterans who opposed Kerry, most of whom had more medals than Kerry, had more wounds than Kerry, and also served much longer terms. (Dowd and other liberals denounced these combat veterans as assassins and liars, denying the curative powers of service and sacrifice. But then, c'est la guerre.) To them, the grief of Cindy Sheehan is more valid than the grief of her husband and other numerous relatives, and much more valid than the grief of Linda Ryan, which they fail to acknowledge as meaningful. The grief of a Kristen Breitweiser is more meaningful than that of a Debra Burlingame, and much more meaningful than that of Ted Olson, whose wife died on the plane that went into the Pentagon, but who is also a conservative stalwart, whose wife was also a conservative stalwart, and who argued and won the case of Bush v. Gore. What's his moral authority? Do we need to ask?

Do we need to ask also what they have been doing to politics, with these poisoned injections of grief? The health of the political process rests upon vigorous argument, in which the back and forth is intense and protracted, so that the holes in all arguments--and there are holes in all arguments--are thoroughly aired and exposed. But no one wants a vigorous argument with a 30-year-old widow who has seen her husband burned to death in the wreckage of the World Trade Center towers, or with a parent who has just lost a son. No one wants to have an argument, period, or even be heard to be raising one's voice.

Political cut and thrust does not go well with the etiquette of bereavement, which tends to short-circuit all argument, which of course is the point. It inhibits argument, makes response awkward, and sometimes can stop it completely, putting an opponent in the position of Norm Coleman before the Wellstone Memorial fracas, in which Democrats were free to seek votes based on sentiment, while anything Coleman tried to say about Wellstone's replacement was called an insult to the dead. People who put mourners up front on policy issues are like robbers leaving a bank with a hostage between themselves and police fire. To do this on purpose, to drive an agenda, is beneath all contempt.

Here is a message for our friends in the grief-based community: Really, you must cut this out. We are tired of having our emotions worked on and worked over; tired of the matched sets of dueling relatives, tired of all of these claims on our sympathy, that at the same time defy common sense. The heart breaks for everyone who lost relatives and friends on September 11, as it does for the relatives of the war dead and wounded, as it does for the sons of Paul Wellstone. It does not break for MoveOn.org, Maureen Dowd, and Gail Sheehy, who have not been heartbroken, except by a string of election reverses, and are using the anguish of other people in an effort to turn them around. Especially, it does not break for George Soros, who, after squandering millions on the Kerry campaign, is now using poor Cindy Sheehan to get back in the action, and it does not break for political operative Joe Trippi, late of the Howard Dean meltdown, who is trying to do the same thing. She is now the vehicle for a collection of losers, who will use her, and then toss her over and out once she has served their purposes, or more likely failed to do so. Her family has broken up under the effects of this circus; she has now lost her husband, as well as her son. Please, send her back to her therapist, and what is now left of her broken-up family. And please--do not try this again.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: cindysheehan; enemywithin
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To: Roscoe Karns

And while we're talking about exploiting grief, let's not forget about one of the pioneers in that field, noneother than Fat Teddy of Chappaquiddick, who has parlayed the assassination of his two brothers into a lifetime appointment to the United States Senate, where he has been free to pretty much do as he pleases, be it the instigator of the drowning death of Mary Jo Kopechne, to raiding the federal treasury for his pals in Massachusetts, to posing as some sort of moral authority when he is in fact among the most immoral of all United States Senators ever elected.

And every November, and every June, Fat Teddy will make some sort of statement regarding the "tragic loss of his brother" (Jack or Bobby, depending on the season), reminding everyone that he alone is the bearer of the Kennedy torch, and it was not unexpected after President George W. Bush showed Kennedy every possible courtesy and favor, reaching out to that fat turd in an effort to "change the tone", that Kennedy would of course respond in true leftist form, calling the President a liar, and every other kind of insulting epithet.

The Jersey Gyrls and their ringleader Sheehy, and the Wellstone Exploiters, not to mention Cindyrella of Vacaville, had a prime example to emulate, and that example has been in the U.S. Senate since 1962.

About 43 years too long.


21 posted on 08/20/2005 6:21:18 PM PDT by Mad Mammoth (Cindy Sheehan = Possessed by the Rachel Corrie demon. Same Hate, Same Foul Taste, Less Calories.)
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To: massfreeper

In recognition of Bill Clinton, it should be called the politics of sticking out your lower lip.


22 posted on 08/20/2005 6:26:19 PM PDT by popdonnelly
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To: Roscoe Karns
they (Bush opponents) succeeded in rousing a counterreaction

The initial success of all of these grief campaigns can be traced to the media. It seems like The Today Show always gets them first. The American people now have truth filters and these "political mourners" always end up running back to the MoveOn crowd with their tails between their butts.

23 posted on 08/20/2005 6:28:16 PM PDT by BallyBill (Cheney/Rove in 08 ....drive the left to suicide.)
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To: Roscoe Karns
Everything the RATS do backfires on them because the reality is, a bunch of mental misfits run the party.

Liberalism =Mental Illness


24 posted on 08/20/2005 6:30:49 PM PDT by John Lenin (Hillary Clinton =RAT Titantic)
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Comment #25 Removed by Moderator

To: Roscoe Karns

Although this is an excellent article, it's nothing new and a tactic the Liberals have been using for years and harkens back to at least when I was child during the Viet Nam war. It was obvious to many of us then and many of us now. It would be good if we could persuade more Americans of this truth.


26 posted on 08/20/2005 6:40:23 PM PDT by TAdams8591 (Member since December 1998)
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To: Roscoe Karns
And please--do not try this again.

Sadly, they will.

27 posted on 08/20/2005 6:43:11 PM PDT by sydbas
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To: Roscoe Karns

Thank you for posting this article which is such a great summation of the RAT tactic of exploiting grief for their political purposes. The last sentence asking them to please stop this shameless hypocrisy has to be read as the author hanging on to a sliver of hope that there is a smidgen of decency left to appeal to. I am afraid she is doomed to disappointment as the RAT party is beyond redemption.


28 posted on 08/20/2005 6:53:29 PM PDT by mountainfolk (God bless President George Bush)
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To: mountainfolk

bump


29 posted on 08/20/2005 6:58:05 PM PDT by Deetes (God Bless the Troops and their Families)
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To: Roscoe Karns

Thanks for posting. excellent article.


30 posted on 08/20/2005 7:09:50 PM PDT by kalee
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To: Viking2002

"...is it possible - just possible - that some humans can be born without souls? Could that explain the incomprehensible actions of today's Leftists?"

We are all born with a soul. But it is easy to turn your back on God, who speaks from the soul through love and morality. Once your back is turned, the conscious quickly takes over and convinces you of its correctness. As time goes by, the conscious continues to mask and silence your soul -- wrong becomes right, immoral becomes moral...

I'm not an expert (by a long shot) of theology, but this is the way I see it. Take it or leave it :)



31 posted on 08/20/2005 7:13:03 PM PDT by Adiemus
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To: Interesting Times
This one is on the money. Leftists only win if they can silence their opponents. The use of grief as a weapon is just another tactic to achieve that end.

Yes.

32 posted on 08/20/2005 7:13:22 PM PDT by zot (GWB -- four more years!)
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To: All
predictable partisan ploy

Ploys are weapons. The issue is not the issue. Issues are weapons.

The issue is, "Bring it all down, man."

the left has been driven mad by their loathing for George W. Bush

That madness has them transferring their hatred onto their own Country.

"Bring it all down, man." They are obsessed to the point that they are hindering the war to defend against radical Islam. There may come a day when a nice peaceful "camp" in the Nevada desert will be just the place for them, for the duration.

you must cut this out. We are tired of having our emotions worked on and worked over; tired of the matched sets of dueling relatives, tired of all of these claims on our sympathy, that at the same time defy common sense.

That's like asking an enemy to stop shooting at you.

This is the inner war in the bigger war to defend America. They have inalienable rights to "do their own thing" we have inalienable rights to defend against them. It's a clash of inalienable rights and ours had better win.

33 posted on 08/20/2005 7:16:39 PM PDT by WilliamofCarmichael (Hillary is the she in shenanigans.)
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To: Roscoe Karns
Thanks for the post. Articles like this will make me reconsider my decision not to renew our subscription to The Weekly Standard. I've been so disappointed in Bill Kristol that I decided not to help put a penny in his pocket.
34 posted on 08/20/2005 7:21:02 PM PDT by PeskyOne
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To: Roscoe Karns; Liz; Howlin
Funerally...


Former President Bill Clinton shares a laugh with former Vice President Walter Mondale, shortly before the start of the memorial service. (Pool Photo/Associated Press)


Mark Wellstone, son of U.S. Sen. Paul Wellstone euligizes his father during a public memorial service. (AP pool photo)


David Wellstone, the senator's oldest son, talked of next week's election and "looking forward to digging in" in his father's name.

Wellstone sculptors find reflection, inspiration in Range rock
GREGG AAMOT
Associated Press
Posted on Wed, Aug. 03, 2005

IRON JUNCTION, Minn. - St. Paul sculptors Philip Rickey and Peter Morales exchanged a summer in the Twin Cities for a cramped apartment on the Iron Range and long days laboring in the sun. And they wouldn't have it any other way.

The artists are working 12-hour days behind a dusty machine shed near this Range hamlet, polishing stones from a taconite mine into tributes to the late Sen. Paul Wellstone and five others who died in a plane crash just down the road.

"I was moved by his death, and saddened," Rickey said, "so I feel honored to be part of creating a lasting memorial to his politics and his family, and to the people who worked with him."

Said Morales: "I was devastated the day of the tragedy, as so many people were."

The men began working on the stones in June and must finish in time for a Sept. 25 dedication at the memorial site, a six-acre piece of land carved into the woods five miles east of here.

Wellstone Action, an organization created to promote Wellstone's brand of progressive, grassroots politics, commissioned the $250,000 memorial and gave direction to the project.

Rickey, the lead sculptor, met with the victims' families and picked the stones himself from a dormant Cleveland-Cliffs Inc. mine in Hoyt Lakes. St. Louis County donated the land for the memorial, and the landscape architecture firm Sanders, Wacker, Bergly Inc. helped with the design.

The men hope the memorial will honor Wellstone's deep connection to the Range - long a DFL stronghold - his relationship with miners and his love of the natural environment.

The stones of granite, stromatolite and other rock aren't being made into statutes or tombstones. Rather, they are being polished to a smooth and glistening finish while their natural shape is retained. The names of the victims will be etched into the stones, and some personal items will be buried beneath them.

Wellstone was bound for Virginia on Oct. 25, 2002, when the plane he was in went down. His wife, Sheila, their daughter, Marcia Markuson, and staffers Tom Lapic, Mary McEvoy and Will McLaughlin died in the crash, along with pilots Richard Conry and Michael Guess.

One stone will represent Paul and Sheila Wellstone while each of the others in Wellstone's group will have a rock of their own. They will be placed around a circle, with stone benches across from them. A trail that winds through the six acres will include information about Wellstone's life and work.

The names of the pilots will be included at the entrance to the memorial.

"They wanted us to work with the indigenous stone of the Range because Paul had a close relationship with the mines, the steel workers and the Range itself," Rickey explained.

On a blistering Tuesday morning, Morales - in a soaked T-shirt, face mask and wide-brimmed hat - worked on a stone with an electric polisher. Tiny diamonds embedded in the polishing pads smoothed the rock.

Another assistant, 16-year-old Nate Holmes of nearby Angora, ground off the rocks' rough edges to get them in condition for polishing.

At the memorial site, which is just 2,000 feet from the site of the plane crash, a trail leads from the entrance - which will include a stone inscribed with an eagle and a poem - to the circle where the five stones will be placed. Trees that were cut to make the trail will remain where they fell, amid the aspen, birch and spruce that reach into the northern Minnesota sky.

It's hoped the spot will make for reflection and inspiration - and for some, maybe closure.

"We wanted to preserve the site and use as light a touch as possible," Rickey said. "Nature is the big designer here, in a sense. We want the vibrant voice of the stone to interact with the person."

35 posted on 08/20/2005 7:25:23 PM PDT by Libloather (Why are Democrats buried in nine foot graves? Deep down, they're good people...)
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To: Roscoe Karns
"Mother Sheehan,"*

Mother Sheehan doesn't seem to care what happens to Iraqi children

Young victims of the attacks by Saddam and his Ba'ath forces on Halabja.

36 posted on 08/20/2005 7:29:05 PM PDT by syriacus (Cindy's campaign was interrupted by a bad event. But the Iraq campaign is supposed to go perfectly)
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To: TWohlford

And they've been searching for a cause that lands them in the limelight ever since.


37 posted on 08/20/2005 7:54:14 PM PDT by tiki
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To: Viking2002

No, they are just sinners who fail to recognize their sins and when/if they do, they justify it away instead of taking it to God. They give themselves moral authority instead of God. But it doesn't matter, He still loves them.


38 posted on 08/20/2005 7:57:57 PM PDT by tiki
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To: twntaipan

bttt


39 posted on 08/20/2005 7:58:45 PM PDT by BenLurkin (O beautiful for patriot dream - that sees beyond the years)
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To: Rocko

" bump


40 posted on 08/20/2005 8:02:32 PM PDT by prognostigaator
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