President Obama Pardon Chelsea
Manning-She Must Not Die In Jail-The Struggle Continues- A Story Goes With It
Click on link to White House Petition To Pardon Chelsea Manning-
https://petitions.whitehouse.gov//petition/commute-chelsea-mannings-sentence-time-served-1
By Fritz Taylor
“You know it is a crying shame that the
Chelsea Manning case has fallen beneath the cracks, that her plight as the only
woman prisoner in an all-male prison out there in the wheat fields of Kansas,
out at Leavenworth has been ignored except an occasional news note or yet
another petition for President Obama to do the right thing like he has with the
drug cases and pardon her, to commute her sentence to time served, to the six
plus years she has already been tossed away behind the walls,” yelled Ralph
Morse over to Bart Webber while they were preparing to set up a banner
proclaiming that very idea as part of a birthday vigil for Chelsea on her 29th
birthday on this cold December day. (Ralph thought to himself while he was
yelling over to Bart that he would never get over those basic training drill
sergeants during his time in the military during the Vietnam War, never get
over being spooked by them that if you did not toe the mark you would wind up
in Leavenworth and here he was supporting a young transgender whistle-blower who
did what he should have done but cowered to those redneck drill sergeants. Well
even 60-somethings can learn a thing or two from the younger crowd.)
“Yeah, between the fact that she had to
in order to protect herself against maltreatment from a bunch of goddam
threatening guards who told her to “man up” at Leavenworth after she was
convicted and sentenced to those hard thirty-five years in 2013 “come out” as a
transgender woman and the overriding blow-up over the Snowden revelations which
took all the air out of any other whistle-blower case Chelsea got the short end
of the stick,” replied Bart also yelling his comment against both the windy day
and the constant stream of loonies, crazies and con men and women who populated
the environs around the Park Street subway station at Boston Common on any
given Saturday between the hours of one and two in the afternoon when the
space, or part of it, was given over to
peace action groups and other left-wing political organizations.
Ralph thought to himself as he cut a
few wind holes in the banner proclaiming the need for President Obama to grant
Chelsea her pardon that he had come a long way (and Bart too) since the fall of
2010 when they learned that Chelsea (then using her birth name Bradley but we
will use her chosen name and assume everybody understands we are talking about
the same person) was being held essentially incommunicado down at the Quantico
Marine Base (strange since Chelsea was in the Army) in solitary and their
organization, Veterans for Peace, had called for demonstrations to have her
released even then, or at least taken out of solitary and stop being tortured
(no small “peacenik” charge since the appropriate United Nations rapporteur had
made such a finding in her case). Ralph and Bart had been among the very first
to set up a rally (not at Park Street but in Davis Square over in Somerville
where Bart had lived for the previous decade) and they had been committed to
her defense ever since. (Their own admittedly sorry response to “their” war,
Vietnam, by in Ralph’s case joining the Army and in Bart’s case by accepting
induction into that same Army had caused then after the fact, after their
military service to “get religion” on the questions of war and peace. They saw
the Chelsea case as pay-back to a real hero, maybe the only hero of the Iraq
War and had worked like seven dervishes on the case. More importantly had kept
the faith even after the case inevitably went off the front pages and became a
cypher to the general population.)
Both men had agreed once the fanfare
had died down that along with keeping the case in the public eye as best they
could they would commemorate two milestones in Chelsea’s live yearly-the
anniversary of her incarceration by the government now over six years in May
and her birthday in December (her 29th ). That was why Ralph and
Bart were struggling with the downtown winds to put their banner in place.
These days they were not taking the overall lead in setting up such events but
had responded to a call by the Queer Strike Force to do so and they were following
that organization’s lead to rally and to make one last desperate push to get
Chelsea a pardon. Everybody agreed, willingly or not, that under the impending Dump
the Trump regime that Chelsea’s chances of a pardon were about zero, maybe
less. So the rally. And so too the desperation in Ralph and Bart’s own minds
that the slogan their fellow VFPer Frank Jackman had coined-“we will not leave
our sister behind” would now fall on deaf ears, that she would face at least
four, maybe eight years of hard ass prison time-time to be served as a man in a
woman’s body when the deal went down. Worse that Chelsea had already attempted
twice earlier in the year to commit suicide and the hard fact emblazoned in the
added sentence on their banner-“she must not die in jail” had added urgency.
Ralph and Bart had met down in
Washington in 1971 after both had been discharged from the Army and had gotten
up some courage, with some prompting from their respective very anti-war
girlfriends, to go down and get arrested during the May Day actions when in
another desperate situation they tried to help shut down the government if it
would not shut down the war-the Vietnam War. They had been through a lot over
the years in the struggle to keep the peace message alive and well despite the
endless wars, and despite the near zero visibility on the subject over the
previous ten plus years.
Both had grown up in very working class
neighborhood respectively Troy in upstate New York and Riverdale out about
thirty miles west of Boston and had followed the neighborhood crowds
unthinkingly in accepting their war and participating in the war machine when
it came their time. So no way in 1968,1969 say could either have projected that
they would hit their sixties standing out in the lonesome corners of the
American public square defending an Army private who in many quarters was
considered a traitor and who moreover was gay. In the old days the best term
they could think of to describe their respective attitudes toward gays was
“faggot and dyke”-Jesus. (That whole gay issue was already well known to them
from some information provided by agents of Courage to Resist, the organization
which was the main conduit for publicity about the case and for financing
Chelsea’s legal defenses. They also were aware through those same agents about
Chelsea’s sexual identity which all partisans and Chelsea herself had agreed to
keep on the “low” in order not get that issue confused with her heroic
whistle-blower actions during trial and only later revealed by her publicly as
a matter of self-defense as mentioned above.)
Later that night after the birthday
vigil was over and Ralph and Bart were sitting at Jack’s over in Cambridge near
where Bart lives (Ralph still lived in Troy) having a few shots to ward away
the cold of the day’s events both had been a bit morose. The event had gone as
well as could be expected on a political prisoner case that was three years
removed from the serious public eye. The usual small coterie of “peace
activists” had shown up and a few who were supporting Chelsea as a fellow
transgender and there had been the usual speeches and pleas to sign the on-line
petition to the White House to trigger a response from the President on the
question of a pardon (see link above). (That lack of response by the greater
LGBTQ community to Chelsea’s desperate plight all through the case had had
Ralph and Bart shaking their heads in disgust as the usual reason given was
that all energies had to expended on getting gay marriage recognized. The twice
divorced Ralph and three times divorced mumbled to themselves over that one).
Ralph and Bart were in melancholy mood
no question since they had long ago given up any illusion that the struggle
against war and for some kind of social justice was going to be easy but the
prospects ahead, what Ralph had called the coming “cold civil war” under the
tutelage of one Donald Trump had them reeling as it related to Chelsea’s case.
They bantered back and forth about how many actions they had participated in
since they got the news of the case that a young whistle-blower was being held
for telling the world about the cover-up of countless atrocities committed by
American forces in Iraq and Afghanistan (via Wiki-leaks, not the mainstream
media who would not touch making the information that Chelsea had gleaned for
love or money).
There were the trips to Quantico down
in hostile Virginia in order to get Chelsea out of the “hole,” get her out of
Marine base solitary (and where they faced an incredible array of cops and
military personnel all to “monitor” a few hundred supporters). The trips to the
White House to proclaim their message. The several trips during the trial down
at Fort Meade in Maryland where they had to laugh about being on a military
base for the first time in decades (they had been barred many years back for
demonstrations on a military base against the Reagan administrations war
against Central America). The weekly vigils before the case went to trial and
over the previous three years the fight to keep the case in the public
eye.
As they finished up their last shots of
whiskey against the cold night both agreed though that come May they would be
out commemorating Chelsea’s seventh year in the jug if Obama did not do the
right thing beforehand. They both yelled as they went their separate ways (Ralph
was staying with his daughter in Arlington) old Frank Jackman’s coined
phrase-“we will not leave our sister behind.” No way.
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