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Added: Jul 26, 2008

From: Acumensch

Duration: 5:50

Thanks to all the editors, I added a correction to the video since this would not be the first coffeehouse since the 1970s. Visit the Different Drummer Cafe's website to find more about this coffeehouse which begun operating in 2006 in Watertown, NY. http://www.differentdrummercafe.org/ Article about the Ft. Lewis coffeehouse on theMelonOnline.com: http://www.themelononline.com/2008/07/the-new-gi-coffeehouse.html A social movement doesn't have a specific place or a location. It lives in the actions, the minds, and the relationships between people. But there are places where the ideas of a movement develop, places where the movement's ideas go more mainstream. A group of Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW) are planning to start up a G.I. coffeehouse near the entrance of the Fort Lewis military base in Washington State. Though the project is still in its planning stages, the idea is that it will be a center for supporting GI rights and war resistance in the region, as well as a place for G.I.s to get coffee right off the base. On a street littered with barber shops and abandoned dry cleaning businesses in Tillicum, WA, the veterans have found several possible locations for this project. Seth Manzel served in Iraq with a Stryker Combat Team before joining his local chapter of IVAW, and is shown in the video talking about these locations. Most of the places he and the other vets have been checking out are abandoned dry cleaners, oddly enough, because with fewer Army requirements for cleaning their attire these places have virtually disappeared from the communities around military bases. A coffeehouse like this would not be the first of its kind in the nation since the 1970s. A coffeehouse known as the Different Drummer Cafe has begun operating since 2006 in Watertown, NY near Fort Drum, and near Fort Hood, TX a coffeehouse known as Under The Hood will begin operating soon. During the Vietnam-era dozens of coffeehouses popped around the nation. In Texas one was called the Oleo Strut, which was named after a part that made sure helicopters landed smoothly. In October of 1968 coffeehouse known as the Shelter Half was established Tacoma not far from Fort Lewis. It took its name from a makeshift military tent structure. Aside from continual harassment from the police force, however, the Shelter Half's shortfall was that its location was still a twenty minute drive from the base. Still, it was in its later years deemed "off-limits" by the U.S. Army. Jane Fonda, the popular anti-war actress, was also banned from Fort Lewis around this time. IVAW believes that one of the closer, newer locations will be more effective. When the Shelter Half opened its doors, the same month saw the first issue of Counterpoint, a G.I. resistance publication, followed by the Lewis-McChord Free Press, B Troop News, and Fed Up!, which were all published off-base near Fort Lewis. This all happened within a short period of time. The Seattle Chapter of IVAW last year started publishing the G.I. Voice, a publication that makes its way onto Fort Lewis, and has also begun a G.I. Radio project, available on GIRadio.org. Though G.I.Radio currently broadcasts from Seth's garage, playing re-runs of Winter Soldier—IVAW's testimonies about Iraq and war crimes recorded in Washington D.C.—the vets plan to move the show to the coffeehouse once its setup. "We're promoting GI resistance," Seth says, "something that hasn't been done a whole lot." Civilians are realizing they can actually do something about this war, he tells me, whereas active-duty G.I.s are not so much in that position. A number of individuals and groups have already started donating equipment to the coffeehouse, such as a cash register. IVAW says the next step in organizing is to raise enough money to pay for the lease they need to start operating and selling coffee. They are several thousand dollars short at this point. As far as a name goes for the coffeehouse, the vets are tossing around "Ogive Plunger" which is the name for a part on a Mk19, a gun that can be mounted to a Stryker vehicle. Seth told me he thinks that's a silly name though. IVAW and volunteers will vote on a name as the project unfolds.

Channel: News

Tags: against  coffeehouse  fort  half  iraq  ivaw  lewis  mk19  oleo  shelter  strut  stryker  the  veterans  vets  war 


Rating: 4.56 (9 ratings)    Views: 656' favoriteCount='4    Comments: 9

dapple33 Says:

Jul 26, 2008 - awesome

ne014x Says:

Jul 26, 2008 - I like the idea, good luck with it

raultalbot7 Says:

Jul 27, 2008 - Should name the place "CS" —(Charlie Sierra) means "Chicken Shit" or "Cock Sucker." Word is the men on base will call it "Hanoi Jane Inc." —term for persons who give aid and comfort to the enemy.

menderfire9 Says:

Jul 27, 2008 - AWESOME!Not only do we have to peacefully protest the occupation of Iraq,we need to develop SERIOUS emotional support centers for the vets who come back in shock with no real effective help in sight so far! This isn't "CS" folks! This is "TGTH" "TRUE GUTS/TRUE HEART" We need to look for ways to help cafes like this & other efforts to support returning vets & their loved ones. Signed:NuriOneHeart/coach,photographer, writer, artist supporting "CafeOneHeart" Another awesome cafe in Tacoma, Wa!!

Acumensch Says:

Jul 28, 2008 - I've never been to Cafe One Heart, what's it like?

peggyforpeace Says:

Jul 28, 2008 - Thanks for this video. I'll be sending it on to others and sending a donation ASAP!

55ella2007k Says:

Jul 28, 2008 - This is an excellent idea! The people on base might not like it, but wait until they come home after 2 or 3 tours of duty...

MNtruthSeeker Says:

Jul 31, 2008 - Good luck young man give em hell but be careful. St Paul is a nasty crime area. So is Minneapolis. You take care Peace & God be with you all

bacale01 Says:

Aug 20, 2008 - "the men on base" - WTF are you talking about? This isn't 1968 . . . women make up 20% of the U.S. military. And if you think informing GI's of their rights is giving aid and comfort to the enemy, then what is that enemy? Freedom? Liberty? Individual rights?

raultalbot7 Says:

Aug 25, 2008 - 20%? That's a lot of dead weight. If you're not willing to fight...then don't join. None of them were force to join. Like you said...this is not 1968.