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Dover Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Aug-15-09 08:38 AM
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Anti-war cafe opens in the shadow of Fort Hood

Off-post, soldiers can let down their guard and
open up about the war at Under the Hood cafe.



By Jeremy Schwartz

AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF


Saturday, August 15, 2009

KILLEEN — Past the barber shops advertising $6 military cuts, weapons stores and used car lots, an anti-war coffeehouse occupies a small wooden house on a corner of Texas' biggest Army town. Six months after opening, the Under the Hood cafe has become home to a growing number of veterans and active-duty soldiers who are beginning to question America's wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Less than a mile from the gates of 53,000-troop Fort Hood, the cafe is a place where soldiers, many of them fresh off of multiple deployments, can swap stories and ideas without fear of retribution, its supporters say.

It has also become a refuge for soldiers who are refusing to deploy — or are thinking about it — including Spc. Victor Agosto, who last week was sentenced to 30 days in jail for refusing an order. Another Fort Hood soldier, Sgt. Travis Bishop, an Iraq veteran who has applied for conscientious objector status, was sentenced Friday to a year in federal prison for refusing to deploy with his unit to Afghanistan.

Not since the heyday of the Oleo Strut coffeehouse, the hub for the anti-war movement in Killeen during the Vietnam War, has such an enterprise thrived here. But unlike its predecessor, which closed in 1972, Under the Hood has for its driving force a newcomer to the peace movement, a 17-year Army wife with no history of activism.

The cafe is run by Cynthia Thomas, a former stay-at-home mom who didn't become politically active until 2007, when her husband, a Fort Hood soldier, was sent on his third deployment to Iraq. Thomas said she was furious about his deployment; she said her husband was suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder and other maladies from a previous tour. When her stepson decided to join the Marines, she said she felt compelled to take a stand against the war. ..cont'd

http://www.statesman.com/news/content/news/stories/local/2009/08/15/0815hoodcafe.html




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snappyturtle Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Aug-15-09 09:14 AM
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1. Good. I have only been at Fort Hood once....to see my nephew off on his 1st
deployment to Iraq. He's presently home on leave during his second. He would fit right in age wise to those soldiers pictured here. Sorry but I think this war machine is eating up our young people. Glad to see the cafe in Killeen. Hopefully more cafes will sprout up around other bases.
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ClayZ Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Aug-15-09 09:24 AM
Response to Original message
2. Places like this help end the Vietnam war.
Edited on Sat Aug-15-09 09:26 AM by ClayZ
I am old enough to remember! Underground newspapers helped, also. And then there were the anti-war protests.

I noticed at the town hall meeting in my town this week people stood up and yelled END THE WARS, whenever a "How do we pay for Health Care Reform" question was being asked.


K and R
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old mark Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Oct-13-09 08:20 AM
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3. Used to be one there in the '60's called the "Shelter Half", had a lot of
people around who would give drafted soldiers advice about going to Canada, etc. I guess these things are coming back into fashion, but I am surprised they didn't start and spread in the Bush years....Maybe they did and I just didn't know about them.

mark
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