http://www.dfw.com/mld/dfw/news/12474934.htmPeace movement goes high tech
CRAWFORD _ Unlike war protesters of the past, demonstrators at the Peace House and "Camp Casey" here have gone high tech and mass transit.
"We've got quite an infrastructure. A lot of companies don't have what we've got out there in the cow pasture," said Carl Rising-Moore, a contract painter, "full-time activist" and a driver for the fleet of six late-model extended vans rented by the Peace House to shuttle members back and forth from Crawford to their camp sites near President Bush's ranch.
Like the old days, the proverbial peace sign is plastered everywhere _ on the vans, on T-shirts and on signs lining the road to Bush's presidential retreat. But that is where memory lane ends and modern-day gadgets begin.
Camp Casey II, the largest of the encampments erected by those protesting the Iraq War, is shaded by a rented multi-coned canopy that, ironically, was used by Bush for a re-election fund-raiser in 2004. The place is equipped with wireless Internet connections, cell phone boosters to improve phone reception on the prairie, a sophisticated mobile kitchen and toilet facilities.