Booman Tribune

Impressions from the DC Rally

by dblhelix
Sat Sep 24th, 2005 at 07:05:56 PM EST

 24 annotated photos from today's rally by your faithful correspondent on a bike. Enjoy.





























9:30 am and the metro was already packed. The elderly couple were on their way -- she wore a DFA San Diego hat and her Dean badge, and he wore his Korean War Veteran cap. The University of Maryland Womens Crew was on board; when I asked politely if they were attending the protest, they laughed, pumped air signs, and looked at me as though I were crazy. It was interesting that even the ride downtown reflected that the protesters, on average, skewed toward middle-age/elderly.

Speaking of Howard Dean, I stopped by the counter-protest first, as it was scheduled to begin earlier (10:00 am). This gentleman was nice enough to let me photograph his custom t-shirt: Howard Dean is scum. What about the children?

ANSWER staging area for bus arrivals at Freedom Plaza. Within 5 minutes, another two buses arrived with signs in the window urging "Honk for Peace".

I rode in with the Raging Grannies. I'm in motion on a bike -- they're not running!

impeachbush.org did a great job of turning out marchers. Their signs were everywhere. The purple man flopping around in the wind to the right belongs to SEIU New York Health & Human Service Union. Union turned out in big numbers today.

Some excellent advice from the Napa Valley.

The Reverend. It was still early -- later, during the actual march, I spotted him getting chauffered around in an unmarked police car with priority sirens whining. I bet he's got more pull with the DC police than Bush.

Respect the Moms.

A DU'er

One of many peace organizations.

The World Wide Web comes to life. So pleased to meet some Billionaires for Bush, who graciously allowed this peasant a photo.

No protest can begin before the Tibetan Monks arrive. It's a rule.

I love bagpipes.

New England Progressive Democrats are in the house!

Will Pitt, of truthout.org lights up. Back of t-shirt reads: Stone Cold Fucking Liberal.

DU'ers Represent!

We want Union (We want Union)!
Kick-ass Union (Kick-ass Union)!

It was a bevy of special interest groups! A pragmatist's nightmare!

The Working Assets board.

On the 'bad' side of town, the counter-protestors get a call that the march has started and head to their position -- behind a fenced barrier and wall of police on Pennsylvania and 9th-10th Sts. NW

The first protesters in a long line of many heading down 14th St to Pennsylvania Ave.

The first group heading down Pennsylvania Ave. One block down to the left, the counter-protestors anticipate their arrival.

Everybody's looking to their left to yell back at the counter-protestors. When one side shouts "USA-USA" the other side responds in kind. When one side shouts "Shame on You, Shame on You", the same is hollered back.

My vote for "best sign in the protest". A Katrina survivor carries a sign that reads: "Iraqis didn't leave me on a roof".
 

END OF FIRST SET OF PHOTOS



Display:
some bagpipes ...
by dblhelix on Sat Sep 24th, 2005 at 07:07:08 PM EST
arrive. No shit! I'd forgotten that. Thanks for your excellant reportage.
by sjct on Sat Sep 24th, 2005 at 07:24:23 PM EST
[ Parent ]
yay Tibetan Monks! Woohoo!
by catnip (llamg88 at hotmail.com) on Sat Sep 24th, 2005 at 07:35:48 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Thanks, dblhelix!!

The complete and total media non-coverage has been incredibly infuriating.

I got a glimpse into the realities of the people in our country who do not have alternate means of "news" and information...jesus, it was scary!

Are you doing anything tomorrow?

I want something else, to get me through this, semi-charmed kinda life..
Third Eye Blind

by brinnainne on Sat Sep 24th, 2005 at 07:16:19 PM EST
Are you doing anything tomorrow?

Prolly not, as I really was supposed to be working on a new project today but decided this am, don't be such a slave...

by dblhelix on Sat Sep 24th, 2005 at 07:32:35 PM EST
[ Parent ]
when over a million of us showed up for the March for Women's Lives on April 25, 2004, almost exactly a year and a half ago.

Bush was hiding out at Camp David, and I had a little fantasy about how the coversation went when he got back to the White House.

"Hey, Turdblossom, anything interesting happen this weekend?"

"Well, the Mall was chock full of women on Saturday, as far as the eye could see."

"Oh, yeah? Were they having a bunch of clearance sales out there, or what?"

Sort of amazing, ain't it? And a hell of a reality check.

The TEA Fund: Practicing random acts of kindness to women

by moiv on Sat Sep 24th, 2005 at 07:40:56 PM EST
[ Parent ]
showed me that protest politics isn't as effective as it used to be. It has it's place and contributions to the effort but that march was the largest ever and it barely registered a blip on the nation's radar screen. Barely a blip. Very disappointing. One million men and women speaking out.

I think the most important part of this weekend will be the meetings on Monday, Sep. 26 with our congress critters.

Rather than marching can you imagine the... however many thousand there... marching into the offices of every Representative and every Senator in groups of 5 or 10, one group after another after another all day long all carrying forward the same message... bush and cheney must resign and the US must leave Iraq.

That would be effective. That would garner some news.

The 10,000 Things

by Andrew C White (acwhite.nospam.@taconic.net) on Sat Sep 24th, 2005 at 08:09:53 PM EST
[ Parent ]

What really amazes me is the sheer variety of people that've turned out. You've got the Raging Grannies, the Unions, Mothers, the ever-insane billionares (the bling on the guy is an awesome touch), monks, New Englanders, and enough special interest groups to give kos an aneurism.



Kill because somebody was killed. Get killed because he killed. Do you think peace will ever come like that?
by Egarwaen on Sat Sep 24th, 2005 at 07:25:22 PM EST
That's what I noticed, from the beginning -- the incredible diversity of the crowd. All ages. All ethnic groups. Grandmothes (some in wheelchairs). Grandfathers. Veterans from all wars. College students. Couples, both gay and straight. Families with children, some in strollers. Middle-aged folks. Ladies in Red Hats. Folks in shorts and sandals. Patriotic dogs (I liked the Huskies for Peace). Soccer moms. Just thousands of the same ordinary, average Americans you'd find anywhere in the country -- in fact, a lot of them are from all over the country. People walking in pairs, in family groups, in groups of friends. The parade that keeps coming. And coming. And coming. And coming....

Great pics!  

Keith Olbermann speaks for me.

by JanetT in MD on Sat Sep 24th, 2005 at 08:04:23 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Great job...looking forward to the next batch. Keep em coming.
by Chamonix1 on Sat Sep 24th, 2005 at 07:26:13 PM EST
Thanks for all the great photos!!!

Fear will keep the local systems in line. -Grand Moff Tarkin Survivor Left Blogistan
by boran2 (blogistan@yahoo.com) on Sat Sep 24th, 2005 at 07:36:27 PM EST
Thank you.

If you want things to get better, be prepared to deal with change.
by Kahli on Sat Sep 24th, 2005 at 08:01:21 PM EST
Yes,thank you,and let us hope that a Buddhist will not have to incinerate him/herself in front of the Whitehouse- to get some attention to this filthy,illegal war. (AGAIN).
by shycat (painebillATHotmail) on Sat Sep 24th, 2005 at 08:53:17 PM EST
wonderful pics!  thank you so much!

Numquam ponenda est pluralitas sine necessitate - William of Ockham
by Cedwyn (cedwynn at gmail dot com) on Sun Sep 25th, 2005 at 03:41:59 PM EST


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