‘Cause in this sleepy London town
There’s just no place for a street fighting man
No!- Mick Jagger
We have recently seen people take to the streets in Kiev, in Mexico City, in Bishkek, in Tashkent, in Beirut. Sometimes they have been effective. More often, they have not. Whether the demonstrations aimed to overthrow a tyrant or merely attempted to question the legitimacy of a recent election, they had one thing in common: they terrified the powers that be. Americans, liberal bloggers most certainly included, tend to see street protests through the lens of the Vietnam era demonstrations. There seems to be something emerging, almost a consensus among bloggers like Jane Hamsher, Chris Bowers, and Markos Moulitsas, that street protests no longer have the same impact that they had in the Vietnam era. There is a surface merit to this analysis. For example, it’s impossible to picture George W. Bush inviting student radicals into the White House, as Nixon did on August 5, 1970. It’s impossible to picture Bush going down to the Lincoln Memorial to talk to the protesters, as Nixon did after Kent State. And it’s true that the media expends very little energy covering street protests, downplays the numbers, emphasizes the most unpopular participants, and prefers to cover non-stories like Terri Schiavo or Lindsay Lohan. But this analysis only holds on the surface. Things today are not really that different from the way they were when our soldiers were bogged down in Indochina.
Take, for starters, Chris Bowers’ complaint about the lack of message discipline in modern protests (this one, from Chicago in March 2004).
First, the speakers were extremely disorganized, self-contradictory, far more radical than the crowd itself, and totally lacking in message discipline. They ranged from Jesse Jackson stirring the crowd in a speech about how the 2000 election was stolen, to an old militant who promised a violent overthrow of the government, to a woman who harangued the crowd for the racism of the anti-war movement (she was part of the program, not someone who broke onto stage), to another speaker who told us we were not really opposed to the war unless we actively helped the Iraqi insurgency. Can there be anything less motivating than holding an anti-war march where the speakers tell those in attendance that they are not really opposed to the war?
I don’t dispute that this lack of message discipline is frustrating and counterproductive. But it isn’t new.
Hunter S. Thompson talked about the emerging campus radical movement in a 1965 article for The Nation.
The new campus radical has a cause, a multipronged attack on as many fronts as necessary: if not civil rights, then foreign policy or structural deprivation in domestic poverty pockets. Injustice is the demon, and the idea is to bust it.
We call it the ‘Sixties protest movement’ for a reason. Protest was in the air and Vietnam was but one of many grievances. Hunter tried to capture the flavor of the era in his famous wave speech:
History is hard to know, because of all the hired bullshit, but even without being sure of “history” it seems entirely reasonable to think that every now and then the energy of a whole generation comes to a head in a long fine flash, for reasons that nobody really understands at the time — and which never explain, in retrospect, what actually happened.
If there is a distinction between the protests of the Vietnam era and the protests of today, it isn’t so much that the message is different or less disciplined, or that the media is less hospitable. The distinction is that this generation has not come to ‘a head in a long line flash’. For many if not most on the left today, they have not been radicalized by the civil rights movement, or the women’s rights movement, or poverty, or rival ideologies like communism. They have been radicalized by the administration’s reaction to 9/11. Therefore, the (new) New Left tends to bristle when Iraq War protests are co-opted by people with side issues. They don’t feel themselves as part of a truly revolutionary movement. Things don’t seem all that out of whack. If we could, say, just get back to the policies of the Clinton era, end torture, restore habeas corpus, amend the Patriot Act, and pull our troops out of Iraq…then the job would be mostly done.
Again, this is a surface kind of analysis that fails to take into account the fundamental similarities between Clinton’s and Bush’s foreign policies. It also badly underestimates the damage to America’s Empire done by the Bush era. It doesn’t understand that Clinton’s policies led to the blowback the ‘Global War on Terror’ was launched to quell. And it doesn’t ask whether it is either possible or desirable to go back to those policies.
It’s easy to overestimate the reforming effect of the netroots and online activism generally. But I will say that online activism is to the early 21st century what campus radicalism was to the 1960’s and early 1970’s. Except, the netroots doesn’t want to get too far out in front of the public. Rather than pushing a radical platform, the netroots seems bogged down in the mechanics of elections. How do we ‘frame’ things? How do we get more progressives elected? How do we win in the south?
We don’t see calls for impeachment. We don’t see calls for a palace revolution. This is, again, a distinction, a generational distinction.
Hey! Think the time is right for a palace revolution
‘Cause where I live the game to play is compromise solution. -Mick Jagger
The people that took to the streets over the bombing of Cambodia and Kent State didn’t win in 1972. But they won in 1974. And it is the Battle of 1974, once thought to have been decided in our favor, that is being waged anew today. Take a look at Dick Cheney’s comments yesterday on precisely this point.
Wolffe: President Ford, his recent funeral—did it put you in a reflective mood about that period? Do you draw any parallels to now?
Cheney: I was delighted to see the outpouring of tributes to his leadership … and praise for the tough, tough decisions he made—in particular, for example, the pardon. I reflected back on where we’d been 30 years ago when he made those decisions and, obviously, suffered for it in the public-opinion polls and the press, and how history judged him 30 years later very, very favorably because of what he’d done. He had displayed those qualities of leadership and decisiveness, steadfastness, if you will, in the face of political opposition.
Cheney has waged an unremitting war against all of the post-Watergate reforms. And it is this war, more than the specific war in Iraq, that really distinguishes this administration from Clinton, Poppy Bush, and Reagan. And for the (new) New Left, this assault on the reforms we grew up taking for granted is truly galvanizing. But we don’t seem to understand that we have been charged with re-fighting the war of our mothers and fathers. We resent seeing those tired faces (Jane Fonda, Tom Hayden, Jesse Jackson, etc.) co-opting our message. We are tired of them and we are tired of their tactics. But the new leaders, the new spokespeople, are not visible. They’re hiding behind screens and screen names. They think they can blog their way to revolution and they think they can gather the critical mass for their limited reforms without associating with unsavory radicals that step on the reasonable message, the majority sentiment.
As evidence for this, they look at the November elections. They certainly were effective and, therefore, our tactics must be working. And if Bush is not persuaded by the drubbing of the midterms, what good can street demonstrations do?
How will these protests serve as a means of changing US policy in Iraq? If the answer is “not at all,” which it very well might be, then you can count me out. I am not interested in protesting for the sake of protesting anymore–that is, simply letting my personal dissent on the war be known far and wide.- Chris Bowers.
Let me respond this, first, with something of an obvious point. If one of the reasons street protests are ineffective is that the media doesn’t give them fair and properly amplified coverage, it would seem counterintuitive for bloggers to add to the problem by being dismissive and refusing to amplify the message. Second, the real power of street protests was never the coverage they received in the press. The real power was the fear induced by an assembled mob on the steps of Congress or the White House. It’s the same power that led to the Orange Revolution in the Ukraine, or that led to the fall of the Eastern Bloc and the Berlin Wall, at the end of the Cold War. Protests may be peaceful, but they have the potential for revolution. The more revolutionary the rhetoric, the more fear inspiring the protests are.
There is another very important reason to assemble en masse in the capitol. The rest of the world is watching. They have seen Mexicans in the street. They have seen Lebanese in the street. But they haven’t seen enough Americans in the street. And they take that silence as assent. It’s true that the world can find plenty of evidence of dissent by surfing the liberal blogs, but the reach of the liberal blogs is limited. The people of the world need to see a visible manifestation of our dissent. They need to see more than clever snark and sagging poll numbers. The world sees Guantanamo and extraordinary renditions and Haditha and Abu Ghraib and they don’t see Americans doing much of anything besides voting to set things right. We owe it to our image and our legacy to make our dissent known, and to make it known in a way the rest of world understands. Liberal bloggers may have concluded that mass protests are ineffective, but the rest of the world knows that mass protests are the absolute prerequisite to revolutionary change.
And this gets me back to where I always seem to wind up. This administration cannot be allowed to take us into a war under false pretenses, lose that war, and then preside over the aftermath. No country has ever allowed something like that to happen. If you went to the protest in Washington DC this past Saturday, and you got down into the crowd and asked them what they thought of impeachment…you would have found near unanimous support. In fact, a plurality would probably have said impeachment is an insufficient corrective. But you would never know how powerful the consensus on impeachment has become in the anti-war movement if all you did was read the liberal blogosphere.
Hunter Thompson talked about San Francisco in the late 1960’s:
You could strike sparks anywhere. There was a fantastic universal sense that whatever we were doing was right, that we were winning…
That sentiment is lacking today. We have been winning ever since we lost in November 2004. But there is no universal sense that whatever we are doing is right. Instead, there is a sense that we should not push too far, too fast. There is a sense that we can win the 2008 election, perhaps with a Clinton restoration, and that things will be hunky-dory. Perhaps this attitude is a legacy of the failure of the highest aspirations of the 60’s generation. Perhaps we are too cynical to fall for the same false hopes. Hunter looked back at the dying dream in 1972.
And that, I think, was the handle — that sense of inevitable victory over the forces of Old and Evil. Not in any mean or military sense; we didn’t need that. Our energy would simply prevail. There was no point in fighting — on our side or theirs. We had all the momentum; we were riding the crest of a high and beautiful wave…
So now, less than five years later, you can go up on a steep hill in Las Vegas and look West, and with the right kind of eyes you can almost see the high-water mark — that place where the wave finally broke and rolled back.
I don’t want to look back five years from now and see the place where the wave finally broke and rolled back was in December 2006, when we realized we had won great victories and decided to consolidate rather than push on for greater and more meaningful change.
If all we wanted was power and a restoration of some kind of pre-Bush normalcy, then we would embrace Obama and Hillary Clinton with open arms. But, we are seeing instead, a profound sense of dissatisfaction with the Clinton/Obama twin-headed media created beast. They have no flavor. We need to add salt. The netroots movement is a like a shark…it needs to move forward or it will die. Rather than trying to calibrate a message that will get us 50+1 in the 2008 elections, we need to push the wave out. We need impeachment, we need to cut off funds for the war, we need to roll back the imperial executive, we need to get the intelligence agencies under control. This is what our mothers and fathers accomplished. We should aim for nothing less.
Orange.
The times are different. TV covered Vietnam differently. Young men of draft age lived in fear of being sent to war (I know I did, and I didn’t become draft eligible until 1974). And we had the fairness doctrine.
The last 20 years we have been inundated with aggressive conservative messages in the media, and little if any support for liberla progressive voices of any kind. Clinton and the DLC crowd certainly weren’t liberal. They would have been considered slighty to the right of Rockefeller Republicans had they been around in the ’60s.
We are still a movement that is finding its way, and fighting upstream to do so.
On Sunday I went to many of our national monuments and memorials. It was in Arlington that I found a couple of things that really resonated with me, and I came to an important realization (which I am working on a diary about).
From JFK’s gravesite:
(click to enlarge)
And from his brother’s:
(click to enlarge)
These are great quotes, that I’ve read before many times. But the realization that hit me then, is that they are not just brilliant quotes; they are profound truths that great men managed to capture in words.
And that is why we enshrine them in marble.
Thanks for capturing those words with your camera. I look forward to your dairy!
Glad to see these! I’ll be on the look out for your diary if it isn’t up already.
I would have e-mailed earlier, but we were completely exhausted. Just pooped. But in a good way.
Predictably, the coverage has been lacking. There’s actually been more mention of it locally than what I’ve seen on the “national” broadcasts.
This is one of your finest essays to date Booman. This piece so touched me because I felt your passion and your commitment in my gut. This is what we need.
I feel also that we on the left have become cynical and all but gave up until 06 elections. It was as if all of our efforts, whether they be protests in the street to letter writing campaigns went for not. Hang in there folks. The tide is turning and we have the power to do something now. It may take another election cycle but please start lining up progressive candidates in your area for 08 and threaten the incumbents to do the right thing. Impeachment should never be “off the table” Before we had the majority the excuse was the vote would never pass. I don’t believe we are quite there but almost. This last move of arrogance by Bush/Cheney and the surge and basically telling congress to go eff themselves hopefully will be the last straw. We are not on the streets to convince BushCO folks. We are there to convince our reps.
As usual Markos and Hamsher et al are wrong. What else is new?
First America excpects everything to be bigger than it was 35 years ago so if you want the attention of the country you have to do alot better than fill up 1/2 of the mall. It was the lowest turnout yet for an anti-Iraq war DC march (i know because i’ve been to all of them).
Second, you must protest as we have to use every available means since the media is owned lock stock and barrel by small cartel of Multi-national Corporations and they have a vested interest in the status quo. They’ve never had a more receptive audience in the White House and they paid alot of money for these guys and they don’t want the populace putting a crimp in their plans.
In a comment yesterday I mentioned that my daughter was committed to direct action protests. She and twenty others are scheduled to go on trial next month. They were all offered a “deal” which only 2 or 3 accepted. She is represented by an attorney who took the case pro bono in order to create the opportunity for these “kids” to make their arguments on the record in a court of law. They’re willing to accept the consequences. One of the main arguments they wanted to make to the jury was opposed by the prosecution. The judge’s decision was that the law did not permit the argument. In rendering his decision from the bench, the judge told the kids that he agreed with their position regarding the war and admired their commitment. When he told them that he had to deny their motion he was crying. Maybe next time he’ll show the same commitment to justice that these students do. Don’t tell me that protest is ineffectual or counterproductive!
When I went out to visit them last summer I came away wondering what the hell had happened. My daughter is 22. She’s right about the war. I’m 57. My life has been good. Her’s is all ahead of her. I’m the one that should be out there in front. Not the one sitting on the sidelines with bail money and the “wisdom” of experience. So now I go out and freeze on street corners but it’s a lonely business for 10 or 20 or 100 people waiting for that 70% to actually realize that their votes didn’t actually change much of anything. You could actually bring our involvement in Iraq to an end but you won’t haven’t made any structural changes that might bring about a different result the next time a President wants to go to war. The media will still be doing it’s cheerleader thing. The Congress will go back to business as usual and all the Progressives will congratulate themselves (the same way much of the 60s generation did).
If you think the next Democratic president isn’t going to appreciate all the power Bush has passed on to him/her you need to get away from the radiation eminating from your monitor–right away! This isn’t just about Iraq. It’s about the failure of our most important institutions from government to media to the courts and more. Revolution is not too strong a word for what’s necessary. Given our institutional failures it’s more relevant now than it was in the 60s.
Great comment.
Sounds like you raise one beautiful human being! And the judge’s reaction says it all! Stay strong and never stop pressing on!
Next time you’re in DC, you should e-mail me!
OK, glad I got that out. Now to return to the point at hand…
Activism is always going to be hard from a media standpoint. One local network today spent more time tut-tutting about some graffiti left somewhere on the Capitol grounds than on the protest. There’s even been criticism that the Capitol police didn’t do enough to stop it. I think the graffiti is stupid and childish but worth a news story? Please. But it was almost as if the protest wasn’t “exciting” enough: the people were too “ordinary” looking; no clashes between protester and police.
Basically, you are damned if you do, and the rest. The media will breathlessly ask if protest organizers “expect” any violence, and will react in ways both predictable and patronizing if it happens. Otherwise, it will be just ignored. Numbers seem almost beside the point. They are just uninterested. At least this same station actually showed folks lobbying Congress today for about 15 seconds. Better than nothing, I suppose. It’s almost the chicken and egg: citizens aren’t interested because they don’t hear anything in the media; the media isn’t interested in covering the story because the citizens aren’t interested. Folks will have to be very novel to get people off their collective back sides…on both sides.
Meanwhile, unless you can pick up a Pacifica station (the local one here offered live coverage) or Cspan, you barely heard a blip. Apparently it was more important how Barack Obama was schooled as a 6yo.
By coincidence, I just finished reading “Fear & Loating in Las Vegas” again today; I was waiting for your use of the “high-water mark” money-quote. Later on, Thompson describes the actual moment:
Ah; this terrible gibberish.
Damn I miss that man.
I keep saying that if everyone who voted for Kerry would just refrain from buying gasoline for just 24 hours the powers that be would get the message loud and clear.
The black maids, janitors, and day laborers of Montgomery, Alabama walked to work for months and months, but we cannot get it together to postpone buying gasonline for 24 hours. Pathetic.
Damn. Nice piece BooMan. I say it’s damn good to read, from a neighbour to the North who definitely sees the Bush FP as an extension of the groundwork the DLC and Clinton laid.
If you won’t stand, be heard, and be counted with your physical being there is absolutely no reason any one should pay attention to a thing you write (and that’s if you aren’t hiding behind a pseudonym and aren’t working directly for a party or “thinktank” – Jesse Jackson et al are still powerful speakers because they are transparent (for the most part) and try and inspire a vision for the future). At this point in your history it is so much more shameful that Americans are not in the street or on a general strike. And you are right, the world is watching and is deciding which ‘side’ of the great game (in this case the EU/ Russia/ China) they will support. And mealy-mouthed wannabe pundits do not inspire hope in the new left coming out of the states.
I’m really curious as to what strategy (or even tactic) the self-proclaimed leaders of the “netroots” have used to push progress forward that has worked better than boots on the ground. Raising money online doesn’t count… it’s still just raising money for candidates the netroots didn’t get to pick; nothing revolutionary there.
Google-bombing? Google decided that was black-hat tactics and changed their algorithm (rightfully so). Local blogs? That was done outside the system. The Town Hall listserv? That’s a gated community. BlogAds? Banner ads fit into blog templates.
Other than actually providing online meeting places (not discounting the importance of that by any means, but they were around before Kos LLC), not much of anything other than community as ATM.
Is the worry that the consultants can’t charge fees for services if people are in the Mall protesting and not online clicking? Call me cynical because I am.
Anyway, really good post Boo.
Some will see the statements of Chris Bowers et al as confirmation that the messages of those blogs have been co-opted by the center or moderate parts of the left. (Be on the left but not too far left.)
It may be that, or it may be an unwillingness to get ones hands dirty doing the nuts and bolts of protest rallies.
In any event, the ending of this story won’t be evident until years have passed. To the prominent but reluctant bloggers I would say, why not add your well known names to the ranks of those that attended? It certainly couldn’t hurt and it may cause others to come. Look, if I can bribe an 8 year old boy to stand out in the cold with me and hold a sign at a local rally, prominent bloggers can take a trip to DC for the day.
I think StevenD hit on one of the biggest differences between the 60’s and 70’s and today.
At that time there was sacrifice being demanded, most notably demonstrated by the draft…if you were 18 and not able to obtain a deferment <cough> Cheney X 5<cough> or a cushy slot in a Guard unit <choke> Bush/Tang<gag> you got a 2yr gig w/ Uncle Sam that included 12 months in VietNam…period, stop, do not pass go and forget about the $200. The only recourse available was to leave the country or resist, which often resulted in federal criminal charges.
Additionally, there was a violent backlash by the authorities, ie: Chicago ’68, Kent State, and an unknown number of instances in cities and on college campuses every week…some of which became very serious confrontations between the authorities and the protesters. Those actions galvanized a huge segment of the population, not just the hippies, yippies and SDS’rs; but made the rest of the country stand up and go …WTF? Today, with the lap dog media, the authority’s have been very effective at pushing the protests below the experience horizon/awareness threshold of a very large portion of the population.
Like Leezy said: We are not on the streets to convince BushCO folks. We are there to convince our reps. To that I would add that we are also trying to raise the awareness of the somnolent segment of the population that they should become more involved than just saying they disagree when responding to a question from a poller. Bowers, Markos, Hamsher, et al can poo poo demonstrations all they want, but to advocate not going or not having them is defeatist thinking. The underlying threat of potential violent confrontation is not necessarily a bad thing…it is fear that they have used, quite effectively until recently, to drive their mad agenda, perhaps fear is the only sure way to get their attention and counter it.
The demonstrations of the 60’s and 70’s fundamentally changed the political landscape. Too many good people paid too high a high price for those changes to have them be lost.
my 2¢
ITMFA
Peace
This is a tremendous essay. Incidentally, I had the great honor of meeting Hunter Thompson when I worked as an actor on the Terry Gilliam film, “Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas.” I loved the guy. What a prophetic legacy he left for us.
Keep marching, Booman. I wish I could be there with you. This work you are doing will either save the world from apocalypse or it will come to nothing in the ash and blood and tears of the modern world. Either way, you have to keep going. Good on ya, Booman! The gloves have to come off. NOW!
This is a GREAT discussion!!
I totally agree with you Booman that the revolution needs to roll on. What I’m questioning is the effectivenss of street protests to do that.
I see two additional things that are different from the Vietnam era. They are:
1. The country is with us. We don’t need to convince the public, the election proved that the vast majority are against the war.
So, why are the president and congress not listening (at least not enough)?
2. MONEY. A massive street protest coupled with an angry public was what it took to get movement in years past. Politicians responded primarily to the voters. I don’t think that is as much the case right now. I think the Norm Coleman’s of the world are sweating buckets because they know they have to run for re-election in a couple of years, but aren’t yet completely convinced that the “people’s will” is what they should be following.
I think that if we want the revolution to roll on, we should spend our energies organizing joint actions that hit the corporate pocketbook. My idea a few months ago was that we take all our $ out of the stock market, 401 K’s, savings accounts. We could maybe develop some alternatives at locally owned small banks and credit unions. But this would have to be organized with a clear message of what we want accomplished. Thats where the blogs could come in as a tool for organization.
Sign me up for something like that – I’m ready to roll!!
Yes, I agree too, a great discussion you’ve generated here Booman.
IMO, Anti-war activists will be more obviously effective when they develop a more strategically coherent plan using NonViolent principles of action.
As of now, it seems there’s been little time invested in research on how known nonviolent methods may be applied to our current situation.
I consider “On Strategic Nonviolent Conflict: Thinking About the Fundamentals” by Robert Helvey a valuable resource on this topic.
See also;
Mandela calls for Gandhi’s non-violence approach
Correcting Common Misconceptions About Nonviolent Struggle [ note: 1 page pdf ]
198 Methods of Nonviolent Action [note: 2 page pdf]
one other difference btwn now and then.
Back then, unless you were a leader of some organization, you could contribute with some hope of anonymity. You could march and show support as just another face in the crowd. Today, with interlocked databases and face recognition software and no-fly lists and much bigger and more monolithic corporations also tied into the same databases, often all-too-eager to share info with each other and the government, it is MUCH harder to be a face in the crowd. Look at the mass detentions in NYC during the RNC, with “just folks” disappearing into a holding pen on a filthy pier. We live under a corpo/gov’t hegemony that has demonstrated that they are willing to make life VERY hard for people who cause trouble. I think that the knowledge of this has seeped into people, and I think it makes putting yourself out there harder. I’ve had people express to me that they wonder that I even post my political opinions online, wondering if I worry about it coming back to bite me later.
Fear has been deeply pushed into people’s heads in this culture. It’s important to remember that. Most people are one paycheck away from missing their rent or mortgage payment, one illness away from financial disaster. That eats at people and makes them cautious. Add to that the political threat of being labeled a troublemaker …
Add to that the political threat of being labeled a troublemaker …
Or worse.
Excellent point about the economic precariousness of most of our citizens. Especially when you have children to feed, a roof to be kept over your head. Most think it wise to keep your on counsel and keep it moving.
Can you blame them?
the hardcore resistance started after the depression that led to the labor movement. It takes disaster for movements to begin, sometimes.
You’re right, and that terrifies me. A former colleague of mine who worked health care issues basically said that we won’t get universal health care until there’s a “health depression.”
It doesn’t seem like we’ll stop this war until folks feel they have a real stake in it, either by losing a family member or friend or the specter of having to risk your life there.
How long do we remain oblivious to the trials, the pain, the anguish of our fellow citizens? How much more “disaster” can we take before it is finally intolerable?
Excellent points. The culture of fear is real. Also many people are living on the financial edge, under the constant threat of their jobs being cut. I do think we are a cowed nation.
Terrific post Booman.
We’re in an interesting moment. The antiwar movement has 65% of the people on its side, yet has very little connection with most of the people who share its perspective. Some parts do, especially the Military Families against the War and maybe Code Pink. But essentially, people have come to revolt against the Iraq adventure because the Bushies are losing. They didn’t get there by adhering to any alternative antiwar infrastructure because we haven’t been able to build one.
One very important difference from the Vietnam era that gets obscured in these discussions is that Vietnam, from 1964-1968, was a DEMOCRATIC war. This was the height of the draft as well. LBJ made Humphrey, who probably knew better, run on a pro-war platform in 1968. So consequently we couldn’t evolve a left to right spectrum running from the hard Far left, to the loosely left, to the peaceniks, to the Dems, to the “realist” Republicans,to the hawks — until it finally became Nixon’s war, functionally after 1970.
So in that era, the option of creating a left within the Democratic party just wasn’t there until very late — and by then there was a flimsy, but real critical mass of political infrastructure outside the parties.
It was a different time.
I am a lurker on lots of left leaning blogs, I also am a street protestor. I attend a protest every Sat in my local small conservative, midwestern town, we have done this since the start of the war. I also have gone to several larger protests including the J27 in DC. It is pretty dismaying to read Kos, Maha, SteveG, etc. snark at those of us who bother to leave our keyboards, change out of our PJ’s, and head out onto a street somewhere and visibly register our opposition to this war(and the ones to come). We have come to accept that the MSM will not cover our activities, and when they do will distort our numbers. It is hard to understand the hostility of the netroots. What is their beef? Do they think there is only one road to Oz? I completely agree with you Booman on the visibility of the street protests to the rest of the world.
This week when we went to DC our bus driver, who is a working class black, said ‘I am glad you people are doing what you are doing.” When we got on the Metro at Shady Grove a man of obvious Mideastern descent noting our signs asked us where we were headed. We explained about the march and he said “thank you for speaking out for us”. When we sat in Union Station after the march getting ready to head back to Shady Grove to catch our 8 hr bus ride home a Hispanic woman who was cleaning up tables complimented me on having my children with me to protest this “terrible war”.
Not everyone is a blogger. Lots and lots of people get all their news from Fox. We march for them and to register our rage to the rest of the world.
I love the blogs, I worked hard in the midterm elections. I called all over the country for MoveON, I have bombarded Congress with e-mails etc on various topics, I campaigned door to door for my unsuccessful Dem challanger in a Republican district. I had yard signs up, went to meetups, sent money, I worked as poll worker, and I voted. I love to follow the whole Libby “Fitzmas” doings and appreciated FDL, Kos, etc and the work they do. I must admit I am a bit miffed with their criticism. We need to work together to get this job done. I am sure the Rethugs love to see our internal snipeing.
Nice to see MaxS, Booman, and a few others expressing support for our tactics. I think we have a common enemy, I hope I am right.
thank you for this. Well said.
i was so fucking pissed i had to work sat – sun and had to miss the march.
this is one hell of a post.