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Public Thunder
By Dan Frosch, AlterNet
Posted on August 29, 2004, Printed on August 30, 2004
http://www.alternet.org/story/19712/

Together, undaunted by a blazing late summer sun,
hundreds of thousands marched through some of New York
City's busiest streets on Sunday in a massive protest
against George Bush and the Republican National
Convention. The BBC estimated the number of
demonstrators at over 250,000.

Some carried clever posters decrying George Bush's
ascent to power. Others wielded drums, horns, or in one
case, a frying pan, and banged out their frustrations
in rhythm. Still others carried small children on their
shoulders.

Despite rumblings about Molotov-cocktail hurling
anarchists and a bitter last-minute legal battle
between protest organizers and the city of New York
over where to hold the march, Sunday's event was
largely peaceful, even as protestors came face to face
with police, the secret service, and a loud contingent
of Republican hecklers at Madison Square Garden, the
site of the convention.

A police spokeswoman told AlterNet at 8:30 p.m. on
Sunday night that 200 arrests were made, a relatively
small amount considering the sheer number of protestors
- at press time, organizers estimated 450,000 according
to news reports while the police have not yet released
a figure - and there were no immediate reports of
violence.

According to the AP, the largest mass-arrest was of "50
protesters on bicycles who stopped near the parade
route were carted away in an off-duty city bus."
Another 15 were arrested "when someone set a
papier-mache dragon float afire near Madison Square
Garden," the AP reported.

Protestors began gathering between 14th and 22nd
Streets and 7th Avenue in Manhattan's Chelsea
neighborhood early Sunday morning in preparation for
the march. United for Peace and Justice (UFPJ), the
marches' organizer and an umbrella of over 800
different groups nationwide, designated different
sections for the various participating contingents to
assemble - Vietnam, Gulf War and Iraqi War Veterans'
groups were gathered at the front as were labor unions
like Service Employees International Union (SEIU) and
PSC-CUNY (City University of New York's Teachers'
Union). National peace groups, youth and student
collectives, as well as numerous regional organizations
and individual protestors filled in behind them.

Virtually all those in attendance were donned in
brightly-hued t-shirts, holding an equally colorful
sign, or wearing a politically charged button, many of
them laden with the sort of sardonic slogans that have
become symbolic of the left's criticism of the Bush
administration.

One man wore a shirt that read "I'll Mess With Texas."
A woman held a sign which said 'Yee-ha Is Not Foreign
Policy.' One elderly man raised a placard asking "Whose
Taxes Would Jesus Cut?" A young woman grinned as she
hoisted a cardboard poster which demanded "Pull Out
Like Your Father Should Have!" Another solemn-faced
woman grasped one which stated: "Bring My Son Home."

"This is incredible," gushed native New Yorker David
Rosner, who came to protest by himself and wore a
button which read "Somewhere in Texas, A Village Is
Missing An Idiot."

Just before noon, filmmaker Michael Moore, Reverend
Jesse Jackson, and UFPJ organizers led the march up
Seventh Ave. toward Madison Square Garden. A team of
yellow-shirted protest marshals from UFPJ locked arms
and escorted them as they walked. The march snaked
uptown at a snail's pace at first, with throngs of
people waiting shoulder to shoulder for nearly an hour
in stifling near-ninety degree heat to walk to one city
block.

"We want an end to this war. We want the troops home,"
said Michael Moore. "It's just not going to work with
us there. We owe a huge apology to the people of Iraq
for creating the amount of death and destruction that
we have created there."

Though police had cordoned off the first half of the
protest route with barriers on either side of 7th
Avenue, preventing anyone from exiting and entering the
march except at designated areas, the mood of the
marchers remained festive. The first ten blocks
resembled more of a raucous political street party than
anything else: Code Pink, a women's social justice
group stopped at virtually every block to perform a
well-choreographed dance routine as they chanted
anti-Bush slogans; a head-bobbing group of teenage
activists co-opted the hit Ludacris hip-hop song "Move
Bitch" and began rapping "Move Bush! Get Out The Way!";
one young woman belted out an unrecognizable protest
tune as she strummed wildly on an acoustic guitar.

Meanwhile, as police helicopters pounded overhead and a
corner of Madison Square Garden's coliseum appeared in
the distance, 80-year-old Phillip Miller trudged along
slowly and deliberately in his full U.S. Army First
Cavalry regiment uniform. "Well, I'm here to protest
the war," he said. "The same unit I fought with in
World War II is fighting in Iraq. If this thing isn't
stopped, it's going to be never-ending." Austin, Texas
native, Rebecca Webber (25) marched nearby.

"My brother's in Iraq. I want him to come home. He
wants to come home. And that's why I'm here."

Things heated up considerably when the protestors
reached Madison Square Garden, which spans from 31st to
33rd Streets between 7th and 8th Avenues. Police had
blocked off the entrance to the arena, and stood
stone-faced, side by side plain-clothes cops and secret
service agents.

"Li-ars! Li-ars!" a huge group of protestors taunted,
as they pressed up against the steel barriers, only a
few feet away from police. "One, Two, Three, Four! We
Don't Want Your Fucking War!" chanted another group in
Kerry/Edwards t-shirts.

The Korean Alliance for Peace and Justice, from Los
Angeles, which advocates for an end to U.S. presence in
Korea and Iraq, formed a circle in front of the
barricade and began playing the drums they were
carrying, and some protestors stopped to dance.
21-year-old Cornelius (last name not given), wearing a
hand-written "Baboons For Bush" shirt, doled out
bananas to curious onlookers. "I'm voting for Bush,
because I'm a baboon, and he's one of us," he chortled.

18-year-old Jessica Miller, from Alexandria Virginia,
and a member of Food Not Bombs, an anarchist affiliated
group which was handing out vegan meals to protestors,
was more serious as she tugged at a gas mask dangling
from her neck.

"I expect everything," she said glancing warily at the
police.

The day before, one anarchist also affiliated with Food
Not Bombs who asked not to be identified, told AlterNet
he didn't expect any violence, and that his group and
others were not planning on breaking away from the main
march.

"Violence would be suicidal," he said.

"This is not a protest. It's more like a conference,"
added Karen Wheeler an organizer for the National Youth
and Student Peace Coalition, which sits on UFPJ's
Steering Committee. "I haven't spoken to or heard from
anyone who wants this march to result in violence or
chaos."

Indeed, the only visible signs of confrontation were
just across from Madison Square Garden where a
hodge-podge of Bush supporters had gathered behind a
police barricade and shouted at marchers walking
directly past them.

"You can't chant U.S.A 'cause you're traitors!"
screamed one purple-faced man. "Get the fuck out of my
city!" hurled back one protestor in a thick New York
accent. From Madison Square Garden, the protest route
took marchers east on 34th Street, over to Fifth Avenue
and down to Union Square, where 14th Street. Park Ave.
and Broadway collide.

Roving teams of legal observers from the National
Lawyers Guild were everywhere, particularly in this
area, offering up legal advice to anyone who asked. One
legal observer, who asked not to be identified, said he
had seen no evidence of police misconduct and had only
taken down one complaint from a protestor throughout
the entire duration of the march. The National Lawyers
Guild's press office could not be reached for comment
at press time.

As the march thundered downtown, police removed
barricades, and the protest flowed more freely all the
way to Union Square, where UFPJ organizers, some
perched on ladders and armed with megaphones, advised
protestors to disperse quietly and peacefully.

Virtually all of them did - with many walking or taking
the subway home, and others heading up to Central
Park's Great Lawn, where UFPJ had originally hoped to
hold the protest (an August 24 New York State Supreme
Court decision ordered them to use the 7th Avenue route
as per the City's request).

Some of the demonstrators after the march headed for
Times Square to pay a visit to the Republican
delegates, who were attending Broadway shows as guests
of The New York Times. Traffic was at a standstill for
many blocks in the theater district, and police
conducted large-scale arbitrary arrests of large groups
without warning, catching protesters, bystanders, legal
observers and some members of the press in their nets.

Back in Central Park, as a light evening wind brushed
the sweat off of the thousands who had trekked uptown
to gather on the Great Lawn's grass, a jazz band played
and a circle of drummers began beating on bongos.

A man in an oversized Dick Cheney mask danced, dangling
a tiny puppet of George Bush in front of him; others
spoke in earnest tones about the day's events;
exhausted news media gobbled long-neglected lunches;
and young children darted amongst the throngs as the
city sun began to move slowly behind the skyscrapers
surrounding them all.

71-year-old Korean War veteran Arlen Dean Snyder
watched, still thrusting his "Bring The Troops Home"
sign high in the air. "This," he said. "was a wonderful
march."

(c) 2004 Independent Media Institute. All rights
reserved. View this story online at:
http://www.alternet.org/story/19712/


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DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
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CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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