From the heart of DC, BMIMC reporter Holly Hoxley offers a report of events as the weekend starts heating up.
* Earlier tonight, on Friday, September 23 at 6 PM, bikers met at DuPont Circle to join the Global Justice Antiwar Critical Mass bike ride.
* From 7 to 9 PM, CODE PINK held a vigil at the Walter Reed Medical Center.
Global Justice Anitwar Critical Mass
The District of Columbia Bicycle Courier Association (DCBCA) states that their regularly scheduled “Solidarity Ride is a casual, fun ride.” Given the police presence at many past Critical Mass rides in DC and elsewhere, there was some concern among observers that conflict and arrests might result. However, police presence at this event was minimal, as it has been so far at all events observed tonight by our reporter.
Due to scarce information on the route of the Critical Mass, BMIMC reporter Hollie Hoxley and others had little luck in following the entire route. However, during the start of the ride at DuPont Circle, there were several hundred bikes gearing up for the ride, one of whom was a former Carbondale resident.
Pedestrian bystanders responded to the event with puzzled looks. As with many other mass public gatherings, the unexpected site of several hundred people on bicycles left passers-by with a mix of curiosity and confusion. Some, however, had a more clear negative response, including a businessman who responded angrily to the large and often vocal presence of the bikers.
Overall, there was a lack of understanding among observers of what a critical mass was and why it was being organized. People on bikes and people on foot had little direct communication as the cyclists went around the circle and continued on their route, leaving no way for participants to explain what they were doing. The main explanation offered was a visual one -- the sight of hundreds of cyclists riding together on city streets. Largely, the participants enjoyed a good bike ride and supported one another in reclaiming the road. But it remains unclear how many of the observers may have gotten the message about the legitimacy of bicycles as a form of transportation.
Hollie Hoxley, BMIMC reporter commented, "Unlike the paperboy, these bike riders didn't deliver."
unpublihed route, several hundred bikes, dupont circle was the start, puzzled peds like at ant demo, some annoyed, incl angry businessman. overall, a lack of understanding of what critical mass was., no sympatico between bike and peds, no way to explain.
Code Pink Vigil at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center
Since March, Code Pink has been holding a regular vigil outside of the Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C. According to interviews with Code Pink members and information on the Code Pink website, the main message of these vigils had been that these wounded and disabled veterans are being treated poorly by the government. They are upset with how the government sends these soldiers out to fight in wars yet doesn't take good care of the wounded.
Tonight, Code Pink held the latest in this series of vigils. However, given the tie-in to the weekend of events in D.C., tonight's vigil was a much larger affair.
At the start of the vigil, BMIMC reporter Hollie Hoxley noted some possible race issues. The gathering in preparation for the vigil occured in a predominantly African American neighborhood, and the participants were predominantly white, creating the unexpected scene of a mass of white people walking through a neighborhood of color. Articles on the Code Pink website, however, report that previous vigils have included positive dialog with residents in the local neighborhood. It remains to see how this weekend will affect future vigils.
Once the vigil started, it was clear that the special weekend had boosted turnout dramatically. The turnout in previous vigils had been approximately 25-30 people, along with a varying number of counter-vigilers. Tonight's turnout, however, was approximately 200 people, along with over one hundred counter-vigilers.
The mood was tense on all sides of the event. Code Pink organizers expressed their intent to hold this and all of their other vigils at the site in a dignified and respectful vigil. However, the effort to present this united front faltered tonight under the pressure exerted by counter-protesters.
Counter-vigilers had a variety of signs, chants, numerous American flags, and various other messages and slogans to direct at the Code Pink vigil.
An overweight white male proudly wearing an American flag on his polo shirt lead one of the group chants by shouting: "Shame on Code Pink!" In response, a group of his well-dressed middle-aged supporters would respond with: "Leave the Wounded Alone!"
When cars would honk for Code Pink, counter-vigilers would make ridiculing "raspberry" noises.
Some examples of counter-vigiler signs:
* "Hippies Smell"
* "Iraq Gives Code Pink the Purple Finger"
* "Straight Girls Heart Men in Uniform" (No "straight girls," however, were available for comment.)
According to Code Pink supporters, the counter-provigilers are viscious toward anyone who is not a counter-vigiler, including personal insults and instigation of shouting matches. At tonight's vigil, this contributed to a very competitive atmosphere void of listening and dialog. Despite any efforts of Code Pink to the contrary, the event degraded into a shouting match between the two sides, with loose cannons on both side shouting back at forth at one another.
One Code Pink supporter was walking around correcting people's pronunciation of the word Iraq. After doing the Iraq pronunciation dance the woman became combative and shouted at BMIMC reporter Hollie Hoxley, "Bitch." The supporter was unable to identify which "side" the reporter was on due to a lack of pink in the reporters attire. Later, the woman apologized for her behavior.
Code Pink has tried to contact the Fisher House, an organization that supports families of veterans above and beyond what the government provides. However, they have not yet been successful in creating a relationship to send in letters, care packages, etc. to those in medical center.
On a local note, Code Pink reports that Barak Obama, a U.S. Senator from Illinois, has been influential in making conditions better at this medical center.
During the vigil, BMIMC reporter Hollie Hoxley interviewed several members of Code Pink.
One of these was Tiffany, who is a paid employee of Code Pink. Tiffany helps to organizes local chapters, spent the summer in Crawford, and was arrested at the RNC in a protest related to Dick Cheney. Her father was a vet, and she was formerly employeed with finding transitional housing for homeless vets. She said she's been personally in contact with those inside the medical center. Her concern is that "they have to pay for band-aids." They're being asked to pay out of pocket for many of the expenses that are required to cover their own care after being wounded.
Hollie asked two of the other CP women: Are vigils enough to address this issue? One responded that people who are going by the vigil can see the intentions of people participating in the vigils , leading to a very powerful experience. Even with the counter-vigilers, people who are going by these places can see the difference between the two sides very starkly. This, according to a Code Pink member, gets people to think about the issue based on seeing the difference between the two sides discovering the benevolent intentions of Code Pink.
Hollie also asked the participant how she felt about the "us versus them" mentality encountered at the vigil. She said that she just views counter-vigilers as uninformed about herself and the issue at hand. Therefore, she doesn't take the "us versus them" attacks personally.
Parting thoughts from Hollie (as reported to Treesong)
In many ways, tonight's vigil just seemed like an opportunity for participants to cheer for their team. Both "sides" of the event showed some of this behavior, creating a competitive atmosphere similar to a heated football or soccer game. This left little room for much dialog. Instead, the public discourse was dominated by the question of who can talk louder and whose remarks were more biting, with few if any participants truly listening. Code Pink participants left at the end of their scheduled vigil to prepare for tomorrow's events, but counter-vigilers stayed on site long after Code Pink left if only to ensure that they had "the last word."
More News
Currently, BMIMC reporter Hollie Hoxley is at Saint Stephen's Church, site of a mass gathering of demonstrator medics. Stay tuned for more reports from this and upcoming events on this special weekend of mass demonstration in Washington D.C.
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Re: As Thing Start To Heat Up: Friday's DC Protest Coverage
here we go again
By the end of the 60's, many activists had come to the conclusion the protests, much larger, more frequent, and more threatening, were not working. In retrospect, we paint a rosy picture and relate the protests in a general sense to the result of the U.S. ending its involvement in the Vietnam War. Therefore, all protests should work, it's other people's fault, or other groups within the protests, that keep that from happening.
Hurricanes win. The 5 people (non-activist) watching C-SPAN on a Saturday afternoon are falling asleep.
Organizing and attending these protests is asking a lot of people. Time and money.
A lack of mass critical thinking dooms us to continuing this pointless charade. One mother and a small group of supporters (initially) was able to get more attention and press than the "anti-[Iraq] war movement" (ha) has since it began. That was accidental of course, and may not work if repeated in exactly the same form, but it illustrates other methods can have more of an impact than the same ol' mass protests in DC on the weekend. Requiring FAR less people and asking very little of others.
Re: here we go again
Re: here we go again
There hasn't been a mass mobilization in DC against the war in over a year, So what continuous mass mobilizations are you talking about?
Do mass mobilizations stop the war? Do they start the revolution? -- no. BUT, Mass mobilizations are important for bringing new people into greater levels of activism and for maintaining the spirits of people who do day-to-day activism by surrounding them with like-minded people. Otherwise, especially if you live in "red state" America, it is easy to feel isolated and hopeless. Mass mobilizations provide people with opportunities to express their views in a public forum where they can be heard and not interrupted, and where they can, if they want to, engage in dialogue with others about the very strategies that you describe.
They also do give some media indication of the volume of the anti-war movement and make it easy to disprove media arguments that "most people" support the war. We know this from polls, but it's one thing to be an anonymous voice in a poll, and another to express yourself publicly in a fun and creative way.
Re: As Thing Start To Heat Up: Friday's DC Protest Coverage
I love it when millionaires talk of direct action and taking it to the streets and pay Martha Stuart with the message on your signs.
Re: As Thing Start To Heat Up: Friday's DC Protest Coverage
Re: As Thing Start To Heat Up: Friday's DC Protest Coverage
"Just as the devastation on the Gulf Coast was not merely the product of a natural disaster, the war itself is not some aberration—a conspiracy by a handful of right-wing ideologues. Rather, it is the inevitable product of an American capitalist society in deep crisis.
"The use of force to lay hold of vital resources and markets has gone hand in hand with the destruction within the US of social programs and attacks on real wages to fund massive tax cuts for the rich. It is a policy of plunder at home and plunder abroad.
"There is no doubt that the many thousands of students, youth and working people who march in the streets of Washington this weekend do so out of genuine anger and a burning desire to put an end to a criminal war launched in their name.
"But calls by the protest organizers to “bring our demands directly to the policymakers” and “send a clear message to the White House and Congress” serve a definite political purpose. It is to subordinate mass opposition to the war to the Democratic Party and divert the outrage over New Orleans back into the confines of a two-party system that created the conditions for the catastrophe in the first place.
"It is high time to learn the lessons of more than two-and-a-half years of protest against the war in Iraq.
"The struggle against war, social inequality and the assault on democratic rights can advance only on the path of an irrevocable break with the Democratic Party and the building of a fundamentally new political movement.
"This means building a mass political party of working people based on a socialist program for reordering society on the basis of equality and social needs, rather than the piling up of corporate profits and personal fortunes.
"This party must advance a program of irreconcilable opposition to imperialism, demanding the immediate and unconditional withdrawal of US troops from Iraq, Afghanistan and wherever else they are deployed to further US corporate interests. It must also fight for holding criminally responsible all those who dragged the American people into an illegal war based on lies.
"The twin debacles for American capitalism in Iraq and New Orleans make clear that this historic task can be postponed no longer. We urge all those seeking a genuine means of putting an end to war, social inequality and political reaction to read and support the World Socialist Web Site and join the Socialist Equality Party."
Re: As Thing Start To Heat Up: Friday's DC Protest Coverage
Re: Re: As Thing Start To Heat Up: Friday's DC Protest Coverage
Re: Re: Re: As Thing Start To Heat Up: Friday's DC Protest Coverage
Re: As Thing Start To Heat Up: Friday's DC Protest Coverage
But as a copy editor, gotta tell you: run a friggin' SPELLCHECK. This detracts from the credibility of your report.
Keep the faith.
TdG
Re: As Thing Start To Heat Up: Friday's DC Protest Coverage
It's a bike ride, not a protest. Some might try and steer it one way or another, but it is still just a visual moment. More Bikes, Less Cars.
As a NYC'er, I want to thank the DC people for showing me the first arrest free ride in 16 months.
-sound bike guy
Re: As Thing Start To Heat Up: Friday's DC Protest Coverage
What a fucking shock. Anti-racists causing a riot condition. If not for the Black Bloc, Anti Racist Assholes and other assorted violent communists, the anti-war movement would go mainstream. Marches would be counted in the tens of millions instead of hundreds of thousands. However, since violent groups like the communist scumbags ANSWER are given credibility, the average taxpayer declines to make their voice heard. They do not want to go to a march that violence is inevitable. HMM. Violence at a demo to end a war? That's communist doublespeak for you!!! The prowar crowd, although smaller, will get far more respect from Joe Q. Taxpayer that funds the war. They will also get far more favorable media coverage because of their behavior and how they dress. I personally am 100% against the war for very different reasons than 99.9% of the antiwar crowd, but that's another story. The prowar crowd will be less than 10% of the antiwar crowd and will garner far more respect because they use soap, a comb and more fashion sense. Isn't it about time to change tactics, people?
Re: Re: As Thing Start To Heat Up: Friday's DC Protest Coverage
There are logistical problems (people have families, jobs, day-to-day shit to worry about; it costs to travel, etc.) Outreach problems. Organizational problems. Lack of purpose.
Why does it matter that I go out there? Will I miss the 5 hour speech-a-thon (aired on C-SPAN anyway)? Will my attendance mean anything or am I just another number, numbers that mean shit, except, "Hey, we had X amount of people show up, isn't that great?" Who cares about these numbers, what does it really mean? Is there some magic number of people who must attend a protest before everything changes?
The sad thing is, we started with a tiny fraction of people during the anti-globalization movement and were able to make a greater impact from the beginning. We were made it interesting and worthwhile. People organized in smaller groups with specific goals in mind, strategies. It made it more interesting for those attending, empowered those people, and the protests had a real impact, despite the lack of numbers. What was reported, only here that I've seen, a few "black bloc" people did, and we're not talking anti-glob size black blocs, is really petty shit in comparisn.
You know, whether there are protests or not, something is going to happen with this war. Either shit will magically start working out over there and we'll withdrawal troops (not all, that never happens), or it'll continue to be so bad we'll have to drastically reduce our presence in hopes Iraqis we'll do a better working shit out without us being in the middle of it all. And you know who'll take credit for that? The groups who organize these horrible protests, and the people who participated. It's sad because then when America goes invade somewhere else, this same failed strategy, the same boring groups will take charge and do the exact same shit, doing it until the war ends or whatever. Wars do not go on full steam forever, especially not today. There's always a turning point, and that turning point doesn't occur as a result of protests, especially not ones as pointless and unthreatening as these. Yet people continue to believe that. When we're doing shit that has the leaders directly addressing us, on the defensive against us, showing fear of us in public, that's how we know we're having an effect. Maybe not a great enough of an effect. That was what we were able to do with the anti-globalization movement, put the LEADERS on the defensive everywhere they went.
Bush being in the hurricane area has nothing to do with being afraid of the protests. He's trying to save his ass for his failures during Katrina. He doesn't give a flying fuck about this. He probably doesn't even know it happened, even if he watched the news for once.
I can't believe I just sat here and wrote all this crap to an audience of 10 who don't want to hear it anyway. Whatever.
Re: Re: Re: As Thing Start To Heat Up: Friday's DC Protest Coverage
Sure, large/mass protests are pretty ineffective over all as far as reaching the greatest populas or stopping certain gov't actions, but it does help out organization, community, and not to mention a sense of purpose in the radical community, atleast a little bit.
Re: As Thing Start To Heat Up: Friday's DC Protest Coverage
Re: As Thing Start To Heat Up: Friday's DC Protest Coverage
Bush based his illegal war for oil in Iraq in part on the official propaganda of 9/11. I am surprised you could not see that, unless the corporate controlled media already indoctrinates you.
The really cool progressives do not accept the corporate controlled media propaganda of 19 hijackers and jet airplanes. There are many really cool progressive Web sites that show it was squib charges and holograms used on 9/11.
The Web Fairy and me question authority and use Internet chat boards to show others that the 72 dpi images we use certainly disprove the months of detailed study by engineers from the National Science Foundation.
As long as we keep up with our really cool postings to let the world know the truth, I would have to assume that we will in fact stop the illegal war in Iraq, have Rummy and Bush and Cheney arrested as war criminals, force Halliburton to give all of their illegal war profits to the Free Mumia Abu-Jamal fund, and overturn the marijuana laws in the U.S.
Peace. -- Scott Laughrey