Archive: April 16th, 2007

weakest. protest. march. ever.

Busing the protestorsApparently the marching orders were issued by Mayor Fenty at 2:30 sharp.

That’s not good for sprite and me, as we got to Freedom Plaza at 2:50.

We’d seen a few people heading down into the Metro Center station with rally paraphernalia – signs, badges and t-shirts – but didn’t really think that the rally would be over so soon – after all, political time in DC is relative, and seldom ever punctual. So we headed into Caribou to buy some warm beverages.

So when we arrived at Freedom Plaza to see a line of buses heading down Pennsylvania Avenue, we were disappointed. Sure, it was windy with spotty drizzle, but were all of the marchers so weak?

We decided to walk down Penn (mailing our taxes along the way). While there was certainly a long line of buses, there weren’t many people marching toward the Capitol building. Is this the new model protest march?

In the wind and drizzleWhen we arrived at the Capitol reflecting pool, a crowd of 2,000-or-so was amassed, and leaders were speaking from the dais. There were some chants of “free DC” and “voting rights now,” but it was a rather uninspiring sight and sound to these eyes. Where were the massive crowds? Where were the congressmen who were scheduled to speak?

Senator Lieberman? Congressman Shays?

Anybody?

Where was the outrage?

The speeches wrapped up by 3:30 – half an hour before they were slated to begin. What the… ?

Perhaps people were just there to get the t-shirt, sign, or badge, and then leave.

Or perhaps in Mayor Fenty’s DC, civil disobedience runs on a tight schedule.

ETA: according to photo evidence, there was a march. But it sure doesn’t look like it was much of a crowd that marched – I’m betting that more than just seniors boarded the myriad buses that followed the marchers.

So my conclusion still stands.

marching for a vote

This afternoon, sprite and I will be marching in the Voting Rights March to help DC finally get the congressional representation it needs.

Isn’t it alarming that we’re trying to force democracy down the throats of Iraq and Afghanistan, while we can’t grant it for the almost 600,000 residents of the District of Columbia? We’re taxed as much as any other United States citizen – if not more so. Yet we have no say in congress about how these taxes are spent.

We have our young men and women fighting the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, some of them being killed in the line of duty. Yet we have no voice in the halls of congress about whether or not we should go to war against enemies, both real and fabricated.

The men and women of congress use the District of Columbia as their political petri dish, testing out all kinds of policy – both good and cockamamie – far and away from their home constituencies. Why? Because there are no repercussions for doing so when the testing is on the citizens of DC.

We’re the last colony. We are being taxed without representation.

And it must stop now.

So regardless of the gale-force winds that are leaving trees strewn across roads (and parked cars) here in DC, we march.

go, flipper and llh!

Just a quick posting to offer some virtual cheers to Dianna and Jeff in their Boston Marathon quest today. They’ll face the worst that Mother Nature has to dish out, and I’m sure they’ll come out smiling!

So:

Go for it, Flipperhead!

Go for it, LeakyLatherHead!