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10,000 Ways of Saying No
Also in Election 2004
How Bush Won
Mark Danner
Not Your Grandfather's Anti-Semitism
Tony Judt
The Myth of the Exurban Voter
Ruy Teixeira
Back to Bush's Regularly Scheduled Problems
David Corn
My Holiday Gift List
Jim Hightower
Will the GOP Nuke the Constitution?
Arianna Huffington
We couldn't have a rally in the Great Meadow of Central Park because 250,000 people would ruin the grass, and because we didn't come to court early enough to say pretty please can we have our rights – that's what the judge ruled when United for Peace and Justice, the organizer of today's mammoth demonstration asked him to rule that the city must give us a permit. So thats why thousands of us, though dead on our feet from a day of marching on New York's unforgiving cement, were determined that the Great Meadow is where we would be, permit or not. The Great Meadow became our great green mother, beckoning us into her arms. And we came and by late afternoon, she was filled with our sweaty and tired bodies. We sprawled on her grass, our picket signs and banners laid down beside us, as the cooling shadows spread , and practiced a peaceful, pleasant politics, a politics without speeches, which is not really such a bad thing. Perhaps the judge did us a favor after all.
It was one of those days where everything worked out. United for Peace and Justice did exactly what it intended to do – turned out the numbers to protest the Republican National Convention. All the trash talk about how tough the cops would be, all the scary stories of their fancy high tech weapons, the sonic blaster that could break eardrums, all the on-again off-again uncertainty about a permit did not deter us. By 10:30 a.m., the designated feeder streets for the march in lower Manhattan are clogged with people and more are coming every minute. On 15th St., both sides of the entire block between 6th and 7th Avenue are lined with cardboard coffins under construction, each draped with its own American flag. A few blocks further on, a Korean dance group, with drums and clashing cymbols, dance through the crowd. Metal police barricades line both sides of 7th Ave., the designated march route; the crowd fills every inch between them and stretches in both directions as far as the eye can see. At noon the great mass of people begins to move up the avenue towards Madison Square Garden. As we get closer, the lines of police behind the barricades thicken. Every intersection is blocked by a sanitation truck, behind which is a street full of police vehicles of every sort and description.
The closer we get to the Garden the more police line the barricades. By the time we reach the Garden itself, the cordon of cops is three or four rows deep, supplemented by clots of Secret Service, looking like refugees from a Men in Black sequel, except their sunglasses are a different brand, and their suits are charcoal gray, not black. They all sport that little cork screw wire dangling from their ear, a sure sign that theyre not quite human. Hanging from the Garden Arena is a many stories high banner of the Statue of Liberty with a background of stars and stripes. Just up the street, the equally huge billboard proclaimed Fox News the place where America goes to get its information.
The block of 7th Avenue directly in front of the Garden is as close as we will get to what more than one sign calls the asses of evil. The crowd roars, and yells epithets, and chants RNC Go Home more loudly and breaks out the sidewalk chalk to write greetings to the delegates.
Just before we pass the Garden and make the turn towards 5th Ave., we catch a whiff of tear gas. A woman on rollerblades says there's been arrests, but for the hundreds of thousands of us who are not watching it on the news, this march may be the largest and perhaps the least violent well ever experience in our lifetime.
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