Rally? What Rally?

Context is everything. 

Normally, tens of thousands of citizens gathering in the nation’s capital would be considered a victorious display of strength.  But in the wake of the recent Glenn Beck Rally and Tea Parties in Washington, the union-organized One Nation Working Together rally seemed woefully under-attended.  Intended to demonstrate that the American left is still alive and kicking, the rally instead landed with a muffled thud on the national mall.

Whereas Beck attracted throngs of people impassioned by fiery rhetoric, big names, and audacious theatricality, One Nation’s response seemed merely a blip.  The mall’s spacious lawns displayed their full greenery, having recovered from some serious Tea Party treading just weeks before.   DC residents confronted with activists en route to the Lincoln Memorial quizzically muttered, “Rally?  What Rally?” 

The unions’ inability to produce the hype or headlines already surrounding the forthcoming Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert rallies uncomfortably belied the event.  Were the obvious comparison points absent, and had the organizers not been such powerful national groups, the thousands of assembled marchers would have been impressive.

“I’m not a very big proponent of ordinary marches like this, so I’m just gonna put that right out there,” says Nadine Bloch, who works for the Washington Peace Center.  Instead, Bloch believes in using creative forms of resistance, cultural work, and direct action.  Towering over her, a 12-foot paper mache “Goddess of Peace and Liberation” demonstrates her views.  Covered with slogans such as “Fund Jobs, Not War” and “Build Schools, Not Bombs,” the Goddess is the creation of a consortium of social justice movements called The Peace Table.  “Marches are important for bringing communities together, showing strength to each other, perhaps sending a message to the White House, if you get really lucky.  So we’re here just to add color and creative expression.”

Close by, dressed in a snazzy suit and smoking a pretzel cigar, Harold Gotbucks III of the Buffalo Billionaires flashes a winning smile.  “The Billionaires decided we need to come down here and counteract these proletarian working people, running around and causing trouble,” he explains.  “They should just shut up and stop complaining!”  The satirical character is in reality Eric Gallion, a part-time engineer who bussed down with his local unions (shunning his private jet).  Gallion believes that humor adds an additional dimension to political debate, a notion that, once again, will come to the fore in the Stewart/Colbert rally.  “I think it makes it more fun and at the same time more real to people.  It’s too easy to just kind of blank out the people with signs.”

As with all large political events, the One Nation rally attracted a variety of like-minded groups hoping to capitalize on the event.  Exemplifying the plethora of causes, four women strolled through the crowd covered in bumper stickers collected from the myriad organizers.  “We just went to everybody, just meeting everybody and hearing their causes.”  The women, who traveled 14-hours by bus from Georgia, came to support the International Longshoreman’s Association/Local 1414 union, whose office is across the way from their restaurant Mama T’s.

For all its good causes, the One Nation rally may have ultimately been counter-productive for the unions.  Given the context, they may have inadvertently proved that they are no longer the backbone of the left. 

-Niv Elis

A Holiday Born of Protest

This Labor Day, in addition to enjoying barbecues and celebrating the end of a relentlessly hot summer, Quotidian Dissent would like to recall the history of the holiday.  It sprung forth from a protest:

The original inspiration of Labor Day was a protest of the traditional 12 hour work day.  Worker strikes, boycotts, unrest and even riots laid the groundwork for labor reform and a dedicated day off honoring all American workers, with rallies and parades starting in 1882.  The first parade was the result of the US troops opening fire on striking workers in New York City that year.

Two years later…the famous Pullman coach worker’s strike against the nation’s railroads literally shut down commerce coast to coast and erupted in violence.  With over 125,000 railroad workers striking, 13 strikers were killed and more than 50 injured in a riot in Chicago.  Later that year, the first Monday in September was sanctioned by the Federal government as a national holiday.

Thankfully, labor laws have come a long way since then; the only people gathered outside the White House today were tourists.  -QD

Pullman Town Strike - Where It All Began

The Ruckus - July 25, 2010

This week on the Ruckus:

  • Not to be outdone, the Westboro Baptist Church set its sites on the Comic-Con comic book convention.  Perhaps they weren’t expecting the counter-protesting prowess of Comics enthusiasts (don’t miss the pictures).

  • In response to France’s lower house passing a ban on the niqab (full-body Islamic veil) in public spaces, hundreds of men in Karachi, Pakistan gathered to protest, carrying signs reading “Down with the West.”
  • Unions staged protests against job cuts and decreased health benefits at Hyatt hotels in 15 cities.  63 of the protesters in west Hollywood were arrested.

In other news, 21 of the undocumented students participating in Dream University (covered in this blog last week) were arrested while staging a sit-in at a Senate office building.  Depending on whether and how they are charged, the arrests might result in deportation.

Join us again on “The Ruckus” next week for your round-up of protests near and far!

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