By Reid Collins on 1.20.03 @ 12:03AM
As we saw on Saturday from the Washington Mall, C-Span shows you what the biased press will never report.
The lady from Dubuque who rode 23 hours on a bus to get to the
antiwar demonstration in Washington, D. C. Saturday may have been a
little dazed by it all. She had come to protest the government's
likely prosecution of a war in which her sons and those of her
neighbors might be hurt or killed along with those of another
people virtually unrepresented in Dubuque. But she was met by
something else hardly native to Iowa.
In addition to the known speakers, Jesse Jackson, Sharpton, the
actress Jessica Lange, Congressman Conyers, the speaker's stage was
occupied for a large part of two hours by those with other agendas.
One organizer brought greetings from Mumia Abu-Jamal, the black
Philadelphian convicted of killing a white policeman in 1981, whose
cause is celebrated throughout the leftist world and who supplies
taped messages from his cell. An Imam somebody brought more
greetings from Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin, known in another day as H.
Rap Brown, onetime head of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating
Committee now doing time for shooting a deputy sheriff in
Georgia.
The Rev. Sharpton made note of the Martin Luther King
anniversary, saying in addition to fighting for fair distribution
of wealth, Dr. King wouldn't be "inside [the White House planning
for war], he'd be on the outside saying, 'Give Peace a chance.'"
Displayed prominently was a quotation from Dr. King from the late
1960s in which he said "the greatest purveyor of violence... is my
government."
The attorney general from the Johnson era got the crowd going by
calling for the impeachment of President Bush. Ramsey Clark recited
the Constitution's causes for impeachment -- treason, bribery, and
other high crimes and misdemeanors -- then ticking off questions
about Bush's actions based on each, Clark asked, "Is that an
impeachable offense?" To each, the crowd chorused, "yes!" Clark and
other organizers said they are setting up a website to further the
cause of Bush's impeachment.
The rally was organized by the outfit called the International
ANSWER (Act Now to Stop War and End Racism). It came into being
with lightning speed, three days after 9/11, to oppose whatever it
might turn out that President Bush and the U. S. Government decided
to do about the slaughter. Though it is obvious from the Woodward
account, Bush At War, that Iraq wasn't even on the radar
scope in those early days.
The visitor from Dubuque may have been disappointed to hear
calls from the podium for the dissolution of the U.S. form of
government. The heavy emphasis on the evils of the status quo and
the need for radical change -- the elision of foreign policy and
racial oppression. To assuage her disappointment, she needed only
to spend $1.50 for the Sunday edition of the Washington
Post.
Now, there was the antiwar protest she had expected to find. A
scrubbed, anti-septic version characterized by the headline:
"Thousands Oppose a Rush to War." The Washington Post lead
was reminiscent of those old broadsides from Mao's press: "Tens of
thousands ...making a thunderous presence in the bitter cold."
But where were the speeches? The words from the podium? From one
end of the
newspaper piece to the other there was but a single quote, that
of Jesse Jackson saying, "The world is cold, but our hearts are
warm." Fuzzy, non-confrontational. Not a mention of Mumia, not a
scintilla of H. Rap Brown. Not even a hint that Ramsey Clark was in
the country. Lots of anecdotals from visitors. "We want peace,"
said Mari Anderson of Titusville, Florida. The Post found
Nancy Patton who rode a bus from Westland, Michigan, who allowed
the war seems "more about oil than terrorism."
Others said suffering in the cold was nothing to "the suffering
inflicted by U.S. policies in the world," reflecting the Dr. King
sentiments from the podium. No one was asked for the article what
he thought of the event, of the program, was it what was expected?
In addition to the double byline at the top of the story, at the
end of it there were six Post reporters credited with
contributing their talents in addition to the Associated Press. Was
there a reason why the podium program went unreported?
Before the bus leaves for the return to Dubuque, time to search
for the antiwar story in the Washington Final of the New York
Times. There it is, inside, on page 12. And, yes, there is one
speaker quoted. Actor Martin Sheen said in San Francisco, "If the
people lead, the leaders will follow."
Confession: the lady from Dubuque is an invention, but she is
representative of an America that exists. People with heartfelt
opinions who are in disagreement with the policy that leads
inevitably to war with Iraq but who have no desire to add their
bodies to the numbers calling for freedom for Mumia Abu-Jamal or
for the destruction of the current form of American government.
They resist having their honest sentiments subsumed by purveyors of
other agendas. They want to change minds, not governments. And they
wonder of events such as the antiwar demonstration of Saturday,
January 18 -- "were it not for C-Span, how would we ever know?"
topics:
Foreign Policy, Constitution, Iraq, Oil