NEW YORK —There was a marked sameness to the protest marches in
New York City last week — several of them came through my
neighborhood and one crossed in front of my building. What was
striking, to my eye, was the tension between the protesters and the
police … or, rather, how utterly one-sided the tension was.
No matter how the protesters ranted and raved, the police, for
their part, remained eerily serene. Indeed, the exchanges between
the two sides seemed less adversarial than familial. The protesters
shuffled down the street like spoiled children, chanting their
potty-mouthed slogans, hoisting their profanity-filled signs, their
leaders snarling and yapping at the cops along the way, crying,
“You can’t tell us to …” or “We have a right to … ” And
the cops — many of whom were disconcertingly young, perhaps a year
or two out of the academy — stood by impassively, aloof, like
patient parents, their arms folded, hearing (but not really
listening), nodding (but not really consenting), letting the
demonstrators vent their frustrations before moving them along.
Amid the sameness of the marches, however, I did witness a
protest singularity. Late Thursday night, 11:45, I was walking back
to my apartment on West 34th Street. Walking several yards ahead of
me was a young man wearing a “Wage Peace!” T-shirt. The convention
had just adjourned at Madison Square Garden, and conventioneers
were streaming in our direction. As they passed by, the young man
began to berate them. “You should be ashamed of yourself!” “Dick
Cheney is a liar! He’s a damn liar!” “How do you sleep at
night?”
He continued to scream right up until he encountered a larger
cluster of convention goers which included three burly sailors in
full navy dress. At the sight of the servicemen, the young man
suddenly clammed up. He walked in silence for perhaps fifteen steps
until he crossed paths with an elderly couple — at which point he
began to yell again.
Rage … cowardice … and more rage.
That will be the lasting impression I take with me of the
protests of 2004.