“Action is the soul of revolution.” The declaration rang
out as new protesters approached the Upper Senatorial Park for
the D.C. Independence Day tea party. This sentiment echoed
throughout the crowd as various attendees sported t-shirts and
signs to incite action in congress and the presidency and to
protest from the cap-and-trade tax to nationalized health
care.
One particular camo-clad and Bible-brandishing participant,
who wanted to be referred to as simply Mark, willingly discussed
with anybody who would listen about “what’s happening to this
land. Times are changing and not necessarily for the
better.” Mark’s reason for protesting, he said, in part was his
sacred mission from God. Mark was just one example of the vocal
protesters in the crowd composed of moms and dads with children
in tow, groups of friends, patriotic veterans, and college-age
students.
Tea party organizer, Patrick Beck of march4liberty.org,
wanted to bring people together in support of “Constitutional
government and fiscal responsibility, pure and simple.” Beck
explained further, “The ignoring of these two basic principles
has caused the disintegration of our nation at the federal,
state, county, local and even personal level.”
The group of protesters “is not a top-down, centrally
controlled, organization but a bottom-up groundswell of engaged
citizens dedicated to finding candidates who will uphold the
Constitution and be proper stewards of our tax dollars,” Beck
emphasized. Protests like these encourage people to support
candidates that uphold these values and to hold
current-officeholders accountable for their actions.
Protesters sported t-shirts ranging from, “Jefferson is my
homeboy” to “Big brother is watching you” and “Party like it’s
1773”. Creative signs littered the crowded lawn. “Hope and
Chains” sign played on the famous (or infamous) Obama
catchphrase, with the Obama logo illustrated in chains. Another,
protesting pork-barrel spending, took the shape of a pig diving
head first into a barrel.
Protester Michele Johnson from the Philadelphia area
traveled to the Capitol’s tea party because “instead of sitting
at home and complaining, all of us are acting.” “People are
absolutely rallying together to take back our rights and our
representative democracy,” Johnson said. “Congress’s actions are
the antithesis of the Founding Fathers,” Johnson explained as the
reason for her presence.
“I pay taxes. I believe in paying taxes, but I want
to be represented fairly in deciding where they go.”
Johnson said as she stood with her other female friends, some who
were from the area and some who were not, “More people in the
crowd are from outside the D.C. area then from inside; I’ve heard
people say they were from as far as Texas, Florida, and
Illinois.”
One of the main concerns of the protesters, Beck said is
that, “We are the first generation of parents to believe that our
children will have a lower quality of life than we do and that I
cannot allow.” Beck himself is a father of five.
Beck said he hopes Washington’s Fourth of July protest will
spread their message and motivate participants “to go back to
their respective communities and create those community
coalitions, and begin a new era in America where we, the people,
are active and engaged in maintaining the type of governance our
Founding Fathers intended for us to enjoy.”
Aaron| 7.7.09 @ 10:52AM
Wow, no wonder the MSM is not reporting on this, they are scared. Attention = fuel and they know it. So does Sarah and they can't ignore her, they go where she goes. Let the show begin...