Well. What kind of
New Yorker, boomer, Jew, chronicler and most of all Hunter Girl – from our
all-girls high school years -- would I be if I hadn’t gone to the Women’s March
yesterday?
I even went to the DC one, after three different girlfriends
considered the trip and changed their minds, opting for local marches
instead. But, in fairness, I had an
extra inducement; my daughter and her fiancĂ© live there. I could also spend a couple days with them. And I had a free place to stay – combining
activism and cheap getaway.
So I get to say I was a part of the mother march in
Washington. I got to buy the t-shirt, carry the sign, and show off pictures on Facebook. I got to feel the climbing excitement and
shared purpose, from the first sight of pussyhat wearers getting out of cars on
my daughter’s quiet, Connecticut Avenue side street, to the jammed Metro trains
at the station, to the converging streams of people – young, old, male, female,
straight, gay, white, black, Asian, some pushing walkers, some strollers –
heading from the downtown station to the Mall.
The crowds were too large to find room on the train where I entered; I had to go north three stations to find room to go south. They were also too large to let us off at Judiciary Square, the closest station to the march’s starting point; we surfaced somewhere on seventh street, near Chinatown.
The crowds were too large to find room on the train where I entered; I had to go north three stations to find room to go south. They were also too large to let us off at Judiciary Square, the closest station to the march’s starting point; we surfaced somewhere on seventh street, near Chinatown.
I had three other friends who were going from NJ, by
different ways, but as we kind of expected, we never met up. The crowds were
too large to get cell signals to communicate, and just getting from point A to B
was frequently impossible. What’s
amazing is how mellow the crowd stayed, when other people packed so densely
might have panicked and started a stampede.
It’s made the news that anywhere from half a million to a million or
more people there managed to generate zero arrests. I’ve seen nothing to compare that with since
the Simon and Garfunkel concert in Central Park; 1981, right?
I appear to have aged out of some of the shortcuts to the rally,
People were helping each other over this wall, but they all seemed
20 and 30-something.
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There was also zero visible security; no bag checks, no metal detectors to go anywhere but inside the museums. March publicity warned people not to bring backpacks, but I saw several. March organizers and guides were sparse, and bullhorns moreso.
No, mellowness prevailed, even though the underlying
motivation for our coming was fury, anxiety, loss and disbelief at how such a
psycho, know-nothing fraud had managed to become president, and more --- replace such exceptional integrity and
intelligence. There was comfort in just being among so many like-minded people,
so ready to be seen and heard, carrying sentiments that were not only right,
but correctly spelled.
More than mellowness; strangers were quick to help each
other scale walls, navigate fences, and to share snacks and information. It was cold and damp, but spirits were high
and warm. Rivers of people just flowed, holding signs, wearing the hats, chanting
chants, drumming drums, taking pictures.
Few of us could get close enough to even see a Jumbotron at one of the
intersections to Independence Avenue, nevermind an actual speaker.
The signs were frequently inspired.
Unable to meet up with friends, I started
conversations with many friendly, like-minded strangers, from the family of
four on the Metro, who’d traveled four days by train from Pacifica,
Calif., to the two young women friends in
the cafeteria of the Museum of American History, one white, from Brooklyn, one black,
from suburban Maryland, to the Hispanic couple from Los Angeles in the same
cafeteria, who liked my recommendation to take in the Newseum the next day, to
the “Nasty Nine” Jewish women from Chicago who I caught up with in a gridlock
near the Washington Monument, to the two fifty-something women in the Lebanese
restaurant back near my daughter’s neighborhood that evening, who I clapped
with whenever the TV screen showed the day’s crowds. All literate, riled-up
people with working bullshit detectors. Many able to afford a plane or a train
ride across country to join up and speak out.
As marchers paraded past, several entertainers on the sidelines
siphoned off afew for a few minutes of dancing or listening
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At the American History Museum
I got to take a nostalgia break.
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A day later, we can read all the analysis and counts; we can
feel a movement launching. But now I
need to know what tools we really have.
What our leverage really is, as Senate, House, and White House all start
to carry out their “promises,” i.e., threats.
There are so many; the cabinet appointments alone fall into the three
categories of useful idiot, unscrupulous opportunist, and reactionary.
What can work? Making
sure the investigations into Trump’s Putin connection aren’t quashed by Trump
himself, now that he’s in power? (The
lady in the Lebanese restaurant has it on good authority that there were Russians
toasting each other in Trump Tower on election night, and that they’ve got him over
a barrel, somehow… just wait till the
dots are connected.) Or the conflict of interest angle, starting the impeachment
process via emoluments violations?
We must quickly get past the understandable pride of knitting
pussy hats and attending mass demonstrations and recognize this event for what
it is: a kickoff. Then we have to make
more history, and in this kind of effort, it just possibly may take more time,
energy and guts than anyone born after 1952 has ever had to summon before.