[Mb-civic] Stop, Children,
What's That Sound? - Eugene Robinson - Washington Post
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Tue Sep 27 03:55:03 PDT 2005
Stop, Children, What's That Sound?
By Eugene Robinson
Tuesday, September 27, 2005; Page A23
There was a clear winner for best slogan at the huge, spirited,
good-old-days antiwar demonstration that filled the streets of
Washington on Saturday: "Make Levees, Not War."
It's no surprise that George W. Bush wasn't around when the multitudes
of protesters -- police said 100,000, organizers claimed 300,000 --
paraded past the White House. After all, this is a president who
restricts his town-hall meetings to townspeople who agree with him. He
left his poor wife, Laura, to suffer the mocking crowds, who
overshadowed the book festival she was hosting on the Mall.
The president's absence was understandable, though. His painstakingly
crafted image of leadership and competence was so damaged by the botched
response to Hurricane Katrina that he could hardly afford a repeat
performance on Rita. So while a genuine Vietnam-era protest march was
making its way past his house, complete with an appearance by Joan Baez,
the president was on the road playing the role of flood-control
commander in chief.
At the end of the day, though, he must have taken a moment to wonder how
his mojo could have deserted him so completely. Rita turned out to be no
Katrina, so there was no massive relief effort to command. The president
still couldn't find his bullhorn moment. Meanwhile, his capital was
overrun by the opposition in a spectacular demonstration of how
unpopular the war in Iraq has become.
A counter-demonstration Sunday in support of the war drew a few hundred
people. The comparison isn't a fair measure of opinion about the war,
but it does say something about which side has passion and momentum.
I know that Iraq isn't exactly Vietnam, but haven't we heard this song
before? You know: "There's something happening here, what it is ain't
exactly clear''? Does that ring a bell at the White House? Or did
everybody in this administration spend the whole Vietnam era listening
to Pat Boone or whatever it was they grooved to in the frat houses?
Saturday had that vintage feeling. Cindy Sheehan was there to play her
iconic earth-mother role, while the Rev. Jesse Jackson's presence
somehow made the whole thing official. In the crowd there were
next-generation merry pranksters bearing caricature puppets, legions of
praying Buddhists, ranks of earnest Presbyterians for Peace and files of
silver-haired Raging Grannies. There were countless young adults whose
baby boomer parents had marched these same streets in protest over three
decades ago. All that was missing was the sour tinge of tear gas in the air.
A kind of perfect storm has gathered to menace the president. Polls
showing public opinion shifting against the war have helped push
fence-straddlers into the antiwar camp. Hurricane Katrina led even
supporters to question this administration's ability to manage, well,
anything. It must be galling for Bush, nearly five years into his
presidency, to be in the position of having to prove himself.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/09/26/AR2005092601472.html?nav=hcmodule
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