Anti-war protests peaceful

| 1 Comment | 4 TrackBacks
Protesters march through the streets of Washington, D.C.
Thousands of Americans opposed to waging war in Iraq rallied on Saturday in several cities demanding the White House back down and give U.N. weapons inspectors a chance. Photo by Molly Riley/Reuters

Well, the anti-war protests that descended on Washington and other cities around the country and the world are over, and most seem to have been a success, assuming you count success as few injuries, few arrests, and being really friggin' big.

Protest organizers in D.C. put the numbers at 500,000 people, a number almost surely inflated somewhat. D.C. cops refused to estimate the size, but Metropolitan Police Chief Charles H. Ramsey said it was bigger than the march in October, which most people have put at around 100,000 people. "It's one of the biggest ones we've had, certainly in recent times," he said.

And the Washington Post described it as "the largest anti-war demonstration here since the Vietnam era." Alas, President Bush was in Camp David this weekend and Congress was not in session, so none of the powers that be saw the protesters. As he did while at Yale, Bush seems be missing out on all the anti-war fun.

"I don't remember debates. I don't think we spent a lot of time debating it. Maybe we did, but I don't remember." -- On discussions of the Vietnam War when Bush was an undergraduate at Yale, Washington Post, July 27, 1999

What's good about this protest is the major media haven't ignored it as many charged after the last major rally in October. In addition to the Associated Press, the New York Times, the Post, ABC News, CNN and MSNBC, a quick search on google revealed more than 1,000 stories. (A fair number were duplicates of AP and Reuters stories, but still...) Not surprisingly, Fox News was not prominent among the media outlets covering the protests. In fact, from my brief survey, only it and the Times didn't feature the protest prominently on the front page of their Web sites. (At least the Times had a link to it, however. Fox made me search for it. For shame.)

4 TrackBacks

TrackBack URL: http://www.back-to-iraq.com/blog-mt/mt-tb.cgi/2404

Turning over a new leaf from in my opinion... 2.5 on January 20, 2003 12:19 PM

Unfortunately events conspired against me on Saturday and I was unable to attend the peace rally in downtown San Francisco. But from what I've read and seen the rally was Read More

Turning over a new leaf from in my opinion... 2.5 on January 20, 2003 12:20 PM

And speaking of G. W. Bush, that brings me to the point of this post. Since I started this site I have adhered to the notion that George W. Bush just isn?t very bright. That, in fact, he is quite dumb. And I have made no bones about telling anyone exac... Read More

Turning over a new leaf from in my opinion... 3.0 on June 25, 2003 3:08 PM

And speaking of G. W. Bush, that brings me to the point of this post. Since I started this site I have adhered to the notion that George W. Bush just isn?t very bright. That, in fact, he is quite dumb. And I have made no bones about telling anyone exac... Read More

And speaking of G. W. Bush, that brings me to the point of this post. Since I started this site I have adhered to the notion that George W. Bush just isn?t very bright. That, in fact, he is quite dumb. And I have made no bones about telling anyone exac... Read More

1 Comment

There were nowhere NEAR 500,000 people on the Mall. I was there and I’d put the number at around 60,000-ish. Probably woulda been more if it hadn’t been so damn cold.

Best protest sign: “With a Dick and a Bush in the White House, we all get fucked.”

About me


Hi there! Thanks for stopping in. I'm Christopher Allbritton, former AP and New York Daily News reporter. In 2002, I went stumbling around Iraqi Kurdistan, the northern part of Iraq outside Saddam's direct control, looking for stories. (Some might call it "looking for trouble.") In March 2003, I made it back in time for the war, becoming the Web's first fully reader-funded journalist-blogger. With the support of thousands of readers, we raised almost $15,000. You can read my dispatches here. It was one of the moments in journalism when everything worked. It was a grand -- and successful -- experiment in independent journalism. In 2004, I moved to Iraq, where I would spend the next two years. It was a raucous, scary and exciting place with a lot of news going on. But I've since moved on to Beirut and the wider region. I now report for a variety of outlets.

Clips
Résumé
Email
AOL IM me

Donate

Won't you consider donating to support reportage from the Middle East? Your generosity directly feeds reporting costs such as visas, travel, fees and other expenses. I already have a bullet-proof vest, so no need to fund that.

Media Availability

If you'd like to book me for radio or TV appearances -- I'm experienced in both -- please contact my agency, Global Radio News, at + (0) 44 20 7976 5335. Thank you.

Technorati

Technorati search

» Blogs that link here

November 2008

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
            1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30            

Archives

Creative Commons License
This blog is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Powered by Movable Type 4.21-en