Wednesday, June 18, 2025

The Days After: Joyful Defiance

1. Joyful Defiance

Asheville, North Carolina: Getty photo

I haven't seen a reliable overview of Sunday newspaper coverage of the Saturday June 14 protests, but I'd have to believe a lot of local papers had photo spreads.  More photos were on the Internet (Talking Points Memo for one collected many from readers) and presumably on social media.

By Monday the media consensus had formed, that the protests overshadowed and shamed the Boss Chaos birthday tank parade.  Some of the organizing groups said that more than 5 million Americans participated in more than 2100 communities, and news media mostly went with those numbers.  A crowd-sourcing effort, not yet complete, suggests a range of 4 to 6 million.  The Crowdsourcing Consortium had estimated the 2017 Women's March at between 3.3 and 5.6 million, so it's likely that Saturday was the largest in history--certainly in the number of communities participating.  (This consortium also estimates that there have been over 15,000 other resistance protests since January.)

Austin, Texas

Some additional numbers got into the mix.  Organizers in Philadelphia, St. Paul and San Diego claimed there were over or near 100,000. Boston media claimed one million there. As an example of breadth, there were 50 protesting communities in Wisconsin alone. 

Boston,MA  

I continue to be amazed at the wit, the buoyancy and relentlessness of these protests. And the courage, given the lawlessness of the Chaos and Chaos-inspired people. Maybe it was Rachel who characterized the day's mood as "joyful defiance." The diversity of participants is implied by the kinds of places where the protests occurred.   The photos show a lot of white people, who look a lot like the stereotypical Chaos voter.  They may be having a good time, but they aren't out there to party.  And they know why they are there.

There are many differences but some similarities to the 1960s protests of my experience.  The mood of the March on Washington was solemn and even reverent.  Anti-war protests ran the gamut from grimly defiant to very angry, but we had fun, too. But we always felt apart from the mainstream.  I don't think these protestors do.  And poll numbers suggest they are right. 

Chattanooga, Tennessee

What might be the same is the disbelief that the media didn't immediately give them their true significance, often with insultingly low estimates of the numbers participating.  And the high that participating brings, and the letdown afterwards when nothing has changed.

But networking with people you met and maintaining some sort of cohesion should be easier with faster and easier communication media.  The question of what comes next is a real one. 

Oakland, CA

On Monday there was a police report of a gun death at a protest in Utah, in which someone used a handgun to shoot at someone pointing a rifle at marchers.  He hit the gunman but killed someone else--a marcher or a bystander.  On Tuesday it was also revealed that one person was killed as a result of the Washington military parade, run down by a truck carrying a tank. 

There were a couple of known attempts of drivers trying to mow down marchers, and another TPM article reports increased agitation for violence against protesters, especially official violence in Red states and communities, where such acts are no longer severely penalized.  

 2.  The Military Parade

It turned out to be Army vs. Boss Chaos, and Army won.  

The US Army and its career professional leadership has made some significant missteps since January.  Censoring the West Point Library, cooperating with the Chaos political show at Fort Bragg are prominent among them.  But they've also proven adroit at seemingly cooperating with Chaos in Chief while subtly undermining him.  They did as ordered and restored the old names to some bases previously named after Confederate generals.  But they officially named the bases after US Army officers and enlisted heroes who just happen to have the same last names as the generals the US Army fought against in the Civil War. 

 

Forth Worth, TX

And they followed orders and organized a parade in Washington, which Chaos publicly denied was in honor of his birthday and his presidency, but was honoring the 250th anniversary of the Army.  Then the Army did something vitally subversive: they took him at his lying public word.

So the parade really was an historical pageant and a celebration, with soldiers decked out in period uniforms rented from Hollywood.  The hardware was at a minimum.  Chaos insisted on tanks, and there were tanks of several eras--which is fitting, since tanks are largely obsolete these days, except to scare citizens opposing their dear leader.  Instead the soldiers manning the tanks smiled at the crowd and made hearts with their hands, while their compatriot foot soldiers strolled rather than marched by in lockstep, waving.  According to biographer Michael Wolff, Trump was furious that the parade wasn't more menacing, and blamed his Secretary of Defense. 

There was of course still no excuse for the $25 million to $45 million spent on it.  But Chaos owns that.

Paris, France

Meanwhile by Monday the news media consensus was that attendance at the parade was "sparse" and entirely overshadowed by the national--really international-- protests.  Even though there was to be no "official" No Kings protest in Washington itself, there were several anti-Chaos marches and demonstrations earlier in the day with significant attendance.

But Boss Chaos always wants control, insisting on being the center of attention.  This time his diversion of choice may be to involve the country in yet another war in the Middle East.  He didn't get his jollies with a menacing parade. He may opt for the push-button power of immense military violence.  His policies are already killing hundreds of thousands of children from starvation and disease that USAID would have otherwise prevented.  Soon he may feed his need with more graphic death and destruction, with high danger of protracted consequences.  

Sunday, June 15, 2025

The Day

Chicago on Saturday: NY Times photo

It was a day unique in American history.  In over 2000 communities, millions of Americans marched and rallied their resistance and opposition to the Chaos dictatorship.  Crowds ranged from the hundreds of thousands in big cities like New York, Philadelphia and Chicago, to thousands in almost every sizeable city in the fifty states, and hundreds in smaller communities--like Pentwater, Michigan (pop.800) where 400 participated.

 

Boise, Idaho: Capital Sun photo

   One New York Times reporter stood on a Portland, Oregon street corner and watched the crowd pass for more than an hour.  "The mood is definitely serious, but also laced with a kind of buoyant joy."  Another reporter observed that in Los Angeles "the scale of the protest in downtown is remarkable...People of all ages have spread across blocks all over downtown."  In Dallas, a Times reporter said the crowd "stretches from curb to curb for at least five blocks, as far as I can see."

Portland, Oregon: Capital Chronicle photo

The San Francisco Chronicle headlined that the demonstration there could be one of the largest in the city's history.  In Chicago, the large crowd shut down the Loop.  

New York City crowd estimated over 200,000

There were instances of police applying forces to divert marchers, but no real violence except perpetrated against the protests, including several cases of cars hitting and attempting to hit marchers.  The worst violence of course was earlier in Minnesota with the assassination of a rising star in state government and the serious gunshot injuries of another official and spouse.  The gunman was reportedly masquerading as police.  Because he was still at large and No Kings flyers were found in his vehicle, the Minnesota protests were officially cancelled.  But the big St. Paul protest went on anyway. 

Des Moines, Iowa: Des Moines Register photo

The millions of Americans committing themselves to active protest underscores the latest polls which show opposition to Chaos in every policy, action or topic; and specifically by a large margin disapproving military intervention in Los Angeles, and some 60% consider the Chaos created military parade a waste of taxpayer money. 

Atlanta, Georgia: Guardian photo


Hartford, Conn.  Courant photo

In Washington the multi-million dollar vanity military parade was met with relative indifference, less than large and more than lethargic crowds, many who left early.  The Times reporter called it desultory and "underwhelming."  Daily Beast observed that Melania and the faux Sec. of Defense appeared bored, and even Chaos looked sour and disconcerted. Politico observed the obvious: that the protests outdid the parade in scale. Many many times over. 

Topeka, Kansas

San Francisco: KQED photo

San Diego, CA

Predictably Faux News giddily covered the parade and the protests not at all.  Other cable networks showed some parade, with more on Minnesota and the Middle East, and showed protests mostly when police were shooting tear gas and their "non-lethal" stuff, as in LA.  But the secret weapon of these protests is they were local, and probably hundreds of city and local television stations and newspapers covered them extensively--they were the biggest news in their locality. And of course, millions of people means millions of social media posts and looks.

Philadelphia, PA : NY Times photo

Louisville, Kentucky

Once again, protestors managed to be more creative and succinct that politicians. In Springfield, Mass. a young woman held up this sign: "Eggs are expensive because all the chickens are in Congress."

Milwaukee, Wisconsin: Journal Sentinel photo

Cincinnati, Ohio


Mt. Kisko, New York: lohud photo

Pittsburgh, PA: Post Gazette photo

I'm not sure where this sign was held but it kind of sums it up:
 "We fought a king in 1775.  We fought a dictator in 1945.  We will fight whatever the hell this is in 2025."  
Los Angeles: NBC photo

Los Angeles: Guardian photo