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I've noticed quite a few people commenting and complaining about how little media coverage the anti-war rallies receive as compared with these immigration protests.
Now, I've been involved with anti-war organizing for over a year now, which isn't nearly as long as many people, but long enough to make some observations. I'm in Minneapolis at the University of Minnesota, and I've attended my first rally with about 50 people at it, and then helped organize one with 200 and 2,000 respectively (The latter got lead coverage on all of the local news programs of the day, all channels, all times). I'm currently involved in organizing for a walkout/rally in the Twin Cities later this month that we are expecting possibly 4,000 students to take part in.
A point: At the rally that had 200 people, we spend about 2 weeks mobilizing, at the rally with 2,000 we spent about a month, and we will have put about a month and a half into the coming rally which will be pretty damn big, as far as anti-war rallies go nowadays.
Last weekend, they had a pro-immigrants rights rally across the river in Saint Paul, in which 30-50 thousand people were at. I'm not sure how long was spent mobilizing for it, but I only heard about it less than a week ahead of time, and I stay in pretty decent contact with the activist community. And 30-50 thousand people showed up. On campus, we spend weeks laboring and stressing out and are completely amazed when 2,000 people come out (And the U of M Twin Cities is the second biggest campus in America with about 50 thousand students, and most of the 2,000 students at the rally were actually from high schools).
You've seen the photos from LA and Dallas, two cities that both got 500,000 people at rallies.
I don't know if the average bourgeois white liberal realizes this, but what we've seen is one of the biggest mass movements in American History build itself up in front of our eyes in literally the past few weeks, while we peck away at the keyboard online and read our New York Times sipping Lattes.
I don't want to discredit anybody involved in the anti-war movement, because I know a lot of good people who have literally dedicated their lives to ending this war. When it nears rally time, I spend nearly as much time working on the movement as I do for school, as do many others.
But I really hope that DUers can see the difference of what's going on. I'll be the first one to say that before the war, when there was a true genuine mass movement to stop the war from happening, the media was shameful in their reporting. I took a bus from Minneapolis to be in Washington DC last September to be with 350,000 plus of my brothers and sisters, only to read on the way home in the Chicago Tribune on page 18 that "thousands" rallied against the war and hundreds of counterprotestors were there too.
But lets not delude ourselves about what is actually going on, either. These immigration rallies are happening all over the country, in huge numbers. Tens of thousands in major cities from coast to coast, sometimes hundreds of thousands. And it happened nearly overnight.
When it comes to the anti-war movement, we have pretty much settled into the routine of having two big rallies a year, sometimes in DC, sometimes in New York. We stroll into DC on a saturday afternoon, and we're out before sunset. A few people stay till monday and get arrested.
On the anniversary of the war, we'll have rallies across the country, anywhere from a few dozen to a few hundred people. New York, San Francico, L.A., Chicago, Twin Cities usually get a good couple of thousand at them.
Can't we see the difference of what's going on? These immigrants are fighting for something, and they know what they want, and personally, I think they are going to get it. They have the numbers, they have the message, and they have the power. There is even talk of doing a boycott/general strike on May 1st, which will most likely be successful if they follow through with it.
There is a big difference between a real mass movement and a bunch of white folk marching down the streets two or three times a year.
We can learn A LOT from what is happening with the immigration rallies. Whether we agree with their goals or not, nobody can argue about how successful they have been in building and mobilzing. Are we willing to learn? Or shall we continue to bitch about the media amongst ourselves?
Here in the Twin Cities, us campus activists are at least attending and trying to learn.
Peace
Steve
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