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On eve of Republican Convention
Massive anti-Bush march in New York
By a WSWS reporting team
30 August 2004
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Hundreds of thousands of people marched Sunday past New York
Citys Madison Square Garden, site of this weeks Republican
National Convention, in a massive repudiation of the policies
of the Bush administration.
March organizers put the size of the crowd at 400,000, a far
more credible figure than the gross underestimate of 120,000 given
by some officials in the New York City Police Department (NYPD).
When the first marchers had completed the nearly 40-block trek
through Manhattan, large numbers of demonstrators had yet to start
off. Solid crowds surged up Seventh Avenue, west on 34th Street
and back downtown on Broadway for a full five hours.

The huge demonstration expressed the immense social opposition
that has built up to the Bush administration over the war in Iraq,
attacks on democratic rights and policies of social reaction.
Its militancy stood in sharp contrast to the desiccated liberalism
and half-hearted opposition to the Republicans exhibited by the
Democratic Party and its presidential candidate John Kerry. Under
conditions in which Kerry is supporting the war, the hundreds
of thousands who marchedand many millions more who share
their viewsfind themselves politically disenfranchised.
The huge turnout was all the more significant given the ham-fisted
efforts of both the city authorities and national agencies such
as the Homeland Security Department and the FBI to intimidate
those planning to protest.
Activists faced surveillance and harassment from the Joint
Terrorism Task Force, threats of mass arrests from the NYPD and
the denial by New York City billionaire Republican Mayor Michael
Bloomberg of a permit for a rally in Central Park after the march.
Moreover, the city remains on so-called orange alert,
with near-daily warnings from Washington of supposedly imminent
threats of terrorist attacks.
Thousands of police were deployed along the route of the march.
At 34th Street, helmeted riot cops and mounted units were massed
in a show of force designed to dissuade demonstrators from attempting
to continue marching north to Central Park.

Hundreds of other copssome armed with automatic riflesNational
Guardsmen and Secret Service agents were also massed in front
of Madison Square Garden, where the convention begins Monday.
Entrances to the Garden were blocked with concrete barriers and
sand-filled dump trucks.
Marchers chanted No more Bush, Stop the war,
stop the lies, and No more years. Many carried
hand-lettered signs with slogans such as: Support our troops,
bring them home, Dont make the dead vote Republican,
RNC out of NYC for 9/11, and Iraq is Arabic for Vietnam.
When a small group of Republican delegates gathered outside
their hotel to watch the march, demonstrators shouted, Go
home!
One section of the march consisted of 1,000 flag-draped coffins,
symbolizing the fatalities suffered by US troops since the Iraq
war began.
The demonstrators, who turned out in near 90-degree-Fahrenheit
heat, included young people who had driven from as far away as
Los Angeles and Texas, as well as large numbers of New Yorkers,
including contingents drawn from the citys immigrant communities,
including Koreans, Filipinos, Haitians and South Asians.
Damien Neva and Ula Bochinska came from Brooklyn, carrying
a sign reading, Poland 1939, Iraq 2003. Damien is
originally from Michigan, while Ula immigrated to the US from
Poland.
Asked about the sign, Damien explained:
The buildup of the German military machine came to a head
with the invasion of Poland. The Germans claimed they had to invade
Poland in order to protect their security, and to establish living
room in the East. Similarly, the United States claimed that
Iraq was a threat to its security, with its weapons of mass
destruction.
In both invasions, you have an imperialist nation attacking
a weaker nation.
Significant numbers of veterans participated in the demonstration,
as well as some active-duty soldiers returned from Iraq, who marched
in desert fatigues.
One of the latter, Mathias Feurer, said that he had come to
the march to demand that his fellow soldiers be brought back from
Iraq now. A member of the 1st Armored Division, he participated
in the invasion of Iraq and spent four months there. Having completed
his military service, he attempted to leave the Army, but had
his service involuntarily extended, and was sent back to the US
to an assignment with the National Guard.
At the time the war began,
I trusted our president, Mathias, a resident of the Bronx,
told the World Socialist Web Site. I thought it would
be justified and that we would really find weapons of mass destruction,
but there was nothing there.
He said that he was shocked by the poverty, destruction and
suffering that the war had inflicted upon the Iraqi people. When
we first got there, the kids would wave at us and stuff, but by
the time I had left, everything had already gone to hell. They
just want us out of there. Sooner or later, that is what will
happen, but in the meantime a lot of soldiers and a lot of Iraqis
are dying.
Mathias said he would advise anyone thinking of going into
the Army not to do it. Today youve got young guys
going in who dont want to be in combat, and they choose
something else, like being a cook. But what they need is infantry
and military police, and once they get in they just send them
over therea bunch of untrained kidsand theyre
the first ones to get killed. All anyone over there now wants
to do is come home.
Dave Pacella, a veteran of the first Persian Gulf War, said
that he was marching on behalf of disabled veterans. I think
the present war in Iraq should be stopped, he said. The
US interest is in oil, but you cant win a war against the
Iraqis when theyre fighting for religion and against being
colonized.
The disabled veterans who are coming back from Iraq are
not getting the right treatment. Spending $177 million a day for
the Iraq war is an outrage when people are starving in this country,
and theyre cutting back veterans services.
The soldiers in the Iraq war need counseling when they
come back. Their families need counseling. And theyre not
getting it. Psychiatric facilities are being cut back.
Dave said that his father, a veteran in Pennsylvania, had been
receiving psychiatric therapy once a week, but the facility closest
to his home had been closed. He now has to drive a long distance
and is able to get an appointment only every other week.
I believe they want more people to join the military,
he said, but once your duty is done, they dont want
anything to do with you, and your medical coverage and treatment
are frequently cut off.
Relatively few of the marchers wore Kerry campaign buttons,
and banners supporting the Democratic presidential candidate were
extremely rare. There were no prominent Democratic Party leaders
or elected officials participating in the protest.
Clearly, the party leadership wants to disassociate itself
from this mass outpouring against the war and other policies of
the Bush administration. Those leading the march included Jesse
Jackson, filmmaker Michael Moore, actor Danny Glover and a smattering
of New York City Council members.
When the head of the march reached Madison Square Garden, Jackson
stepped to the front with a bullhorn and asked the front ranks
to sit down, leading them in a call-and-response chant of Hope
is in the air, help is on the way. The slogan echoed the
speeches given by Kerry and his vice-presidential running mate
John Edwards at last months Democratic National Convention.
Members and supporters of the Socialist Equality Party distributed
10,000 copies of a leaflet entitled The
socialist alternative to Bush and Kerry and had numerous
discussions with marchers. Many said that they were voting for
Kerry, but were not at all happy about it. Others expressed strong
interest in the election campaign of the SEP.
The WSWS spoke with Alejandro Urruzmendi, age 25, who drove
to New York from Los Angeles, picking up several friends along
the way. While born in the United States, he spent some years
living with his family in Uruguay.
He said, Creating a third
party is going to take a lot of hard work and effort. Sadly, most
people see Kerry as their only choice. It would be nice to have
a real democracy. John Kerry agreed with the invasion. He shows
no shift in policy from the Bush administration. The reason is
that the same people who are supporting Bush are supporting Kerry.
No matter who is elected president, the problems in our
country are only going to increase.
Carey Fay-Horowitz, a bakery worker, said, I am totally
against the war in Iraq. It was started based on lies, and it
is a war for oil. Now it continues out of loyalty to the people
in power.
Im not too happy about Kerry supporting the war.
He is not that good an alternative. I wish another party could
work, but at this time its too late. But I agree there should
be another party, it would be ideal.
The WSWS also spoke with Herman Bijkerk from Holland, who was
taking a weeklong vacation in New York. He had originally planned
to go back Saturday, but decided to extend his visit by a day
when he heard about the demonstration.
Herman said, Its incredibly important to democracy
to have more choices. Bush and Kerry represent no choice at all.
In Holland, we now have fifteen parties that are meaningful, including
four or five bigger ones.
Because of Bush, you see more and more anti-Americanism
in Europe. Friends and colleagues in Holland see everything American
as black. Of course, this is not just because of Bush, but because
of US policy in Iraq and especially in Israel.
John, who said he had been reading the WSWS for more than three
years, came to the march with a placard calling for support for
the SEPs election campaign and spelling out the partys
policies for the immediate and unconditional withdrawal of US
troops, and for war crimes trials against those who conspired
to launch the war.
I think the Democrats represent the same financial and
corporate elite as the Republicans, with a slightly different
spin, he said. On Iraq alone, it is clear that there
is no alternative. If the US doesnt withdraw immediately,
there will be continued resistance by the Iraqis and continued
isolation of Allawi. There will be a steady stream of dying US
soldiers and increasing losses on the Iraqi side.
Since protests began in the city on Friday, over 400 people
have been arrested, some of them taken to a makeshift detention
center set up by the NYPD at a pier on the Hudson River. Most
of the arrests took place during a ride-by protest by bicyclists
on Friday night, which saw unprovoked arrests and excessive force
by city cops. Police officials have said that they are prepared
to make 1,000 arrests a day during the convention.
See Also:
In run-up to Republican convention: 24-hour
surveillance of protest organizers
[25 August 2004]
Civil rights advocates denounce FBI harassment
of protesters
[20 August 2004]
Specter of a police state: FBI anti-terror
task force targets Bush administration opponents
[18 August 2004]
Two weeks before Republican convention:
New York City denies demonstrators' new bid for park permit
[16 August 2004]
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