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A semi-private parade

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The Washington Post laments the grossly high security for the Coronation

parade.

... it's an excellent article. It is supposed to be a NATIONAL event. Fathers

should be able to hold their wee ones on their shoulders, to see the thing, if

they so desire. People should be able to crowd the streets to get a glimpse...if

they so desire. It's a PARADE for goodness sakes!

 

 

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A25250-2005Jan20.html

 

 

 

Friday, January 21, 2005; Page A16

 

THERE WERE, in the end, protesters along the route of President Bush's inaugural

parade. It is conceivable that the president might have even caught a glimpse of

them. What there were not nearly enough of, however, were ordinary people:

Washingtonians, out-of-towners or anyone at all who was neither a Bush donor

with tickets to the bleachers nor a demonstrator with a permit to wave a sign.

This was not an accident. In advance of the inauguration, the National Park

Service granted the Presidential Inaugural Committee exclusive rights to nearly

all of the sidewalk space along Pennsylvania Avenue, space to which the public

had no access. When Post reporters asked the Secret Service, the Department of

Homeland Security and the D.C. police this week where the public would be able

to stand, no answer was forthcoming. Grudgingly, a Park Service spokesman said

on Wednesday that the public might be able to find some open areas east of

Seventh Street or west of 12th Street, a statement that

did not exactly encourage casual parade-goers.

 

Reports from those who did try to attend varied. Some stood for hours in the

cold, trying to get through checkpoints. Some reported swifter entrance. But

many, we fear, simply didn't bother to go, discouraged by the unwelcoming

atmosphere of the inauguration with the heaviest security in history, the

negative advance publicity, the closed streets and the phalanx of police

officers lined up to protect the politicians from the people. Maybe that's what

the post-Sept. 11 world has to look like, but on a day ostensibly dedicated to

the spread of freedom around the world, it wasn't the best advertisement for

American freedom either.

 

 

 

© 2005 The Washington Post Company

 

 

 

http://www.blueaction.org

" Providing health care to all Iraqis is sound policy. Providing

health care to all Americans is socialism. " -- anon

http://www.sharedvoice.org/unamerican/

 

 

 

 

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