New policies not our cup of tea, protesters say
I had to chuckle Wednesday when I read The Wall Street Journal's resident liberal columnist, Thomas Frank, trying to belittle the hundreds of Tea Party protests planned that day nationwide as soft and lacking in conviction. The protests would be held, he said, "Unless it rains today. ..."
I had just stood outdoors in a relentless spring snowstorm to witness one of these "parties" in front of the Federal Building in downtown Salt Lake City. Several hundred people were there. They reacted strongly when one of the speakers said she would cut her remarks short "because of the snow." No, they shouted, we want to hear it all. And so they did. I saw a lot of people shivering, but I didn't see anyone running for shelter. And the speakers were drowned out regularly by the loud horns of cars and trucks whose drivers sympathized with the cause but had commitments to do other things.
What did it all mean? That question is hard to answer because these protests were disorganized. Despite what some on the left were alleging about the backing of corporations and others who stand to lose from Washington's current policies, these had the earmarks of a truly grass-roots movement — the type that couldn't have happened in the days before the Internet.
Each event had its own personality. Two pages over from Frank's column, author and activist Glenn Harlan Reynolds wrote of how in some states the parties were as much anti-Republican as they were anti-Democrat. The organizer of Knoxville's event "said that no 'professional politicians' were going to be allowed to speak, and he made a big point of saying that the protest wasn't an anti-Obama protest, it was an anti-establishment protest."
Salt Lake City's protest had a decidedly more Republican and anti-Obama feel to it. Rep. Jason Chaffetz told me afterward he had been invited to speak. Other speakers included Rep. Rob Bishop and Utah Attorney General Mark Shurtleff, who quoted liberally (if that's the word) from the nation's founders.
That was a recurring theme. Pictures from around the country showed people in tricorn hats and with signs saying "Don't tread on me."
In Salt Lake City, there were several of the usual one-issue opportunists you find at any conservative rally, from Second Amendment supporters to people against illegal immigration. Someone handed me a flier urging me to read Ayn Rand's "Atlas Shrugged." But in nearly three decades of attending protests, I have learned you see those on either side of the political spectrum. You didn't need to know who John Galt was, however, to appreciate the level of anger at bailouts and nanny-state engineering that led to these protests.
Recent comments
Maybe the protests show the belated waking up of a sleeping giant....
waking a sleeping giant | April 21, 2009 at 8:23 a.m.
@ Duh "ds | 8:45 a.m."
I agree with your sentiments.
But I...
Captain Kirk | April 20, 2009 at 5:33 p.m.
You keep asking, "Where were you guys 8 years ago"!!!
Obviously we...
Duh "ds | 8:45 a.m." | April 20, 2009 at 4:45 p.m.
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Mark my words, Whittingham will have something to say. It may take one year...
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Does anyone remember the ute fans jumping on Derek Stevenson dad at an game?...
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Dear Cherie and Leon and Family, We love you and appreciate your strength...
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Thanks big brother???? ha ha ha. You weren't even competitive for 30 years.
Well said, Amy, and spot on. Hall has shown his true colors. It's what a...
I find it interesting that many of the same people who say that we can't...

