Protestors have creative message for Bush

Protestors have creative message for Bush

(Photo/The Daily Progress/Megan Lovett)

An anti-President George W. Bush protestor creates an outburst and is hauled away from Monticello’s annual naturalization ceremony July 4, 2008.

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By John Henderson
| 978-7277

Published: July 4, 2008

While thousands flocked to hear President Bush speak at Monticello Friday morning, Dana Palmer stood by the side of Route 20 dressed like Lady Liberty to teach her kids a lesson in free speech.

Palmer, her husband and their two children were among more than 100 people to protest Bush’s visit to Monticello with homemade signs, costumes, expressive T-shirts and their collective voices.

Palmer wore bright green robes, a foam crown and had her face painted white to represent “the death of liberty,” while her husband, dressed in black, was “Darth Cheney.” Palmer, a Charlottesville area resident, brought her son and daughter to see the first amendment in action.

“What better thing can I teach them about free speech than bringing them out here to show them free speech?” she said.

Protesters started arriving around 6 a.m. in Quarry Park, a mile away from the Monticello Visitors Center, and their numbers grew through the morning. The earliest to arrive stood at the entrance to Quarry Road on Route 20, but moved nearer the visitors center to make their views known to drivers, bus passengers going to the naturalization ceremony at Monticello and eventually Bush’s motorcade.

Most people held up signs of their own creation with messages including, “Healthcare Not Warfare,” “Save The Bill of Rights” and “Who Would Jesus Bomb?”

The protest got mixed reactions from passersby. Many drivers honked to show their support and gave the thumbs-up or the peace sign. At least two, including a limousine driver headed toward Monticello, gave protesters a less-friendly finger gesture.

State and Albemarle County police officers made sure the protestors did not stray into the road or onto private property. At around 8 a.m. a Virginia State Police trooper asked everyone to move 75 yards away from the intersection of Route 20 and the Thomas Jefferson Parkway, where Bush’s motorcade would pass by.

The protestors included members of Code Pink: Women for Peace, the Charlottesville Center for Peace and Justice, the Charlottesville Democratic Party, and Web sites moveon.org and afterdowningstreet.org.

Sarah Lanzman, an organizer and CCPJ member, said the protest was about protecting the constitution from what she described as attacks by Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney.

“We don’t want to hurt the ceremony for the new immigrants,” Lanzman said. “We just want to state our constitutional right that someone who has destroyed our constitution should not be at the home of a president who initiated it … that seems very disrespectful to the memory of Thomas Jefferson.”

That seemed to be the central theme for protestors who chanted over and over, “Impeach Bush! Defend the constitution!”

The only counter-protest was carried on by Jeff Gray who stood in his driveway solemnly waving the American flag. Gray, who supports Bush, said he felt like one man against many.

Keith Drake, former chair of the Albemarle County Republican Party, said those in opposition to the protest would be at the naturalization ceremony in support of the new citizens.

“To cast a stain on their day … is shameful,” Drake said. “The time and the place is elsewhere.”

One man had protested the Vietnam War at the University of California, Berkeley in the 1960s, where police used tear gas to control the crowds. Another joined protests in New York City and Washington, D.C., in the ‘60s and ‘70s.

Pat Dowd, a longtime Charlottesville resident who participated in protests in Washington in the early 1970s, said young people are not as politically active as they once were.

“We really thought we could change the world when we were kids,” Dowd said. “Kids [today] don’t have that feeling.”

When Bush’s motorcade finally appeared down Route 20, the protestors were ready. They cried for Bush’s impeachment, held their signs high and spilled into the road to get a better view. The police officers who stood guard at the intersection of the Thomas Jefferson Parkway gently escorted them back while a line of black cars, one of them bearing the president, drove away toward Monticello. 

Reader Reactions

Posted by ( Sirhc Sibmark ) on July 06, 2008 at 4:23 pm

“Charlottesville is full of these aging, screeching, nihilistic ex-hippies without a cause.  In their drug-crazed, purple haze they think it is still 1968 and Bush is Nixon. Ignore them.”

My sentiments exactly. One article described how one man, who apparently lives near where the protesters staged their rant, said he felt alone against many as he waved the American flag from his driveway. Well, maybe at that point in time he was, but he’s not based on some of these posts. However, these leftists do make living in C’ville a chore.

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Posted by ( javaguy ) on July 06, 2008 at 10:00 am

Charles,

I would like you to explain why the protesters rights to disturb the ceremony are more important then my rights to listen to a speech undisturbed. Or do not my rights count? Please enlighten me.

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Posted by ( Stephen Sossaman ) on July 05, 2008 at 6:46 pm

If a protester called out “death to Bush” (not that any apparently did), then they and you have both broken the law. There are several widely held restrictions of free speech (e.g. perjury, forgery, death threats, false police reports, libel, slander). Are you defending your call for killing protesters based only on your claim that others have threatened the president? My own view is that the law correctly forbids incitement to murder, whether of a president or an ordinary citizen. Do you agree?

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Posted by ( javaguy ) on July 05, 2008 at 1:55 pm

Charles has shown the usual liberal attitude of name calling when he disagrees with someone. He also seems to feel that I should let my rights be trampled by someone who thinks their rights are more important. Typical of the left.

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Posted by ( k9gs ) on July 05, 2008 at 12:35 pm

Oh, I see protesters can scream Death to Bush and all the rest of their vile rantings, but I don’t have my “right to free speech” to say what I think of them?
Classic.

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Posted by ( Toxic Avenger ) on July 04, 2008 at 11:41 pm

Dear Charles,
You sound like such a tough liberal wimp, always the first to whine about free-speech, and always the last to fight for that right. It’s cowards like yourself and your kook buddies today that have brought the democRAT party to a new low, but being anti-american is nothing new to you folks, is it? From Jack Murtha, John Kerry, Bill Ayers, George Soros to Nancy Pelosi, there is nothing red,white and blue about you idiots. Imagine no liberals, what a wonderful world it would be.

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Posted by ( lcsm ) on July 04, 2008 at 11:29 pm

Charlottesville is full of these aging, screeching, nihilistic ex-hippies without a cause.  In their drug-crazed, purple haze they think it is still 1968 and Bush is Nixon. Ignore them.

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Posted by ( Stephen Sossaman ) on July 04, 2008 at 11:02 pm

I am surprised that the Daily Progress allows an implicit incitement to murder (k9gs wrote that the protesters “are like rabid animals that need to be put out of their misery.") This is the language of repressive dictatorships, not democracies. Perhaps k9gs prefers the treatment of the opposition practiced in Zimbabwe, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, and Iran to the enlightenment tradition that Thomas Jefferson helped establish.

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Posted by ( k9gs ) on July 04, 2008 at 8:16 pm

I agree listening to the ramblings of the retirement president of the TJF was in poor taste, today was not the place for that.  I was not impressed w/Monticello’s handling of the snack/beverage tent either.  The line was ridiculous for such a small event.  Thank goodness they had the good sense to put out the water coolers.  I thought security was poor in handling of the protesters, that one guy should have been hauled out the first go round.  I would like to know how they got tickets to the section they did since every seating section was color coded. Someone wasn’t doing their job.  It ran through my mind they were planted by the media, how convenient they were right in front of the cameras.  So I agree w/Javaguy, where were our rights to attend an event in peace?  All was peaceful until they appeared.  Isn’t that ironic?  I am really, really tired of these crazed people griping about peace and yet continue to disrupt, disrespect others in the name of their freedoms.  They are like rabid animals that need to be put out of their misery.  I am starting to believe they are all mentally ill.  Every time I experience things such as today only makes me vote Republican.  After today I think my days of voting democrat are over at least in this lifetime.  When are they gonna get it?

It was great to do something special on the 4th of July and be part of history.  It was the patriotic thing to do.  What an honor to see others raise their hand to take the oath of citizenship to our country.  Congratulations to them all.  I guarantee they will cherish America.  The elderly woman touched me the most, at her age she still wanted to become an American.  God Bless her.  God Bless the USA, God Bless President Bush, and God Bless Our Troops.

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Posted by ( sniggles ) on July 04, 2008 at 7:33 pm

These protestors should be ashamed of themselves for ruining a very special day that so many people have worked so hard for.

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