[lbo-talk] [Fwd: 3,000 march/rally in Salt Lak City on Sept. 24]

Carrol Cox cbcox at ilstu.edu
Mon Sep 26 17:03:52 PDT 2005


-------- Original Message -------- Subject: [Marxism] 3,000 march/rally in Salt Lak City on Sept. 24 Date: Mon, 26 Sep 2005 17:26:50 -0600 (MDT) From: Dayne Goodwin <dayneg at aros.net> Reply-To: Activists and scholars in Marxist tradition<marxism at lists.econ.utah.edu> To: marxism at lists.econ.utah.edu

Over 3,000 people marched and rallied in Salt Lake City on September 24. Saturday's demonstration was organized around unity on one political issue: "Support the Troops, Bring Them Home Now! U.S. Out of Iraq." The crowd was fairly representative of the (limited) diversity of Utah's population.

The rally at the city government building included anti-war songs, hip-hop, poetry and speakers in the following order: Salt Lake City Mayor Ross "Rocky" Anderson, Reverend Dan Webster of the Episcopal Peace Fellowship, United Steelworkers union representative Julie Holzer of U.S. Labor Against the War, Isaac Giron of Youth for Socialist Action (who participated in World Youth Festival in Venezuela in August), Tala Fakhouri of Utahns for a Just Peace in the Holy Land, Gina Cornia of Utahns Against Hunger, Robert Littlehale, M.D., of Veterans for Peace and Joan Maymi of Gold Star Families for Peace.

In addition to the growing opposition to the war, the mayor's support for the protest had a lot to do with it's relative success. I met Rocky Anderson when he became an activist in the Central America solidarity movement some twenty years ago; he is an unusually independent-minded and radical Democrat. Last month an Anderson e-mail promoting protest when President Bush came to Salt Lake to speak to the Veterans of Foreign War national convention (August 22) was leaked to the press. Instead of etreating, Anderson stepped up his support for that protest (of around 2,000 on short notice) and he sent out a letter supporting the local September 24 demonstration.

Whereas the August 22 anti-Bush protest was a happy, united affair among the liberals and 'radical' Democrats who naturally took leadership, preparing the September 24 protest was difficult, with tension among organizers over issues that brought out political differences between Democrats, 'radicals' who want to influence the Democrat Party, revolutionaries who want to build a politically independent mass movement, and the local 'anarchist' expression of ultraleftism. The continuing bitter split in the Utah Green Party (between those who supported the independent Nader-Camejo 2004 presidential campaign and those who supported the GPUS national officer clique in _de facto_ support of John Kerry) and the resultant overlay of personal antagonisms that involve some key local anti-war activists, exacerbated the usual challenges facing a small group of volunteer activists.

Although we weren't a very happy group, and organizing work suffered as a result, we still managed to work together and mobilize a strong anti-war demonstration that was even larger than the pre-war early 2003 demonstrations in Salt Lake City.

Dayne

________________________________________________ YOU MUST clip all extraneous text before replying to a message. Send list submissions to: Marxism at lists.econ.utah.edu Set your options at: http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxism



More information about the lbo-talk mailing list