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Steve Savicki
01-21-2005, 11:04 AM
http://cbsnewyork.com/topstories/topstories_story_021064753.html

Jan 21, 2005 6:46 am US/Eastern
(AP) Thousands of people in dozens of cities across the nation walked out of work and school, held mock coronations, intoned the names of the Iraq war dead and held candlelight vigils to show their disapproval of President Bush as he was sworn in for his second term.

From Bridgewater, Mass., to San Francisco, the protesters carried a similar message Thursday, deploring the war in Iraq, angry about the Patriot Act and concerned about the next four years.

"The administration thinks it's got a mandate to continue its policies," said David Williams, a 49-year-old construction company owner from Oakland, Calif., who wore a T-shirt to the San Francisco march with Bush's picture and the description, "International Terrorist."

"This is my way of saying, 'I don't think so.' The Bush administration has no respect for human rights outside the United States and they have no respect for people anywhere else in the world," he said.

Crowds were larger than organizers expected in some communities — more than 1,500 people took to the streets of New Orleans in a "jazz funeral of democracy," an event that took on the appearance of a lugubrious Mardi Gras ball, a raucous street protest, Halloween freak show and traditional New Orleans jazz funeral rolled into one.

About 1,000 people rallied in Seattle, more than 2,000 in Portland, Ore., and several thousand gathered in downtown San Francisco, where protesters waved signs and carried banners with slogans such as "Not Our President," "Drop Bush Not Bombs," and "Hail To The Thief."

There were dozens of smaller rallies, marches and walkouts as well. Two hundred protesters filled a city block marching through downtown Atlanta, 150 marched on the state capitol in Lincoln, Neb., and in Denver, several hundred demonstrators were joined at the state Capitol by a group of women wearing witches' hats who chanted "We've been under a spell." The crowd cheered when they added "But we are waking up."

In Santa Cruz, Calif., about 250 marchers followed a 20-foot-tall Statue of Liberty puppet to the Town Clock in a demonstration where former Democratic presidential nominee George McGovern was the featured speaker.

Many demonstrators said the protests were galvanizing, a way to motivate anti-Bush activists.

"We need to build a massive movement for change in this country because it's going to be a bleak four years," said Margo Polley, an organizer with Not in Our Name, which sponsored rallies at the federal courthouse in Seattle.

Besides those in Washington, D.C., there were few arrests — one in Seattle, and another in Portland, Ore., where clusters of Bush supporters got into shouting matches with protesters as they marched by.

But hundreds clashed with police in the nation's capital at the inaugural parade. Gary Gillespie, an activist in Baltimore, said he had planned to travel the 35 miles for the larger demonstrations, but decided "local action" was important.

Many demonstrators said they deliberately avoided watching or listening to the inauguration.

"I missed the whole thing, thank goodness," said Pat Neary, 62, a real estate agent who joined about 50 people gathered on the snowy town common in Bridgewater, Mass.


"Drop Bush Not Bombs."- very creative

"Hail To The Thief."- disgraceful but apt

"We've been under a spell." The crowd cheered when they added "But we are waking up."- too bad people didn't wake up before the election.

"jazz funeral of democracy" - a funeral of Gore's 2nd term

fanofdave
01-21-2005, 11:08 AM
thousands protested;
millions celebrated.
next story, please.

bueno bob
01-21-2005, 12:12 PM
I thought it was cool how he said that America won't force it's form of government on the unwilling.

Did he leave out "anymore"?

ODShowtime
01-21-2005, 02:20 PM
he's the best president in the history of freedom!


he said some bullshit about the "history of freedom"

Steve Savicki
01-21-2005, 02:44 PM
Originally posted by fanofdave
next story, please.
http://www.miningjournal.net/news/story/0121202005_new02-n0121.asp

Dems vow to block President: Bush opens ambitious term



"The survival of liberty in our land increasingly depends on the success of liberty in other lands. The best hope for peace in our world is the expansion of freedom in all the world." - President George W. Bush

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush, head bowed in prayer, today opens an ambitious second term in which he boldly promises to reshape Social Security and spark democracy in the Middle East. His Republican allies say they're eager to begin, while Democrats vow to resume their fight against Bush policies.

Four days of celebrations surrounding Bush's inauguration were to culminate Friday with an hourlong National Prayer Service, following a tradition set by George Washington. The service, Bush's second visit to church in two days, was to bring together 3,200 invited family, dignitaries, administration officials and other guests in the majestic Gothic-style sanctuary of the Washington National Cathedral.
On the program were instrumental and choral music and an interfaith lineup of Christian, Jewish and Muslim clergy, all to help celebrate through prayer the events of the day before, when Bush placed his hand on a family Bible at the U.S. Capitol and swore a second time to faithfully execute the office of president and uphold the Constitution.

On Thursday the president was on the go all day, from an early morning church appearance to hours in the cold watching the traditional parade down Pennsylvania Avenue to a late night dash through 10 black-tie inaugural balls. The only thing on the president's public schedule for the first day of his second term was the prayer service.

But there will be little time for him to rest, with all the tasks he has named as priorities for himself and the nation:

-Win a war on terror against shadowy, deadly networks.

-Establish stability and democracy in Iraq, a deeply divided country where the American casualty rate has even fellow Republicans urging Bush to say more about how he will get the United States out.

-Add private investment accounts to Social Security, through an as-yet-undefined plan that has many deeply skeptical.

-Simplify a tax code bloated by thousands of provisions that special-interest patrons will be loathe to relinquish.

-Limit medical malpractice and class-action jury awards.

-Push a "guest worker'' immigration plan that conservatives in his own party oppose.

For the immediate future, Bush's list of most-pressing duties include naming someone to the powerful new post of director of national intelligence, watching the Jan. 30 elections in Iraq and mending still-frayed relations with Europe during his first overseas trip of his second term.

"I'm looking forward to putting my heart and soul into this job for four more years,'' he said, making no mention of the legislative battles ahead over taxes, expanding immigration laws, Social Security, the burgeoning budget deficit, judges and more.

"We're ready to go to work,'' replied Sen. Trent Lott, R-Miss., chairman of the congressional inaugural committee.

Eager to begin, the GOP-controlled Senate convened at midafternoon Thursday and confirmed Mike Johanns as secretary of agriculture and Margaret Spellings as secretary of education, the first of Bush's nine new second-term Cabinet officers to win approval.

Senate Democrats are delaying confirmation of Condoleezza Rice as secretary of state, originally expected on Thursday, until next week. The inauguration, they said, was only a brief respite in their battle against the GOP majority.

Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., chairman of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, told supporters in a fund-raising e-mail that "when the inauguration bands stop playing and Congress comes back into session, we Democrats will be on guard and ready to fight against the Republicans' extreme policies once again.''

He pledged to reform "great institutions to serve the needs of our time.''

He talked of the spread of freedom and liberty as the oldest ideals of America, and said, "Now it is the urgent requirement of our nation's security, and the calling of our time.''

He promised that U.S. relations with other countries would turn on how decently they treat their own people. He used the word "tyranny'' five times, "liberty'' 15 and "freedom'' 27.

"We are led, by events and common sense, to one conclusion,'' Bush said. "The survival of liberty in our land increasingly depends on the success of liberty in other lands. The best hope for peace in our world is the expansion of freedom in all the world.''

"Our country has accepted obligations that are difficult to fulfill and would be dishonorable to abandon,'' he said, mindful of impatience on Capitol Hill and in the public.

Instead, he left it to his State of the Union address, due for delivery to the nation in less than two weeks, and his new federal budget, due to Congress on Feb. 7, to flesh out in more detail his second-term goals and how he intends to achieve them.


Bush putting his hand on the bible... what would FORD have to say about that?

vhrightnow
01-21-2005, 03:00 PM
Originally posted by fanofdave
thousands protested;
millions celebrated.
next story, please.

perfect!!!! man all you libs are a bunch a cry babbies.......

Sgt Schultz
01-21-2005, 03:34 PM
Originally posted by ODShowtime
he's the best president in the history of freedom!


he said some bullshit about the "history of freedom"

Except that there is a limited history of freedom, as in democracies or republics.

But never mind, Bush is a num-num! So now you can all sleep safe and snug tonight..

Steve Savicki
01-21-2005, 04:26 PM
Originally posted by vhrightnow
perfect!!!! man all you libs are a bunch a cry babbies.......
Then why don't you go sign up for the battlefield and take Sarge's place in what Mezro calls the shi+grinder?

ODShowtime
01-21-2005, 05:19 PM
Originally posted by Sgt Schultz
Except that there is a limited history of freedom, as in democracies or republics.

But never mind, Bush is a num-num! So now you can all sleep safe and snug tonight..


I just thought he sounded like a jack-ass again.