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A man yells slogans at a rally against the Bush Administration in New
York City November 2, 2005. Demonstrators in several American cities organized
by the group The World Can't Wait rallied Wednesday calling for an end to the
Bush regime and the war in Iraq.
The 22nd Amendment ensures that a new commander in chief will be sworn
in on Jan. 20, 2009. But some Americans aren't willing to wait that long.
To mark the one-year anniversary of President Bush's reelection Wednesday,
a group called The World Can't Wait staged rallies at sites across the United
States, calling for radical change in Washington.
"We seek to create a political situation where the Bush administration's
program is repudiated, where Bush himself is driven from office, and where the
whole direction he has been taking U.S. society is reversed," the group,
which formed last summer, said in its mission statement.
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What appeared to be thousands
of protesters rallied at New York's Union Square. |
The rallies came at a time at which the Bush administration may be at its weakest
point since it assumed power in 2001. The government's response to Hurricane
Katrina and the rising death toll in Iraq, and the indictments of the top House
Republican and a senior administration official have further emboldened the
opposition. According to a CBS News poll conducted this week, Mr. Bush's job
approval rating is now 35 percent, the lowest number of his presidency. Organizers
of Wednesday's rallies hoped to utilize this rocky time for the Republican establishment
to tap into public discontent and generate steam for their movement.
"I think people have a sense that history is turning right now. It's kind
of a Rosa Parks moment," World Can't Wait supporter and author Larry Everest
said.
The New York rally drew a crowd of what appeared to be thousands of protesters,
who ranged in their political affiliations from moderate Democrats to members
of the Revolutionary Communist Party. But the demonstration was not able to
attract the hundreds of thousands of people and significant media attention
that past anti-war protests generated.
"I wish there were more people here," Janice Bryant of New York said.
"I don't understand what everybody's thinking in this country. What do
people need to understand that these people in this administration need to go?"
While the World Can't Wait organization hopes to initiate a public drive that
will eventually force President Bush out of the White House, the group does
not attempt to lay out the chain of events that would produce such an outcome.
Some protesters in New York admitted to feeling somewhat powerless and were
not optimistic about the prospects of a regime change in Washington.
"Democrats are in a catch-22 situation because they have the evidence
to impeach him. The Downing Street memos are like a smoking gun ... but the
House is Republican, the Senate is Republican and the courts are Republican,"
a protester named Anthony, who didn't want to reveal his last name, asserted.
The group is certainly not afraid to take controversial stances, and its Web
site repeatedly warns that the United States government is headed toward fascism.
But that has not stopped several prominent critics of the Bush administration
from lending their support to the group, including iconic writers Gore Vidal
and Kurt Vonnegut, "peace mom" Cindy Sheehan and the winner of the
2005 Noble Prize for literature, Harold Pinter.
"The Bush administration is the most dangerous force that has ever existed.
It is more dangerous than Nazi Germany because of the range and depth of its
activities and intentions worldwide," Pinter wrote in a statement to the
group.
A significant number of attendees at the New York rally were high school and
college students who walked out of class or played hooky for the day in order
to attend the event. Maris Gelman is a 14-year-old student at The Bard High
School Early College, but on this day she traded in her school clothes for the
"Resist Or Die!" t-shirt that was popular among youths at the rally.
"I think that Bush is really driving our country into a hole, and it's
inappropriate. We don't need this, we need to get better," she said.
A small group of about a dozen counter-protesters stood outside the designated
area that NYPD officers had cordoned off and waved American flags. Sarah Chambers,
a member of the NYU College Republicans, was one of them. She held up her homemade
poster that read "Hippies Go Home!" and criticized the rallies' organizers
for telling kids to skip school in order to come to the event.
"I think a lot of them don't really know what's going on," she said
of the contingency of high school students. "I don't know how educated
many of them are as far as the actual issues. I think it's kind of a bandwagon
effect."