Sunday, July 10, 2005

I'd bet my right to vote on it

I received the following email from a fellow Portsmouth resident.
Your recent "Sunday evening musings" rings a bell to what has occurred in communities like mine (predominately African-American). On one hand you have creative leaders and thinkers like Martin Luther King Jr who vehemently believed in non-violent social change. They believed that confrontation was warranted only when those who opposed civil rights for everyone literally stood in their way (i.e. voting poll). The results of their efforts and doctrines are unarguably monumental. On the other hand, you have many of today's leaders, often clergymen, in communities similar to mine that devote far too many resources to personal "blessings" and the hereafter rather than the here and now. I'm still waiting for someone in my community to tell me to "Have an involved day" rather than "Have a blessed day".

The lives of Dr. King, Mahatma Gandhi, Nelson Mandela and according to Christian theology, Christ all represent altruism. Altruism when combined with non-violent social change always has and always will change the world forever and for the better. I'd bet my right to vote on it.
Thank you, Robert. May we, indeed, stand together, involved and, ideally, blessed.

Thursday, July 07, 2005

Jamming to the very end of the day

We were all having such a grand time that the hours slipped right past us. We were jamming to the very end of the day.

Sometime after five o'clock, Mia -- that would be Mia from the Mia Johnson Band -- looked up and noticed that the nearly two hundred state troopers who'd been listening to the Rally's music and poetry had taken off. We were left with three trooper cars: more than enough to keep the peace, I might add.

Anyway, what a fitting end to the day. Mia and her band played in Valley Forge. The Band showed they can jump between straight-up rock grooves and swinging world beats as they jammed the late afternoon away.

Dave Quicks helped out on guitar; here you can barely see Rico Joseph on bass.


Here's Rico on bass with Tom Walling wailing away on drums.
All in all, what an awesome day.

PLEASE NOTE: These photographs are Copyright (c) 2005 by Cathy Dixson and are used here by permission. These photographs may not be used further without the written permission of Cathy Dixson. All rights reserved.

Catching some rays of sunshine

Not quite "girls day out," Mia Johnson of the Mia Johnson Band caught some rays and some good music before closing out the Rally.

Some people brought their own shade.

PLEASE NOTE: These photographs are Copyright (c) 2005 by Cathy Dixson and are used here by permission. These photographs may not be used further without the written permission of Cathy Dixson. All rights reserved.

Quick! Quick! You've got to hear this.

The BurnDown All-Stars, in the form of Dave Quicks' Brainchild, played the Rally. Dave Quicks (shown here) also played at this past September's Valley Forge Rally. The Brainchild rocked.

PLEASE NOTE: This photograph is Copyright (c) 2005 by Cathy Dixson and is used here by permission. This photograph may not be used further without the written permission of Cathy Dixson. All rights reserved.

We invited all people who wanted to make a positive statement

Who didn't come to the Rally for Social Justice? Well, these folks (and I'm not sure if they are anarchists or members of Anti-Racist-Action) did not drop in. They started to come our way, and then they realized there was no one they could argue with at the Rally. News reports indicated they not only yelled at those in brown shirts across the park, but also took offense with law enforcement officers and the other counter-protestors. I think they realized they were no match to the power of being for something, as we were/are; their antics would ring empty at the Rally for Social Justice.

Who did show up at the Rally for Social Justice? Well, these two young, flower-decorated, sun-dress clothed women did drop in. The music kept them for more than a spell, too. These young ladies provided no antics; their presence helped us assert that we, and they, stand for diversity, tolerance, non-violence, and social justice.

PLEASE NOTE: These photographs are Copyright (c) 2005 by Cathy Dixson and are used here by permission. These photographs may not be used further without the written permission of Cathy Dixson. All rights reserved.

From the "Rally for Social Justice" to "Live 8"

A huge shout-out and thanks go to Barb, our sound expert and all-around production guru. Here's Barb at the Rally; pictures of Barb a week later would find her in Philadelphia working on the Live 8 concert. That's right: a week later and Barb was in front of the steps of the Museum of Art in Philly doing sound for the likes of Alicia Keys, Dave Matthews Band, Linkin Park, Toby Keith, and a dozen other musical groups. Well, the day of the Rally, she was with us, doing sound for our varied and talented and dedicated musical groups.

Barb is a person who puts her actions with her words. A strong believer in social justice, Barb volunteered her time for the Rally. Not only did she help the day of the event, but she spent innumerable hours the three months leading up to the Rally helping to arrange for all the technical details, including contracting for the sound equipment. And, the morning of the Rally, Barb earned a Purple Heart when she was injured in an accident, caused by my eldest son, during the set-up of the tent. A little ice to cool the injury, and she was back at it. (Note, however, the tape on her finger; I'm thinking she's wincing in pain, here, even hours later.)

PLEASE NOTE: This photograph is Copyright (c) 2005 by Cathy Dixson and is used here by permission. This photograph may not be used further without the written permission of Cathy Dixson. All rights reserved.

And straight from venues in Europe...

The music kept on coming. Here's Ben Arnold (on the left) and Todd Barnison.

We were so blessed to have Ben on stage at the Rally. Ben arrived in the States the evening before the Rally; he'd been on tour in Europe for more than a month playing in such venues at House of Live in Paris and Festhalle in Finnentrop, Germany. He also played in Affalter, Lunzenau, Greiz, Worms, and Solingn (all in Germany) and Lyon and Bresse in France. Talk about a tour! Well, Ben was on stage at the Rally having weathered much jet lag. His dedication is fabulous. As is his music.

Ben's web site notes that Ben isn't just any singer/song writer. He draws from the history of Dylan, the cantankerous spirit of Randy Newman, and the soulful singing and showmanship of Van Morrison. His set rocked.

PLEASE NOTE: This photograph is Copyright (c) 2005 by Cathy Dixson and is used here by permission. This photograph may not be used further without the written permission of Cathy Dixson. All rights reserved.

Scat, soul, & jazz -- all wrapped up in one beautiful package

When I first saw Nadine Goellner, she was walking across the fields of the Yorktown Battlefield with her guitar in a case and strapped to her back. She'd parked about as far away from the Rally site as possible. I wondered how I'd missed her (I was parking cars), and then I realized that when she drove in she looked as if she knew what she was doing: she asked no questions; she was here on a mission. And, indeed, she was.

Her unique acoustic-driven blend of scat, soul, and jazz won me over. She is the consummate musician, and she looked to be at home on our stage at the Rally. I get the sense she'd be at home anywhere acoustic music is held in esteem.

I shouldn't be surprised that Nadine volunteered to play at the Rally for Social Justice. Nadine is a proud volunteer for NYC-based charity, Musicians on Call. Musicians on Call are a wonderful organization helping thousands of people in New York City area hospitals through the healing power of music. Nadine is a woman with a huge heart who understands the positive power of music; her contribution was well received by all.

PLEASE NOTE: This photograph is Copyright (c) 2005 by Cathy Dixson and is used here by permission. This photograph may not be used further without the written permission of Cathy Dixson. All rights reserved.

Peace and Goodwill

I know I've mentioned it before, but I'll mention it again. The Rally for Social Justice was a peaceful, family-friendly event. Diversity. Tolerance. Non-violence. Social Justice. These were, and these are, our watch words. People came to the Rally for Social Justice to enjoy themselves, not to spout off.


All ages... Our rallies truly are appropriate venues for families. We're not teaching hatred or opposition. We are for, not against.


Smile! We're all at the Rally for Social Justice!

PLEASE NOTE: These photographs are Copyright (c) 2005 by Cathy Dixson and are used here by permission. These photographs may not be used further without the written permission of Cathy Dixson. All rights reserved.

The big sound of Seed Is

Seed Is gathered off to the side of the stage before making music, a quiet moment together in prayer. Let me tell you: their funk was like a prayer reaching to the heavens. What a great sound.

Biggs jammed out on guitar. According to the Seed Is website, he is not the illigitimate son of Richard Nixon who "wears a fat man costume so people from his past will not recognize him." That would be Mike Peace. Biggs is a native of Washington, DC, and a self-taught musician. Biggs has played with a number of bands; with Seed Is, his current family, Biggs adds immensely to the sound of this funk, soul, rock, rap, folk, jazz, go-go, reggae band. He's not alone, of course.


Here's Big T, the band's trumpeter, warming up before their set.

I really liked the big sound from Seed Is, and Big T's brass was a large part of that. There's just something about a horn, you know.

Nikki, the last band-member I found playing on the roll of film, plays bass. I'm thinking "cool."

PLEASE NOTE: These photographs are Copyright (c) 2005 by Cathy Dixson and are used here by permission. These photographs may not be used further without the written permission of Cathy Dixson. All rights reserved.

Rally Poets: Revolutionaries with words

Pete Freas of the Chesapeake Bay Poets says, "Poets are the revolutionaries in society." Well, I don't know if revolutionary describes our poets and poetry featured at the Rally, but it was strong, personal, and on-the-mark. Pete read a couple of his poems; he had also helped spread the word about the Rally throughout the arts and poetry community.

Joining Pete on stage was poet and MFA student Eddie Dowe. Eddie read several very powerful pieces. His words were able to stop us in our tracks and force us to think and examine our own lives. I imagine you'll be seeing more of this young poet in the years to come.If you'd like to read some of Eddie and Pete's poetry, feel free to surf over to Poetry 360, an online poetry zine that has published poems by both this strong and heartfelt poets.

PLEASE NOTE: These photographs are Copyright (c) 2005 by Cathy Dixson and are used here by permission. These photographs may not be used further without the written permission of Cathy Dixson. All rights reserved.

Thursday, June 30, 2005

Enjoyment & diversity: We stood, we stand, for tolerance, diversity, non-violence, and social justice

And what, exactly did those who attend the Rally do? Well, for one thing, they enjoyed some great music.


They hung out and enjoyed the hot, summer breeze coming off the York River.

Sure, those of us at the Rally for Social Justice didn't raise our arms in salute or shout slogans that could barely be heard across an open field.

We did play a little impromtu whiffle ball, a folding chair serving as home plate.

This is what we mean by saying the Rally for Social Justice is a creative, non-confrontational response: We created something; we did not just confront.

PLEASE NOTE: These photographs are Copyright (c) 2005 by Cathy Dixson and are used here by permission. These photographs may not be used further without the written permission of Cathy Dixson. All rights reserved.

She's only fourteen!

To say that Margot MacDonald is unique is understatement. Afterall, we are all unique; that's one of the foundations of diversity. Each of us brings strengths, weaknesses, experiences, and skills to the table. Well, in Margot's case, she's bringing quite a bit as a singer/songwriter... and she's just headed into high school.

That's unique. While most youth her age are playing video games or little league or just chilling, Margot is honing her musical skills. She plays guitar; she plays keyboards; she sings; she writes her own lyrics; she writes her own music. She is a busy young lady.

We were all so impressed with Margot and her music... and not because she's a young teenager, but because it was good. Bright and compassionate, Margot landed her spot on the Rally stage through her bid at SonicBids. We are so glad we choose her, and we are honored that Margot and her family would spend the afternoon with us. This is, folks, the power of commitment to diversity, tolerance, non-violence, and social justice.

Keep an ear out for this young lady; she's going to be making sounds on a radio near you... very soon.

PLEASE NOTE: This photograph is Copyright (c) 2005 by Cathy Dixson and is used here by permission. This photograph may not be used further without the written permission of Cathy Dixson. All rights reserved.

Let us live in a world with no fear


Scooter Scudieri
, a veteran from the Valley Forge Rally for Social Justice, brought his powerful music to the fields of Yorktown. Scooter is a self-taught guitarist who writes his own in-your-face lyrics and music. He is out to change not only the record industry, but the world, one person, one song, at a time.
I play my music as if my very life depends on it, because it does. I spend every day creating, focusing, and channeling energy into my writing and music. It is my vision to help transform the industry by turning positive thought into action.

This website has become a launch pad for my Music, Mission, and Method. By merging online and offline techniques I have created a focal point not only for my message, but for the movement which is redefining the way music is created and distributed.

I am grateful to be alive at a time of such great change. Fear prevents us from becoming our full possible selves. Our potential is unlimited if we only tap into the source.
We are greatful for Scooter joining us in Yorktown, and we know our paths will cross again.

Let us live in a world without fear.

PLEASE NOTE: This photograph is Copyright (c) 2005 by Cathy Dixson and is used here by permission. This photograph may not be used further without the written permission of Cathy Dixson. All rights reserved.

Wednesday, June 29, 2005

Ours was a gathering of love and peace

For those of us that attended the Rally for Social Justice and didn't make the walk down Surrender Road, this photo pretty much captures the spirit of the day. Hugs, not straight arm salutes, ruled the day.

PLEASE NOTE: This photograph is Copyright (c) 2005 by Cathy Dixson and is used here by permission. This photograph may not be used further without the written permission of Cathy Dixson. All rights reserved.

These are some fun doctors

The Rally opened with the Phun Doctors. Dr. George is lead vocals and keyboards; the Doctors are a premier classic rock & oldies band from Chesapeake. George's PhD is in urban studies & organizational leadership; he's a former helicopter pilot with the U.S. Navy.

On guitar, we found Dr. "Mad Dog" Mike, a graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy and a 20-year Supply Corps veteran with the Navy. Mike holds a PhD in mathematics and provided lead riffs, licks, and signatures.

And standing in for a missing Phun Doctor was Dr. Kevin from Seed Is. Kevin holds an honorary doctorate in musicology with an emphasis in percussion. Kevin joined the Phun Doctors never having played with the Doctors George and Mike before. As nearly everyone in the audience noted, it didn't sound that way. The three Phun Doctors jammed a sweet set of oldies, sending tunes all the way up to the parking lot.

PLEASE NOTE: These photographs are Copyright (c) 2005 by Cathy Dixson and are used here by permission. These photographs may not be used further without the written permission of Cathy Dixson. All rights reserved.

Dogs and horses enjoyed the hot day, too

And even the dogs came out to enjoy the day. The Virginia State Police swept our fenced in festival area to ensure we didn't have any explosive devices. They were certainly not taking any chances.

And to add to the "not taking any chances," law enforcement was complete with mounted officers. Our mounted officers were from the National Park Police. At the south end of the Park, mounted officers from the Portsmouth Police Department on the southside of Hampton Roads kept the peace.

PLEASE NOTE: These photographs are Copyright (c) 2005 by Cathy Dixson and are used here by permission. These photographs may not be used further without the written permission of Cathy Dixson. All rights reserved.

Law enforcement and the Rally

Early Saturday morning, both Phil and I met with reps from the Virginia State Police. Here Phil is debating the finer points of security and enforcement with two senior officers from the Commonwealth. More than 170 officers from the State Police were on hand to ensure a peaceful day. Their presence was more than welcome.

Our most humble thanks go to the men and women of the Virginia State Police.

PLEASE NOTE: This photograph is Copyright (c) 2005 by Cathy Dixson and is used here by permission. This photograph may not be used further without the written permission of Cathy Dixson. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, June 28, 2005

Thanks are owed to many for Rally's success

I continue to recover from the weekend. All the rented and borrowed materials are back where they came from, and life returns to some sense of normalcy.

An event like the Rally for Social Justice takes many peoples' contributions to ensure the "show" can go on. Over the next several days, we'll be publicly thanking contributers and volunteers. I start today with several key volunteers whose last minute contributions ensured the show would go on. Without their time & talent, we might still be sitting in the field off Ballard Street.

My thanks go to Chuck, Pat, & Andrew for their help on Saturday and before:
  • To Chuck for his invaluable prep work including soliciting donations & purchasing needed supplies & obtaining the Rally t-shirts; for his strong & tall assistance raising and striking the tents; and for his assistance in parking cars.


  • To Pat for his financial contributions, for flying down from the Big Apple in order to attend & help out; for raising & striking tents; for assisting in the parking lot; and for ensuring good order & discipline.


  • To Andrew for wrestling with nearly a ton of weights; for spending more than 12-hours helping with tents & car parking when, as a young teenager, he might have rather been doing nearly anything else; and for keeping me company.
Gentlemen, thank you.

Here's a picture of Andrew, late in the afternoon; I think he's flagging in a 747.
And here is Pat, along with me and the baby. I'd like to note the baby did not help much at all.
Somehow, Chuck avoided the photographer. I'm not sure how he managed that.

More thanks -- and photographs from the Rally day -- are forthcoming.

Monday, June 27, 2005

News round-up: Yorktown in the press

Thought I'd give a round-up of the traditional, mainstream print media's take on Saturday's events...

From the Daily Press, published on the Peninsula here in southeastern Virginia, we have Tamara Dietrich, a columnist. She compared the day to a circus, although I'm not sure she found the clowns all that funny.
It was Saturday in Yorktown, and the carnival had arrived.

SWAT sharpshooters; women in tallit prayer shawls; young toughs chanting, "Death, death, death to the Nazis"; flower children; messianic Jews; guerrilla anti-racists; enough firepower to overthrow Cornwallis all over again; and baffled senior citizens with tote bags and sensible shoes, stumbling upon it all.
Carol Scott of the Daily Press noted that "counterdemonstrators outnumbered the white supremacists at the battlefield on Saturday."
Saturday's three rallies at the battlefield - one led by the neo-Nazi National Socialist Movement and two counter-rallies led by the messianic Jewish synagogue Congregation Zion's Sake and the Center for Education Rights - ended with no arrests, said National Park Service spokesman Mike Litterst. There were no injuries; a handful of people were treated for heat-related issues, he said.

More than 500 counterdemonstrators attended the congregation's rally. The center's "Rally for Tolerance" brought in about 250, and some of that number attended the Zion's Sake rally as well, said center President Phil Stinson.
The southside newspaper, the Virginian Pilot, sent Kristina Herrndobler to cover the news. She wrote,
Fewer than 150 members and supporters of the National Socialist Movement gathered for speeches by their own members and members of the Ku Klux Klan. As they faced the counter demonstrators on the other side, group members wearing Nazi uniforms with swastika armbands shouted Sieg Heil.

Some 500 counter-demonstrators, including members family attends synagogue, and Anti-Racist Action, had flags and posters of their own. One read Fight Terrorism, Smash the Klan. Another read, No tanks in Gaza, No Nazis in Yorktown. A second counter-demonstration, sponsored by the Center for Education Rights, was held about a halfmile away.
She also wrote,
Peter Stinson, a local organizer for the Center for Education Rights peace demonstration, said more police officers than activists attended their rally. But Stinson credits the police force for keeping the day free of violence.
Yes, the men and women of law enforcement were out in force. I'll note the Virginia State troopers who were at the Rally for Social Justice site were extremely personable and professional. We couldn't have asked for better law enforcement personnel; and clearly, we couldn't have asked for more... ;-)

Sue Lindsey of the Associated Press covered the event. She noted,
About 150 members of the National Socialist Movement and their supporters gathered at the Yorktown Battlefield to honor George Washington and other founding fathers of the United States whom they said held white separatist and anti-Jewish views - a position disputed by most scholars.

Many wore Nazi uniforms with swastika armbands, while others identified themselves as members of the Ku Klux Klan and various skinhead groups.

"This is sacred ground," said Jeff Schoep of Minneapolis, Commander of the National Socialist Movement, which bills itself as the largest Nazi party in the United States.
Her story went out over the wire and was picked up by more than 200 news outlets. This site has a photo from the AP; this is probably a better view than all the counter-protestors on Surrender Road had. When you're more than 250 yards away, people look like ants...

CNN (I know, they're not print media... but they've posted words online) also included the day's festivities in their reporting. Their film coverage also included aerial video, likely provided in a feed from the law enforcement helicopters which provided real-time surveillance video to the Incident Command Post headed by Chief Ranger Nash; a still frame of the video is posted here.
National Socialist Movement leader Jeff Schoep railed against immigrants, calling them "putrid scum" that are "pouring over our borders, destroying our culture, and robbing us of our heritage."

"We must secure the existence of white people and the future of white children," another speaker said....

Bill White, a spokesman for the movement -- which calls itself "America's Nazi Party" -- acknowledged the turnout was not large....

In a nearby field -- separated by barricades from the Neo-Nazi rally -- about 250 counter demonstrators shouted for an end to such hatred. The protest was organized by a messianic synagogue and six other religious institutions....

About a mile away, a second counter demonstration was held. Organizers called it a "tolerance rally." Those participants said shouting at the Neo-Nazis only helps fuel the fire of Neo-Nazi hatred.
By now, frankly, I'm just glad they caught one of our four key values.

Bill Geroux of the Richmond Times Dispatch posted a thoughtful news account. He noted that police outnumbered both the participants at the National Socialist Movement's demonstration site and the counter-protest site sponsored by Zion's Sake.
Police clearly outnumbered both groups put together, though authorities would not say how many officers were deployed.
While officials might not have been telling the press how many officers were at the Park, reliable sources placed the number in excess of 500.

Geroux writes,
The commander of the neo-Nazi group, Jeff Schoep of Minnesota, declared in his speech yesterday that America was being controlled by Jews and ruined by racial integration. He vowed his group would resist such "occupation" and likened them to the patriots led by George Washington who won America's freedom at Yorktown.

"If being proud of your race is hate, then we are a hate group," Schoep shouted over the pounding rotors of a police helicopter.

"If hating foreign occupation makes us a hate group, then we're a hate group." His brown-shirted listeners urged him on with cries of "Sieg Heil" as Nazi flags flapped in the wind.
As to the counter-protest, Geroux notes,
The counter-rally across the battlefield was organized by Rabbi Eric Carlson of Synagogue Zion's Sake in Newport News and attended by members of nearly a dozen other synagogues and churches from Moyock, N.C., to Richmond.

The synagogue group asked for a permit to gather within sight of the neo-Nazis, Carlson said, because "we want them to see the face of love. We've been praying for them all week." The group spent much of the day dancing and singing songs of peace to drown out the distant neo-Nazi speakers.

But the counter-demonstration was joined by a group of about 50 men and women dressed mostly in black and carrying placards with messages such as "Die Nazi Scum." Members of that group, who would not identify themselves to reporters, marched and shouted condemnation of not only the neo-Nazis but the police, court system and Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.
Frankly, it all sounds like a zoo, particularly when compared as to how he describes the Rally for Social Justice:
About a mile from the opposing rallies, a third group, the Pennsylvania-based Center for Education Rights Ltd., held a low-key gathering to promote tolerance.
I'm not sure how one could say Seed Is or the Dave Quicks Band are low-key, but okay. At least nobody was screaming obscenities or wishing people dead.

Diversity. Tolerance. Non-violence. Social Justice.

I continue to be amazed that people on both sides of Surrender Road can't fathom a world that embraces these values.

Well, that's it for the mainstream news round-up. If you have links to other, different, stories covering the event, please post them in the comments section below.

Peace.

Sunday, June 26, 2005

Some Sunday evening musings

Here it is, a quiet, rainy evening in Portsmouth, Virginia, and home to excellent eateries such as the Bier Garden and Roger Brown's within block of each other.

In the midst of ruminating about leadership development, I'm struck by an observation from yesterday. At Yorktown, I spent some time directing traffic in the northern parking lot several hundred yards from the Rally for Social Justice site. I spoke with someone in nearly every car that entered while I was in the lot; my fluorescent orange vest and orange traffic flag made quite a fashion statement when taken in concert with my wild blue shorts.

Anyway, here's one of things I was struck with: why is it when we oppose something we feel we must directly confront it? Many of the counter-protesters felt an urge to directly confront the neo-Nazis gathered at the park. They felt to oppose, they had to confront; they wanted to see the people gathered at the National Socialist Movement site. Rather than confront, the Center for Education Rights' approach is to creatively respond to that which is opposed. Confrontation gets nowhere. Certainly, the neo-Nazis were not going to change the opinions of the counter-protestors from the Anti-Racist Action network or Zion's Sake or any other segment of the population. And, just as certainly, the counter-protestors were not going to change the minds of the National Socialist Movement's members or the members of the other white supremist groups in attendance with the neo-Nazis. Confrontation only provides a place for evil to flourish, on both sides of the fence.

But many -- most -- of the people I spoke with wanted to confront. This includes, by the way, one car load of neo-Nazis in brown shirts and one car load of heavily tattooed young men (a swastika prominently displayed on arms) and several other sympathizers to the white supremist movement; most people choose to confront violently (violence as in "vehemence of feeling or expression; fervor" if not "force exerted for the purpose of violating, damaging, or abusing").

So, my question is: why is it that to oppose something, the seeming natural (at least yesterday at the Park) response is to confront?

As a member of my church suggested to me to today, perhaps the Rally for Social Justice response is one for thinking people, people who have a creative understanding, who can see beyond their own point of view, who understand the world is, indeed, a complicated place.

Let us hope that over the coming years, people and communities see there is power in creating a creative, non-confrontational, non-violent, tolerant response to that which goes against humanity.

Diversity. Tolerance. Non-violence. Social justice.

For all.

These are our watch words; these are our values. May we, indeed, live in a world without fear.

Peace.

Saturday, June 25, 2005

Rally for Social Justice concludes

Greetings, all... a quick note before I fall asleep: The Yorktown Rally for Social Justice was a superb time and, I think all would agree, a success. While our numbers were lower than we had anticipated (I figured we had some 130 to 150 come through the gate; Phil thought the number was perhaps closer to 250), the music was excellent, the spoken word was excellent, and the cupcakes were excellent. Everyone, from the Holocaust survivor who stopped by to baby Elliot, seemed to enjoy themselves.

To those of you who didn't make it, you missed a super summer festival.

Peace.

Mobile Post: Seed Is, for sure

Seed Is kicked much with their big sound, filling the park with horn and voice. Peace.

Mobile Post: Law enforcement out in force

There are likely more law enforcement officers at the park than all the people demonsrating their right to free speech. Here at the Rally for Social Justice, we have the Virginia State Police providing services: excellent presence.

Mobile Post: What more could we ask for?

Live music. Pizza. Soda. A beautiful sky. What more could we ask for?

Mobile Post: Margot's beautiful voice

Singer Margot MacDonald is here on stage; what a voice. She won a contest to participate. She's 14 and presents like a professional!

Mobile Post: An honorary doctorate?

Phun Doctors are playing now: "Mustang Sally." Their drummer didn't make it, so the drummer from Seed Is jumped in. I guess they're going to give him an honorary doctorate!