Anti-Vietnam War Protest Marchers, October 21, 1967, photo © Jim Moore |
Before the main body of the marchers continued beyond the bridge, they paused, and a banner they were carrying, “Support Our GI’s [sic] Bring Them Home,” sagged across one of the rows of marchers. Being the 1960s, there were many protest songs being sung, including “The Times They Are a-Changin’,” written by Bob Dylan in 1964, and made popular by Peter, Paul, and Mary (who sang at the Lincoln Memorial at the beginning of the demonstration), Joan Baez, the Byrds, and many other artists prior to and years after the Pentagon march.
Half-a-century (plus a year) later, this time as a 68-year-old photographer without media credentials, and with the significant hitch of age in my physical mobility, I journeyed from my Alexandria home with a photographer friend to the rally on Pennsylvania Avenue on a bright, cool, spring morning. I brought my cameras and a healthy dose of optimism about the March’s mission—to bring the visual, vocal, and social-media power of young people to bear against the onslaught of gun-related deaths in America. My optimism proved right, though frankly, it was overwhelmed and ultimately boosted to a new height by what I experienced for the four hours I spent in the midst of the hundreds of thousands of people who packed Pennsylvania Avenue for nearly 14 long D.C. blocks.
Half-a-century (plus a year) later, this time as a 68-year-old photographer without media credentials, and with the significant hitch of age in my physical mobility, I journeyed from my Alexandria home with a photographer friend to the rally on Pennsylvania Avenue on a bright, cool, spring morning. I brought my cameras and a healthy dose of optimism about the March’s mission—to bring the visual, vocal, and social-media power of young people to bear against the onslaught of gun-related deaths in America. My optimism proved right, though frankly, it was overwhelmed and ultimately boosted to a new height by what I experienced for the four hours I spent in the midst of the hundreds of thousands of people who packed Pennsylvania Avenue for nearly 14 long D.C. blocks.
Participants at the March For Our Lives, March 24, 2018, photo © Jim Moore |
This was no loose confederation of idealists, destructionists, chanters, off-message ranters, and unfocused protesters. Unlike the 1967 Pentagon march, which had a number of dark facets, bitter undertones, and political rancor detracting from a simple anti-war message, the 2018 March For Our Lives organizers and participants were absolutely on-point, on-message, and on-fire with vision, energy, and determination. While many adults attended (I saw thousands of my generation, and dozens of my parents’ generation there), what happened on Saturday was of, by, and for the nation’s young people—the generation to which will fall, in just a few years, the full weight of local, state, and national governance.
The shooting deaths of 14 teenagers and three adults at Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida on February 14, 2018, brought to the national media stage some of the most articulate, politically-savvy, deeply philosophical, and empowered teenagers and pre-teenagers I have ever seen. And in the crowd that jammed Pennsylvania Avenue, it was clear to me that what the public sees in the faces of the Marjorie Stoneman Douglas (MSD) students who are the impassioned spokespersons for the movement, I saw in their peers from every corner of the country.
Six blocks from the Capitol, Pennsylvania Avenue was overflowing with marchers, photo © Jim Moore |
Make no mistake; MSD student Emma Gonzales was riveting in her 6-minute-20-second speech. Likewise, her classmates David Hogg, Delaney Tarr, Cameron Kasky, Samantha Fuentes, Jaclyn Corin, and Alex Wind spoke with assured eloquence and ingrained determination (Fuentes was so emotional, she threw up during her speech, but soldiered on to complete it, with praise from the crowd). But there were also speakers from other schools and communities plagued by gun violence, and each, in his or her turn, spoke truth to the aged, unreasonable, unchecked, and deaf powers standing in the doorways and blocking the halls of Congress, state legislatures, and in the offices of the National Rifle Association.
Eleven-year-old Naomi Wadler, a student at George Mason Elementary School here in Alexandria, an organizer of a student walkout at her school, spoke with a confidence belying her age on behalf of “…African-American women who are the victims of gun violence.” Edna Chavez, a high school student from South Los Angeles, who lost her brother, Ricardo, to gun violence, noted in her speech, “I learned to duck from bullets before I learned to read.” And Alex King and D'Angelo McDade, from North Lawndale College Prep in Chicago, partnered on the stage with powerful voices ringing with words from Martin Luther King, Jr., and impassioned accounts of life under the constant threat of violence.
The crowd, having been brought to a high emotional pitch by so many of their peers, found itself as one mass of people lifted even higher by the simple words of one of the day’s last speakers, nine-year-old Yolanda Renee King, Dr. King’s granddaughter, “I have a dream that enough is enough, and that this should be a gun-free world.”
By the time Yolanda spoke, I’d returned home, tired and sore from the physical experience, but excited by what I’d felt and seen while taking pictures of people representing the broadest possible U.S. demography. I watched the replay of all the speeches—those I’d been there to hear, and those I’d missed—and my energy level increased. What I and several hundred thousand people experienced was part of what I’m going to have to describe as a part of the social-political spectrum heretofore unseen, but nonetheless quite real and important.
As any prism-and-sun experiment confirms, white light is really a combination of the full spectrum of colors visible to the human eye, from violet on the far left, to red on the far right.
Eleven-year-old Naomi Wadler, a student at George Mason Elementary School here in Alexandria, an organizer of a student walkout at her school, spoke with a confidence belying her age on behalf of “…African-American women who are the victims of gun violence.” Edna Chavez, a high school student from South Los Angeles, who lost her brother, Ricardo, to gun violence, noted in her speech, “I learned to duck from bullets before I learned to read.” And Alex King and D'Angelo McDade, from North Lawndale College Prep in Chicago, partnered on the stage with powerful voices ringing with words from Martin Luther King, Jr., and impassioned accounts of life under the constant threat of violence.
The crowd, having been brought to a high emotional pitch by so many of their peers, found itself as one mass of people lifted even higher by the simple words of one of the day’s last speakers, nine-year-old Yolanda Renee King, Dr. King’s granddaughter, “I have a dream that enough is enough, and that this should be a gun-free world.”
By the time Yolanda spoke, I’d returned home, tired and sore from the physical experience, but excited by what I’d felt and seen while taking pictures of people representing the broadest possible U.S. demography. I watched the replay of all the speeches—those I’d been there to hear, and those I’d missed—and my energy level increased. What I and several hundred thousand people experienced was part of what I’m going to have to describe as a part of the social-political spectrum heretofore unseen, but nonetheless quite real and important.
As any prism-and-sun experiment confirms, white light is really a combination of the full spectrum of colors visible to the human eye, from violet on the far left, to red on the far right.
Visible light: the narrow portion of the electromagnetic spectrum humans can "see" |
How the eye-brain combination works to discern individual colors must be left for additional reading outside this blog, but here’s what’s most important in the study of the spectrum: There are colors we cannot see, but which are nonetheless very much a part of the spectrum.We humans cannot “see” ultraviolet or infrared wavelengths—our eyes are just not designed that way—but they exist.
Radio waves, microwaves, and X-rays, are part of that spectrum—heating our food, burning our skin, exposing our bones, delivering music to our ears—but it was only with equipment designed to make those wavelengths known and measured that we discovered the true span of what is called the electromagnetic spectrum. Visible color is but a small portion of that spectrum.
So it is with America’s social-political spectrum. What we perceive as the social-political spectrum comprising the far-left to far-right political persuasions coupled uneasily to the myriad visible social strata in between: from black to white; from undocumented to dynastic blue blood; from dire poverty to untold wealth; from under-education to privileged education; from homelessness to penthouses; from debt-doomed illnesses to insurance-supported health; from huddled lives of daily fear to care-less lives of ignorance of those who live in daily fear.
These, and other visible segments of the social-political spectrum, are aspects of American life we can see, touch, experience, write about, dwell on, decry, exalt, wring our hands about, or ignore as we choose. The question is, do we have to accept this spectrum as the norm for our time (or worse, as the norm for future generations)? The answer, spoken forcefully from the March For Our Lives’ podium on Saturday, is “no.” No. We do not have to accept the norm, and, what’s more, there is a once-unseen and unheard portion of that spectrum that has the power to make that “No” a reality.
These, and other visible segments of the social-political spectrum, are aspects of American life we can see, touch, experience, write about, dwell on, decry, exalt, wring our hands about, or ignore as we choose. The question is, do we have to accept this spectrum as the norm for our time (or worse, as the norm for future generations)? The answer, spoken forcefully from the March For Our Lives’ podium on Saturday, is “no.” No. We do not have to accept the norm, and, what’s more, there is a once-unseen and unheard portion of that spectrum that has the power to make that “No” a reality.
March participants watch Delaney Tarr, a student at Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School, photo © Jim Moore |
America’s teenagers and pre-teens (as evidenced by Naomi Wadler and Yolanda King), are that long-overlooked, politically-ignored and unappreciated portion of the social-political spectrum that, in truth, is the source of the yet-untapped, but clearly sustainable energy the nation needs if we are to ever overcome the inequalities that color virtually every feature of our past, present, and (if left unaddressed) future histories.
Of course they have always been a part of the spectrum. There is no doubt that far too many teenagers were only appreciated by their government as necessary to the military, or as entry-level (if that) employees as a staple of the workforce. But, ask virtually any politician if he or she considers teenagers positive or negative factors in their continued electability, you will get either a condescending remark, or an “I-don’t-really-care” shrug. To many politicians already in office—local, state, or national—the potential of teens to make serious contributions to the pressing social issues of our time has, up until Saturday, been dismissed or, at best, patted on the back.
Let me be clear: I am not calling out all politicians, or all adults; there are a handful of politicos, and millions of parents, grandparents, teachers, and probably many employers, who stand firmly behind the young people they love, educate, and employ. And at Saturday’s March, I saw and photographed many aging folks like me who heard the strains of “The Times They Are a-Changin’" and recalled, wistfully, a time when we teens were fired up and ready to turn the world on its head.
Well, what we couldn’t do then, today’s teenagers are going to do tomorrow. I believe that. I believe that in the crowds here in Washington and participating or watching around the country, there are millions of young men and women who were inspired and energized by the March. They will need help focusing that inspiration and energy onto the problems facing the nation, but they saw role models on the podium at the foot of the Capitol, role models who are focused and energized, and who have a plan to bring their peers with them on a grand mission.
Of course they have always been a part of the spectrum. There is no doubt that far too many teenagers were only appreciated by their government as necessary to the military, or as entry-level (if that) employees as a staple of the workforce. But, ask virtually any politician if he or she considers teenagers positive or negative factors in their continued electability, you will get either a condescending remark, or an “I-don’t-really-care” shrug. To many politicians already in office—local, state, or national—the potential of teens to make serious contributions to the pressing social issues of our time has, up until Saturday, been dismissed or, at best, patted on the back.
Let me be clear: I am not calling out all politicians, or all adults; there are a handful of politicos, and millions of parents, grandparents, teachers, and probably many employers, who stand firmly behind the young people they love, educate, and employ. And at Saturday’s March, I saw and photographed many aging folks like me who heard the strains of “The Times They Are a-Changin’" and recalled, wistfully, a time when we teens were fired up and ready to turn the world on its head.
Well, what we couldn’t do then, today’s teenagers are going to do tomorrow. I believe that. I believe that in the crowds here in Washington and participating or watching around the country, there are millions of young men and women who were inspired and energized by the March. They will need help focusing that inspiration and energy onto the problems facing the nation, but they saw role models on the podium at the foot of the Capitol, role models who are focused and energized, and who have a plan to bring their peers with them on a grand mission.
The time is over for those in Congress who ignore the voices of tomorrow's voters, photo © Jim Moore |
A new color of the American spectrum was revealed on Saturday, a color that was always there, but, until teenagers all across America stood their ground against violence, political ignorance, and ballot-box reluctance, it was a color politicians chose not to see. Beginning on Saturday, and gaining strength toward the Novembers of 2018, 2020, 2024 and beyond, there will be a new color painted on the walls of Congress and the Oval Office. My advice to today’s politicians and candidates who have not yet gotten the message: Help the painters or get out of the way.
Once again, thanks Jim
ReplyDeleteMike, thanks so much for reading this post, and for your always-kind comments. We were young once, and what we couldn't do then, I do believe the youth of America will accomplish tomorrow.
DeleteBravo Jim. And thank you. As I said in another post of yours. These young people are the future. And the future is here. They are eloquent, smart, well-educated, mature and marching toward change. And they will VOTE, VOTE, VOTE
ReplyDeleteMy pleasure, and thank you for your kind comments. I agree; they will vote.
ReplyDeleteWonderful piece, Jim. I commented on your photos on FB earlier, also fantastic. I am so proud of these "kids" and you summed it up so eloquently for us "aging Boomers" with protest backgrounds. Keep up the great work. I will share your blog far and wide. Pam
ReplyDeletePam, thanks so much! I'm glad you like the post and delighted you are sharing it. We have an obligation to these young people, and I want to do all I can to keep that commitment.
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