Monday, October 20, 2025

Gratitude Monday: United we stand

I went to one of the nearly 3000 No Kings protests around the world on Saturday. Over the past few weeks as I’ve watched protesters and people just going about their lives, TBH, being assaulted and arrested by masked and armed federal thugs, the feeling that I can’t let others do this alone has built up inside me.

Also—listening to Republicans of every strip yowling about the paid America-hating radical left extremists planning insurrection on Saturday just frankly got up my nose.

I bought posterboard and markers from Dollar Tree, used a graphic an artist on Bluesky made available as visual interest and cobbled together a little homemade sign.

The local Indivisible org asked protestors to wear yellow, and I managed to find a tee-shirt from some tech company that filled the bill.

I removed the biometrics from my mobile phone and put ID and bail money in my pocket (Governor Fleeceweasel had announced he was calling up the Virginia National Guard to “keep peace” at the protests) and started walking to the nearest of four sites in the People’s Republic, about a mile away.

Along the way, I ran into one of my neighbors, who was carrying several signs—turns out he’s a cartoonist, and is really good at expressing ideas visually.

As we approached the site, I was relieved to see that there were already hundreds of people lining Reston Parkway—on both sides. (I’d been rather worried it might be five blokes and a dog.) As time passed, protestors spread out about half a mile. It wasn’t just the blue-haired set (as predicted by one of the yowling Republicans), although there were plenty of us who had experience protesting back in the 70s. One woman walked up and down the line with a bubble generator; there were plenty of cowbells. No inflatable frogs, but one squirrel, and my neighbor said he saw a rabbit, too.

Cars driving past honked, waved and flashed thumbs up. Some went back and forth several times. It was a festive atmosphere.

I did not get a lot of pix, because of having to hold up my sign. Did not get a shot of the beautiful banner proclaiming “We the People means all of us”, or of the squirrel. But here are a couple.





BTW—the response from the White House was to post an AI-generated video of the Kleptocrat in a fighter jet (wearing a crown and with his breathing apparatus below his nose) releasing clumps of liquid shit on protestors. No, I am not making this up.

My gratitude today is for participating in just one event of many that were held in Reston, which was one town in hundreds around the world. More than seven million, we are told. I'm grateful for every one of those seven million, for their determination, their creativity, their joy.  And no major incidents (outside of that one woman in Fairhope, Ala., who was arrested for “lewd conduct” for wearing an inflatable penis suit and a sign saying “No dick-tator”; it took three local cops to wrestle her to the ground and someone on Bluesky commented, “Four dicks.”. And there were a couple of attempts by MAGAts to stir up trouble, because fuckwits gotta fuck), despite all the federal forces standing at the ready with fingers twitching against their weapons.

I’m grateful for the reminder that—while I am but one, one plus one plus many more ones is power. And as a sign at one of the protests proclaims:

Power to the people.

 

 

©2025 Bas Bleu

 

 

No comments:

Post a Comment