The Other 912 Rally at the National Mall
Sep 14 2009, 12:09 pm by Max Fisher from tHe Atlantic Magazine
I'm just going to post this i it's entirety
The Other 9/12 Rally
Just how many people attended Saturday's 9/12 tea-party protest? Estimates by conservatives range from the hundreds of thousands to the millions -- numbers they say indicate a growing anti-Obama grassroots movement. Unsurprisingly, liberal pundits are pushing back, saying protesters came out in the tens of thousands. So far, the debate is hinging
on photos of the rally, which appear to show the National Mall packed
from the Capitol to the Washington Monument, 16 blocks away. A National
Park Service map pegged to the 2008 inauguration appears to show that the Mall holds about a million people. Bloggers have overlaid
the map with photos from Saturday. Case closed, right? Not so, as
there's an important detail both conservatives and liberals are
ignoring.
What no one has noted is that two-thirds of the National Mall was
filled by an entirely separate event on Saturday that had nothing to do
with protesting the president. September 12 just happened to be the 24th-annual Black Family Reunion,
which ran from 7th Street all the way to the Washington Monument. I
spent several hours on the Mall on Saturday, and there's no question
that protesters numbered at least in the tens of thousands, but they
were isolated to only a fraction of the area they're credited with
having filled. The Black Family Reunion, a peaceful and friendly event
designed around "healing and uplifting black families," featured
mild-mannered African American families meandering through a series of
promotional tables and large white tents scattered across the Mall. One
crowd gathered across from the Washington Monument, not to protest
health-care reform but to enjoy a Christian-themed R&B concert,
where volunteers handed out free water bottles and bananas.
Not even the most biased observer could have mistaken these people for
anti-Obama protesters. So why did so many pundits conflate the cheery
Black Family Reunion with the angry tea-party protesters? The answer, I
think, is that they either weren't there or didn't bother to leave the
protest's zenith on the Capitol steps. It's an institutional hazard of
covering protests that reporters seek out the center of the action and
don't budge, giving them great anecdotes from individual attendees but
little sense of the event's overall scope. Similarly, it's easy for
bloggers to just read after-action reports or browse a few photos
before drawing conclusions. But these are both risky strategies for
covering big events, and it's easy to see why people are so confused
about Saturday's attendance figures.
Also see 1849's blog













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