Protests in Washington on the day of the Inauguration in 2017. Some thought it was rude. It was. Good for rudeness.
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Yesterday
was the bitter third anniversary of
the Trump inauguration. No matter how bad we imagined it would
be, it has been worse—a catastrophe picking up victims like mud on a rolling boulder. I won’t go
into the litany of abuses, outrages, and insults. But you already know them by heart, don’t you.
The
day after the Electoral College
certified the disaster I wrote:
Electoral
College/Solstice
December 2016
What if this
time the fading Sun
does not heed the beacon fires,
the prayer pyres,
the incantations,
the invocations?
What if a
conclave of warlocks
and necromancers
have found a new God
and armies
more powerful
than the Light?
What if day by
day the new God
consumes the Sun
and all upon it shines
until Darkness is total?
Then, my
friends,
we take up our yew bows
and from the fastness
of the deepest, darkest forests,
light the eternal night
with our flaming arrows.
We gather
kindling and fuel
far
and wide,
haul it stealthily
to the foremost alp
and bide our time.
We seek out the
allies
from the corners
of the gloom shrouded earth,
learn alien tongues,
make brothers and sisters
of strangers,
build leagues of comrades.
We find new
prayers,
we fashion with our own hands
new amulets, totems, and fetishes,
forge new singing swords,
invent our own magic.
We carry in our
hearts
the sure knowledge
that no darkness
can ever be truly eternal,
no god or demon can survive
if we no longer give him
power over our imagination.
Now has come the
time, my friends,
to set out in our own
epic saga.
Take heart and
make it so.
—Patrick
Murfin
From
Resistance Verse, a homemade chapbook,
2017.
We
did take heart from the very
beginning, greeting his residency on the first day with
the largest inaugural protests in the street of Washington, D.C. in history.
Then we followed it up with the massive Women’s March on Washington and scores of record breaking
Sister Marches, including one in Chicago
I was privileged to participate in. But many thought we would get bored, discouraged, or intimidated and would give it up after a tantrum or two.
But
we persisted. There were giant marches all over the
country to defend reproductive rights and
health care; to protest the Muslim ban, deportations, and to defend Dreamers; a March for Science; actions to protect
voting rights and ballot access;
to demand sane gun policy and an end to senseless domestic carnage; we
marched because Black Lives Matter and
White Nationalism and its symbols suck.
We
marched on Earth Day, May Day, and any damned day we pleased.
And
we invaded the Halls of Congress in wheelchairs
and with prayers; stormed state capitols and city halls; hunted and haunted the Republican Congressional fronts for the oligarchy who try to hide
from the Voice of the People. And were have been ready for thousands of local actions organized in rapid response to
any outrage by ordinary citizens many of whom had never before organized anything
more dramatic than a bake sale or spaghetti dinner.
And
more.
We have registered, walked precincts, circulated petitions, and run
for office. Tens of Thousands of women,
Blacks, Latinos, Muslims, Gays, Transgender and non-conforming, the disabled,
progressives of every sort—even White men and—gasp! Atheists. And we have won!
Race after race, state after
state even in the deepest red bastions.
The Resistance grows stronger day by day.
And
it was evident in the Women’s Marches
held Saturday.
In the 2018 Chicago Women's March with Tree of Life UUs Terry Kappel and Judy Stettner. The experience inspired a poem.
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In
2018 I marched in Chicago with 300,000
of my closest friends. The next morning, after recovering from the beating on
my old body and with a few moments to reflect after an overnight
shift at a gas station and brief nap before church I scribbled this on a scrap of
paper:
Today,
I Am a Woman
After the
Chicago Women’s March
January 20, 2018
Today, I am a
woman—
a put-a-bag-on-her-head-woman,
a never hit on by Cosby, Weinstein,
or Trump woman,
a lumbering lummox of a lady,
a barren womb non-breeder,
a hairy-legged horror,
a gawky, graceless girl,
a disappointment all around.
But Sisters,
today, I am a woman—
if you will have me.
Tomorrow I will
be just another prick.
—Patrick Murfin
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