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Title: No More Presidents
Author: CrimethInc.
Date: January 17, 2017
Language: en
Topics: US, J20, reportback
Source: Retrieved on 22nd April 2021 from https://crimethinc.com/2017/01/17/no-more-presidents-a-narrative-from-the-2005-inauguration

CrimethInc.

No More Presidents

An earlier version of this narrative appeared in the first issue of

Rolling Thunder: An Anarchist Journal of Dangerous Living. It has become

more poignant with the passing of time: what if anarchists and others

had somehow succeeded in making the invasion and occupation of Iraq

impossible? Perhaps the Islamic State would not have come to power, and

the Syrian uprising could have turned out differently. What if

anarchists had been more successful in opposing Obama, so Trump could

not have presented himself as the only alternative? What horrors loom

ahead in this next administration—and what would it take to forestall

them?

---

January 20, 2005, Washington, DC. The second inauguration of George W.

Bush.

The riot police were already pouring out of their vehicles and suiting

up when we arrived at the reconvergence point. Our first march had hit a

wall of armored police before we could reach the checkpoints surrounding

the inaugural parade route, and we’d spent the following hour lost in

the multitudes outside those checkpoints, trying to figure out where our

friends were and how to attain critical mass again. We passed the riot

police and crossed the street into the throng assembling at the point we

had agreed the previous night.

Many people were gathering here, but there was no clear indication as to

what to do next. As far as any of us knew, now that the initial march

was over, no one had a backup plan. At a discussion the night before,

when I’d broached the question of what we would do if the march failed

to break through the checkpoint, one maniac had coldly responded,

“What’s with all this talk about backup plans and exit strategies?

People are fucking dying in Iraq.”

“So what are you saying, that we should just go until we all get

arrested?”

“Well, yeah.”

Things hadn’t played out that way in the streets: we hadn’t gotten

through, and we hadn’t been arrested. Now we needed to come up with a

new strategy—and quick, before the motorcade passed.

The prospects of this weren’t looking good. People were milling around

indecisively, conferring in small groups; there was a feeling of

dejection in the air. To one side, some activists were bickering about

the decisions made during the earlier march. Others—from the looks of

it, not the most experienced protesters present—had actually sat down in

a circle to hold a formal collective discussion, which didn’t seem to be

turning up any answers either. This, while riot police were massing

across the street! Perhaps they wouldn’t arrest us all right here, but

the longer we dallied, the more difficult it would be to get past them.

I went from one cluster of friends to the next—in each one, ideas were

being tossed around, but none seemed to be sticking. In my pessimistic

frame of mind, it struck me as a microcosm of protest politics in

general: every clique has a pet plan they’d like to see put into action,

but none is willing to do more than talk about how great their plan is.

There was no sense in joining the marketplace of ideas. I returned to

the friend I trusted most, the one with whom I’d shared so many

experiences at other demonstrations. “Listen, nothing’s going to happen

unless somebody decides something and goes for it. I trust you to make

the call for both of us. Just pick a plan, and count me in.”

One of his friends had an idea—apparently, she’d seen a flatbed truck

parked near the checkpoints loaded with wooden pallets we might be able

to seize, with which to try to break through the police lines. This

seemed hard to believe, but stranger things have happened.

So we had an idea. But how were we going to set it in motion? My friends

went around to a few other knots of people, making the proposal.

Everything just seemed to turn to mush: “Yeah, we could do that… or

maybe we could…”

Regrouping quickly, we decided—insanely, impetuously—that we would just

go, the ten of us, and try it, since we had to do something. Ten was a

quixotic number with which to storm flatbed trucks and charge police

checkpoints, but at this point it seemed like a quixotic attempt could

only be an improvement on what would happen otherwise.

We stepped out onto the street opposite the now thoroughly prepared riot

police and set off in the direction of the trucks. To our surprise, a

dozen more people trailed after us—curious what was happening, perhaps,

or just responding instinctively to movement.

Another of my friends seized the chance. “Come on! This way! Join us!”

he shouted, waving his arms. I put my riot whistle between my teeth and

blew a series of blasts in a marching rhythm.

In a matter of seconds, the whole crowd poured off the corner and into

the street behind us.

Now something was happening, and the initiative was ours. Behind, the

riot police reoriented themselves, as if submerged in molasses, and

prepared to follow. We were already well down the street, moving

swiftly, once again appreciative of each other’s presence and sure of

our collective strength.

It struck me that there was a lesson of sorts in what had just

transpired, but before I could explore this thought further, we were

swarming over the trucks, unloading the pallets.

Could we really do this? In the full light of day, here we were,

commandeering a full truckload of defensive materials in the most

occupied zone of the capital city of the most powerful nation on earth.

Why hadn’t we done this during the larger march earlier in the day? If

we had been equipped then, we certainly could have gotten to the

checkpoints, and history might have played out differently. We had

passed construction sites, garbage heaps, and plenty of other

opportunities to gather what we needed. Did we really want a revolution,

or just a protest march?

It remained to be seen if we would be able to get to a checkpoint this

time, either. There were police behind us, presumably on the streets to

either side of us, and in much greater numbers ahead. I kept close to my

companions. We were moving swiftly, almost running.

No squad cars or baton-wielding officers blocked our path. Perhaps as we

had reentered the area they had not at first identified us as the

anarchist menace against which they had mobilized police from all around

the eastern half of the country. We arrived at the street running

parallel to the parade route, a scant block from the checkpoints. We

could see one of the checkpoints ahead of us, a fence of towering black

metal grate with lines of hulking armored police behind it.

Now the police behind us were catching up, and we sighted a larger force

in armored vehicles approaching up the street on our left. If we went

straight for the checkpoint ahead, we would be surrounded.

Instinctively, the crowd veered to the right, increasing speed; some

threw down their pallets in the intersection as a makeshift barricade to

slow our enemies’ pursuit.

A couple blocks more and we arrived at another checkpoint, having

somehow eluded our escort. Here, before the fence, we suddenly paused as

the gravity of what we were doing hit us. A thick cordon of police

waited ahead for us, behind the metal fortifications. There were only a

few dozen of us, really, and we were scarcely equipped with hooded

sweatshirts and bandannas, let alone the tools it would take to get this

fence down while protecting ourselves from the troops behind it. We were

a shoddy bunch in a time that called for far fiercer forces.

At this moment, when, in our hesitation, it seemed like we all might go

no further, I heard a familiar voice behind me:

“Ten! Nine! Eight!”

It was the maniac from the meeting the night before. He was wearing a

motorcycle helmet, shouting at the top of his lungs with a cool

certainty. Until now, his impetuousness had been a liability—but here,

he was the only one with enough morale to imagine we would actually

follow through with what we had come to do.

“Seven! Six!”

This was obviously insane behavior. A few unarmed, skinny lunatics could

no more break through this fortification than a bundle of flowers could

flip a tank.

“Five!”

Our arms were linked tightly, binding us into lines. My friends and I

were in the third line of perhaps seven. Over the heads of the taller

people in front of me, I could just make out the front line of police,

readying industrial pepper spray dispensers.

“Four!”

There was nothing else for it. If we didn’t do something now, it would

just be embarrassing. By the final numbers, we were all screaming:

“Three! Two! One!”

I exchanged a glance with my bosom companion, at my side to the right.

In an instant, it conveyed, “This is absurd. But fuck it, here we go.”

“Yes. Here we go,” his eyes responded.

An instant later, we were surging towards the checkpoint—and then,

before those of us behind the front line could see the object of our

charge, everything went black and our lungs seized up. The crowd heaved

forward and broke against the line of police officers showering us with

pepper spray, then fell back choking in disarray. The fence shook,

rattled, and was still.

I staggered back about fifty yards with the friends on either side of

me, all of us blind and unable to breathe. There we paused and helped

each other to regain use of our eyes and throats. A cynical television

cameraman hurried up to capture this poignant moment; I chased him off.

We cleared out of the area before the police could secure it. Maybe they

were under orders not to arrest us en masse unless we did something

really dangerous.

I later heard that after our charge, they shut down all the checkpoints

around the parade route. I’m not sure whether to believe it was because

of our meager effort. I also heard that the truck we unloaded was

stocked with grappling hooks, too, with which we could more easily have

assaulted the fence had we taken them along with the palettes. Grappling

hooks? What were grappling hooks doing there?

But again, stranger things have happened.

Why didn’t we arrive prepared for the work we came to do that day? We

could have given our opponents a run for their proverbial money, had we

been ready—we simply would have needed protective gear and the

conviction that we were really going to go for it. It came out in

conversation afterwards that a couple of the friends who had been at my

side when we charged the checkpoint—some of the most courageous and

capable among them, in fact—actually had goggles and vinegar-soaked rags

in their backpacks. Somehow they had forgotten to put these on when it

came time to charge the fence.

Why do we sabotage ourselves like this? By and large, our own

hesitations seem to pose a much greater threat to our efforts than the

assembled might of the police state. It’s as if, even when we are

staking our lives and freedom, we find it hard to believe it is really

happening. We know well enough in our heads that if we are going to do

anything to interrupt all the injustices in progress, we must do so here

and now—but it’s another thing entirely to behave with our bodies as if

this is the case. When we don our masks and raise our black flags, we

seem to enter a tentative, imaginary world in which we don’t take

responsibility for believing the things we’re doing are actually

possible.

Clearly, as my story shows, it is possible for a few maniacs to seize

defensive materials, charge police lines, and change the course of

history a little bit—all this, without even getting arrested. It only

remains for us to do these things with the sense that the stakes of the

struggle are our lives, that we can actually win—to take the goggles out

of our bags and put them on before the pepper spray comes out, literally

and figuratively. People have done this before—in Quebec City, in Genoa,

even in Washington, DC. It’s not too much to ask of ourselves.

Next time, we’ll show up with both backup plans and motorcycle helmets,

ready to leave the world we’re familiar with behind once and for all. We

won’t hesitate or falter. We’ll know just how lucky we are to get a

chance to live and act outside the cages prepared for us, and we won’t

count on getting another one.