Washington Free Press On-Line, Breaking News:
Neighborhoods throughout the District of Columbia are now reporting
unexpected and unprecedented movements of US Army troops into the city,
where they seem to be securing major traffic nerve centers that could seal
off the ceremonial area for tomorrow’s Presidential Inauguration from the
residential areas of the city.
Troops seem also to be establishing posts on all bridges across the
Potomac Please click the
icon to follow us on Facebook.between Virginia and the District, and on Interstate 95 where it
crosses the Beltway.
Repeated requests for comment to the White House and to the Army Chief
of Staff were met with repeated refusals to comment .
Meanwhile, leaders of the Mobilization for Democracy that has been
planning to bring two million “Counter-Inaugural” protesters from the
South and from the Eastern seaboard as far north as Boston said they had
no definite information on what the appearance of troops meant, but
thought it might be intended to thwart their protests of the Inauguration
of Sarah Palin tomorrow.
“We can’t believe President Obama would be ordering this deployment for
such a reason, but there are certainly some military commanders who
might,” said Congressman Jesse Jackson, Jr., co-chair of the Mobilization.
“All our demonstrators have been trained in calm and committed nonviolent
behavior since we began organizing after Election Day, and we expect them
to adhere to that discipline. We will not turn back. We shall overcome.”
News Analysis:
Plans for the Counter-Inaugural demonstration and the newly reported
troop movements climax what many observers have called the most divisive
national election since William McKinley defeated William Jennings Bryan
in 1896, or even since 1860, when Abraham Lincoln was elected on the brink
of the Civil War.
There is general agreement that the election of Sarah Palin was brought
about by three factors: the rise of the official unemployment rate to 15%,
plus another 9% of workers who had given up seeking work and thereby gone
off the official count; the rising weekly death toll of US troops in
Afghanistan, as the Taliban established firm control of the Pashtun
regions and encroached more and more deeply in Kabul and other major
cities; and the Congressional stalemate and paralysis that emerged from
the elections of 2010.
Through the Republican primaries of early 2012, Palin consistently won
about 35% of the votes against a field of other candidates. Under the
Republican Patty’s winner-take-all rules for the primaries, she carried
enough delegates to cement her nomination by late May, and turned to
campaigning against the President.
Her speeches and the responses of her audiences were vitriolic,
connecting accusations of Mr. Obama’s “un-American” origins with
denunciations of him for “sucking up to Wall Street while jobs were sucked
out of the real America” and “playing games with Muslim terrorists while
real American kids died.” “Why doesn’t he just nuke those America-haters
out of the water – or the mountains?” she cried out at many rallies.
Nothing like the 2008 tidal wave of youthful volunteers emerged for the
Obama campaign in 2012, as many of the ‘08 activists expressed sorrow,
bafflement, or anger at his policies in office. While most asserted that
they would vote for him as against Sarah Palin, few offered the devoted
organizing effort of 2008.
In November, Obama’s support among “Reagan Democrats” practically
disappeared. While his support percentages among African-Americans and
Hispanics remained high, the Hispanic turnout dropped considerably. (In
the stalemated Congress of 2011, no immigration bill could be passed.) The
only other constituencies where he carried a majority of voters were Jews,
self-described gay people, Muslims, and a thin sliver of urban and
suburban white women from 18 to 45 years old.