Wednesday, April 12, 2023

We can’t say we haven’t had practice

Sun-Times file photo

     “Queer” used to be a slur. Then gay people took the word back, claiming it their own, as a sort of general term for the whole rainbow-hued subculture in all its freedom and fabulousness.
     My first thought, learning that Chicago has snagged the 2024 Democratic National Convention, was that this is a good way for us to similarly reclaim both the adjective “Democratic” and the noun “Chicago” and make them a little less battered than they have been of late.
     For years Republicans have been trying to turn “Democratic” into an all-purpose insult by chopping off the ending and pretending that the problems facing cities are there because they tend to be run by Democrats, when it’s the other way around: Cities tend to go Democratic because they have problems that need to be addressed, not chuckled over. Thus, Democrats.
     This is a chance for Chicago, the poster child for urban woes, to marry itself once again to the party that for too long has seen its mantle of patriotism and efficiency stripped away, and by those bumbling shambolically toward treason.
     First, a few ground rules. This isn’t our third Democratic National Convention, though that might be the default assumption. It’s our 12th, having been the host in 1864, 1884, 1892, 1896, 1932, 1940, 1944, 1952, 1956, and of course 1968 and 1996.
     That 1932 convention is worth remembering not just because it led to the rare defeat of a sitting president. Franklin D. Roosevelt became the first candidate to show up at a convention to accept the nomination (the habit had been to sit on your front porch and feign indifference), and he did it by arriving in a shiny silver Ford Trimotor, making him the first presidential candidate to fly in an airplane, arriving to promise a “New Deal” for America.
     Otherwise we have the twin bookends of 1968 and 1996 as guides. The first was a catastrophe that hardly needs explaining — masses of shaggy-haired protesters battling police. While the cops rightly get blame for that, the disaster was set in motion by City Hall. In trying to keep protests away from the site of the convention, the International Amphitheater, Richard J. Daley ended up pushing it onto Michigan Avenue. The 1968 convention might have transpired differently had Daley not spread the combustibles that the cops ignited.

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13 comments:

  1. So I guess J.B. won't be throwing his hat in the ring this time.

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    1. You never know, because at his age, something might change Biden's health & Harris can't win a general election nationally!

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  2. I vote. almost exclusively for democrats. I dont see why a convention is needed at all . I definitely dont want it here. I'll make a prediction. President Biden will get nominated.
    Saved 100,000 balloons

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  3. Vietnam. Remember when we crawled under our desks to practice dying in a nuclear attack and how dying in Southeast Asia was part of defending us from communism? I remember the lessons learned from the 1968 convention, became more Woke to the perils my generation faced. While Lyndon Johnson and his Democratic administration was the face of that peril, the danger our country faces now is Donald Trump and the cohort of idiots he has recruited. The political conventions are a perfect time for millions of Americans to march, to show up somewhere to support democratic institutions.

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    1. Your last sentence is very on-point. Now is the time for protesters to SUPPORT the convention. We need democracy to work.

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  4. In theory, I'm all for that millions of people coming to Chicago. To say, it's really important that we have free and fair elections in our country and we should all participate in them.

    And then you get to vote for the person that the DNC shoved up our f****** ass

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  5. Happy Johnson and not Vallas will be the Mayor.

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  6. Actually, this will be Chicago's 26th rodeo, if you count the 14 GOP hoedowns, starting with Lincoln in 1860. Back-to-back-to-back in the 1880s, then five in a row from 1904 through 1920. Followed by Hoover (1932), Dewey (1944), Ike (1952), and finally Nixon in 1960. Which means that Chicago hasn't hosted the Republicans for more than six decades...and counting. And there have even been four
    doubleheaders, when both parties came to Chicago in a given election year...1884, 1932, 1944, and 1952.

    The most memorable, of course, was in 1968, when I was in Lincoln Park, Grant Park, and finally on Michigan Avenue. I'm even visible in "Medium Cool"...the 1969 Haskell Wexler film that used actual riot footage...if you know where to look. Why Chicago cops didn't fire into the crowds, as they did when they shot ten Republic Steel strikers to death in 1937, has always been a mystery to me. To this day, I'm still amazed that nobody was killed in '68, especially on that day of infamy, August 28.

    Maybe the word went forth from City Hall...don't shoot 'em...just beat the living crap out of those hippie bastards. Which the police proceeded to do...with great vigor. Why? Because they liked to.

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    1. We were sitting in my friends kitchen discussing the events outside the Hilton with his father, a Chicago firefighter. The anti war aspect didn't matter to him, or his brothers and in-laws on the police force. The volleys of baggies filled with human waste trumped all else for him that night. The cops beating reporters while clearing Lincoln Park and likewise in Grant Park were justified because "They were breaking the law". Of course some laws mattered more as the residency requirement didn't prevent him from living in Niles. The protesters had different motivations, some sincerely opposing deaths in a foreign and futile war, others just out to create general mayhem. Abbie Hoffman. Would the anti-war message been better served without physical provocations like shit tossing? Probably. Would it all have been different had Sirhan Sirhan not shot Bobby Kennedy? Definitely. We got Nixon, and four years later my ship was hurriedly dispatched to the 1972 escalation, stoking a level of opposition from me that I should have had in 1968.

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    2. "Got to scrape the shit right off your shoes..." was a lyric by the Rolling Stones. And I had to do just that. One of those baggies, a near-miss, landed at my feet.

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  7. It would really be great to see a large Dem gathering in Millenium Park for a celebration of values, issues and accomplishments (creative signs and clothing) for an afternoon early evening of great topical music-perhaps sing along, food and that beautiful city by the beautiful lake. I'm a southside gal living in central IL and I'd be there!! With some local Dems!

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  8. and so happy to be living in, for now, sane Ilinois vs.......

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