
From the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, conservative broadcaster Glenn Beck told the tens of thousands of activists he drew from around the nation Saturday that the U.S. has too long “wandered in darkness.”
His rally’s marquee speaker, Sarah Palin, praised “patriots” in the audience for “knowing never to retreat.”
The two champions of the tea party movement spoke from the very spot where Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his “I Have a Dream” speech 47 years ago. Some civil rights leaders who have denounced Beck’s choice of a venue staged a rival rally to honor King.
Palin, the 2008 GOP vice presidential nominee who may make a White House run in 2012, said activists must honor King’s legacy by paying tribute to the men and women who protect the United States in uniform.
Beck, pacing back and forth on the marble steps, said he was humbled by the size of the crowd, which stretched along the Washington Mall’s long reflecting pool nearly all the way to the Washington Monument.
“Something beyond imagination is happening,” he said. “America today begins to turn back to God.”
“For too long, this country has wandered in darkness,” said Beck, a Fox News host. He said it was now time to “concentrate on the good things in America, the things we have accomplished and the things we can do tomorrow.”
Neither Beck nor Palin made overtly political comments.
Palin, greeted by chants of “USA, USA, USA” from many in the crowd, told the gathering, “It is so humbling to get to be here with you today, patriots. You who are motivated and engaged … and knowing never to retreat.”
“We must restore America and restore her honor,” said the former Alaska governor, echoing the name of the rally, “Restoring Honor.”
Palin told the crowd she wasn’t speaking as a politician. “No, something more, something much more. I’ve been asked to speak as the mother of a soldier and I am proud of that distinction. Say what you want to say about me, but I raised a combat vet and you can’t take that away from me.” It was a reference to her son, Track, 20, who served a yearlong deployment in Iraq.
Palin honored military members in her speech. She likened the rally participants to the civil rights activists who came to the National Mall to hear King’s historic speech. She said the same spirit that helped civil rights activists overcome oppression, discrimination and violence would help this group as well.
“We are worried about what we face. Sometimes, our challenges seem insurmountable,” Palin said.
“Look around you. You’re not alone,” Palin told participants.
The crowd — organizers had a permit for 300,000 — was vast, with people standing shoulder to shoulder across large expanses of the Mall. The National Park Service stopped doing crowd counts in 1997 after the agency was accused of underestimating numbers for the 1995 Million Man March.
Civil rights leaders protested the event and scheduled a 3-mile plus march from a high school to the site of a planned King memorial near the Tidal Basin and not far from Beck’s gathering.
Karen Watts, 57, of Mount Vernon, N.Y., was among those attending the King rally and march. “The dream is not forgotten,” she said. “I live my life honoring Dr. King to make sure I’m part of that dream, by serving my community.”
Of Beck’s rally, she said, “They’re American citizens. So long as they don’t infringe upon my rights … let them do what they do.”
Eleanor Holmes Norton, Washington’s delegate to Congress, said she remembers being at King’s march on Washington, which she said prompted change and ended segregation in public places. “Glenn Beck’s march will change nothing. But you can’t blame Glenn Beck for his March-on-Washington envy,” she said.
Beck has said he did not intend to choose the King anniversary for his rally but had since decided it was “divine providence.”
Beck, in a taped presentation mixed in with his live remarks, invoked King’s message and said “the fight for freedom was not easy.” He repeatedly injected religion into the event and urged rally participants to rely on faith to help the U.S. recover from an economic recession that has given the country stubbornly high unemployment.
“Faith is in short supply,” Beck said. “To restore America, we must restore ourselves.”
Organizers said their aim was to honor military personnel and others “who embody our nation’s founding principles of integrity, truth and honor.”
Many in the crowd watched the proceedings on large television screens. On the edges of the Mall, vendors sold “Don’t Tread on Me” flags, popular with tea party activists. Other activists distributed fliers urging voters “dump Obama.” The pamphlet included a picture of the president with a Hitler-style mustache.
The Rev. Al Sharpton, leading the civil rights march, said Beck’s demonstration was an anti-government rally that advocated states’ rights — counter to the message in King’s speech, in which the civil right leader appealed to the federal government to ensure equality.
“The structural breakdown of a strong national government, which is what they’re calling for, is something that does not serve the interests of the nation and it’s something that Dr. King and others fought against,” Sharpton told C-SPAN hours before his event.
People began filling up the space between the Lincoln Memorial and the Washington Monument early in the day, many waving American flags. Wasington’s subway system was extremely crowded with long lines of people trying to get to the rally. Metro spokeswoman Lisa Farbstein said that there was crowding at least a dozen stations.
Ricky Thomas, 43, a SWAT team police officer from Chesapeake Beach, Md., brought his 10-year old son Chase to the Beck rally. “I wanted my son to see democracy in action,” Thomas said.
He said he wants government to stay out of people’s lives. He acknowledged that he works for government, but said it’s “a part of government that helps people when they are in trouble.”
Beck has given voice to those angry and frustrated with President Barack Obama and other Democrats this election year, especially members of the tea party movement.
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Associated Press writers Brett Zongker, Nafeesa Syeed and Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar contributed to this report.
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Online:
Beck rally: https://www.glennbeck.com/828/
Sharpton rally: https://www.nationalactionnetwork.net/
Copyright © 2010 The Associated Press
6 thoughts on “Beck: America ‘wandered in darkness’ for too long”
And we know the reason why…
https://neithercorp.us/npress/
Sadly,Mr. Nemo, you are right. I still want to believe in the late great United States of America. As I posted somewhere earlier on this site an article from the Checzk Rebuplic from Aug 28?, 2010. To paraphrase: the problem is not obama, rather an electorate who allows someone with his lack of credentials to become president.
I saw these airbrained agitators walking up the mall today. protesting the very Americans who wish desparately for the saving of the republic, for saving these mush headed young people, for saving them an America they do not yet realize they will inherit.
I apologized one time to my father (A WWII vet) for my generation. His generation saved our freedom, my generation pissed it away, and the current generation (Save for our military) pissed on it.
This country is bankrupt, morally, ethically and financially. Maybe 6 more lawyers /politicians or community organizers can save us.
This conversation pulls the shades on my day of hoping for an improvement,.
for a return to the USA I grew up in and shed blood for. Once again, I apologize Dad.
I thought I’d repost your supplied Czech article jim0001. It was excellent and I had saved it to my archives. Sometimes it takes those from afar to analyze a situation correctly.
*****
“The danger to America is not Barack Obama but a citizenry capable of
entrusting a man like him with the Presidency. It will be far easier to
limit and undo the follies of an Obama presidency than to restore the
necessary common sense and good judgment to a depraved electorate willing to have such a man for their president. The problem is much deeper and far more serious than Mr. Obama, who is a mere symptom of what ails America. Blaming the prince of the fools should not blind anyone to the vast confederacy of fools that made him their prince. The Republic can survive a Barack Obama, who is, after all, merely a fool. It is less likely to survive a multitude of fools such as those who made him their president.” …Prager Zeitung of 28 April 2010.
*****
Carl Nemo **==
All the rhetoric on the part of these sponsors and the warm fuzzies felt by the audience still doesn’t mitigate the national nightmare that is awaiting all of us; ie., “national insolvency”.
This crowd might as well be in the grand salon of the Titanic with the current elected madman on the bridge and his motley crew steaming the USS AmeriKa ahead at flank speed into a terminal collision with hyperinflation along with a run on the U.S. dollar. Once people, especially the suppliers of capital, goods and services realize “the full faith and credit” of the United States no longer means diddly, then it will be lights out for the U.S. with the resultant aftermath being rioting and the burning of cities leaving us nothing but a broken “banana republic” ruled by liars with guns under the auspices of perpetual martial law.
After suffering the aftermath of Obama’s campaign run for the presidency along with the major disappointments to date all these aspirants seem to blend together; ie., Beck, Palin, Rand Paul, McCain redux, Hillary and whomever else stands before the mike squawking their hollow promises to a politically uneducated, braindead crowd of undisciplined spendthrifts.
The more things change, the more they’ll remain the same…no?
Carl Nemo **==
At least they got up off their dead asses and tried to do something.
Good show Jim.
” tens of thousands of activists”
I was there and believe you are grossly underreporting the numbers.
Maybe Mr. Elliott you meant to say several Hundred thousand patriots…
People did streach from the Linclon Memorial to the Washington monument, and beyond.
Participants were over the hill beside the reflecting pool and filled an area behind the Linclon memorial
Even NBC said 300,000
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