And you, to whom adversity has dealt the final blow
With smiling bastards lying to you everywhere you go
Turn to, and put out all your strength of arm and heart and brain
And like the Mary Ellen Carter, rise again.
Rise again, rise again - though your heart it be broken
And life about to end
No matter what you've lost, be it a home, a love, a friend.
Like the Mary Ellen Carter, rise again.
Thanks to Jude at First Draft for the video. Jude is on the scene in Madison.
From Athenae at First Draft:
I really don't think it's possible to overstate what is happening here. How many times have we watched this happen? Really, how many times? People stood up against the war in 2003, in the millions, and we still went to war. People stood up for John Kerry in 2004, in the hundreds of thousands, and he lost. People have rallied and rallied and rallied, and all they've ever gotten for it is pounded on, when they weren't being ignored.
But they keep getting back up. Walker won the election and claimed a mandate, and they came. The bill passed the state assembly, in the middle of the night, and they came. The state's talk radio haters and newspaper commenters and conservative columnists called them all scum, and they came. Walker gave interview after interview, speech after speech, declaring victory, and they came.
The doors were locked against them, the building ringed by armed guards, and still they came.
Armed with nothing but signs, nothing but post-it notes, nothing but donated pizza and boundless cheer and limitless good will, they came. And they sang and they drummed and they wrote and they called and they inspired their friends and their neighbors and their elected officials and a nation, and no matter what happens now, everyone has seen it: What happens when you stand up. That it isn't pointless and it isn't useless and there is always, win or lose, value in it, because the view from uprightness is so much clearer and you need to see like that, once or twice in your life at least.
....
I believe in expecting the worst so as not to be surprised or disappointed, but it's hard to shake this horrible feeling, that is hope.
Watch the video from last night as the protestors left the capitol singing.
Thanks, Mimi, for the link to the State Workers leaving the capitol building in Madison. I put it up on my FB page.
ReplyDeleteAnd think of it! 60% of likely voters in Wisconsin now disapprove of their recently-elected governor's performance.
ReplyDeleteGood old Stan. We still miss him.
ReplyDeleteHe's good, isn't he, Tim?
ReplyDeleteOMG, I LOVE Stan and this song! [What Tim Said]
ReplyDeleteImagine! The chorus of the song probably gave the man in the beginning of the video the courage not to give up while he was in the water and kept him from drowning.
ReplyDelete