Great crowd, over 1,000 strong. Motivated and loud. I could here them 2 blocks away behind the downtown buildings and over noon traffic.
Lots of worked up patriots who were exercising their First Amendment rights.
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Winston-Salem Tea Party
We left the Greensboro Tea Party and headed home to Winston-Salem, getting to the Winston Tea Party as it was breaking up. There were still several hundred folks out of the 1500 or so that had gathered. Fred Benson, one of the organizers, said that the sign-up table alone had garnered 700 attendees. 500 copies of the US Constitution got sucked up fast.
Those who remained seemed reluctant to leave. They were having fun waving signs at the downtown drivers and getting more than a few friendly honks.
And the first picture says it all.
Those who remained seemed reluctant to leave. They were having fun waving signs at the downtown drivers and getting more than a few friendly honks.
And the first picture says it all.
Sunday, March 22, 2009
Notes from Raleigh
Here are some early thoughts about yesterday's Tea Party:
1. No concerted effort was made to identify the attendees and capture contact information. John Locke and Americans for Prosperity did announce sign up tables for information from their organizations, but no one captured the Tea Party crowd.
It would have been a good thing to have asked everyone to take out their cell phones and send a text message. Asked for some coded content:
- Name; whatever you are comfortable sharing - first and last, first only, alias
- How did you hear about the event?
n=newspaper,
i=internet,
f=friend
b=smelled the barbecue and came up to see what was going on
- Would you be willing to become involved in working to achieve our common goals. Could be canvassing, calling, stuffing envelopes, contributing, etc. Text 'yes' or 'no'
2. Would have liked to hear a reference to the Obama personal pledge drive and then a statement that we were also going to take a pledge (Shocked silence from crowd), followed by, "I pledge allegiance to the flag..."
3. This is the South. Speakers were good, but they wore suits for the most part and were pros in the political arena. We need that, but being Southerners, we want a little more revival atmosphere. Think old time Southern political gatherings. A little fire breathing, a lot of working up and calls for action. Maybe some tar warming up on the fire next to the BBQ. :-)
4. The people that attended were already believers. We need to reach out and touch the folks who are not yet believers, but who might be. The ones who are afraid for their future and their family's future. The ones whose savings have vanished, who are facing years more of work rather than retirement, the ones who sweat the mortgage payment they have been making comfortably for years, the hard-working people who are trying to turn their sweat into a comfortable life for their family, but who are now facing the prospect of paying for a radical progressive agenda instead.
We don't need to preach to the choir, we need to get out and take the message to the people.
5. We need to remember that a lot of people will never come around to our point of view and that's all right. Obama won with 53% of the vote. In reality, what took him over the top in the Electoral College was probably less than that. We just have to recruit enough people to turn the corner. The key to that is getting the message out to people. If they get their news, like 80% of Americans, from the local newspaper and TV station, then they don't know what is going on. They can't, because they are not hearing it. We have to get the word out and it has to be authentic. Not fear mongering, not he said/she said, but real hard news from sources not covered locally.
1. No concerted effort was made to identify the attendees and capture contact information. John Locke and Americans for Prosperity did announce sign up tables for information from their organizations, but no one captured the Tea Party crowd.
It would have been a good thing to have asked everyone to take out their cell phones and send a text message. Asked for some coded content:
- Name; whatever you are comfortable sharing - first and last, first only, alias
- How did you hear about the event?
n=newspaper,
i=internet,
f=friend
b=smelled the barbecue and came up to see what was going on
- Would you be willing to become involved in working to achieve our common goals. Could be canvassing, calling, stuffing envelopes, contributing, etc. Text 'yes' or 'no'
2. Would have liked to hear a reference to the Obama personal pledge drive and then a statement that we were also going to take a pledge (Shocked silence from crowd), followed by, "I pledge allegiance to the flag..."
3. This is the South. Speakers were good, but they wore suits for the most part and were pros in the political arena. We need that, but being Southerners, we want a little more revival atmosphere. Think old time Southern political gatherings. A little fire breathing, a lot of working up and calls for action. Maybe some tar warming up on the fire next to the BBQ. :-)
4. The people that attended were already believers. We need to reach out and touch the folks who are not yet believers, but who might be. The ones who are afraid for their future and their family's future. The ones whose savings have vanished, who are facing years more of work rather than retirement, the ones who sweat the mortgage payment they have been making comfortably for years, the hard-working people who are trying to turn their sweat into a comfortable life for their family, but who are now facing the prospect of paying for a radical progressive agenda instead.
We don't need to preach to the choir, we need to get out and take the message to the people.
5. We need to remember that a lot of people will never come around to our point of view and that's all right. Obama won with 53% of the vote. In reality, what took him over the top in the Electoral College was probably less than that. We just have to recruit enough people to turn the corner. The key to that is getting the message out to people. If they get their news, like 80% of Americans, from the local newspaper and TV station, then they don't know what is going on. They can't, because they are not hearing it. We have to get the word out and it has to be authentic. Not fear mongering, not he said/she said, but real hard news from sources not covered locally.
Saturday, March 21, 2009
Raleigh Tea Party Part 2
Raleigh Tea Party Part 1
Back home again, tired and drained from the experience and the two hour drive each way. Windburned, a little sunburned and head full of pollen. But it was worth it.
It was worth it, though. The weather was perfect. The crowd was good; about 350 of us there, many with signs. The program was well organized and the speakers were good. Met a few people - not as many as I would have otherwise, because I was trying to keep up with what was going on in Twitter posts. Live-blogging via Twitter, as it were.
Anyhow, here are the pictures we took. I am not even going to try to caption them. Maybe later, after rest.
It was worth it, though. The weather was perfect. The crowd was good; about 350 of us there, many with signs. The program was well organized and the speakers were good. Met a few people - not as many as I would have otherwise, because I was trying to keep up with what was going on in Twitter posts. Live-blogging via Twitter, as it were.
Anyhow, here are the pictures we took. I am not even going to try to caption them. Maybe later, after rest.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)