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Monday, February 11, 2008

Obama in Virginia Beach

Last night Dan and I took the kids to see Barack Obama at the Virginia Beach Convention Center. It was advertised that the doors would open at 5:30 and the program would begin at 7:30. At 5:15 we were sitting on the freeway, in a solid line of cars waiting to exit for the Convention Center.



About 30 minutes later, after figuring out that there were no more parking spaces in any of the lots, we parked in front of a hair salon, and began to hike toward the back of the line. Past the front of the building, the line snaked around and doubled back on itself. Past the parking lot, it stretched on out to the end of a row of trees. We got in line. I could not comprehend what I was seeing. Ahno kept saying, "See? See? He's going to be president." I started thinking maybe she was right.

Here's a blurry, dark, windy video of the line:



People (and we too) stood in that line outside for two hours while it crept along, with people being let into the building after being checked by security. At one point, Obama went past in an SUV with darkened windows and a police escort. Everyone in the line went mad, as if it was a Beatles concert, with all of them resurrected from the dead and promising to end pocket lint or something. I saw a lot of people I know, and I met some new people. Everyone was nice. Nervous though. It was cold.



Finally at 7:30, they just gave up on the security, threw open all the doors, and the stampede began. We had to fight to stay connected to each other. Ahno got run over twice by people abandoning any sense of order or place in line and rushing for the entrance. The children were excited.



Inside, it was just as crazy but in a different, brighter way. A sea of people. We fought our way as close as we could do the front and stood there for another hour waiting. We listened to Tim Kaine, our blue governor. We listened to U2 songs. I hoisted children onto my shoulders, onto my head, while staring at the shoulder blades of a forest of tall people in front of me. People were eager, anxious, desperate. It was like a rock concert. They wanted to see him, touch him, catch a glimpse of him.



Finally Obama arrived and cranked up the oratory. It was a familiar speech. At about the halfway point, I had had enough of the crushing crowd, and my unforgiving spine was ready to crack. We went back to the back, where we could see more easily if from a greater distance. The ethos of the place was familiar from some churches I have visited. Call and response. Rhythmic murmuring. A collective excitement. A feeling of humble petition to the man on stage. Toward the end of his speech, we jetted out, to try and avoid the thousands pushing through the doors to leave.

The paper said there were 18000 people there. I can't believe we actually went and took both kids. Being part of a crowd that big is just something I would normally crawl over glass to avoid. I'm glad I did, though, because I think it was important for the children to see this piece of history. They enjoyed it -- I'm not sure what part of it was interesting for them but I'm sure the experience will be memorable.

As for me, I'm still a Hillary supporter. I'll vote for her tomorrow. Apparently, so is Benny:

5 comments:

  1. My sidekick was sitting right here while I was reading your blog. His indignant comment? "Isn't Benny EIGHT? He can't vote!!"

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  2. Anonymous10:39 PM

    Thanks Karen for your post about last night's rally! It really was amazing. I was one of the many volunteers who worked the event.

    I know that little can be said or done to help sway your decision about who to vote for tomorrow. I mean, if attending the rally didn't do it, I can't think of anything more powerful. I just wanted to share a video where Senator Obama answers directly the question of why people should vote for him instead of Senator Clinton.

    Thanks for your blog post and your commitment to being involved in choosing the future of our nation. I've been truly blessed to have had the ability to campaign for Senator Obama, and I invite you to read about my experience at http://joel-junior.com/CampaigningforObama.pdf.

    Best Wishes!

    - Joel McDonald
    nxtoracle[at]gmail[dot]com

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  3. Wow, I'll be that was interesting. I applaud you for wrangling the kids at such an event.

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  4. His wife was here at New Mexico State University last week (maybe it was last week? Lately my weeks have been flying by and I can't keep track) but they did such a bad job of announcing her visit no one really knew she was here until 2 hours before the start of the event. :(

    ReplyDelete