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Million Mom March 2004:Reflections and New Commitments (MMMers running for NH House, Missou. Senate)
Join Together ^ | 5-6-04 | Dick Dahl

Posted on 05/08/2004 6:12:41 PM PDT by Dan from Michigan

Million Mom March 2004: Reflections and New Commitments
5/6/2004

Feature Story
by Dick Dahl

Four years ago, Laurel Redden couldn't have said who her elected representatives were. A middle-class mother of two from Salem, NH, married for 15 years, Redden was outraged by TV reports of senseless gun violence, but felt powerless to do anything about it. She voted, usually Democratic, but never wrote a letter to an office holder or a newspaper.

But then she heard about New Jerseyite Donna Dees-Thomases' ambitious plan to gather one million mothers on the Mall in Washington, D.C. to protest the gun violence that the nation's leaders seemed to tolerate so casually. When she read about the planning efforts in her home state, she decided to check it out.

The effort made sense to her. So she traveled to Washington on Mothers' Day 2000 and joined some 750,000 others for an event that would change many lives, including her own. Redden became the state coordinator for the New Hampshire chapter of the Million Mom March. And in June, the politically inactive woman of 1999 will be filing her candidacy papers for a seat in the New Hampshire House of Representatives.

For Redden, the Million Mom March precipitated her entry into political life. A newly minted activist, she began spending a lot of time in the New Hampshire statehouse, lobbying for sensible gun-safety measures. But as time wore on, she began to realize that lobbyists can only do so much.

She was also coming to other conclusions. "The more I got involved, the more I realized that this goes way beyond the gun issue," she says. "What I found is that the same system that keeps common-sense gun laws from being enacted goes beyond that single issue. It is the same system that keeps our public education from being properly funded; it's the same system that places more importance in maintaining a huge military budget than in taking care of our citizens here at home. It's the mentality of 'every man for himself' and not looking at the bigger societal issues that go along with some of these things."

In fact, Redden is not the only person who attended the 2000 March who entered political life as a result. Another New Hampshire Million Mom March member, Susan Nord of Candia, is also seeking election this fall. And in Missouri, Jeanne Kirkton, legislative director for the St. Louis Million Mom March chapter, is running for a state senate seat.

Five Committed People Per Congressional District

This year, the national Million Mom March (now united with the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence) will hold its Mothers' Day event on the west side of the Capitol. Nobody is saying that it will draw anything approaching the numbers of 2000, when the crowd that day far surpassed organizers' most optimistic hopes.

"What we learned from having almost a million people there on Mothers' Day 2000 is that what you really need is five committed people in every Congressional district," Dees-Thomases told Join Together Online. "That's what we hope to obtain from this event."

The second goal for the event is to kick off a campaign, "Halt the Assault", for continuation of the 1994 assault-weapons ban, which is scheduled to expire in September. President Bush has stated that he favors continuation of the ban, but if Congress takes no action on extending the ban he won't have to face the politically unsavory task of alienating his gun-rights supporters by signing such a law. But as Dees-Thomases points out, in the wake of the 2000 event on the Mall, then-candidate Bush "promised us that if he were elected president, he would make sure that his administration renewed the ban. So here we are, four years later, and we're going to be standing on the steps of the United States Capitol and vow that for the next four months we're going to do everything possible to hold him to that promise."

The messages coming from the stage four years ago were far more grandiose on a day when the emergence of a powerful grassroots movement to end gun violence had seemingly emerged. But much of the promise of that day was never fulfilled, and in her new book, "Looking for a Few Good Moms: How One Mother Rallied a Million Others Against the Gun Lobby" (Rodale), Dees-Thomases provides a critique of what went wrong in the months following the March.

As Dees-Thomases describes the series of events that followed the March, the impact of that event was to bring a new wave of political neophytes -- along with massive media attention and the availability of rather large sums of money -- to an issue that she believed had been weighed down by a lack of consensus among gun violence prevention groups.

In 1999, looking for at least the $1 million she figured was necessary to stage the event she had in mind, Dees-Thomases heard about a new organization called the Bell Campaign, a victim-led organization that had been created with the help of a $4-million grant from the Richard and Rhoda Goldman Foundation. The Bell Campaign became an integral part of the March, and four days after the event, its directors voted to formally merge with the Million Mom March. But, as Dees-Thomases writes, the plans for this new national organization were dealt a critical blow when billionaire Andrew McKelvey, who had told Dees-Thomases that he would give the Million Mom March $2 million to fund its post-march efforts, instead gave the money to a new centrist group, Americans for Gun Safety.

Dees-Thomases believes that the gun-control movement squandered a "precious and fleeting moment" when the Licensing and Registration bill was to be introduced in Congress. "Not only did this bill mysteriously disappear," Dees-Thomases writes, "but Congress also failed once again to close the gun-show loophole." Ultimately, "in February 2001, overwhelmed with applications for Million Mom March chapters, but without the resources to respond, the Bell Campaign's national office collapsed."

Still, Dees-Thomases believes that the event was successful in other senses. "It spawned grassroots activism across the country," she says. "That's the most positive thing that happened. It developed a new wave of activists."

She says that these new activists are operating under the media radar, quietly bringing change through such tasks as distributing "Ask" brochures, which encourage parents to ask whether there are guns in the homes where their children are visiting. She says that the Million Mom March has distributed close to one million brochures.

"When we started marching in 2000 the number of kids dying was 12 a day," she says. "By last December, it had dropped to eight a day, according to the CDC" (Centers for Disease Control). "I like to think it's because of all these moms out there who very quietly but persistently hand out this material. They're trying to create a cultural shift in our country. They're trying to put the genie back in the bottle."

Plugging Away in Detroit

Like Laurel Redden in New Hampshire, Shikha Hamilton of Detroit wasn't very politically active prior to the 2000 March in Washington. At the time, her infant daughter, Avani, was critically ill in an intensive-care unit, with whooping cough. Hamilton prayed for her daughter's recovery, but was struck by the almost daily news of young people being shot in Detroit and how other threats lay in store. Avani did recover, but her mother had grown fixated on the danger that gun violence now posed.

She heard about the Million Mom March and quickly became involved. She was the first mom from Detroit to join the Michigan group. Then, about two weeks later she heard the news about Kayla Rowland, the first-grader who was shot and killed by a fellow first grader in nearby Mount Morris. "I was devastated by that because I had a baby and I was thinking, 'My God, if the kids aren't safe in school in the first grade, then I need to do more.' That's when I kicked it up a notch."

The state Million Mom March coordinator in Michigan asked Hamilton if she would coordinate Detroit. She agreed, and went to work. "I would just meet strangers and ask them to get involved, and 99 percent of the people said yes. We just showed up at every community meeting, police precinct meetings. We targeted politicians."

At the same time, Hamilton and her Detroit chapter moms were forging a strong relationship with the two Million Mom chapters in suburban Detroit. "It's a beautiful experience when you live in Detroit and you see the suburban moms and the urban moms work together," she says. "We were strangers to each other four years ago. But now we communicate with each other almost every single day."

Hamilton is the national spokesperson for this year's event, and will be in Washington for it. Like Dees-Thomases, she is sometimes dismayed by the internal lack of consensus that happens in the world of gun-violence prevention. She says that she doesn't let it bother her.

"It doesn't interest me one bit because I live in the city. I know the devastation, and for me it's a daily reminder that all the in-fighting doesn't matter in the end. I see victims every day and I can't tell them we can't do this or we can't do that because somebody believes this or that. It doesn't matter to them. All they want is to get the guns off the streets. And I can't let them down."


TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: Michigan; US: Missouri; US: New Hampshire
KEYWORDS: bang; banglist; millionmorons; mmm; monomommarch
I hope the MMM'ers running do as well as an MMM'er did in Michigan for state house in 2000......33%!

five committed people in every Congressional district
Takes a lot more than that.

Bell Campaign, a victim-led organization that had been created with the help of a $4-million grant from the Richard and Rhoda Goldman Foundation.

The Bell Campaign was ripping off taxpayers. Remember the million moron layoffs and the canning of Andrew McGuire?

Andrew McKelvey, who had told Dees-Thomases that he would give the Million Mom March $2 million to fund its post-march efforts

Guess where McKelvey's true colors lie?

"in February 2001, overwhelmed with applications for Million Mom March chapters, but without the resources to respond, the Bell Campaign's national office collapsed."

PBS. Much like the TV Station, that's Pure BS.

"It spawned grassroots activism across the country,"
I haven't seen a damn thing anti-gun wise since 2001. In fact I remember a cancelled rally by the million morons in 01, when the gun issue was huge here. Granholm's run like the plague away from them in the 02 election.

two Million Mom chapters in suburban Detroit.

Maybe a dozen people between all of them.

1 posted on 05/08/2004 6:12:42 PM PDT by Dan from Michigan
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To: *bang_list
BOOM
2 posted on 05/08/2004 6:13:02 PM PDT by Dan from Michigan ("There's no points for second place")
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To: Dan from Michigan
was outraged by TV reports of senseless gun violence

Well, nice to know she's distinguished that from TV reports of purposeful gun violence... :-|

3 posted on 05/08/2004 6:15:28 PM PDT by Eala (Sacrificing tagline fame for... TRAD ANGLICAN RESOURCE PAGE: http://eala.freeservers.com/anglican)
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To: Dan from Michigan
Missouri just passed Concealed Carry, I doubt the candidate here will make much headway.
4 posted on 05/08/2004 6:23:28 PM PDT by Clintons Are White Trash (Helen Thomas, Molly Ivins, Maureen Dowd - The Axis of Ugly)
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To: Dan from Michigan
What do we know about this person, I suspect a Masshole linage, I have some friends in Salem.
5 posted on 05/08/2004 6:27:30 PM PDT by Little Bill (John F'n Kerry is Swine, I want to see the Ms's tax returns!)
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To: Dan from Michigan
Is the rat in NH running in a rat dist?
6 posted on 05/08/2004 6:29:56 PM PDT by spunkets
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To: Dan from Michigan
Four years ago, Laurel Redden couldn't have said who her elected representatives were. A middle-class mother of two from Salem, NH, married for 15 years, Redden was outraged by TV reports of senseless gun violence, but felt powerless to do anything about it. She voted, usually Democratic,

A voter who didn't know who her elected representatives were?

I smell a lie somewhere in there. Either this is a lie to portray her as some sort of naive innocent housewife (the same phony story that they fed us about Donna Dees Thomases), or this is true, and MMM has one dumb puppy representing them.

The effort made sense to her. So she traveled to Washington on Mothers' Day 2000 and joined some 750,000 others for an event

STILL with this lie about 750,000???

http://www.alamanceind.com/nation/nation_28.html

http://www.smartcarry.com/mmm.htm

MMM organizers caught lying about crowd size

Aerial photo of Million Mom March

This is an aerial photo taken from an ABC News flyover of the May 14, 2000 crowd at the Million Mom March at the Mall in Washington, DC. Note that the crowd stops at the uppermost white tent, and green grass (unobscured by people) and a white sidewalk are clearly visible at the top of the picture. The stage for the MMM is at the lower part of the picture, and the photo shows the entire crowd, which, by no means extends from "one end of the mall to the other". The only way you could fit 750,000 people into an area this size would be if you buried them five deep underground.


Aerial photo of Promise Keepers rally                  PK rally with MMM rally size superimposed
The photo on the left is an aerial photo of the crowd of the Promise Keepers march at the same mall in Washington, DC. The official estimate of the size of this crowd (not rally-originated) was put at over one million, for real. The photo on the right is the Promise Keepers march photo with the landmarks from the MMM superimposed on the Promise Keepers photo. The green line marks the position of the sidewalk that appears in the upper portion of the MMM photo. You can see the breaks in the trees where it enters and leaves the mall, and bits of it on the right and left sides. The yellow outline therefore marks the area that the MMM crowd would have filled if viewed from the same angle as this Promise-Keepers aerial photo.

The ABC site, unfortunately, calls it variously "almost 750,000", "over 750,000", and "thousands". ABC also begrudgingly called the SAS-AIM crowd "over a thousand". Of course, twelve billion is "over a thousand" as well, so that's a marvelously misleading way of downplaying any number you care not to deal with.


Is anyone surprised that the media is lying about the size of the MMM and downplaying the Second Amendment Sisters' Armed Informed Mother's March?

The above information and graphics were taken from a post by a Mr. Dan Day on the Free Republic website and the URL was in an e-mail from Neil Knox. All credit should go to Mr. Day, and his original post can be viewed at the Free Republic website

7 posted on 05/08/2004 7:52:27 PM PDT by lowbridge ("You are an American. You are my brother. I would die for you." -Kurdish Sergeant)
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To: Dan from Michigan

8 posted on 05/08/2004 7:53:06 PM PDT by lowbridge ("You are an American. You are my brother. I would die for you." -Kurdish Sergeant)
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To: Dan from Michigan
bump
9 posted on 05/10/2004 6:19:08 AM PDT by DBrow
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