Sacramento,
Calif. (WND photo / Chelsea Schilling)
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SACRAMENTO – Americans took to the streets to protest wasteful
government spending today – with estimated crowd sizes of 5,000 to
15,000 in Atlanta, San Antonio, Oklahoma City, Olympia, Wash.,
Lansing, Mich., Kansas City and St. Louis, Mo., and Sacramento.
At the California Capitol, a sea of red, white and blue U.S. flags
waved above a large crowd that surrounded the building and spilled
into city streets. Visitors arrived in yellow school buses from
surrounding cities.
Sacramento tea party organizer Mark Meckler scanned the scene from
behind a platform before the event.
"It's unreal. It's beyond my imagination," Meckler told WND with a
dazed look. "I can't imagine anything better than this."
Some protesters shouted at the Capitol building with megaphones:
"Hey, tell Gov. Schwarzenegger to come out here!"
"We are leading a revolution, and this is the first day of that
revolution," Meckler said. "Politicians will no longer be able to
divide our nation. They are taking our money, and we aren't going to
stand here and take it anymore."
With booming enthusiasm, the crowd recited the Pledge of Allegiance
and began wildly chanting, "USA, USA, USA!"
Their voices could be heard from blocks away as the California
legislature remained in session and lawmakers dared not venture
outside.
Local businessmen, families with small children, military veterans
and elderly men and women carried handmade signs with a variety of
creative messages.
After speaking with WND, Meckler climbed the stage and asked the
crowd, "How many of you have never been to a protest before?"
The crowd erupted in cheers as thousands of tea partiers raised
their hands.
"Our politicians think that you don't pay enough taxes," Meckler
said. "As we stand outside, the California legislature is in session."
The crowd let out a thunderous "boo."
"We've had it!" Meckler shouted. "We're tired of being punished by
politicians!"
They cheered wildly and drowned out Meckler's voice, chanting,
"Vote them out!"
(WND photo /
Chelsea Schilling)
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Guests included Michael Reagan, Rep. Tom McClintock,
singer Lloyd Marcus and Fox News' Neil Cavuto.
"In the 27 years since I came to this building, I have never seen a
protest this large," McClintock said. "The silent majority is no
longer silent."
He continued, "Some time along the way, we lost our country. Don't
you think it's time to take it back?"
The crowd applauded with excitement.
Air Force reservist Sgt. Kevin Steele told WND he returned from his
second tour in Iraq two weeks ago.
"I think this is just wonderful to see," he said. "I'm disappointed
to see how much things have deteriorated since I left."
(WND photo /
Chelsea Schilling)
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Asked for his thoughts on the
Department of Homeland Security report warning against the
possibility of violence by unnamed "right-wing extremists" and
specifically singling out returning war veterans as particular
threats, Steele said he was baffled and felt a deep sense of betrayal.
"I couldn't believe it," he said. "I'm the guy they're watching
now? Give me a break!"
He continued, "You can send me over there and put a weapon in my
hands, and now you worry about me? It's disappointing and
disheartening."
California Highway Patrol officers, sheriffs and horse-mounted city
police surrounded the event on all sides. There were no noticeable
arrests or acts of violence at the tea party.
(WND photo /
Chelsea Schilling)
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One Highway Patrolman told WND there were more than 5,000 people at
the event.
Meanwhile, in
Washington D.C., 1,000 people huddled beneath
umbrellas in Lafayette Park across from the White House. The crowd
consisted of a broad variety of protesters of different ages,
nationalities and political parties.
When the crowd was asked, several Democrats indicated that they
were present as part of the protest. Many parents brought their
children along, who were also carrying signs and chanting.
Speakers at the D.C. event included talk-show host Laura Ingraham,
Alan Keyes and Grover Norquist.
The rally combined with another Washington, D.C., party after
Secret Service members revoked a permit to meet outside the U.S.
Department of Treasury.
(WND photo /
Chelsea Schilling)
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One tea partier, Rusty Carrier, allowed all
employees at his Culpepper, Va., farm to take the
day off and attend the protest. Carrier said he felt the pains of high
taxation and the government's reckless spending.
"I don't travel to D.C. very often because I can't do it," he told
WND. "Unlike the government, I don't spend money I don't have.
In Tennessee, an overwhelming crowd of 10,000 people met on the
Legislative Plaza, spilling into sidewalks and up the hill toward the
Capitol building, Americans for Tax Reform reported.
Cars circled the area, honking horns.
In Rochester, N.Y., 1,000 tea partiers marched on the county
administration building and city hall.
Approximately 4,000 people crowded Fountain Square in Cincinnati,
while 8,000 gathered in Madison, Wis., 5,000 surrounded the Oklahoma
Capitol and 4,000 attended the Chicago party. Even Rhode Island, the
smallest U.S. state, brought 1,000 protesters to its Capitol.
Washington state police estimated crowds of 5,000 in Olympia while
2,500 marched the streets of Boise, Idaho and 1,500 rallied in Austin,
Texas. In Lansing, Mich., throngs were measured at 7,000, while 3,000
gathered in
Hartford, Conn., and 2,000 Floridians in
Jacksonville poured wagons of tea into the St. Johns River.
An additional 1,000 people packed into Market Square in Pittsburgh,
Pa., while some 3,000 gathered in Des Moines, Iowa, and 1,500 gathered
in Louisville, Ky. There are reports of 7,000 at the North Houston tea
party and 5,000 in Phoenix, Ariz., while organizers announced that
8,000 people showed up at the tea party in St. Louis, Mo., and an
additional 8,000 tea partiers rallied in Kansas City. An estimated
7,500 packed the Central Valley tea party in California.
Tea partiers
rally with American flags in national show of patriotism (WND
photo / Chelsea Schilling)
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The Atlanta event may have been among the largest tea parties, in
part because of the presence of conservative talk show host Sean
Hannity, who broadcast live from the Georgia Capitol and estimated
crowd size at 15,000. Also, as many as 15,000 crowded around the Alamo
in San Antonio, Texas, as nationally syndicated talk show host Glenn
Beck aired his television show there.
Across the nation, thousands of tea partiers sang the national
anthem, recited the Pledge of Allegiance and chanted while waving U.S.
flags and displaying homemade signs.