People Take Action, Pols Take Break


http://childpsychiatryassociates.com/treatment-team/maggie_mcgill-200/ The people showed up because the government won’t.

Danshui Nearly seven million Americans poured into 2,700 cities Saturday for the No Kings March, a coast-to-coast show of civic will that felt less like a protest and more like a music fest for democracy.

In Los Angeles, an estimated 200,000 filled downtown from City Hall to Union Station.  Drums, chants, costumes, dogs, strollers—an orchestra of ordinary life reminding Washington what action looks like.

Meanwhile, Trump and Congress sat on their collective ass. The White House, the House, and the Senate each blamed the other, yet all managed to agree on one thing: Do nothing.

Day 19 of a shutdown that has frozen paychecks, closed offices, and drained patience.  Three weeks of silence disguised as resolve. The same weekend Americans filled streets, their leaders filled cable slots, explaining why stalemate is strength.

This is what Republicans have wanted for years: a government of no.

No budgets.  No urgency.  No belief in the role of public work.  A shutdown that began as leverage has become lifestyle.

The White House feels secure because the polls show both sides take blame.  The GOP feels triumphant because a stalled machine means fewer rules, fewer checks, less governing. And Epstein who?

Yet the country kept going. Teachers marched beside nurses. Veterans walked with high-schoolers.  Families brought toddlers on shoulders and snacks in wagons.

They weren’t protesting power.  They were performing it. They filled the vacuum left by elected officials who mistake rigidity for leadership.

In city after city, there was no riot, no gunfire, no smashed glass—just motion.  A movement born from fatigue with gridlock.

People worked the streets the way lawmakers once worked the floor.  They held signs that read ‘We’re Still Working,’ and they meant it.  That march was not out of rage, but repair.

That’s the story of this weekend: a nation that refuses to stop, even when its leaders do.

The government may be closed, but the citizens aren’t.  They’ve already gone back to work.

Too bad Washington still hasn’t shown up.