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| Sanders Campaign Rally, taken on my Galaxy S5 |
Today, I attended my second ever political rally. Bernie Sanders came to speak on Monroe Community College’s campus, so I asked a coworker to cover my tutoring shift (shout out!) and set out for the rally’s location, the Bill Gray Iceplex.
My first political rally was four years ago when Bill
Clinton came to Lamar University’s campus in 2012 to campaign for local
Democratic candidate Nick Lampson. I went to the rally largely because I wanted
to see a former President, and also because my friend Zach (a staunch Democrat)
talked me into not missing it. I was really only interested in the spectacle.
At the time I was a Republican, mainly because my parents were, and I hadn’t
formed strong political opinions yet. My friends and I got signs, cheered at
the appropriate moments, and then dispersed. I don’t even remember what Clinton
said, because I was only there to see what he looked like and spoke like; let
me tell you, campaign rallies are way different when you feel passionately
about the candidates and their platforms.
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| At the 2012 Lamar University Nick Lampson Rally, Featuring Bill Clinton |
Today, as a left-leaning Democrat, I
was excited when I heard Sanders would be coming to Rochester. 2012 Christine
would not have awaked before dawn and stood in line from 6am until 8am in 35
degree weather. She certainly wouldn’t have done it alone. But that is exactly
what I did today – and for those of you who know me well, you know how much I
hate getting up early. It was cold and unpleasant, but I was ultimately glad that
I went for two main reasons.
First, I gained a clearer understanding of Sanders’s campaign
platform. Hearing Sanders’s stance on the issues from various sources pales in
comparison to the passionate delivery of those principles in person. After participating
in this gathering, I feel solidified in my support of Sanders. Although of a
large portion of his speech was targeted towards labor issues because of
Western New York’s labor demographic, Sanders took time in his speech to speak
to different marginalized voters, talking to and about Latino, African
American, and Native American voters specifically. He proclaimed, “This
campaign is listening to a group of people whose voices are very rarely heard,
and that is the Native American community.” Even in a predominantly Caucasian audience,
the human rights of minority groups became a focal point of his speech, in
addition to economic and student loan issues. Additionally in a campaign season
loaded with pervasive, sexist rhetoric, hearing a candidate state unequivocally
that we need a change in our professional treatment of women was incredibly
important to me. On Equal Pay Day, significantly, Sanders highlighted that
women across the country make $.79 on the dollar compared to men, concluding that
“They want the whole damn dollar!”
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| Quality not Great, but Still Bernie |
Secondly, I am encouraged by the sheer number of people
committed to attending this rally. In my experience on the internet and in
person, people are sometimes hesitant to stand up and say that they support
equal pay for women, or that we should treat undocumented immigrants as people
with basic human rights. Being surrounded by such an energetic crowd of
supporters restored some of my faith in people’s compassion. The majority of
the supporters there seemed invested in witnessing Sanders and his platform. I
arrived at 6am, but some people had been in line since 4am! I heard attendees saying
that they had missed out on shifts at work to be here, or that they had skipped
classes to come to the event. I also spoke with a supporter who said that she
had not been to a political rally since 1974, but she was in line today. Multiple
times throughout the speech, the crowd drowned Sanders out with chants of “Bernie!
Bernie!” and stamping on the bleachers.
In comparison, while Donald Trump has many staunch
supporters, there are also many of his event attendees who are only interested
in him as a spectacle, in a similar way that I viewed Bill Clinton’s rally in
2012. As a result, many people going to his rallies don’t actually support his
platform. We can also see this in the astonishing number of protests to his
events; Twitter user @Jordancentola highlights this difference, tweeting “I
find it awesome how no one has to say ‘stay safe’ at Bernie rallies.” At this
rally, I never felt unsafe, I saw no protestors, and the entire audience, as
far as I could tell, was actively participating and very energetic about the
message.
A major downside of this Democratic primary cycle has been
how the candidates talk about each other on the campaign trail. As a Sanders
supporter who would also cheerful vote for Hillary Clinton, I am distressed by
this in part because the Democratic Party, if it wants to win in November, will
have to come together behind one candidate at the end of this primary. While
both candidates are definitely guilty of these attacks, rhetoric against
Clinton (including that used by Sanders) frequently has a gendered component. Luckily, I didn’t see much of that in the speech Sanders
gave today. Instead, he focused on their different positions on the issues as
well as their different fundraising strategies – although, I think even this
comparison isn’t completely devoid of gender bias, and I may talk about that in
a later post.
Like anything, there were definite drawbacks to this experience.
While the people in attendance made this an awesome experience, there were also
some troubling aspects to the crowd as well. While I found Sanders’s discussion
regarding Clinton fairly respectful, I cannot say the same thing for the
audience. Many people, mainly women, were yelling things like “traitor” and “fuck
her” during this portion of the speech. This vicious hate from the audience is,
at least in my opinion, wildly misdirected. There were also the ever-present “BernieBros” waiting in line. A pair of high school seniors behind me
were repeatedly referring to their classmates using homophobic slurs, in
addition to their discussing one female classmate who they “wouldn’t fuck with
because she’s so ugly.” I truly don’t understand how someone who actually
supports this candidate could have these kinds of opinions; rather, I don’t see
how they could not identify these opinions and words as fundamentally harmful
to the idea of equality that seems to be at the heart of the Sanders campaign.
If you would like to read more about the rally I attended, links to news reports on the event are available here and here. You can also check out the
hashtag #rocfeelsthebern for firsthand tweets and posts from the event.




You bring up such a nice point about the audience. I've been struck before with a kind of "I like Bernie, but not so much some of these weirdly dogmatic Bernie supporters..." Sometimes it's clear he's saying one message but it is heard another way. Like "Yes, Bernie tells me to respect women, and I do! That is, I respect women in general, in theory. Not, say, any of these actual women I know and interact with, because they're all whores and ugly and I don't see why they don't love a guy like me. But the idea of women in abstract, sure, yay." Bernie, like all the other candidates, exists not just as himself but as a kind of rhetorical fantasy for people, representing their personal hopes and dreams, and sometimes those personal hopes and dreams are pretty creepy. Anyway, I digress. Wonderful blog.
ReplyDeleteYeah, I agree, and I could very easily see how rallies get out of hand, in the hands of someone like Trump for example. Because it's not really easy to get into these things, so the creepy hopes and dreams being presented are really strong, in addition to being creepy.
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