citypaper: archives

Puppet Show
Is it any surprise that we like our anarchy well-planned in D.C.?

Cover Story

Photographs by Darrow Montgomery

Washington, D.C., April 16

We all know how things turned out--or didn't turn out. Yes, angry, dedicated people showed up to--well, there never was a list of demands, but they showed up. And yes, angry, dedicated cops showed up to occasionally douse them with pepper spray and club a few who were particularly out of line. But the meeting went on, and so did the show.

And that is what it was. Everybody, including the protesters, ended up playing themselves on TV. Once the cameras swung into view, the leaders of this leaderless movement revealed themselves--and declared victory. Nothing, save a few blocks of city street, ended up getting shut down.

What else were we expecting? Was the protest a failure just because most of the plate-glass windows protecting global evildoers were preserved? The protest didn't meet expectations because it couldn't have. Seattle was a big deal because nobody saw it coming. Everybody saw A16 coming from a mile away.

It was a hyperorganized, hyperorchestrated show on all sides. There were promises to shut down the meetings. There was tear gas, there was broken glass, and, at times, there was even a little rain. But it wasn't Seattle. For a few months or so, it was like old times again on the ramparts of the political left. Despite the dayslong siege in Washington, it was business as usual at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank. All the planning in the world won't yield chaos.

Gray Panther Office, April 5... Continued

Issue of Apr. 21 - 27, 2000

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