Inauguration Madness

Sorry about the mess. For some reason WordPress won’t let me make line breaks. I’ll fix that when I can. The administration has been in office now for just over sixty days, making this the perfect time to share my memories o the event.\nSoo many pictures still to process . . . The trip in to DC was great. Many thanks to Joe and Kelly, and especially Kayla for hosting us. They were gracious enough to put us up for the duration of our stay.Thanks also to Enterprise Rent-A-Car for excellent service, and a nice upgrade. We reserved a pickup truck, as it was the cheapest option. Apparently someone else needed it, so Enterprise upgraded us to a Pontiac G6, which was a pretty sweet ride.We had a great time leading up to the trip, with the exception that my ebook reader conked out, (Still no resolution on that, stay tuned for the possibility of an invective-laced rant if the manufacturer doesn’t rectify the situation soon.), and that Carin spent about a day feeling pretty crappy.We got to hang out with friends, and friends of friends, had great food both out and about and cooked “ourselves”. The quotes are because all I did was chop up some olives. Both Joe and Carin are great cooks, and one night we had a spaghetti feed with homemade sauce and homemade bread. Soooo yummy.The morning of the inauguration was indescribably cold, in addition to which, I completely overestimated my cold tolerance. It had been pretty nice most of the time we were there, and I didn’t wear nearly enough layers. We got up and got to the metro some time around four in the morning, so we were stepping into a whole new level of cold.We were out and about in the frozen, darkness for a good two to three hours before things started to light up and look like daytime.I mixed up our metro stations pretty badly, assuming Federal Triangle and Federal Center must refer to the same stop, simply because I could only find one on our little metro map. So admittedly a fair bit of our extra walking was my fault. However, that doesn’t excuse the fact that the inauguration itself was a complete and total snafu. Not one single uniformed person could so much as point us even vaguely in the direction we needed to go. Keep in mind, there were only three or four points of entry for ticket holders. Such a lack of communication was inexcusable.The pandemonium expressed itself in many ways. The metro closings were not as announced, the cops seemed to be completely without instruction mostly wandering at random, security was a joke, and crowd control was nonexistent. You may have seen the story of the “tunnel of death”. I assure you, attendee reports of the complete failure of inaugural logistics were not exaggerated. There may have been vast numbers of plain clothes law enforcement, but whatever they may have done was completely overshadowed by the utter uselessness, and often the counterproductivity of the uniformed cops and military personnel.It was apparent by the time we got to our assigned area that security was an illusion.It was assumed that security would be airtight, so apparently nobody got any big ideas.In hindsight, if I’d known what I was walking into, I could have snuck an M-72 Light Anti-tank Weapon in to the inauguration of an American President. (I had to google the correct name of that weapon. A kid I knew growing up had an empty tube from one, and that’s been the image in my head since inauguration day.) We were told to bring no bags, no tripods, nothing extra. As it turns out, camera bags, purses, tripods, collapsible chairs, blankets, and all manner of bric-a-brac were allowed in. When we got to the security checkpoint, there were no metal detectors. I was asked to open my coat, and I was half-assedly frisked. They patted down my sides, but not my front or back. If I had been dressed in an appropriate coat, I don’t think it’s an exaggeration to say I could have snuck an M-72, or even two, into the inauguration.After being herded like cattle through the security illusion, we were cordoned off by plastic hurricane fencing and expected to wait quietly for several hours. Carin and I had just picked out a likely spot of ground and sat down to wait out the cold when the crowd announced its opinion of the waiting game by stampeding through the hurricane fencing and pushing their way forward by roughly five hundred feet.After catching up with the crowd, and finding them to be about as comfortable as sardines, Carin and I decided to push our luck and see how close we could get.Finally, a use for Google Earth . . .The little x marks about where the  ”fence” was supposed to hold back the crowd. The straight line was just so I could measure my overall progress. Turns out I got right around 850 ft. closer to the incoming President, by being allowed to flagrantly ignore the rules. Our route along the little reflecting pool took us across three different fences, and the only admonishment we received was to get down off the wall of the pool itself, lest we fall through the ice. It was pretty awesome for us, but I can’t overstate the complete lack of security.The final act of I-can’t-believe-this-is-happening was when the cops blocking the section of Capitol Circle in front of us, opened up the area they’d kept clear and let what appeared to be completely random people in. I saw at least three kids jump the fence into the Capitol Grounds. Could have been anybody. And they didn’t get kicked out so far as I could see.All that said, I don’t think I’ve ever been in a place with such an overpowering sense of goodwill. Grouchy bastard that I am, even I couldn’t get upset or annoyed with the millions of people that showed up to witness that morning.I can’t recall my feet ever hurting as bad as they did that day, and after the swearing in and about half of the President’s speech, I sat down on a frozen stone bench closed my eyes and listened. And damned if he didn’t infect me with hope. I know most of my feelings were of relief at the end of the last administration, and that relief brought me to tears. President Obama’s speech finished the job. Even now, even though I think his administration is making a lot of bad choices, I’m hopeful that we can get our country back on track. And I’m trying to figure out what I can do to contribute.On the way out of the inauguration, we could not find transportation to save our lives. Nearly every single barricade remained in place, forcing the crowd to funnel out the same ways we funneled in. Metro stations that were supposed to open up to get people out of downtown stayed closed, and those that were open had tens of thousands of people trying to choke through every entrance. We ended up walking what strangely enough looks like 1.00 miles as the crow flies from where I stood to where Google Earth puts the icon for the Navy Yard Metro station. Best I can figure it it was about 3.3 miles through the lost and wandering route we stumbled through. Makes me feel like kind of a puss to remember it so harshly, but it was so cold my sweat felt like ice water under my jacket, and so windy I couldn’t take the jacket off. Top that off with the fact that I weight 350 pounds and had been on my feet largely on frozen concrete and asphalt for something like seven hours. Perhaps worse was the repeated defeat of finding every entrance to every metro station completely blocked by a mass of people so tight you’d think we evolved directly from coral.Despite all of that I’m glad we went. It was the biggest event I’ve ever witnessed, and one way or the other, it will turn out to have been a pivotal moment in American history.On a side note, I’d like to hand out a world class FUCK YOU to United Airlines for the worst day of air travel I’ve ever had, and the completely callous, dismissive, and downright rude treatment we received throughout our trip home.The plane leaving Dulles had problems with its “air start” which forced the smell of burnt plastic into the plane requiring an evacuation. After about an hour, they claimed to have cycled the air in the plane and that it was ready for us to return. They lied. The smell of burnt plastic ass was still there. We, the cattle passengers were expected to filter the cabin air through our lungs.The plane from Chicago had problems with the luggage loading machinery. I’m not sure if it was internal or external to the plane, but either way, they never did get it repaired. They just kept us on the plane for three and a half hours while they fiddled with it, announcing about every 18 minutes that it should just be another 20 minutes. This whole time, the alternate power supply hadn’t been in operation, so they couldn’t run the air conditioning. I think I now know what the inside of a speculum feels like. It was only at the end of our ordeal that we discovered they’d kept the jetway attached to the plane the whole time. They could have let us out any time within that three and a half hours, but they chose not to. How did we find out about this? Because the brakes on the jetway froze, preventing them from disconnecting it. Another forty minutes wasted.After that, you’d think they’d have set us up with some sort of courtesy in Los Angeles, since we’d utterly missed our connecting flight. No such luck. No meal voucher, no apology, not even basic courtesy. Not only did we miss the next flight too, but they dragged us out to the plane home, let us look at it longingly for a few minutes, and then sent us back into the airport, telling us we were too fat. Being that we were the delayed passengers the ubiquitous United announcement that “We’d like to offer a free round-trip ticket anywhere in the contiguous United States to anyone willing to give up their seats.” was actually on our behalf. So get this. They tell us we’re too fat to get on the 2nd to last plane, still won’t give us any kind of consideration, but when we turn in our worthless “you have a ticket, but you don’t have a seat” tickets for real tickets on a later flight, (which was already our only option), they give us free tickets to somewhere else.I hope other folks can manage to swing this “deal” so here’s how it goes.This was a puddle jumper connection from LA to San Luis Obispo.1. We missed flight A.2. We get “tickets” on flight B which aren’t actually linked to seats on the plane.3. Nobody else was about to give up a seat for us, so we gave up our fake tickets.4. They give us our consolation tickets, then haul us out to plane B anyway but don’t let us on the plane.5. We get on flight C miserable and angry, and toting two free tickets on what should be called “Go Fuck Yourself Air”.I’m still glad we went, and I’ll post more pictures eventually. This thing is way too long anyway, and may be split into separate entries at some point.

Posted In: Personal,Politics,Travel on March 28, 2009 | Comments (0)

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