Monday, January 29, 2007

On the road again


Half the fun of going to an event in DC is getting there, walking around, and getting home.

There was a conference going on for conservatives ... but there were also opportunities for those who are anything but.

Lafayette Park, across from the White House, is a fantastic place to get a sense of the disgruntled. This depicts the tail end of the anti-war protests from the past weekend.

Everyone was gathered to photograph three young ladies posing as statues representing the deaths caused by the current battle in Iraq.




There is a lot to protest about these days, if one has a hankerin' to protest.


On the way home, I got some cools shots of the Potomac River in Great Falls.


I think, technically, the following establishes me as an artist. Whether "bad" or "good" artist I don't care. As long as I can take photographs of rocks and receive decent treatment from civil society.


And of course no visit to DC would be complete without paying homage to Andrew Gallatin.

6 comments:

  1. Are those ladies a set of triplets? What's the one in the business suit supposed to be?

    So it's TRUE about the Republican connection to Bonus Cards!

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  2. Isn't that weird? I could not figure it out and I was 10 feet away from them. Maybe they had some kind of make up on, but it sure looked like they were triplets.

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  3. I declare them triplets. Now, tell me what the one is doing in a business suit!

    Also, every time I open that picture of the Bonus Card rant, I want to click on "Steal Food" and "Needless Forms" because those sound like a hell of a good story.

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  4. Good question; I guess the business suit represents American or other civilians that have been killed in Iraq? --

    No, here's what I think it is. The business suit represents those killed on 9-11 - the number on the forehead is the number killed then.

    The soldier represents our soldiers killed in Iraq - a slightly higher number.

    The arab woman represents the civilians killed in Iraq, a much higher number and correspondingly larger flow of "blood."

    Pretty powerful little demonstration.

    The guy who owned the signs kept walking away from me; I should have pursued him because it likely would have been a very memorable conversation.

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  5. Wasn't a National Review conference a great place to view the disgruntled as well?
    William Buckley won't save ya'll now that your Decider is driving the party straight to hell in a manual transmission car and he only knows automatic.

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  6. Crap,they'll stall out before they make it to hell.

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