People, Justice, Common Sense Prevail in Capitol Hill Sledding
Despite efforts by police to crack down on fun, much sledding happened in D.C. on Thursday.
Merrymaking insurgents struck a major victory in the War On Fun Thursday, sledding to their hearts' content on the Capitol Hill West Lawn and forcing the police into a retreat.
Cops kicked off sledders two weeks ago, and ahead of Thursday's snow, Capitol Police Board chairman Frank Larkin said he would not temporarily lift the Capitol's sledding ban. This prompted outrage from politicians and the Capitol Hill community, and I set out this morning determined to join my fellow citizens in protest.
I began the day sledding—or at least attempting to—in my makeshift "sled" (i.e., a recycle bin). Not a cop or other sledder was in sight. This whole civil disobedience thing was seeming pretty disappointing, to be honest.
I was eventually joined by two other families, neither of whom was aware of the ban.
After 15 minutes of sledding, three Capitol Police officers appeared at the bottom of the slope, begrudgingly approaching the criminals they would have to accost. The officers jokingly asked to play rock paper scissors to determine who would have to be "the bad guy."
"We don't want anyone crashing into a tree, busting their head open," said one officer before brandishing the following flyer:
I informed the officer I didn't actually have a sled—as specifically noted in the ordinance—and was thus not breaking the law. This complaint didn't seem to get much traction.
"If these cameras weren't here, I'd go down with you," quipped one officer after telling us we had to go—but not before agreeing to snap a photo for one of the offending families.
While we spineless morning sledders dutifully adhered to our police masters, though, the crowd that arrived later in the afternoon had no such intentions.
"All men recognize the right of revolution; that is, the right to refuse allegiance to, and to resist, the government, when its tyranny or its inefficiency are great and unendurable," wrote Henry David Thoreau in his 1849 essay "Civil Disobedience." By 1 p.m., dozens of sledders, perhaps motivated by the same same sense of distrust of authority as Thoreau, had taken to the hill to exercise their rights. The "sled-in," organized on Facebook, again drew the Capitol Police.
When a cop approached the crowd to inform them of the ordinance, sledder Tim Krepp—surrounded by a swarm of media—told the officer he appreciated his concern but would ignore the rule and continue sledding with his kids.
This seemed to be enough to deter the officer, who retreated back down the hill.
"It's just a bunch of neighbors showing up to go sledding," Krepp said. "This isn't Rosa Parks here. This isn't a great blow for civil rights. We're just trying to use our neighborhood asset as a neighborhood asset as well as a federal asset."
Cate MacGregor, age 8, was not to be fazed by the law, either: "This is my first time on this hill, but I'm really enjoying it," she said.
Asked if she thought the police wer right to kick people off, she said, "No, because this is a public space. It's kind of hard, because there aren't that many hills on Capitol Hill. This is a city, so it's not that easy to find a really really really good hill that's really near."
By this point, the 40 or so sledders were outnumbered by roughly 60 reporters, photographers, and cameramen. The police were nowhere in sight.
"It's not often we get snow here in Washington, D.C. It's just nice to get the sled out, enjoy the elements, and let the kids go sledding," said D.C. resident Jason Petty, who came armed with a sign reading, "The public and our kids love to sled. Please let us! Thanks!"
As far as I could tell, nobody was arrested or fined. It was only later that I learned, via a tweet from D.C. representative Eleanor Holmes Norton, that the police had agreed not to enforce the sledding ban.
"I know [the ordinance] was made by people inside their offices," Petty said. "But there's no terrorism here, there's no trouble. It's just kids sledding. We'll keep the lawn in good shape, I promise."
Want to learn more about silly sledding bans? Check out Reason TV's January nanny of the month, below.
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"All men recognize the right of revolution; that is, the right to refuse allegiance to, and to resist, the government, when its tyranny or its inefficiency are great and unendurable," wrote Henry David Thoreau in his 1849 essay "Civil Disobedience."
Makes one wonder why progressives lionize Thoreau so much.
He's a handy guy to quote when a Republican is president.
Lawmaker *whispering to another*: Can we just let these people sled? I mean, if we throw 'em this bone, it'll get top billing in the media about how they "won" something, that way we can concentrate on the big dogs, like Net Neutrality.
Good for these folks, but that is not a hill. unless there is some serious perspective/foreshortening/distortion working in those photographs, that "hill" isn't much more than a slight rise. I guess that makes the ban even worse, what could the safety issue possibly be? are they protecting the sledding from being bored to death?
Needs more hyperbole
Needs more hyperbole
Needs more hyperbole
There's never enough hyperbole.
That's what I keep telling 'em
No shit... it's like skiing in Vermont.
When a cop approached the crowd to inform them of the ordinance, sledder Tim Krepp?surrounded by a swarm of media?told the officer he appreciated his concern but would ignore the rule and continue sledding with his kids.
Where is this swarm of media when a liberty not fun related is regularly infringed?
All those other times usually come with a higher than average chance to be shot.
Cheering on the infringement.
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Probably for the first and only time in my life, hat's off to Rep. Holmes-Norton.
Kudos for the first time of her statist existence, but I'd not count on that moving forward, so fuck the hyphen bitch. She still hates freedom , it's not even debateable. It is nice that you tried to be nice, I'm
also think that being nice is the right thing to do, but with HN it's statist all the way.
Now watch one of those kids get injured and the family sues. Then they go and whine to the press about how the negligent government refused to put up the necessary safety precautions to prevent their idiot children from sledding in a perfectly safe environment. And then Congress will spend taxpayer dollars to make Capitol Hill safer for kids who sled there whose parents can't accept responsibility for their own choices. And every year those safety precautions will be deemed "not enough" by some other idiot whose kid gets hurt engaging in an inherently risky activity.
This is why I'm perfectly happy with a public land sledding ban unless the participants sign a legal waiver of all liability. It may not look great for a postcard, but if sledding on Capitol Hill is so important to them, then they can fucking well sign a piece of paper promising not to make their choices someone else's liability. If they don't like it, then they can back tort reform.
Don't sled on me.
That's a Captain America shield sled. No way they can stop that. It would be un-American.
Whose hill do they think it is? We paid for that Capitol. I want to sled on my hill. And make a sandwich in my White House kitchen. Which apparently isn't too tough to break into.
I want my fair-and-equal access to POTUS-class pussy, like Monica from way the hell back when, in the Oval Office's side-closet / bedroom...
I did not cause her dress to stain, and I never boiked Saddam Huisein...
There was that time, with Margeret Thatcher, I chased her 'round, but could not catch her...
I never did it, with Socks, the cat... I might have once, with Affafat...
I might have, once, last November, but if I did, I can't remember...
Betty, close those shades, willya?!?!?!