An Overorchestrated Rebellion: Dispatch From the DNC
An anticlimactic protest in Chicago reveals a tired approach to modern activism.

William Langewiesche, a writer and pilot, once told me that flying a plane was "90 percent boredom, 10 percent terror." I might say the same for the "Make it great like '68! Shut down the [Democratic National Convention] for Gaza!" protest that took place in front of the Israeli consulate in downtown Chicago on Tuesday night. The event was organized by Behind Enemy Lines, and as might be expected from a group whose tagline is "The empire is the enemy. From the belly of the beast, we choose to resist it," participants arrived carrying resistance-ready banners, flags, and bullhorns.
They arrived when they said they would, 7 p.m. on the dot, after Behind Enemy Lines promoted the protest for weeks on Instagram and provided helpful links on its website. The group's leaders had also granted many pre-DNC interviews, including with me, explaining how they were real radicals, unlike the namby-pamby March on the DNC crew who'd applied for city permits—lame! If any group in Chicago was ready to let the Democrats know their imperialist and genocidal acts were being watched, and were not afraid to get into it with the cops, it was Behind Enemy Lines.

It was a message they spread perhaps too well, as the 75 or so participants were joined by maybe twice as many press people and six times as many cops. There were cops everywhere, eventually lining every curb and blocking every cross-street—a cop-a-palooza that all but assured the protest would not get out of hand, or not for very long.
This made the whole thing feel kind of staged: a clot of protesters chanting "Intifada revolution!" and "Killer Kamala, what do you say? How many kids did you kill today?" while the press all snapped the same photos (burning flag? Check). Meanwhile, more than two dozen legal observers with the National Lawyers Guild Chicago, recognizable by their fluorescent green caps, monitored police conduct and stood ready to assist any protester in need. There was a lone man waving an Israeli flag, who, at least initially, was neither approached nor harassed by the protesters.

"Is this a little boring?" asked a cameraman. An Irish journalist agreed, and the three of us—having covered more incendiary events in France, Minneapolis, and Portland, respectively—chatted about the days when protests were not announced weeks in advance, but formed spontaneously or were made known through literal samizdat or its digital equivalent. We might have gotten a little nostalgic for times when chats like this were impossible, when you were too busy ducking projectiles, avoiding a stampeding crowd, or covering your face from the tear gas.
There was none of those things here—almost none. The protesters were, if you'll excuse my vulgarity, what my late ex used to call "young, dumb, and full of cum." They were horny for confrontation, and if that meant getting in the faces of some of the cops, they'd do it. Which they did, creating a maybe three-minute scuffle during which several protesters were arrested before everybody went back to their places.

It was utterly bizarre—an overorchestrated rebellion where nothing new happened. Maybe it was our fault for paying attention. During the downtime—which was almost the whole time—I spoke with reporters from The New York Times, the New York Post, ABC, and other outlets: Had social justice protesting jumped the shark? And were those of us covering it chewing on little more than chum?
I think maybe so, and while young people protesting injustice may be evergreen, the current form has gotten tired. The protests that started in 2020 were a form of release, a way to get out of lockdown and maraud in the streets with your friends while concurrently believing you were making the world a better place. The causes could change—Black Lives Matter, Ukraine, Roe v. Wade—so long as they provided the requisite rage calories. And boy did October 7 hit so many notes—racial, historical, and religious. We would fight in the streets to prevent another Nakba or Holocaust, trusting no data unless it aligned with our values.
Michael Boyte, one of the founders of Behind Enemy Lines, told me that the Israel Defense Forces had so far murdered 168,000 Palestinians, including children by amputation. If this were true, I could understand how a protest in front of the Israeli consulate would be a "get-your-message-heard-by-any-means-possible" emergency. But it is not true, and while one might imagine an inflated number would give the protest more fire, on this night it did not. Maybe people smelled a rat. Maybe they have activism exhaustion, which turned out to be the case this past Monday, when an expected 30,000 people for a March on the DNC resulted in only 1,500 participants—an advent that can leave leaders a bit sore, even combative.

Looking around at Tuesday's participants, dressed in the usual facemasks and keffiyehs, chanting the same slogans over and over, the protest seemed like a retread, corporate rock in lieu of punk rock. No wonder they were not getting a big rush. They were settling for a simulacrum, an exercise that required little more than showing up and shouting, when they might be working in any number of ways and even quietly to end the war in Gaza.
Instead, one boy was yelling into a bullhorn two feet from cops' faces, "This is what democracy looks like!" He yelled it again and again, and I thought, yes, that is what democracy looks like: being free to be as loud and as boring as you like without fear of repercussions.
By 8 p.m., another line of police had formed to shield a very small group of pro-Israeli protesters, including one of whom carried a mounted poster of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, the German theologian executed by the Nazis, and another singing "America the Beautiful" in the direction of the pro-Palestinian protesters. As the latter began to leave, it appeared the night was over; maybe they thought it safer to slip away than risk confrontation.
The ones that stayed were not interested in safety; they were primed and revved. There had been an hour of foreplay and now it was time to mix it up. But it was an unfair fight and they knew it: about 60 young people against 600 police officers. Yet the line moved toward the cops anyway, shouting "Look at what these police are doing to us!" and "They're kettling! They're kettling!" before running alongside a line of police, some of whom gave pursuit.

Leaving the protest, I passed more lines of Chicago cops—three officers of unknown origin being pulled by bomb-sniffing dogs, and two Secret Service agents getting out of an unmarked car. It seemed like overkill. While I could understand the city not taking chances during the Democratic National Convention, most people did not want to see a return to the violence of the 1968 DNC, despite Behind Enemy Line's pitch to make it so.
Or maybe they did: On Wednesday morning, I read reports of 55 arrests, then 67, finally 72—almost every protester there. This I find striking and strange. Did the police overreact? Did the protesters want to be arrested? Are we at the stage where the conflict must be consummated to both parties' satisfaction?
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So, they either have forgotten how to commit arson, or they’re truly the controlled, theatrical “opposition”. How surprising.
I guess that's what happens when the quango money for bussed in activists dries up.
Yes. The whole thing feels very, very staged.
Yes, the headline completely misses the point. These are UNDER-orchestrated protests. These little rump protests are what's left when only the actual grassroots protest movement shows up, without the money, direction and logistical support from the plutocracy.
I've said it before, but I don't mind saying it again.
I have a lot of respect for Nancy Rommelmann getting on the ground and reporting what she has actually seen and heard, live. Too few reporters these days do the real work that she does, and I appreciate her for doing it.
She's the only actual journalist Reason's got, and one of the few writers on the staff who isn't auditioning for a spot at the Atlantic with each article.
She's not even on the staff! (wish she was)
Seconded.
She was the one who actually went to San Francisco and reported on the state of their progressive utopia to explain why voters were souring on some things, amongst some other acts of old school journalism.
She's been there, the went to Portland and I think Seattle mid-BLM riots, she went to Ukraine! Brian Williams could only dream of being that intrepid.
I have a lot of respect for people who put their butts on the line to tell a true story. She is one of them.
Israel after Oct 7 also stamped on her passport.
Thirded. Long live Nancy.
Looks like Soros and the Pritzker's aren't paying for this one.
Nah. You don't go "all-in" when you're protesting the people you're going to vote for.
More important that all the employees of Flowers By Irene were inside making sure everybody was gushing to each other over Lil Jon and nobody was asking to many questions about how someone who didn't run in a single primary won all the votes.
An anticlimactic protest in Chicago reveals a tired approach to modern activism.
By "modern" I guess we mean late 2024, not 2019-2023?
In arts and architecture, the 'Modern' era started in about 1920, so your guess is as good as anyone's.
Street protests are so 50 years ago. Didn’t accomplish anything back then, even less now.
“….seemed like a retread, corporate rock in lieu of punk rock.”
Ah. So the ramones, then.
An anticlimactic protest in Chicago reveals a tired approach to modern activism.
More like a corrupted approach to citizenship. Voting, signing petitions, marching around with signs making noise. That is theater of the powerless and the manipulated. Begging others more powerful to do something. And that constitutes all of what is taught as civics. Nothing about how to participate in and/or make the decisions of governance. Only about how to march around the outside of it.
The 1A itself is an 18th century view of what subjects should be allowed to do by an enlightened group of leaders. Subjects may have rights of subjects – but there is nothing in the 1A or the Constitution that really requires – requires – govt to operate according to the constraints citizens place on it. Because that would require that citizens know how to take over failed governance and right it.
Said the champion of government tyranny during Covid.
I think your view of the 1A is so inconsequential and wrong to not merit commenting.
I also think central / urban planners should be rounded up and burned in the town square, along with their zoning codes. What say you?
We could make a public spectacle of it. Come to the County fair and see your local shallow state assholes get what's coming to them! Next year we're including HOA's!
to not merit commenting
And yet you did comment. Though we can both agree, it had no merit.
Didn’t comment on your 1A bullshit. The fact that you can’t differentiate is valid enough of a reason.
Maybe you should go back to being an urban planning crank, where you can use terms you’ve heard online to justify socialism. That’s worked well in the past.
Well, it also attempts to intimidate and "other" a certain group of people, based on their religious and ethnic identity. That was a micro-aggression (at a minimum) 2 years ago, but now it's supposedly okay, because the out group is supporting the "colonizers" and the protestors are supporting the terrorists.
Protesting had more appeal when people were cooped up inside during Covid and pissed off. Now most people are just focusing on taking care of themselves and their families.
Also I think many on the left have realized the Floyd protests/riots went way too far.
"Protesting had more appeal when people were cooped up inside during Covid and pissed off."
Even with the risk of being exposed to all the COVID germs?
I don't think the leftists think the protests went too far.
They basically just legalized the looting after that, not even prosecuting people for organized shoplifting.
Did anyone notice that you never see this sort of thing at the RNC? No abortion food trucks, no piles of leaflets in the streets, no fences and knocking them down, nobody boarding up their windows expecting the worst.
What's wrong with Democrats? Like, in their brain. What is so fundamentally screwed up with ALL of them, that makes them incapable of being a part of society?
You downplay it, Nancy - pretending this was tame in comparison to other protests/riots. But that's a false metric. You didn't see any of this at the RNC. You didn't see it when somebody literally tried to assassinate their guy. Why are people on the right so better at behaving themselves, and people on the left so incapable of doing so?
That's the question you should be asking.
And then you should be asking: why do we ever tolerate, at all, the people on the left?
What is wrong with Democrats?
A politics based on resentment, sophistry, ingratitude and nihilism. The general feeling that the world owes you something for your mere existence, despite you being a nightmare to be around who contributes nothing but whining.
The entire Democrat ethos is centered on victimhood and jealousy. So people riot. They you have globalists willing to fund these people with these emotions to travel and protest. They are professional grievance protestors.
It is all about societal collapse.
no piles of leaflets in the streets
This, to me, is bizarre. Not just the leaflets, but the placards too. It's not like one person made 5000 placards and just set them out for no one to take. All well-formatted, digitally-composed, color-printed, and neatly-stapled and aligned.
It's very much like a bureaucracy churning out promotional materials according to their budget for an event that they expected to be poorly attended.
It’s not like one person made 5000 placards and just set them out for no one to take. All well-formatted, digitally-composed, color-printed, and neatly-stapled and aligned.
They get professionally done by the same left-wing NGOs. There's nothing organic or "grassroots" about them, these are professional organizations who've been at this for decades, and have years of practice in grifting federal and state bux to fund their operations, plus huge donations from left-wing millionaire and billionaire activists.
Why are people on the right so better at behaving themselves
Like they did on January 6, 2021, for example?
The single example that can be highlighted which is marred by accusations of federal agents acting as saboteurs. Even then it doesn't rise to the level of at least dozens of left wing riots.
Riots? It doesn't even rise to the level of a Christmas Parade in Waukesha or a Congressional Baseball game.
1 Capitol protest. Since then you've had a half dozen similar protests in the Capitol in the left. Not to mention the cities burned.
You continue to cry about an event whose only murder was by Capitol officers. There were 2 actually.
Meanwhile BLM had 2 dozen murders and 2B in damages.
Yet you push a retarded leftist grievance narrative.
What else is a retarded leftist to do?
"Dan S." huh? Where do these idiots come from, to be here for a short time, make a few nit-wit'ish comments and disappear? Are they all just socks or what?
Remember "Joe Friday" for example; whatever happened to him?
LOL, your side bombed the building twice, Dan, you have no high horse to ride on here.
"Did the police overreact? Did the protesters want to be arrested? Are we at the stage where the conflict must be consummated to both parties' satisfaction?"
Are reporters part of the stage setting? Is Nancy Rommelmann disappointed that she wasn't tear gassed? Has the press become just another propaganda organ for "Protest, Inc. (TM)?" Enquiring minds want to know!
This puts the lie to the claim that all these riots, looting, graffiti scrawling, camping, sit-ins, marches, speeches, brick-throwing, occupations, window breaking, car burnings, and Molotov cocktails are against both the Democrats and the Republicans equally.
The Left has taken over the heart and soul of the Democratic Party. They now occupy its core. What these faux demonstrators are allowed to do now is basically just PR, cos-play, B-roll for online clicks.
At least leftists back in ‘68 had some balls, which it took to actually blow things up and fight the cops. Nowadays it’s just mostly virtue signaling.
Maybe people smelled a rat.
[spews coffee all over monitor]
Of all the rats in all the criminal mischief in all the world... *this* is the protest where people probably smelled one and thought "Nah, it's probably a bad idea to burn this one down."
This is a relatively new turn of young people protesting for injustice, in support of the cause of murderers, kidnappers and rapists.
I can't help but wonder if the Chicago protests are underwhelming because the spring protest on college campuses were over reported. I don't think the earlier protests were as significant as they were made to look. The biggest asset to the earlier protests were than campuses weren't really ready for them and the news was the surprise more than the issue.
I do think there are many Americans saddened and shocked by the warfare in Gaza. The problem for the protestors is that they have made the focus Israel and not a focus on peace.
Parody. You think the Chicago riots are tame because the media is not reporting it. Meanwhile the DNC has built a 3rd layer to fences outside with dozens of cops inside the fence line.
Also ignores, if not tries to downplay, the blatant disparity of The Democratic Party openly cheering, if not Agencies supporting, riots when they align against the party’s enemies; playing up, if not Agencies confounding, the peaceable assemblies that crop up against them; and, now, facing little-to-no social unrest at their own coronation ceremony.
It’s between uncanny and incredible. Like all of the political opposition to the Nazis getting beaten down and blamed for various forms of social unrest but, when Der Führer speaks, well a few people show up outside the venue, nothing much happens, and people like M4E says that he thinks the Brown Shirts we’ve seen agitating, for years at this point, have been over reported.
I hope all the Ha,as protesters all invade the convention and ‘occupy’ it. Maybe even hold the elite democrats inside hostage. Demanding ‘free Palestine’
I love that a generation that has been raised as perpetual children believe or have been led to believe they are the rebels in Star wars. There's nothing more to this besides that they've been told all their lives the fiction they see is reality and they are the "hero" in the story. They are boring and empty.
re: "Maybe it was our fault for paying attention."
Yes, you're finally getting it. You do not convince a two year old to stop throwing tantrums by reacting to those tantrums. When a child threatens to "hold my breath until I turn blue", let him. Watch for safety or violence but otherwise ignore the tantrum.
props for jornolisming in correct fashion, even though this Hamas Counterrevolution Coronation has been a snoozefest
The loyal opposition has struck, again.