Huddle Up!
By David Swanson
Team, huddle up. Huddle UP! Now, listen. I'm not going to even tell you what to do in the second half unless you
understand what you did in the first half. Do you?
You think you're tired and worn down and you got beat bad, right? Is that what you think? When you pulled off the most
powerful offensive attack in league history on February 15, 2003, putting millions of people in the streets against this
war, you think no points went up on the board, right? You need to understand that you sidelined three-quarters of their
lineup. They've been using the same players without a break ever since. You sent most of the nations on the globe and
the United Nations out of the stadium. You left them with a couple of skinny Brits and a fat Italian as substitutes, and
that's it. Now, do you think you're the ones who are dog tired? Their uniforms look bright and clean, but they're
hurting bad.
And what about your defense? Have you seen them move into North Korea or Iran or Syria yet? You're holding them to the
little stuff. They're losing the ability to think and adjust. And when you thumped them in the November 7, 2006,
elections in the final seconds of the half, you could see the fear in their eyes. They're running on rubber legs,
they're spitting blood, and they're scared. And look at your bench! You could each play a half a minute and go home.
You've recruited two-thirds of the stands onto the team. You've also put the refs on your side by calmly and
relentlessly exposing their cheating. The cards are in your hands, and this is your game to lose.
Now, I'm going to talk about the second half and we're going to go out there and finish this thing right. But first
you're going to give me 100 pushups. Now! You think you're tired? You think you're ready and wasting energy? The more
energy you use the more you're going to have. We're playing for the world here, and we have the world to work with.
Don't think about saving resources. We've got resources you can't drill for in any wilderness. You can only find them in
a crowd. You can only find them on a team. There you go! Faster! 2 – 3 – 4! Push it! Don't stop! It's making you
stronger! Strong enough to walk out there and win this thing with a look.
Stand up! If you think you've struggled, you don't know your history. And you don't know the misery of your opponents'
victims. Pain is not the worst thing you can face. Pain together for the better good of all is a pleasure you should
value. You're not going to win a field full of virgins in paradise. But nobody else is either. You're going to win
something that actually exists. You're going to win peace and life and freedom – and before any of that you're going to
find solidarity. Did you know that protesting is good for your health? It is the brotherhood and sisterhood. It
nourishes your soul. It brings you in from your masochistic exurban mansions of isolated media intake and puts you into
action with others. You will get stronger the longer you struggle. And it's going to be a struggle. They haven't
exhausted their playbook yet. They're going to open the second half with a defensive formation called the Democrats.
Pay attention. This is when you strike hard and long. This defense is misleading. You move into it and it gives way, but
it cushions your blow and then moves you to the side, to the side, to the side, and endlessly out of bounds. You start
out right up the middle demanding an end to funding the war. They are going to counter with a claim that bringing our
men and women safely home is an attack on those troops. You'll think you've heard them wrong, but you cannot pause.
They're just throwing sand in your eyes. They're about to hit you with an escalation and an opposition to the
escalation, and they'll have the fans getting into the opposition too. And you'll find yourself sliding out of bounds
unless you stay in the middle and cut off the funding for the war. If you do that, you'll slowly gain traction, and if
you hit them hard with articles of impeachment they'll be on their backs wondering which way up is.
Their offense is still going to look like a standard corporate media assault on free thought, but it's going to
overreach and commit more errors. Your best defense is a good offense. Turn to the independent media and build it, and
play tough with the corporate corrupters of communication. You can shut them down and turn them around. They need you
much more than you need them.
Our opening drive is January 27th in Washington, D.C. If you are not there you are letting down the team. If you are not
there you will feel shame when your grandchildren ask you about your life. If you are not there you are not in
solidarity with the people of the world who do not know what Americans think because not enough of us are there. Get up!
There are no excuses. No, not even that one. No, not that noble one. Not that personal one. Not that strategic one. NO
excuses. You need to be in Washington, D.C., on Saturday, January 27th. If ifs and buts were candy and nuts you could
just go buy a trophy and put it on your television. You've got to EARN IT, my friends. You've got to get your ass to
Washington, D.C., this Saturday, or you can join the other team. We don't need you. We'll win without you. Have a nice
glass of oil with your steak. Or come and eat and march and sing and share and laugh with us as we turn this world on
its axis.
We're going to march past the U.S. Capitol, and it's surrounded by Capitol Police, but they are on our team and they
know we're marching for them too. We're marching to tell Congress what it has to do. But we're also going to march past
Fox News, and this is where we throw a screen pass and go long. We're going to hit Fox News with a protest so loud that
deep within their studios a guest will seize his throat and some truth will come out. We're going to rock the
opposition's two key players, Fox News and the U.S. Senate, to the ground. We're going to demand an end to this war now: http://www.unitedforpeace.org
And then we're really going to start. Then we're going to reach way back into our playbook and drag out of our memory
what really happened in Washington, D.C., the last time it was run by a man named Dick. The antiwar movement last time
around built the momentum for an impeachment movement, which gave Congress the nerve to end the war, and then the threat
of impeachment stopped Nixon from vetoing the bill that cut off the war funding, and the exhilaration of doing the
decent thing and cutting off the war funding drove impeachment to the goal line.
You can come to Washington on Saturday and march, but you can't go back home. We need you on Sunday as we train and
prepare:
And we need you on Monday as we lobby Congress to cut off the money and start the investigations:
We need you for three days. Three key days. Then you can climb back on any cross you choose. This game is within our
reach, but they're tough and determined and devilishly slippery. They can't beat you, but they can and will drive this
into overtime.
On February 5th you will hit them hard all over the country with nonviolent and creative occupations of congressional
offices:
When you walk out of those offices it will be because you have won, and you will walk out with a smile, a handshake, a
hug, and friendship for our newest teammates: your congress members.
Now, put your hands together here! Who's going to win this game? The people! Are we going to win it for the Gipper? Hell
no! Are we going to win it for Halliburton? Hell no! Are we going to win it for Hillary Clinton? Hell no! Are we going
to win it for our grandchildren's grandchildren and their loved ones? Hell yes! Are we going to win it for the people?
Hell yes! Get out there!
ENDS