Over 20,000 people came from all over Southern California to unite with a single voice to demand civil rights and marriage equality. It was one of the largest--possibly the single largest--pro-LGBT rally in Los Angeles' history. The rally was initiated and led by the ANSWER Coalition and the L.A. Coalition for Equal Marriage Rights.
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In the days before, thousands of LGBT people and their allies had taken to the
streets to decry the passage of Prop. 8. Protesters marched on CNN, the Mormon
Temple and held spontaneous demonstrations in Los Angeles, Long Beach, Orange County, San
Diego and throughout the state.
The speakers denounced bigoted Prop. 8 and vowed to continue the struggle until
all marriage rights are restored and LGBT equality is won. They denounced the
ongoing attempts to divide the LGBT community from people of color and
immigrants, and stressed the importance of unity.
Rally co-chair Lindsay, a graduate of Howard University, said, "The
right-wing is trying to keep our communities divided. We can't let that happen.
We all suffer discrimination and we must make common cause to struggle against
the true enemy--wealthy institutions and outlets that spread bigotry. No one
should be scapegoated. An injury to one is an injury to all!"
By the time the march stepped off at 6:45 p.m., 20,000 people were in the middle
of the streets of Los Angeles. The crowd was very diverse and reflected the wide
spectrum of people in the LGBT community: Latino, Black, Asian, white and
others. The march filled the enormous span of Santa Monica Blvd., and then
Vermont Ave. and Sunset Blvd as it twisted through L.A. It measured at least 5
blocks from beginning to end and was densely packed with people. It was a lively
march carrying message of anger and hope. People chanted loudly and pumped their
fists in the air, "Gay, straight, Black, white--marriage is a civil
right," and "What do we want? Equality! When? Now!"
All the major national
and local media--TV, print and radio--covered Saturday's Los Angeles mass
protest. From CNN to Good Morning America, organizers and participants were
interviewed. The lead cover photo and story in Sunday's L.A. Times was about the
march. Our message was heard not only in the United States, but also in Europe,
Central America and Asia, as major international outlets covered the event.
All major outlets
described thousands or tens of thousands of people marching. This was correct. By
all organizer and independent estimates, well over 20,000 people marched. At
the same time, 10,000 people marched against Prop. 8 in San Diego. One day
earlier, 15,000 people protested in San Francisco. The wave against Prop. 8 is
building and the struggle is sure to intensify and take different forms in the
future.
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