Tuesday, January 20, 2009

The Purple People Eater

Good thing I am unlikely to have grandchildren, so I don't have to tell them about the time I almost made it to the inauguration of the the first black president of the United States.

I live four blocks from the U.S. Capitol. I was lucky enough (or so I thought) to score a ticket to one of the standing sections between the reflecting pool and the Capitol. I left my apartment before the sun came up to arrive more than an hour before the gates opened. I actually brought a book because I was worried I would be bored standing around waiting for the ceremony to start.

Ha. I forgot that the D.C. Police and U.S. Capitol Police were in charge. I have never experienced such an epic clusterfuck in my whole life.

The photo above shows the "line" I stood in to get into the Purple Gate, designated for purple ticket holders like me. For security reasons, they were funneling all ticket holders for the section through a single security checkpoint, which was not clearly marked. When I arrived at 7 a.m., any semblance of a line leading to that illusive checkpoint had started to deteriorate into a blob. But everyone was in good spirits and hopeful, even as the blob turned into more of a mob. People chanted "Obama!" and sang songs. My little part of the mob even tried (in vain) to start the wave.

While standing in this mob, I noted happily that this is the most integrated I have ever seen DC. Black people and white people hanging out (if involuntarily), joking around, making conversation.

While freezing cold and uncomfortable, we had no reason to believe that we wouldn't get in. After all, we had heard about the precision inaugural preparations non-stop on the news, and we had arrived early, as suggested by event organizers. Three hours in, however, we hadn't moved more than 50 feet. And we weren't really going anywhere in that 50 feet; rather, the mob was just getting denser. By 10 a.m., I couldn't move my arms because I was so packed in.

Not once--NOT ONCE--during this three hours did I see a single police officer, National Guardsman, or event volunteer.

By 11 a.m., one hour before Obama was to take the oath, people started to get desperate. The mob descended on the security checkpoint and started chanting "Let us in!" and "Purple! Purple!" As the mob grew more restless, I still didn't see a single cop. The only uniforms I saw were those of the medical personnel who twice had to fight their way through the mob to help two elderly people who had collapsed from standing in line for hours in the cold without access to water or restrooms.

By 11:32 a.m., I realized I was never going to make it in. With tears in my eyes, I fought my way out of the crowd and sprinted home. I made it home 10 minutes before the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court flubbed the presidential oath.

The Washington Post reported that "
at least 4,000 people with coveted blue or purple tickets to the presidential inauguration were blocked from entering the U.S. Capitol grounds because too many tickets were distributed, entry procedures bogged down and security officials were overwhelmed by surging crowds at several gates." This is a GROSS under-estimation of the number of purple people denied, let alone the other sections. I was surrounded by thousands of people. And that doesn't even take into account the thousands of purple ticket holders trapped for hours in what became known as the Purple Tunnel of Doom, the I-395 tunnel that runs under the Mall.

Check out this photo of the Purple Tunnel of Doom (the survivors of which have already started a Facebook page). Event organizers directed thousands of people to stand in line underground in a cold tunnel for hours with no restrooms, no water, and no police presence. This is ineptitude on an epic scale. It is a testament to the patience and good will of the people trapped in that tunnel that no one was hurt, even after most of them emerged from the tunnel to learn that the gates were closed.

My favorite excuse for this disaster: the Sergeant at Arms said people wearing bulky winter clothing took up more space on the Mall than expected. Are you fucking serious? This is your excuse? It is January 20th, moron. While this ain't northern Minnesota, it also ain't Miami. It's winter, dumb ass. Moreover, satellite images taken of the Mall at 11:19 a.m. show open space in the purple and blue ticketed sections and a mob of people at the gates. Don't blame the weatherman, Sergeant, for your incompetence.

I was so disappointed. If I had known that having a ticket meant nothing, I would have gladly gone and stood miles away at the Washington Monument with my friends and witnessed the event on a Jumbotron. After all, I didn't expect to see much even from my ticketed seat; I wanted to experience the jubilation of the crowd, which you can't get from watching it at home on TV.

Instead, I spent the majority of this historic event either staring at the back of frustrated strangers or sprinting home through blocked off streets with police yelling at me to stay on the sidewalk. Why the police felt it more important to patrol blocked off streets rather than ensure the safety of tens of thousands of people trapped in the Purple Tunnel of Doom is beyond me.

As disappointed as I was, I felt terribly for the people who spent thousands of dollars on plane tickets and hotel rooms in order to be a part of history. Many of them had stood in line
for hours at the House and Senate office buildings just the day before to pick up their tickets, which turned out to be useless.

I felt even worse for the numerous elderly African-American men and women, most dressed to the nines, to whom this event likely meant more than most. As it became more obvious that the Great Purple Gate Disaster of 2009 had reached Code Red Clusterfuck, many of them started to tear up or even quietly cry.

Fuck you, U.S. Capitol Police Chief Morse, for making little old black ladies cry.

4 comments:

GQ said...

This was the most insane disappointing thing to ever happen to me. I too left early and arrived at the Purple Gate at 6:30 am. I followed the line to find the back and kept going and going, finally heading down into the 3rd street tunnel. I had no idea I wouldn't come out of the tunnel for 5 more hours. As we slowly moved up the exit, I heard about my friends already secure in their spots. People sang and played hang man on the dirty walls. It looked like camaraderie was a nice pre-show to the inauguration.

Once we got out of the tunnel around 11 am, it became a mob. People were going every which way claiming the gate was closed. Then we all pushed to the Yellow line. I could see people getting in, so I decided to stick it out. But since no one came to dissuade me I missed the whole thing. They closed all gates 12:05 pm. I heard the speech through a stranger's cell phone. I think the day was a testament to the people, but you're right, the entire organization sucked. Epic fail.

karayan said...

I was going to respond with an angry, bitchy comment relating my own horrible experience but I find I am actually still too disappointed and frustrated to think clearly about this. Hearing other stories, especially of the elderly and handicapped, and remembering the people with children, those who had traveled from as far away as Omaha and San Francisco and watching the looks of great expectation and anticipation change to profound disappointment as folks first realized they would not get in, and then with the sound of the cannons realized we had missed EVERYTHING kinda makes me want to cry.

My mom and I traveled from Ohio. We planned this over months, drove here, arrived early to Sen Brown's office and followed every bit of advice and direction given to us.
We did what we were supposed to and not only did several someones mess up monumentally but no one had the common decency to inform the masses of people waiting expectantly that they had no chance of getting in. We could have made it to a bar or restaurant, onto the Mall and a JumboTron, or even back to my aunt's house... but no one ever told the crowd anything.

I saw Capitol Police when I arrived in line at 5:30AM (with only ONE Lt. actually directing foot traffic)and by 7AM they were gone. I saw one fireman standing on a scaffold near the Hyatt trying to direct people. At 11:50 there was ONE woman with a megaphone telling people the purple gate was closed but those with tickets could enter another gate (before a huge surge of thousands mobbed the gate with tickets in air).

That press release from the Inaugural Committee and hearing words from Chief Morse and others just pisses me off further. No one wants to be held accountable. And even worse no on seems willing to realize that its not so much not getting admitted that riled folks up but the complete lack of any presence by organizers or law enforcement and informational black hole we were sucked into. SIX hours with no information save that from those at the front who gave up and the cells and Blackberries of others in the crowd.
Their excuses are ridiculous. I've already heard accusations of corruption (along with the obvious incompetency) floated around. Ugh. Epic Fail

And to hear the story from a friend in the Silver area; arrived at 7:30, got in with no problem, tons of volunteers in red hats anticipating their needs, police everywhere, national guard directing traffic at the portable john lines... seeing everything on the JumboTron, the joy excitement and comraderie

I could have stayed in Ohio and watched it on television. As it stands now I'm relying on reruns and the internet to fill in what I missed; EVERYTHING

**sorry, guess I really still need to vent**

Unknown said...

Thanks for sharing this. My wife & I got out there at 6am & we were absolutely sullen about how little we were taken care of by our security officials. I just don't understand how some folks got to their checkpoints at 9am and breezed in, yet I live 3 or 4 blocks from my checkpoint, but for some reason there were 8 police officers outside my apartment but NOT ONE outside the Tunnel of Doom. What a nightmare. It's an experience I won't allow myself to forget. It was a sour taste I needed to feel. I had allowed myself to feel very happy & kept my New York City cynicism to myself. My cynicism is back.

Waage said...

Lame. Same thing happened to 3 or 4 people I was hanging out with on inauguration night. I don't know anyone (except one Senate staffer) who actually got in to the swearing in with a ticket. So did it actually happen or was it simulated like the 1969 moon landing?