Monday, October 4, 2010

Restoring Honor and 'One Nation' Compared

Socialists Come Up Short in the Aerial Photograph

ABeck_Rally_v_Commie_Obama_Rally
The aerial photographs speak for themselves. Consider the fact that all of us paid our own way to 08/28 and people were offered free transportation and meals for the 10/02 event. ht/Phil.

Phil Has More [click to read]. Also of note is the 'trash test.' Phil Has That News Too [click to read].

"I Guess after free bus rides, free lunch, free Metro cards, they figured there was free trash pick-up???" -- Phil.

"Live free or die" has an entirely different meaning to these people Phil.

Remembering the Restoring Honor Rally

08/28/10
Arriving at the Lincoln Memorial for the Restoring Honor Rally...

08/28/10
...and the crowd stretches all the way down the reflecting pool to the World War II Memorial.

Rally
The crowd from the air... ht/Mike

undertrees
...there are people crowded UNDER those trees as well.

More Photos [click to view].

Lynn Has More on the Rally [click to read].

Thoughts from the Side of the Reflecting Pool

08/28/10
Here I am at the rally. Photo by T. Barbour.

At today's Restoring Honor Rally, Glenn Beck pointed out the scar in the Washington Monument. Far down the reflecting pool, the mighty obelisk rises as a pure form of ancient architecture. Look closer and you see a change in the stone color, about a quarter of the way up the Monument.

That 'scar' marks the point where work was stopped as North and South fought the War between the States. This bloody conflict might well have ended the American experiment... but the Nation survived and became the great Nation we live in today. When work was resumed on the Monument, the builders went back to the original quarry but were unable to match the marble exactly. The change in color bears silent testimony to one of our most perilous times.

Beck asked the thousands listening to him to look beyond the scars of our differences and see the good that is in our Nation.

Joined by Governor Sarah Palin and Dr. Alveda King [neice of the great Civil Rights Leader], Beck led a call back to the foundations of good in our Nation... the sure step to do the right thing when no one is looking, the value of individual honor in service to one's fellows.

Aaron Copeland's 'Fanfare for the Common Man' played over the Reflecting Pool as the virtues of Faith, Hope and Charity were celebrated. That piece had become a theme piece as I visited the Memorial on the July 4th weekend. It was on Xaver Wilhelmy's demonstration DVD played on the glass organ pipes! It was a nice departure from the 'Rocky' theme as I trotted up the steps of the Memorial to watch the morning light illuminate the shrine to Lincoln.

Now it became the theme for honoring people who exemplified the virtues.

Under the trees lining the Reflecting Pool, ordinary Americans came together to affirm the foundations of this country's greatness.

08/28/10

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