The
SOA Protests in Context: A Diary of a City
by Danielle Chynoweth
After a 12-hour trip
from Champaign-Urbana, Illinois without a map, we intuit
our way through rural Georgia by following the language
of war. We pursue signs leading to Veterans Parkway,
Fort Oglethorpe, Memorial Stadium, and sure enough we
are guided into Columbus by a flag-lined street called
Victory Drive, the whole time feeling like part of a
tailgate party for some non-existent game.
My first impression: Columbus wears economic hardship
on its sleeve, right next to a God Bless America patch.
The two - desperation and patriotism - seem intertwined,
at least in Columbus, Georgia.
The journey from the highway to the base, along Victory
Drive, tells the story: title loan agencies, pawn shops,
inexpensive Chinese buffets, a half dozen topless bars
flanked by cheap motels where the guests have local
license plates. Theres a Guss Chick
n Shrimp Drive-in with a printed menu the
size of two billboards, and Freddys Fast
Tattoos just down the street from a strip mall
with Army, Navy, and Air Force recruiting centers. The
Civil War Museum faces two expansive cemeteries across
the street. Several billboards shout out the number
of a hotline for compulsive gamblers. There is the merest
shadow of green in the midst of all of this - grizzly
gray grass struggling out of the cracks in the cement,
looking like the beard of an unshaven old man.
The roads are wide; the parking lots are huge and empty.
Giant flags flap every fifty feet for several miles.
The face of Osama bin Laden, ten feet high, looms over
the highway, with the crosshairs of a gun sight laid
over his face to advertise a local radio station. We
are All American Radio the billboard declares,
and its hostility proves it. A factory stretching several
blocks lies vacant, an enormous steel gate rusting on
its hinges, its wide loading docks empty, doors gaping
open like wounds.
It is a city made for giants, but the giants must have
left, because all I see are tired looking black folks
and mean looking white folks hovering around the shoulders
of the highway.
In my search for life in Columbus, this is my inventory:
hotels buzzing with men in uniform and several factories
actively cranking out snack cakes. And then theres
us. We have come to protest the SOA, and in doing so,
have breathed life into the city for a weekend. Between
the military and its opposition, the tourist industry
of Columbus ekes out an existence. Luckily, I say to
myself, the SOA protests come right in time to put a
little extra cash into the pockets of people short on
money for Christmas presents.
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