Thousands rally against Obama govt

Thousands rally against Obama govt Protesters against US President Barack Obama's health care plan and other policies gather in Washington, DC, on September 12. Photo: AFPAFP, Washington Tens of thousands of protestors from across the United States descended on the nation's capital Saturday, decrying President Barack Obama, "big government" and big spending. They carried hand-painted posters protesting Obama's proposed health care reforms and accusing his administration of leading the United States down the road to socialism. "Abortion is not healthcare," read one sign. Another, held aloft by an immigrant from Ukraine, said: "I had enough of socialism in the USSR." The demonstrator, who refused to give his name, said he had come to Washington from Baltimore because "too many things remind me of what I saw in the communist countries. "Communism didn't work over there and it's not going to work over here," he told AFP. Quinn Ryan, 11, stood in the middle of Pennsylvania Avenue, near the spot where Obama and his wife Michelle greeted supporters in January after he was sworn in as America's first black president, brandishing a sign reading: "Born free, taxed to death." The protest was coordinated by Freedomworks, a grassroots movement calling for lower taxes, less government and more economic freedom for all Americans The march had to set off before the scheduled 11:30 am start time as Freedom Plaza near the White House filled to overflowing. Police were unable to say how many people had turned out for the rally, but at mid-afternoon the crowd stretched out of sight from the legislature and onto the National Mall. The organizers said earlier in the week they hoped to attract between 20,000 and 30,000 people from around the country for the protest, which was supported by prominent conservatives, including former House Majority leader Dick Armey. Holly and Nick Bikakis had come from California for the protest. "It's not convenient for us to be here, and it's costing us money we'd rather not spend, but we felt strongly enough that we decided we would come no matter what," Nick Bikakis told AFP. The couple were among many at the protest carrying signs that read: "You lie" -- the words shouted by Republican lawmaker Joe Wilson at Obama during the president's speech about health care to Congress this week. Lois Calzone from Maryland carried a poster showing Obama painted as Batman character "the Joker" with the captions "Un-American" and "cap and traitor." "He is a traitor. He's either a Marxist or a Communist and we're not. He's totally un-American," Calzone told AFP. "I think Saudi Arabia is behind him. Where did he get all that money to fund his campaign?" she said. Her daughter, who refused to give her name, said: "The reason he hasn't picked a church in DC is because he's not Christian. He's Muslim. "We were willing to give him the benefit of the doubt but this is too much." Some in the crowd were there to try and engage those skeptical of the Obama administration. Georgetown University law student Lindsay Windsor asked demonstrators to explain their opinions of the president. "A lot of the slogans are very inflammatory and I want to understand what they actually mean," said Windsor, 22, who was wearing an Obama-Biden T-shirt, as she walked over to Calzone and her friends. "I don't want to try to convince you that I'm right. I want to try to understand you. If we are going to fix our country's problems, we need to have a conversation together," Windsor said to the group of women. "Obama is a sleeper cell... Go have a conversation with someone else," Calzone's daughter told her.

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