Rep. Kyrsten Sinema (D., Ariz.), candidate for Senate in Arizona, gave a glowing account of an event in 2002 that included "Greens, Democrats, Communists, and Young Democratic Socialists alike."
"On Saturday, July 27, 2002 the Jim Hightower Rolling Thunder Down Home Democracy Tour in Arizona gave a kick to the revolution Emma Goldman-style," Sinema wrote in an October 31, 2002, article for Independent Politics News. (The article is available on ProQuest.)
"For 10 hours that day we talked, listened, debated, learned, taught, shared, formed coalitions, mobilized and moved. And during it all we ate, laughed, danced, sang, twirled, and just plain out had fun." She added, "Perhaps Emma Goldman's quote sums it up best, ‘If I can't dance, I don't want to be a part of the revolution.'" (A 1917 New York Times article described Goldman as one of the "two most notorious anarchists in the United States.")
Several thousand activists met in Tucson in late July 2002 for the Rolling Thunder Down Home Democracy Tour. "This tour, one of many ideas cooked up by Jim Hightower in that mysterious and elusive political conundrum that we call Texas," Sinema wrote, "is his answer to today's humdrum, predictable corporate-controlled political discussion."
Sinema listed some of the event's attendees, from "Food Not Bombs, Jobs with Justice, Women in Black, the Nuclear Resister, and Tucson Peace Center to the Arizona Advocacy Network, Arizona Citizen Action, and the Arizona Human Rights Fund—over 180 in all! Political parties and candidates also turned out in droves to talk progressive politics—Greens, Democrats, Communists, and Young Democratic Socialists alike."
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