Here's the thing about 
                                    knitters: 
                                  We have [moral] fiber, 
                                    we vote, we have a strong network, and oh, 
                                    yeah...our tongues 
                                    are sharper than our needles.
                                  I would be a much 
                                    better student if I could knit in class, although 
                                    I'm sure my profs wouldn't buy it -- keeping 
                                    my hands busy controls my "monkey mind." Instead, 
                                    I sit with glazed eyes through endless PowerPoint 
                                    presentations [I curse you, inventor of the 
                                    evil PowerPoint] paying attention to everything 
                                    else. Sometimes this pays off, like the day the monkey whispered "Knitters 
                                    Against Bush: Don't Unravel Our Rights." And 
                                    thus the idea for the first knitter's PAC 
                                    [Political Action Committee] was born. Good 
                                    monkey.
                                  [PACs usually have 
                                    lots of money to throw around. Following tradition, 
                                    a knitter's PAC would advocate for things 
                                    related to knitting. But there's not a lot 
                                    of money in this -- in fact, what money there 
                                    is came later -- and what's to advocate, aside 
                                    from being allowed to knit on airplanes? We 
                                    have our sights set on something much bigger.]
                                  The minute I heard 
                                    about this year's March for Women's Lives 
                                    in Washington, I knew I'd go. I'd gone in 
                                    1992, and although I was/am irritated that 
                                    conditions are even worse for women 12 years 
                                    later, I saw my attendance as imperative. 
                                    I am not a religious woman; some would even 
                                    call me amoral. This is as close as I get. 
                                    
                                  I heard about the 
                                    March in mid-March, and started wondering 
                                    how to mix marching and knitting towards the 
                                    end of the month. I had a vision of knitters 
                                    from all over united under one banner [or 
                                    t-shirts, since I don't really like carrying 
                                    things while marching]. So first came the 
                                    slogan, which I ran by Carolyn, who wouldn't 
                                    be able to attend, but gave it a thumbs up. 
                                    She suggested CafePress for the t-shirts [which 
                                    was good, because I'd forgotten all about 
                                    their convenient little service and had images 
                                    of myself buying the home screenprinting kit 
                                    from the latest issue of Bust, which wasn't very pretty]. 
                                  That weekend, I registered 
                                    my domain name, opened my CafePress 
                                    shop  with two t-shirts and a bumpersticker, 
                                    put together a web page and found a host. 
                                    By Monday, April 5th, the site was up and 
                                    running. [This is where the money part belatedly 
                                    arrives on the scene. Why let CafePress make 
                                    all the money? On the other hand, I didn't 
                                    want to be ridiculous, so I marked up my merch 
                                    by the smallest amounts, with the proceeds 
                                    going to NARAL and MoveOn.org. I figured that some people may be against 
                                    Bush but not want their money to go to NARAL 
                                    -- perhaps those people would like something 
                                    more directly anti-Bush, kind of like an electoral 
                                    depilatory.]
                                  Right off, I started 
                                    getting great responses on my blog, both from 
                                    people who were going and now wanted to meet 
                                    and from people who couldn't go but wanted 
                                    to express their support. Maggi, 
                                    being more familiar with the Mall area, came 
                                    up with a time and a place for all of us to 
                                    meet. By the weekend of the March, we knew 
                                    to expect Maggi and her daughter, Caroline, 
                                    who's just shy of her third birthday [gotta 
                                    get those kids started down the path of political 
                                    involvement early] from Richmond; Rachael, 
                                    coming all the way from Oakland; Bethany, Rachael's 
                                    sister, from all over, but lately Florida; 
                                    Michelle, NYC; and Cheryl, 
                                    who lives in the DC area I think. Sarah also met us there -- she's 
                                    a local -- and a mother-and-daughter knitting 
                                    pair, whose names I didn't catch, were there 
                                    as well. I brought my fellow library-school 
                                    person, Alexa [she knits, and does some mean 
                                    needlepoint]. "Met us" is kind of an exaggeration, 
                                    since Alexa and I were late; by the time we 
                                    got there, Cheryl had already left to "dance 
                                    with the ones what brung her," so to speak.
                                  We met on the steps 
                                    of the National Museum of American History. 
                                    When Alexa and I arrived, everyone was knitting 
                                    -- what else do knitters do when they have 
                                    to sit for more than two minutes in a row? 
                                    Meeting other bloggers is like meeting old 
                                    friends [for me, friends I'd lost touch with, 
                                    since I'd effectively stopped blogging for 
                                    a while]. Even non-blogging Alexa said she 
                                    felt welcome. People were asking them to pose 
                                    with their "Knitters Against Bush" t-shirts 
                                    -- they were a big hit. [Every time someone 
                                    asked to take a pic of all of the shirt-wearers, 
                                    I'd invariably have my sweater on, so I only 
                                    ended up in one of them. After the woman took 
                                    it, she said "Oh, I hope I got your faces 
                                    in there." ["Hi, I'm Maureen, and these are 
                                    my boobs." The story of my life.] My favorite 
                                    question was, "Knitters Against Bush -- is 
                                    that a real organization?" Answer: It has 
                                    been ever since I made it up.
                                  
                                  L-R 
                                    [sort of]: Myself, Rachael, Maggi, Sarah [back 
                                    turned], Bethany [looking off-frame], 
                                    unknown mother-daughter duo.] 
                                    Photo by Alexa Leinaweaver
                                  Eventually, we decided 
                                    to put away the knitting and start marching. 
                                    After I got home, I saw the pictures of Madeline 
                                    Albright and Gloria Steinem and all of those 
                                    other people at the front of the March, which 
                                    makes the whole thing look much more organized 
                                    than it seemed at the time. No one said "Start 
                                    marching now." We just saw that it was 12:15pm, 
                                    and since the March was supposed to start 
                                    at noon, we left. The NMAH was near the step-off 
                                    point, so we started toward the street and 
                                    eventually found some crowd; once you get 
                                    into the crowd, you lose all perspective.
                                  The marching itself 
                                    took about an hour. The counter-protesters 
                                    were relatively few and not particularly loud, 
                                    but they made up for it with these extra-huge 
                                    posters of fetuses [dead and in-utero] and 
                                    Hitler, and pictures of sad Jesus. Chanting 
                                    was a little dicey for the marchers:
                                  Call: What do we want?
                                  Response: Choice!
                                  C: When do we want 
                                    it?
                                  R: Now!
                                  Based on the venerable 
                                    "Peace! Now!" chant, this inevitably devolves 
                                    into "Choice! Now!" The problem is, we do 
                                    have choice now, but we aren't sure we'll 
                                    get to keep it for much longer, especially 
                                    if this administration sticks around, what 
                                    with Bush's love of mingling church and state 
                                    and his desire to pack the courts with his 
                                    lackeys. Choice! Forever!
                                  
                                  Roe v. Wade itself 
                                    isn't about "choice," or about an explicit 
                                    statement of the legality of abortion. What 
                                    Roe 
                                    says is that a woman's right to privacy [in 
                                    the first two trimesters of her pregnancy] 
                                    overrules the "state's interest" in fetal 
                                    health. Women didn't get the right to privacy, 
                                    and the right to govern their own bodies, 
                                    until 1973. Bless Roe's little heart, but at this point I'd like something stronger, such as 
                                    a national law mandating safe, affordable, 
                                    and accessible abortions for all women. Yeah, 
                                    it ain't gonna happen, but this is why we 
                                    march -- because Roe 
                                    is all we have, and we need to keep her intact. 
                                    Keep abortion safe and legal!
                                  After we finished 
                                    marching we returned to the Mall and staked 
                                    out a place to rest and listen to the speakers 
                                    [as much as was possible; I didn't pick up 
                                    on much] -- and knit. And people watch, since 
                                    the majority of the Marchers were still coming 
                                    in. Close to two hours later, hunger got the 
                                    better of Alexa and I. We walked a few blocks 
                                    and people were still coming onto the Mall 
                                    -- after a few blocks more, we saw the end 
                                    of the March. All of us became really choked 
                                    up, because that's when we realized how many 
                                    people had come out that day. 
                                  
                                    [L-R] 
                                    Back row: Alexa, the author. 
                                    Front: Rachael, Sarah and Caroline; Maggi, 
                                    Michelle, Bethany.
                                  Forget about all of 
                                    this "knitting as political statement" crap 
                                    -- I'm not buying it. I knit because I like 
                                    it, and do so unapologetically. Wanna question 
                                    my feminist cred? Watch out for the flying 
                                    needles. What I'm talking about is this: knit 
                                    and make a political statement. Sure, women knit for the 
                                    soldiers during the World Wars, and now we 
                                    do all sorts of charity knit-alongs, but if 
                                    people are really interested in taking knitting 
                                    out of the private and into the public realm 
                                    [and I don't mean coffeehouses], we need to 
                                    take the opportunity to be overtly political. 
                                    Many of the knit blogs address political issues, 
                                    so Knitters Against Bush seemed like the logical 
                                    next step.
                                  One marcher who noticed 
                                    our shirts and asked about them also asked 
                                    how serious we are, as knitters. Dead serious, 
                                    lady, and we proceeded to tell her how we 
                                    got together through our blogs. She wasn't 
                                    listening, but she did tell me that she and 
                                    a group of her friends were trying to think 
                                    of a way to use knitting in a political way, 
                                    and one idea they had was getting people to 
                                    pay them by the inch for knitting up all of 
                                    their odds and ends of yarn into scarves. 
                                    She also told me that her husband had been 
                                    the photographer for a couple of Melanie Falick's 
                                    books [Knitting in America 
                                    was one]. She emailed me the next day for 
                                    other fund-raising ideas, and I suggested 
                                    that she tap into the power of blogs and have 
                                    a "swatch marathon": invite everyone to send 
                                    in swatches to be made into an afghan [to 
                                    be given to charity or auctioned off at the 
                                    end], and set up a PayPal account for people 
                                    to pledge. Supporters could pledge a set sum, 
                                    or, say, fifty cents per swatch, or some amount 
                                    for every swatch with a cable pattern, etc. 
                                    If bloggers can get together and knit hundreds 
                                    of catnip mice 
                                    or blankets 
                                    for pets in animal shelters, I'm sure 
                                    they can do wonders for regime change. [Don't 
                                    get me wrong: I love the kitties, and even 
                                    the doggies, having some of both myself. But.] 
                                    
                                  Washington had to 
                                    contend with all of those hundreds and hundreds 
                                    of thousands of people that day, and a bunch 
                                    of angry knitters from around the country. 
                                    T-shirts and bumper stickers are still selling, 
                                    some weeks better than others, but I'll have 
                                    some donations to pass along. People are still 
                                    e-mailing me to have themselves added to the 
                                    "Comrades-in-Needles" list of links. What 
                                    exactly does "Don't unravel our rights" refer to? Pick your 
                                    favorites -- so many are endangered at the 
                                    moment.