Commentary by Jerry Lanson

In my community, Falmouth, Massachusetts, upwards of 1,000 people packed the Village Green, spilling across the street in front of the Congregational Church on one side and the Episcopal Church on the other.

Rather than the dark gathering of terrorist sympathizers and criminal agitators depicted in advance by White House officials and numerous GOP congressmen, the protestors were retirees and families, neighbors and acquaintances, enjoying a day peacefully and humorously with a bit of political theater.

As my granddaughter, who attended the huge Boston rally put it, “I really liked that people were excited and not angry.”  

In Falmouth, I saw one protester dressed as an orange man in striped prison garb and a woman dressed in green, crown and all, as the Statue of Liberty. There was song and speeches, laughter, chants and chitchat with friends.

From what I can tell, all across the country crowds collectively cast as “up to 7 million” massed in similar ways, peacefully, sometimes humorously and, judging from photos and videos, with gusto.

Much of the day’s fun came from finding creative signs.  “No Crown for the Clown,” read one, complete with a hand-painted president trussed up for the circus. Others were more serious, such as, “When cruelty becomes normal, compassion looks radical.”

I’ll leave you with two thoughts:

1.) The demonizing of the great American tradition of peaceful protest has to stop.

That demonizing was coordinated and unrelenting in the weeks leading up to No King II and its purpose was to frighten. That backfired badly.

2.) Even those of you who still admire Donald Trump should look closely at the activities of his growing private paramilitary force. Increasingly, they are operating outside the law.

I think both were big factors boosting turnout Saturday, along with lots more, from the erosion of public health and medical insurance to the renewed efforts to suppress free speech and fire public servants too often for no other reason than upholding the law.

If No Kings seemed celebratory it also was serious. Many people in this country are deeply concerned by the erosion of democratic norms. There’s always room for vigorous debate on economic issues or social issues. People disagree. But it’s not possible to split the difference on freedom.

Lanson’s SUBSTACK is From the Grassroots.

•••

More commentary on Saturday’s No Kings protests -- The No Kings protest is going to look like a country-wide furry convention, which will make it much harder for King Trump to have his Kent State moment. Attendees need to hold the line on non-violent protests because Trump is itching to start shooting. Then again, maybe if he starts killing us, we'll learn to love him. –KE Bell

_____
MONDAY 10/20/25

By Todd Lassa

Near rural Salisbury, Pennsylvania, just north of the Maryland border, there is a large building just off the state highway with a sign, “Trump Digs Coal.” 

It’s a standout sign in this rural area filled with pro-Trump signs and campaign banners, the single sign calling out an industry that has helped define this part of the country for more than a century. There are far more “Pro Life, Pro-Trump” signs on lawns on the roads to Meyersdale, where we spoke with a Trump and a Biden supporter earlier this month [“Talking to Trump and Biden Supporters in Small-Town Pennsylvania,” Oct. 5]. 

The Biden supporter we interviewed, Jennifer Clark, said she thought it was time for locals to move beyond the coal industry and train for jobs in a modern industry. Because of natural gas production, spurred in recent years by the fracking process, the coal industry is declining on its own, independent of President Trump’s support for the electrical power source. 

Pennsylvania is the third-biggest state for coal production according to a September 2018 report in Mining Technology [ https://www.mining-technology.com/features/five-largest-coal-producing-states-us/]. Wyoming was first with 297.2 million st/year. Even the next four biggest producers in the U.S.; West Virginia (at 79.8 million st), Pennsylvania (45.7 million st), Illinois (43.4 million st) and Kentucky (42.9 million st) don’t add up to the production from the nation’s least-populous state.

According to The New York Times’ recent deep-dive into the industry [https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/05/us/politics/trump-coal-industry.html?searchResultPosition=1] 145 coal-burning units at 75 power plants have been idled since the president’s 2017 inauguration, enough to power about 30 million US homes. “Another 73 power plants have announced plans to close,” the Times reports, including the Navajo Generating Station in northern Arizona, which went offline October 2019, months before the coronavirus pandemic shut down major parts of the country and led to reduction in the burning of fossil fuels. 

A positive effect of these shutdowns is that sulfur dioxide emissions are down nearly 30% for the first three years of the Trump administration, according to the Times. Coal burning accounts for about 20% US electricity production, down from 31% in 2017. Meanwhile, renewable energy, spurred by Obama administration policies, accounts for about 17%, NPR reports [https://www.npr.org/2020/10/19/925278651/what-would-a-2nd-trump-term-mean-for-the-environment]

Mining coal long has had a reputation as a dirty, dangerous, and life-shortening job. Former Murray Energy CEO Robert Murray has filed an application with the US Labor department for black lung benefits, according to West Virginia Public Broadcasting and Ohio Valley ReSource [https://ohiovalleyresource.org/2020/09/30/bob-murray-who-fought-black-lung-regulations-as-a-coal-operator-has-filed-for-black-lung-benefits/].

Despite the potential dangers, coal miners have prospered over the years, and the biggest threat to small towns and rural communities might be the wages lost. According to the Times report, miners at the Navajo station that closed late in 2019 earned an average of about $117,000/year.

Please address your comments to editors@thehustings.news

—–