There was the famous Colonial flag with a coiled rattlesnake and the words
- "Don't Tread on Me."
- Another early American flag showed 13 stars arranged in a circle.
- And then there were the tea bags hung from the brims of people's hats and ears.
"You are called to a new revolution today," conservative talk radio host Gary Sutton, of York's WSBA-910, told the crowd, estimated to have numbered around 1,000 by the State Capitol Police.
- "This is about right and wrong," Sutton said.
- Cries of indignation and outrage against the stimulus plan and the president roared from the crowd. People held signs slamming Obama and other Democratic politicians as communists.
"This is treason," said Mark Holloway, a self-employed contractor from Red Lion.
- The consensus among protesters was clear:
- The stimulus plan won't lift the country out of its economic crisis.
The president has also called for an additional $75 billion to stem home foreclosures.
- Blasting Obama's proposals, protesters clamored for more tax cuts and reduced government spending to solve the country's economic troubles.
- "Rush Limbaugh is absolutely right," she said. "The government is out of control. They're spending all this money for themselves."
- The idea for the tea parties started last month on CNBC, when business reporter Rick Santelli, standing on the floor of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, blasted the president's economic stimulus plan.
The rant became an instant Internet smash, generating nearly a million hits on the video-sharing Web site YouTube. The rant inspired conservative bloggers and pundits to organize tea party protests of their own.
- The idea comes from the iconic 1773 event, when American Colonists tossed
- crates of tea belonging to the East India Co. into Boston Harbor
- to protest British taxation and commerce policy.
- "I'm a realist," said Andrew Emerick, of Baltimore. Asked whether the rallies will have any effect, he replied: "Probably not." Holding a "Don't Tread on Me" flag, the real estate investor is looking to the 2010 congressional elections as the point to direct change in fiscal policy.
"We cast the net far and as wide as we could for this rally," Sterns said.
- Many in the crowd said promotions by conservative talk radio hosts on WHP-580 and WSBA-910 boosted the turnout.
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