The speakers were almost all young people, mostly teenagers. My City Councilmember, Mitra Jalali Nelson, who is 33, was probably the oldest person to speak.
I wish I had a recording of the opening spoken word piece by high school sophomore Juwaria Jama. These words from her will stick with me:
There’s something the whole world should know:Here are my photos from the day. First, there's my sign (it looks a bit shiny because I waterproofed it with tape in anticipation of rain that didn't happen):
We aren’t generation Z. We aren’t the last to live.
And we won’t let this crisis be, we won’t let this crisis be
The be-it-all for our generation because
We are the era of the Green New Deal.
We are Gen GND, and we are just getting started
These two-sided signs were in the hands of Daughter Number Three-Point-One and her friend:

It was a hot day and I was trying to keep a beat on a metal can in time with the chants, so I didn't get as many photos as I might have. But here were some of the signs I saw and managed to get pictures of:







Some signs were more in your face than those, whether generationally...

...or with expletives undeleted:

One guy brought his reformed school bus, painted to say "Stop Line 3" on the side. The back of the bus, painted in black, was a participatory art project where each person could sign their name in red, white, or blue to say "No Line 3."

Finally, I had to appreciate this bit of sign engineering:

If you've been to a protest, you know your arms get tired holding up a sign for hours, even if it's light. Personally, I hang mine around my neck with yarn so my hands are free for the aforementioned metal can-clanging. But this guy cut a slot into a piece of foamcore board so he could hold his sign up with just one hand, switching arms over time. Pretty clever.
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