Maine activist plans shoe-hurling action
By DEIRDRE FULTON | January 7, 2009
Kennebunk activist Jamilla El-Shafei is at it again. On Friday, between 3 and 6 pm at Portland's Meg Perry Center (644 Congress Street), the Kennebunks Peace Department "Chief of Peace" will collect shoes to throw at the White House on the day before Barack Obama takes office. In an e-mail, El-Shafei (who has demonstrated her contempt for George W. Bush on several previous occasions) described the protest as "an act of disdain for the President who is leaving office and not held accountable for impeachable offenses and war crimes."
El-Shafei plans to drive the shoes down to Washington, DC, next week. On Monday, January 19, several anti-war/anti-Bush speakers will gather in Dupont Circle for a rally. Then, protesters will march to the White House to try to throw shoes over the fence, in a reference to the Iraqi journalist who threw his shoes at President Bush during a December press conference. Retrieved shoes will be donated to the non-profit Peter Bug Shoe Repair Academy, which teaches cobbling skills to inner-city youth.
In a Portland Press Herald column over the weekend, Bill Nemitz wondered at what point liberals — who have mined such a rich source of anger and disillusionment for eight years — need to just "get over it."
To people who harbor similar skepticism, El-Shafei responds:
"I ask them if they could look in the face of a Gold Star mother and father, who lost a son in Iraq for a war based on Bush's lies, and say 'Get over it!' Bush has left a path of destruction from Iraq to the economy here at home and although the pain may fade people will never GET OVER IT! If hurling shoes gives them some satisfaction as a statement about the Bush presidency then I am happy to provide the venue for people to express their anger that this criminal was not held responsible."
Related:
Unwelcome in Kennebunkport: Bush and Putin, PPH almost sold. Now what?, Music seen: Pinkerton Thugs, More
- Unwelcome in Kennebunkport: Bush and Putin
Just days before the Fourth of July, disgruntled citizens will have the opportunity to practice their own kind of patriotism.
- PPH almost sold. Now what?
The long-floundering Portland Press Herald is about to have a new owner. At least, all signs suggest that the money necessary to seal the deal will come through by the end of the year.
- Music seen: Pinkerton Thugs
It has been more than a year since Kennebunk-based punkers The Pinkerton Thugs reunited, and yet there still seems to be a resonant buzz around their return. And seeing them live, you get the sense that the band are more relevant now than ever.
- Press releases: Confusion and upset
The big Maine media news is that Central Maine Morning Sentinel executive editor Eric Conrad fired reporter Joel Elliott on January 26. (Disclosure: Elliott is a friend and a fellow member of the Maine Pro chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists.)
- Countdown
With last week's news that Portland Press Herald managing editor Bob Crider has been summoned back to the state of Washington to run a Blethen-owned paper there.
- Sitting pretty
Richard Connor has cleverly cornered the market on the Portland Press Herald and its sister papers, and is now in what can only be called the catbird seat.
- Naming names
Any effort at survival by the Portland Press Herald should take advantage of the ample brainpower and ability already on staff
- Letters to the Portland editor: April 24,2009
Having worked at Guy Gannett for years, I have sadly watched the papers drop in size, content, quality .
- Death knell
Last week was a bittersweet week for the people who work at the Portland Press Herald and its sister publications. It is hard to fault them for the steps they took to try to preserve some semblance of the present, but we cannot avoid the fact that they have sounded the death knell both for the newspapers that employ them and the unions that represent them.
- Down in the flood
A few years ago, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (motto: Cornsistently Rong Abowt Everyting) informed me I was buying a house in a flood zone. FEMA had a map that showed where the waters of the semi-mighty Carrabassett River had surged over its banks a decade or so earlier and inundated my property.
- Talking points
Rich Connor's reforms have brought a much-needed sharpened focus to the Portland Press Herald/Maine Sunday Telegram and its sister papers. Certain changes, though, are raising eyebrows not just for what they are, but because of how Connor is doing them.
- Less

Topics:
This Just In
, Barack Obama, U.S. Government, Politics, More
, Barack Obama, U.S. Government, Politics, U.S. Politics, George W. Bush, Media, Kennebunk, Portland Press Herald, Meg Perry Center, Jamilla -Shafei, Less