Modest Lefty Pittsburgh Protest Comparable to Huge Conservative Protest in D.C.?

Coverage of the leftists and anarchists protesting the Group of 20 meeting in Pittsburgh downplayed the violence in a headline implying peace ruled, and boasted of a crowd size of up to 4,000. Yet the Times didn't estimate the size of the September 12 conservative rally in D.C., which some estimated to be over 100,000. In both cases Times headlines stated that "thousands" turned out, as if the rallies were comparable in size.

Ian Urbina's Saturday story from the Group of 20 economic meeting in Pittsburgh last weeked, about left-wing and anarchist protesters who took to the streets, came under a headline that misleadingly claimed that peace abided: "In Pittsburgh, Thousands Stage a Peaceful March for Multiple Causes."


Yet in paragraph four we learned there were 66 arrests in downtown Pittsburgh, and "about 19 businesses sustained broken windows or other damage." And while the Times was loathe to estimate the crowd size of the enormous September 12 anti-Obama protest in Washington, the Times forwarded estimates from "observers" at the lefty Pittsburgh protest who "put the crowd...at 3,000 to 4,000."


While the peaceful September 12 crowd was tarred in the Timesas "angry" and "profane" with "no shortage of vitriol," Urbina downplayed the actual violence and vandalism committed by a far smaller band of anarchists in downtown Pittsburgh.

A headline reader could assume that the September 12 conservative protest in Washington and the anarchist protest in Pittsburgh were of the same magnitude, as both used the term "thousands" to describe the crowd size.

The Times' print headline from the conservative rally, where the low end of crowd estimates was 70,000 and some estimates went much higher: "Thousands Attend Broad Protest of Government."


The Times' print headline from the left-wing/anarchist protest, in which "observers" estimated 3,000-4000: "In Pittsburgh, Thousands Stage a Peaceful March for Multiple Causes."


An excerpt from Urbina's piece from Pittsburgh:


Several thousand demonstrators espousing and denouncing a host of causes converged on downtown Pittsburgh on Friday, chanting, pumping up signs and playing instruments in a peaceful and permitted march calling for solutions to a range of problems that they attributed to the economic policies of the world leaders at the Group of 20 meeting.


Protesters with Iraq Veterans Against the War, wearing fatigues, marched alongside Tibetans chiming cymbals, chanting denunciations of China and waving signs, like one that read "G20 Let's Talk Tibet." Students for Justice in Palestine assembled on Forbes Avenue and called for an end to "the Israeli occupation." Others held up signs like "We Say No To Corporate Greed," and "We say yes to human needs."


One group held aloft with bamboo poles a giant fabric replica of a dove. A marching band with a French horn, several snare drums and a trombone played amid a sea of black, American and Palestinian flags.


The People's March, as it was called, was sponsored by the Thomas Merton Center, a Pittsburgh peace organization. It came a day after raucous confrontations between the police and protesters resulted in 66 arrests. At least five people needed medical attention, and about 19 businesses sustained damage.


Later Friday, protesters and students gathered near the University of Pittsburgh. Lines of police officers declared the milling groups to be unlawfully assembled and forced people away from the central part of the campus, launching smoke canisters, firing rubber bullets and making arrests.


Observers put the crowd at Friday's march at 3,000 to 4,000. Speakers urged demonstrators to fight for an array of social issues they felt had been largely ignored in global economic policy.


Urbina later included another numerical estimate, as if "more than 400" anarchists is some impressive figure:


Rows of police officers looked on from the sidewalk, watching a group of more than 400 self-described anarchists clad in black.


Before long, singers from the Raging Grannies and workers from the United Steelworkers of America took the stage to talk about the need for jobs.